Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Weekly Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1900-1924 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1900)
FEED STORES. Crass SeodQ . A complete Stock of gra?a and clover funds, at tbe lowest possible prices for first class seeds. Give ;us a call be fore buying. . ir ; i . BSlftSTEB & wnrTETlie feci Mea No. 01 Court St, Salem; ;Thone 17S1 DEALERS IN GRAIN. . WHEAT BOUGHT or expunged for flour ; and .feed Wrnch office of Aurora Roller Mills. warehouse on Trade street near High Salem.; Oregon. ; I i i W. S. HUItST & CO. AurnL Oregon. .Wliolesale dealers in Wheat v Oahv; Hops, Potatoes, ( mioii a mf Onion. ' Sets, etc.: t Salem Agency at otlh-e Aurora ' Roller Mills, on Traill- street; hear iDg!: ' . : ' - BICY'CLE "REPAIRING. G. A. ROBERTS Bicycle Repairing New and Secondhand Wheels , 105 5TATE STREET f SALETl, OR rTl'NNING AND PLUMBING. T. S. BURROUGHS TINNING AND PLUMBING Gas : and Steam Cttinar. 'ilanufact arer o Hop and Fruit Pipe. ioj State St.. TeL Salem, Or. PHYSICIANS. J. R CO OR, M. Dl BOTANICAL DOCTOR Cures Consumptiijai, iCancer, Tumors, Graved and Kkney Troubles,.' Aiibma. Skin and -Bone Diseases khovtt knife, plasters, posiions or pain. Also Blinds nmfc t ii v-i Salent. Oregon. LIVERY STABLES. FAVORITE STABLES II S?.tte St.,; Salem.)5 , Telephone 701 LIviry, Feed and Boarding . , ItHi lH:irlHi. by day, - Wfck- or uioiith at rvaioiialile prices. The ne HHii!uolatiom urn giod aJd the r;s; are first- class In every rexpeet. A sjKehiIty ma do of rif.s for commercial ,ui.n. j UADAIUUGII & FUANCI. rroprletors. 4- Hi R. PAGE W. A. STEPHENS , PAGE a STEPHENS ; llorsei wH fed, good accominoda- lions. . Fine Rijjs- f Good Rigs, iot comrmerciaJ men a Speciity. ilorses boankd by tlay, .week ,-or . monitli. . ,-.Haa froni uven, Feea con Bccrcioo sw 164 Cainhicreial Sti, , TeL 851. , Salen RESTAURANTS. You nn; mostcbrdisfiy idrited to , Jltiio itestaurant yl4 5immcrclal strort. .iknn. Orsotu ami try ur MKAI-'S. vo U-llvt i5i t fcnd la the city. i 1 . .T. LI'J I ITS K II, Proprietor. 4- The Wonder Restaurant MHALSao CENTS : OiMii d.iv and ulsluh Wlw-11 iu the city w willeii jonr i.ltroii.i?e. F(li:W.Vni A: HYULV Ilnps. r t'oniinwlttl Slieet, Salem. IRMUIHERK HtSIEOMIT jir CmiiJ'Tcial Stn-ct, Salem. thod 5quire Meal for acc Tliirtj-lntt jti'iiin In Ir.iwiii'-ss in tltl sty and have fed morv iki'- than ttiere an'- !n (hfsn: alt were well pleased. Meals t all honrn. i w.iiii:r.i.i:xnnANn. Kill iCETrOSTV coated with ..CarboHncum Avenarius.. WtU out wwir ireflitr It Is a Iladieal Hraxly AcaiMSt, CtiHken L.1cp. Its ai..ti aUn t tho Uud wan r loui Iry hoiisa Hl ivrtnnnt-Btiy ex . rmiiil0 nil LICK. Results: Upalihy. CTcKms-flpnty ttx. Write fur circular!' in l prices And uiu tKm V pnper. ft. M. WAI)K & CXX, ARfot. ' , SAJ-KM. OHKGO.N. S Al EM I RON WO RK S 0 . . 1 - ; : Your Work Solicited. GEORGE E. SLY, Sup't WOVEN WIRE FENCING At riTatly redm-el prices. Poult it' -Netting. Pickett ami Shingk-S SALEM FENCE .WORKS VALTEIl? MOIILEY, Trop. . f.jv State Street, Baleiuu' ' Washintiro:!.' kct .Vrti mr Was , j a for nw I htf ( Yr 1I m rt n.eRi; f IU.riral of? tU;tctpTJrt Tliotua at. ManUa. i Thei hcaKiuar tejs baud and. first lilt t.iliou of the I if Mi ; ii f a tifrj i.:, ho.aiu;i r Mr . ha nd nd sectHul batuliou of . 4h Elyhth iarantryj.cvj; frccrulf' thirteen wa-ti3H-t PHr- Kons; six renmle nurses ami four cttptf be Philipl"" C tu inisloit were, aboard.: -' ; , SAILED FOB EXtiIAXI. New York. Oct. 1'7.-Julian B. Ar nold, second ssoii of Str IMwtn. Arnold, sailctl for. Europis': a prisoner, on-, the Ciui.ird limr Unilrfei7-5lay. .'"Arnold was bfwijrht Imi-. frmi San Fr.incisfco last Vclesd.y by two -H'srtland YartI th'tVn tlvoC 111 was chaf jrrcl with tlie c.:ntr7.j:leinent'of large "iuis of. money In IxnHhm arly iu the year. Arnold 'a .wife U still in 'iJau, Frauciacol P' A 'fr'n j for Infants and Children. Castoria Js a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pares , gorlc, Drops and. Soothing Syrtips. Jt Ja Pleasant. It contains neither Opium. Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic It relicTes Teeth- inr Troubles eud cures Constipation, ; It regulates the Stomach and Dowels, sririnjr healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's friend. The Kind You Have. Always Bougit JJears tne In Use For GRA'S s Oar stock of Grass Seed for fall eowinsr is complete, and we invito all seed users to call and examine same before purchas ing, as we feel sure that the quality, as well as the prices, can't be beat;: SA V AGE 4c REID, Seedmen 322 and 324 Commercial Street,. North o' P O. BEING ILwIST -OK Twice-a-Week WEEKLY OREGONIAN, per year........ .... ......,.....,...,.$1: TWICE-A-WEEK STATESMAN, per year.., .i. ....... OUR PRICE, BOTH' PAPERS .$1.50 PACI FI CT IOMESTE AD. TWICE-A-WEEK.- STATEM At, pst ;MBOTU' PAPERS HOARDS DAIRYMAN, per year P ?IC-A-WEEK . STATESMAN, ' J' i . ' . '.. ,! ; I . . , i i . - BOTH PAPERS L - l - - - - OREGON POULTRY JOURNAL, TWICE-A-WEEK r STATESMAN, BOTH:PAPERS;. - .r, - NEW YORK TRIBUNE, , per year T Yl CE-A-W EEK STATESMAN, BOTH IAPERS TIIRICK-A-WEEK NEW YORK TWICE-A-WEEK STATESMAN, BOTH PAPERS s . - - MrCAI.L'S MAGAZINF. fincludinjc TWICE-A-VEEK STATESMAN, BOTH PAPERS CH ICAGO INTER-dC Al-L? IpeV wUt,'!, Ul ? iirifi i Vi4 iV.Stlco TWICE-A-WEEK STATESMAN; 'pcteiK il.ViU.U-. .nU.$i.oo i i i iBOTii papers i:.itiii-Ud--::--:iJi.-u$i.35 77?e Pacific Homestead ' ; r ' 7 - SAtAl,: OREGON : " , The Leading Fa no Paper of. the Pacific Xortfi- . west: i 20-pn;e illafctnttcd wecklr, $1 per jyjar. We want goodfagent3 and solicitors, and to such -- will juiy a liberal commission: Write for terms. v ;" Advertibtrs should jatrontze the Honicsf cad... .... CIRCULATION, 5,000 WEEKLY Special rates on lon time contracts. Clubbing rat with the Twice-a-Week Statesman; if paid in . advance, or within six months after giving the order. Address: j PACIFIC HOMESTEAD, Ofricc in Statesman Building. i SALEM, OR. 14 1 MOfmon HtShODS HIHS ,,7 Of 'IT rMf Ad Cress. ' FOR SALE DT F. G. HAAS. Washington, ? Oct. - 27.4-Paymaster. tffiu tal Pales rt'iKtrts to the Secretary of W.-r that during the ysir endHl June :v Itm,' lie has Iahl lo tlie iuTi'V, rt gulars; and roluntcers, SftUi. rCH'Jvny, lm ihf emergency fund to disband the 'Cnlan nrmy." $l.M2.i"Vi. A con't-arison of the expendit ure s of ihe last 'fiscal -year with those of tlie picseni fiscal year of 1HO shows a net decrease of ?38,3n2,147. ; j -T vdim- BauaL'-aSa'fi -vHrij Tbo rret wjn-xiy for rocLS a,nMit fei.tirTsx. such a.s .V,'iij;ict!o or Opixifo. wbitfc rrre rcir iotjr vnrorinU"cti' ... 1 1 euaro or Oniiuo. alM h XOR SALE BV. vtf-aatuo. obUpctiKM. rees, w J;. vuriii -vv iw.iniwai wrww dons-tuition, wps. iM'Vr'"" n if 1 rr.. t"? -i- Signature of Over 30 Years- THK Statesman CO I.ClO year . . ; ; j 77 . . . , . ... ;;;r. ... 50 .... .. per year. - - .Sr.oc . r i 4 - ...:c.LL..l - - . - . - - - 1.7o per yar...... per year.... . - - . - - - ... - - . - - . - T - r - . - - S1.2o .it.,. ., ....... ..$I.OO . $t.oo ter year .1.2o WORIjD, per year... ..... per year..... ....... .... .. ... .'.St.no $i.oo ---ri - - --.-$l.Cojit i r dare do it. a free pattern to eadi subscriber) .'.ft per year $i oc .00 S1.30 fien la vv ocr y fr -.r l it m rto? MrtK !1 M hK. IJ;!TI Mre MUB, tMII Bishop Rme4y Co at rrP: Omt DRUGGIST, SALEM, OR. f IS iMPJtO.yiNOrrKepojrta,'. reeelved from Jeff ersn last evening, , iilicat the cnt:re recovery of ilisa I.nht Jours, tin; latig'T " lsJ-nt ling practically passed. The yoiipr lady" is cheerful, and frequently jokes with Tier -nurse, btie he is Impatient to pave th sick room. Sl:e has no krtowltdge of Ww s he was injnretl. bnt thinks the fujury Is tlie result of a full. fSTAL ?rostratira and d rticss of Uio troerUit Kt-TTtms iTcwtravioT. i-ai:irrcr uos i iaaoooa. icr. J to v.n3urap'-cn &ad iammtT. Wild eerT ica'4 to snietc wtl wmiy. Wli rrfind th mo'T. Sola a T.OO j 0 per box. A LL DRUGGISTS m ilLEUER FROM. . SOLDIER BOY lie Saw Bryan's Picture Pasted on a Filipino Hat. FtCLUAR IDEAS Of THE REBELS They Cannot Understand How It Is .Possible that l?rjaa Can Bev IVfeated Sorember 6th. The iwrents of Artlinr Te Poaco. who lhe in Virginia and who are old schoicl IJeuiocrats. have received- an Interesting letter from tlfc'lr son.-.who U a soldier in Comiiauy M..Tir!rty- ninta ' Ileimeilt, United States Yol uhteers, t stationed at - Santo Thomas. Pbilippinc Islands. The letter says: - "The antl-xpansiouists at honu hare simply ruined all prospects of ny le-i enable teruiiuatin of tic tronbles here, at least nntll after the tk--t ion.' They have discouragtnl or nen and enoouragxl our enemJos. Kvcn admitting the souuduoss of their views., they are guilty of .the- highest treason, aud hundreds of deaths must o,f necfSHity lie laid at their door. They tthe natives) have the greatest conii-deiK-e In Mr. Uryau. and they do not hes".ate to tell us that as soon as he is elected the soldiers will all be sent away ami they will run things to suit themselves. - - j "I was. down at Caiamla a few days ago and saw. a large picture of Mr. Itryan KtiK-k up on a native's hut. They all firmly believe that he will he elected in. Xovcinlier, nd they . also believe that the anti-expansionists are largely in the majority, in the United States.' Froni their ioiut of view they can see it bi to other light. vYon we-thest pople have ahva.vs U'cn accustomed to living under -the uot despotic form of govehrujneut, ami for any one to critic-ize or disagree with the met hods of the reigning pow er meant nothing- less than instant ilea th and confiscation of proper ty.and so they reason accordingly thajt if Mr. lryan's party was not stronger than the reigning power in the United .states, it -would be impossible for. the party to exist. Xo argument can co;ij vine them or make theui understand the freedom of speech and action un der which the people at home live. "It makes me weary every- time I see in one of the state -papers .where some auti is shooting ofT his head about these ioor downtrmldeu people over here, and how they aife uciug iilosed. upon .by-the Americans, and yet these ieople who are doing all the talking do not : -know any mdre about the true condition of affairs; on these islands than I, lo-alKJUt preachiug.; a sermon, in the nrst .ilaee they are letter off now than they ever were'tu tireir lives. iefore; have 'mow Iftierty and liiere td cat tnd ii re milking niorc money. We pay twenty cents a dox- fii for -eggs an I buy every one they can, produce, ainl ; they never wert sol J ijor more--than three ceiits previAus to onr coming' hvre.' We pay liiore for laundry work to hese native's than we would ever-think of doiug in tht suUcjs. and a' sddier is c6miMlled to hav clean clothes all the lime. pay the men fifty ctnts a day- for work, which Is more than fhey made in a week before. ; 1 " " '-."Wheu a farmer raises a crop now lio diics not have to gle half of it to the rturch ami the other half to the govcrniiK'nt. as he formerly did. and starve himself. He can-carry his .roods to market and not iu roblv.d fiief ore. Ik srets there bv Iidrones. As for being imposed upon, it is as much i as a soldier s lire is worth, almost, to om of them. He dovs . not for their slightest grievance is listened to. anjl the oflemier. If lie lt A soldier, is severely puni.-dicd. 'What hurls ns the most is what, the papers at home say about us. What can ; we lo? No soldier can say' or liiniself. Tlds war is not right, and I'll not light.' The majority of us wiU Ik glail when we can 'ret urn to civil life. . We are all tind of it. but we can not leave until there is a, Wg ehanze in. the tdtuation. In the inefi li ft iiue. we need encouragement." Instead tof being branded as unirderers, rol- Ibers and desperadoes. ' I don't . believe jou will find a man THAT , I SELL... Pedigreed Belgian Hares $.O0 ro Do You ((now ? JUST COME AND SEE l- 'LORD, LURGAN 2d" i'. -Score 94 3-4, ay Gore w Serrlce Fee 93. I Mrs. Rnsh, the noted Judce. aays be will soon score more than Do points. -- Iocs 'and litters cheap Ioes bred and unbred. Plenty of youngsters ready to sell la pairs, or singly. ' flive f be boys ami girls a chance to make easy money toy raising tbenx; Wilt Exhibit Itarts at tbe State Fair. j: v - " , r 1 See Them. U 'jA Marion Square Rabbitry . F. A. WELCH, Prop - 391 Cemmerclal St., Salem Or la the sorrier here who would !e wUI inpr 4o give up Ihese islands. Jt kwps a fellow guessing. I daut know wait to iuake f it.I have- kua a; Defno crat all mj lite', ami' was' always: a great admirer of Mr. Bryan, but I can not for the life of me see how a man conscientiously ran be a follower, of P-ryaa and fight under the Stars aud Stripes at thejsarae tluie, ,;.; ..-''-.. THE BUYAN DINNER. New York, Oct. 27. d'or tlie dinner given in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Bry aa. the Hoffman House lallroonj was most elaliorately dccorateil. It com menced at o'clock, lasting over au i hoar. Wm. It. Hearst sat at the head of the table. At the close of the dinner 1 ex-tiovernor Stone made an address In the course of which I13 charge.1 Senator Scott with having said, at a banquet given to Governor Roosevelt at the Fifth Avenue Hotel last night: - "Right here I want to say, I lteliove in trusts. They are a good thing. The ; Standard Oil Company pots Jn lis pipe lines in all the small town, where oil Is produced, and if it were nrft for the Standard Oil Company, the prosperity ,that we have would not be there. Continuing Stone said: "I do not believe In trusts. They ' are bad thingsr I do not believe that the prosjierlty of the eouutry or any iart of the country .Is dcin'udeut ou piie lines laid by "the Stanslant Oil. Com pany. Tlie Standard Ud fompany s 1 , monotwily. Tlie presitieut or the Standard Oil Company, John I. Rocke feller, Is. worth ?1. HUM w KM0. AMiat does that mrestmt? It rcpr.scnr the lapor or ss,iriu.ism incti iot one tmj , ni 2 er lay. The entire adult punk impulatiou of tlie whole workl is abjut 0,tHHMX0. The fortune of this trust maguate is equal to one days labor at f2 a. day to nearly double the entire adult, population of the jlobe. QUEER USE FOR CANNON RALLS Condemn ned as War Wspns. They Are Just the Thing la Stone Quarries; ' ' "Cannon' balls for' blasting!" '- This sign. hnng in a conspicuous plaeo In'fore the door of a store on Atkintic avenue, lcl a reiwrter Jnside and started a bit of questioning uiou the subject. : The proprietor said: "I-Jist fall when tbe United States tiovemmeut sold all of the old cannon balls and solid shot whk-h for so many years 'were pll- j ed in pyramids along the main street of the navy yard at Charlestown. Ave I purchase! a lot of them, with little thought of converting them into any thing lieside pig 1rou. Rut a few weeks after we had storel fliem I over heard a quarry owner eomidaiuing of: tlie slowness and uncertainty of thj? old system of steel wedging used In. getting out liuge blocks of granite, and after a bit of thought I suggest ed the use of esnnon ' balls " in the place of the steel wedges. We sent about twenty of various siaes and weights out to his quarry,' and after the llrst trial lie hurrletl a team in here with a 'note that reads "I trletl the cannon balls; they are it.. . Scud lif ty .more; . ha ve . thrown the steel .wtnlgcs awaj'.' .'. ; -Tlie experience of tills man led us to send tlie cannon . bails aud . solid shot to pother pia rry opera t ors, ' a nil within tlie past month the orders hav been coming hi go thickly . we can scarcely fill thein . from the stock oa hand. . ..'. "Tlie nuthoil ustsd in -getting out ia?at culies or monoliths from . the. granite nud marble, quarries has,, Ikvu to drive steel, wedges along tlie. line of the lower portion of the split mad Ivv a blast until 4he great chnnk of sioue topples over pn its face. , It rciuircd a, deal of time and a jiumWr of men with big iron si dj;os and steel wedges to separate tiiese cnlics from the quarry wall from which th(v had lieeii start eil by the blast. The method now pursued with tlie caiinon Iialls is to start .the block of stone away by a light blast, and theu lefween the quarry face v and the bhVk several of the smaller solid shot, usually, the 4-iuch sort, are dropped down into the njierture. Two uiou with crowbars give'-the block a little shake, aud the Instant the block moves in the slightest manner for ward the shot take up their .'purchase on the space made, Avhen the large cannon balls. Home measuring four teen or fifteen- inclws -and", weighing 200 or SO0 iKiuuds, are dropinnl lata the top of the gap. Now, tlie slight est out want Jar; by levers 'on the big stone sent these heavy camion Imllif dropping downward of their own weight, until, with au easy forward mot ion, the cube goes over on its face. "These shot , do..' away with any driving: of necessity their great weight in proportion to their slae forces them downward, and their form prevents-any chance of backward setting of t he block. "Thee cannon balls are also nsod as rollers, as they take up and g. over the inequalities of the quarry surface, ami can lie rolled in any di rection without resetting, ..thus doing away with the old atyle wooden roll ers. - - . . . . - . "They are also used to smother heavy clearing-out blasts. Heavy ropj inats are thrown over tlie surface where the blast lias ecn set, and these cannon balls are thrown on the mats." Ronton liailjr ;iobe. 'TlfSH SUSPICION UIXIARDINO THOSE FRANCS. Officials, puldic or semi-public, come In for their share of criticism, but that heard on a street car a morning or two ago IsMts the record since tlie flood. The driver ami au Italian were cursing and abusing the management of the Relief Committee in the most artistic Rilltaigs-jate, using the whole dictionary of profanity and coining a tew . words and phrases nlltliclr own. Finally to wind up tlie conversation and bring a fittfng climax to it all, tlie Italian was heard to comment: "I'ri'M'dent Iiubay, the I'r's'(K,nt o" Fran-e, he giva, twent thousa franc for le flfod suf. Whata go wi' do mon? Ha' you see a . de franc In-a fialres-ton? I see-a not-a, one sing' damn franc. Some-alody hie put-a in-a le pocket and say not-a damn word a 'bout it-a." There Ss more In the care yon give your fowls than in the breed you keep. Iiifferent tircedj ri.-quue dift crcnt environuicnts. . . . . ' If any f your chick have been ha tailed late th-y sliould hare the ls-st at cai rn fco they will le well luatnred by w inter. They will not grow much la vol J wtdthvr. ' GAINING STHENGTH Th YMf lay 1 Kntlrely ComcIuu d : 8ffra tU Uttto Paia-'Story - - (From IVJtily Statesman, Oct- 2.) Miss Lnlu Jtyies. of Jefferson, Is re ixirtetl much lniprovctl, a message from one of ber brothers, last ereuing. In dicating that the young lady Is prae-. tleajiy out of danger, aud that with -good care it will Is- but a matter of time uutll she will be completely re covereiL Miss Jones has regained full consciousness, aud does not suf fer as much pain as was .expected. Miss Jones is till at the, house of frieuds, mar the cool house,, where , she was Ukeu ImnuMlatcly after bt ing found lu the. Uimcut , of 1 scJmoI building last Tuesday imwu-. iug, and It is likely she will remalu tlure for some time, as it Is thought . inadvisable, to move her at the pres ent lime.' . ' . ' ' '.. -.. "" . ' ' ' "Young Yauglin la his confession of the deed declares tluit lu vdldu'ttuow whv he did it. That the impuls caine Into his head and lie struck the blow. This is not justitlctt at all by the circumstances, and there is no doubt at all that it was' premeditated.'; . It is leailied that ten days lierure ie, plactnl iwisou in her lunch at -the school house, but fortunately it was discovered, llie plea of Infinity- will In a ditncult thing to substantia r V His mind has protwily. lsin weaken-, h1 by abuse but- otherwise he is as bright as mot toys. a pretty gotnl scholar and behaved himself at home, keening good company. Had 'the girl died It is doubtful If ho would have leen permitted to go to Salem, where he , now is." Albauy HeimK'rat. (Thero is nothing . reliable 4 ubout. h"' poison thory. Since the trageily. one of the. little schoolmates of tlie lu jured girl remembers that, about . two. weeks ago Miss Jones found a white; jmwder scattered over Iter-lunch, ami that: on the account she refused. 1t. It Is not certain either that It wa-v Hisou or that j-tung Vaughn put the lowdcr on the lunch.) Twice-a-Week Statesman Jl a year. HARD TO PASS CANADIAN COIN. Tendency to Shut Out Silver That Isu t ueaiiy Iegai render Here Increasing. : Every now and then a man on a street car offers a Canadian ten-cent piece to a condm-tor and the. conduct or 'accepts it. , Possibly the man will try 4he same kind a vfew days la tor and the Conductor will not accept tlie com.' 'Then there,,! .an argument. Tho conductor) tells t he-man that he is not iwrinit'ted by the company to turn in Canadian money. Tlie man tells the Coiiifiletpr t'hht the! 'other jconduHia tookj.it nud he diKsn't- sh- why1 iU conductor shouldu't. WlwUever the re sult of the argument the conductor Is in the right. 'l. iH'gluiwlUi. Cauadisiit nioucj- isn't.. lcgl , t:ndvrt and would not be If-It; were, worth more than American .monies. It is a fact that the street car conqitiiiie will not ac cept Canadian money from its con duct ors. The reason for. this Is that the' banks-will not accept it from tlie street car companies. It must be dis posed of to coin brokers, who will not buy It at par. If a conductor oa a street 'ear' or. a ticket seller of the elevated road accepts a Canadian coin he does so at. his own risk. If he can disMse of it in making change to oIIht pti'ssengers, well and good. If not nc Is the ierson who Is stuck. It's his businesH 1o refus the uio!i.y. Tlw tendency not to. accept ':iii uli.ui coins is on the increase. Fifteen years ago Canadian quarters passed current In ordinary transactions In (thls' ctty. Lirter they were shut out. but the ten-; is'iit picsi ftayed in -ircula I Ion. Ev ery jear it Is imne diltl nil to pass thetii' and they are now refusi-l In many stores. While they sell little !" low par It. makes them undescrfbable. Up the Ktate tho nearer you no to tfie. Canadian ltordcr tlie more of the timvii's coins jou find and (lie easier it Is to pass them. In the frontier towns on 1k11i sides of the line llio nioni'y of each country pas without prejudice to either. New York Sun, Dr.feniw'SKiDNEY! Backache Cure. For all KWiwy. HlBVlr f4 Lrtnury Troaliiom lm llarh.Hxart liami-t.".a tiwaw. R)iamU.u, V--A Wt t tmir. etc. Unfailing in Female Weakness. By d-jaOen. tuiatM by bmuI met nxtoula. J X. Market Reports. ' The local market quotations jester day rtrt as follows; -i Whent--jO cents at the Salem Flour ing; Mills Cos office. Oals .11 cents (buying.) Hay Cheat, buying. $7 to f7.50; clover, $5 to fXJ. tlmotliy, f'J to f IO. H Flour73 and 80 cents per sack; f 2.80 to -$a per bbl. , Mill feed-Rrmi, tlC 'td $20, shorts $17i. - ' " - , , .. - Putter 20 cent; (buying.) . ' . :r Eggs 25 ei'Uts. y Poultry Cblckcus fid per lb, market dull...-. i Pork Fat, 4 in 4Yt. gross; net. Itecf Steers, C'i; cows, 3e; good heifer, S'Ac. ' , . ' Mutton' Sheep,' 2c on foot; shcar- ed to jc '- . : Vm1- and 7c dressed. Potatoes 25c, buying. Wool 14 to 13 cents .market weak. Mohair -2$ cents. : .. ' WIIIP5, robes r:.. California Oak-tanned leather Harness Oil, etc. used. P. E. 5HAFEK 5 ' 2 j Sute Street. - Calcm, Oregon