•
Is Pe-ru-na Useful
for Catarrh?
New Canning Process Preserves Nat
ural Color and Flavor.
Should a list of the ingredients of Pe
runa bo submitted to any medical ex
pert, of whatever school or nationality
ho would be obliged to admit without
reserve that tlie medicinal herbs com
posing Peruna are of two kinds. First
standard and well-tried catarrh reme
dies. Second, well-known and gener
ally acknowledged tonli remedies
That in one or the other of these use«
they have stood the te.-t of many years
experience by physicians of different
schools. There can be no dispute about
this, whatever. Peruna is composed ol
some of the most efficacious and uni
versally used herbal remedies for ca
tarrhal diseases, and for such condition»
of the human system as require a tonic
Each one of the principal ingredient»
of Peruna lias a reputation of its own
in the cure of some phase of catarrh oi
as a tonic medicine.
The fact is, chronic catarrh is a dis
ease which is very prevalent. Many
thousand people know they hav«
chronic catarrh. They have visited doc
tors over and over again, and been told
tiiat their case is one of chronic catarrh
It may txj of the nose, throat, lungs
stomach or some other internal organ
There is no doubt as to the nature oi
the disease, Tlie only trouble is th«
remedy. This doctor has tried to curt
them. That doctor has tried to p ru
scribe for them.
No other household remedy 80 uni
versally advertised carries upon tile
label the principal active constituents.
■ howirtg that Peruna invites the full
inspection of the critics.
Still
Had
Them.
The woman of the house eyed him bus
piciously.
“You’ve been here before, haven’t you?’
she asked.
“Not lately, ma'am,” answered Ware
ham Ixing. “You prob'ly reco’nize mt
clothes. This is an old suit o’ yer bus
band’s you wus kind enough to give mt
when I wuz here two years ago.”
Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing
Bynip th*- best remedy to use lot their chrldr -n
luring the teething per.od.
Limi te<l K uowlpdge.
Prepared by Jure- Dryden. Oregon Agricultural
College. Corvallis.
Ground Wire Fences.
In the summer season many farmers
susstaiu considerable loss of live stock
from lightning striking wire fences and
killing animals standing near. This loss
can be avoided if the fence Is grounded
—that is, a connection made between
the wires and the damp soil beneath.
Tills can be done by stapling a No. V
wire along the post from top to bottom
anti burying the end in the ground deep
enough to reach damp earth. These
ground wires should be fastened to
about every third post. When the light
ning strikes a fence thus fixed the cur
rent Is conducted into the ground In
tend of being deflected into the body
*f some animal.
When a storm comes up stock ln a
field will naturally drift toward the
fence for protection, especially if there
are no trees in the field. The barbs on
wires attract ttio lightning, which has
been known to travel several miles on
a fence before it was discharged Into
the ground. Lightning takes the path
of least resistance, and if the body of
an animal Is standing near the fence
It makes a good conductor and the
charge is deflected, with the result of
x dead horse or cow.
The cost and time needed to ground
a wire fence is small and need not en-
ter into the question, but when a valu-
able animal is killed, or maybe a whole
herd, as has often happened, the cost
I b then very considerable. While you
may never have had any losses of this
kind, it will not pay to put this matter
off, for the next storm that comes tp
may be as disastrous to you as It has
been to some of your neighbors. Avoid
It by grounding your wire fences In
time.—Goodall's Farmer.
“Paw, have you ever been east?"
“Yes; I spent a year in New Yoi
Concrete Water Tank,
City when I was considerably young»,
than I am now.”
The diagram shows a sectional out-
“Well, what is the ‘eastern question'?’ fine of a concrete water tank with the
“The only one I ever beard was, ‘How bottom and top finished, and a portion
much is he worth?’”—Chicago Tribune In the middle of the walls In course
CITC
Vltus’ Donee nn<1 ‘‘rvooR DleeaMM perm»
■ I ■ J nuntly cared l>y I)r. * -ine'« Grout Nerve Ko
storor. Send for FREE $2 00 trial bottle and treatise
Dr. R. 11. Kline, Ld., 931 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa
Desperate Hrnirtly.
"It says here,” began tlie 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.
of construction. The bottom Is shown
in position, but as a matter of fact,
the walls are built first, and the bot
tom put In afterwards. A quantity of
1*4 inch by ♦> inch unplaned board,
sufficient to make a large box of the
length and breadth the finished tank
Ls to be, and two feet deep, will be
required. The sides and ends of this
For Infants and Children.
The Kind Ycu Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
Superfluity.
"Do you think Mars is inhabited?
asked the scientific person.
SECTION OF TANK.
“I really can’t say that I care much
whether it is or not,” answered Miss
Cayenne. “There are already enough box are made as separate shutters, the
neighbors to talk about.”—Washington boards being nailed to cross-pieces of
2 inches by 3 inches batten, put about
Star.
four feet apart. The end shutters are
Btato of Ohio, City of Toledo /
made to go Inside the side shutters,
SS.
Lucas County.
(
this
Frank J. ('honey makes oath that ho lssentot and two of the cross pieces, Ln
fiartnor of the Urm oi F J. Cheney A Co., Joins ease, are fixed right at the end of the
xisincHi i u t hot' Uy of Toledo, County and State
aforoaid, mil that «aid firm will nay t lie sum •'■oa rds.
one
fol nt
Settled.
“And now, Cryptomeria,” said the
young man, »till holding her hand, but
wirh 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 suit tne a great deal better than a
long and expensive trip.”
"We nre going to be very happy, dear!”
mid Gerald, with a sigh of relief.
- 'ulixWSonna
Cleanses the Sv stem E
ually. Dispels ( (tills and itcti
aelie.s duo to ( onsti
..sit pa ion;
Acts naturally, qc its
U ¿
truly as
a Laxative.
Best forMeiiVomm an d Child’
ren-Vanii ó and Old.
name oj the Com
CALIFORNIA
po S yrup C o .
by . J >nom
leading
A War on Ineecte.
Mat Each usetts scientists have evolved
a plap for the destruction of the gypsy
and brown-tailed moths. 'I hey hav *
looked with dismay on the ravages of
these moths m the follag-t end have
planned what, tn military science
would be a fine bit of strategy. Un-
able by any direct assault to destroy
the moths, the scientists have enllstel
t.'.e aid of an army of moth pfuasltes
'Ittlo insects that fasten themselves 01.
tne i.iotbs, feed upon and finally de
stroy them. Eight hundred thousand
of those parasites have been secured,
and at the right moment will be set
upon the nemy. A singular fact Is that
the moths do not recognize the para
sites as enemies, but seem to find their
presence grateful. They give of their
life to support the parasites, and ul
timately, fall a victim to their own
generosity. Iiow similar this relation
ship to that which too often obtain.,
among human beings! So striking
is that similarity and *o many unpleas-
¡mt tnlr.gs does It recall that we almost
feel pity for the destructive moths and
resentment against the ungrateful para
sites whose services have been invoked.
But a look at the devastation wrought
by tlie moths gives poise and resolution,
and we welcome the scientists' strategy
and wish for it success.
But what of tne parasites? What
mischief, if any, will they work In the
cffnlrs of man when they have de
stroyed his enemies, the moths? Wil)
It tie necessary to employ another army
of insects to destroy them, and, If So.
how much progress will have been made
toward tlie conditions of healthful veg
etable growth?—Columbus Dispatch.
Leather
it n m.nmf.K-tured. printed on the
¿rout of rv.n package.
^
.YALL
druggist
IM sue only, regular pro.« 50«e«*- butll*
persons realize that a horses
hoof is really the same thing as the toe
nails of human beings or of animals
having toes. The horn of a hoof grows
just as a toenail does.
The hoof grows more rapidly in un
shod horses than in those wearing
shoes, and it grows faster in horses
which are well groomed and well fed.
But on un average, says the New York
Sen, the horn grows ubout a third of
an inch a month.
lllnd hoofs grow faster than fore
hoofs. The toe of the hoof being the
longest part, it takes longer for the born
to grow down there than at the heel.
For Instance, the toe will grow entire
ly down in from eleven to thirteen
months, while tlie heel will grow down
In from three to five months.
As the new horn grows out any
cracks or defects In the old gradually
work down to where they cun be cut
off just as with human finger nails you
can watch the progress of a bruise
from the root to the tip.
Prevent« Ruuitwuy,
After being trained to pass locomo
tives, bicycles, etc., without shying,
the horse must now be broken in to
automobiles .
In fact, the
horse has de-
veloped a
new prank,
called "auto
phobia , ”
making him
unsafe espe
cially for la
dies to drive,
Let him see
BUNDS THE HORSE,
the machine
coming, let him hear it, let it pass him
slowly at the other side of the road—
the effect is likely to be the same. He
shies, he rears, breaks bls harness and
throws the occupants, the carriage
and himself into the ditch. The horse
cannot see in front of him—only to the
right or left. A California man thinks
the safest plan is to let him see noth
ing at all. He suggests enclosing the
eyes in the novel bridle blind shown
here, which he recently patented. A
pair of blinds are attached to the bri
dle. Normally these blinds remain
open. When the driver sees an ap
proaching automobile he pulls on a
strap which extends to the driver’s
seat and the blinds are folded over the
horse's eyes, completely obscuring his
vision, The danger of the horse be-
coming frlghtened and running away
is thus reduced to a minimum and the
occupants assured of safety.
w n It on Rond nridffrn.
CASTOR IA
of ONE HUNDRED HOLLARS for each and
»very cii.e of < atarrh that cannot be curod by
the uso of llaii’s Catarrh Cure.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my pres-
•nee, this 6th day of December A D 1866.
.
»
A. W. GLEASON,
'
’*
Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure I. taken internally, and
iru directly upon the blood and inucousaur-
'aees of thosyateni. send fortestfmonlala free.
F. J. CHENEY4CO.,Toledo,O.
Sold by all druggists. 75c.
Take Hall's Family 1’llls for constipation.
■ fRU.TS AH» VSCtTABLK»,
•
from
t-'rou
Skina.
There Is some leather made from frog
«kins In this country, and American
novelties made of this leather Include
pocki'ttxxiks, qnrd cnses and •infilar
things i In France
/•'rance some t children's
shoe« are made of this leather.
State supervision of all bridges erect
ed Is proposed by State Engineer Fred
erick Skene of New York. That gen
tleman has drawn up a proposed law
■overing the matter. He would require
his approval, ns* well ¡is the approval
of tlie county engineer, of the plans
and specitications of every bridge ex
ceeding $500 in cost to be built by a
town. He also recommends that eon
tracts for such bridges be required to
be awarded to the lowest bidder, after
the work lias been properly advertised,
and, finally, that the approval of the
State engineer be required before pay
ment for a completed bridge Is made.
There is a law In that State providing
that the assistance of tlie State engi-
neer may be invoked to superintend
such constructions, but It has been Ig
nored by the counties and towns, and
contracts have been Irregularly award
ed, with tiie result that there are many
Inferior structures. Such a law as
I hat proposed would be the means of
■ •orrecting the evils of the existing sys
tem.
Trees niul I.lirhtnlng.
There Is a popular belief that certain
trees are less likely than others to be
struck by lightning, and that during
a thunderstorm It is quite safe to stand
under a beech, for example, while the
danger under a resinous tree or an oak
is, respectively, fifteen or twenty times
greater. This Is disputed in a recent
writing by Dr. A. W. Bothwlck in his
"Notes of the Royal Botanical Garden
of Edinburgh.” The doctor sajs that
no tree is immune, and tlie beech Is
struck quite as frequently ns any other
species. Apparently the taller trees in
a neighborhood are tlie ones most like
ly to be struck. Contrary to wiiat is
believed by some people, tlie cells are
not “ruptured or torn by tlie formation
of steam, ns might happen If tlie heat
ing by the electric current was very
great The cells collapse and shrink
up. but are never torn.” The root sys
tem does not seem to be ever damaged
by lightning.
The
Invaluable Cuckoo.
Tlie fact that there Is a national
danger In the disappearance of the
birds Is coming to be more and more
widely recognized. A writer In Subur
ban Life tells of the work of the cuckoo
as an Insect destroyer.
"To watch
either the black-billed or the yellow-
hilled cuckoo flourish Ills long bill dex-
trously among tlie fruit trees or bushes
affords much pleasure, ns we know that
he is doing ills l»est to store away all
the insects he can find, either in his
own little stomach or those of his
fledglings. Twelve or more caterpillars
—big. fat ones—seem only a light lunch
for him. and, when at least his appetite
Is appeased, lie will kill the destructive
insects, apparently for the fun of It,
killing, tasting and Indifferently throw-
Ing them away without turning on hlf
perch.”
Certain fruits ami vegetables may
be preserved in such a way that they
will retain indefinitely their original
flavor, color and structure. This is in
the nature of a discovery, made by
Prof. F. F. Pernot, of the Oregon Ag-
1 ricultural college.
A report of Prof.
Pernot’s investigations is given in
Bulletin No. 87 of the Experiment sta
tion, Corvallis, and for the benefit of
the housekeeper who is wrestling with
the canning problem we give the sa-
! ’ient points of the bulletin.
Successful canning is a question of
sterilizing.
If a can of fruit spoils it
means that it was not properly steril
ized to start with, or there was a leak
age in the can. Spoiling of the fruit
, is due to germs which were in the
fruit when it was canned or entered
the can later. Sterilization kills the
jerms, and the fruit may be sterilized
by cooking or heating.
We quote the
following paragraph from the bulletin:
"Micro-organisms, not unlike all
other plants, possess the power of self
preservation and of perpetuating their
kinds; one is by means of producing
spores, or seeds, which are very resist
ant ; while others which do not produce
spores have a resisting power nearly
j “qual to that of spores.”
Heating the fruit to 160 degrees foi
ten minutes will kill the germs with
out injuring the good qualities of the
fruit, but the spores, which are "un
incubated” germs will not be injured
at that temperature and will become
"germs” in another day, when the heat
should again be applied. A few spores
may escape the second heating, making
a third steaming necessary.
eto*»o<
t-.nou^a
rw»r
eftm.
City -N ¡ece—Why, mjcle, I’nt surprt's-
eft to see you wearing such a rusty
looking bat when you come to town.
Uncle Reillieii -It’s th’ hat 1 allers
wear tew home.
City Niece—Yes, but that’s different.
Everyitody knows you there.
Uncle Reuben—Wall, nobody don’t
kne r.’ me here, so I aiu’t worryin’, bj
grass!
Turning <» T lx hl
Screw.
Any one who has attempted to re
move a very tight screw knows what
a very difficult business It Is.
After
straining and twisting for a con
siderable time the operator frequent
ly ends by losing bis temper and de
stroying the bite of the screw, which
remains fixed as tightly us ever. With
the aid of a pair of pinchers, however,
the affair is quite a simple one. Place
the screwdriver in position uud then
catch hold of tlie blade with the pinch
ers just above the head of the screw.
Press tlie screwdriver firmly and at
the same time twist round the blade
with the pinchers. The tightest screw
will yield immediately to this sort of
persuasion.
What 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 Team”
Soap for washing the birds, and I can
say from years of experience washing
white birds, never before have I 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 agent« wanted.
Write for money making plan
Iler
Idea.
Hair
at Auction?
At any rate, you seem to be
feciiing i id of it on auction-sale
principles: “going, going,
g-o-n-e!” Stop the auction
with Ayer’s Hair Vigor. It
checksfallinghair,and always
restores color to gray hair. A
splendid dressing also. Sold
for over sixty years.
** Mi hair canie out so bn'Vy I nearly lost II
ail. I bad hoard . nnu I, nbout Ayer*. Hair
Vigor I thought I would giro It« trial. I did
•o audit completely stopped lire tailing and
made my liair grow vety rapidiy."- liatrv H.
t 1X1.1», Nortlitield, Musa.
Made by T.C. Ayer Co., Lowell. 1 sa.
maaufaoturere of
SARSAPARILLA.
PIUS,
cium pectoral .
Sorry, but...... -
“Gumbolt and I have made a bet an4
agreed to leave it to you. He says a
drowning man gets bis lungs full of
water, and I say lie doesn't. Which of
us is right?”
"What are the terms of the wager?”
“The loser is to pay for a dinner tot
the three of us.”
"H’ln—1 never knew Gumbolt to pay
i bet. You lose.”—Chicago Tribune.
Side Llgh(, on
Poesy.
Scott was writing the “Lady of ths
Lake."
“If you were to tell the truth about
her,” he said, “I should say that she is
awfully seasick, but eipoets to feel bet
ter when tlie boat gets to St. Joe.”
Thus it is, in all ages, that the poet
lias to sink rlie Real in the Ideal.—Chi
cago Tribune.
“Stocks were all down a few points
to-dny,” remarked the broker.
How It Should Be Done.
“The Idea!” exclaimed his wife. "It’s
First—Clean the fruit jars or cane h wonder they didn’t advertise It as a
by means of a brush, using hot water bargain day.”—Catholic Standard and
to which washing powder has been Times.
I added.
After washing thoroughly
--------------------------------------------- j,
steam the jars to remove any dirt that
may remain.
Second—After washing the vegeta
bles or fruit place them in jars, com
pletely filling them. Then add water
to fill the interstices, and put on lid.
Don’t screw it on tight or the jar will
burst when heat is applied.
Malaria is due to impurities in tlie blood which destroy the rich,
Third — Procure a wooden steam healthful qualities of the circulation, and reducé it to a weak, watery fluid.
chest, the wash boiler will do, and put The body is then deprived of its necessary nourishment and strength, and is
some water in the bottom of it.
Put unable to resist the countless disorders that assail it, and the general system
slats in the bottom on which to set the suffers in consequence.
The appetite fails, digestion is weakened, chilla
jars.
and slight fever are frequent, while the sufferer loses energy and ambition.
Fourth—To get the proper tempera Boils, skin eruptions, and some times sores and ulcers follow when the
ture, put a thermometer in the center blood becomes deeply polluted with the malarial germs.
Both a tonic
of an extra jar of fruit or water and and blood purifier are needed to cure Malaria, and S. S. S. is best fitted for
steam the fruit at a temperature of this work. It is the most perfect of all blood purifiers and at the same time
160 to 165 for ten minutes. Do not let an invigorating, healthful tonic. S. S. S. goes down into the circulation,
temperature get above 165.
Then and removes every trace of impurity or poison, and gives to the blood the
remove jars and screw lids on tight health-sustaining qualities it needs. It cures Malaria thoroughly and per
immediately.
Repeat the steaming a manently because it removes from the blood the gernis and poisons which
second and a third time at intervals of produce the disease, and while doing this tones up and strengthens every
24 to 48 hours.
The jars are then part of the system. Book with information about Malaria and any medical
sterile. Cans may be used instead of advice furnished free to all who write.
jars. If the latter are used the vent
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
in the top of the can will have to be
soldered after the first steaming.
A Retort Diecoarteoue.
Boiled but not boiling water should be
A young lady full of good deed« no
used for filling the jars, or a syrup
may be used instead of water. Un ticed the tongue of a horse bleedlug
sterilized water or syrup may contain and with a use of technical terms too
about ten million germs in a quart jar, little appreciated said to the cabby,
and it is just as well to "nip them in “Cabby, your horse has hemorrhage.”
the bud” by sterilizing the water. It
“It's 'is tongue's too large for bl»
is important that the fruit or vegeta mouth,” said the cabby and added sen-
bles be neither under-ripe nor over tentiously, "Like some young ladies.’’—
ripe.
The same good jundgment London Globe.
used in selecting material for the table
should be exercised in the matter of
OWARD E. BURTON— Assayer ari Cham Ht. '
canning.
Leadville, Colorada K peel men prices: Gold,
fMlver, L ad, 91 ; Gold, Silver, 7»« ; Gold, 6u«’; Ztucor
It was found in the tests made at
Cepperai. Cyanide t»’sis. Mailing enveloppa and
the experiment station that a temper hill price list sent on application. Control and Um
work solicited.
llwieruucei Carbonaie
ature of 165 degrees was sufficient to pire
Uoual Kaufe.
sterilize the fruit when treated as
above, and this temperature did not
men’ll K3.OO and S3.CO ahora than any |
impair the flavor or structure of the
oth<*r manufacturer in the world, be- •
fruit.
Where only one heating Js
chunc they hold their hliape, fit better,
I
nnd wear longer than any other make. 1
given, as is the case at the canneries,
Shoe« at A!l Prien, for Every Member of the
I
it is necessary to heat the fruit as
Family, Men, Boys, Women, Muses & Children
;
high as 240 degrees in order to kill
W.L.DoualM $4.00 ar>d :?3.on Uf’.L Kdg» Khoes cannot
b«
«quailed
at
any
pile«
W
.
I,.
D'/nflas
$2.00
and
both spores and germs.
$2.00 «hoes ar« th« best in the world
It should be stated that this methoa
Ffitf Color Eyelet* I'xrd Ctr'liisit'f'ly.
2VNHLE 35ÇTS.ATALI ERÖEf R3
©F* i nk«' *• ° Wul»«lItuic. W. L. D ouk I sir
of canning was not successful with
name and price is stamped on bottom. Sold ’
every''here. Shoes main'1 from factoiyto any i
sweet peas and corn, as they have a
part of the world. CatalogU” free.
W. L. DOUGLAS, ISA Spark St., Brockton. Maw. ]
germ normally that is not killed at a
temperature of 165.
This method would probably not be
ARRANGE TO STOP AT
practicable at canneries, where fruit
is sold at low prices, owing to the ad
ditional expense of treating the cans
PARK AND ALDER STS.
three times; but for first class high A New and Modern European Hotel, catering
EGG-PHOSPHATE
prided goods the additional expense particularly to State people., A refined place for
would be warranted.
In the case of ladies visiting the city, dose to the shopping
home canning, however, it is a more center. Rates reasonable. Free Hu-».
N. K.. CLARKE, (late of Portland Hotel) Mgr.
desirable method of putting up fruit
and vegetables than the methods usu
A modern ieavener at
ally in vogue.
a moderate price) is 30
per cent, more efficient
A farmer residing near Almira,
Washington, inquires concerning the
than “Trust” or Cream-
milk weed pest which is infesting that
of-Tartar products and
locality. Professor R. Kent Beattie,
absolutely free from the
of the department of botany, answered
health-racking Rochelle
as follows :
Salts residue invariably
"The perennial milk weed, which I
Said an Employer: "Stick to quality.
accompanying their use.
believe you have, is very difficult to
It
will
win
out
in
the
end.
”
We
do
destroy.
The only principal upon
which you can work is to keep the tops “slick to quality.” That is the reason
Get it from your Grocer
of it closely cut down, so that the plant our graduates are so thorough and in
cannot make food, until you have such demand. Investigate our claims to
starved out the roots. This, of course,
- - -
is a difficult task, especially if they superiority. Catalogue, busiuesa forms
cover a large field. I would put the and penwork free. Call, phone or write.
P N U
No. 35—OS
patches into clean cultivation, either Portland Rusiness College
as graden, or potato plots; then it
TIrHEN writing to uilvertisam please
Tenth and Morrison, Portland, Oregon
IV
mention this paper.
would pay you to work very hard to A. P. ARMSTRONG. LL. B- PRINCIPAL
exterminate these weeds, for they are
difficult to kill once they taks posses
sion of the land.”—From the Wash*
ington State College, Pullman,
CUPES
MALARIA
»
ressent
TflapIeinB
WHEN YOU COME TO PORTLAND
THE CORNELIUS
CRESCENT
BAKING POWDER
25C-FULL P0UND -25C
Machine for Shnflllnn Cards.
A machine
which automatically
sbnflles a pack of cards In an lustnut
with the cards concealed from sight
nnd which changes the position of nine
out of every ten cards is the latest
mechanical device for cardplayers. It
not only protects the cards from Injury
but gives an atxiolute square deal
shuffle. The machine weighs four
pounds and attaches in a moment to any
table. It is about twelt« lnchee high.
BUSINESS COLLEGE
■P ortland , orkuon
BEHNKE-WALKER STUDENTS SUCCEED. WHY?
They ar. Trained for binine.» in a business-like way.
Why not enroll in a remUbl. school that place, all of its graduatas?
I. M WALKER. Pres.
. SEND TOR CATALOGUE
O. A. B0S8ERMAN. S*