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Mla^bxngtow \ill,l'MK XLIX.--XUMBEU 10. I >^hmgtoij-ftumbril i ISSUED EVERT FRIDAY EVENIHg ST I JOHN MILLER MURPHY Editor and Proprietor. *til>«rrl|jLlaa Haiti*. IVrytir. in advance 1 liO AJvrrtl.ing Rates. <>: 111 s juare (lncli) per year Jl2 00 per quarter * C Ono sjuare.one insertion 1 J."' •' •• subsequent insertions.. 50 Vitvertisini*. lour squaresor upwnrd liy l!■« vear, at liberal rates. I,i'i{al notions will tie ehargnd to the rttt'irney or otHcer authorizing their inser tion. Advertisements sent from a distance, •ui.t transient notices must lie accompan ied tiv the c:ish. Announcements ot in images, births and deaths inserted fre». obituary notices, resolutions of respect and other articles which do not possess a general interest will be inserted at one half the rates for business advertisements. | Charlie's f | SALOON «► < > ; \ Olympia's Popular Resort! 1 < ► All (he best brands of Im- J [ ported ami Domestic Wines 41 i > Liquors and Cigars. ... < 1 i: BBIE6EB & BIRCHLER { \\ PROPRIETORS. 1! St. 10S Writ Fourth Street. Pkuie Hub 27. <> I <' PAUL © HOLTHUSEN'S NOTED FOB QUALITY OF THEIR LIQUORS. THE FINEST Wines, Liquors and Cigars Olympia Beer a Specialty 113 FOUUTII MTKKKT. Courteous Treatment to All. PAITL I'ETIILEESEN, LEE KEDEK. Proprietor!. 0 OM V» .> O V *> 'M« V O V V n»V«V«Vt nn>«n*« nnn fl W. R. WHITESIDE | 1 FUNERAL DIRECTOR I $ COR\tK FOISTD ANN FBIMLIiI BTB « » « K Telephone lied i:UI. I'.eniilewe Ked 1191 K « « * * |FRANK'S PLACEii t Bond & Lillard # "Wliislty ( 1 { j; MACK AY & BURR REAL ESTATE —AND— INSURANCE £d and Columbia Sts. Olympia, Wash. \TONY FAUST SALOON j ■ All the Best Brands of im- ■ 7 ported and Domestic Wines, 7 J Liquors and Cifars always 1 ■ on hand ■ I Willium Meyer I J PROPRIETOR. f 7 320 Main Street Olympia, Wuh. | <: A Weiss Talk <: We promise to make stylish !> clothes that will fit your <[ J! purse and your figure J > Fred Weiss ij ;t Meriuant Tailor <; MAIN ST.. - OLYMPIA. J > -Phone Red 431 1» BE KIND He kin<l. children, lie kind, be kind to one another; Your minds will lie sweeter, just mini! what ymi say. An<l when you're in doubt, ask father and mother. For where there's a will there's always a wav. He kin 1. chiMren, lie kind to the birds in your childhood. Feed them with erunihs when colli, winter winds blow*. They'll repay you In spring with sweet Rungs in the wild wood; Without them this Karlh would he dreary, you know. _ He kind, children, be kind to every* dumb creature; Cowards are cruel, to torture a sin. Keiuember that nature can puuish you each, or She will reward you for each victory you win. He kind, children, be kind; be honest and truthful, The world may tempt you, but never tell lies. You'd belter be whipped for mistakes when you're youthful. Than lie to escape in a traitor's dis guise. He kind, children, be kind to the |>oor and the aged; Kind words from girls often vanquish a foe. Hut if that should fail, then war must IK* waged; He brave, boys, strike hard; make the bully lie low. He kind, children, be kind; let your smiles gild the hours Of life like the sunshine illuming the scene. You are just like the bees, loving lips kissing flowers. Gathering honey for the hive, the home of your queen. Be kind, children, be kind to the sick ; 'twill endure thein To you as the toys. Like the wingsof a dove Fly away to each cot like an augel to cheer them, They'll bless you, dear children, in your labor of love. —hue Virtmii. Only Store of Its Kind ia America. A niau up in Albany lias a store which is the only one of its kind in the country. In it he sells just .two things: Wooden shoes and long Dutch pipes. He has kept the store for years and has never enlarged his stock beyond these two items. The proprietor is a Hollander him self, as his name. Van Wart, would indicate. He imports his pipes and wooden shoes directly from the old country. It must not be thought that there are enough wooden shoes worn in this country to maintain Mynheer Van Wart in affluence. Most of his sales are of small shoes which can be used for ornamental purposes, or at least, alleged ornamental pur poses. He ships boxes and l>oxes of tiny wooden shoes to women who gild theiu and make them into dinner favors. Others are made up as candy boxes. Others are tilled with flowers for luncheons or dinners. A limited number really find their way into the feet of some imported citizens, who know the advantage of having an inch of dry, warm wood lietween their soles and the wet ( ground. Wooden shoes are especially suited for gardeners,.although they might be worn with advantage by anybody working in cold, damp or I sloppy places. While the pipe end of the busi ness is also largely patronized by people who are looking for odd trink ets and by collectors who want a few long clays on their pipe racks, there ai e a good many smokers scattered over the country who really put such pipes to the use for which they were intended. A Welsh View. The incumlient of an old and his toric church in Wales who had been showing a party of Americans around, asked them to visit his parochial school, of which he was very proud, in the fond hopes of a liberal dona tion. After a recitation or two he invit ed them to question the scholars, and one of the party accepted the invita tion. "Little boy," said he, to a rosy faced lad, " can you tell ine who George Washington was?" "Iss, surr." was the smiling re ply, 'e was a 'Merican Gen'ral." "Quite right. And can you tell me what George Washington was re markable for?" " Iss, surr. 'E was remarkable cos 'e was a 'Merican an' told the trewth." The rest was silence —and it was not followed by a donation. An Apt Reason. A rather pompous-looking deacon in a certain city church was asked to take charge of a class of boys during the absence of the regular teacher. While endeavoring to im press upon their young minds the importance of living a Christian life the following question was propound ed. "Why do people call me a Christ ian, children?" the worthy dignitary asked, standing very erect and smil ing down upon them. "Because they don't know you," was the ready answer of a bright eyed little boy, responding to the in gratiating smile with one equally guileless and winning. -• Leap Year a Failure. Marriages for the past year are re jjorted to be about 10 per cent, less than the usual number, which shows that there isn't so much in leap year, after all. Vital Statistics. Life Of the 1,001 young women who fainted last year, 998 fell into the arms of men, two fell on the floor and one into a water butt. "Hew to the I,iiie, Let the Chips Fall "Where they May." SILVER AND GOLD. TIME WORKS OUT WONDERS-SOME TIMES. Increased Volume of Gold Augments Prices of Commodities Decreases Our Trade with Silver-using Countries Threatens in Time to Erect a Chinese Wall Around Oriental Trade nore Impregnable than Prohibitive Tariff—Already Exciting Apprehensions of Farseeing Men. ill ri*s|*ins«» to a request of the Xiics .b/rrrtisrr recently. Mr. Morton Fre wen, the London financial expert, who is visiting Vancouver, granted a si*vial interview, in which he dealt with matters of exchange, gold and silver basic and relative values, and their effect II|H>II the commerce of the world. Introducing the subject the reporter said: "Mr. Frewen. we are aware you have given your attention for many, many years to the silver question, and especially, as cheaper silver af fects our trade with the Orient, will you tell us the points which are at present of interest to our readers?" In reply Mr. Frewen said: " For some years 1 have turned my back u|)on this most troublesome problem, thinking that the great supplies of gold would settle it. Whereas it no v upi>ears that so far from settling the question the great gold supplies and the consequent rise in all prices is. making the silver question more om inous of disaster than ever liefore. Since ISWS, we gold-standard com munities have had a great rise of gold prices, occasioned by the abundant supplies of the new gold; but prices, and wages in silver-using Asia have not risen. They have actually fallen. The result is that the fall in the prices of silver, in other words the fall in the rate of exchange with all Asia, is stim utating all the manufacturers and the exports to us from Asia, with her eight hundred millions of people, and is contracting her imports from us. " If you |ieople at the Pacific ports ever expect to have profitable export trade to Asia, the price of silver will have first to rise to at least a dollar an ounce.'' " Please explain that statement more fully." " Well, 1 will put it in this way. China to-day stands waiting to buy millions of tons of steel rails for a com plete system of railways or it may be our cottons or your wheat or your lumber; but how can the Chinaman buy? He says: ' I have been absorb ing or hoarding silver for two thou sand years; silver is my money. He fore 1 can buy your rails 1 must first buy your money, and with that money pay for your rails. Thirty years ago four and a half of my silver dollars or taels bought a sovereign, but now it takes twelve taels to buy a sovereign. So you have lost my business: my wages are no liighrr, the price of the commodities 1 pro duce are no higher in silver; then how can I pay nearly three times as much for a bill of exchange on Ix>n don or New York as I paid before 1873?' This is why the great fall in silver exchange last year has dis located the trade of Kuroite and America with Asia, and your people l here can never trade with Asia to any profit until the exchanges rise very considerably." "Then, said the reporter, "the question of silver is really a great race problem and it requires, in your opinion, the attention of the West ern powers?" " Exactly," said Mr Pre wen, "and I believe this view has at last broken in uj>on our statesmen. At Wash ington they have selected a commis sion, and are to send a sub commis sion, to inquire into wages and prices in China and India. Already Secre tary Root has sent a circular to all American consuls in Asia. In Eng land, I believe we are to have another Royal Commission on Currency. Speaker Reed phrased it very hap pily in 1H94, when he said: 'The yellow man with the white money will cut the throat of the white man with the yellow money.' If the ex changes with Asia remain where they are now you will see an enormous de velopment in China of the steel and iron industries. " Men now living may witness great exports of Chinese steel from Shansi. How indeed lan it lie otherwise? Aready thousands of factories which recently employed white labor in Eu rope are closed and have been re opened with yellow labor in Asia. " Before 1K73, a sovereign was worth nearly five silver dollars and five silver dollars in China paid the wages for one day of twenty China men. But to-day a sovereign is worth not five but nearly thirteen dollars, and as wages for one day of fifty Chinamen. Is that a condition of competition which 'Pree Traders' ever contemplated? It is little wonder that we of England are sick to death of the very phrase 'Free Trade.' " Mr. Frewen believes frankly that the whole problem can lie solved, and intimates that steps are Ijeing taken by England, Germany and America to agree on a universal standard of silver values. Miss IDA UKAKA, who was recent ly apitointed professor in the medi cal college in Tokio, is meeting with seiious opposition in her new work. The conservative element in Japan deplores her appointment in out spoken terms, declaring that it is only the entering wedge for the general employment of women on the teaching force of other higher ed ucational institutions. Miss Uraka is the first woman to hold such a post in Japan and is regarded as excep tionally well fitted for the work. She was graduated from the Univer sity of Ilerlin with honors and her teachers predicted a brilliant future for her. TYKE salmon are "running." (►LVMI'IA, WASHIXKTOX: 1-KIDAV MOl{MN(i, JANUARY 22. 190!). DRIFTWOOD j G BY LUE F. VERNON. J K."*\ >'S .n'\ .A j'N S -\ Paper-Ink, Paper-Ink, Printer's mail, Doing State printing, Perkins' plan. Everything lovely, tioose lianas high— Shade nf Mark Haniin. Sammy's got a G MM I EVE It is noticeable the hair-dresser stands at the head of her profession, while the chiropodist sits at the foot. * i i The ('iiiisti of Oakville, the l/nstlrr of Hat ton, the l><nni of KUensburg, the /fiizt/nut of Tukwila, the (intimii/ of Wallula. the <Jnill of Quincey. and the Smri/i r of Hoquiam are a few <MIII names of newspapers published in the State of Washington. * * * As was stated in this department once b 'fore, the Tacoina A'« »■* seems to be .i Mecca as the starting point for etlitors employed on that journal to become proprietors of newspapers themselves. Dan Cloud, recently city editor of the AVI/ N has purchased the Lynden Trihum- , of Lynden, What com county. * * * Roosevelt has broke loose again and calls two newspapermen liars in the strongest terms. He has ques tioned tlie veracitj of more men since he has been in public life than was ever known before and assumes with more pride that he is altout the only living person who is able to tell the exact truth aliout each and ev erything. * » * Beyond question the public welfare has an interest in each murder case. The prompt administration of justice through the courts, lies very close to the survival of our institutions. It is to the interest of the public that every case of murder be tried on its merits, without passion and without malice, with justice to all and injus tice to none, and that a verdict in accord with the law and the evidence l>e rendered by a jury. ♦ # * Do not get the idea into your head. said an Olympia business man, last night, "that if you were 'your own IXJSS' you could afford to be easy with yourself. Whether working for yourself or for others, you must check any tendency toward laziness or idleness, for if you do not, you will be kept down all your life. To succeed in anything, you must work: if you want the liest, you must give the I jest. You will find, too, that if you are your own pay master. a few hours' work each day will not IM> sufficient by which to earn a good living. You must be strict with yourself, and hold your- I self to a just account, even more so ; than you would hold another. Kven though the muscles may rest, the brain must be kept busy, for in order to succeed in any undertaking, you must exercise your Ixxly much, but your brain more; you must think, plan and contrive, constantly seek ing to improve on your past. ★ * * Bremerton can feel proud and hap py. Bremerton has the right. Brem erton is all right, too. Why is the , pretty place so happy—happy as l»oy I with his first Ball? Don't you know? { I 'll tell you. Bremerton has removed i the first yard of earth for building ! the largest drydock in the United States. The town turned out Jan. 4th and celebrated the removing of the first shovel of dirt. Glory be to j Bremerton. Here's to you. you pret ty little city Bremerton. Here are the dimensions of the drydock in feet: Length of dock on center line out side of coping BKH; length of dix-k on inside of coping. 820; length of dock on floor from head to outer sill. 770; length of dock on floor from head to abutment, lib: width in body of dock 210 100-rorND SACKS "PKIDK OF OLYMI'IA" I'OTATOKS, CKOWX ON MK. CATON'S HAI.F-15LOCK, ON WKSTSIDK. HOWS "PRIDE OF OLYMI'IA" P< »TAT<» AS SHOWN WHEN DIG at coping l.'Ci; width between face of altars at sill level, i'ti; width between faces of lowest altars, S4: width of entrance at coping level, lI.Y width of entrance at level of mean high water, 115:dcptn on center line from coping level to floor. 47: depth coping level to sill of doc k. H.S. * # * The Primary law is a farce foisted upon the State by designing politi cians. That's all. People have be come so accustomed to sleeping in a political boiler works, during the past decade, that they can now re pose, peacefuly ami sweetly during a cannonade. In other words, primary election laws so pr< long compaigns thnt tlu> votwii uru utterly jaiU-U and out of patience by election day. Un di-r tin* old system of caucuses and conventions there was "teamwork," outside as well as inside the organiza tions. There had to be and it result ed in partv organizations that got the vote out. It offered opportunity for ambitious young men to take part in politics and co-operate with their fellows; that the primary law pre cludes. Now they can only l>e some candidate's personal retainers, or lie come candidates themselves by pub licly proclaiming their own superior virtues. The old system taught them citizenship and gave opportunity for its exercise. The primary one merely encourages the individual who has check, or money, or liotli, to impose himself on the public. Party organ izatiou no longer exists, because the primary law has disputed it. and put in its place " personal politics," which i means a mad scramble for ollice where success depends upon brass ' and plenty of nerve, supplemented jby a well-tilled pockctliook. The only ! sensible thing to do with the primary ! law is to repeal it. Fifty school children from Chicago are to !>e brought to the Alaska- Yukon-Pacilie Exposition next year if plans suggested by Secretary Totn- Uicliardson, of the Oregon Develop ment League, is carried out. They will also visit Portland, Olympia, and other cities in the two States, and when they return home will write letters telling of the trip and what they saw in the Northwest. Kx hibits of the woods of ties section, with industrial and scenic pictures, have been used in the Chicago schools, made up into sets and circulated from one school to another, in the teaching of geography, and doubtless this will be a leading feature of their mission. It's a Bargain. Some time since a genial-looking Irish gentleman wanted an empty i>ottle in which to mix a solution that he wished to prepare, and went to a chemist's to make the purchase. Selecting one that suited his purpose, he asked the shopman how much it would l>e. " Well," was the reply, "if you just want the empty Uittle it will be one penny, but if you want anything in it you can have the iMittle free of charge.'' "Shure' that's fair," said the witty Celt. " Put in a cork." A novel feature that could advan tageously be adopted by any North western commnity, no matter how smail, has been introduced by the Portland Commercial Club. A special committee has formulated a plan hav ing for its purpose giving the "glad hand" to every newcomer. At the rate immigration is coining to the Coast a similar committee would have its hands full in welcoming new peo ple. lu some places the woman s clubs have made it a point to prompt ly call upm the new ladies. What's the Use? Ain't no use to grumble or complain. Ain't no use in growlin at the rain, Ain't no use in gcttin' in a stew ; Hut we do. Ain't iiu use in Licking at a freeze, Ain't no use in bein' hard to please, Ain't no use in belli' glum, I swear ; Hu' we air. IT would be line to have summer in winter-time. I LOGIC OF SEQUENCE. ' , WONDERFUL ADAPTATION OF NA- j TUBE'S LAWS. A Lesson May Be Learned from the Crea tor s Master Handiwork, the Human Frame, Adaptability, Symetry, Strength, all E xeni plificd by the Structure that is "Won derfully and Fearfully Made—Suggestions for Study of and Profit from, the Lesson. I 11V bit. ,\. «l. COOK. LOXUHHACII, Cal.. Jan. lti, l'.hl'l. Now it adds to the beauty and im- ; pressiveness of a group of public | buildings, where each has an ap- j proucli of a bit of green ami two or three trees. (lod speaks to us through the conscientious architect as devinely as through any lineal , apostolic pulpit, and so the up-to i date architect declines to prepare ' plans for rooms without light and | air from without. No intelligent person, from choice, will live in a j home that throws a considerable 1 shade ujton a neighbor's home, nor j should he want to live in the shade l of his neighiior's house, since area. | air aud sunshine are essentials in | physical integrity. Every law in ; tin* construction of a building is | operative in the human l>ody— Bridge-work in the arch of the foot; | dove-tailing in the skull; hinge in 1 the joints; greater strenth in use of , a given amount, the hollow column, in the long bones; fulcrum and lever. in jaw ana arm; guy ropes in various | tendons; valves of a pump in the heart; the ball and socket rotary, the hip joint; lubrication, the synovial fluid of joints and mucous surfaces; plumbing, thirty-two feet of intes tinal tubing; wiring, the motor and 1 sensory nerves. Even the ocean (cable is isolated like a nerve whose ' central conductor lies in a casing of j fat, which in turn has two trans verse wrappings of tibrous tissue. Kven an old lady's bag pucker-string is like the pulling of a nerve about , the gall-bladder, about the lips in puckering, or the heart when anger, worry or ignoble thought instantly [! iuipri«uns and makes poisonous se cretions. The (I rand Master workman won derfully created us —very good for the occasion of earth experience, and if men would stand for the in tegrity of their bodies, in a right spirit, against manhood-saping vices, an interesting city, satisfactory in every means of prosperity, health and wealth, could shortly lie attained. A right spirit brings physical ca pacity, healthfulness, immortal crea tions, and what all the main beliefs of the world teach, love, truth and righteousness. Hacon said: "Na ture is governed by obeying her." Kinerson said: "By contenting our selves with obedience we l>ccome di divine." Obedient to that liight Spirit, 1 should be glad if a compe tent commissioner were to stndy the city and its environments for a plan of civic improvement. Through it, might not all be worked out for a hundred years? Cardinal boulevards —perhaps Mt. Rainier-ward: also towards Tenino. 'certainly to l'ricst's Point park, and some suburban lakes, might IK; con sidered; perhai>s removal of some structures asked. The removal <>f typhoid menacing, tly-accessible, an tiquated toliets; measures for chang : iug the repulsive appearance about i the Northern Pucitie depot, which | travelers tell me is worse than aU>ut j Russian depots, and not so good as | those in Turkey. This, at a State Capital! First time travelers some ' times resent, and snitT at the dejtot setting, as being worse than a I camel yard. That bit of green and ; some lawn shrubbery and other tidy ! ing would Ik; in order, also the wo man's rest-room, herebefore men i tioned by intentment. Somewhere a water-side drive would be in order: uniformity of kind, and regularity of street trees; children's recreation ground, and many other things ■be thought over; but progressive cities now see the economy and wis dom of comprehensive plans, in which topography, manufacturing abattoirs, beautitication, health and other matters are considered in plans to embrace general welfare. Ixis j Angeles would have saved ten mil lion dollars, had she had such plans earlier. Portland and Los Angelts have recreation grounds with a sup erintendent to teach fair play, etc. A million Knglish speaking i»eople go insane, approximately every year, all needless from doing what they know they should not. missing the larger part of life —save part of childhood, and some brief attempts at simple life. Simple life misses nothing. A fractional life is not satisfactory. Let us know, however, that as conditions are, the happiest and healthiest people in cities, are those with a population of from ten 1 thousand up to fiftv thousand. So now is our chance. Existence is not life, and until it means life, for the mine part as I study it, its trend is to insanity accident, discomfort, and greater or less disaster: perhaps iu a lot of cases it is a gradual perishing. The Master suggested that idea over 2.000 years since, and in a brotherly way, showed how it could beavoided. l'lie V. M. C. A., represents ad vanced thought, and is a social ex pression of the spirit of federation and human sympathy; joy, and a robust and more abundant life Vl lowship with, and faith, that "the scrubiest have dormant faculties that might gladden the community. As 1 see it. discomfort, an educatory dis comfort. anywhere and everywhere, comes to a man or a city, not 111 har mony with the moral order of the universe. To illustrate: The ignor ant man goes to work with a plane on a board. TIIO plane chokes, the board is gouged—injured: he gets a painful splinter was perhaps men tally determined to hurry swears, (confound it); more and more discom fort! Hut he is being educated, sits down ia dispair, finally unconscious ly prays a little: Wha tafo oliam! Hows hal lima keilgo? Then a silent prayer, which is a since desire, unexpressed, that he might have his plane work. Hope grows—peace chases his frown away —he cleans out the plane, turns his board to plane with the grain and rolling riblwn after ribbon off. he ex periences the joy of obeying the law —natural law, (rod's law, as all true law is, and with a big smile on, he sings: "There is a (tower To make each hour As sweet as Heaven designed it, Nor need we roam, To bring it home. Vet few there be that find it." The prayer did not pull out the splinter. Good nippers in the hand, steadied by just that plain little prayer did, and then washing with water to cleanse; an antiseptic to kill tetanus germs, and putting a little grease on the pitch on his hand to aid in cleansing it was all under God's law, to the satisfaction and peace of his soul. As soon as that got in harmony with his best think ing he found it was all God's law — everything working together for good. That philosophy is what a Y. M. C. A. stands for, and in its fullness it means a whole lot. In Chicago it turns out 1(M) electricians at a time. The true chutvh is a spiritual body, niaile up of all folks of any church, or none, who, like Lincoln, intend at any cost to do their best. That kind of a church is now in transition in the spirit of peace federation and human sympathy. No institution is un changable. It matters not what we are to-day, we are something differ ent and 1 believe lietter, to-morrow — slowly better by conforming to nat ural law in any world in which wo can and will work. 1 should be glad to see the men from Posey county, Indiana, Hoop-pole Township, Klk horn Tavern, near Jinkin's mill; Pike county, Missouri; Aroostook county, Maine; anil whosoever that will, federated under that power within themselves; greater than themselves, which in any world, makes for right use of things, that each might share the benefits of every other one's experience ami wisdom, where everyone is a free thinker, as Christ was. There is a oneness in humanity and the all-round life, that is there is no occasion for mystecisin and two departments, secular and religious, apart from each other. Seveu days in the week it is good to preserve our physical, mental and spiritual integrity. The Kininanuel Movement invites every possible scientific and religious test. The whole body is the true organ of the mind. We think as we feel and we feel as we think. Hone will go, just himself and God, into his den, any quiet place, and just think out the things that he himself knows he honestly to think out (it is just prayer) there will come u great light, which will enable one to do the things that he should do. It seems a human need and preserves physical fitness, so that one working in machinery is saved from many accidents that l>efall those without light, and it is that way along the line in degree as lighted. TIIK Washington Historical Society will have the largest collection of historical and Indian relics ever dis played in the State exhibit at the A las ks- Yukon -Pacific Kx pos i t ion. YAKIMA county will have the larg est exhibit of honey ever shown in tho State at the Alaska-Yukon-Pa cilic Exposition. To the oculist the eye is the win dow to the soul because it is so full of pains. WHOLE NUMBER 2.5:1 li A Bold Step. To overcome the wi-11-unmndod and reasonable objections of the morn intel ligi'iit to the use of secret, medicinal com pounds. Dr. U. V. 1* . r.*c. ( ,i ItutTalo, X. Y., some time di-cnii d to make a boM departure from the usual course pursued by the makers of put no medicine ; for do mestic use, au<l so has published broad cast aud ornrTy to the w hole world, a full and comp\»ie list of t!l the Ingredients entering iuW*becoi.po- ;, N!iof his widely celebrated i. 'i t*, he has taken bis numciyT.-i t/ilruu; and patients bis full Thus too he has re- from among secret nostr/m<of doubtful merits, anil made themMi ciru'J its 0/ Ktiouil ComposttU/n. Hv this b"' l'•ten Dr. Tierce has shown that Ills lori'llll IS are of silrh etoPl]e|,yn tluit be is 11 l .*1 r.L,ii 10 subject them t.j Not only ilwrlht wrapper of erery bo. tie of Dr. Pierre's Oolden Medical Discovery, the famous medicine fir weak stoi. la> li. pld liver or biliousness mid all catarrhal diseases wherever ioratnl. have printed upon |L in lildin Kritfluh. a full »:id complete ll»t of ali the Ingredients composing It. but a small liook lias lieen cunipilal froi i numerous standard uiedi. al works, of all the diOerwit schools of practice, containing very numer ous extracts froui the writings or leading praclitioners of medicine. endorsing in the Btrninjoit ptHtaillc Irniu, each id every ingre dient contained In iJr. Plrice's niedlclnss. One of these little bool.s *!! l lio mailed frea to any out) sending addrem 011 postal card or by letter, to In. It V. Pierce. Buffalo. N. Y.. and reuuesting the same, f'ri tu this llttlo book it will IHI learned that lir. Pierre's med icines contain no alcohol, naicolics, mineral agents or other tiolsonous or Injurious agents and that tliej arc made from native, medici nal of trn*nt vuluo; aUo tliat smnu of thu iiuiht Vitlual'lo liiiTiviilentH routalm tl In I>r. I'ltrcu's l uvt.rlto fur weak. Uvrvous. o\*or-work»*d. " ruii-ilowii." ntTv»*us and dcMlhati'tl wonun. wt-r« eninloycd. I 0114; years aifo. by the Indiana for hlmllar ailmenu affertlntf their s4jnaws. In fart, one of tho most valuable lfudicinul plants enterlnc Into th«i roniiKisitioii of Dr. l'lirt Favorite Pre scription was known to the Indians as "Suuaw-Wevd." Our knowledge of the uses of not a few of our ujost valuable native, diclnal plants was gained from the Indians. As made up by Improved and exart pro c*sses. the " Favorite I'res< , riptlon n la a most efficient remedy for resrulatlng all the wom anly functions, correcting displacements, as prolapsus, an reversion and retorversloiu overcoming pslnful periods, toning up tha perves and bringing about a perfect state of MalttL Sold by all doaleia In . A ►?« AAAA i!< A A »T« »7« »7« i!* A »T« »T« A J. A. Graham Frank L. Weston & i f %G& W | | BARBER SHOP I >2 i * and Baths 9 § * •2 For Good Workmanship, Clean- $ £ liness and Fair Treatment $ £ give us a trial. £ •f 125 East 4th St. Olympia, Wash. f| wjf vww wtwwwaw P. J. O'BRIEN & CO. HORSE SHOEING AND General Blacksmithing. OIVK US A TRIAL. Sole atfi'titg for Olvmpia AII.L Thurston COOIIIT for the celebrated STUDEBAKER Wagons and Carriages Corner Third and Columbia Streets. Olympia, Wash. E. M. YOUNG Fine Watch and Jewelry Re pairing. 213 E. 4th St. Olympia. Wash. K. L. VAN KPPS. F. W STOCKING. Pri*«. Hec. THURSTON COUNTY ABSTRACT CO. (INC.) Corner Washinfton and Sixth Streets. Abstracts. Drafting and Blue-Printing. _City and Township Plats. Phone Blark 11. lOt. j![ THE poi't i.Ait ;!; TONY FAUST I | RESTAURANT. i i C. BOLTHUSEN, - - PIIOPRICTOH. i Q The tabl« will be tei .ed with all the O 0 dellcacif* of the aeaauu. Upen dav O § ./i'ilSXet. Oljapii, W»sk. § Boooooooooooooooooooooooou GEO. C. ISRAEL Attorney at Law OLYMPIA, WASH Suite 214 Safe Deposit Building Olympia R. J. PRICKMAN Artistic Tailor, / Is showing a BEAUTIFUL LINE OF 8000S Both standard and BOY.I. [ NAIX ST., BET. FIFTH AND .SIXTH.