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PAGE TWO The Farmers Savings Bank Oldest State Bank in Walla. Wall*. Capital. Fully Paid Up . . . $100,000 W. P. Winans, Pres. G. W. Babcock, Vice-Pres. A. Chitwood, Cashier A. A. King, Asst. Cashier We Do a General Banking Buiineti Interest Paid on Time Depotiti BAKER-BOYER NATIONAL BANK WALLA WALLA. WASHINGTON Capital Stock $100,000 Surplus $100,000 OLDEST BANK IN THE STATE OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS: miles c. Moore President t. c. elliott - - - - Vice-President H. H. turner Cashier h. e. Johnson - - Assistant-Cashier Directors—Miles C. Moore, T. C. Elliott, H. C. Baker, W. W. Baker, E. L. Smith. S. E. CARR, President. B. F. CULP, Cashier. Capital $50,000. General Banking susir.c S Interest paid on time deposits and Baving accounts. Before You Take a Bath Be sure that all the things you need are in the bath room —bath soap, sea salt, big sponge, bath brush or mitts, towels, talcum pow der, etc. Tallman can sup ply anything that is missing Tallman's Bathroom and Toilet Articles Department is exceptionally well stock ed with fine goods. L. L. Tallman Tel. Main 96 Everything Delivered THE TRUSTEE COMPANY Investment Bankers, Seattle, Wash., Offer Seattle Business Property In the form of Business Property Investment Bonds in Denominations of $100 $500 $1000 $5000 $10,000 Nei iCarnlr.g from Rentals, «y | per cent per annum. 1 3 Premmfla Accumulation from Increase Ground Value 4% to 6% per Annum. DICE & JACKSON Resident Agents. Walla Walla MODEL BAKERY LUNCH ROOM Best place in the City to get a LIGHT LUNCH MODEL BAKERY CHARLES RETZER. Manager 3 First Street Phone Main 38 COMMISSIONS ACCEPTED ON PORTLAND RACES AT THE IDLE HOUR Full Telegraphic Descriptions by Wire Direct From The Track. IDLE HOUR GOV. FOLK LIKES HI6H BALLS IS MIXER OF SEDUCTIVE BEVER AGES AND KEEPS HIS OWN SIDEBOARD. His Aggressiveness In Holding Down Lid On Sundays Not Due to Prohibition Tendencies. Considerable public surprise seems to have been created by the discovery that Gov. Folk occasionally partakes of liquors. Apparently it was as sumed that because Mr. Folk was so aggressive in holding down the lid he is a prohibition worker. But it has been thoroughly established that Gov. Folk drinks and drinks where and when he pleases. It remained for the governor of Kan sas to make the facts known about the governor of Missouri and ne made the discovery when they were fellow travelers in a Pullman car. In commenting afterward upon the incident, Gov. Folk said: "My efforts to enforce the law do not mean that I am a rabid temper ance man. I have no inclination to re strict the rights and privileges of an American citizen. He can drink if he wants to so long as he does not get it in Missouri on Sunday. If he does get it on that day and I find it out I will prosecute tne man who sells it to him because it is against the law. It is the ! law that I am sticking up for." An Expert Mixer. Gov. Folk drinks, but he is so quiet about it that few persons would even dream that he is the expert in mixing liquors that he is. When he used to practice law in St. Louis he dropped into the bar with his friends and took his drink the same as any one else, but when he became circuit attorney he became more careful, and now since he has become governor with his lid on his hands, he prefers to go to his club or to take his drink at his own sideboard. For the governor keeps a sideboard and is always supplied with the best Kentucky bourbon to be found in the market. Gov. Folk's favorite drink is the highball, and close friends say that he has the art of making them down to a fine point. A few weeks ago while the governor was in town he fell in THE DOCTORS SAID "SHE MUST DIE." LOBE OF LEFT LUNG ENTIRELY GONE With CONSUMPTION! Enjoys Perfect Health NUT RIO LA & MATURE Cured Her I Mrs. Minnie E. Tapley. The case of Mrs. Minnie E. Tapley, of Brewer, Maine, was considered A REAL, MIRACLE. She was in an ADVANCED STAGE OF CONSUMP TION. Weighed only 67 pounds. Digestive organs so weak she could take only weak beef tea or a bit of chicken broth. Lobe of left lung entirely gone. Consulting physicians said "SHE MUST DIE." Hers was one of the 640 1 cases pronounced incurable —and that were in curable with anything except NUTRIOLA—that we treated with NUTRIOLA while perfecting it. & NATURE ' restored her to PERFECT HEALTH SEVEN YEARS AGO, and she has CONTINUED CURED until the present. NUTRIOLA IS NO EXPERIMENT. Ten years have elapsed since we first began experimenting and perfecting it. We have waited to see if the marvelous cures were permanent. Now in its PERFECT FORM it is offered to the public 1 under our POSITIVE GUARANTEE to do all wc claim or MONEY BACK. 26 clays' treatment, $2- 8 cents a day. 1 The complete statement of Mrs. Tapley's won. : derful cure, with others, and an article on " How i to Get Rid of Microbes" without medicine, ap pears in MODERN MIRACLES. Sent FREE. | If suffering from disease and drugs; if you feel ' the terrible effects of "lodism" caused by taking blood purifiers; if you are suffering torments I from acidity of the blood caused by taking acid j "germ" and "microbe" destroyers, remember 1 NUTRIOLA removes the effects of drugs as well as disease — begins at the foundation — fills the ! veins with rich blood full of constructive material. I And Nature makes you " NEW ALL OVER." Put up in tablet form in decorated metallic box. If your druggist hasn't got it we send it postpaid and show you how to buy at wholesale. Our Testimonials State Facts —tell of Real Cures that are Permanent. The Nutriola Company, Chicago, Hi. Sold and Guaranteed by L. L. Tallman WALLA WALLA, WASH. THE EVENING STATESMAN SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1905. with a crowd of friends who proposed that they go to dinner. In the assem blage was a railway president, who was not very well acquainted with the governor. On the way over to the club he remarked: "What in the world did you ask Mr. Folk to come along for? Now, we can't have anything to drink." When they had seated themselves around the board, however, the friend had the temerity to ask: "Shall we have anything to drink?" "Well, I should say so," Mr. Folk replied quickly before any one else had time to speak. "I want two high balls right now—one to quench my thirst and the other to give me an appetite." Nearly Caught by Ministers. Some of Mr. Folk's friends insist that he is the original "lid lifter." Dur ing the campaign for the democratic nomination for governor, Mr. Folk and a crowd of politicians, w,ere seated in a room around a table at the Madi spn hotel when some one proposed a drink. "Let's have some highballs," sug gested the St. Louis candidate. And forthwith five glasses, a bottle of whiskey and a bottle of seltzer were ordered up from the bar. Gov. Folk was making the high-balls when there came a knock at the door. Mr. Folk laid his hat over the five glasses, which were huddled in the center of the table, so that they were not visi ble, while another member of the par ty went to the door. It proved to be a delegation of ministers who had come up to congratulate Mr. Folk, who was then circuit attorney, upon his good work as a reformer. Mr. Folk shook hands with the ministers and chattered with them till they de parted. Then he lifted the lid and made the high-balls. Fond of Tobacco. Although he loves his high-ball, none of Mr. Folk's friends can remem ber ever having seen him under the influence of liquor. Indeed it is re markable that a man who is as fond of high-balls as he is can be so tem perate. But if Mr. Folk is temperate with liquor he is far from it with to bacco. He is scarcely ever without a cigar in his mouth. If he is where he can't smoke it he chews the end of it. It is nothing uncommon for him to -moke twenty cigars a day, and he smokes only the best. He smokes so many that it is difficult for him to carry enough to supply his demand. When he is out on the street or in a private office he often finds it neces sary to resort to his friends, for his own case is soon emptied. He smokes rapidly. "Give me a cigar," is about the second greeting to a friend when he is away from his own lair. Those who know him best usually hand him one before he gets the chance to ask. Gov. Folk is a good dresser not over fastidious, but always tidy. He goes in for sports but abhors gambl ing. He is particularly fond of base ball, and when his work as circuit at torney would permit was a "regular" at the park whether the team was losing or winning. While a boy he was known as a "crack," and he has not lost his interest in the game. Though making no pretensions as a Nimrod, he Hkes to hunt, and fre quently goes out for quail and prairie chicken. THIS IS A VALUABLE VALISE BENJAMIN DAVIS BEGINS SUITTO RECOVER $503.60 FROM N. P. RAILWAY. Alleges That Company Lost His Va lise Somewhere Between Hope and Sand Point, Idaho. To recover the sum of $503.60, al leged to be due for the loss of a va lise and contents. Benjamin Davis commenced suit against the Northern Pacific railway in the superior court today. Mr. Davis alleges in his com plaint that early in January he turn ed over to the Northern Pacific agent at Hope, Idaho, his valise and received a check for it. The valise was lost en route between Hope and Sand Point, and as the company had made 10 move to reimburse him. he com menced the action. Mr. Davis enum erates the contents of the valise, which he says included a Boehem flute worth $100; valuable receipts worth to him $150; superasbestos wicks worth $135: a flute, piccolo, razor, fountain pen md other articles of considerable val ue. Attorney George T. Thompson represents Mr. Davis. Swimming for the Championship. NEW YORK, Aug. 26.—The first *roup of events in the championship swimming contests at Travers Island is coming off today. The contests are held under the auspices of the Ama teur Athletic Union and are open to all amateurs. The principal event of today is the contest for the half-mile championship of the United States. Besides that there will be a 100-yard back-stroke race; a 100-yard novice race; a fancy diving contest and a 200-yard handicap. Among the entries for the race today are Charles Ru berl, C. M. Daniel, L. L. Goodwin, who won the recent 440-yard championship. C. D. Trubenbach, T. E. Kitching, Jr.. and E. H. Adams, of the New York Athletic club, while among the con testants from outside are Marquant Schwartz, of the Missouri Athletic club; H. J. Handy of Chicago, the phenomenal boy swimmer; Joseph R. Wilson, of Toronto, Can., and James B. Greene, of Boston, the champion of New England. The diving championship will be competed for by Dr. George H. Shel don, of the Missouri Athletic club; D. T. Hammond, of Chicago; Hector Oemmers, the Canadian champion. \nd Fred A. Wenck, Walter Lee and Philip Kearney of the New York Ath letic club. The second and third groups of the series will come off on September 2 and 4. PRINCE OF WALES CUP RACE CANADIAN AND EASTERN YACHT CLUBS WILL CONTEST FOR THE TROPHY. Event Is Attracting More Than Pass ing Interest Among the Clubs at Halifax. HALIFAX, N. S., Aug. 26.—The fleetest keels of the Canadian and Eastern Yacht clubs are assembled in Halifax harbor to attend the annual yacht race for the Prince of Wales' cup, the most coveted trophy ever contested for in any of the British colonies. The yachts of the N. Y. Y. C. and of the Eastern Yacht club, which took part in the ocean race from Marblehead to Halifax, arrived here in good time and are now the guests of the Royal Nova Scotia Yacht club. In view of the fact that there is prob ably not a yacht in Nova Scotia equal in speed to many of the American yachts just in from their ocean race, it was highly unselfish and sports manlike act of the Royal Nova Scotia Yacht club, to extend an invitation to the American visitors to compete with the Nova Scotian and other Canadian yachts for the magnificent prize. The cup was originally presented to the Halifax Yacht club when the pres ent king, then the Prince of Wales, visited Halifax in IS6O. It is a beauti ful specimen of the silversmith's art, standing two feet high and of great artistic value. When the Halifax club went out of existence in 1898 and the Royal Nova Scotia Yacht club was formed, the latter received th'e trophy from the Halifax Yacht club as a leg acy. The trophy has never left the waters on which it was first sailed for. According to the conditions the trophy can be kept by Ijhe winning yacht only nine months, when it must be re turned to Halifax, to be competed for again the following season. Not to be outdone in courtesy by the Nova Scotian yachtsmen, Mr. Laurence Minot has offered a trophy to be competed for by Canadian yachts at the same time, when the Prince of Wales cup is sailed for. The trophy is a handsome silver cup, the decora tions of which are symbolical of the international character of the race and of the good feeling existing between the yachtsmen of the two countries represented in the races. The first race was sailed today over a course of twenty-five miles off Hal ifax harbor. Under the regulations of the Royal Nova Scotia Yacht club, according to which the measurement of the yachts is determined by multi plying the load-waterline by the sail area and dividing the result by 6000. several o fthe American boats were barred from competing in the race. Nevertheless both the N. T. Y. C. and the Eastern Yacht club were repre sented at the starting line, when the signal for the beginning of the race was given this morning. This evening the visiting yachtsmen from the United States will be the guests of the Royal Nova Scotia acht club at a grand celebration at their club house. On that occasion many government officials and prominent citizens will also be present to greet the American yachtsmen. The Amer ican yachts will remain here for sev eral days and in their honor a series of minor yacht races will be held, in all of which the Americans will have the privilege to take part. Special prizes will be offered for the various events. The visit of the Americans wil conclude with a grand festival, on which occasion the Prince of "Wales, the Minot cup and the other trophies will be presented to the respective winners. Hacks—Shaughnessy A Clancy Stand, Caswell's Cigar Store. Phon* 350. * "PainkUUt 1 (PEKBT DAV IS'.) I j Cures Colic, Cramps, I I Stomach Complaints. I 25c. <fc 50c. bottles. We Are in Our New Building Better prepared than ever to ser?- our customers with everything in th« meat line. Don't forget the place. GUS. HARRAS Alder Street - Opposite P.O. Steam Dye Works 16 N. Second St. Phone Main 716 EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME THE PAUL HOUSE FURNISHING COMPANY 14 East Main Street Telephone 328 Above the Firßt National Bank. Pennyroyal pills R/"%>\BArE. Always reliable. Ladle*, uk. ?. ♦< ftSf for CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH '» KED an 1 Gold metallic boxer <•»;«• ! with Mne ribbon. Take no other. BeTu.e A V-C-S I>anceroa* Sabetttatioae mm* lrnHa ] — Iff tltina. Boj of yoar DroggUt. or MM **■ '» L Jl «aai». Ibr Particulars, Teatiawatala VW» K» «"» " Relief far Ladle*," im Uum.hjn. XT IT tar* Midi. l».»ll«T«tUm«UU. SoMbj V r all DragcLu. Chleaeater Ckeatleai Ca tlmitam lata papas. Maalaea H«aar*, PaULA*. fA. Skiles Dry Goods Co. 2nd Street Between Main and Alder 48c 3rd. The handsomest assortment we have ever shown These are the new Fall Dress Goods; come in Serges, Black and all colors—the new mixtures in the Fall styles. Sicillians, new mixture of Waterproof, p] a j n Cashmere, prices are 50c, 6X)c and (35c for Saturday and Monday, your choice 48c >rcl. 35c Ladies Hose, at 0- ' Joe 15c Children's Hose 2 pair ->' )C 5c pure Linen Handkerchiefs 10-4 and 11-4 white and colored Cotton Blankets. special at g« NEW RAINCOATS, NEW SUITS ♦ VAI ID UADCT at his worst in a poor half-wornout harness. He ♦ ♦ Yl II IK 111 111 XT doesn t look right and he doesn't feel right. Hrinphim • ' IUUI\ IIUIXOL to us and we can fit him out with somethi,, K & » J and serviceable. No establishment in the cityis Yet.„ « J equipped to please, either m the matter of style and price. " r 4 ♦ CHARLES E. NYE, g MAIN s *- ♦ I ! Those who have tried it know that 1 ♦ WHITE CLOUD RYE is the best J f You '■an get it at nearly all first-class bars J ♦ BACHTOLD & ACKERMAN, Distributors ♦ j A Snap »c h "oT pden . $5-00 j Z. K. Straight, Jeweler ""TjyStfL* jIF IT'S GOOD * * i I ** WE HAVE IT j | THE BOOK NOOK ! j Cor. Ist and Main= 'Phone 453 + ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ tZ. L. SMITH, Pres. Mills and Factory at JOHN G. BARNES, Sec. } ♦ L. SMITH, Vice-Pres. Barueston A. E. SMITH, Gen.Mgr. i ♦ Kent Lumber Co. ) T (Incorporated) 4 ▼ Manufacturers of all kinds of A + Lumber, Lath and jmiingrles j a Long- Leiijftliss* nnd Bridge Timber ' J a. Specialty J t Can send you an entire house or barn bill direct from Mill to I i your nearest railroad station. f 1 Come and see us at our Walla Walla yards, Fourth and Elm. Kx- k ( amine carefully our lumber. Get our Drices. We are satisfied we can A 4 please you. We carry everything for your entire home. * ♦ Phone Main 774 W. H. DRAKE, Local Mgr. ALWAYS ADDRESS ♦ j KEIXT IiUMBBR 00. | DOrffORGET THIS IS THE DAY on which we invite yo« to call and receive A FREE SAMPLE of that Wonderful Discovery CALIFORNIA PRUNE WAFERS A Liver Tonic From Nature's Laboratory CONSTIPATION PERMANENTLY CURED You Can Eat What You Please if you follow each meal with a California Prune Wafer, which quicWj . fc solves the most indigestible food, and helps to C through and out of the system in a gentle and hea manner, without the slightest pain, griping or nausea Now take our advice and Don't Miss This. Let us tell you Call early as supplies are limited. L. L. TALLMAN Cor. 2d and Main St*. Walla Walla.