Is Pc ru na Useful
for Catarrh?
BAD FLOOD IN SOUTH
Should a list of the Ingredients of Pe-
runa be submitted to any medical ex
pert, of whatever school or nationality
ho would be obliged to admit without
reserve that the medicinal herbs com
posing Peruua are of two kinds. First
standard and well-tried catarrh reme
dies. Second, well-known and gener
ally acknowledged touit remedies
That in ono or tho other of these user
they ha VO stood the test of many years
experience by physicians of different
schools. There can be no dispute about Three Deaths Are Reported—Union
this, whatever. l'eruna is composed ol
Depot Inundated to Depth of
Some of tho most efficacious and uni
Ten Feet.
versally used herbal remedies for ca
tarrhal diseases, and for such condition,
of tho human system as require a tonic
Each ono of the principal ingredient,
Atlanta, Ga., Aug. 27.—A long dis
of Peruna has a reputation of its own tance telephone message from the As
in tho cure of some phase of catarrh 01 sociated Press correspondent from
as a tonic medicine.
I Augusta says that the city is complete
The fact is, chronic catarrh is a dis ly under water. In the down town
ease which is very prevalent. Many portion business houses, telegraph
thousand people know they have , offices and newspaper offices are com
chroniccatarrh. They have visited doc pletely demoralized.
tors over and over again, and been tolc
There were three deaths in Augusta
that their case is ono of chronic catarrh yesterday, two white people and one
It may be of tho nose, throat, lungs negro.
stomach or some other internal organ
The damage, it is estimated, will
There is no doubt as to tho nature ol reach half a million dollars.
the disease. The only trouble is th«
At 8:30 last night it was learned
remedy. This doctor has tried to cur« through the single wire of the Georgia
them. That doctor has tried to pre Railroad company, working partly into
scribe for them.
Augusta, that the large cotton ware
No other household remedy so uni house and th«> wholesale grocery ware-
versally advertised carries upon the 1 houses of the Nixon company were
label tho principal active constituents. burning.
■ bowing that Peruna invites tho full
The union depot is under ten feet of
inspection of the critics.
water, and in the best residence dis
trict the water stands six feet deep
i and is slowly rising.
Still flail II’hern.
The report of the fires in the Nixon
Th« woman of the house eyed him bub
- warehouses cannot be confirmed.
A
¡riciously.
“You’ve been here before, haven’t you?* telegraph operator said he could not
get near enough on account of the
■he asked.
“Not lately, ma’am,’’ answered Ware water, but that the fires were burning
ham Ix>n£. “You proh’ly reco’nize mt j in the vicinity of the big warehouses.
clothes. This is an old suit o’ yer hus The floods in the Carolinas and Geor
band’s you wuz kind enough to give mt gia culminated in the breaking of the
when I wuz here two years ago.”
i big dam six miles from Augusta, which
Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing diverts the water from the Savannah
Byrup the best remedy to use fox their children river into the canal at that point.
The
luring the teething period.
great flood of water let loose soon
found its way into the city, and last
Limited Knowledge.
night, from Fifteenth street to the
“Paw, have you ever been east?”
“Yes; I spent a year in New Yoi Eastern boundary, Augusta was under
City when I was considerably young« from six to 12 feet of water, which is
than I am now.”
gradually rising.
“Well, what is the ‘eastern question’?’
“The only one I ever heard was, ‘How
FIGHT TO REGAIN TRADE.
much is he worth?’”—Chicago Tribune
Fire Follows Deluge at Augusta,
Causing Heavy Damage.
LOSS WILL REACH HALF MILLION
CITC
I 11 J
Storer.
Dr. B.
St' Vitu8’
Hnd
rvouR Diseases perm»
nently cured by I)r. i -ine's Great Nerve Re
Send for FREE $2.00 trial bottle and treatise
11. Kline, Ld., 931 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa
Desperate Hemefly.
“It says here,” began the lady who
could do more talking In one day than
six phonographs and five parrots com
bined, "that after a balloon has ascend
ed to the height of six miles its occu
pants dare not open their mouths.”
"Will you go up, Marie, if I buy a
balloon?” asked her husband, desper
ately.
CASTOR
IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
Sii peril ult y.
“Do you think Mars is Inhabited?”
asked the scientific i>erson.
“I really can’t say that I care much
whether it is or not,” answered Miss
Cayenne. “There are already enough
neighbors to talk about”—Washington
Star.
State of Ohio, City* of Toledo I
Lucas County.
| ss<
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior
partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney «<• Co., doing
business in theCity of Toledo, County and State
aforesaid, and that said firin will pay the sum
9f ONE KI NDRED DOLLARS for each and
•very case of Catarrh that cannot bo cured by
the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my pres-
ince, this 6th day of December A D 1886.
v
A. W. GLbASON,
'
Notary Public.
nail’s Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, and
lets directly upon the blood and mucoussur-
kces of thesystem. send for testimonials free.
F. J. CHENEY 4 CO., Toledo, O.
Sold bv all druggists, 75c.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
one
Point
Settled.
San
Francisco Merchants Will
ganize Traffic Bureau.
Or
San Francisco, Aug. 27.—An aggres
sive commercial campaign to recover
trade lost to the merchants of San
Francisco through the alleged indiffer
ence, neglect and lack of concerted
act ion, _ was decided upon today at a
meeting of the trade and commerce
committee of the Merchants’ Ex
change.
Steps were taken immediately to
organize a traffic bureau, with an ex
perienced traffic manager in charge,
which will be a central organization
for the mercantile bodies of this city,
whose object will be to see that mer
chants, manufacturers, wholesalersand
jobbers of San Francisco receive rail
road and water rates that will enable
them to regain the territory taken
away by other cities, particularly Los
Angeles. ____________
POSTPONE EXPOSITION.
Japanese
Public Clamoring
Vast Expense.
Against
Tokio, Aug. 27.—The unpopularity
of President Kaneko, of the Tokio ex
position, has caused difficulties which
may result in the postponement of the
great exposition, which is now set for
1912.
The people are clamoring against the
methods of Kaneko in spending great
sums of government money and the re
ports of the postponement have been
so frequent that today the minister of
agriculture and commerce found it ne
cessary to issue a formal denial. He
said the exposition would be held at
the time set, but even this assurance
is not sufficient to quiet the reports.
The strained industrial and financial
situation in Japan is the matter upper
most in the minds of most of the peo
ple and there is a widespread feeling
that the government chose a poor time
to go to the enormous expense of hold
ing the first great world’s fair in the
.Orient. ________________
“And now, Cryptomeria,” said the
young man, still holding her hand, but
with a note of anxiety in his voice,
“where shall we go for our wedding jour
ney ?*’
“Some quiet little place in the country,
not far away, Gerald,” she answered,
Will Expel Undesirables.
“will suit me a great deal better than a
Marysville, Cal., Aug. 27. A num
loot a>.d expensive trip.”
“ .Ve are going to be very happy, dear!” ber of business men of Quincy, Plumas
county, have recently received letters
laid Gerald, with a sigh of relief.
threatening the burning of all the bus
iness houses of the place. It has now
been discovered that the apparatus of
the fire department has been tampered
with to the extent of rendering it prae-
tically useless.
The residents ■ are
aroused, and at a mass meeting last
night appointed a vigilance committee
empowered to rid the town of all unde
sirable characters. It is feared that
Cleanses the System Effect serious trouble may occur.
Syrup tf'figs
^LlixirtfSenna
uallyiDispe
.......
................
......
ually; Dispels
Colà»
and Head-
aches duo to Constipation;
Acts naturally, acts Irujy as
a Laxative.
Best forMenVomen and (ndd-
ren-young aiul Old.
To Act its Beneficial Effects
Always buy the Genuine which
Ims' the Jull name of the Com-
‘"'CALIFORNIA
R q S yrup C o .
by unom it is manufactured. printed on the
front ofcxery nacknie.
sold B yall leading druggists «
•ne
only, regular price 50<bolli«.
Builders Tap Secret Till.
Seattle, Wash., Aug. 27. Finger
prints in dust on a jewel box led detec
tives last night to arrest James
Holmes, a carpenter, who afterwards
confessed that he stole 42 diamonds,
valued at $1,000, from Captain E. W.
Johnston, the well known Nome oper
ator. The diamonds disappeared Aug
ust 17. Holmes and another carpenter
were the only persons who knew of the
secret closet for jewels, as they built
it at Captain Johnston's home.
No Clue to Raiders.
Aberdeen, S. D., Aug. 27.—The au
thorities here are investigating the
raids on Lowry and Alaska Sunday
night by a company of armed anil
mounted men. Absolutely no clue to
the raiders has been found.
FEAR STRIKE RIOT.
FRUITS AND VEGETABLES.
Conditions Growing Serious in Ala New Canning Process Preserves Nat
ural Color and Flavor.
bama Coal District.
Dryden. Oregon Agricultural
Birmingham, Ala., Aug. 24.—The Prepared by Jamea
Cullese. Corvallis.
nerve tension in the Alabama strike
Certain fruits and vegetables may
zone is exceedingly taut. The attempt be preserved in such a way that they
at assassination of a nonunion miner will retain indefinitely their original
at Pratt City last night is a theme of flavor, color and structure. This is in
general discussion. Deputies attempt the nature of a discovery, made by
Prof. F. F. Pernot, of the Oregon Ag
ed to make an arrest for trespass at ricultural college. A report of Prof.
mine No. 5 of the Tennessee company i Pernot’s investigations is given in
near Pratt City today and met resist Bulletin No. 87 of the Experiment sta
ance on the part of white women. Two tion, Corvallis, and for the benefit of
the housekeeper who is wrestling with
women were arrested.
the canning problem we give the sa-
A big barbecue was held at Fulton 'ient points of the bulletin.
Springs several miles north of this
Successful canning is a question ot
city today. Several thousand miners, sterilizing. If a can of fruit spoils it
union men, were present, and W. R. means that it was not properly steril
Fairley, Alabama member f the ca ized to start with, or there was a leak
tional board of mineworkers, was age in the can. Spoiling of the fruit
among the principal speakers.
is due to germs which were in the
A number of evictions from com fruit when it was canned or entered
pany houses has been accomplished at the can later. Sterilization kills the
the Sayre mines. Big bodies of men germs, and the fruit may be sterilized
are meeting all trains along the north by cooking or heating.
We quote the
end of the mineral railroad.
following paragraph from the bulletin:
Reports come that threatening let
“Micro-organisms, not unlike ail
ters are being dropped on the porches other plants, possess the power of self
of homes of men remaining at work, preservation and of perpetuating their
and as a result many men are leaving. kinds; one is by means of producing
spores, or seeds, which are very resist
ant; while others which do not produce
AVERT CLASH ON BORDER.
spores have a resisting power nearly
equal to that of spores.”
French and German Officers Cool-
Heating the fruit to 160 degrees for
headed in Emergency.
ten minutes will kill the germs with
Paris, Aug. 24.—War between Germ out injuring the good qualities of the
any anil France was averted by the cool fruit, but the spores, which are “un
headedness of French and Geruman incubated” germs will not be injured
at that temperature and will become
army officers in a dramatic frontier “germs” in another day, when the heat
episode which is reported from Lunes- should again be applied. A few spores
ville. Two German army corps are en may escape the second heating, making
gaged in maneuvers near the border, a third steaming necessary.
How It Should Be Done.
and yesterday morning a battalion of
French rifles, marching out from Ram-
First—Clean the fruit jars or cans
bersvillers, approached within 50 yards by means of a brush, using hot water
of the frontier and suddenly found it to which washing powder has been
self face to face with a German regi added.
After washing thoroughly
ment which was drawn up at an equal steam the jars to remove any dirt that
distance on the other side.
may remain.
The troops stood looking at each oth
Second—After washing the vegeta
er for a moment without uttering a hies or fruit place them in jars, com
word or giving vent to an explanation, pletely filling them. Then add water
and then their respective commanders to fill the interstices, and put on lid.
simultaneously orderered them to face Don’t screw it on tight or the jar will
about, and they were soon at a prudent burst when heat is applied.
distance from each other.
Third — Procure a wooden steam
A fine illustration of military discip chest, the wash boiler will do, and put
line was given on both sides, as a cry some water in the bottom of it. Put
might have been the signal for serious slats in the bottom on which to set the
trouble
jars.
Fourth—To get the proper tempera
ture, put a thermometer in the center
BUILD MANY SHIPS.
of an extra jar of fruit or water and
Japs Will Have Large Fleet of Auxil steam the fruit at a temperature of
160 to 165 for ten minutes. Do not let
iary Cruisers.
temperature get above 165.
Then
New York, Aug. 24.—According to remove jars and screw lids on tight
Kashiera Shiba, one of the managers immediately. Repeat the steaming a
of the Mitsubishi dockyard at Naga second and a third time at intervals of
saki, Japan, the Japanese government 24 to 48 hours.
The jars are then
is making earnest efforts to increase sterile. Cans may be used instead of
its fleet of auxiliary cruisers. Mr. jars. If the latter are used the vent
Shiba, who arrived at the Hotel Astor in the top of the can will have to be
tonight, declared that while the Japan soldered after the first steaming.
ese navy is highly efficient, there is Boiled but not boiling water should be
need of a fleet of steamships which used for filling the jars, or a syrup
could, in time of war, be converted in may bq used instead of water. Un
to cruisers.
sterilized water or syrup may contain
“Our dockyard,” said he, “is work about ten million germs in a quart jar,
ing at its fullest capacity. We are at and it is just as well to "nip them in
present turning out three 14,000 tur the bud” by sterilizing the water. It
bine steamships, which will do 21 is important that the fruit or vegeta
knots, and which will ply between San bles be neither under-ripe nor over
Francisco and Hongkong via Japan. ripe. The same good jundgment
The boats will use oil for fuel. In ad used in selecting material for the table
dition to these boats, we are building should be exercised in the matter of
four large steamships, which will run canning.
from Japan to England via the Suez
It was found in the tests made a<
canal. All these vessels will be at the the experiment station that a temper
service of Japan in case of war. Our ature of 165 degrees was sufficient to
dockyard, of course, is not the only one sterilize the fruit when treated as
that is active in producing this big above, and this temperature did not
order for auxiliaries. The dockyards impair the flavor or structure of the
at Kobe and other places are all run fruit.
Where only one heating is
ning at their full capacity.”
given, as is the case at the canneries,
it is necessary to heat the fruit as
high as 240 degrees in order to kill
Strikers Cry’Conspiracy.
Montreal, Aug. 24.—A formal state both spores and germs.
It should be stated that this metho«,
ment issued today by Bell Hardy, chair
of canning wag not successful with
man of the federated trades of the
sweet peas and corn, as they have a
Canadian Pacific railway system,
germ normally that is not killed at a
charges that the strike of the past
temperature of 165.
three weeks, in which 8,000 workmen
This method would probably not bt
have been engaged, is due to a conspir practicable at canneries, where fruit
acy on the part of some of the officials is sold at low prices, owing to the ad
of the company to disrupt the unions ditional expense of treating the cans
and drive the union men from the three times; but for first class high
company’s employ. This conspiracy, priced goods the additional expense
Hardy alleges, had its inception in would be warranted. In the case of
conferences held by the railway super home canning, however, it is a more
intendents and master mechanics early desirable method of putting up fruit
in the present year.
and vegetables than the methods usu
ally in vogue.
uooa
r.non* n
tor
rttm.
City Xlece—Why, uncle. I'm surpris
ed to see you wearing such a rusty
looking hat when you come to town.
Uncle Reuben—It s th' hilt 1 alters
wisir tew home.
City Xlece Yes. Imt that's different
Everyhodv knows you there.
I'lieli“ Reuben Wall, nobody don’t
kne c me here, so I ain't worrylu'. ba
grass!
Turning n Tight
Screw.
Any one who has attempted to re
move a very tight screw knows wlmt
a very difficult business It is. After
straining aiul twisting for a con
siderable time the operator frequent
ly ends by losing his temper mid de
stroying the bite of the screw, which
remains fixed as tightly as ever. With
the aid of a pair of pinchers, however,
the affair Is quite a simple one. Place
the screwdriver In position and then
catch hold of the blade with the pinch
ers just above the head of the screw.
Press the screwdriver firmly und at
the same time twist round the binds
with the pinchers. Tile tightest screw
will yield immediately to this sort of
persuasion.
Wliat a Poultry Man Says About
20-Mule Team Borax.
As I am in the poultry business, I had
ten white chicks to wash and prepare
fora show. I used “20-Mule Teain’’
Soap for washing the birds, and I can
say from years of experience washing
white birds, never before have 1 found
a soap or Borax that cleaned my birds
so fine and easy. I had a great deal of
comment on my birds being so white
J. A. Dinwiddie, Newmarket, Tenn.
Local agents wanted.
Write for money making plan
Her
Idea.
"Stocks were nil down n few points
to-day,” remarked the broker.
"The Idea 1” exclaimed his wife. "It's
a wonder they didn't advertise it us a
bargain day.”—Catholic Standard and
Times.
Derelict in Mid-Pacific.
Honolulu, Aug. 24.- The steamship
Asia which arrive«! here today from
Hongkong and Yokohama encountered
a derelict schooner in latitude 33:56
north, longitude 163:25 east. It is
thought that the dismasted vessel was
the Japanese schoon«T Kinomoto Maru.
The Asia carries a cargo of silk valued
at two and one half million dollars, to
be landed at San Francisco.
The
steamer Aorangi en route from Van
couver to Australia arrived here today.
Meteor Falls in Kansas.
Salina, Kan., Aug. 24. A large
metoor fell three miles north of Ells
worth last night, lighting up the coun
try for miles around, and burning
brightly 20 minutes after it struck the
ground. The metoor exploded when it
struck the ground, and shook the town
of Ellsworth.
A farmer residing near Almira,
Washington, inquires concerning the
milk weed pest which is infesting that
locality. Professor R. Kent Beattie,
of the department of botany, answered
as follows:
“The perennial milk weed, which I
believe you have, is very difficult to
destroy.
The only principal upon
which you can work is to ke«-p the tops
of it closely cut down, so that the plant
cannot make food, until you have
starved out the roots. This, of course,
is a difficult task, especially if they
cover a large field. I would put the
patches into clean cultivation, either
as grauen, or potato plots; then it
would pay you to work very hard to
exterminate these weeds, for they are
difficult to kill once they take poss< s-
sion of the land.”—From the Wash
ington Stats College, Pullman.
Ma,-blns for
Buy Hair
at Auction?
At any rate, you seem to be
getting rid of il on auction-sale
principles: “going, going,
g-o-n-e!’’ Stop the auction
with Ayer's Hair Vigor. It
checks falling hair, and always
restores color to gray hair. A
splendid dressing also. Sold
for over sixty years.
•• Mv hair came out so badly I nearly lout it
all. t had heard so much about Ayer's Hair
Vigor I thought I would give it a trial. I did
so audit completely stopped the falling, and
made mv hair cron very rapidly.”- -MARY H.
FIELD, Northfield, Mass.
Maa a.
Madefy
bo
manufacturers of
SARSAPARILLA.
PILLS.
Ctll RKY PECTORAL.
Sorry, but--- —
“Gumbolt and 1 have made a bet and
agreed to leave it to you. He says a
drowning man gets his lungs full of
water, and I say he doesn’t. Which of
us is right?”
“What are the terms of the wager?”
“The loser is to pay for a dinner fof
the three of us.”
“ll’m- I never knew Gumbolt to pay
a bet. You lose.”—Chicago Tribune.
Side Lights on
Poesy.
Scott was writing the “Lady of th«
Lake.”
“If you were to tell the tmth about
her,’’ he said, “1 should say that she is
awfully seasick, but expects to feel bet
ter when the boat gets to St. Joe.”
Thus it is, in all ages, that the poet
has to sink the Real in the Ideal.—Chi
cago Tribune.
CURES
MALARIA
Malaria is clue to impurities in the blood which destroy the rich,
healthful qualities of the circulation, and reduce it to a weak, watery fluid.
Tlie body is then deprived of its necessary nourishment and strength, and is
unable to resist the countless disorders that assail it, and the general system
suffers in consequence. The appetite fails, digestion is weakened, chills
and slight fever are frequent, while the sufferer loses energy and ambition.
Boils, skin eruptions, and some times sores and ulcers follow when the
blood becomes deeply polluted with the malarial germs.
Both a tonic
and blood purifier are needed to cure Malaria, and S. S. S. is best fitted for
this work. It is the most perfect of all blood purifiers and at the same time
an invigorating, healthful tonic. S. S. S. goes down into the circulation,
and removes every trace of impurity or poison, and gives to the blood the
health-sustaining qualities it needs. It cures Malaria thoroughly aud per
manently because it removes from the blood the germs and poisons which
produce the disease, and while doing this tones up and strengthens every
part of the system. Book with information about Malaria and any medical
advice furnished free to all who write.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
A
Retort Dlsconrteon*.
A young Indy full of good deeds no
tlced the tongue of a horse bleeding
and with a use of technical terms too
little appreciated said to the cabby.
"Cabby, your horse has hemorrhage.”
"It's 'Is tongue's too large for hi
mouth,” said the cabby and added sen
tentiously, "Like some young ladies.’’—
London Globe.
E. BURTON.—Assayer ari Chenils*
H OWARD
Leadville, Colorado» Kpociinen prit es: (told
Silver, L- ad, fl ; Gold, Hllvur,7->- ; Gold, 50c; Zinc or
< <.pp«T, Ç4. Cvanido t<sts. Mailing envelopes nnd
full price list sentun application. Control and Vm
pir«1 work solidlud.
lUleruuce: Carbuuute Na
tional Baule
W. I., D«mglas make«* nnd «ells more
m«‘ii*N $3.<N) anti *3.50 k I kh ’. s than any
oilier manufacturer hi the world, be
cause t Ivv hold t lo ir i.luipc, fit better,
ami wear longer than any other make.
rescent
Offlap I eins
Shoes a* All Prices, for Every Member of the
Family, Men, Boys, Women, Misses & Children
2 K BOI lïi 35 CTS. AT ALL GMCERS
W L DvighwM 00an<l 40 C>r) (ii't Kdga Hhoeffcannot
be aquai> 1 at any prie« W
Douglas $2.00 and
>2 00 shoes aro the boat in tho world
FVi.O Cnlor 1'iiihh I nd /•.'rrhittively.
Of-T’ ike > o Nuhsllt liti-, \V. !.. Douglas
name and pri«*»? is stamp. I on bottom. Sold
rwy viK ir. Mim-s mail' d from factory to any
part of tli«’ world. Ualalogu** fi<*o.
W. I. 001'01.AS, IM .Spark St . Brocktos. Ms««
ARRANGE TO STOP AT
THE CORNELIUS
CRESCENT
PARK AND ALDER STS.
A New and Modern European Hotel, caterin
particularly to 8fate people. A refined place fm
ladies visiting the city, close to the shoppin
center. Rates reasonable. Free Bus.
EGG-PHOSPHATE
BAKING POWDER
J*
N. K.. CLARKE, (late of Portland Hotel) Mgr
Cloudbursts in Colorado.
Pueblo, Colo., Aug. 24. Cloudbursts
in the vicinity of Florence tonight
transformed Oak, Chandler and Sand
creeks into raging torrents, which are
sweeping through Florence and vicini
ty leaving ruin in their wake. The
damage is expected to agrgegate $150,-
000.
The Florence Fuel company
alone has been damaged to the extent
of $2,000. Water covered the Santa
Fe tracks to a depth of several feet, 1
and the Rio Grande’s are in danger.
I
IS OUR MOTTO
Said an Employer: “Stick to quality.
It will win out in the end.” We do
‘‘stick to quality.” That is the reason
our graduates are so thorough and in
such demand. Investigate our claims to
superiority. Catalogue, business forms
and penwork free. Call, phone or write.
Portlnnil R unìiichh College
Tenth and Morrison, Portland, Oregon
A. P. ARMS i KONG. LL.B,
PRINCIPAL
J»
A modern feavener at
a moderate price: is 30
per cent, more efficient
than "Trust”or Cream-
of-Tartar products and
absolutely free from the
health-racking Rochelle
Salts residue invariably
accompanying their use.
Get it from your Grocer
25c- FULL POUND - 25c
P N U
No. 35
Tlfifl N writing to ndvertiaera pieuse
mention this paper.
Shuffling Curd«.
A machine
which automatically
shuffles a pack of cards In an Instant
with the cards concealed from sight
and which changes the position of nine
out of every ten cards la the latest
mechanical device for cardplayers. It
not only protects the cards frotn injury
but gives sn abaoluta square deal
shuffle. The machine weighs four
pounds and attaches In a moment to any
table. It Is about twelve Inches high.
BUSINESS COLLEGE
PORI LAND, OREGON
BEHNKE-WALKER STUDENTS SUCCEED. WHY?
They are Trained for business in a busin« '-like way.
Why not enroll in a reputable school that place.» all of its gra<Iuat«i?
I. M WALKER. I'ns.
08
SEND row CATALOGUE
O. A
H
HUMAN. S m .