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About The Madras pioneer. (Madras, Crook County, Or.) 1904-current | View Entire Issue (June 11, 1908)
..... ' .. ST PATRICK i Twcniy-flve Years Had a Bad Cough. fm Peph! Klltleon, Evanston, toll. U.B-A. , . , RftiM bhb troubled wJth raUrrh j bdj cores io ""'" jimhhtlp... , , . ic jay brother aavuou wo w n T rlM. ir vflrv Door at trie .Ln taking rerun. My throat 'iBTMre will had a bad cough, i tone nid my hearth t very kfepevttf. i Rs-ommena rrrona m i " wbof8 troubled ns i was." vi tar! rrSi Some neonla nro- r.alleii, nthtr than mcdiolne in a Ifora. Each poopio can ouiaio uNew, whion represent, mo rl liurfdlml of I'orunu. Ifeclt tablet equals one avorago dose -(in the Ideal Laxative :fBtafftl by tho 1'orun.t Drug Coring Co., Columbus, Ohio. Ifcr Is Da Without I'ockets. i mcit annoying thing In nary t recruit Is tho absence of ipocWi In tho uniform trousers," a yeoman nt the nary re station, said thin morning. wfrip win doesn't rcallzo how 1 1 tb ctiilom of thrusting his i la bU trouwra pockets until be r without pockets, Pro worn uniform four yearn now, and stir find myself trying to put i In my pockets." Kansas City MtOXOES ONLY FOR THE CHILDLESS, By Prol. Alexander Graham Hell. Throw wide tho gates of marriage, and where children oro produced cIoho tight the doors of divorce. Kvcry child Is entitled, by nature, to n father and n mother, nnd no people should pro duce children who nre not prepared to give them parental cure for life. Tho grand spectacle la presented to our eyes of a new people being grad ually evolved In the United States by tho mingling together of tho different ... rttCCS '"o world In varying propor tion. It Is of tho greatest conse quence to ih that tho final result ahould be tho evolution of n higher nnd nobler typo of man In America, nnd not deterioration of tho nation, To tlilH end tho process of ovolutlon should be carefully studied and then controlled by unliable Immlgmijon luws tending to eliminate uudeHlrnble ethnical elements nnd to stlmulato tho admlaslon of elements assimilated readily by our population and that tend to rnlso tho standard of rriaiihood here. 1 iii EMOTIONAL C0NT10L BEINGS POWER. By SUvaln Roude. When we yield to an emotion our sentiment always transforms Itself Into a movement. Joy, fear, love, anger arc expressed In un conscious ffvatures, In a perfectly clear man ner. The strong man Is master of his emo tions and his unconscious movements, in or der to expend our strength to the best advan tage la Is needful to glvo out as little as possible under that base form of encrev known ah our emotions. All our emotions should be un der control. Tho choleric tnau, violent, exuberant, Is n feeble fellow, at the mercy of his environments. With him the nerves dominate or even abolish Individual In itiative, lie is n creature of Impulse, no matter where It originate. Ho Is a moral and a social slave. The man that Is too lively, too iietulant, dispenses his fore as quickly an they aro produced. He never has but a hinall amount of energy to conccntrnto on some thing really useful, although he attacks his problems with vim nnd even with violence. A man who wishes to have strength for tho right occasions must husband his resourcen and hold careful watch over his dally move ment. Sucli a man has the advantage In that by his vic tory of will iover over his emotional tendencies, over his animal miter nnd human instincts, he lias purified IiIh Judcment. reinforced his mental jHiwers, and given himself the cupaclty for discrimination In many othor matters between tho important and tho insignificant, the useful and tho Idle, THE CHURCH'S INTEREST IN LABOR . By Rev. diaries Stelzle. The labor union Is not the labor question. If nil the unions were wiped out of exist ence tho question would remain. This Is tho era of the common man. Tho common man, the worklngmnn, Is coming to his own. Un less that victory Is based on sound principles, the last state will ho worse than the first. The square deal for every man ahould bo our Ideal. We are making mistakes, but we are' making progress. If tho church did not care about the conditions of Inbor, I tell you right now I'd get out of tho church. Hut the church does care. Christ gavo no social system; He set out to better the individual. Josh Killings onco said: "Before you can have an honest horse rnce you must have an honest human race;" and I giiess there was lots of horse sense In that state ment. It is not so much n question of man's surround ings, but What lie is within, within himself, that has to do with composing the social unrest. Tho church herself has created this increased social unrest, in showing people tho heights to which they might attain. That is as Jesus Christ would havo It a health ful dlsnatlrfactlon with personal conditions to teach men how to rise higher. Droye all the snakes from IRELAND S-JACOBS OIL Drives all aches from the body, dure Rheumatism, .Neuralgia and CONQUERS PAIN 25cALL DRUGGISTS-GOc. BANKERS' SERVICE TO THE COUNTRY. By Senator Depevr of New "York. Bankers do not claim that they are In business for philanthropy or their health. They do not deny that they desire to mako all the money they le gitimately can, to pay good dividends to their stockholders, and strengthen their Institutions by adding to their surplus. But no student of finance can rise from n study of what the bankers, not only of New York, but of Chicago and other large cities, did in the recent crisis without fecllnz SEJfATon defew. that the banks of tho country are of ficered and managed by wise, level-headed, exceptionally ablo and patriotic men. No better public service can be rendered by bnnk of ficers and directors than to keep the machinery of com merce colne and to mnlntnin stromr nnd cnlvnnt th in. stltutlons upon which the credit nnd business, the em- oioynicni nna tue living or tno people depend. Zxttunttlt. SHOES AT ALL PRICES. TOR EVERY MEMBER OFTHE FAMILY MEN, BOYS, WOMEN. MISSES AND CHILDREN. wo? W. L. Oaufftaa mmfcam and more "fTjft world, btseanae ihmy bold (half "DS anama, fit heltmr, wmmr I an par. and mro or mevatar vaium than any otim m- mkoam fnihti world ta-dav. E5 W. L Douglas $4. and $5 Glif cJm Shoes Cannot Bo Eaualled At Any Price Wf AUTIOHr. W.t.D(HjtUiiumend price IxUrnpcd on bottom. VnUr Tfn 8Bhtltut. Bold hj the it ihcw) dealer ntrrwhttt. Hhot mlif from fartorr to any Prt of the world. Ilia. nti (MHog free to Uij uldreu. V. X. XI O U UL.A&. Broektaa, Mus. ixiriiirjenna If. n i dun to inn crmnfinn. naturally, acta truly as motive. u J MenfcnnQn(lCl,ill OUndnnr 111,1 t its jWt;.ni Vn'- fH name of the Com- WORNIA tljOB. U ... tfitVll!' id uiokr.; :.r ?LUoctor toid li (r,r',.we" 1 fair. air AH, IUkI.1 r0.ro manage Lni or from -n... Pl'lrw " 00d: ffT Vsars.M THE TRUTH ABOUT MEDIUMS. I'erfectlr llralthjr People ortcn I'oaopRN jVliHorinal Vovfern. "I have had a good deal of experi ence with mediums, nnd I'rc como to tho conclusion that they all start with at least somo small basis of abnormal power, Is It not rntber -suggest I vo that the number of practicing mediums does not materially Increase? If It were a mero mnttcr of deception, would there not bo thousands ut the trade? As a matter of fact, Micro nre not fifty ad vertising mediums In New York nt this moment, though, of course, tho number Is kept down by the feeling that It Is u bit disreputable to acknowledge posses sion of these powers. There nre nice ones. My own moth er had this power In her youth, so my father tells me. Her people were liv ing In Wisconsin nt tho time, nnd tho settlers front many 'miles around came to see tier perform. An uncle, when a boy of four, did automatic writing, and nn aunt reenntly wroto to mo In re lation to my book, Tho Tyranny of tho Dark,' that for two ycara (beginning when she was about 17) these powers of darkness mndo her llfo a hell. There are many recent people who nre posses sed by strange forces, but arc shy of confessing these abnormalities. Ank your family physician. Ho w(ll tell you that ho always has at least ono patient who is troubled by occult powers. They call It 'hysteria,' which doesn't explain nnythlng. Many apparently healthy people possess the more elementary of these powers often without knowing it." Hamlin Qarlaud in Everybody's. A EOTHECHILD STORY. . t - The rieiTnrd Hint Cunio to n Student vrllh n Ilcnrt. Old HotliBcliIld, stories nre popular now hi Europe. "Somo aro true," says an English writer, "somo aro only clever, nnd many arc simply Inven tions. But all aro read with Interest." Hero Is ono from the Bystander, Lon don: "At a luncliOon given by Empress Eugcnlo nt tho Tuilcrlcs tho head or tho Paris house of Rothschild was seat ed opposlto a great painter. Both schlld was not blessed with good looks and had, moreover, nn expression of distress nnd resignation combined. The painter could not take his eyes off him. nnd this worried Ilothschlld not a lit tle. After tho meal he asked the paint- er wliy he had taken so grent an Inter est In him, nnd to his great amaze ment tho painter Informed him that hp hud studied him as a model for a beg gar in a picture ho was then evolving. Rothschild's face brightened, and he said, 'I will sit for you.' And ho did. Ono day when ho wns posing a pupil of tho painter's was so touched by the expression of woe on the face of the model that he slipped n five franc piece Into the 'poor man's' hand and vanish ed before nn explanation wns possible. The next day the young man received -100 ns Interest on bin well invested 5 francs." Story at a War Trophy. Boso Garth, of Cilntpn, probably made the first corn shelter used In Mis souri. Fifty years ago, in 1858, he devised ono from wateronk plank and teupenuy nails. He used It on bis farm until 1801, wlisn Price's men came through there, saw It wns a good thing and took It down to Jackson's mill, where It wns used -to shell tho corn which was ground Into meal for Con federate soldiers. Tho old corn shellei wns lost track of for a number of yenrs by Its maker, but afterward he wus informed thnt it wns being pro served nt Washington among other cu rious trophies captured from tho South. Clinton Democrat. A Ctnch. "And how can you be aure of going to heaven?" asked the Sunday school teacher. "I guess," said little Tommy Wise, "the best way would be to gtt pa to say we couldn't Then ma would take us there ,or bust. That's how we got to the seashore last summer." Phila delphia Press. riTrt Bt. Tito Dtnre nd ftU Nervous DWse 1 1 lu permanently cared by Dr. Kline's (Jrtot Aerve Kestorar. Bend for FBEE 12 trial bottle and (rtMlsc Dr. V- II. la In,;, LcUldAich bU, l'iii:a..f. The Gentry. "She's engaged, ajil't she?" Inquired tho haughty blonde at the ribbon coun ter. "Yes," replied the lady who sold laces, "she's engaged to that new sales lady's brother."' "Where's he employed at?" "He's a night watch gentleman over to Bargcn & Co.'a." Philadelphia Press. CASTOR I A For Infanta and Children. The Klpd You Hays Always Bought Signature of Tci Far from It. Uprardson Yoa smoke ell the tisM, don't joa? Atom No: half the time I don't mokt t all. I seldom touch a dear betweea 0 p. ra. and 9 a. m. Mothers win And Mrs. Winalo Soothiar Byrup the best remedy to use tor their ckadrTB during tho teething period. "Willing- to Giro It a Trial. Sympathizing Friend YoUjSufferxfrora general debility sometimes, do jou? Did you ever try massage? Mrs. Skimmerliorn No; sow much does it cost a bottle? HOWAltD R. r.TJIlTON. Awiaycr and Chemlrt. LcadviKr, Colorado. Ppvcimen prices: Gold. Et'.ver, lr ad, ft ; Uold, 81 ver, 75c; Uotd, Mc; Zinc or Copper, ft. Cyanide t?:. Malllne envelopes and full price list sent on application. Control and Um- !re worfeollcllod. Itefcrencat Carbonate Ka on Bank. WANTED INfORMATION REGARDING Farm or Business for sale. Not particular about location. Wieh to hear from OWNER only who will sell direct to buyer. Give price, descrip tion and state when possession can be had. Address, LDAKBYSHlRE.Ee: 223. Er,N.T. In Guarded Tones. Ulchun Motiey .talks, you know. Poorun Yes, I'know; but when it converses with mo It never speaks above a whisper," Illustrated Bits. Sometimes there la trouble brewing In n brewery. t Relieving- the Monotony. Nan He proposed to yoa while the train was going around the elevated loop? How odd I Fan Yes, and tba,. engagement lasted till we got clear around. You1 don't know how it relieved the tedium of tBe ride. Chlcazo Tribune. How's This? W nffwf Ann TTn-tf4vl nn1laMVaa .-. Muse of Catarrh that cannot bo cured by Ha.l'g ! VDWtlU VUIO. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney (or the last 15 years, and believe htm perfectly honorable in all bultnoss transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga tion made br his firm. , WALDINO, KIVNAN & MARVIN, . Wholesale Drngeists, Tolcdo.O nail's Catarrah Curo is tken fnternaUy, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Testimonial? sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Bold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family PlUs for Constipation. Literal Chnrlty. I "I would like to take the sense of the ! meeting about this charity relief," said the professional philanthropist. And when tho' eontrlbutlop was taken up he found he bad taken nothing else, j Baltimore American. I 20 MULE TEAM BORAX IN A NEW PACKAGE 5 lbs. Most economical to buy. All dealers. Save the package tops; each are worth 12 coupons In ex change for presents. Premium list free of Pacific Coast Borax Co.. Oakland. CaL uo n TEL MOORE OPEN ALIj THE YEAS Clatsop ieach Seaside, Oreqim (TH V Directly oa the beach overlooklnr ns the oecaa. Hot salt batbs and fll ICF HnilQP surf bathing. Uteres- j " lion plef ror lishlnt:. ftp San parlors. Electric UrnU. Fire place and steam beat. Fine walks flRPRniy" 8n drlrrs. Sta foods a epec- per Ji7. Wh'prclal rates by tho week. mam IAlt. J. lIOOItE, I'rcpriotorj PKU No. 230 WOES writing to utlvertlsors please mention this paper. SIZES OF TYPICAL BATTLESHIPS OF 1888 AND 1808 CONTRASTED. I rrrffw iumMMAKiffr ill "mr ' mi u II i i i i am. WA.cjxr tt. tts rotat Rear Admiral Coghlnn, whose vessel, tho Itnlolgh, ren dered such conspicuous ser-ice at tho battle of Manila Bay, tella the Philadelphia Ledger of tho important changes which have takon plnco In tho navy ulnco that, memorable battle of ton years ago. The greatest change," said the Admiral, "has, of course, been the great Increoso In tho strength of our myy, Never lu tho history of the world has a nation Increased Its sea power within any period of ten years as We have since the war with Spain. We had then four battleehlpe. We now have 26, nearly all of which are In communion. The four others .which are under conitruc tloa should won be ready for eeihrlce. You might era. phMlM this: that any one of these newer battleships which we have built since the battle of Manila would hare been more than a match for the entire fleet which Admiral Dewey commanded. "The other advance. They have been notablo and many, There la the Increase In the rapidity of fire. We now bare actual rapid flro, But In thoee days such appliance we were introducing might be described M tending to, well, y, ree alownew of rej that would be tho best way to express what we were doing then, Then tho minimum of time required botween shots of tho heavy pieces wsb two and u half minutes. Now tho maximum Is about 4Q seconds. , "Tho Improved gun mechanism permitted of a vastly lucreased rapidity In flrlng. Tho telescopic sight brought about a vast Improvement In nccuracy, especially when flrlng nt long rango. One observer had become so much Impressed with this accuracy that ho Bought to tell about It In this wlso: Tho captain peering through his binoculars at a ship Just above the horizon, says to the captain of a slx-luch gun: 'Hit thnt fellow on the bridge In tho eyo. 'Ayo, aye,' Bays the gun captain, which eyo?' " Among tho numerous other Improvements the Ad miral noted tho ndvanco in armor construction, a prog ress so great that tho 11 Inches which tho new Connecti cut carries has greater resisting power than tho la inches which tho Oregon and her class carried. Still another Important advance Is the smokeless powder with which our magazines are uow supplied, this being vastly suporloi to tho old smoking, brown hexagonal with which we fouftht out the war with Spain. s.s.s CURES . MALARIA Malaria is due to impurities and poisons in the blood. Instead of beinr rtrrl. strnnc nnrl 1ipi1Mitt fUa nimit.ti ir i i . -- j . i.uv.uiuiiuu wu ikvuiuc luiccicu wim genua or. vdisea-e which destroy the rich, red corpuscles that furnish nourishment and strencth to the bodv. and redmvl tli vttnl fl;i tn cm ,oi. condition that it is no longer able to keep the system in health, or ward off the countless diseases and disorders that assail it. The loss of these red corpuscles takes the color and glow of health from the cheek, and we Bee' pale, sallow faces and washed out, chalky complexions among the first symptoms of Malaria. But Malaria is a genernl systemic disease, and as the blood becomes more heavily loaded with its (emis we have moreserioua vnd complicated symptoms ; the impure blood having its effect on all parts cf the body. The appetite fails, digestion is weakened, chills and slight lever are frequent, and the sufferer loses energy and ambition because of a constant tired-out nnd no account ' feeling. The lack of necessary nour ishment and iienltiifnl nnnlirioa ? " f - - - the blood causes boils and abscesses, skin affections, nnd in some cases Sores and ulcers to break out, and Boraetiraes the patient is prostrated with a spell of malarial fever which may leave his health permanently impaired. To cure Malaria both a blood purifier and tonic are necessary, in order to remove the cause and at the same time build up the system from its weakened and run-down condition. S. S. S. is the medicine best utted lor this work, It is the lUOSt Derfcct of all hlrwl nurifi the purely vegetable ingredients wnicu it is composed make it and of the During 1900 I was running a farm on the Mississippi river mr-i became to Impreg nated with Malaria that (or a year I was almost a physical wreck, I tried a number of medicines recommended as blood purifi ers, chill cures, and Malaria eradicator, but nothing did me any good until I begao to use S. S. 8. The result was that after taking it for awhile 1 was as well and strong as I tver was. I have never had a chill since nor the slightest symptom of Malaria. I hope others will be benefited by my experience, and with that end In view I give this testimonial, knowing that S. 8. 8. Is the best remedy for Malaria. Amory, NIm. 8. R. COWLEY. S. S. S. goes down into the circulation and removes every trace of impurity : ' "fc vuc ou,uc wnie gives 10 me dioou tue neauu-susiaining qual ities it needs. It cures Malaria thoroughly and permanently because it removes the frernia nnrl nnUrtno tuMM, vrsr1iiA fltA fl laaa Os nrl Veil a !.!. this tones up and strengthens every part of the system, When S. S. S. has cleansed the blood the symptoms pass away, the healthy color returns to the complexion, the old tired, .depressed feeling is gone, and the entire health TU SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLAJITA. GjL, - i 5 . t4 'P "in