Night Sweats & Cfiugh.
E. W. Walton, Condr. S. P. Ry., 717
Van Ness St., San Antonio, Tex.
writes: “During the summer and fal
of 1902, my annoyanco from catarrh
reached that stage where it was aetua!
misery and developed alarming cymp-
kuns, such as a very deep-seatedcough,
night sweats, and pains in the head and
chest. 1 experimented with several so-
called remedies before I Anally decided
to take a thorough course of I’eruna.
“Twoof my friends had gone so far ns
to inform me that the tiling for me to d >
was to resign my position and seek a
higher, more congenial climate. Every
one thought 1 had consumption and I
was not expected to live very long.
“Having procured some I’eruna, I de
cided to give it a thorough test and ap
plied myself assiduously to the task of
taking it, as per instructions, iu the
meantime.
“The effects were soon apparent, all
alarming symptoms disappeared and
my general health became fully as good
as it had ever becu in my life.
“I have resorted to tlio use of Peruna
on two or three occasions since that
time to cure myself of bad cold-.”
I "
Children Were Sind, to Smoke
I
It may seem strange that there was
Cholera Breaks Out in Palace oí
Emperor’s Cousin
A study of the United States report
on Illiteracy reveals some Interesting
Rems. Iowa beads the list with only
23 Illiterates to each thousand popula
tion, Louisiana at the other end of the
list with 2
to each thousand. No
State with
uipulsory education has
more than st Illiterates to the thou-
sand. The eighteen States without
compulsory education laws have from
111 to 385 illiterates to each thousand
of population.
The best dressed man in the United
States, according to the best of au-
thority, is C. S. Eddy, a banker's clerk
of Providence, It. I. Eddy possesses
some fifty-odd suits, He says that Is
approximately the number, but really
it's too much trouble to count them,
you know. There Is a suit for each
day lu a month, suits for social func
tions, for driving, walking, for almost
every special thing a human being can
do. Moreover, it is said he is con-
stantly adding to his collection.
—Court Councillor Stricken.
"George,” asked Mrs. Ferguson, “if I
should want to put some money in the
bank while you are away how will I go
about it?”
“That's easy, Laura,” said Mr. Fergu
son. "All you have to do is to go to the
bank, make a noise like a depositor, and
there will lie somebody to see that you
don't get away till you have got rid of
your money.”—Chicago Tribune.
Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow's Soothing
Syrup the b st remedy to use fol their ch lor u
during the teething period.
Tlie Alphabet.
CASTOR IA
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Caller (trying to be complimentary) —
I notice one interesting peculiarity about
your little boy. He is ambidextrous.
Mrs. Strutkoyle (with a frosty gleam
in her eye)—Not at all, Mrs. Highsome.
Ilis legs are just as straight as any
body’s.
it you must take inter al remedies. Hall's
<• -iturrii Cure is taken internal y, and acts di
rectly upon tlie blood and mucous surisces.
Halls Catarrh Cure is not u quack medic ne.
It wa< prescribed by one oit e best physic tins
In i Ills counts,- for t ears and is a regular pre-
cription. It is composed of the best tonics
know .combined with the best blood purifiers,
acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The
perfect combination of the two ingredientsis
wliat produces such wonderful results in cur
ing Catarrh
Pond for t.-st monlals free.
« .J*. 4. CRKN'EV
CO., Props., Toledo, O.
Sold bv Prueei-ts, pri< o 75c.
The favorite amusements of Queen
In :e Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
•Wilh'lmuia of Holland are skating and
riding, but as a child her hobby was the
The quartz lamp is the latest electric
keeping of poultry.
lighting apparatus. It Is a mercury-va-
por lamp with a quartz tube in a glass
globe, and resembles an arc lamp in gen
eral appearance. It is to be used as a
single lamp at 220 volts, and has a rat
ing of 3,000 candles, consuming 0.25 watt
per candle power. Its life is given at
1,000 hours, and an advantage claimed
for it is that it is unnecessary to replace
The cleanest.lightest
any electrodes.
and most comfortable
POMMEL
SLICKER
At the same time
cheapest In the I
end D^riuse it
wears longest /'
‘350 Everywhere ■■j
Every garment, <
guaranteed
waterproof Catalog free
A J TOV/EQ CO BOSTON. USA
TOWER CANADIAN CO L'MiTCD lOKONTj c*M
CRESCENT
EGG-PHOSPHATE
BAKING POWDER
j«
jt
A modern ieavener 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
Faster
Than Sextons Can Inter Them
The great Phoenician alphabet, the
parent of every form of European
writing and of he scripts of Persia,
For Infants and Children,
Arabia and India as well, owes but
little to Egypt. It is true that in tlie
construction of their alphabet the
Bears the
Phoenicians made use of certain hier
atic characters found in their trade
Signature of
dealings with Egypt, but this fact in
no way detracts from the glory of the
Tit for Tnt.
invention which belongs to the ‘‘Yan
Affable Barber—You’re .cry bald on kees of antiquity.”—New York Amer(
top. sir.
can.
Self-Conscious Customer (much an
noyed)-—What If I am? You needn't
Catarrh Cannot be Cured •
. _______________
APPLICATIONS, as they cannot
talk so much. 'Ow about that squint with LOCAL
reach the seat oi tbe disease. '. Catarrh
________ _ is
____
_
a blood
of yours?—London Telegraph.
or constitutional di ease, and in order oeuro
Resented It.
Cemeteries
Th. Conntrr'. Peat Dr-saed Man.
Not lined to Do.
Illiteracy In the United State*,
IMPERIAL PATIENTS
a period in English history when Ju
venile smoking was enforced oilleially,
but It is nevertheless true. The diarist
Hearne, in writing of the Plague of
London, says: -‘Even children were
obliged to smoak. Ami I remember that
1 heard formerly Tom Rogers, who was
yeoman beadle. say that when be was
a school boy at Eton that year when
the plague raged ull th«’ boys of that
school were obliged to smoak in tlie
school every morning, and that he was
never whipped so much in his life as
he was one morning for not smoak-
iug.”
Dead Arrive at
Tact.
“You insisted on our coming to this hot,
horrid place,” shrilled Mrs. Outsome,
“and I'm sunburnt till I look like an
Apache Indian !”
“Not at all, my love,” said Mr. Out
some. “Y’our complexion is a clear, beau
tiful light brown.”
Thus did a soft tan, sir, as it were,
turn away wrath.—Chicago Tribune.
Almost
Reconciled
to
It.
The Moors were preparing to leave the
Alhambra.
“We might as well go. anyhow." they
said. “The Americans will be here pretty
soon looking for souvenirs.’’
Hastily gathering up their trinkets,
they departed, only regretting that they
couldn't, take the glorious landscape along,
too.
Adding
to
Ills SniTerlnga.
The Doctor—I expected to go out of
town next Saturday, as usual, to spend
Sunday with my family in the country,
but professional duties forbid. The fates
are against me.
The Professor—The fates are to blame,
are they? Well, it’s natural for a week
ender to come to a lama conclusion.
Horrors of Politics.
St. Petersburg:. Sept. 24—Asiatic
cholera is spreading
.
_ so rapidly
. . that it
j has invaded the families of the aris
tocracy and merchants, and one case
' Ims been discovered in the palace of
l’rince Alexander of Oldenburg. a :
cousin of the emperor, Schools ltavi c
become infected and the deaths are so
j numerous that the sextons cannot bury
the bodies as fast as they arrive at the
cemeteries.
Twenty-four cases have been reported
I in the town of Peterhof. The imperial
family is expected to return soon to
Peterhof palace from its cruise in Fin
nish waters.
The disease has broken out among the
I cadets at Pavlovsk military academy,
me of the most important higher mili
tary schools in the empire. Forty stu
dents have been sent to hospitals, and
wo deaths already have been announced
Several attendants at the academy also
have been stricken. The academy has
been closed and the remaining cadets
sent into camp at Krasnoe-Selo.
Among the cases reported in St Pet
ersburg yesterday was that of Court
Councillor Nechiporenko. who was
stricken while entertaining a party of
guests. Two prominent merchants, sev
eral officials of the various ministries
and other members of the better classes
in the capital are down with the disease
A servant in the second military
school has developed the cholera, and
measures are being taken to prevent an
outbreak in this institution. The disease
was conveyed to these two schools in
t e rations served to the students.
The accumulation of corpses at the
graveyards continues. There- were 92
-inb-’r ed bodies at the Preobrazhenskoe
cemetery yesterday morning, and the
regular mortuary train brought down
146 more. The sextons are able to in-
cr only 120 bodies a day.
The report for the 24 hours ending
at noon yesterday shows 430 cases and
157 deaths in St. Petersburg, an increase
of 19 cases and a decrease of IS death-
.' s compared with Tuesday’s statistics.
TUGBOAT MEN CURYED.
Captain of Star of Bengal Says Crew
Could Have Been Saved.
Wrangel. Alaska. Sept. 24.—One hun
dred and ten whites and Chinese were
-wept, to death when the cannery bark
I Star of Bengal broke to pieces on Coro
nation island. Twenty-seven, including
Captain Wagner, were rescued, and arc
now here, phys cal and mental wrecks
from the terrible exposure and hard
ships which they underwent.
The seafaring annals of the Pacific
coast have no more horrid record than
the destruction of the ill-fated bark and
the deaths of the men who were carried
awav while two tugs stood by.
"Those tugboat captains should he
sent to prison for cowardice.” gasped
Captain Wajner as he was brought
ashore. Unable to sit up and with voice
sunk to a hoarse whisper, the captain
•if the wrecked bark cursed the masters
of the Hattie Gage and Kayak as cow
ards, who, he said, stood by and saw
human being perish by the score when
they could have saved every one of
them.
Sobbing like a child, the captain of
the Bengal told ho-g his vessel was al
lowed to drift on the rocks while these
tugs stood by without making an effort
to rescue her until she broke into three
pieces.
‘‘They cut loose from us and ran like
the cowards they are and let us go to
certain death. We were in 10 fathoms
of water. The wind was not blowing
hard, and they could have held on to
us as well as not. We were in plenty
of water for four hours while they were
standing by, and we hoped every min
ute that they would come alongside
For four long despairing hours we
burned blue lights, hoping against hope,
and those cowards hung off in fear and
saw good men swept away, We bless
upon the rocks and pounded to pieces.
Something hit me and when I came to
I was on the beach.”
“Then you knew something of it al
ready?” said the chairman of the notifi
cation committee, much chagrined.
"Yes,” ans-wered the nominee, "I saw
an intimation of it in the newspapers. In
Kansas Warns Rail Magnates.
fact, gentlemen,” he added, with a broad
Topeka. Kan.. Sept. 24.—.Alleging that
smile on bis sunny face, “I had a printer’s
the Missouri Pacific tracks in this state
inkling of it.”—Chicago Tribune.
arc in such poor condition that the lint
is unsafe, the state railway commission
has notified George J Gould and E. H
Harriman that repairs must be madi
immediately. The commissioners remind
Gould of promises to repair the road
which have been made in the past by his
company, and warn him that mere words
will not be acceptable in future. The
board threatens to send inspectors and
nublish weekly reports of the defects
found.
Pale, Thin,
Nervous ?
Is jour u outh wiinilar in any way to the above? I.'
no r o need to wear a wobbly. unusable j m i 1 ;late
or ill-t ttinu. ordinary bridge work. Ihe Dr. Wise
•»-■ton- o'
“TEETH W.TKCUT PLATES”
The retail? of 21 year«' experience, the new way of
replacing teeth in the n outh—teeth in fact, teeth in
apj<ear»’nce. tee'h to chew your food uj>on. an you
did upon jour natural one*
Our force ia ao organ-
|*ed we cm do jour entire crown, bridge or plate
work in a d y If neeeiwary
Positively pain.ess ex-
trading Only Uigh-claaa. aoientiho work.
WISE DENTAL CO., INC.
Dr " A Wise Mnnag r 21 years in Portland
,8e< ond Floor, i • .I n. Build tn.. Third and Woah-
iBi-tO!'*'’re-” (ifi.r-slo-im.hA M. to 8 P.M. Rm-
days. V o 1 P M i t • « H ruviuig. ale. plu.ua.
Sb up 1 houee A and Main JU2k
Then your blood must be in
a very bad condition. You
certainly know what to take,
then take it —Ayer’s Sarsa
parilla. If you doubt, then
consultyourdoctor. Weknow
what he will say about this
grand old family medicine.
Sold for over 60 years.
Tbit 1s the first question your doctor would
oak: "Are your b"Wr » tegu ar?” He knows
that daily action of the bowels is absoluteiy
essential to recovery. Keep your liver active
and your bo we is regular by taking laxative
doeee of Ayer’« Fill*.
ZOdabvJ.C Ayer Co., Lowtli. M.il. 1
tsotursr* or
HAIR VIGOR.
?
AOt'E CIRE.
CI1ERRV PECTORAL. I
Cuban Attacks Diplomat.
Havana. Sept. 24.—J. Cornell Tarler.
charge d’affaires of the American lega
tion. in the absence of Minister Morgan
was assaulted by a Cuban in a restaurant
in th s city last night. The assault was
unprovoked, and several Cubans were
concerned in it. One of them, without
giving Mr. Tarler a chance to rise from
his- seat, struck him in the face, cutting
him severely over the right eye. The
assailant escaped, but his arrest is ex-
peeled.
Plague Again Raging.
Willemstad. Cnracoa. Sept 24.—Let
ters received here from Caracas an
nounce a frtsh outbreak of the bubonic
plague in the Venezuelan capital. Sev
eral deaths have occurred among people
of the better class.
Q BEST TREATMENT
FOR CATARRH
CHOLERA IN ST. PETERSBURG.
Government
May Have to
Martial Law.
Proclaim
St Petersburg. Sept 2
ersburg is in the dead1
Asiatic cholera, which alre
ceeded in severity and
o.
deaths the visitation of
disease is increasing daily ;
ing rate, and unless the authorities
show in the future a much greater
degree of ability to cope with the
situation than they have in the past
there is every reason to fear that it
will get out of hand. The govern
inent s threat to apply the provision-
of martial law has driven the munici
pal officials to bend all their energies
to clearing the city of the scourge.
Ihe aldermanic council Saturday
voted $250 000 to enlarge the hospita
space, to purchase and distribute dis
iniectants, the supply of which in St
Petersburg is well nigh exhausted
nd to expedite the interment o
bodies, which has been notoriousl
«low. 1 he deadhouses are over
rowded and many corpses lie un
ittricd.
Under his authority, the prefect <•
t Petersburg, Genera Dracheflfeky
i
'iturd-’v pr di bi ed the sale <
u t throughout the city, iuciudin
. government vodka shops, unti
•le. her 22. and he has further o
rcu that hereafter the sale of th
nor shal' be suspended at 2 P. At
turd y uni 1 A. Al. Alon lay
is action has been taken in ordci
• diminish alcoholic excesses, wliicl
cry materially increase the li.abilit
o cholera infection and the genera
USE PRIVATE SCHOOLS.
Mrs. Rockefeller Says Public Institu
tions Are tor Poor.
Milwaukee, Wis., Sept. 22.—Mrs
William Rockefeller, who, with her
husband, is in this city, said yesterday
hat she believed the children of the
rich should be sent to private rather
than to public schools.
"All 1 have ever tried to be is jits'
n ordinary mother” said Mrs. Wil
m Rockefeller, at the Pfister Hotel
“I have two sons and two daughters
nd they arc just four ordinary boys
and girls. 1 have brought them up
the best I knew how, and used all
the common sense I had to think of
the best ways and means to make
them good average men and I women.
"Did my boys "o to public schools?
No; that would have been most sei
rtsh ill a city like New York . where
our schools are crowded, It is only
fair that parents who can afford it
should send their children to private
schools, and thus allow room in the
public schools for children who must
depend upon the public schools for
their entire education.
"My boys were sent, like thousands
of other New York children, to pri
vate schools, where they were in daily
contact with other children. They
studied like ordinary boys and had the
same ambitions in their school work
When they had finished school they
were sent away to college.”
MAKE LAST STAND.
Nevada Only State in Union That Al
lows Gambling.
Reno, Nev., Sept 22—The gamblers
of the United States will make their
final stand for freedom in Nevada
next month. At that time a special
election is to be held in Reno to give
the people an opportunity to vote on
the question whether or not the gam
bling houses of this city should be
closed.
For six months the fight has been
in the making, each side making every
preparation for the contest, Nevada
is now the only state in the union
where gambling is licensed, Mon
tana legislated it out of existence
some time ago. Arizona followed
suit, and the toleration which kept
gambling going in Denver and Salt
Lake has been withdrawn.
Nevada only remains, ami nearly
every prominent gambler in the coun
try is now located in this state.
Firefighters Lose Ground.
Albany. N. Y., Sept. 22.—Although
New York has one of the best
equipped forest fire fighting organiza
tions in the country, fresh fires are
being reported daily from the Adiron-
darks and Catskill regions. Unless
there is a heavy rain soon the dam
age may approximate that of the de
structive fires of 1903, when over
450,000 acres were burned over, cn
tailing a loss of $800.000 in standing
timber, logs and pulp wood. Every
effort is being made to hold the pres
ent fires
”
in control In 132 towns in
the Adirondack* and Catskill regions
743 fire wardens are at work.
Paris Has Big Fire.
Paris. Sept 22
lire broke nut
last night in the Central Telephone
building and spread with such rapidity
that the telephone employes wen
forced, after brief and ineffectual <-f
forts, to extinguish the flames, to flee
hastily to the streets The entire
building was soon in flames, and this,
together w.th the postoffice, which i-
located close to the Place des Vic
tories, was totally destroyed. The
loss is estimated at *5,000,000.
Two Towns Wiped Out.
Chicago, Sept. 22.—Long - distance
telephone messages to the Tribttm
from Rhinelander, Wis . -tatr that
the towns of Daggan and Woodborow
have been destroyed by forest fires
The 4009 residents oi the two towns
arc fleeting through the burning
woods to Rhinelander panic-strii ken
Many people of Woodborow ar<
missing
•
The entire inner portion of our bodies is covered with a soft, delicate
lining called mucous membrane; this is kept in l.-.althy condition by the
nourishment atul vi.al vigor it receives from the bl <«d.
So long as the
circulation remains pure this membrane will be healthy, but when the blood
1
rhal impurities and |
becomes infected w
rl ningof
the body becomes irritated and diseased, and the unpleasant and serious
symptoms of Catarrh commence
There is a tight, .stuffy feeling in tlie
nose, watery eyes, buzzing noises in the ears, often slight deafness, difficult
breathing, etc. The disease cannot be reached by external treatment, though
such measures afford temporary relit f in some instances.
S. S. S. cures
Catarrh by cleansing the blood of all impurities and poisons. Then as rich,
pure blood circulates through the body, the inflamed, irritated membranes
heal, the discharge ceases, headaches are relieved ami every symptom disap
pears. Catarrh, being a disease in which the entire blood circulation is
affected, can only be cured by a remedy that goes to the very bottom and
removes every particle of the impurity front the blood, and this is just what
S. S. S. does.
Book on Catarrh and any medical advice free to all who
write.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
A ii<«tr:iIinit Cadeta.
Literal.
All children in Australia are drilled,
hut the elder boys are attached to the
Australian military forces by means of
the cadet corps. Almost every large
school has its band of cadets, who
wear neat khaki uniforms and are
armed with light rifles, in the use of
which they are frequently instructed.
Every year those hoys have shooting
matches, and the scores prove that
mnong the youngsters there are many
who have already become skilled
marksmen.- London Standard.
A house painter in a New Hampshire
village was proceeding down “the main
street” one day when he w is accosted
by a fellow-townsman.
“Hello, Tom!” called the latter.
“Why. I thought yod were working ou
old Spinner’s hou.se to-day.”
"1 was about to commence the job.”
said the painter, “when tlie old'man
pi< ked a quarrel with me. He said he’d
put the paint on himself.”
»
“Do you think he’ll do it?”
“Well.” said the painter, with h
smile, “when 1 passed just now that Is
where he bad put a great deal of it.”
White Peril in tlie East.
The “white peril’’ is as threatening to
never Mei One Before.
the East as the “yellow danger’’ is to
The butler, tired of having nothing to
the West. China and Japan should agree
to stop the Europeans and the Ameri do, had gone out to the stables to com
cans from cornering the whole of the in mune with the coachman, and was nosing
dustrial and commercial markets in the around in his usual dignified way.
“My word !” he exclaimetl, looking with
far East.—The Taiyo, Tok io.
some curiosity at an implement he had
F1TK HL Vitus’ Dance and tvour DlRcaHOR perm»- just picked up. “That’s the biggest safe
I 113 nently cared by Dr. i .ino'« Great Nerve Ko» ty razor I ever saw.
How do you put
wtorer. Send for FREE $2.00 tnal bottle and treatise. the blades in it, Jawge?”
Dr. K. 11. Kline, Ld., 931 Arch Si.. Philadelphia, l'a.
“Safety razor!” howled the coachman.
A Boy on Clergymen.
“You bloomin’ idjit, that’s a currycomb!”
Bishop l’otter, at an ecclrsiasttc.nl
dinner in New York, read a Coopers
town school boy’s essay on Clergymen.
The essay, which created much amuse
ment, was as follows:
“There are 3 kinds of clergymen blsh- of the Well-Informed of the World hay
ups rectors and eurats. the bishups tell always been for a simple, pleasant
the reefers to work and the eurats have and efficient liquid laxative remedy of
to do it. A curate is a thin married known value; a laxative which physi
man but when hr Is a rrrtrr he gets
cians could sanction for family use
fuller and can preach longer sermons
because its component parts are
and becums a good man.”
known to them to be wholesome and
Ilow It Happened.
truly beneficial i. effect, acceptable
“True, the night was dark, but he to the system and gentle, yet prompt,
appeared to Jump deliberately lu front
in action.
of the automobile.”
In supplying that demand with iti
“Force of habit. The poor fellow
was mt actor atul naturally dived for excellent combination of Syrup of
the spot light." Kitns.ts City Journal. ( Figs and Elixir of Senna, the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along
Helle of ili® Paat.
"So, woman, you treasure another ' ethical lines and relies on the merits
f the laxative for its remark' ble
man's photograph?”
"Don’t be foolish. Henry. Tills is n tuccess.
portrait of yunrsclf when you bad
That is one of many reasons why
hair.”—Louisville Courier-Jourm.l.
tyrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is
liven the preference liy the Well-
informed. To get its beneficial effects
always buy the genuine—manufac
tured by the California Fig Syrup Co.,
fflapleiñB
only, and for sale by all leading
’ uggists. Price fifty cents per bottle.
The
General Demand
22ÎBDTÏLE 35CTS.ATAH FACERS
WHEN YOU COME TO PORTLAN
ARRANGE TO STOP AT
THE CORNELIUS
PA1«< AND ALDER SI’S.
A New and M«»dern European Hotel, cater’’
particularly to State people. A refined place f
ladies visiting1 the city, close to the shopp.
center. Rates reasonable. Free R ua .
N. K.. CLARKE, (lats of Portland Hotel) M;
Said an Employer: “Stick to quality
It will win out in the end.” We <1>
“stick to quality.” That is the reaso:
our graduates are so thorough and ii
such demand. Investigate our claims t<
superiority. Catalogue, business form
and penwork free. Call, phone or write.
Pori land IliiHincss College
Tenth and Morrison, Portland. Oregon
A. P. ARMS TRONG. I.I.. It.. PRINCIPAL
W. L. Dougin« iiuikcs and m < II h more
men’* $3.00 !iu<l $.3.50 wlior* than any
other iiianiifaet ur<‘r in the world, l»e-
catiMetliey hold their «liape, tit better,
ami wear longer than any other make.
Shoes at All Prices, for Every Member of the
Family, Men, Boys, Women, Mioses & Children
W L D oq , t U s $4 00 and $5.00 Gilt Edge Shoe* cannot
be «quailed at any price W I. Dougiaa $2.50 and
$2 00 shoes are th« best in the world
/'"(/«< t'olof I t/fhtit I itd I'clitnirfly.
rji-'l’.ik«- *«4» Subetit'ite. W. L Dougin*
ii.one anti pn
ia fdainp« d on txrttom. Sold
cvctyvli.-if, -I < H Iiiailt <1 tniiri factory to *ny
p-vrl
t lie world. <'utalotfUf free.
W. I . IMX hits. ISM Spark St . Brink ton.
P N U
w
No. 39-08
Ifl.X writing to advcrtiMer* plena®
mention thin paper.
BUSINESS COLLEGE
POHU.ANÜ. t'tlKl.ON
BEHNKE-WALKER STUDENTS SUCCEED. WHY?
They are Trained for buainesn in a businees-llke way.
Why not enroll in a reputable school that places all of ita graduates?
I. M. WALKER, Pres.
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