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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (April 29, 1904)
Peculiar To Itself In what it Is and what It does con taining the best blood-purifying, alterative and tonic substances and effecting the most radical and per . manent cures of all humors and all eruptions, relieving weak, tired, languid feelings, and building up the whole system is true only of Hood's Sarsaparilla No other medicine acts like it no other medicine has done so much real, substantial good, no other medicine has restored health and strength at so little cost. "I ni troubled with scrofula and eamt Bear losing my eyesight For four months I ould not see to do anything. After taking two bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla I could set to walk, and -hen I had taken eight bottles 1 tould see as well as Tr." Best A. Haibs ox. Withers. K. C. Hood's Sarsaparilla promises ts curs and keops the promise. Allen Mortal. Think for a moment of the narrow Amlt of our knowledge! Sixteen hun fired million of featherlesa bipeds, more or less, are picking up a living, sating and drinking, marrying and giv ing In marriage, on this pretty planet of ours; of what infinitesimal propor tion can you really unveil the secreti and gauge the virtues and the happi ness How many people do you know Intimately enough to say whether theit lot is, on the whole, enviable or th reverse? Every human being is a for eign kingdom to every other. We mak a short excursion into their minds; w touch at a port here and there; and w ay glibly that we know them intimate ly. We know not how many dark cor ners are carefully hidden away from all strangers, and what vast provinces have never been reached In our most flaring travels. How, then, can we Judge one another? Such utter ignor ance of our neighbor's thoughts and motives should make us wondrous charitable. A Heart Story. Folsom, S. Pak. In these days when so many sudden deaths are re ported from Heart Failure and various forms of Heart Disease, it will be good news to many to learn that there is a never failing reaiedy for every form of Heart Trouble. Mrs. H. D. Hyde, of this place, was troubled for years with a pain in her beait which distressed her a gi eat deal. She had tried many remedies but had not succeeded in finding anything that wonld help her until at last she began a treatment of Dodd's Kidney Pills and this very soon relieved her and she has not had a single pain or any distress in the region of the heart since. She "I rannot aav too much in praise of Dodd's Kidney Pil's. "They are the greatest heart medicine I have ever nsed. I was troubled for over thraa veara with a severe rain in mv heart, which entirely disappeared after a short treatment 01 uouu i tuuney Fills." La teat Electrical Novelty. Down near Atlantic City, N. J. there has been In successful operation for several months an experiments trolley road minus the trolley. More astonishment still there is no third rail or storage battery to be seen on this unique bit of road. Without any apparent means of obtaining the all Important electric current, motor cars will draw a 200,000-pound load on this road. Of course, the secret of it all lies in the application of a new sys tem. Every sixteen feet a point of connection is established midway be tween the rails where a metal button projects above a box through which passes the powerful current carried along wires In a subway. A person might step on this button and one of the rails at the same time and not receive a shock, but, as the car passes over, a powerful magnet underneath attracts the button and in raising It establishes the circuit which supplies the motor with enough of the essential fluid to propel the car along the six teen feet of track to another point of contact The saving of expenses in Installation and maintenance over that of the old systems, the freedom from overhead wires which so seri ously interfere with the fighting of flres In the cities, and the immunity from fata! shocks which It insures are factors which will no doubt bring about its rapid adoption. Conflicting Evidence. The Widow I wonder why Minerva was called the goddess of wisdom? The Bachelor I'robably because she wasn't foolish enough to marry. The Widow Then why was Solomon, who had a thousand wives, called the wisest man? TBtDC MARX For Rheumatism I Neuralgia Sprains Lumbago Bruises BacKache Soreness Sciatic Stiffness Use tha old reliable remedy St. Jacobs Oil Frie. 93c. avnd 0Oc Itaei tun ail itu mils. set Couah Sirup. Testae Uood. Dee la time, oom nraraw 'fetfNScience jjfVention VsrrAssrNsa Gravel will shrink eight per cent; gravel and sand, nine per cent; clay and clay earths, ten per cent; loam and light aaudy earths, twelve per ceut These figures are useful In making estimates for such work. Among the Innumerable experi ments with llauld atr two are particu larly curious. A ball of India rubber Immersed in it becomes as brlttlo as glass, but a ball of lead, in the same circumstances, acquires elasticity, ana will rebound like rubber. French statistics show that a total of 238,703 borse-power from the falls of the Alps Is now used for generating electricity. The electric power serves the following: Aluminum works, 22, S3fl horse-power, other metallurgical factories 20.4S5; chlorate of potassium works, 9,000; calcium carbide works, nu 4iltl: sodium chlorate works, 13.- 300: transmission of power aud light ing, 38,727; various Industries, 19,989. It is renorted from Johannesburg that a new and unexpected source of wealth has been discovered in the ter ritory of the late Boer republic. Near the eastern border of the Transvaal, on the edce of the lofty South Africau plateau, three valuable lodes of tin ore have been found, and the deposits are apparently so extensive that predic tions are heard that the new colony may prove to be as rich in tin and copper as it is already known to be in gold. The human body changes its tem perature very slightly under any con ditions of heat or cold, but a Russian naturalist finds that the body tempera ture of insects is practically that of the armnanhere. It usually rises more slowly than the air, though more rap idly when the air is very moist. nen the Insect begins to move, the temper ature rises rapidly, and may reach about S3 degrees C. (102.2 degrees Below 0.5 degrees C. Insects remain motionless, and the wings are not moved until the temperature reaches about 12 degrees C. The latest new form of dirigible bal loon, invented by L. J. Andersen, of London, has two elongated gas-bags of the same shape and site placed side by side, like the two hulls of a cata maran boat The car is suspended beneath, being equally supported by both balloons, and the driving pro peller is placed behind their rear ends, and half-way between them. In expe rimenting with a model having nat ion, urn feet long, the Inventor finds that this form of air-ship pos sesses advantages in steering and in maintaining a straight course. He is constructing a full-sized apparatus with balloons 70 feet long, to be driTen b a 50-horse-power electrlct motor. After forty years of agitation, led by Liverpool merchants, the British government has Just sanctioned the use of a weight of fifty pounds In place of the standard 'hundredweight" (112 pounds), and "half-hundred-welgbt" (fifty-six pounds). The re form was demanded because the im mense quantities of cotton, corn, to bacco and other American products landed at Liverpool were calculated by the sellers in pounds, while the buyers were compelled to reckon in "hundred weights," which did not represent the number of pounds that the name Im plies. It is claimed that the reform will save a great amount of time and labor and prevent many errors. It Is also regarded as an entering wedge for the Introduction of the decimal system In England. QUEER USES FOR CEILINGS. Men Have Employed Them aa Bnbatt tatea for Savings Banks. Some time since a Liverpool gentle man died, as it was thought. Intestate. No will could be found, and the next of kin had already entered into pos session when the decorators, in whose hands the deceased's old house had been placed for renovation, came across the long-sought-for document, pasted on the library ceiling, where it had been hidden from view by a layer of paper, which had been placed there by the eccentric testator himself. The celebrated Beau Brummel, dur ing th first yeara of his exile, while yet his fame as a dandy was pre eminent, had the ceiling of his bed room covered with mirrors, so that even while at rest be could study ele gance and assume a graceful pose. For such a purpose a glass celling Is, How ever, not unique, and the notorious duchess of Cleveland had such anoth er constructed to gratify her vanity. For a far different reason did a cer tain Yorkshire gentleman of the last century, mentioned by Mrs. Gaskell In tor "Life of Charlotte Bronte," have hi ceiling paneled with mirrors. Ar dently devoted to the sport of cock fighting, he continued to the last to enjoy bis favorite pastime, and even when on his deathbed his room was the scene of many an exciting fight, which, lying on bis back, he saw re flected In the glass overhead. Another invalid whose tastes were certainly more aesthetic was a gentle man who died lately at Munich. Con fined for many months to bis bed, he gratified his love for art by having his celling papered and covered with his most treasured pictures, which he In his younger days bad acquired. These were changed from time to time for others in his collection, which In tbclr turn were contemplated with delight by the crippled connoisseur as he lay stretched on bis couch of pain. During a police case heard a year back at Tottenham the prosecutrix told the magistrate that she bad taken the prisoner In out of charity and bad per mitted her to remain. This the pris oner denied, saying that she paid 2s Cd a week. "You only paid 2s," re torted the other, "and that Is marked on the celling." This novel idea of converting a celling Into a rent book evoked a roar of laughter In court An eccentric Brighton pedagogue was wont to use the celling of bis schoolroom as a blackboard. It was covered with a casing of blackened and polished wood on which the domi nie, by means of a long, chalk-pointed rod, nsed to draw geometrical figures, and diagrams while discoursing on thi subtleties of Euclid. This unusual pro ceeding was but the practical appli cation of a quaint theory of his thai the elevation of the pupils' eyes in duced sharpness of Intellect Much annoyed at the barefaced man ner In which the photos of his frlendi and acquaintances that were scattered In profusion about hit rooms, were ap propriated by his many visitors, a gen tleman well known In Parisian eocletj hit upon the Ingenious device of hav ing them affixed to the ceilings of hli flat. Three large rooms are thus deco rated, and that callers, should they desire, may obtain a clear view of the portraits, opera glasses of special con struction are supplied. When In ISM Mile. Forrester gave a dance at her house In Paris the celling of the ballroom was so constructed that at given Intervals It discharged upon the dancers a fine rain of white rose, cherry blossom, Jockey club and othr scents. This pleasing surprise was likewise prepared for his guests by a wealthy Kusslan nobleman, who, however, heightened the effect by hav lng the ceiling exquisitely painted with the flowers whose essences descended unon those beneath. Loudon Tlt-Blts. HOW ZOOS GET WILD ANIMALS. Bait Used by Hecrnltlusj Agents and Travelers. Getting recruits for the aoologlca parks Is not by any means the easiest thing In the world, though tne autuori ties themselves do not bear much ol the trouble In this connection. Th work is mainly done by travelers anil natives of countries from which tin wild beasts come, from whom the varl ous loologlcal societies of the world buy. except when the purchases are made from professional wild bean! dealers. Some of the latter employ regular re crultlng ageuts, whom they send out whenever they receive orders which they cannot execute with stock they have In hand. If the park authorlttei order an African Hon of a dealer and the dealer has not a suitable beast on hand recruiting Hons in Africa begins at once and continues until a good specimen has been obtained. The different methods by which the various wild animals are captured lu their native state are interesting. Lions are geuerally caught by being tempted to thrust their heads tnrough nooses ol strong cords composed of twisted hides. Pieces of meat are used for bait, but frequently the hunters have many days of hard chasing before the lion can be persuaded to try the noose. When he does the cords are pulled quickly around bis throat, stifling him and other stout cords are then bound around hit legs. Restoratives are then administered to revive the animal whose efforts to free himself from the noose have brought on exhaustion, and he Is carried away and put In a special ly constructed cage for shipment Tigers are more savage than Hons and can rarely be captured when full grown. Recruiting is accordingly car ried on among the cubs, the parent tigers being killed and the young, left without protectors, being easily caught The cubs readily accustom themselves to captivity. Perhaps the most difficult of all wild animals to capture Is the giraffe, says the New York Times. In addition tc being very rare, giraffes are exceeding ly timid and are very swift-footed There Is no special way to capture a giraffe, as almost every way has been tried, and all have been almost equally unsuccessful. The method which has occasionally resulted In a capture Is by using a long cord, at each end of which is a round weight This cord Is thrown by the hunter in such a manner as to wind around the animal's legs, either bringing It to the ground or rendering It incapable of escaping before It Is made a prisoner. Most of the giraffes In captivity have been caught by chance when young. A House Divided. Most persons have had the expert ence of walking with a friend out of step and trying to shift Just at the moment when the friend also makes the attempt. This Is an Instance of thwarted harmony much like that which appears In a story, told by V. C, of an elder v eounle. They were cnim less, and had never been united by the bond of other lives linked witn ineir own. So they were always In a state of well-bred disagreement fin tha aublect of meals they dls aoreed thorouehly. and each usually suggested a dish for the Sunday dinner nrhinh tiiA other did not approve. Cue Saturday the man came home from market with a basket "You needn't worry about to-mor rw'i dinner anv more. Maria. I've irnt it." "And so have I. George. You were an undecided T-n,iiciiMi? I told vou want I wanted." "Well, I mean you didn't decide as t did. So I bought a goose "Why, so have I. I told you I'd like a nuuu) "Well, now we are agreed for once anvwav." "Yes, and I suppose we'll have cold goose and stewed goose for the next two weeks." They relupsed Into their usual si Sunday forenoon the wife asked, "Do you want a little quince in the apple sauce with your goose i "Ynnr troose. vou mean." "No .1 don't. It seemed so absurd to have two geese In the house that I aont mine to Aunt Jane. "WhutI I sent mine to Uncle Joe!' DreaeiMl for a Iionir Walk. Mrs. Malaprop I walked twenty A ta mlloa veetardnv. Mr. Parlormop Did you wear a ped- nmAtflrl Miss Malaprop Oh, no, Indeed Just a short skirt Harvard Lampoon. Temporary Opinion. The Fiancee The Idea of bis think ing that be Is unworthy of me. The Confidante Yes, but you need n't argue the matter with blm. He'll discover bis error in time. Brooklyn Life. Some women have so much powder on them that kissing them must laste ; like the first bite in a biscuit Ayers If your blood Is thin and Im pure,you are miserable all the time. It Is pure, rich blood that Invigorates, strengthens, refreshes. You certainly know Sarsaparilla the medtclne that brines food health to the home, the only medicine tested and tried for 60 years. A doctor's medicine. - I owe my Me. without ttonM. to A?er't SnrHirlM. II l the Hunt wonilerfiil mull, eloe to llie wrt,l for neivnimuf . Mv cure Is tirmaii'o.nil I i-Hlitiol limns iiiiMKli. Mll. 1U4 MoWKlX, Newark. N.J. 1 00 twill. MX .!, ,. 1st. for Poor Health ... I - -J . .. DillM AMOH nlRht greatly aid the Sarsaparilla. Cp-tifttate Mngatlne Work. Hack Writer How would you like an article on Solomon' Magazine Kdltor First rate, If you can only furnish a complete set of por traits of his wive. Somervlllo (MusaJ Journal. How's This? .... 1I..h.Im. IL.II.N Tlow.nl f,ir no mrr ....mil... anr case ot l eiarrh that cauuol be oil re J bj lull's Catarrh .lit. , , F. J. chunky tt lo., crops., loieno, . e, mn uiiiivi.kiiv.i, ..... v -. Cheney tor tha lat li jrare, ami heliere hint wnVUT Hitm'.wi'm lions and flliemially able to carry out auy ul- W asr Jt Turn. h,leale I'rUKlits.Tolnlo.O. w.LniN.i. kiNKAM Ji Mjkitvix. holnal Uruc- (t-U, Toledo, . , 1IKU 1 1 utrrn i. la.vi, ....... - lK iltrei'ily uiwn tha blood ami uiueous sur lt,gi o( in )iem. l'Moe ;,e. ir bolua, SoWt by all UrtiKKiais. Tciitmntilala true. l.lltlB Willie. Willie Mr. Oldboy, why do they say yon are iu your second chiMliood? Mother Willie! Willie Oh. I know: it's becauae you are biiMhesded, just like baby Dick. Uoston Transcript. IMso'i Cure U a good coueh nedlelna. It has cured coughs and colds for forty yeara. At drupKnts, cents. It All Depends. "They tell me," said the youth, "that men who work live longent. lo you believe it?" "Well," remarked the sage, "it clo penda a good deal on who tlu-y try lo work." riTA Permanently urea nonuoroarroaanaal II I V after llrKtiUy'iuwofDr-KUne'iUraatNerva Rtnlorer. Hentl for Frea9 trial botlleand treatlaa, Dr. U- U. Kline. I.l.l.-W.' 4 nil ML. I'blladelBUla, ra Something Alike. "Why Is a kiss over the telephone like a straw hat'" Because neither one Is felt," re marked Mr. Wise. And then the old maid was heard to remark that current events wero certainly shocking. Brooklyn Eagle. Mother will flnl Mrs. Winslows's Boot tins; Byrup the bait remedy touwlor their cMldrea during; the teething sirlod.. ti. - .:.!.... np l, 1nnt.n. 1 dorra, in the ryrenevs, gets tha smallest salary paiu oy any cmuzeij government. It is only $15 a year, and he thinks of asking for a ten per ceut increase, which would make it S 10.50. -Keelev liquor-morphinc-tobacco ,tjre rUBITS rtftMANtNTlY C f OS FULL rSTICUlAJ wirnitYmirmiif.- fesTnno.es r Eight relatives of Premier Sedden of New Zealand drnw on an average of 5J5.fSX each in salary from tbs gov ernment. Perries Pile Specific Th INTERNAL REMCDY Ho Uu EkUU It Will Not Car HOWARD L BUFTON, Assaf and ChfmUt hpftiiuen pnr-. ..old. Hijver, ,, l ; t.oM, H Tr.7ic: (.old. fK;Zlneorroir.t I. t nl. trtnti tll!ltaT nvHorafes Mti full prtct 111 Mttit on uppllftv tlon. Con fro! n! Cmrrlr work millt'ltril. !,ett Till, t'olo, j tfre ri-n t arDoriaia -Nan liana IQ J CAN EARN $25.00 PER DAY Q tttnj- Water, ( I ar Coal with At SUN WELL DRILLS Ma le 1 1 all liei anl style.. Write fur Cala liicm an l U.l ol liners In the neat. Beall I Co. H13 Commer cial llloek. PORTLAND, OKB. BUY PROM YOUR DCAUCR W. L. DOUGLAS 84.00, 83.50, 83.00, 82.50 UNION SHOES 'AT IN MAUI WORLD. W.L. Douglas Bhoes are worn by more men than any other make. J no reason 1h, they hold their Hliape,iltlxjtter,wear longer, and have trreatcr intrinsic value than any other shocH. Bold imumhtn. . V .... l. r., hums mmA .', iin l.i.l I una . lluuicl Corona. flollakln, which la everywhere. concedm! tolMitli lineal Talent Leather yet prod need, fait Color t itHtl uui. HlKies bt niHll.jr. evnls lr. Wrtle fur Caution. W. JL. DOUOLAM. Wrucktou, Mass. P. N. LI. Ho. 18-1004. WHSEK writing to advertisers mention tbla papar. ptMsaj O H TUB or .a. ' ... uSrlV AV STORY Or THE MUFfc Once Its Color Betokened tbs Rank ol tha Wearer. "Do you kuow that the color of a muff once betokened the rank of the wearer?" said a furrier to a riumtiei phla Kocord wan as he stroked a beau tiful sealskin muff. "In the ot Charles IX. no lady could have worn this fur, for black was decreed by the King to bo the badge of the common people and the court followers were restricted to the colors. "Muff have gone through more styles tlmn It would seem possible to Invent for such a simple article of convenience.- It has been long and nar row, like a sheaf, ami. again, hrg and round, At the beginning of last century the test of slue wits to try the muff In a flour barrel. If U went In without much trotib'e then that mtiir was too small to be really fashionable. At the present tiny almost any thing is proper, but those enormous cylinders would certainly draw much attention. One of the most curious styles was that of Louis XI V culled tlio vinous inunctions,' because, they were made to convey little dogs lu. "The muff w hen tlrst Introduced wa the exclusive property of the nobility and originated lu Venice. These mult were very small and consisieu oi a single piece of velvet, brocade or Uk, lined with fur and the opening ins tilled with rich Jewel. Su.h arrange ineiits came In during the early part of the seventeenth century , but In the previous century the ladle froim-nty carried a piece of rich fur, which they used either as a muff or a neck piece. The muff reached It highest l'ui lu the reign of Louis XV.. when the productions were exc,ulslte. Then fnahlon declared for a cloth muff In stead of fur, and the furriers made a great uproar. They petitioned the l ops to excommunicate tne wearer vi. Kith muff, but to uo purpose, r many ttitri.iiloiia merchant bribed the headsman to carry a clotn intitr on execution day. The women unrans from such association and the fur won the day. We now associate tne mure only with cold weather, hut In the old days It was a regular part of woman's dress and was carried lu all weather. Aa lata as 1S30 a muff ami a straw bonnet were not deemed Incongruous." Havage Atlilelea. In this ago of athletics one might think that no peoplo ever showed so much lutcreat In feats of muscular might and skill as those who have per fected football; but modem games, and even the games of the (ireek at Olyiu pis, may have been more than match ed by the sports of peoples who sro now held In little esteem. A writer on the Canary Islands gives an account of their athletic training which makes even the college giants of to day aeetu weak and effeminate. ( Tho Canary Inlands were subjected by Hjialn about the time Columbus dls - covered America. The conquest was due solely to the superiority of Kuro- pean weapons, and not to better skill and prowess. The native noldiers were trained athletes, developed under a system which held athletic sports sn Important business, like military drill. Spanish chronicles hnve left us ac counts of the sports of the Inlanders. From babyhood tliey were trained to be brisk In self defense. As soon as they could toddle the children were pelted with mud balls, that they might learn how to protect themselves. When they were loys stones and wooden darts were substituted for the bits of clay. In this rouuh school they acquired the rudiments of warfare which en abled them, during their wara with the Spaniards, to catch In their hands the arrows shot from their enemies' cross-bows. After the coniiiot of the Canaries a native of tho Island was seen at Seville who, for a shilling, let a man throw at him as many stones as he pleated from a distance of eluht paeet. Without moving his left foot lie avoid ed every stone. Another native used to defy any one to hurl an orange at him with so great rapidity that bo couid not catch It. Three men tried this, each with a dozen ornnges, and the Islnnder caught every orange. As a further teat, he hit his antagonists with each of the oranges. Fishhook actus. Many a traveler In desert landi, when In (lunger of dying from thirst, has been saved by the plant known at the water or fluhhook cactus, sayt the New York Cominerclnl. During the moist season It stores up a large quan tity of water for the subsequent dry one, when sll the ground Is parched with heat and only channels filled with stones nmrk the course of former rivu lets. Ho well has this cactus provided for the safety of Its precious liquid that It Is no ciiy timk to obtain It The exterior skin Is more Impenetra ble than the toughest leulher, and, be sides, It Is protected with long, wiry spines curved Into books at the end, yet so strong and springy that If a large rock be thrown ngiiliint them they remain uninjured. If the spines be burned off one may, by long and tedious effort, cut through the rind wiui a nioui Kim:; oiucrwiHe nothing but an axe will enable them to get at the Interior of this woll-nrmored plant W hen the top Is removed and a hol low made by scooping out some of the soft Inner part It Immediately fills with water, cool and refreshing, though a blistering sun may Imve been beating upon ma toiign ski n shove It nil day. xiie wilier, win-ii iinn oniiiineu, nut it whitish or smoky tint, hut when set tled Is as clear as crystal. Doing Ilia Ile.t. "Have you ever made any effort to do your follow mun any good?" "Certainly," answered Hcnator Hor- ghum. "it Is a well-known fact that money widely distributed can accom plish but little. In order to exort lt full force and achieve great works It must be concentrated. ' "Well?" "I have been dolng my best to con centrate as much of It aa possible." Washington Klur. A Query Answered. Laura Wo have no Infallible for mula ror removing a double chin, Con sult some man who says ho can shuvs himself In the dark. Uallliuure News. A MICH IGAN Know Pc-ru-na Is Worn Out Hon. Schon of St. Joseph. MUh , ' J" grateful put tend In his count who have beta turnl by Vrw. Hon Nelson Mice, MatnrotSt. J...,.,di, Mi. lilg ribs , The I'crmia .Me.li. ino Co , t'lmulm, luu; tienltrtiien: "1 wish lo euiig.et.iUl y '" ,"' '"", 'n"rU to win the ..lldei.ee of the public in u-,l ol rtdiakle lomlicil..., I know HerJn. U . flrl. ionic for . worn mil '1 iarrhal difficulties. Vou have a largo number ot (raleful patlcrila In this county who hsv. used feruna and have been tared by II. and whi jira . ullbofe all other medklnes. I'eruna has my heartiest good wl.t..." Nclson KUe, MARCH, APRIL, MAY Weak Nerves, Poor Diges tion, Impure Blood, Depressed Spirit.. The sun has just ct.i the equator on ita vearlv trin liorlh. The leal ''equator is shilled towaid lhr north ; nearly rigi'tixm miles evety day. With the return ot tlio sun fumes tne bodily ilia 14-culiar to Mrlltg. With ; we rmn ,1B ,1(rvM ,re ,, ; anoth ! . dluealion t"f; w tttt oilier th, j,1Jot jg olll 0f l)r,i,.r . l ,ii) U, era have depressed spirits and lired (eeling. All these things sro raw;lally true ot tlioM who hevs Iwon suhVring with The Cauaa or It. "Whtl's Ilia raua of all this twaddle sIkmU elevating tha stage, I'd like to know?" "Want to get It al the level uf the women t halt, I miqKiea. BOILS PYRAMIDS OF PAIN noils show the blood it in a riotous, fcvcri.li i.Miuiuuu, or inn ii nil grown too weak and Hug. 5T:fV Kith to throw off the bodily impurities, which V V then concentrate at some t(Kt, and a carbuncle V or boil is the result. To one already enfeebled by disrate, boilt term to corne with more freoueiu v. causing the inteiueat fiain and greatett danger to the already weak and debilitated sufferer. All tkin erui.tiona, from tho sometimes fatal car buncle to the tpiteful little cat-boil, are caused by bad blood, and the only way to avoid or get prtmaiiently rid of tlicm it to purify and build up the deteriorjted, polluted blood, and counteract the humor and poisont; and nothing will do this so (juirkly and thoroughly a b. b. S., which it the acknowledged king of blood purifiers mid great est of all tonici. Where the blood ha in-como impovrri.hcd and is poor and thin, no medicine act so promptly in building up and retlof ... . ijuiiiy aim . .1. '1-1 . r . ' strength. The time to cure a boil it before it devel ops, when it it in a state of incubation or formation i- ,i. . 1 1 . in tne oiooa; lor boil are after all, only the imnuri. 5,d aood. I had but utile faith In), a. a. ties .n.l r,l. t n i- doing sua rood whan I bagaa Ii, but aflertakmt lie and poiton bubbling It for a ahort while the boil began to disappear. Up through the skin, and 1 """llnuedon with lite medicine, teklne-aia bol this will rnnlinn. tl,,n,l""''OtlBtlratydlaappaarad. Five inis Wl I continue in spite ..n b.t. elap.ed em, e thai Urn., and I bava poulticing and lancing "" till the blood get. rid of th'.VoU u accumulated no i son entirely ne way to tlon mill ! ou. to attack them in the .blood, and this is what S. S. S does. All danger of boil 1 pott when the blood has been thoroughly purified and tho system cleansed of all mor bid, impure matter. If you are tubject to boil, then the itme cause that produced them lutt teuton will do to this, and tho sooner you begin young, , ., . , .....,, Trim imicit Biuciy oy on. n,t" and Without harm . j'ii ..- .....r. v. I. :t.i j . . . . . . anu pieatant in it. action, a. .urcu eruption.. Write u if you information. THE SWIfT Hi aiav. imve tne Uee l.ino " Hoad Wagons. acK,,,,tH?rl.1.ltJU, U,JW, HTAVIJR CC. HtOK AINIt - Ilr-miut-iwai "HATTUH MAYOR SAYS a Fine Tonic for a System. catarrh In sny firni or la grippe. A f-Hirtat of IVruna Is sura lo correct alt tbeiw conditions. It It an Ideal epiing mtHlli liie. IVmtia dor not irritate it Invigorates it atrcitgthen. It rqusllwa the rtrctiUlion ol the blood, tranqulliara the nervous system and regulates the ltdy (iltirlinna, 1'ertl. na, unlike so many spring meJU lnr is nut simply a pbyaie or ailmulatil or nervine. It is a natural tonic and In vlgotalor. 11 you do nt rwtdv prompt and t Win. t.iry rroulla Ir.mi Hie tiae id 1'rru na, write si once to I'r. Ilartman, giv ing dill statement of yur rat, and lie will twi plrae-d In gi you hie valu able advice gratis. Addrraa I'r. Ilarlmsn, 1'rrenloiil ol The Ilartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Hl.iu. ) Jarring an A. tor, ' "What did j"U think of mj deals Irene " asked lha a-tr. I "Well. It seemi) lo m ll rune a lilt! ino lata In Iks piece." was the reply. 1 hksjo l.rcnlii rust. I 1 1 1 .... Allegheny, r., Jan II, luOil. Tromth of twenty or llurtir I was earelf anieud wit large, awful bolls on toy rae and body. Aa soon aa they wonld heal up In one plee they wouU kraak out la another part of lue liody, nd thle continued for ten rears. I tried every trtlna 1 eauld ria&r r mm. .ellef hut BOlhlne bothered alnoa, eliowloa that the euro aaenl. I had eome thirty ar forty of ost painful bolls one a ever had. and lo he rid of them by your great purifier. .. but me under a debt of a-ratttna to hs mbv zinN. to put your blood and system In goon order the better tho chunce of going through the spring and summer season without boil or other painful and irri tating skin eruption. S. S. S. U guar anteed purely vegetable, and can bo tL- r . -r.... i t.l n,l niuai ucncnio coiittiiiition. and uneou.led .. c,.rB for boil, and would like medical advice or other SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, CA, "BEE LINE" BUGGIES Ar not Bianulaeturers regular construction, km Our Own Special Construction Tut up with full knowledge ot the re lulreii ts ol thi rough western coun try. Made to stand up, and will stand up, Indler than any buggy sold at any thing like the, price). If ymi want K'exi iniKgy ni a uioiioralo price, try "r " lien I,ln." You can't beat It. Wo It O I Hit