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About The Daily journal. (Salem, Or.) 1899-1903 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1900)
WWl' ' PIWWH" '" mil is. 7- "W !'.. 1 N r-V. '- p., r . v: fc-52 MttfMfllliaVEW CMAairtt mfiVwiiWiiiigMjaajii.iAiUa nJiTrn 1 11 itiVnifTMimtfiliiiSlltfTMiTTiltf rnfTiV-1 iirliM1airt(iiTili,iO& For Bloodb ! i and Nerves 'Williams' Pin.K Pills for Pale People An unfailing specific for all diseases arising from im pure or impoverished blood or from weakened nervous system. Most remarkable cures have been made in cases where physicians have failed and hope of recov ery was abandoned. At all dracclita or direct from Dr. WIHUm tedlc4ae Co.. BetKBectAd)', N.T potld on receipt of prle. 60a per box ; lz boxe, tlM. DD MB ME THAT CHILLI l'EUli Try G. W Johnson & Co's Prescriptions--A Good Suit of Winter Underwear... . LOOK OVER THE FOLLOWING PRICES Heavy Fleece Lined 50 cents. Heavy Ribbed, 50 cents. Hevy Wool Mixed, 50 cents. - .. V BETTER GOODS AT PER GARMENT X S1.00, St .25, SI .50, S2.00 and $3.00 m m ms- m - m m 4 1 tT 4& G, W, Johnson & Company, The Peoples Clothiers and Furnishers T3E DHL! JOURNAL BY HOFER BROTHERS, SATURDAY, OCT. 0, 1900. Dally Ono Year. 3.00 In Advance Dally Pour Month 91. In Advance Woakly One Year SI.OO In Advance TRIUMPH OF A POLICY OF PEACE. TJie McKlnloy administration lias so cured tlio modification of the Gorman program and the support of all tlio pow en for a policy of peace in China. A, program of revongo and internation al war would liavo cosla millions and nothing would have been accomplished. The stoto departtnont oan now see what strength there is In the loins of tho re public when it resorts to enlightened principles instead of force. Wo ARK n ! world power. Would it not bo wiser to adopt tho I library is proven by tho fact that largo libraries of a semi-public character have ben maintained and are persistently Kought after und the (service paid for by thotcablo. It would bo a wise phllan throphy that would organize tlieee con ditions and throw them open to n wider uscfulness,whero tho en tiro public might enjoy tho Ixsneflts and sharo tho ex pense. Thero are historical treasures in tho libraries now in tho oity that should be gathered together and preserved. The state library itself is outgrowing its room and will eomoday havo to bo removed to a largor building. Tho public library in terests of thecity need looking after. Forester's Contest. At the last meeting of Court Sher wood Forest, Y. of A., a contest was arranged, which, if carried out as is planned, will result in one of the liveli est tuseels ever carried out in tho fra ternal orders of Salem. Tim roiltixt U'lll Iia far fniir Utint I -.--- ..... .... . .w... .(..bw What, cn'h prizes given to the members bring- tamo policy in tho Phlllninea? have we to gain by strengthening thu in ,n tho ,n08t candidates, something ' " ' " I t aw liiirii Tim In.ln,. .1.1. ll. I.. ..-iJ. illU 1UOIIIU DIUU IIIUII 111 JO nrmv In Mm AnIntS., n,lilin1iwA9 f.t ' ' v k turn to furnish on oyster supper to the not our navy look after all our legltl- w,,nurs. This will be no small banquet, mato interests thorltioing through with owing to tho largo membership already the war there is a good deal l'ko a man enjoyed, and tho contest now on will bo feodlnsliImnlC Into a tliraalilnir mnoliliin t "" ,l0"u" P"" or mornucrs over en because tho clyinder has drawn In two Inches of Ida Anger, THE TELEPHONE TAX. The city has employed able counsel in the perron of Win. II. Holmes to push its suit to oolleot tho tax on telephones, lly appealing to the courts tho telephono company hopes to defer payment for so v oral years. A a examination of thu tax rolls shows that tho tolephono company, Wells Pur go's express, the, telegraph companies, and other companies, while enjoying valuable franchises mid doing n largo catlt business that is very piofltnble, yot pay on almoit no property valuation. Borne of these corporations colloct mora net cash out of the eopla ofSulem than any bank or faatory. Why should thoy not contribute to maintain oity ex penses. The legislature and thu assosor have very generously left them out of tho assessment rolls, nud If the oity ot Salem can find a legal and eiiuitableway to tax thorn it should bo done and tho city authorities do right in pushing Iho collection of the tax. tered into by any Balem lodge. Court Sherwood annually pays out a largo sum for sickness and benefits to members. This extra effort Is being put forth on account rf the meet'ng of tho Grand Court of Forestry of Oregon, meeting in Salem in which this court wishes to be represented by more delegates than any oilier court in Oregon. t 4 Jk . Vjr 1 llYLb OW-Styl Clsrth Ctotf Zi z, "" Aatbor of ou Oreroa t biVC 1 driEb Frte Cetstre of Fua t ' 4e -h-o4V !1R ii HAD a talk with my Annt Jane reserved for this century to crown the the other day about the old style and the new-fangle church choirs. "Weil," said Aunt Jane, "when I was young we nsed to do our own eliurch singing. We didn't have any craving fer twelve-hundred dollar sentimental tenors and two-thousand dollar high falutlon ropranoe. And we didn't have any ate for your new-fangled fal la la A-a-a a-amen music, either. Good, honest, ttraigbt, ptatuspoken hymns were good enough fr us in tlte good oM days, and they touched the right spot, too. Parson Homily, after a short fifty- active authoress with the garland of ubi quity. Aailioreifos aboatHl.nol only in part, bat in regions hitherto held aloof frora the track of man. In the pine forests of Georgia, in the wild untrod wildernesses within the city MmiU of Chicago, and westward, where "rolls the Oregon, and knows no sound save his own dashlngs' aalhoressesare epringlnr up week after week, and inscribing on the dial of time printed sobaof piknate joy.typograpli hail rtridngs after the nnnttexabk, and practical novels "reeking" with human interest. Nothing within tho whole QUESTS DMS F&R A FREE CITY LIBRARY. The people of Balom would bo taking n p ogroaelvo step in providing for a free BLOOD We live by our blood, and on it. We thrive or starve, as our blood is rich or poor. There is nothing else to live on or by. When strength is full and spirits high, we are being re freshed, bone muscle and brain, in body and mind, with con tinual flow of rich blood. This is health. When weak, in low spirits, no cheer, no spring, when rest is not rest and sleep is not sleep, we are starved; our blood is poor; there is little nutri- ! ment in it. Hack of the blood, is food, to five-minute, heart-searching sermon on range of literature is left undone, from life giving cooking receipts to the eso teric vibrations of the higher soul. Tills is the golden age of Helen Chipmunk Icecream Smith, whose Hemlock Heart Bats has fired the mind and pen of ev ery book reviewer in twenty-seven States. This is the harvest time of Sadie Rasberry Chittenden Jones, whose his torical novels are feverishly devoured by two generations one rising and the oth er risen. This, indeed, is the heyday of Eleanor Davis-Davis UuckIeberry,whoe book on Civilization has been clamorous ly adopted as an entire course in itself by the unanimous action ot the direc tories of fourteen seminaries. The word female (a no longer heard. .It has been stricken from the records. A girl is either one of two things she is married or becomes an authoress. And after she is married, if she dis covers that she has made a mistake and ought to havo chosen tho other road, does sho repent of her desire in the si lont watches of tho night? Does she hide her light under a bushel and quench the bright 'fire of genius with the wet blanket of domestic duty? Not sho. Sho says: "Here, John, you take the baby. Go out and wsbIi the dishes, wield tli 3 useful broom and do the mark eting. I havo had a ball to be an auth ored. I am going to join tho great writing majority, nenceioriii you are but an echo. Yesterday I was a more wife, but tomorrow you shall bo known ns my husband. 1-ot this glory surllcc you, nnd do not disturb me, for even now thoughts surcharged with moment- oiih consequenco to the human race nre speeding through my brain. And John takes up his burden with out n murmur, knowing his tiino has come, but seeing, oven In his dull, hopeless way, that rebellion would only make things won-e; for it would me&n notoriety; and honceforth his lifoork is to avoid being scon, henceforth he moves olone his greatest joy when he has not been mentioned as the husband of the gifted being whoso half-tone por traits are datkening tlio magazine hori zon. Tills Is, indeed, tho Augustan ago of th: authoress, and dwindling man may well contemplate tho future with de spair. Uvon now he is rapidly drifting toward tlio shore of n hopeless obscur ity. It is not without a shuddor that we look back a hundred years and no'to how the authorofls has multiplied in tho land, At this rato of incroase, what will the ond be? Fortunately, in tho process of evolution, a check is bound to come. In the courso of time, as every woman be comes an (authoress, there will be no readers left. Man will probably lack tho Intelligence oven now ho shows signs in this direction to appreciate tho wondorful subtloty, tho transcendent culture of what is being published, nnd, as every woman will bo absorbed in her own creations, there will be noaudionco to echo the critic's praise, and the heart muttoringsof beautiful Sybol Apricot Grasplot Plum will bo lost upon nn in different and introspective community. Peter at the Gate, gave eut: " 'Oh ! take a pll oh I take a pi 1 Oh ! take a pilgrim to the sides.' "And we sang it. Lordy! How we did sing it . Itlght from our shoetops. "And I mind me, too, of the time when Sarah MeSwattles went East, visiting. MeSwattles wasn't the pret tiest of names, I'll admit, hut Sarah was the sweetest of girls, and 'Lijah Adler just worshiped the ground she walked on. She had miles of land in her own right, stretching along the trout stream, and rivals said but that is neither here nor there,- anyway. Some folks Mowed that 'Lijah hod Jewish blood in his veins, and may bo 'twas so, for he never had any use for jibing at other people' doctrines, even while ho did not 'tend a Christian church himself. That is, he didn't until Sarah went East. Then. thoughtful friendd who didn't like to see him throwing his life away on a girl who would play him fale began to hint at Sarah's supposed carryings-on with now flames in Boston town. It isn't your enemies, you know, who toll theso lying tales, but always your own familiar friend, whom you trusted. 'Lijah didn't exactly believe the whispers, but he somehow grew so suspicious and moody that the whole village was on the watch. Parson Homily felt in his bones that his opportunity nould como sooner or later. And it camo sooner; for ono beautiful Sunday morning unhappy 'Lijah wand ered down tho long nvenuo of limes, ni.d kind o' happened in to service. Tho minister saw him lingering in thu porch entry, and quick as a Hash said. 'Let iih sing to the praise and glory of Ged: " 'Oh I send us Sal oh ! eend us Sal Send iih Salvation ere we die.' "And would you bclluvo It? Tho poor boy said afterwards that when ho heard tho good old words ring out at tho tp of our voices, ho knew tho mestage wis from heaven, that his Sarah was true, that sho would come baok to him. ... . . . - 1 ... .4 Ii M.t.tM If you were offered sure aul in tMo oi trouble, wumu you im, iw uom and accept something of doubtful efficiency? If you saw before you a strung and safe bridge leading to your goal, would you ignore It to try some insecure and tottrintj ntnwtur The answers to these questions are plain. You would, of course, choose without hesitation what all evidence allowed to be the sfe thing, and you would risk nothing in useless experiments. Whv ifwn do some woman risk one of thair most precious possess fans their hcalt ft to trying motffofnos of unknown value, which may even prove hurtful to them ? Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has stood tho test of years, it has the largest sale of any remedy for female ills in tho world, and nothing could have given it this sale except its own meritm Do not try experiments, buy what la known to be reliable. Mrs. Pink ham's Compound can do all that is claimed for it. and all bUtements la regard to It can be easily verified. For instance Here are vix letters which prove our claims. A Lift m .mAw fM totofm BHnM Ms. EE? li mr ry?-ii;n. -iSi'Tri' ' l -x i "T i iP -' ir.'-Mfe i ssffla" Sw vitinrn:::- --. raj,!Sg;S Jt.nc,H .Wall. Hw-Tr-" pi SJ? 4 AtUn f tie Ex. 9 p, ra I V,A HUNTINOTON . fe .. I lk ;7 "vi Backache and Womb Troubles Succumb to Lydla E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. I have been for ten years an in ralid with female weakness, and the torture and pain I suffered no tongue can telL I never spent oae week in the ten years that 1 was free from pain. My trouble was inUammation and congestion of the womb. When I coeasaeaeed to take your reined v I had been bedfast for some time under Um treatment of two of the best physi cians in Illinois without receiving an v benefit. You can imagine the beneSt I derlvedfromLydiaE. Pi nk ham's Vejre table Compound when I tell you that I hare gained forty pounds and am well a thine I never dared to expevt-" Mrs. C. E. Fobnd, .Monett, .Mo. "For a number of year 1 was troubled with backache and leueor rhtcv I became so weak and mivor able that I could not attend to my work or studies. The least effort would completely exhawt me. I'hysi clans failed to help sae. I felt that my youth ww blighted, and the life before me would W of suffering and misery. Ta-ea a friessd lsu4ied on me taking year aacdjeia. Before 1 had used oae bottle I waasmeaUy relieved. I had aoc In-vara a. we" dar for foqr years, bat s I feel byT-er tSan I h; ve ,sfRe arhikL aval it is all ':? tr l.-.'' E I nVHm'V-rtrVv." - " -MliS .May B. 5:&vcasB, AKLtncr, 0. Facts About Tvo Gases of Falling of tho Womb Recovered by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. " I suffered for nrtees years without finding any relief. I tried doctors, but nothing eeiued U do me any good. I had faUing of the womb, leucorrhcea, pain In the back and head, and thoe bearing-down pains. One bottle of Lydla ft Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound did me much good that I sent for four more, alto two boxes of Mvur Pills and one package of Sanative Wah. After using then? I felt like n new woman." Mrs. 0. A. Winter, Glidden, la., Dox 220. " I was suffering with falling of the womb, painful menstruation, head ache, backache, pain in groins, ex tending into the limbs; also a terrible pain at left womb. The pnln in my back was dreadful during menstrua tion, and my head would nohe until I would be nearly crazy. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has Icivn mi- jrro.-'t r-Mef. I suffer no pil.i nv. rnd I Tirf vor medicine ,r 1'.. :.. - Ai-j. J. P. McSpad ueti. lvoi:.b.r,';, Tex. Ovarian Troubles Always Y'old to Lydia E. Pink, ham's Vcgai&blQ Com pound. " l had been in pooi health for twenty years, having Intlammntion of orarie and womb trouble. Although treated by phyaictans, I cnild uot gain strength nor do my work, and was w tow-apirited and tired of life. A friend advised me to take Lydia K Pink hara'a Vegetable f.'ompjund. 1 he nrt bottle atrengthenel me, and I w rote to you. After taking hix ittU-s on hny that f am well nud on i-en do washing." Mrs. M. V. A' lllcr, No. 1033 Canal Street. New Orleans, La. "For three yoarh 1 aiiffWid with ovarian trouble, bavin? iuiii.imiicticn and an absceaa on right rvury. Had such pain in my 1-ack and head, and at timet was unable to wal'c. llnd sev eral doctors, but they did not do me much good. One din tor k.'u! that 1 would have to have an cpcrnt'.on and have the ovary removed. I l-ecnmu dlKouraf;el.nnd gave up nil ho)xs of getting well. I gan taking Lydiu E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I wrote to Mrs. Pinkham and followed her directions faithfully, nnd am let ter than I have l-een for three years. I have taken ten bottles, and my friends aro surprised at my rapid im provement," Mrs. W. II. Walters, I Cold Spring Harbor, L. I. N. Y. toP;o'. """ JUu,Dai;i Invf en'.ea Uad.ua... T.4,il,, fclaffi4 "wgia, W1LLAME1TK mvrrr. " l)oU to lMrtUnd u .UJVIS'0il rtreel ear lino at Oregon QtV rutn lelaypJ ihefo. Tlfk!nyvyi',',,aS, mads at Portland wl anV? , 1 ' SfW4dr Clly ticket and freight oSci j- lt SOUTH AND I VIA ' Southern Pacific THE SHASTA Mr Trains ieavo Salem for PertUaa: BUtion8at6:40a.n,,7:5TS,1S 4:05 p. m. I.v fort laud. Lv bIcm. Ar Aihlnrt Ar Kacmmenuu Ar Ban Krnnct Arl)ffil.n Ar lxnm.f Ar Kanta, Ulty. Aryniwo. L'fwn flin lilnn1 i-tli M,n,i if .Thth ScQtt,s ' , . f at hand for making suoji an institution 1 t jv . . ., 1 Oregon has achieved fame through tho labors of Mia Eva Emory Dye of Ore gon City, whose book on Old Oregon and Father McLaughlin has proven n groat feller. I called on tho lady tho other day at her pretty cottage home perched on the rocky cliffs above thu Falls nt Oregon City. It H n modest home and Mrs. Dye la an unassuming lady sur rounded by littlo domestic responalblU ities in tho form of several bright faced toddlers. On nll.nidcs nre tho beautiu! natural forest and Bhrubliery, atono piles and nature unadorned, and yet nowhere bo charming to look upon as in Oregon. Mrs. Dyo is not at all a bookUh, or blue-stocking sort of a porson to look at, .and you'd hardly pick her out of a crowd of women as the ono capable of n notable n litorary achievement. Her husband is a flno looking lawyer, with a strpng faco and a shaggy mano of black hair, and it is easy to see tliat ho is as proud of his wife as alio is of him. Ho was n school teacher imlowa, but is now a sujeessful lawyer. The greatest satisfaction of his life is that the trust and confidence ho placed in a rather pretty little girl who stood high in her olaesoa and who has ropuid his lovo and good judgmont in ohooning n wife a thousand (old. If I am not inUtiiken Mrs Dye was the valetllotoriuiiof huralass alOberlin college. Sho has ruidtled ten years in Oregon, coming to tho state in the great westward sweeping wave that brotiuht no many young lownus uorote the Cascade and KocMce. Mrs Djo has u Qouml book, a supnlomontury reader on Oiegou history, in thu pre, that will probably become a handbook lor our uhildien d her MrLuughliu chronlclu f will nut tie in tho favorite ouriior of our private bookshelf. to plant a nth-wheel ri;h: at the m uth of this pool. This is the way we do business with fish is Oregon. We propose to destroy tLe industry as fat as possible and then appropriate money to build hateherie,tlMt the wheat raiser and the prune raiser dig out of the soil by the sweat of their labor. We are dealing with the salmon just about as successfully as we did with tl e Indian and are with our for ests exterminating them. On topof the whole iniquity of destroying this noble fishery, there is now a board dam constructed clear around tho top of Willamette falls by the pulp-mill com pany. If by any chance a salmon over did got beyond Oregon City he would run his nose ngainst the board dam of a soulless corporation. So long ns this policy of obstructing tho salmon streams is pursued wo can enjoy paying big taxes for artificial proportion of fiiimnn. TiieColonki.. "Hunter Is the Best Sauce." Yot Fome peoplo are never hungry. Whatever they eat has to bo "forced down." Thero is, of courso, something wrong with those people. By taking Hood's Sarsaparilla n short time they are given un appetite and then thoy en joy eating nnd food nourishes them. If you llnd your nppetito failing, just try a bottle of Hood's. It is a truo stomach tonic and every doee does good. Tlfo best family cathartic is Hood's Pills. 3 BUSINESS CARDS C. H.JDACK Successor to Dr. J. M. Keene, of White Corner, Salem Or. Parties dotir ing sujierior operations nt moderate feus in any brauch are in especial request. ALBERT A. JESSUP. Phfine 1071.1 ROOMS 1 AND 3, OltAY 11LK. B. P. JONES, Attornoy-nt-Law Toledo, OroTon Wan tier of Circuit Court 1 1 jrr &ndh an up-to-date abttuotoi al -- nj 111 Lincoln 'ouotr ii.Km Lo.ms and Insurance Money to loan from 0 to 8 per cent, according to security no exiK'iise for examination. Insurance effected on hops ond other property at lowest rates. John Moil 290 Com, sf, 7 lll'fdi-w At Ixm Ancfila '. At KI Vaw Ar Fort Worth. Ar City ofilcxlco. Ar Houfton Ar Hew Orleam Ar W'aJhlDEion Ar Now York ., ,,, PuTImnn trains. -831 A -U.-00 A u -12 A M - so p y - 7 P X -A M .126 AM - 7 A 51 - lflU Pll - fcuo p M - 10 A N -JAM .3AM .636 I'M .tU A -i P M liT, IS Wil lLara.Viif Tlip'.- ' anu lour lets ram m hT Chair cars Sacramonininft.i. I a, 111 I.! ffla Mn.l ,M..t.. . ... S: 1 i T'T Jiinicrswuiiap bt. Ixiuis, Now Orleans and Wuhinf Conntvting at San Frantliwo with , oral eteuniBhii) lines for HodoUIi, Japan, China, Philippines, Central w. rviuth America. CANADIAN X PACIFIC And Soo Line. Old Post OfficeStables Are largo am hnvo reliable attend ants, your toein Iwarded bv the week or day. Good teams for hire. Prices rea sonable, lour patronage solicited. H. M. Brown 62 Forrv Street. First-clase and Tourist SLEEPERS DAILY Passengers booked to and from ALL POINTS EAST tnjo Mr. W. W. Skinner ugeut it ttm Station, or addross O. II. MAKKHAM.ti.P.A.. Portland, Orr? , POSSIBLY You nre not aware of tho fact timoiU tn purl) service now afforded by ttiu M WM rraifi3'7BB SALEM HOP BUYERS, Squire Fair ar No W SUte St. 'Phono No. 1661. Wmi Brown Co Hush Building, Comracrefal S. (ground floor), uaico telephone No. 130. Lilienthal Bros, II. J. Oitenhelmer, Manager. Oltlso over l.add a Ilakh Dank. '1'hoiMi No. 4SI, souiiis mos. Piano Tuners and R pares POR1LAND ORE. ror aIem ami viclnltv loavo orders at Geo. Will's Music Store. Boots and Shoes MadetooMar. Ladles Shoos a hicc Ully. lti airing utail done, J. M. Nccdham. 181 Com st T. J. Sullivan, State Street Tailor. Fall Suit! k iut la Tho OtHirwloriT pat trn fruia Chicago. Rtt buini uiu JI4 M (Hinu $. at hand for making gugji an (netithtic aeuctea.Whanflnoetle4 ! tho right to welH the maUrljiJl Jy , Tliat Salem has iuhhI for a public cod-liveroil. It set the whole body going agnin man woman and child. Wcd W! a little to try, If you like ITC0TT& UW.VK, 49 Pearl , New VwW My friend Tom Maaren wiiodoa com lo history on 'uw York I, has this Qlmrmiug take-off on tho present era of authoretsoa: Women havo tonohed llforature In BiotB from time to tiino, and streaked it with thin voltiB of inuuorallt, hut It la ww !(' 1 ' m ' ' "- 1 ne ue i-rt scrip iwa ror rouru. At last accounts that fish ladder at tlio' falls of tho Willamette had npt been repaired. As you ride up the river you oan spe at low wator the natural channel for the fish ladder. In fact nature has provided a place for tho salmon to ollnib up about two-thirds of the way ovor the (alls, if man would do (ho rest. Hut political man will not. That is not what fillies is for. Ponnoyer and Milt Miller did mako a few holes in tho rook for that ten thousand dollars the legislature appropriated for n llsh ladder, andlf they 'had kept right on tho whole Willamette and all its tributaries would be one vast spawnirg ground for Bahiion. Hut that would have required too great a spurt of In- tullfgeiice. It would have been free coinage of fish for the musses that would havo produced over-production, To prevent the jmssibility of a salmon even getting into tho one rung of tho llsh ladder that Ponnoyer did build in the rock the authorities have allowed n man Catlin Linn Office over Weller grocery imre. No an. 'Phone , Carmichael Office over Johnmi'a Clothing itore, In lium-lireymau blilg. T A, Livesley Co Commercial if Second italr wuth of Liuld A Jlub bank bank; foom 18, uiwtalrv. Phone 1211. ' L D Jacks Co Hop office formerly Muplel by llerrcn A Levy Kjuiti of Willamette Hotel. WHERE TO EAT AND SLEEP THE DESVEIl R&MIUNr Tho only place In the oily where voti can get a tlrst class meal for 16 oqiju. State .Street. U ft lin Tillson, Bartlett Grain Coiiipany Prunea wantft.1. Fruit bag for Mle. 1 rjfflcc A complete stock VJlaoo of grass and clover Cppi c seeds always on OttUO hand. Prices the lowest possible for first-class seeds. Give us a call before buying. -V PTiH!"1 BREWSTER & WHITE, The Feed Men. Atlantic Steamship Office. For full particulars npply to E.J. COYLE, II. II. AUIIOTT, A. G. P. A., HO Third St. Vancouver. R. C. Portland. atatwinriirii 1 1 - , , llLLL Htlil'I n WE HAVE Daily Fast " TO THE EAST. If you cannot tnko the mornini tru I travel via tho evening train, lloih u finely quipped. "Our Specialties" Fast Timo, Through Servlte, Pulton Palace Sleepers. Pullman Tourli' S'eef era, Pullmnn Dinors, Libraty (OifejCn nnd reo Hecllnlng Ulialr cars, Hours in timo saved to Omftht Cbc ago, Kansas City. St. Louis, New Yort uosion, nuu otner r-astom poinu. Ticket good to Salt Lake City w Denvor. It is tovour interest to use Tai Orn- l.nd LutiTEi). Tickets and lepu car lierths can bo secured from I W. W. Skwxu. AgentS. P. Co. I Or Guy Towoip, Ag't. 0 K. 4 . I Salem v& J. H. Lothkop, Gen'l Agent, No. 1:5 Third St. Portland Or. WHEN YOU PAY YOUR GOOD MONEY For a ticket Ell t. VOtl natlirnlle nml very properly wnt to go over tho route ' uiiu. win give you trie very best nccomo nations nt tho lowest oslhIe rate. iiciiue, j to make OrigoD Sbon Line Tho Direct Route to Montana, Utah, Colorado f:0 and ail Eastern Points . '' Gl vea choice of two favorite rootM.,' fc -' , The Wilson 18 Center Street. It now itniler tho old management and t' pairuua in ine imure an in uio wt Hill nicvt entire NHUfnotlou lu li4nj awl l-aun UlCUl iiik. Kooma for rout, dr. vri-k or ma. cii.va ixnv.vd. i'ioi. ilBbJIill frA?? lA tltt at Oravefa Tate4e. I OliTl.Tiup. It ta KmulyTron andjiutnliia In ta.Wfo(B Nuourouo pay. nli-o R5, -i Ita a Stops the Couth sad Works off the Col4, 10 nim.eo.1 lU IUodio QulnliiftTabtoti oure a row In lusmeod uhb,!,,. No Cure No IViy. "'rlccsic. sSt WHY GO HUNGRY When you cau get all you aunt to eat at the WHITE HOUSE RBSTMlM Our patrons lei-oive the bast the market afford. Onen dav and night. McKillop & Berkhart 108 tate St. C, STONE. M. D I'mmietor n' Stone's Drus: Stop, BAL.HM. OHlUil N. Tao crrt ttwo lu uwojier, mio looaM a 'o. ta Httd M OomraeroMl Mrot. and ar vlUkMkl-Hhaemlot Hae of drug.nn awllln, UM lt aittelM. pr(uiaery, bruOMi U.. elo.ttu, U. HTONK ilabadoiHe26e4n eioreu". lu tbe pao-kH-ofeiMitoiueand now ntiuu do ob.g) to wiMnliini. enmlnminn or ir-erUoa. High Grade Belgian Hares We guarantee the best stock at the lowest price that can be purchased. X X X A Commercial Rabbitrv 618 Commercial St., Salem, Or. ' you thould ask your ticket agent ' the UNION PACIFIC Fast MalllM js" J your ticket mul via tho ; or the RIO GRANDE Scenic Liwt GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE Our rvinillni- n.A..II - I..... '- " ! IID1 3IIII11IIV I'llllllllKIIUI --" V-1" --- . tourist excursions in. modern Pullman : jffiMffi&S&S-SuEKl No Change of Cars, , On the Portland-Chlcago FpecW, " uueai in tno vesu " Equipped With Klcgaui dtandard Sleera . Fine New Ordlnarr Tourist Sleeper. Superb Llurarr-liuffet far. 8iIendlp Dinner. Mea' a Ucarle, rreo uecjininu tnair in lourijt sleeping cars leave Slem every For further information apply S onUuy Kvening and Tlitirwlay evening ' J. R SAGEL Gl'V POW via bacrainento and every Tuelay even-1 Tv Ami 'abI AsStt O " ing and Saturday mornfng via Portland , 4ti,i. r, it .1 11 Ar Bslro and rim throtmh in ('hi..,. in,. ! H2 Third St. Portland Or. " utri U-ll linnl change via tho World's mrwt rnm t i.. S"'? WSfSSsi CorvalIis"& Eastern Itailw ,.. ......... ,j v.tiiuiii.-iuu ionrit car tor Itwlon . Theo tourist sloping caw nro TIME CAM D, broatl voetibuled lighted wiUi Pintch No 2 For Yaqulna: bas and providejl witli all vtoekly illus-! Train leaveAlbanv ...12 45p- Krorfm:rit:o,ma?rno9fori,, TSsgsiiSsrii; ::!;: nmlHiUmXh ff VILh ati ar? accom'1 TlulD ""I Yaqulna . 0 r-iiuiH uirMigi to dtwtina inn hv a rnn. 1 n 1 in i... rentative of the Ureal Rock' Island ( LcavM YaauUia ItnlllH. We nlto hava n .laid- Hr0,.ltJ , P?".. . ,. ullu,.!'a lrpng oar rli ,o"di,toV vht !' ryes Albany ' on or write to. A. h Looi-ki. Gen. Agt No. 4 Rtiturnlng: u. 1 ortlnnd Oregon. Leaves Detmlt.. U . W . Skixnur. Ii. M. Powmta I Airfvea Alhanv. Aisttnt S. 1 (Vi. A..ui,, ili' .(. v- n ' inn nn .... ..,.t ut AlhatlT fealem Or. Salem Or. Corvallls with Southern Pacific tiiwj irivmg direct sorvlco tJ ana iruu' ' b-IOi lloa-w 12:15 P-" 7.00 .r 12:10 n. 6:15 p. tw ' ! port and adjacent beaches. CTEdiVl WOOD SAW Two Maohlnoa Work Don Quickly Telephone a6SS black . , , , rtidiiHe on IStli street, or Ri.ilna, juarket, Al. VanFLRvr, Yaw Park, fi fit m "."" ?uiuXJUV T"Vrr' . .rrllOll xruiusnir ine niountun" ,' not Detroit at noon, giving ajPIenlihe to reach cauiplni; irniunds od j 1 Breltenbush and Santlam rltei w same day. II L WA.LDKN T V A l J. TURNER. S ut, Albiny. rowungS Salem Wilier hmimm OFFICK CITY HALL Wk wtir arv)c unW at onl$. Bills nayabbj monUily in advance. Make all complaints at the ottk riru rrvftc wiii I 4l. U03 wer.FulBlshlaCoKJs.M;t, Ornameats, Silk HHttPBSi Chiaaw4re. Etc All tvoii a ,.j seldaccbeip.' . n- 110 STATE STREET, WW 0 i&J