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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 7, 1913)
POULTRY AND GAME laa ft yoe fancy prlraa fur Wild thirka and etbar (am In mml Writ ue fur aaah altar an ell slnda uf poultry, aura. Ma. iVanton-rage Co., Portland Ship is pr VEAL, PORK, POULTRY, HIDES I ...r..l(iH. t.rl.aa tllK'M HV mi'KI I MAIL. lrk .? "'" Tl'" ,Mr um tiMitirM til ll aim U'akMMitiMttir(a 111 J! mIS.. I.Hlllr, lira, S.nlbaart I'wtrli- I rmr. Tit .mi tall yaar aalea luraaMnl ear lllaval uSrr. akli Ul r. It. M HMAI.a at cn j 110.00. 141 141 rra ft. rolUAWi Nt r Rala-40 a, .lntln Cn. Ora.: It a. ault. knuaa, (am tMitlMltUlinaii. aiiH-k. nuH-hittaif, wla.t laal dairy and callla faim. U. J. ThunuU, tiu mil. r. Air HaW--l0 a. frank I-, Ora.t ft) a. rulL, 4-r iMiua lukrii. hriihuuaa. all. Am iw fwnwr. Ilar galuji'tV' uni ' "'''"tai ar, rilnallla. Or. fur Mala- S a . all (till., Umatilla . Or : 4-r. hoiiaa, burn. mitl.Maa, a ivl.anl. !-, 1.1,-al k aauVm, lautif ul hvma. r. L. Walla, IlinnWt.m. Or fxm aalaor .Khaxr f"' Oweift land, a. HlaT ' Itiwn fa.. Wvn.; VDf In alfalfa, i-r lnniaa. barn. I aultiulf. Vu fruit ti-a U-a. Biachlnary, 1 ala, M I' lliiaaia, orayDuu, nm HaWiMn K. rH'STuM - iaim rkaiaM, II VMa.H. fui.4u. aiHNiir.aa .iimii imta. Ilr UJ II Hold. Illli.f. liui IniH kwi rw., II U.lll. l"l- tail r-rU-allat Mini aj lltalen. tValn.l a4 I'ttiblr aurk aw UUWMUW NUnM Machinery fWand Hand Mai-hln. InMiaht. auid and a-d; rnalnaa. nollara. Ma-mllta. eta. 1 ha J. t. Martin .. M la t I'urllaiul. IWnd fur stuck I tot and aria, HUNTERS! TRAPPERS! I vat illfwt rlh manufa-v iutr. A i'r tha aiiihai tir fr Kaw fur: V rila r I r prttw list tutd Input"! 'V- N. i. I'NUU CO . FlRllIU 1 bra rVtrbUtO. OIL RAW FURS WANTED M.ntsT fiwi (rum kiawsr irs -' H. UtEES CO. Vtf Itiuiiaiiw. MKHIU aaraianV lnWlMi IHNalutlbai lanaaiuM. LIME FERTILIZER ! Alxt "- P'atrr. .-im Vm-nl. Wall Flu- I.mia, r-TrPnt, Tt taJI W law , rVitt ftr pru.. (JIIAM & (O. I rollTI.AND. OK. I trr 4wi HMrtii'w. Witt fur pru.. NOTTINGIIJ L !0a rrn( mrtwt. KANDMEN: Z are Sole ntt for IIOI.TON ami III TM IIH hand lr.tnimnta. 1 tu mra)t eint.i .fork .1 Hun..! MrrrliamluM In lha N.atkaMil. Writ f.a fatal vnrt. Mini in im; i r ah mi kic . IM Raraad KIimL fartlaad. OnM SHIP YOUR VEAL, IICCS. POULTRY t .i ECCS VOGEL PRODUCE CO. 203 J WukBflM Si., tMtUad. Crta. Anil st tuti market prtrva and rmmay by ratnrn n.ail. Mai kt tvpiata. nhi.pifva tatf. tr.. Mil i.n raquaat. IU frma: l.unikarman'a Nat'l llank. Care of Broken China. When mending broken china always place It to set In a large boi filled with aawdust lly this means It Is easy to stand the article In any do aired pokltlnn. so that Ha own weight bolda the plocea In place, whlla tba oement la hardanlng , North Pacific College of uun TrTC aa " " " 3 il l l:i?"i n jmv- w S-;".iew orl acc AaVaik. UitgM Philosophy. A philosopher la a nan who can look Hard I.uck In tha fare and think of the value the experience he la hav ing will be to him In later years. There Are Compensatlona. "This Increased coat of living la something terrible'" mM tba young man ns he pnltl Ihe third Installment on thn eni'rmeiiieri' rlne. Stops Backache Sloan's Liniment is a aplendid remedy for backache, stiff joints, rheumatism, neuralgia and sciatica. You don't need to rub it in just laid on lightly it gives comfort and case at once. Best for Pain an4 Stiffness Ma. Gin. IUtiianan, of Welch, Okla,, write t "I haveuted your Lin Imtnt for the past len yraia for pain in bark and stiff neta and find It tha heat Liniment I ever tried. I recommend it to anyone for pains of any kind," UN is good for sprains, strains, bruises, cramp or soreness of the muscles, and all affections of the throat and chest f a 1 Vl i MiiiK'. III., wiitaai " I am a piano polisher lk i A '4S3 by o. i up.uion, and since List S. ptrnilier have Vl Jj,J V-k V auflcted wilh seveie pnin in IkiI ahoulilir. I -i'. -Iw,V'r-A I rotild not rest ni(;lit nr day. One of my vi.-. i T v fil'nila Da. lauthlng CofTt fra jrino. rndwr KrHfnrt;k Ihn Orrtt fellow wltU knvn, long nokoi, thruunhout tb country jot jobs an Coffue niiiar to mull out tha bnn roasting and to ilt-tset ths odor off ths boiling coffra, Th loTnrnini'iit tried building big eoffsa) roasting plaota and charging high prloas. and In tlm tba Oarmaua all turn d again to bear, and ooffa wa considered a luiury. Van Can Cat AlUa'r fax taaa fRrf. Wrlta AIImmS ,IIi...m.I I . u..M kt v . fra larai'le ol All. n't V.-.t k.-a. It rurxa toaalliia. Ii.it wnilan, ai lilus l. ul. aiakra liw ur Unlit ilium raay. A oarlala rura loi antiia. Iniiiuwliig ualU and bunli.ii.. Alldrua- UUwilll. Mm. IJuu'i auuu(l auy suUlllula. Worth While. We may bo aura, although we know not how, wa give our lima Ilka coral Insects, to build up. Invisibly, la the twilight of the tttss of time, the reef of righteousness; and wa mar ha ur. altbought wa ace not why. It la a thing worth, doing. Robert Loula Bttanaoa. Mothers will Had Mrs. Wlnrlow's Bnotaiag rru a tt a tl rainadv ti ua 'ut IbaU etUatUaii uitig I'm taattilutf uarlud. Not a Man's World. Tbts la not rlgli'ly a man's world. Great men ara but drrams of women become militant. Women ara tba real Insplrara of men; they Ignite bla ev ery conception. Never yet has man aung, painted, prophesied nor In any way woven tighter the spirit of bis time, but that bla mother was first great enough to attract tba gift; and mora ofton than not, upon bla ma turity, the potential gift waa startled Into its supreme eipresslon by an other tnother'e daugbtur. Will Lav Ington Comfort. $diMsfoie&atve GRANULATED ITCHING LIDS Old-Time Letter Writing, for the purposea of letter-writing the leaves of some trees were early naed, whlla tha Inner bark of the lin den tree waa In au h common demand for thla purpose that It baa given tha word for a book to two languagea. Hut one of tha most convenient mate rials for letter-writing ware tablets covered with thin coating of wax. upon whic h It was esay to wrlta with a pointed needle railed a stylus. ItM Cmaa lull ttlua rlvra dmibla value for ymiff nwHit-y. guaa iwica aa far aa an vthar. Aafc ywuf srucar. Beginning Afrtah. "Each morulng Is a (rash beginning. Wa are. aa It were, Juat beginning Ufa. la a aense there Is no past, no future. Wlaa Is be who takes toduy and Uvea It, and tomorrow whvn It cornea but not before It comes. The. past la ot talue only by way of tlm lessons It hits brotiKlit us There should be no regrets or crippled ent-rgl-'s that re sult from such. Wo have stumbled all have stumbled " Kalph Waldo Trine In Hurpor'a llniaar. TO H HP A rfH.D IN ONE PAT TVa I.AVTIVK HKuMO (julnlna TabMa, PmaalMta ml nuatay If it faiU u rur. kL. W. CIUJV L'H aisnatura taun aacb buju Xua. Furniture New to Mary. A lady out shopping ordered an nnv brella aland sept home for ber vesti bule, and only reached home lata la tha evening, where she had left her now maid In charge. "Well, Mary.' she said, "did any parkaRra come?' "Yea, mum." waa the reply. "The wagon cum mid th' cuapldora for th umbrellita " Dentistry and Pharmacy The North I'aciflc Colleire was eatab litihrd in l-i'.iH. It has il'pnrtminta of I't'iHiHlry ami rnttrma-y. iNo xchool In Aincrii a hits better fHcihlira fur the train liiK 'f younir men ami women for succvaa ful profeaHiiiiwil run it. Th annual mu ni, m Ihio Ictnlier First. An iiluatratt'il cntalog of information will bo forwarded application to L-a wiaiu anu vii(tfn if iviiiaiiu. vie Eternal Feminine. A woman can't win a man merely by making blm comfortable, but aha often ran do It by keeping blm gu eas ing. Topeka Capital. ABaolute MossbacK. The mail who takes no Interest In public achoola, good roads, religion or politics Isn't even a satisfactory has been. Atlanta Journal. MEIf Cot Entire Relief R. T. ItnanovNK, of Mayvrille, Ky., RR. I, Rot J, writes i "I had severe ruina between my ahoul drr; I got a bottle of your I iniment and had eniiie relief at the fifth application." Relieved Severe Pain in Shoulder ItMl.riivrwili ,if rwl U'jrr.n Ava.- lobl me n niut vour I Iniment Three applii aiiona completely cntnl me anil I will never lw wiihout It." Pries 2So., ROn., and $1.00 at All Deakra. Band fur Bloau't frua bnukon horses. . AiMrrne Dr. Eatrl S. Sloan. Doiton, Mi Cornerfofy cf union AMUSING TRICK WITH WHEEL Seema to Revolve Automatically With out Any Internal Power Appar atus Is Very Simple. Tha mystery of thla wheel la thai It aeema to revolve automatical! without any vlalblo external power. It la at the aame time an amusing trick and an lnatructlve experiment. Th Kppuralua required la very simple and ran be made at borne, says tba I'opu lar Mechanlca. A glasa hot lie la half filled witt land and water, so that It will atan securely, and a cork placed In th neck. Into thla cork a needle shouU be Inserted so that It projects per pen dlcularly, which la most easily donr by heating one end of the needle tt a red heat and then pushing It Intc the cork as deeply aa possible. Into a dlk of cork of stiltnbls thick liens and at four points on Its side,, aa equal dla tunoa apurt, are Inaorted four plocei of copper wire of the same length euch bent at tha outer end to form hook thena copper wlrea thua form Ing the spokea of the wheel. The rite Is matin of a small Iron wire bent In a Mysterious Revolving Wheel. clrculur shape and bold In the hooki on the enda of the copper wlrea. Th( now completed wheel la balanced ol the free point on Ihe needle, so that ll can turn easily. I'luce an alcohol lamp In such a po sltlon that when It Is lighted the tit of the damn will Juat reach the rim ol Ihe wheel. (Any other flame that will not aoot the rim may be used.) In tin box A, placed with Its bottom leve1 with tlui wheel, put a horseshoe iiug net so Hint the flume Ih opposite one of Ita poles. Xfter the lamp hua beet: lighted for a few seconds, the wheel will begin to revolve, seemingly with out cause. Why does It do so? He cause the magnet magnetlzea or at tracts the part of the ring nearest ll whlla cold, but not when It la glow Ing. Instead, ll will attract the coolei part of tha ring nearest behind the flume and so on, the wheel thua spin nlng round, foster In the same propor tlon aa the magnet la stronger and the Iron rtm smaller. If this experiment Is shown before apectators aa a trick, the performei may aay to the audience that be alone ran make the wheel spin around with out touching It. Should some one ac cept his challenge, be may. In a care less way, move the box containing thr magnet away or turn It around ao that It will not Influence the Iron ring and then, of course, the wheel will remain Immovable. TO OPERATE A TOY DERRICK Objtct of Invention of New York Man Is to Provide Mechanism for Handling Small Loads. The Scientific American In describ ing on Invention of A. I'felffer of New York city saya: "In this case the aim of the Inven tor Is to provide a new and Improved nieehunlHin for operating toy derrick arranged to ralae, lower or swing tiimill loads by the use of a motor driven mechutitiim eaully controlled by children, affording considerable aniUHcmcnt and at tho same time pro viding an I untrue! I ve toy. A boy or other child can readily control the motor by manipulating the reversing lever thereof, and also readily control tha two handles for operating the Operating a Toy Derrick. derrick with a view to raise or lower the load, to awing the boom op or down or sldewlse on turning the poat A side elevation of the Invention Is shown In the Illustration. Simple Card Trick, The nuiHt almplo card trick and one for which neither sleight of hand nor practice la necoaaary la performed as follows: I'lnco three picture cnrtla either kings, queen, or knaves In a row and tell the company that during your ab sence from the room they can reverse any card they rhooso, and that on your return you will name the card which they have reveraetl. You have only to notice Unit the white mnrglnjof the cards Is narrower on one aide tliin on the other and to pluco all the nhrrow or all tho broad enda either townrll or from you, and on re-entering Ihe ryom you enn en In on Instant which dird hns been turned. t Ethel's Climax, I. lUlo Ktliel hud been brought tip wilh a tlrin hand and was ulways tatiKbt to report mltuloeds promptly (inn afternoon nlie. ciwnt) sobbing punt lenily to her mother. "Mother, I I broke a brick In tho fireplace." "Wall, ft mlstit be worse. Put how am earth did yon an It, tBthmlf -I poua1 ft la wna yaw aaiax, i f m www ici. W1 L " -a i m' : i c r- VV.v:-i'ic:TffVa Lm'I' Ll the. garde.! IWKNT to Cllfden, that stupen dous natural rock, wood and prospect, of tha duke of Ituck lnghama building of extraor dinary expanse. The grotta In the chalky rock are pretty It is a ro mantic object, and the place alto gether answera the most poetical de scription that can be made of aolltude. precipice, prospect or whatever can contribute to a thing ao very like their Imaginations. The stand la something like Krascat! aa to Ita front, and on the platform la a circular view 16 the utmottt verge of the horizon, which, with the aerpentlng of the Thames, la admirable. The atalrcase Is for Its inuterluls singular, and the clolaters. descenta. gardens and ave nue through the wood august and I stately, but the land all about barren 'and producing nothing but feme. In deed, aa I told hla majeaty that eve ning (asking me how I liked Cllfden) without flattery, thut it did not please me so well as Windsor for the proa pect and park, there being but only one opening, and that narrow, which led one to any variety." John Evelyn made thla entry In his diary more than two centurlee ago. but the Impression made on the mod ern visitor la no less rich and atrik lng. Nothing of the duke'a house re mains except the great under building of the magnificent terrace, 400 feet long and 25 feet wide, but even thla baa been much altered, especially In the disposition of the slalrway. The gardens have been changed and the prospect of the neighboring country Is no longer bare, but cultivated ana bmtllng. Checkered History. Although Evelyn was right In clalm ng for the royal castlo a great and Lnconflned outlook, the view from the errace at Windsor overlooking Eton -ollego and the meadowa scarcely sur aaaea the splendid picture which neeta the eye from the terrace at 'llveden, with the Thames winding ke a silver thread through the gapa I a foreground of treea. Thn house as bad an unusually checkered hls- iry. There doea not seem to have uen any building on the site until It as bought by Oeorge Vllllers. second uke of Ilucklngham, some time after ie restoration. The architect waa aptaln Wynne, or Wlnde. a native of lolland and a pupil of Sir Balthazar erbler. He was a man of consldera- le ability, and la. perhaps, best re- embered now for his design of New istle house. Lincoln's Inn Fields, hlch remains, though somewhat ai red. Very little Is known of 'ynne. Ho must have been a friend Samuel repya. for ne received a kentv-shllllng mourning ring at hla f meral In 1703. but there la no men t on of him In the diary. We have no s ace here to attempt a sketch of ao v vid and contradictory a character a George Vllllers. Like Charles II.. he dabbled In thn arte and sciences, and as llryan Kalrfax wrote of him. spent much on building "in that sore of architecture which Cicero calls In aanao suhutructlones." Vnfortunntely. Fairfax, the author of the only con temporary biography of the duke, gives no details of his architectural employments The work at Cliveden was begun about lCi'.'V and among tho state pnpers there is a significant warrant dated June II. 1677. Tho duke was then a prisoner In the tow er and had permission to go to Clive den, "attended by Sir John Robinson, to take order about carrying on some buildings of his there, and to remain till the 23d and then return to the tower." In 1735 more building was done at Cliveden. Olaajnda l.eonl, the Italian, who was architect of Clandon park, ilenlgned the small octagonal temple which stamU southwest of the main building Australia Gets Wlreleas. The chain of wlrelens stations around Australasia will In a very few months be an accomplished fact. It Is said, and Australia. New Zealand, and the Island" will be In constant touch day and nl'tht. The station nt Awanul Hay. North Auckland. Is practically In ......rniion already, although not yet officially taken over by the govern ment. The Installation, a thirty Kilo watt one, compares very favorably with that at Pennunt Hills. Sydney, and wilh the hlnh power station at Kremantle. will enable Auckland to speak" to Sydney or FIJI at any time. A similar Installation Is now In course r r..etlnn at Tho lUuff In the south of New Zealand, and there are three supplementary stations In the domin ion. Air Sickness to Increase. Climbing I"'" the ttlr ni, b'Vt'lopod three new typos of diseases: 1. Mountain sickness, duo to the mus nular work; of cllmblnaj In adJltlon to .yuM-v pioa-oaaM, ua varaa araaaw r 1 C 3 I I .rill M-' l V . , m"m ll 'Ha am E ;' ?-w fromt The year 179S proved diaastrous for Cliveden, for on May 20 It was almost wholly consumed by fire, with the ex ception, we may well suppose, of the "Insane substructlonea." In 1824 the estate waa bought by Sir George Warrender, who rebuilt the bouse. In 1849 It again changed banda, and be came the property of the duke of Suth erland. Within six months It waa again burnt down, but atralghtway rebuilt in the form In which we aee It now. to the designs of Sir Charles Harry. Hla executed design la reminiscent of those stately structures, and his ac complished skill Is ahown by the One effect of the garden front, where per fection of acale gives extraordinary value to dimensions by no means largo. Standing over the great ter race of 400 feet In length, his palazzo la only 150 feet In extent, reduced In the main mass to 100 feet by 65 feet In depth. Parallel with the terrace front la a superb stone balustrading with a tilling of thin bricks between the piers and stone seats at regular Inter vals. The ends are widened out and treated as fountains. This Is the orig inal work which for a long time dec orated the gardens of the Borghese Villa at Rome. The carving of the stonework la admirably done, and represents the rich Italian work of the seventeenth century at Its best It Is at once rich and. refined, showing a brilliant fancy at yet unspoilt by rococo extravagances. The masks spouting freshness Into the curved basins, the moldings of the top of the parapet, and the reliefs on the ped estala are alike worthy of the superb gardena for which they were, con ceived. Recent pictures of that great garden still show the balustradea. but they are coplee. It should be added that the statues which stand on the piers at Cliveden are not the original llgurea. Cliveden was given by Mr. W. W. Astor to his son. Mr. Waldorf Astor, on the marriage of the latter In 1906. HERE'S CHAMPION FISH STORY Nova Scotia Comes to the Front With Tale That Bears the Marks of Real Genius. Not all the fish prevaricators live In the United States, according to the Mariners Advocate. An editor re cently received the followin; letter: "J have read an Interesting account of singing fish in your paper. It re called to me the memory of a rather remarkable fish we have In Nova Scotia. It la known as the 'Frost Fish," because It may be frozen like a lump of Ice. but. If placed In water In that condition. It soon thaws out and swims around as vigorously as ever. The natives make use of this property - make Ice Cream. The Bsh Is caught, frozen, and placed In the cream. In thawing out. It freezes the cream, and its movements at the same time beat the mixture, making it smooth." Taking them by and large, from Moosehead lake to Tuget Sound and from the upper Mississippi to the gulf, we have some very capable and Indus trious fish liars In this country. Hut w e hand the reel and rod over to Nova Scotia We have talent In this coun try; but Nova Scotia la the abode of genius. Smiling Time. Yeast Does your wife always go out with you? Crlmsonbeak No; not between the acts she doesn't. . No matter how good a figure a woman may have, she never over looks an opportunity to change some of the outlines. severe symptoms result from the rapid ity of the change of atmospheric pres sure, especially In descent Herget notes that aeroplanes may rise to 10.000 feet In an hour. The humming or cracking produced In the ears Is the same as In balloon disease, but there Is also a peculiar uneasiness and the aviator Is quickly out of brenth. The French aeronaut men tions further that the descent In a sail ing flight may be at the rate ot 1,000 feet or more a minute, Morane, at Havre, having dropped 8,000 feet In six minutes. The effects are heart beats of great force, but no Increase In rate, humming in the ears, and an exaggerated special uneasiness. New Side Show. Tommy had been to tho circus with Ms father and was telling his mother all nbout It "Hut," ho said regretfully, "there waa one sldo show wa didn't aee." trltm tm our aiMl tM4 ana im mi ' Raman bar abarai ara arn ra karua. from wtl" ku-a. ! iMUkarar. POULTRY HARM IN CROWDING THE HEN Results Given of Interesting Experi ments Made at Maine fatation . Must Have Room. Ihe Maine experiment station re cently flnlbhed a text to ascertain the number of hens most profitable to keep In pens. All the pens were 10 by 16 feet, giving 1C0 square feet. The hens were l!rahmaa and Plymouth Rocks, and these testa continued six months. The hens were fifteen, twenty, twenty-five and thirty to a pen. The Barred Plymouth Rocks. conditions and hens were as much alike aa possible to make the test a conclusive one. The pen with fifteen hens male a profit of 80 cents per hen. and the eggs laid numbered 976. The pen with twenty hens mada a showing of 1,208 eggs tor the pen and a profit of 71 centa per hen. The pen with twenty-five hens made a laying record of 1.328 eggs and a profit of 35 cents per hen. The pen with thirty hens had at? egg production of 1,200 and a profit of 33 cents for ecah hen. The experiment shows distinctly that hens can be so crowded as to re duce the profit of an egg farm. The difference cf twenty-five eggs per hen for six months Is great On the basis of fifteen to the pen the profits of the total ninety hens were $72; on a basis of thirty to the pen the profits were $36. In each case the actual cost of feed waa deducted. FOR FUMIGATION OF FOWLS New York Man Dealgns Coop Especial ly Adapted for Removing All Injurious Vermin on Bird. For the fumigating of fcfwls, to re move the vermin which are so injur! ous, a New York man has designed an effective apparatus. In a coop, speci ally made are guide rails and between these rails the chicken is placed, with Its wings spread out over bars that Fowl Fumlflator. run alongside. Near the top of the coop is a hole for the fowl's head, so that she need not breathe the poison ous atmosphere. A key la turned and the fumes rush into the coop and penetrate the bird's feathers, killing off all lice and other Insects. Little chicks can also be fumigated in this device by being placed in a basket that hangs above the place designed for the old fowl. Keeping Egga Fresh. In Germany eggs are kept fresh for any length of time by simply Im merslng them In a ten per cent solu tion of silicate of soda, commonly called "liquid glass." This produces the formation of a coating which ren ders the eggs perfectly alr-tlght The eggs so treated retain their fresh taate for many months. The best proof of the efficacy of this treatment has been furnished by the fact that such eggs, after having been kept for a whole year, were hatched and the chlckena were strong and healthy. The preserving solution Is best prepared by dissolving one pound ot liquid glass In four quarts of cold water. The eggs are then immersed In this solution which should be kept in a glaied earthenware veasel, and the eggs are kept in the solution for a short time. If one cf these preserved eggs is to be boiled, the shell must be first per forated to prevent cracking. Discarding the Mongrels. Mongrel fowls should not be kept tor egg production because the eggs will be uniform in neither color nor size. Thla factor of Itself Is of enough Importance to Induce one to select a pure breed, even though the mongrels might possibly lay aa well as the pure bred fowls, but this Is very doubtful. l . k . ariui. I 7-B- wvirar or thm fto.a to in no j I improved by IreaajMiae ana! Iatie- I rrmm arMillM. Jtea-ularltjr Ut to Mia' c r i bueinaaa mom mo wall aa iw4 imi vua.Maae waa. ' Y itafWitiii tuiiiii-'i)! ! q "Isn't it funny" the difference it makes in your general health and happiness when the Stomach is right, Liver active and Bowels regu lar? If you have any trouble with these organs HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS will overcome it quickly. Try a bottle today. It is for Sour Stomach, Heart burn, Indigestion, Cos tiveness. Colds, Grippe, Malaria, Fever and Ague. Hundreds of Centuries Old. What la believed to be the earliest human akull yet found In England has been unearthed In a Suaaez gravel pit (t Is Judged to belong to the pleisto cene period, and to be quite aa old sa any human remains yet found In Europe. The skull is said to have evi dently belonged to an exceedingly primitive type of human being and to have enclosed a brain with marked differences from that of aay ltving race. Ba thrifty on llttlathinra lika bluing. Don't ao a-ptwatar f'ir bluins. Auk foe Kad Cruee bail Hue, tna extra sued ralua blua. Simplify Life. "I do believe In simplicity. It is aa enlshlng as well as sad, bow many rivlal affairs even the wisest man iilnks be must attend to in a day; tow singular an affair be thinks be nust omit When the mathematician rould solve a difficult problem he Irit frees the equation of all lncum irances and reduces It to its slm ilest terms. So : impllfy the prob em of life, distinguish the necessary .nd the reaL From Thoreau "Let erg." PILES CUBED IN TO 14 DATS four druiririst will refund monay if PAZO OINT. a ENT fails to eura any eaaa of Itching. Blind. lUudmg Frotrudina Pilea in to U daya. iue. Believes Hens Once Had Teeth. That bens bad teeth ia the olden lays Is the opinion of Professor Gll ert of Los Angeles (Cat )high school. n a recent address before a local or- intzation of naturalists he also told Js auditors that the eggs ot birds lave greatly decreased In size since ihelr teeth became extinct Had they een marketed then aa they are now. ie considered, they would, at the jresent scale of egg prices, bring from (250 to $1,000 each. Small Boy Again. "Bobby, do you see that bright star verhead, at the top of the big cross?" Yes." 'Well, that's Deneb. It Is learly three quadrillions of miles iway." "Huh! Then how do you know ta came Is Deneb?" Ta Help In Hanging Pictures. Cut a groove In the end of a cur lain pole, place the end ot the plo MTo wire in it. and hoist It up to the sail or hook from which it is to hang. This saves climbing up and down, ind also allows one to see more slearly how the picture is going to DOk. it DEAD SHOT ft DR. PEERY'S VERMIFUGE FOR WORMS ROMAN EYE BALSAM For Inflamed Eyelids Prepared by Wriqht's Indian Vegetable PILL CO. NEW YORK Plain, Like the Squire. 1 hear you have got a new baby, art.. tna" aald tha squire to his gar dener. "What are you going to call htmT Not some high-flown name that will make him ridiculous In after llf. I hope?" "Oh, no. sir." replied Wig gins. "If it's not a liberty, sir. we thought of calling him plain jamea after you, sir." ffSS 'JSZndtL Sizes.