I jrttW next week. -. i.L vmiDM ", i. rl oinpl. "v,trr"" .... SKii. OSft, it CO.. Pf f ."W T 'l ' wd bollara a . fin .ii in . . . at n v ri im m uv"' i.iirf iiin v tin PUi- bottl at IM-'jiH . &t.r)-I wotidar look "Jl, her nr trying .tinI 1 ivw-w K" - i.nv nvar iiiav-a .-l.Ifl WDJ J " ....-hi Una M''V.1 1.CiBhiW An Old Timer. Prettr KooJ .tor m - l l a hi n n II . ' ,.U Alt DIKi nw"" . . a 1 1. in OUl "" '. t-fa trie one ---- . iLit INI riiuii TB 1MB -- U." I WV 1KB jorlnwnw ana vwm" IM Yin Havs Always Boueht U iiiuiv wu t So Tom ! engtJ to Ethel, ..... tnnir It norr. t, Vettr know whst? n--T&t Hi cuum EJCSftJrrr. trt1 bollU f ' Lg.iilM,Ud.,Ml Arcu bu. rniiMtipui, . .... fVmrf -nua. L EWer!elth-Vb.t! Your bb ...l. M anil rin WIK JTll UJ, .u M It lion Bl ID IB l QiU V if. Ya inn i Duim Iit ba lolnc It iiono Tcr kito, POKTUANU HELEN'S HALL Aiti.it SCHOOL Of TUB HIOIIKBT uwiw.." - - " . r 1. IK. lOnj iwii'1"- - . . .. .. . mil a rrr h ft luiini in m i 1 1 1 i rui Bititnt u4 itrenMt mump rulltr Btrtrt. ill lion powrr X) Ui try mtrm Wrlu I at aaacrlntl catj KEIERSOri MACIilNRKr CO. iDWtImi Strtt CsftUni, Orsn CPU CRT! 7 A Qathbcutrtttm ( ta Hthlh i twtiM m yourulf nd Im f your 1 kuj)rti aAttt. tni t HU crcsllt tU KX9 en pur t&OO KhoUnhlp. . dwot ttat ttrtptlonat dvtnl(r to 1 But litTucTio-locir Tuition nntrtiuiui(t i in rut THE MULTNOMAH M. A. AUIN. IN(. wTHtT. ponTLAND. one. CONOMY - - -w ar r A! n . i uiiipms engine Puntj waUr for houit and Irrigation MpUe, Wnd mtlli nJgtKilliio n(lnei. Ilurnnatolliie, wood or col. Uu auto matic itop. Bhlpi-jd on approval. Writ 'or catalogue and price a. QEALL &. CO. tWWAve. Portland. O,,. VAJaa lilt DR. G, GEE WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO, rormo:ljrlocaUd et M Aldor St, lor the put A yean HAVE MOVED a- 7 " . .VT'H firiAar tl..aaa ' firil ihJ a. -'''MIH III allH n. IT r."o .t... . e n.. - I- UOW brn.l . .. VSm called tiil f SKVM in .. - . ttiit iiHrr aitifi m wiiKiinwia in . a " r to a.7.-"" w rmi.rii.. U ..",uJ?.n).N,,.." .?' 'rung .r-ioni in.;'. Buiain Aa.wn... c .1. u . . vi 11 1 nr wait rr ' Birai "u ook a. M 1 a Vfl. F lease Your Hair Don't have falling out with your hair. It might leave you I Then what? Better please It by eivlng It a good hair-food Aycr'a Hair Vigor. The hair atopi coming out. becomes soft and smooth, and all the deep, rich color of youth cornea back to gray hair. -1 wm IreaMtd rraatljr with dandrnff until 1 vigor. iieomaMMlreured ippea mi hair from i ry nfctlr alto In '..TO I Mad A: Hair' ; eomaMialTCu th tHfviruf and alia Hopped t hair fr ralHBfoui. ittarrti ni Tery nictlf al arraMiriB mj nair in 1IMHA4MI1 a an VOOt, Ull " 1 K44 J. O. JLt." Co.. iiowtUMaaT! Alee) KMuteetarera r 5 Klt-aiPlOTM a Mviu cnuby pcctokal. sXWHanmaTCraVaWMa Inaalt to Washington. The principal of a UIrU cbool in Jer aey sudtloiiiy ordarcd all cl&oseii to fl ffcrnblo in the auditorium, and when teachers and pupils, In amazement, were fathered together beforo bin?, ad dressed thorn on "Georeo WaahiURton, the Katlicr of Our Country," says the Now York Press. In finishing his en coihIumb on the Immortal George be said: 'Tho bust of George Washing ton which stood upon the pedestal In the reception rooai has been removed and place- upon the floor with Its face in the corner. Until the culprit, who ever he or she may be, cornea to the frent and makes a public confession of the misdemeanor, not a soul will be permitted to Imto this bulldlngl Re member there will be no other pun Isiuuent imposed than the open and public confession J" Bensatlonl Teachers glanced at teachers, pupils fidgeted around In af fright, the principal looked solemn unil funereal. If that old pin had dropped, erery one would have beard It. Then the Janitor arose and stopped forwatl, to break the awful silence. "I'm afraid It's up to me, sir," he said. "The roof was leakln' mighty bad, an' the boost of Mister Washln'tou were in the drip, aa' I thought proper to more It to tceep the rain frosa apllln' it, an' I meant no insoolt by turnln' his face to the wall, sir." The principal, a man of talent and some brains, tapped the bell and dismissed the school without further quesUonlog. Crowded Oat. There is a contractor who most strenuously objects to the teamsters is bis employ lea Tins their wagons unattended outside eating bouses. Bo when be came across a flagrant breach of this regulation the other day his angry passions rose. With Bra In his eye he rushed Into the eating bouse, and feund his em ploye placidly Investigating the In terior mysteries of a chicken pie. "What do you mean by it?" he cried. "How dare you leave my horses in the street! How came you to de itr The startled teamster looked up, his mouth full ef pie crust. Well, sir," he stnmmeretl, "there wasn't no room for them In here!" aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaH rWa Krlc Hales, author of "A Madcap Crulflo," a morry son romnnce, Is tho only son of Harriot Vono l!nten. Ills Inheritance, It will be perceived, was destined to tnnko him look with favor able regard upon the "habit of wrlt liiK." He Is alo la love with out-of-door sports, and for two summers ho lived with his father on a yacht coast ing along tho Maine promontories. Two summers he spent abroad, and laBt February left Hoston he being In his fourth year lit Harvard with tho I'umpelly archaeological expedi tion for excavating ruins lit Turkestan. The scenes of "A Madcap Cruise" are described by him at Ilrst hand. On July 12 there was sold at Sothe bys, London, n perfect copy 10 leaves of tho fourth quarto edition of Shakespeare's "Trageillo of King Itlch ard tho Third, lOO.V The price, $8,750, Is higher than any sum previously paid at auction for a Shakespeare quarto. It Is believed only two other copies of this edition exist. One Is In tho Itrltlsh Museum; the other In tho liodlelan Library at Oxford. The fact that' In live places a contem porary autograph of "Wm. I'cnn" Is found gives this Just sold copy a pe culiar Interest. The signature Is prob ably that of the famous admiral, the father of the founder of Pennsylva nia." Houghton, MKlIln 6c Co., Hoston, havo brought out a biography of Natluinli'I Hawthorne, complied by Nina IS. 11 row lie, which Is said to be as complete as It Is probably possible to make such a work. MIhh Browne, who Is secretary of tho American lit erary Association publishing board, has been engaged upon the work! for sixteen years. It contains, along with tile entry of Hawthorne's published work, whether In book form or In old magazines or newspapers, everything that could be discovered In print about Hawthorne, In both books and period icals. Much pains were given to the arrangement to make It as helpful us poxlblc, both to the literary work er and to the collector. There has even been Included a very full double entry author and magazlno Index, the references in Poole's Index, as well as references to periodical literature not cited In Poole's, being given, which will be of special service to librarians and students. The edition consists of 555 numbered copies, of which 500 are for sale. The author of "A Publisher's Con fession," speaking of the price paid to authors for their books, says: "There are, perhaps, a dozen Ameri can novelists who have largo Incomes from their work; there are many more who have comfortable Incomes; but there is none whose Income Is as large nk the writers of gossip for the lit erary Journals would have us believe. It has been said that Harper's Maga zine pays Mrs. Humphrey Ward $15, 000 for the serial right of each of her stories, and 20 per cent royalty. Miss Johnston must have made from $00, 000 to $70,000 from royalties on "To Havo and to Hold,' for any publisher can calculate 1L Hut along with these great facts let us humbly remember that Mr. Carnegie received $300,000, 000 for all his steel mills, good will, etc.; for the authors that I have named are tho 'millionaires' of tho craft I wish there were more. But the' diligent writers of most good fic tion, hard as they have ground the publishers, In tho rise of royalties. lm vZt nnnroil to Grub street than they aro to Sklbo Castle." N. 3s-i hT ynem HOW TO CLASSIFY THE MULE. Mlaaourl'o Oreut Product Difficult to Orade, Huya a Htock Dealer. "Tho classltlcaUon of Missouri's great product, tho mule, Is the hardest of all llvo stock," said Johu Grant of the firm of Walcott, Beers & Grant at tho stock yards. "To most people tho animal Is sim ply a mule, with a Btrong Inclination to cmphaslzo his presenco with a kick. To most buyers ho Is a good or bad, large or small, smooth or rough, will probably bring a certain price on tho market or will not bo wanted at all. Whllo among some dealers who supply tho different demands he Is classified according to weight, bone, size, color, ago, mouth, teeth, broken or unbroken, length and breadth, and also in regard to tho locality of tho buyer. "In tho first place, green, unbroken mules aro nover wautod. Once in a wlille we receive a fow and generally havo to sell them at a Bacrlflco. Tho principal cIbbbos of mules known to CLEMENTINA GONZALES, the market ore: Cotton mules, lumper OP CENTRAL AMERICA. mu,c8' rnllroaA IUU,C"; aUK"r ,m,l,e'' ur -CINIItL AIY.cniv.rA, Jarm mnlp8( 0ve0 nnilos, city mules RESTORED TO HEALTH. nn(1 ,nUOra. Miners aro classod aa PE-RU-NA THE REMEDY surface and pit mules. "Cotton mules aro tho commonest MIm Clementina Gonzalea, Hotel kind In regard to numbors. They range Provincla, Guatemala. 0. A,, In a re- from thirteen to sixteen hands, and cent letter from 247 Olovoland Avo., from four to sovon years old aro tho Chicago, III , writes! host agos. Their build makos llttlo "I tee Pwuna for a worn-out eomiRlon. fllfferenco bo long aa thoy are smooth. I was so run down that I coukl not sleep at jn prjco thoy rango from $50 to $105. night, had no appetite and felt tired hi the Lumber mules are the largest, heavy memlflf. honed, rugged grades, 1D.8 to 10.2 .JJKXtffiTtt Ss'orTetter.'Thoy are used In the AfltSBMra boSe I felt big lumber camps or logging and much better. I continued Rs we for three must havo the weight for good, heavy waU ami I waa compteteJy restored te pulling. In price thla class register health, and waa afcte te take up my studies u., t0 $250, which I kd hmn forced to drop There h "similar to the lumber mule ia tho aSS5. iSSSlSiSi4 railroader. Some lighter, but on tho drelft Co, Kood ijsss&ir taij vSt jess ,,dl)MUv , jpopu-1 Towiuk.1 bujldinft. in tho construction of railroads, Sugar mules belong to tho fancy class.'Thoy must bo smooth, built rangy, small head and neck, small bones. In height from 15 to 10 hands, and In price from $105 to $210. Farm mules vary In size, but are formed from tho rejected ones of tho foregoing classes. Their prices range from $10 to $25 lower. "The miners aro the hardest class to supply. They must be cither dark bay or black In color. White and sor rel mules aro never -used. When tho mines have long shafts, in the Penn sylvania coal regions especially, they Bay a white mule resembles a ghost and frightens the other mules beyond control. The pltters must be long In body and have good weight They range- from 15 to 15.2 hands and bring from $135 to $200, whllo for any other trade they would bring $50 less. Sur face mules are used on the long hauls on top of ground. They nro heavy, but til Her, and havo not such largo bones, "Levee mules, as tho word Implies, are used near steamboats and docks for the heavy work. They are general ly single workers and must be of the rugged class. Their looks matter lit tle so long as they aro sound and fit for hard work. A city inule Includes the small, light grades, mich as you seo on delivery and transfer wagons. The high prices In the last year have reduced the number greatly. "The government buys all classes of mules, but that Is done according to contract and prices hold a wide range. They never buy a low-priced animal and they nre rigid in their examina tions." Kansas City Star. - BU8INES8 VALUE OF A WHIM. .CAJXCE5, Twice as Good One Third the Cost Every day Is bargain day in the Ware Circle. Come In and get ac quainted. K C will help you cut down the living expenses and mako doctor's hills a thing of the past Do you realize that you can get the best and purest baking powder in the world Kf BAKING W POWDER at one-third what you've been paying for anywhere near K. C quality. A 2s ounce can eoitM2$e. Think of the savingl Can you mako money anyaskr ? Get it to-day. Tho grocer returns the price of can if you are not satisfied. Jill Grocers Send postal for the beat(nl "Book of Preteotf." FREE. JAQUES MFC. CO. umcago. Factories Do Not Piiy KnoiiKh Atten tion to Needs of Foreigners. Tho commercial world of tho United States hns paid almost no attention to the peculiar wants of the LaUn-Amer-lcan, Oceanic and Oriental people. When these distant countries are con sidered they are usually regarded as merely points for the unloading of an occasional American surplus. Not long ago, for example, an Amer icau company tried to sell a cargo of heating stoves In Para, Brazil. Para Is Just a little more than one degree south of the equator. The women of India like to get their cotton goods done up In paper boxes, each containing In addition a few pieces of colored glass and a gilt box. These trinkets are practically worth less, and their cost to the manufac turers Is Infinitesimal. But tho sturdy British dealer will not descend to fur ther his trAde by the inclusion of such absurd gewgaws; and as American manufacturers have never given the matter a thought, the trade Is begin ning to pass to Germany, where cotton cloths with their accompanying bau bles are put up to suit the Hindu taste. When I was In Japan they told me of an enterprising American who had nrrived with a new curf for corns. Ho had learned by correspondence that in all Japan no remedy for these Inflic tions had ever been sold, and be con jured up a dream of fortune. But when ho got to the Sunrise Kingdom ho discovered that the people are a barefooted race and had no corns to cure. This is a grotesque Incident, but it is one of many Instances of Amer-; lean failure to Recurc trade abroad sim ply because of our Ignorance of foreign conditions. Not a Willing Victim. Hw neat, middle-aged matron gazed suspiciously at the disreputable-looking tramp who had knocked at her kitchen door. "What do you want?" she asked. "Would ye mind glvin me a piece o' pie, ma'am?" be said. ' "I don't know about that I can't say I like the looks of you." "I know I ain't very prepossessln', ma'am, but It ain't my fault I can't afford to dress any better." "I'm not speaking of your clothes altogether. You don't look clean." "I'm wlllln to confess It, ma'am. I guess I don't" "And you don't look as if you ever combed your hair, or took any sort of care of yourself." "Well, I reckon that's 'cause I live close to nature." "If you do," she said, as she went after the pic, "I'll guarantee it isn't nature's fault!" Strange, Indeed. Belle Do you believe in second sight my dear? Eva Sometimes. Belle Speaking from experience? Eva Yes, I have often told Jack that he needed a shave when it was too dark to see his face. An Easy Task. Nextdoor That new cook of jours Is certainly a handsome woman. Neighbors You bet she is. Why, all she has to do is smile at the potatoes and they are maohed. The Great Jersey Resort. Speak to the man from "way down East," or tho cowboy from the plains, about AtlanUc City, and the chances are he will tell you as much about It as any Jcrseyman who runs down -to "the beach" in an hour from his homs town. This little sandy island off the Jersey coast has become one of the nation's greatest pleasure grounds; a city created solely to help people kill time. There are bathing, yachting, boating and fishing for those who are fond of water sports; there are golf links, a race-track, and baseball grounds; ev ery form of diversion from the ma chine which tells your fortune, given your weight, and plays a merry jinglti while doing so all for a nickel to the band concert merry-go-round and "trip to the moon." Nightly the large hotels are scenes of balls and card parties. Every hour of the day, from the time one rise from the breakfast table until even the dawn of the next morning, some thing diverting can be feund by tho pleasure-seeker. In the forenoon, be fore the evening dinner, and from nightfall to midnight it is "tho thing" to be on the promenade. She Was Prepared. Husband I mado $100 on a. luck? turn ia stocks to-day, and you can now get that new gown you hare wanted fo so long. Wife Oh, I'm so glad. Here Is the bill for It, my dear. Tho Wrong Anthem. One of the many diverting nccl- dents which marked the kaiser's re cent visit to Corfu is related In a let-' tro from an ofllcer of tho British squndron which was present during tho emperor's stay. King George of Greece, after fall ing to meet tho kaiser in his yacht through taking one channel while his Imperial guest steamed un the other, landed In advance of him. In order to welcome him on Greek soil. His nstonlshment nnd.. according to somo observers, his annoyance was great when ho was saluted with a barren rendering of the German an them 1 Tho luckless conductor of tho Greek band, who had failed to recog-; nlzo his sovereign, received n severe personal reproof from the king of the Helencs. When ho quitted tho liner Hamburg at Naples tho kaiser asked tho'oiUclals of tho Hamburg-American Comnny If tho suite of rooms which had been specially fitted up for the Imperial voy ngo would bo left as they were. On being told that, on the contrary, they would be dismantled, tho em peror, according to the Frankfurter Zcltung, remarked: "That Is a groat pity, and a loss to tho company. I am sure that thero aro Americans who would pay almost anything for tho prlvllego of occupy ing for a tlmo tho cabins nnd sleep lug In the bed used by tho kaiser." London Mall. JUl 21 1 Z D I A A Poison BfeatfieJ IlnIiri- into the System The air arising from low, marshy places, damp cellars, stagnant ponds and pools aad from decayiag vegetable matter, as well as the gases from sewers, is loaded with germs of malarial poison. The water we drink, that has not been properly filtered and purified, is also full of these germs and microbes, and as we daily breathe and drink millions of WAT. ASIA IN HIS SYSTEM FOB YEASS. these into the system, to be For several years I suffered with Chills an J absorbed by the blood, the Fever, caused by Malaria in my system, and each! entire body begins to feel the snmmer for several years I would have a relapse.') effects of the poison. The Finally n physician prescribed S. S. S. ItenJ f t ... ... r w tirely cured me; I have never been troubled since.1 SSf iTiSa'S fev 9X3 W. Market St, Louisville, Ky. L Shapo. 1 but when the blood is thoroughly saturated with the poison it becomes so weak and polluted that abscesses, carbuncles, boils, sores, ulcers and other skin diseases result. Malaria also affects the liver, kidneys, bowels and stomach, producing a chronic state of biliousness that often results in jaun dice or some malignant fever. In cases of Malaria the blood must be puri fied before the body can regain its natural health. S. S. S. contains purify ing and tonic properties possessed by no other blood medicine, and is tho ineai remeay ior me treatment oi xviaiana. it des troys the germs of the disease and builds up the weakened, polluted circulation. It enters into the blood and forces out every particle of poison and waste matter and adds strength and activity to it. S. S. S. improves the appetite and digestion, tones up the entire system by its alterative and purifying action, and Malaria, with all its bad effects, ia permanently driven from the system. Book ou the blood and any medical Gdvice, without charge. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA j GAa sss SI PRUSSiAN UCS KILLER kills 6 LICE on Poultry. &-l2n&52k kill tfie lice. NeTcr falls. Sold by dealers, 50c end i.oc per caa. CLEANED CUT ALL TIIS LICE ANDMITEB. . Albert Blocker of Chauhassen, Minn., bought a can of Prussian Lice Killer and used it tborougblr three times anil cleaned hie poultry houra entirely free from Hoe and mttea. Before n!lnf, tho poultry bouse waa all re with red lloonixl mites. JUST THE THINQ FOR LICE ON HOCS. , . 3. n. M alone, ot Adel. Uo say tke nrusalan LiceKlUer Is jut the tUng (or lice on bog, and is worth Are times Its cost. PORTLAND SEED CO., Portland, Orecon, Coast Aeents "Smart" London Matters, A fashionable crowd Is almost In variably bad tempered. People Jostle each other vindictively nnd preserve a stony, Icy glaro tho whole time. A man at n dnnco seeking his partner In tho crush will not hcsltnto to push past womon In a way that would prob ably shock his barbarian ancestors. Loudon Lady. GveatuRlly. "Who gets tho bulk of Pomberton's estate?" I "The lawyers." Cleveland Plain Dealer. h A man called another man a liar to-day. The man accused saldi "I know I am a liar, but I thought you were too much of a gentleman to r far to It," Why Hoosier Drills I Perfect Sowers A Perfect Drill it impossible without a feeding device that will sow the grain evenly under all condition. Tke ordinary gravity feed towa by weight The greater pressure on the feed opening when going up hill makes it sow more than when coming down, when this pressure is re moved; the same on skle hills. NOT SO ON THE HOOSIER. It has Perfect Force Feed; sowe by measure, consequently always sows the same; and pretuure does not affect it Enlargement in the Feed Cup just where the Feed Roll takes hold of the seed prevents cracking. Write for "The Feeding of the Seed in Hoosier Drills." That tells all about it MITCHELL, LEWIS & STAVER CO. first and Taylor Streets PORTLAND, OREGON