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About Weekly Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1900-1924 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 4, 1902)
tlAT-MA 1 -rhU.-HlN'J COMPANY' It. 2. UEJipKM'K .4, Manager, ' i .; tear. In advar.ee i bionihH, in advance-..... fl.dO $1 i , .--ee months. iaaUTaiMw... uji jear, on Mm.....,.-.,.. .......,.. Xt The SalemnaD h been i-lb'!hni ftr sea'ljr fiMwo y !-, and tl haa ) trterjlir who hite rtceivrd it Drly IfiU km, and nur wan h -tl it Utr s K l fral'im. Pome the tiject to fearing toe pepe diw-ontinoed m Ujs tune ol expimuon of th-ir uteiiptiona, i ,r tre wsnt-fil of tne?.B4 tor other reon fum-conclnd lodtKContinne-Mib rripi'n 0 tly when mtlfJed todoao. All pt roiu paying ;jn aatmcnMne:, or jayto adrc, wj.i 1 ate the benefit of tbe doilarra'c Bnt if they . ot piy f t ix monh, the rate will N; !.2ft ! a er. tiereaiier ne wiu kin " r. pnlbie persons who order It, tiiouri Uiry it&y not eid the money, with the nnaTtnrt tne that they are to py $1.25 a year.iueat ihey Jet . trve ntacrtptloB aeconnt rnn oer m:x worMia. Itt order that there way be do miron cfertan1in?. we will keep thie notice atatuing at thlit vlaoe in tbe paper. - : . - CIRCULATION (SWORN) OVER 4000 EEEE.'i BETTER OPINION OF THE ORIGIN AL INDIAN TRIBES, j : The thirteenth meeting of the Inter national Congres of Americanists closed on October 25, at the American Museum of Natural History In New York.; Its most 'notable contribution of knowledge was its testimony to the ethnological -unity of the Amerlcaw, North, South and Central. ' That similarity: In thought. In workmanship, In art and In religion . characterized the various races Inhabiting the continents of the New World before its discovery by the -white man was "shown by every paper dealing with the subject. .It appears tha't we' have commonly put too low n estimate on the Indians uning the term Indian a Inclusive of all the aboriginal inhabitants of this hemisphere. The Indian, these learned men find, was a more intellectual "be ing than has generally been supposed. He was religious with high sentiments and keen emotions, ' arid he was, ad vanced politically far beyond the de gree In savagery where he is usually plafd his iHtlcal development Ingt measurably Influenced bv his be-re- Ugion, - - - 'T ; j . The star worship of the Pawnees, whose Hkldl band ordered even 'their Village sites solh.it they reflected "the positions of the heavenly constellations whose wards these red men believed themselves to be, was a revelation of this New York congress. Their Tlrawa, whowas of the stwst was the,AII-Km-braclng Hi-lrlt, the ,lrlt of all life and of all power, who spoke to Ills children lii 'the elemental functions of nature, Ftar cults among Indians further south and in Mexico, and Jn Peru, were re ported,, each of a charac4i to suggest one the other. -:'rT i ' . -- .... -- - -; $ : s , Connetions with the Old World jwere shown of n nature to Indicate thai northwestern America and northeast rJ A sla were once peopled by ofte race, whose dominion was lnterrputed ; by down jcomlng Esquimaux. There? wai an American1 clvillxatlon as definite as the Euroieah civilization. Really, there has been , a "series of clvHikailons, one overcoming the y other' and the higher form usually, dominating. -We were not the first Invaders. We jere hot the first exterminators. America has seen races come, rule, and be swept away in their turn. Where savagery triumphed as In the case of prvej race of Mound Guilders, when a mild and stationary reotle ' were" overborne by a. more vigorous and restless stock, as in Europe, it uoually followed that the conquering race was lnnuen.ced, In time by the culture of the conquered. Thut has been found written jn immu mints and tomb.. .KometlrnW there can' be, traced the evidence of al con querrlng race's .recognition of the su perior attainments of the people it' has overthrown, srwl when the different In vestigators compra notes th. history of an ancient InvaMon is completed. The Hoathwentern United States and far parts of South America have ; ben brought together as" homes of 'pfple communicating with other. " . ' The ancient American fought for .his religion, and- he strove to force it! upon t In se whose faith - was notv hix.! The Cnristlan cross following the Spanish sword was not America's Introduction toholy wars. There were, batttea be tween wonihlptMiB of the sun and wor p.h1prers of thw mon, to estaWifh the Dark Hair I be used Ayer's Hairyijnr for a great many years, and al though. I am fast eighty years of age, yet I have not a gray hair in my head." v ; ! Geo. Yellott, Towson, Md. Wc mean all that rich, dark, color your hair used, to have. If It's gray now, no matter; for Ayer's Hair Vigor always re stores color to gray hair. Sometimes it makes the hair grow very heavy and long; and it stops4 falling of tne hair, too.. ? ; j ; SI N S kettle. AO eraRXa. ! ' f. yoor arnetriat eannn anrply jwi, M on anrpiy j"w- r m will eiprraa t rrt th name L fn-. Ati-lreaa f Lowau.lis. ( M a an tii&r ami m will eiprvwe 7" m omim. iwmmwi ec year ei ii n J.CAVEUtt) tv.r the oU.tr. Or. a ,:.tr. i..o.-1 i.. i-e-,tinz exhibits f the congress was a 'rtries of illustrations ol an ancient i Peruvian vase, showing a battle for -this very purpose. The warriors were ; differentiated quaintly by the aborlgin- 4l potter. The civilizing- conqueror are clothed; their vanquished antago- obits are pictured as naked. In art the pre-Columbian Americana were advanced beyond the stage of development to which they have .been assigned. "So say the Americanist stu dents. ; We have been able to consider the art of the Egyptian from the laoint of view from which it was executed, partly because Egyptian 'monuments and papyri have offered enlightenment as to the dally life, habits and aspira tions of tbe Nile people. But conquer ing Indians' in America destroyed the temples where : their vanquished foes kept their records. Not; always did the Spanish conquerors who followed them preserve the ancient archives that sur vived earlier despoilerg. Codices' Which ... " ij n found their way to European libraries have been deciphered, only to disclose astronomical data or material for the t, purposes of a calendar. Only now are the students, these scholars of the Americanist congress, beginning to get near a point where they think that they will be able to judge with some accuracy tbe standard of art attained by the early peoples; of thus continent. The closest attention was given in the congress to copies of temple paintLsgs from Chichenitza, patiently made by an English 'woman, a student among the Americanists, who, with, the com iny of x native nald, works among the ancent obsidian mines and ruins of Mexico, "studying what is compla cently cahed thecradart of vanished , races. Thenlcanistshave found. they iar, that only an artist is able fully to appreciate the quality of the drawings of these aboriginal Americans such, for exa mole, as the action in a jwised spear, or the color values plainly! indicated. - ; - ' IndeedJ according to a writer In he New York Sun. some of the most !eriicd and most distinguished mem bers of the congress held the opinion at the close of the week's discussions that so much higher were the Indian's ideals than they havehad credit for. that now. the term savage is almost Ironical as applied to te aboriginal merican. , ' BOOK. AND HANDKERCHIEF. ; An editorial writer In the San Fran cisco Bulletin Insists that "no man should be without a bok or a hand- Ikerchlef,'. using the arguments below in support of the contention:'' " 5 , i ...... . , - "y We have and have had all sorts -of anti-killing crusades. One set of hu mane reformers would put an end to. pigeon-shooting. Another exhorts us to lay away, our guns and rods and stop spying dumb creatures for our brutal Sport. Still another declares that the crime of crimes is khe .murder of birds or millinery trimmings. Vege tarians say it is wrong to take the life of any animal for human food. There are many persons who assert that cap ital punishment for; crime Js contrary to natural law; But there is one sort of killing, t more noxious t the word is not paradoxical than all the rest, more detrimental to the mind and character of the Individual, more dan gerous to the State, and yet there is no organised -crusade against this sort of killing. It is the killing of time. I am killing time, a mart will say calmly, though, that were aft indif ferent matter Instead, of : a. confession pf crime. Killing time!' Destroying the stuff fiat life Is made of! , Com muting suicide by Installments! Wast ing the capital "with which, nature starts us out! Imperiling our morals and our minds! Throwing away op portunities! Confessing our incompe tence! Proclaiming our unfitness to live!, y, :., . -.-s : There Is never ah. occasion : or any excuse for killing time. Every experi ence, every. moment should bring us profit in mind, character, strength or money. There is always something to do. The jnan who knows the value of e v v never-s kills IU , He carries his brain about with blm, and If he were bound and . gagged and left alone In the dark., he could still think and think something trorth while;' something th.it would make him better and wiser, yy J A good many persons to avoid wast ing time, carry a book with them con stantly and read it whenever they have a spare five minutes on their hands. One Can buy almoat any classic in any language in a compact pocket edition for a few cents, and it Is re markable- what an amount of good reading can be done by employing thus odd fragments of hours. A man ought to carry bis book as constantly a he carries his hanlkerchlef., And he Should never be without either. : CROWDED OUT. y: v ; i - . .v . ': - Mr. Tarte, the .Canadian Minister 4 Public Works, has been crowded,! out of the laurier Ministry. . The offense of Mr. Tarte was his devotfon, to' the principle of protection to home In dustry. .The Laurter Ca"binet favored a-treaty of reciprocity with the lri t ed States, and it did not approve of a tariff policy th?Vf would clone the doers between their country and the United States. It Is now expected that, ex- Minister. Tarte wiH organize a party sponsibility ended when the com mi s wlth a high protective tariff as Ita slon weat to work. The fact that he principal article of faith. Being a' man, brought the modus Vivendi on which a of great -ability, corresponding energy and possessed wiinat wun a faculty jut irui.-s of voters, it is not rcs?.r 1 .aa I;v;pro!Lle that he will bring abuut the overthrow of the Laurier Ministry. On the other hand, there are those who believe that the organisation C a par j ty avow pedient of ed" protectionists Is the ex- an able politician to con vince the American Congress I that re ciproclty is preferable to a tariff war. NOT RETIRED. The much vaunted Republican ,"t ull dinner, pair has not been heard much of lately. The cost of the food therein having advanced out of all proportion to the advance in wages, the dinnea pail has been politically retired for repairs. Mobile. Alabama,. Register, j JThe full dinner pall has by no means been retired. It will .not be retired. There , has' , been an . advance In the prices of some of the articles going Into the. dinner pail. In tome cases the wages of labor has not proportionately advanced. But the . laborers of the country are busy, j whereaa they were Idle when the full dinner pail cry was raised. Ther will not forget this fact soon. 'Until they do: rorget it, the dinner pail will not be' "politically rts tired for repairs." f . LIFE IN THE COAL MINES. , The statement is made on good au thor! t'v that anthracite ..coal strikers who secured employment above ground during the strike are now applicants for their 'old places.' This" statement is intending as showing that the con dition of. the coaj miners la not worse than -that of other, 'wage-workers in the mine region. The fact should be considered, however, that the coal min ers return in the expectation of receiv ing the 20 per cent. Increase In wages which It is assumed the commission will iaward. Work underground has certain advantages in the East, where the climatic changes are great. The temperature In the mines is about the same in summer and winter, and for this reason, if for no other, men who have been accustomed to underground life accept whatever deprivation may be attached to it.; It Is possible, also. that descriptive writers have found more striking material for narratives by dwelling upon the dark rather, than upon the bright side of the-coal min er's life. , The women's clubs', throughout the country, and similar organizations, are taking up the project, now on trial In New York City, of establiehlng juvenile courts, which have jurisdiction over offenders, male and female, under the age of 1 years; The herding of juve niles with old offenders In city prisons, county Jails, the ducks of criminal courts and in the penitentiaries is. be yond doubt a serious evil. 'It Is no torious that prisons apd penitentiaries are. Incubators of criminals. The boy convicted of his first offense is rarely Incorrigible'. - But' In confinement ' he meets old offenders, who school hlnj In Vice and crime and turn him out a An iahed, professional criminal. Even though the boy is not ruined by evil associations in prison, the disgrace of having ' been convicted clings to him through life and mars his whole -career What is said of boys in this respect may be said with greater force of feirls. In California the Legislature will be asked by the women's clubs to take action. The proposed law1 will keep the children out of jail. Trials will be informal and there will be no delays. The term offender," "criminal," "pris oner." or "convict," will not be applied tjo any child charged with delinquency. This Is . work that deserves encour agement, 'i The environment, y nine cases in ten, makes the criminal. Only the exceptional criminal is morally weak from birth." Would it not be a good Idea for the women's clubs of Oregon t; take this matter un7 The same evil in this respect exist here that lare complained' of in other states. Portland is waking up to the ltn ttortanoe of securing the early action of the Oovernment and state In under taking the Irrigation of the arid lands in this state. It' Is a splendid idea.. The way, to get things these days is to go for them and get them. There is no good reason for delay, but there might be a great deal of It If the offi cials at Washington thought there was little Interest in Irrigation in Oregon. While this Is the Webfoot State, there are millions "of. acres of lnd In the eastern and routheastern section of it which are now desert and almost without value, or entirely so, but which will become rk h and great with the aid of. irrigation, and which will pour Im mense wealth into'the channels of com merce tor all time, once they are re claimed. r The. Oregon Legislature Is made up of a Iwd lot, according to certain "re formers. ' Th members propose to break all their pledges sacredly mad to the people-r-at the regular session. They are not honest; thy are out for the stuff; r4hey are as low and mean as the devil ian make them at the regu lar seslon.But there should be an ex tra session of these same rascals, ac- cording to' the "reformers," -to clear, up th? atmosphere and make everything good and straight. ; 'f - ' ' . "r s ' ,,': President Roosevelt, of course. Is" not going to dictate to the arbitration com mission In the coal case. lie will have nothing to do with Its findings. .His re settlement is to be reached is a big' triumph tor him. An exchange thinks- rvf s the title of the great paci-cat- Salem business men had a very sat isfactory trade yesterday, and in fact, all week, and for several weeks. The many improvements made In the busi ness houses here, and? the carrying of larger stocks of goods and fuller, as sortments, is a good thing for all the -people of the Capital City who have property or business Interests of any kind. Th.e trade Is coming I from a wider territory than ever before. ' The communication of Dr. Keelet , Marion county stock inspector, con cerning swine plague, is timely. The hogs of this section ought to be healthy There should be no plague here. Dr. Keeler points out the ways to prcrent the propagation of the disease. ' More hogs and better hogs, and still more and better bogs, is one of the needs of the W'illamette valley farmers. . An exchange insists this: y "We are America, and there is no other Amer ica on this continent but us. Canada is Canada' Or British America:, Mexico is Mexico; Central America Is Central America and' South America la South America, but we "are America. There is no North America In' ours. We are America straight and only, and there is no America but us." The whole country Is being flooded with literature from the Sacramento valley In California. It is high time the people of Oregon, assisted by the im migration department of the llarrlman lines, woke up and made an effort to get some of the good things coming this way from the East. After today business will be gl chance, and politics will take seat, in . all tbe states excepting Ore gbn. Maine and Vermont. Tbe people of the Webfoot, the Green Mountain and the Pi ne'Trce states escape the fall disturbances by holding their elections early In June, and September. Chancellor Andrews, of the Unlver slty of Nebraska, told his students the other day that foot bail enthusi asm and the devil sometimes go band in hand. The students had demolished a street car. In celebrating thclc vic tory over the Minnesota University students. '. Linn county proposes to be In the good roads movement next year. But W trust .that old Marlon will not let her neighboring county get the best of her. There will be plenty of time In the next few months to talk of good roads, in the absence of any of them to speak of. .. . ..' .. " ."V 'X':: -f " " Silver has touched the lowest point in. price In all history.. And " yet the pt Ice of wheat is soaring. -t But even r thfese facts will have no effect upon Mr, Biyan. - He will continue to shout for the white metal as long as he has breath to shout with. ; The Dallas-Kails' City railroad pro ject Is progressing, i Seven miles of the roadbed are graded, leaving only about two miles to finish. The new road will be in operation by April 1st, 1903. It should be running; Into Salem by the fij-st of April, 1904. 'The raisers Of wheat and oats are not So very far behind the hop and prune men, and the producers of dairy pro ducts and live stock. The prices are up all along 'the line. . It la a 'good year Lfor the men 'engaged In agricultural pursuits.. The German Oovernment excludes American meats, and the people of Berlin are obliged to- pay 44 cents a pound for their steaks, when they have any at all. There, is trouble brewing for the German officials who support the present policy. ' -; A car load of honey was a few days ago shipped from Huntington to Min neapolis, bringing $1,152. Bee keeping- is becoming quite an Industry In tht section of Oregon. I It shoutd be more of an 'industry in other 'parts of the stale.. ' . -.-:' ' . -r It Is suggested that Morgan lost to Yerkes in London because the English are afraid they will-wae up some morning and find that Morgan has bought the tight little Island in fee simple, navy thrown in. J " The Orange Judd Farmer, in, men tioning the hop conditions around Che hslis (town); and Lewis county, Wash ington, places the same In Oregon, y A pajer of the O. J. F.'s age should know better. - The vote on the Statesman's free piano contest will be counted again thhti evening, after 7 o'clock. The interest-In the', contest Js growing, and It is materially swelling the subscription lists of the Dally Statesman. Twenty-four marriage licences . were Issued In Marion : county . during tbe nonth of "October. Not ouite one for each business day.' But there are twenty-four divorce cases pending ia the Circuit Court for this county. ' A California Federal judge Mis Is sued an injunction against the forma tion of a salt trust. It Is suggested that a few salt injunctions sprinkled over the country would cure la num ber of evils. The number of patients in' th Ore j - r ! or. x a back -a ,for Infants fstorla"l3 o Iiarmlcss snbstituto or Castor OH, rary contain neither Opium. Morphine nor t Sbstance. It destroys Worms ad at Jllf: mm Diarrhosa and Wind Colic itreneves xcciu 5-TUDleand enrcs Constipation. It reflates tho rrnw, hUArrn' Panacea The Mother's iTJena. The Kind You Haye Always Bought j Bears the' In Use For PARK AND WASHINGTON, PORTLAND, OftCGOrf The scho61 where thorough work Is dofie; where the reason is mlways given; where ; confidence is developed; where bookkecpfirg is taught exactly as books are kept in business; where, shorthand is made easy ; where penmanship is at its best ; where hundreds of bookkeepets and stenographers Save been educated -for success in life; where thousands more will be.; Open all the year. Catalogue free. A. P. ARMSTRONG, LL. D., PRINCIPAL J goi Asylum for the Insane Is at high warter mark. There were "1.265 yester day. It, Is a big Institution, and grow ing larger steadily. Ah exchange suggests that David B. Hill's, attention should be called to the historical fact that very few of the Presidents have been bald-headed. The rainy season will increase the gratefulness of the public for the many new' cement sidewalks and cross walks constructed recently In Salem. The temporary White House will be permanently remembered as the place - ... . - V where the anthracite strike was settled.'--: : V'- Nx. . The, English market for hops has opened up, and It has opened at above 25 cents for choice hops. ' . -The campaign liar will be out of a job after today In many states. He has had a busy season. PERSONAL AND GENERAL. Pat Prunty and the rest of the Japan ese residents of Salem yesterday cele brated the birthday of the Emperor of Japan, and sent the gentleman on the throne of the Chrysanthemum Realm a cablegram of congratulations, wish- t lng'hlm many happy returns.. of the; day. , i The 81.000.0T.O of lobsters distributed laxt year by the United States Fish Commission were ail of the aquatic species. The dry-land breed continues to multiply also. ." a o The buying of hops "on London ac count and shipping them away to Eng land will 'probably, cause the Eastern brewers to get into the market . at a lively rate. -There are not many bale of hops to spare 'rora , this country. They arc all needed here, or! nearly all, or they will be before the next har vest. ' .- . ' o o o ' Commencing tomorrow, the pupils of Marion county will have a vacation for a few days,-while the teachers go to school. . There are plenty of ,boys and girls who hone the teachers will have to study hard, "have no recesses, and stay in after school. ' - : Mrs. Olive S. England, formerly of Salem, Is now a resident of, Houston. Texas, where she is connected wltri a new weekly paper, '.The ElMe,? devot ed to society and club news snd liter ary matters. A good aeal of the liter ary matter- Is original, a larg part of it being contributed by Mrs. figland. The issue of the paper for October l'th contains a half-tone engraving of Mrs. England, aluo the following concerning Mr. Mrt rkhmn, who was well known in Oregon, having be.n for a long time genersl freight and passenger agent of I, the. Southern Pacific lines In Oregon: iiir-uiiiiiaiH rnciuirn nq mninrri In honor of Mr. Charles II.,Markham. j vice-president and ichief executive of J the Soiithem Pacific lines In Texas, at the club rooms of the Elks, by the 1 leading and influential business men of ! Houston, JMonday night, October 13th,"" a god showing for apples. Eugene was one or tn most notable and su cessfui affairs of the kind ever given In this city. It in a well -deserved compliment and mark of hr.nor shown a moat worjhy and cwnpeient man; ne who has madeva marked success wherever he has - ben -engaged In business,- and one whom ntm has ever stood for. all that honor, success and ability may mean. Mr. Markham Is perhaps better known on tits Pacific Coast than In -the outh. and in no place t better th.in In Portland, the beautiful and enterprising nirnfKjIl of Oregon. Ills work there being fn a public and official capacity, mae his fif 'Irnown to ail merf. and all the at tention shown' him by Houston's citi zens was Indeed well merited. o e o . A TIMELY-HirOGEHTION. wowiane..:. evening 4ime. .1 1 ijt ansrjr Fire, nun irawnip; WOW, And a trunk-strap in his-hand. : "" ' '- ' A , The stage Is cleared; the time has in j- ; come '. t For the awful play to start; The man .In- the moon looks down fear, ,--"'--.'" ' in end Children, Slsnatnre or Over 30 Years. . .And clutches bis aching heart. -The strap comes up and it poises-there X.iKe a menacing strode oi.raie; When. stlfled and choked on his fath- rr. mirr, .... - Poor Totnmy gasps, Say, It feeem'n to :, - me . ,'- . . . . t . . .i.i . . r. i. . I . iwni you ininn w, x tp ; n vv.-ri surely be Lots better to arbitrate!" a o Isaac A. Manning, formerly city ed itor of the Ktatesrmtn, but who Is ti-w engaged with his brother and others in - r !..:.. n . m,,. 1... vf......... in jm rm.-ui in raiiuurg, ma., 1 1 r r- he Is promoting new ooffee-raislng schemes and where he Is meeting with uccess v Mr. Manning has become one of -4be leadlngj tnen In" the coffee bui rKss In Central America, and he is ilkdy to hold his lead. K . ' ; ; O o v "... . ..- si"What on earth are you doing la there, Tommy?" asked a Salem mother, peering Into the darkness of the h-n-house. whent-e had heen mrninir fur t . .. l Ti- flve minutes or more a series of disr.tl 'fuwklngs, "accompanied by a lud Mapping of wings. "I am trying." said Tommy, who seemed to be doing Something witit a knotted rope "to fix this rooster so his alarm won't go off before 7 o'clock to inrrow morning." s ' ' OREGON EXCHANGES ',-: t essw Accident at Laundry. MisS Pearl Grx-ss. an employe of the K"?e undry. met with .mh accl -lent shortly before noon today that proved very painful. She was working at the body lroncr when In some manner her left hand was caught between the roll ers of the machine, badly bruising .nd burning the member. She. was 'taken to her homMn Oak street and Dr. At witod drcssei the hand. It was 1th ky that no bones were broken: Eugene Guard. ' Valuable Horsa Killed. While orlvlng fcom "Idonroe 'to JunclUm last night In the dense dark ness. Coleridge McKlroy and Ik Simp son met wiin an aaventure which re- . suited In th death of McElroy'a valu able mnre. Fly, one of his elegant team. , ! In the center of the road near Junc tion there i a stump which parts the fi3. ;Th stump could not be sen Iru he darkness, arid the horses drew lhr burfgy onto it breaking the slngh-tr-" freeing the frightened team. The .. .... jrw iiuiHimi yaras iiiki ran into a tree. The mare was knoVk ed from her feet and fell groaning to the ground. Site died in agony :niti- ute later. ' : - The Stump h the middle of the road is an unusual condition. The county - w.Mjir, nc j-esponsinie ror any loss in such a case. Eugene Guard. , Big Apple Crop. W O. Ziegler has just warehoused his fail crop of apples. He has an acre orchard of 200 trees which has yielded vimts oi nne apples Of th Baldwin and' King varieties. He has 3-4 acres in various kinds ofruits oh the Junction road, three mites from t'ugene. Mr. Ziegler finds that fully one-half of the crop is sound, which vmira. A FCXAS IVO.VOER HALL'S GREAT DISCOVERY. One small boftle or Hall's Great Dis covery cures all kidney and bladder troubles, removes gravel, cures dia betes, -seminal emissions, v weak and lame bitrks. rheumatism, and ail . ir regularities of ihe kidneys and bladder In both men and women, regulates bladder troubles Jn children. If not sold by your drugglat, will b ent by tnall on rv(-er,t of 1. One small bot tle Is two months' treatment, and will cure any case above mentioned. Dr. Iv. W. Hall, sole manufaturer, p. o. , P.ox 23. St. Louis. Mo. Snd for testl- rtKWij.ua. Hold bv all rinic-tf-inta on.i - PH. - S. C. STONE'S drue store Kt " . Oregon. .. , KEAD THIS. K - Bandon, Ore., Dec. 8, I Ml. Dr. E. W. Hall. St. Iinl tn r.. - Kir; I have used your Texas Wonder J for kidney and rheunfitlc trouble. Its effects are wonderful. It has. no equal, and I can chcertully recommend It. 'Yours truly. ; HARVEF HOWa