i:ly oi:e go:; stati FiilDAY, rr,TvTT'T ; i ' 7I1EY DELIAND PROTECTION Japanese Residents of Jef-Wie-Ja Growing Uneasy - AT RUSSIA'S ATTITUDE Vb!ch is Regarded as Menac ing Hare Fortified Ycngampno THIS ACTION .LOOKED UPON AS AN- INFRINGEMENT VPON IN TEGRITY OF CO REA RUSSIA PROPOSES TO DIVIDE THE MAN CIIURIAX SPOILS WITH JAPAN. to Its present situation on the North Side. The patronage there wu too small to make the running of the wheel profitable. ; ft FOrXD j MANY THINGS ROTTEN KANSAS CITY. OcU 7. A -special to toe Star; from Ernooria. Kan., says: Swlge Kepplinge-,- ,f the Kansas Cltr. Kan, Mercantile 'CiUb, who is here gathering .nformt!on rtraiCinz the' allegations of hoodrnir made against the Kansas Oltr Hoard .f Education. Professor ra-art!L president, of ne Emporia high ;--hol, ; Mooted tod;? as saying: : I was an applicant for the prii-ij tt inip luart mrr'n r . and I ai Informed by ;i Ui rJ otfson that I could have "lis J for l?fC I tcrned down Um proiHjwitlon. -I found o tt many th!n'tli:.t were ro;u tt lh core, and ;tn i!r.t tJ W-ll them w fore a grand j'iry. . " JHE IS STILL ! CONFIDENT YOKOHAMA. Oct. 7.The Japanese resident of Jef-Wie-Ju have filed,' a .petition with the foreign office at To klo asking that a Japanese war ship and troop be sent to protect their In terests In view of the menacing atti tude of Russia. The press which reported the fortlfl- c at ion ty Jiussia or Ion tamp ho onJ the Coren bank of the Talu river, considers this action as possible casus belli and a being an Infringement of the Corean Integrity. A rumor current tonight says that definite Russian de mands concerning Manchuria and fore a have been presented to Japan by Baron Von Rosen, the Russian MlnUter to Japan. Professor Langley Believes His Aerodrome Will Fly, ALTHOUGH THE ATTEMPT RECIPROCITY RETALIATION Joseph CLamberlain Is Still ' Continuing His Campaign : AGAIKST JHE COBDEHITES Spoke Before Meeting of Over Four Thousand Last Evening IS A FREE TRADER.? BU.T WANTS OtEE EXCHANGE . WITH - ALL : NATIONS, OTHEBWT.SE HE IS A PROTECTIONISTS AN INCREASE OF IMPORTS- ' - Made China Calls for Help. Yokahoma, Of t. 7. According to In formation reaching here the Russian Minister at Pekln. M. Lessar. has in formed the Chinese foreign office that Itussia'wHl never evacuate Manchuria unless her latest demand are granted, China, It Is added, has appealed to th Japanese Mii.ii.ter, M.. Uchlda, . for Japanese assistance. Yesterday Proved An Utter Failure In Every AIRSHIP SPED ALONG ITS TRACK RAPIDLY. WAS CARRIED 100 YARDS THROUGH AIR BY MO MENTUM, THEN DROPPED INTO THE POTOMAC RIVER. . Believed in Washington. Washington, Ot-U ".--State Depart ment officials say they are fully pre pared to believe the news that RuxsU has served notices on Oilna that she , ll not evacuate Matu-huria until her latest demands are. granted. Exactly what these demands are no official of the State Department is prepared to say, but the belief is that they are the very demands which Count Cassini. the Russian Ambassador, fold Secre tary Hay were merely presented u a basis of negotiation. . . . Japan Is Too Hone it. '1 London. Oct. T- Tae correspetKlent of the Daily Mall, at Kobe.' Japan, tel egraphs that Baron Von Rosen. Octo ber 4. presented "a note to the Japan ese government contending that Japan teadno tight to Interfere in the ques tion of the evacuation of Manchuria, which solely concerned Russia and China. The note further proposed partition of Corea a nd suggested that Japan should taka rtd southern half and Russia- the northern provinces. The government sent a reply to Baron on Rosen rejecting the Hussian pro posal. A crisis is possible at any mo ment. WIDE WATER, Vr.. Oct. 7. The sixty-foot steel built flying machine. - .. . ; the climax of years of exhaustive study in the effort of Professor Samuel F. Langley, secretary of the Smithonian institution.''' to solve the problem of mechanical flight in mid-aid. was launched today- and the experiment, carefully . planned ' and delayed ; for months, proved a complete failure. The immense airship 'sped rapidly along; its seventy-foot-track, was car-. ried-byits own momentum for 100 yards, and then fell gradually Into the Potomac river, whence it emerged ' a I tnlil i wrM'k. ProfenMor Charles M. Manley. who has been Profesor Lang ley's jthlef assistant in the work pre liminary to the attempted flight, made the pscent' In the aerodrome and es caped with a ducking. At no time was there any. semblance of a ; flight, the initial momentum,-the lightness of the machine and the sus taining surface of the wings furnishing the Conditions which account for ths hundred-yard transit of the air bird front Its sixty-foot elevation to the water. An official statement made af ter the test admitted that the expert Jment was unsuccessful but asserted confidence in the ultimate success of the Invention. LONDON. Oct. 7. -Continuing his fiscal campaign Joseph f Chamberlain tonight addressed a meeting of 4000 persons In the town hall of Greenock. seaport- on the 'Clyde, twenty-two miles from. Glasgow. He dealt partic ularly with the question of retaliation and 'reciprocity. ; The late colonial Stecretary said that he was a free trader; and wanted to live harmoniously ' with his neighbors. but he desired free exchange with all nations. If they would not exchange, he was not a free trader at any price. Chamberlain asked why all the pro tective nations prospered more than the unprotected ones If the Cobden- ites would . satisfactorily answer that question, he would ask to be allowed to hide his diminished head. His oc cupation would be gone. Certainly Is Alarming. ., - London. Oct. ; 7. The - September statement of the board of trade shows an increase of $18,433,500 in the im ports and a decrease of $2,401,500 in exports. The imports are the highest on record for the month of September, food accounting? for upward of $12,- 500,000 of the increase, the exports hav ing only twice been exceeded. The de crease in the exports occurred chiefly in iron manufactures, - cotton fabrics and new ships, it. ' Americans Hopeful. i London. Oct. 7. By Thurstlay even ing the Alaska Boundary Tribunal will probably have finished all its labors except- the pronouncement of its deci sion. The commissioners are not . ex pected to take long before announcing their decision or their disagreement. The Americans today expresed. a more hopeful view than they have hitherto held. . . r she must have been, killed three times, Is the Sherlock Holmes deduction -f the situation according to George W. Sproule. clerk of the . United States court. Mrs. Running Deer Is an In dian and a ward of Uncle Sam on the Crow reservation. She was Indicted by a grand jury for the. killing of Mrs. Kills twice 'and appeared ' before Judge Knowles yesterday for arraignment. It was suggested that the squaw was mentally unbalanced and the case was referred to Attorney Louis P. Sanders for Investigation as to her condition. On June 3 last Mrs. Running Deer had an altercation with Mrs. Kills twice. The latter struck Mrs. Running Deer with a club and Mrs. Running Deer slashed Mrs. Kills twice with a knife, inflicting a fatal injury. The general belief is that Mrs. Rutming Deer is out or her mine; ana a. canoi date.-for the Insane asylum. , RATS CAUSED DAM TO BREAK Honeycombed It With Holes and Caused Washout : THE GOVERNMENT CANAL From Lake Union to Puget -Sound Was a Raging Torrent CATASTROPHE WAS bVECTACU LAR ONE BUT DAMACS W.S NOT GREAT AND CAN BE RE PAIRED FOR $2,001. INCI.UDING NEW WING DAM. , i - OLD FERRIS VHEEL FAMOUS CHICAGO ATTRACTION IS RESCUED KUM JCNK, PILE. , CHICAGO, tvt. 7. The Inter-Ocean today shjb that the famoua Ferris wheel has been rescued from he Junk pile and will te. taken to the St. Louis ilx-iosltirtn is 'now believed to tie an essureil fact. Men are at work on the North Side, dismantelinr the wheel for local house-wrecking company. It Is Sild- that the company will be allowed to retain the first $100,000 of the receipts at the fair grounds. The cost of removal and setting up h wheel is estimated approximately at $100,000, After the amount named in the concession has been received, it is eald, one-thtrd of the profits will go to the owners of the wheel, and the remaining two-thirds to the treasury of the extoition. The value of the hee as junk is ctlmate.I at $30.mm. but because of the xtnse attaching to its removal, the , present owners are said to have ob-' tainel the wheel for $"1100. ;- " ! The history of the wheel abounds with legal complications. Time and I again there have been reports of sale1 A ST . . . I i"j-c-- i or its removal. After j LIVED 103 YEARS WAS, BORN IN MANITOBA WHEN j IT WAS A HOWLING WIL i DERNESS. t VAXqOUVER, B. .. Oct. 7. A man uh0 can remember the time when the whole Pacific coast was but a happy hunting ground for the fur traders, has Just died at Winnipeg at the age of 103, , He was bom in what is now Manitoba, but was then a bowling wil derness, given over to a few white trappers and hunters and red skins with chips on their shoulders William McMillan was the man's name, and he was born when George III. was King. He lived under five sovereigns. Mc Millan resided near Silver Heights. Lord Strathcona's Winnipeg estate, longer than any of the -earliest inhab itants' can remember." His father was engaged in the fur. trade in the "Great Lone Land" over 17 years ago. He himself naturally took service with the great trading companies and wandered the biased trail for half a century. Pifty years ago he took up tend on the Red river and engaged in farming. varied by trading and hunting. the World . Fair the wheel was taken I been averted. THINK 'WAR IS AVERTED. CONSTANTINOPLE. Oct. 7. Since the arrival of M. Natchovic. the Bul garian diplomatic agent here, there is evidence of a relaxation of the strained relations with Bulgaria. The opinion prevails here that all imminent dan ger of a Turko-Bulgarian conflict has HER IDENTITY KNOWN MRS. ADMER T. JOHNSON. HIGHWAY WOMAN, WAS A PORTLAND GIRL. HE BROOKLYN LEADERS TO FIGHT TAMMANY Course cf Lee, dor Murphy and Other Delegates at Convention Con. . ' demned by Martin LyttIetonGroit and Fornos .? - Removed From Tualoh Ticket ' ' ": i NEW YORK. Oct. 7. All uncertainty icganling the atio of the Citizens' Union and KeoubUcitn organisation on the question of ousting Grout and Fornea from the fusion ticket -was re moved tonight when both conventions convened and voted unanimously to c-ind the nominations for controller and aWernjanic president, made at the origUtal convention, and to nomi nate Instead Frederick W. HHnrtchs. f Iirtwkiyn. and E. J. McGuire, of Maifhattan. ; Heinrlcha was a cniMtA r it.. governor ' the (JolA iw. tenant ratie ticket in McGuire is assist ant corporation counsel. j The chaotic condition of the Demo cratic organisation In Brookln was made evident tonight when Martin W. Lyttleton. the Democratic candidate for borough president made his first campaign speech at the Seymour club. Mr. Lyttleton launched into a speech condemning the course . of - Leader Murphy and the delegates. from Tam many Hall at the convention ' and made it plain that the Brooklyn lead ers would not support either Grout r r ernes. I PORTLAND. Oct. 7. The mystery that for the past few d.iys '.las hong around the identity of Mrs. Adn-;r T. Johnson, wife, of (the pel C-co if tossed highwayman, who Is now occupying ti cell in the woman's ward of tha coui ty jail, has at last been lrawn aside. She is a Portland gi:l. She who the officers b!le-,'e assisted her imprisoned nusband in com-iitting highway robbery, upon the . publi streets of this city, was formerly 51! m Emma Von Carnap, daughter of Mt. ar-d Mrs. Jasner E. Voi Car nan. Mr. Von Carnap was at on s limv employ ed at Inman, Poulsen & Co.s ir !1. Toe fun.ily now make, the'.- home at 483 East Harrison street, according to the last city directory. - - i-i i joniiEon is na'u tc nao en bc-.i. a th- old Windsor Hrif:.' rear Fourth and Flanders street, abc-nt 20 years ago. She has one child three yeais of age, which is now- in the evs tody of Its grandmother. Mr. Von Carnap, although steps a.c unJer Way to have It taken from he.-. .. natn airs., Jonnson, as ee is now anown, was aKut 1C yenrs ..id. she wat married M Bert M-Kinster. logger, who at present works in one of I ne logging camps of tn Colunibia. anu owns a little ranch not far iroin Vancouver.''; ' The marl a re t,t McKir.itj' and Em ma Von Carnap wss not a happy one. according to reliable Intmat'on. Ic gia iaai tne matrimonial career of the logge. was a sad and checkered one. They ? lived rh a t small town known as Moors vllle. nea Goble. for a while, and it is said In this connec tion that the conduct of Mrs. Mc-KI.;-ter was no unseemly ihfvt they were at last obliged to Icavs the i lace. That was about four year ago. From Moos-llle they went to P-a'.-jfer, .id here she left him and wnt to .h Lower Columbia river eoju'.rv. This; morning an' InfonnaUon was Aide against Mrs. Johnson in the mu nicipal court, charging her with the theft of a brown silk akin, a b'ack oversklrt and a pair of loshot from i'rs. E. C. Goddard. of t9i Mill ttr.--t. Sh wore the , clothes wil i-onflr.ed in the city jail and whn anesled. can i he perfect health without pure blood. Burdock Blood Bitters makes pure blood. Tones and invigorates the wnoie system. ; 1 ' I : ' ; KILLED BIRS. KILLSTWICE MRS. RUNNING. DEER. INSANE. HELD FOR MURDER OF SQUAW. . SEATTLE, Wn, Oct ". Tae din at the head of the government canal, ex tending from Lake Union to ihe wai -ers of the Sound went on this ir'.rn ing and all day and ton! ?ht a river 75 to 100 feet wide and ten or twelve feet deep, has been racing throuah the ditch. The water first Din ui .--n through, past the south wing of the dam, this morning about 7 oclo!c ' What at first was a small crevice grew to a large crevasse. A ditch is cut through the sand and loose earth and the 'rushinjr water ranidl ate its way Into this. Great sections of the bank," from time to time fell into the water, and were carried away. While the catastrophe was spectacu lar in the extreme 'the damage is small... A temporary dam will be thrown across the Canal tomorrow and the wing dam will be rebuilt. The damage; including the cost of rebuild lng the wing dam, and the temporary dam will amount to : less than $2,000. The rats which honeycombed Jhe dam Wit htheir holes are thought to be re sponsible for the washing out 'of the dam, and not th high water. THOUGHT HIM A CRANK ";. -' e HARMLESS MECHANIC ARREST ED BY AUTHORITIES AT TfU , WHITE HOUSE. WASHINGTON. Oct, 7.--John Deck er, of Norwich, Conn., who evidently is a mechanic,' about 44 vears of cge, entered the White House soon alter the doors were, ooened this morning. The officials thought from his cc-Uons that he was a crank and arretted hirr. He was not armed. and made no res-'El- a nee when placed under arresx. He was turned over to the police authori ties - -':' - r . ' Sent to the Asylum. v asnington, Oct. 7. John Decker, who this morning tried to enter the V hite House and . see the President, was sent to the Insane asylum this af ternoon. He was from Norwich. Con necticut, ana was employed by the Thames Arms Company DEED OF A DESPERADO Two Deputy Sheriffs Killea In Harney County by Ex- - . Convict - FIERCE DUEL TO DE.TH .... l:E TWEEN OFFICERS JOHN G. SAX TON AND JOHN ' WS3 T. WHO WERE KILLED. AND I FUGITIVE BURGLAR JOHN H. FP.OST. . WaL STAND BY GIRLS lilt, STOKA.NE .LINEMEN STILL REFUSE TO RETURN TO WORK. BUTTE, Mont, Oct. 7. If Mrs. Run killed - . - i , ininz I yrr L-lll.wl u.. rnt.i-. mmmma 7 " mi . ice One? 1 v 10 Cure a Co!3 In G113 Bay tC3onkox4laiaglKaa. TatCrC.- Sj?r Cures Cria every box. 25c SPOKANE," Wn, Oct. ' 7. The strik hig telephone linemen have refused to go back to work, as they were ordered to do by a telegram from Preairini Edwards. The trouble is' over the tele phone operators, who have been out on strike since June, about a week after the linemen went out. i From present advices it looks as thoasrh th tora har" been left out in th cold r. the settlement and the Spokane line men say they win not stand for It. They will either .refuse' to go back or else will go back at once and then call a new strike. Advices received here from San Francisco today say no pro vision was made-for the operators In the settlement. No positive informa tion has yet been received here u tA the terms of the settlement, but It Is be- uevea me wages asked . have been granted. '.- : ... '- " operators ml&ht have ' nettKxf their difficulties at uny time earlier in the summer and got their places- back, but they agreed to stand by the line men and stayed oaf. For this reason the men consider that it would not be treating the girls fairly by going back and leaving them out. ' 3 . BURNS, Or, Oct. 7. Harry Egbert, a fugitive burglar, shot and killed John G.' Sax ton and Jack West shortly after noon Monday at the ranch house of Charles Fields, in Wild Horse valley, 135 miles south of Burns. Saxton, a prominent attorney of this place, was a special deputy sheriff, who, went ta arrest Egbert, and West, who is an old resident , of the Wild Horse: and Stein mountain region, was assisting him. The f ugitive, also known as John Frost, is wanted In Douglas county. Sax ton's body is at Burns, while the remains of West win be kept at Wild Horse for burial. After killing his pur suers, Egbert went to a neighboring ranch, demanded a horse at the point of a gun and rode away. Sheriff Allen, Coroner Marsden. George Lozemore and A. Ankeny, of- Bums, are using every endeavor to get a trace of the murderer's course. Egbert had once been ; arrested by Saxton, but gave him the slip and eluded the officer from - September 2 10 ociooer. , on wnicn day at noon Saxton and West came up with him at the ranch house of Mr. Fields. Theie was.no one at the house except Eg bert :and his wife, and as the two of fleers appeared Egbert opened fire from behind a corner of the. building. West was first hit. He died in a short time from a wound In the back. Aiier putting one man out of ex istence, Egbert entered the house through a window. Saxton, conscious of having to face a -desperate man, en tered the house . through a door. Up to this time Mrs. Egbert had been watching the proceedings. Seeing the men entering the house she feared fo her own safety and took to the woods A thin board partition separated the two men. and through this they kept up a duel to death, Egbert using nne and baxton a large revolver. The appearance of. things in the house proves that Saxton was shot through the right shoulder.' but kept up the battle, shooinr with his left hand. Egbert fled to the upper story, and it seems that Saxton, instead of pursu ing his man, responded to calls for water from West, who was dying in the grass 'not far from the house. Sax wu. in 10 nave gone twice to a spring, and as he turned away from West was shot from the upper part of the house, as the fatal bullet ranged downward through the center of the breast. His body was found near that of his assistant. Making certain that he had disposed of his pursuers, Egbert went on foot to the ranch of Helbln Voane. five miles from the scene of the shooting, and uemanaeu a norse to ride. This was refused him, and he took wh.at he wanted at the muzzle of the gun and rode a way. Since then he has not been seen. Wild Horse valley is one of the most Isolated regions on the coast, and the start Egbert has will give him a grood opportunity to escape, or at least evade his pursuers for some time. He Is supposed to be near the California boundary line by this time, heading for Modoc county, w here he has relatives. There is a reward of $500 offered for his capture, dead or live. fcgDert. or John H. Frost, as he is also known is a . confirmed criminal of the worst type He was born in Iowa twenty-three years ago. I.v 'March. 190L he Was sent to the Penitentiary at .Salem for a term of two years upon conviction of the crime of larceny from a building. No sooner had Ite been released from the Institution than he again resumed his crooked career by breaking Into houses at Roseburg and other Southern Oregon towns. ' John O. Saxton, the murdered dep uty sheriff, is a brother of F. M. Sax ton, a member of the Baker City coun cil, and was an estimable citizen. He had lived in Burns about four years. John West, the other victim of the murderous desperado, was a highly respected resident In bis community. WILL SEE WgST POINT ARTILLERY COMPANY OF LONDON GOES TO INSPECT MILI- t TART ACADEMY. " 11H P" I EAR YE ! AND TAKE NOTICE THEREOF: Oreat Sale.atQ State "St, Of Clothing, Hats, Rubber Boots, Bicy cle Capes Is still going on, and the bargains in these liucs are immense. Also our Kid Gloves, Lint n Inseition. pai- - seincntrie trimming and thousand of useful articles in Dress Trimmings. Buttons and Buckles, .Pon-pons, Notions and Stationery Cutlery, Ladies' and Gents' . Furnishing Goods, fiiome of thes we are selling for less 'thari one-fourth what they originally cost . Make No Delay lor This Can Only Last 30 Days at 149 State Street S. F R. I EDM AN, Ma n ager A GREA T OFFER Dr. (B ' Or Home Book of Health ritEMIUM WITH. Statesman BOOK WITH THE STATIC ? I;s- ' VM! r ;.. evr, ' 1 TO BK GIVEN AS A Twice-a-Week THIS IS .OUR OFFfifti THIS MAN ONE YEAR $3.25; OR BOOK ALONE $2.50 . HERE'S AN OPPORTUNITY TO GET A VALU ABLE BOOK AT SMAIJ. COST. Tha only complet household guide ih reUsble, genuine iti'm! tsai book ever pub Kshed. Evky dUM to which the human race Is subject is ful ly treated in th'a ex haustive volumtk New diseases. Treat ment and - Theories which have appeared within the lasf fevr years, and which art not even mentioned Iir other so-called medical books. , are herein discussed. nf tbo treatment and remedies set forth; such as Bacteriology, Appendicitis, Tuber culosis. Hypnotism, Venereal and Skis Diseases, La Gripps, Nervous Diseases, etc Treatment and crc of every disease ot Men and Women and Children. The sim plest and best reme dies minute direc tions in -cases ot w o u n d s, scalds, burns, poldon, hydro sudden dLaeae, likt l.it-'-vi:i. ' ;irfi.it ii -t 1.-- r ' a 1 s ' - ya- - ' a f ? phobia, sunstroke, fits, tails, sprslns, bruises; also for croup, cholera, etc It describes the cause, ths symptoms, the nature, the effect, the treatment and the remedy of every disease which affects human ity. Treatises on tho Passions and Emotions, such as Love, Hope. Joy. Af fection. Jealousy, GrLef," Fear. Despair. Avarice, Charity. Cheerfulness, show Ing the influence of the mind on the bodyminently calculated to arouse th people to the fact that hearth tiepends to a greet degree upon the proper di rection and control of the passion and amotions. Essays on Intemperance, Use of Tobacco, Sleep Exercise, Cold, Baths, Etc SPECIAL LECTURE TO Y0UNC- WEN A Complete Materia 'Medics, o- lirt of the principal remedies, In'-hH " nearly 300 medical plants, herbs and vegetable remedies; decrIptl-Jt: of e where found; when to be gathered; how to preserve same; their prejwrauun for, use. ' ' ' Manual for Nursing the Sick. Treatises on Anatomy. I'hvnio'oev and Hy giene. Domestic snl Sanitary Econom y Ventilation. Iure and Impure Air, Water. Purification of Water. Dralnag e Disinfectants, etc. etc I'Uyr.ati Culture ar-i Development, etc. PRETTY BITTER PILL NEGHO HOLD-UB GETS TEN - YEA IIS - FOR GETTING FIF- TEEN' CENTS. R MifSOt-iA. M'C OcL : 7.John banUago, a. Spaniard,: was held up at midnight Saturday,. Sunday morning Chas. -Wilson, colored sorter. lately from Spokane, was j arreiited for the crime. Today he pleaded gu tlty and was given ten year fn the peniten.- t,aryHe got 15 cent-from his vic tim. - - NEW 4 YORK, Oct. 7.The Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Boston and the Newport Artillery Com pany, escorting the Honorable Artillery Company of London, arrived here today on a steamer from Fall River. Without los of time the Boston and London companies, in full uniform, descended the gangway of the Fail River boat and marched in column of twos across the pier and up the gang-way of an excur sion boat, and Ave minutes later the steamer swung ourinto the stream and with the united bands of both com panies playing proceeded up the river en route to West Point.' The Newport Artillery Company then proceeded to a hotel to spend the day. Intending to meet', the London and Boston Honor able on their return from West Point late this afternoon. ..',, Legal Bianirr, at Statesman office. : Do Good It Pays. A Chicago man has observed that, "Good deeds are retter thsn real estate deeds some of ?the latter are worth less. Act kindly and gently, show sympathy and lend a helping hand. You cannot possibly lose by t." Most men appreciate a kind"1; word and en couragement more .than substantial help. There are persons in this Icom- xnumiy who might truthfully sayzj "My good friend, ; cheer up. A few doses of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy will rid you of your cold, and there is no danger whatever from pneumonia when you use that medicine. It always cures. I know it for It has helped me out many a time." Sold by Dan." J. ry, druggist, Halero, Oregon. Address: Statesman Publishing Co., Salem, Oregon CLUBBING LIST -Of IM- - Twlce-a- Week Statesman "fc--v untuuniAN, pr ysar.... .... zZ imut.A.wttN 8TATE5MAN, per year $159 OUR PRICE. BOTH PAPERS .... ... PACIFIC HOMESTEAD, per yer.:... TWICE-A-WEEK STATESMAN, per year.... -BOTH PAPERS.........,..'. CHICAGO INTER. OCEAN. Mr vtir. TWICE-A-WEEK STATESMAN, par yesr. BOTH PAPERS. ...... ........ HOARDS DAIRYMAN, per year. .T.. ...... TWICE-A-WEEK STATESMAN, p.r ysar.... ' 8GTH PAPERS........ J...;.... . ..... ". NORTHWEST POULTRY JOURNAL, per ysar .... TWICE-A-WEEK STATESMAN per ysar ; BOTH PAPERS. . . ...... . . ..... ..... . . t . rH RICE. A-WEEK NEW YORK WOR LD, per ysar... ... .... TWICE-A-WEEK STATESMAN,' per year.:.... 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