Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (July 29, 1904)
H ood Sarsaparilla is unquestiona bly the greatest blood and liver medicine known. It positively and permanently cures every humor, from Pimples to Scrofula. It is the Best. Blood Medicine. Bnrgory In High FaYor. Not 10 many year ago surgical oper ations wers generally regarded by the public as a moans of last resort, and were submitted to only when tbe pa tient or his family was advised that no other escape was open far the suf ferer. Frequently the sick man was in extremes when he went under the sur geon's knife, and It is asserted by med ian men that the large mortality in a given number of operations was due ' to this faot tn tills way the popular fear of going through these ordeals was Increased, the surgeons generally being held responsible for the fatal outcome. To-day there is less fear of the knife, and statistics show that the mortality is far less. This Is attributed by the profession to the advanced views now held and what may be termed the greater popularity of surgery. Of course, a most potent contribution to this condition of affairs Is the more ex tensive knowledge possessed by the modern surgeon and his greater skill. But there Is another source from which help comes; that is, that cases requir ing the services of surgeons are not de layed until the last minute, when the patients are so exhausted or they can not stand the shock they must neces sarily sustain. To-day it is appreciated by all stu dents of the ills to which flesh is heir that if the knife Is to be used the soon er it is done the better; just as every body knows that If a disease is to be checked the sooner medicine Is admin istered the better. And to this view of the matter the doctor and the surgeon have gradually educated the people. This accounts for the popularity of sur gery and for the material diminishing of the death rate of persons passing under the knife. Baltimore Herald. An Important renounce. Caller Well, the nerve of that! Merchant What? Caller Didn't you hear that snip of a boy referring to you as "Bill 7" Merchant "Sh! That's our office boy. So long as I can pretend I didn't hear him it s all right Philadelphia ledger. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little Liver PUls. Must Bear Signature of See Facsimile Wrapper Bttow. Try lull mm as eaar to take as sagas. TOM HEADACHE. FOR DIZZINESS. FOR IIUOUSIESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR C0MJT1PATI0R. FOR SALLOW SUM. FOR THECOMPLXXIOR I Purely ettaMe-fas6e CURE SICK HEADACHE. M - J ' IKVW tle greate6t courge CARTERS! I n ITT! T MP' Elooa 1 oison. une arop oi me virus oi iuis iuudi horrible of all diseases will pollute and vitiate the purest, healthiest blood, and within a short time after the first little sore appears the system is filled with tho awful poison and the skin breaks out in a red rash ; the glands of the groins swell, the throat and mouth become ulcerated, the hair and eyebrows drop out, and often the entire surface of the body b covered with copper-colored splotches and sickening sores and erup tions. Contagious Blood Poison is as treacherous and elusive as the serpent. You may be carrying it in your veins with no visible evidences of its existence ; for while . . . , , ' , After snfferlna twelve years mercury and potash seem from oontagioas Blood poison, to cure and all external ?J aad tryin the best yhystoiana ,. , ,. Tlgaa. f-fTk obtain bio, and ail the patent Bigns disappear, the 018- A&9LfU tuedioines procurable, and stead, ease 18 doing its destine- r5'V'J liT eontinoins- to grow worse, I .. , . fswll no all hope of recovery, and live work Wltllin, or the (BCQ0i physicians pronounced my case patient is constantly irJSfSSni incurable. Hoplna; ag-ainet hope, fj v, rf, ,, Olfl I tried 8. S. 8. I improved from harassed by returning 'gfcssssg the first bottle, and after taking symptoms and unmistaka- twelve i cured sound and i,t- r i-t-j well, and tor two years have had ble traces of the blood MfrtBTm0.twtomrtU.TU. ,.... poison. 1 ho US andS Of Warsaw, M.O. H. M. BEGIBTES. physical wrecks and chronic invalids from the effects of Blood Poison know the uncer. tainty of the mercury and potash treatment that it stifles but does not kill the 6erpent. As long as there is life in the serpent there is danger in its fangs; and while your blood is tainted there is danger of infec tion. Safety lies only in crushing out the life of the loathsome disease and killing the serpent. For many years S. S. S. has been known as en antidote for Blood Poison. It is a remedy composed entirely of vegetable ingredients, and we offer $1,000 for proof that it contains Write us about your case, and our physicians will advise with out charge, and we will mail you free our home-treatment book tell ing all about Contagious Blood Poison and its different stages and tymptoms. 17 SWIFT SPCGIF1G CO.. ATLANTA, CAs The Ttirfiry, "This health food doesn't do nny good," asserted the Irate, customer. k Torhaps you ova; rloaked the ttrst rule relating to Its use," suggested the grocer " i v ' -What's thatr ."First get your health. Tou don't seem to understand the theory of it. Tou wouldn't get dog biscuit uuless you had a dog, would you J" ; -No." '.;' Or birdseed unless you had a bird?" No," . ., - ; - Then what are you ftolng with health food before you get health!" "But if I had health I wouldn't need If "Well, that's your lookout Proved Beyond a Doubt. , Middlesex, N. Y., July 25. (Spec ial) That Rheumatism cau be cured has been proved beyond doubt by Mrs. Betsey A. Clawaon, well known here. Vhat Mis Ciawton had Kbeu matism and had it bad, all her ac quaintances know. They also know she is now cured. Pcdd's Kidney Tills did it. Mrs. Clawson tells the story of her cure as follows: "I was an invalid for most five years caused by Inflammatory Rheumatism, helpless two-thirds ol the time. The first year I could not do as much as- a baby could do; then I rallied a little bit and then a relapse. Then a year ago the gout set in my hamls and feet. I raftered untold agony and in August, 1903, when my husband died I could not ride to the grave. "I only took two boxes ol Podd's Kidney Pills and in two weeks I could wait on myseli and saw my own wood. I dug my own potatoes and gathered my own garden last fall. Podd's Kid ney Pills cured me." Rheumatism is caused by uric acid in the blood. Dodd's Kidney Pills put the Kidneys in shape to take all the uric acid out of the blood. Does It pay to save 6t per cent of your income by eeononitrin- on your vacation this year and brenk down next year from Che continued strain and be obliged to pay 60 per cent for doctor's bills, besides the time lust in enforced idleness 1 Success. rTQ PwnuraU7i.md. woataaroanrooanass flltf lttllltilil.r'lllKirDT.KlIK'lllmlNm BMtom. Bol tor FmSt Irtalbom.and treaulaa, Sr.K. H. kum. Lid., at: Aid o. MniaJaijuua, i- As Explained. Benson Why does your friend Miir glea always carry his watch in the rear pocket of his trousers? , Dawson Oh, he's a crank on punctu ality. Benson But what has that fit to do with carrying his watch as aforesaid? Dawson Why. it enables Uitn to al ways show np s little ahead of time. Wnthsra will find Kit. Winslows't Soothing gyrap the hoi remedy ton w far their children Gettlns a Likeness. City Editor What's the matter? " Art Editor Matter enough. I've got no picture of Blazeawayskl, the great Russian general, who's Just reached the front City Editor Oh, well, borrow the Janitor's wig and photograph it These Russian generals are all whiskers. Philadelphia Bulletin. For forty year's Piso's Cure for Con sumption has cured coughs and colds. At druggists. Price 25 cents. A count of the church and saloon at tendance in Paddington. a district of London having a population of 14'J (. made by agents of W. T. Stead on a re cent Sunday, showed that the saloon at tendance was the greater by ten to one. Only 16.000 women attended church, while 28.000 were found in saloons. Lwkeeley LKtxxM40ftPHi he-tobacco llWrSS HABITS PERMANENTLY CURECi a FOA FULL. ARTKUIAR5 M"nUTgTTTOTr.- POH.TLS.NP.OSIC Blessed Be Business. The ladies of the club were closely grouped about the speaker of the aft ernoon, a remarkably successful wom an, in whom commercial and literary ability were admirably balanced. "Tell us, Jn a few words, how to be successful," said one of the ladies, in sistently. "To be successful," said the success ful one, "all we women have to do is to make as much of a business of our own business as we do of the things that are none of our business.' ,L THE 1 J Lm 1rMMmn am1 t0 tbe human ra5", is Contagious the least particle of mercury, potash or other mineral. It thoroughly purifies the blood, improves the appetite and diges tion, and tones up all parts of the system. I In chronic and long-standing cases of f Blood Poison, S. S. S. acts promptly and ' without leaving any bad after-effects. Krromango Is out of the larger la lands of the New Hebrides, from which were formerly brought large quantities of sandalwood. The care lessness of the natives In protecting the forests reduced the product, until now there Is very little valuable wood on the island. Iter. n. A. Roberteou, In "Erromango, the Martyr Isle," gives a brief history of the sandalwood trade. The EtTomangans for generations used the sandalwood as they would any other, for fuel, and bad no idea of its value until foreigners came and asked for It, The only price that was at Brst given was a small bit of hoop Iron, from three to four inches In length, and tbla for a great boat load of wood. The savages were greatly taken with the iron, for by sharpening It on a stone and fastening it to a piece of wood they made themselves rough, light hatchets. Before that they had nothing but their ancient Imple ments of stone with which to work. Netal, the great chief Netal, of Cook's Bay. used to delight to tell me of the olden times on Erromango, nud how slow were the methods of cutting trees for their houses and cano-.'S. Every tree had to be burned at the base, and when that was done there still remained the slow work of hack ing with stone axes to sever it from the stump. Such was the early Erroman gan method of hewing wood, and tho sandalwood had to be cut In this way. The ships carried great lengths of hoop-Iron bound together. Amid the labble of voices from swarms of naked, painted savages clamoring for their pay, and the confusion and shout ings that arose as the huge logs were swung lnU place, there could be heard the click of the hammer as it struck the anvil; the Iron was being cut Into the coveted lengths. After the logs were burned and cut down, they were carried to the bay on men's shoulders. "The biggest logs had to be dragged down the rocky mountain tracks. At the present time the sandalwood tree, once so plentiful, is fast disap pearing, and there is little to remind one that sandalwood once grew on every hill and clustered In every val ley of Erromango. In appearance the hark, which Is rough and of a light-brown color. Is somewhat like that of the cherry tre The narrow leaves, which are of a rich green tint and smooth, shiny sur face, are not more than three Inches tn length. There Is no odor until the tree Is cut. and the young limbs have none at all. It Is said that unless the bark la removed the wood loses the sweet scent and becomes valueless. It Is almost Impossible now to secure a fairly good specimen. Intertribal wars. as well as the traders, have helped to destroy die tree, and the habit that natives have of setting fire to every thing and anything has nearly complet ed the ruin. NOT WHAT IT USED TO BE. Traffic on the Miaalaaippl Ilaa Experi enced a Decline in Kecent i'eara. The best days of the Mississippi River traffic are long since past, and the scenes that once endeared that stream have apparently gone never to return. The best year for steamboat busi ness on the Mississippi Is said to have been the one immediately before the outbreak of the Civil War. says Mr. Chittenden In the World To-day. Dur ing that conflict until the North gain ed control of the river, commercial boating below the mouth of the Ohio waa broken up entirely. On the Mis souri a new source of business sprang np in the early years of the war by the discovery of gold at the bead waters of that stream. Then began that most remarkable episode In the history of river navigation, the send ing of cargoes from tit Louis to the base of the Rocky Mountains, more than 2,000 miles distant and bait a mile vertically upward. Long before the steamboat business on the Mississippi and Its tributaries had reached Its maximum the forces which were to accomplish its ruin had begun to operate. The beginning of practical railroading followed many years after that of steamboatlng, but when It once got well under way its progress and development rapidly out stripped those of Its older rivals. Here was a steam engine that could go with Its load anywhere. It did not have to follow water courses. It could climb mountains If they were in its way. It could serve the Inland town as well as the river port Its speed was four times or more that of the steamboat It was not put out of commission by the winter's Ice, but served the public the year round. Clearly, the steamboat stood little show In its struggle with a rival like this. For many years, from one cause and another, the boats held their own; but finally the railroads got the up per hand, and their vast development In tho twenty-five years following the Civil War practically drove the steam boat business from the rivers. The commercial Interests of the country have always looked with re gret upon the disappearance of the steamboat There is a deep-rooted conviction that our rivers have some value In the commercial economy of the country, as regulators of freight rates If nothing more, and there has been a strenuous effort to maintain active navigation. There is a hopeful belief tljat the future will see tho rivers again teeming with boats, as they do in Russia, Austria and France. But the logic of statistics is against it Making at Irfiaet One Kiceptlon, Customer Do you keep fur caps? Fresh Clerk No, sir; we sell in. rustomer Not always, my friend You may keep one that you might have sold to mo. Good-day. Philadelphia. Press. .. .... It is too bad that there Isn't somu wav for always having a girl baby lust three years old lit the family. Beware of keyholes. It was Eve's dropping that' caused Aduin's downfall. 1 ers Falling hair means weak hair, j Then strengthen your hair; feed It with the only hair food, Ayer's 1 lair Vlfor. It checks falling hair, makes the hair Hair Vigor grow, completely cures dan druff. And It always restores color to gray hair, all the rich, Q dark color of early life. M tislr Milne n n t fmid I wonM U. Hail. Tlwn !,,rJ Rutin.' K. ALLUi, fclUlHilti. N.J. fl Matmtll. j. o inn ov. for 1 -i ... Falling Hair Modesty K plained. Foreigner Many of )u Americans have diatiiiKtiisliril ancestors, yet )uu never mention them. Why Is tlmtf American It's this wuy. While we are poor we are ashamed to boast, und when we get rich we duu't uccJ ances tor. $100 Reward, $100. The readers ot this paver will I r-leswd to Irarn that Ihrrt la at W-t ou ilrrailtnt ,11.0a. tttal actonce has nell nMe to t-tirv in all its a-M, and that ta t'aiarrh. Ilatl a Catarrh cure l mo only poaltwo vuie iiionn 10 he mJti-al fraternity. Catarrh twin a con.tliu lumal dlxaw. rftstre cuiiimuili'iol treat ment. Haifa Catarrh Curttitakn internally, actiaf dlr.ctly uiwb lh Uoott sad uiuroua lurfacotol theiyiiem, thervtiy dVatioyins (he (ounJallon ot th diarSM, and sirlns thn ( tl.nl ilrensth by bnlldinit up th coti'tituliou and SMialius nature la Utln( lt work, lh urunrUtor. havo au much latih lu It. curattvo iMwara that they otter One Hundred lMllars Kr any raw that it laUs tu cura. Sand fur lUt of tellmoutala. . Address. r. J. CilENKY A CO., Toledo, 0. Sold by druintiita, 7:- lialrs Family 1'Ula are the boat. Real Sport. The ticket speculator entered the pri vate otllee of the great manufacturer. "Now, sir," said the former, "let me sell you a season ticket to the baseball grouuds.' The great manufacturer shook bis bead sadly. "No," he sighed. "I'm only the boss. You'll have to see the office boy." Miss Ames Miller, of Chicago, speaks to young women about dangers of the Menstrual Period. " To Torso WonM I suffered for six years with dysmenorrhea (painful periods), so much so that I dreaded every month, as I knew it meant three or four days of intense pain. The doctor said this waadue to an inflamed condition of the uterine appendar-ea caused by repeated and neglected colds. "If young girls only rcaliwd how dangerous Ft is to tiike cold at this critical time, much suffering would be spared them. Thank Ood for Lydla K. PinktianVs Vegetable Com pound, that was the only medicine which helped me any. Within three weeks after I started to tako it, I noticed a marked Improvement in my general health, and at the time of my next monthly period the pain had diminished considerably. I kept up the treatment, and was cured a month later. I am like another person since. I am in perfect health, toy eyea are brighter, I have added IS pounda to my weight, my color is good, and I feci li if ht and happy." M tss Aokks M11.1.E B, 2S Potomac Ave.. Chicatro, III. fwoo forfeit If arlflna) of about IttM prounf gmiiln tuu tannai 1 product. The monthly sickness reflect tho condition of a woman's health. Anything uiiusunl at that time uliouhl havo prompt and proper attention. PRICES THAT TALK. Thre.l:.rmen arifl Hawmlll Mt-11 Xotet IV n. n1!-Mi Uncn hikcIm-iI. Il.-vy Cafiv.1,, 4 :y, 7 liicti lleltlnx, f-T l-'0 n. a Inch wifK Mine a. ar,ve, 1J.'HJ. Tana I'urni rmn'.li. with 1" ft. 2 Iim-Ii HiK tlolt Mu-e, 1W ft. llrh-fK" H'.a", with ael anil atratri.r, t!0..'0. )!.tliiir, Urn. and I'tw-kliitf at wli'tU-HMl. (Tire, Ueneral afm.y fur J'Knwtiiit llawk. Hlf F..,..r, l-ane iilr'Kl mill, run umy audaya, at a lHrKaln. Writ. U rcarahwa. KEIKItttOM M AOHIM-.KY t it. fUUTU.VU, UllKiiON, $5 For a Name $5 Hnd in lea or more name, of youi people with mean, lo arcure a llnalneaa Kdiiiallun and fur the S rat one that enrolla itirrhK.nK Ir.j ti ua a i ho)arlilp, w will remit you 4" lu t-aah. Addreva, Betwell Business College. Tacoma, Wash ut. uuee wo VONDERFUL HOME TREATMENT Ttm wondarfai Chi nm A:Ur If cbHmJ 0 f-sU l;rmtlM h rtirwsi yntpl-i WlttlOUt fMTsV tion lbt r i tmi up to A9, Hm rtirtMi wnb Ih'MM wonderful Ctii nctw htrr rtxilM, hndn, bark si.4 vftU ItisU ftr tntlrflr Ultr kriowa lu uis1U;fli ci- f nc ta lh oointry, Throiign iti unm o' ihw barailM mmitl ihm fitrnrrtis) ti'tcutt know llm Mtion of ftvr fi dlfTfr-n( retfn Hit, wlitrh h afWsVMfuii us) In A tlirni liswsv. ;iirntwMi to rur cttrti, swtti aift, 1'ing, tbnmt, rhffiimstlm, iirrvounfiftti, tomsv-h, llvar, kidnsjr, tci Iim humirml of lrMJmoail.il. Cbrgf nuHitntm. (nit mini tf him. Ptlnt out of th rttf wntn for blank nr cirnilard. Henil mamp, tOMHUl 1AHUH kkliitL. AUUH.ki.nH The C Gee Wo Chinese Medicine Co. tSl Aid' St.. MorllanJ, Oror CUHll Klt All lltl 1111.. It OiuA hrmp. TaaUia Owat llaa UJ in tttna. noil ny qniatfiaia. Prli m .faf.iiin.t ji.iim .KI.T.1.JIJ.1.KL THEYEEKLY J One Hundred Venrs Ago. A heavy dock duty was Imposed by the Itrltlsh goveriiinent on all ree! lu Liverpool, and Aiiierlcau ships were forcinl to pay double The Inland of Martinique was block aded and an attack was eipoctcd hourly. i'ho UaKiie sent a deputation to con srnttilato Napoleon on bis tceeaslou lo the throne of France. Tho mall sliiKe startwl runnlnit once s week from Tlilladelplila to rituhtirir. lieneral Jean Jaciiuea lirallne. of lluytl, was declared governor for life Omnibuses were Introduced Into tendon, the first one ruuuliut from raddiiiiitou to the Hauk of Kngland. All iiiUunderstandlnga lietweeu the fnltol States and Tunis were arnica hly adjusted. Seventy-five) Years Ago. iVuL'o uegotlattous between Ituatla and Turkey fell ttiroutib. each country coiitiuuliitt extensive preparations for further hostilities. Martlu Vau Bureu was nominated lu Alabama for the office of I'realdcnt of the I'nlted States to succeed lieu oral Jackson. j An auti-Masoulc convention waa ht'id ! at the capltol of the State of IVnnayl jvaiila. Thirteen counties represented uoiiiinated J. Hltner for the office of j tjoveruor. I Urltlsh and French sulijivt In Con j stantluople, durlim the absence of Ibelr ! ambasaador. were untlcr the prulec- tlun of Uie NetlierlaiitU minister, The Ilrltish and French auiltsadr were received with great distinction by the Sultan at Coustaiitli.ople. General Tolstoi, of the Ittilaii army, received orders to Join the army on the Danube, which consisted of , UUO men. fifty Years Ago. A collision ou the Susiiuelmnna Kail roml near Italtliuore. Tlnrty killed and ; a large number wounded. An American dtuen was arrested on the authority of Mcamgua on a cliaigr! of krc'ping Ui a treasonable i-orr spunilcuce with the I'laxa do Urniiud.t. Tho whole peninsula of Spalu was declared lu slate of siege. Tile lAindou Missionary Society opened Its Drat mission at Vrstignpa tain, Madras. liusalau lwtterlrs were destroyed at Sullua, the mouth of the taiiulie. Twenty-five thousand Auslrlam marched from Orsova to Wallachla to forcibly cxet-ute the treaty betwi-.-ii Austria and the Porte, and If necessary to expel tlie I til hi inns from the terri tory tliy bad selzml. Extirnslve copper fields were discov ered at Nauiaiiuiilaiiil, Cape of (iuod Hope. forty Years Ago. Ie-ausM of the repeal of the goid gambling bill gold on the New York market dropped from to Zi3. S'cretary Clnise, of the Treasury, resigned .because Congress declined to accept his piau for raising war rev enues. Rebel forces were raiding along 'he I'pper Potomac, having Invinb-d Mary laud and attacked Martlnsliurg ami ll.'iri'er's Ferry, W. Vn. The Thirty eiKhlli Congress adjourned, i'rwxltb'iit Lincoln signed the war tax bill, which. It iv ns estimated, would add f3Mi.KM.i.(HM tu the annual revenues of tho nation. Senator Feasenden aci-eptiil the Treasury portfolio left vacant by the resignation of Secretary Chase. The constitutional convention of t vada selected Nevada as the name of thn Stutc and adopted a constitution. President Lincoln Issued a proclniu.i tloti declaring the Htuto of Keutui-ky under martial law. Ihirty Years Ago. Iiy a vote of -l.'S to 01 the !lrltlli House of Commons rejected an Irish home rule measure. Over 700 Mormon converts arrived In New York from Europe, niosf of them from the Hcandlnavlun peninsula. General Custer at lilsniiirck. S. I was preparing to sturt an expi'dltlon against the Hloux Indians who were gathering near Fort Lincoln. The Count do Cliainlmnl, In Purls, Issued a manifesto dechiriug that Franco should revert to a moinm-hy and enthrone him king. Thermometers In Chicago registered 101 degrees, Illinois suffered from drought. The United H talcs demniided of Kpaln Indemnity for the Virgluliis prisoners executed In Cuba. Tho big (Eads) bridge across the Mississippi itlver at 8L Louis was opened, find dedicated. twenty Years Ago. Mine. Baruh Iternli'ardt gave a pre sentation of Macbeth at the Lyceum Theater, London, which was a lilstrluu Ic failure. Mqny Jews were killed In null Semitic riots in western Kussln and lu Algiers. A prohibition law went Into effect In Iowa, slopping the retailing of llijuor In that Htute, .- Congress passed amendments to tho Chinese exclusion act of 1882, making the law more restrictive.' V J?tJ 11 1 V - Thousands of women suffer from pelvic catarrh and calanhal nervous, oess and don't know It. If yoti feel fagged out. begin at on.etaklng Dr. Hart man's I'rruna. It w ill relieve your catarrhal aftll.tloo aad all your organs will be r.-MotoJ to Itcalth. Iluy a bottle today, as It will Immediately Blovi ate your ifl-c. Toes t'.ver Thna. Joiu It s uscis to ask Ilrown to any a word lu my favor. He baa no earthly tte for Uuv Kmitti -What s the trouble T Join 1 was ftHilUb enough to let ill tu owe uic uioncy. ; To Itreak in , Shoa. ! ttwava rV,. In 'lrn a tMtl t.aa. a it.r Itrur.. h'-t, .w.allnc, a. bins .wtl.n ft f i ur-. tvtti. ti-s'ius nail, atitl tmtttona At i all ritott-a-i.u a't,t art, l.,r-a, .'V K-n'l a!'t j anv .ittMlitut. fcarnt-!. iiiatlr-1 Hit K. A4trM AIl.li !t lliin.trO. I. Hir. N V. j Wanteil Noiiirtblng l-aa Hai-hneytMl. Mrs. It.-n b r tt" t a buok store and lit k out n for uo. I inngliirr W loti ort J Jin. 1 -.-..-!. r --Try to t, t au old faah loiovl nor.-, In wbii It the brru and lirro in are t,ir,tti--l by nu-l parents. I sui a b"!'- tirxt ut tha juuug wotnan Willi a htii- l. 4 XV'iCcl.ilili'i'rcpnMlionrorAs i slmilaiinS ittchkxlamlltetfula i liiigilicStuiiviitltsaiaiDttweliof rromole.sDistion.CU'erfui ness flml iu-.si eimt.tiiis ndilrr Opium. Morplune nor MuicxaL utNaiicotic. Itmku .War - Hi..! rWW.Suay. kakf- 'fataal Apeiftxl ncnictly rorrorwllrot tlon.Sotir Slonuv It.DinrrlaHvt fnitl Loss or Sijeei'. Fac Siiitik) Stijnfilurs of HEW YD UK. tXACT COPY Of WtURJft. ' '' ' aalTtf RUSSELL HIGH GRADE MACHINERY ENGINES r-JL BOILERS SAW MILLS I tin A. H. Averili Machinery Co., "SBiSS "DID'INT HURT A IS WHAT THEY SAY , .o ?,7,o"tr?'t 0,""rslliiiirtnih with an e nay If you tlualrs. inirayatom orpn.wn ami brldss work Is lin,,i, .tilk and paiiilsas. Kaiaiillahed In I urllaiid II yrara. "l" evritliiKs till Buinlsys from to 1J hm mop jJ lilt. W. A. M lrtU 'bone WlSIi BROS., Dentists r A UliAUTirUL, YOUNO SO CIUTV WOMAN'S LUTTOK. Bt. Paim,. Mini. 0'.'1 Wabash 8t. Ir. Ilartnian, Colnnilma, 0., DearHIrt "J took leruna last summer when I was all run down, and had a livatlsehs mi, back ache, and no ambition for any. thing, I now fml as well as ever .lid In all my lln, and all thanks Is due lo your excellent reruns."- Hess If, llvalv. The symptoms of summer ca. larrlt sr ipilta unlike Indillerviil ru.es, but the tiinatcmiiitniii ones r swimil liiolttnln, i typ,.,,ii, IIii-,I-ipiiI, uwd-iip, rtiii-duwn liwl luga, vouiblnrHl with iiuiruor !. heavy. luili. liatlaaa. meiitnl eolidllloit, Ki-liali fur iihh sinj Ilia ability lo tllgeat fnud seems to ha loU Hkln rrtiplloiis, satluw com. 1tl- S Kill , hlllOtl.liraa. COStnl ,niiie, llllltl, IrrTgular i., livlp lo roiiiplote the piiltu li it h l so common at llna sea son, IVrnna eiactty nieela all these conditions that thedetnaini la au great for this tvmnly at this wnsiiii of I be year that It la near ly Impossible lo suply II, Parana Caaslataa Ne Namtlca. On rean why IVruna tiaa found permanent u In an tunny home. 1. that it contains no nar enllcs nf any kind, I'eruua Is iwrfeclly Imrmleas. It ran be uae.1 any U'ligtb of llm without atqiilruig llm arug Uatill, BUY u I D IRO.M YOUR DKAL.UQ t. it, u. Ka, ji-iee. IVUBXt nile a4raare please! l ewnlas I at la aaar. 6RST0RIA For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears tho Signature of For Over Thirty Years GUSTOS! . Txs HntHM eaaiMiav, an veaa em. thpfhfrS STACKERS Write for Catalogue ani Prices BIT Main Div. fMn' HOtf xtu, i . i'. y At AW fiT Use mm, uftiiiw TT' "