MY OWN FAMILY USE
PE-RU-NA.
Another
Peppermint and Tobacco.
you have a boy who has begun
smoking too early And whom you wish
to cure of the habit, feed him pepper
mints. Dr. O. Clayton Jones of Silver-
ton. England, writing in the Loudon
Lancet, is authority for this simple
cure. Dr. Jones writes: “To break the
smoking habit in a youth there is noth
ing better than peppermint drops. He
cannot smoke with a 'bullseye' in his
mouth, and even for some time after it
Is dissolved tobacco will not blend kind
ly with the taste that remains. Social
ly the cure may seem worse than the
disease, but from a medical point of
view the sucking of peppermints is far
less hurtful. A common ‘bullseye’ will
prevent smoking for nearly an hour,
so the amount of sweets used need not
be great.”
HON. GEORGE W. HONEY.
Hon George \V. Honey. National
Chaplain U. V. U., ex-Chaplain Fourth
Wisconsin
Cavalry,
ex - Treasurer
State of Wisconsin, and ex-Quarter-
master General State of Texas G. A.
R. writes from 1700 First St., N. E.,
Washington, D. C., as follows:
“I cannot too highly recommend
your preparation for the relief of
catarrhal troubles in their various
forms. Some members of my own
family have used it with most grati
fying results. When other remedies
failed, Parana ; roved most efficacious
and I cheerfu.iy certify to its curative
excellence.”
Mr. 1-red I.. Hebard, for nine years
a leading -
1--*--------*— of r Kansas
photographer
City, Mo, located at the northeast
corner of 12th and Grand Aves,
cheerfully gives the following testi-
niony: "It is a proven fact that Pe
I nnns wernblc,
runa will cure catarrh and la grippe,
The lion was sneering at the awkward,
and as a tonic it has no equal, Drii” uncouth, and generally ugly appearance
gists have tried to make me take of Che elephant.
something else 'just as good,’ but Pe-
“I may not be as graceful as you are,’
runa is good enough for me.”
observed the elephant, “but I’m nearer
Pe-ru-na in Tablet Form.
akin to the human family than you are.
The knees of m.v hind legs bend forward,
as a man's legs do, while yours bend back
ward, the same as a hyena's, or a bog’s,
or a skunk's. Y’ou belong to a lower order
of creation, and I’d rather not associate
with you on terms of equality if it's all
the same to you.”
Whereat the lion, observing that the
elephant was waving his trunk tbreaten-
ingly, went back among the wolves and
coyotes, where he still retained some pras-
•’20-Mule-Team” Borax tends to stop tige.
the development of blight and mildew, and
destroys paras.tical insects. Stalks, young An Unfortunate Misunderstanding.
leaves and buds affected should be care
“I had to leave my last situation be
fully sprinkled with Borax solution, and cause the missus said they were going
*‘20-Mu!e-Te<tm” Borax should be used
to lead the sinful life, and they wouldn't
freely around the wainscoting and floors
want any servants about the place.’’—
of buildings to protect from insects.
For two years Dr. Hartman and
his assistants have incessantly la-
bored to create Périma in tablet form,
and their strenuous labors have just
been crowned with success. People
who object to liquid medicines can
now secure Périma tablets, which rep
resent the solid medicinal ingredients
of Périma.
Punch.
C. Gee Wo
The well known reliable
CHINESE
Root and Herb
DOCTOR
m made a life study of
. jots uik I herbs, and in that
ii«iy disaoven'd and in giv-
,o
world hie wonder-
l'ulremedies.
No Mercury, Poisons or Drugs Used He Cures
Without Operation, or Without the Aid of a knife
He uiiarantiMH to Cure Cutarrh. Asthma, Lun«,
Threat. KheumutlHtn. Nervousness. Nervous Debi lit v,
Stomach, Liver. Kidne) Troubles nl>-o Lost Mun hood.
Female Weiikii«-’ and All Private Disc h sea
A SURE CANCER CURE
Just Received from Peking, China—Safe, Sure
and Reliable.
IF YOU ARE AFLICTED DON’T DELAY.
DELAYS ARE DANGEKul'S
QO1MM. I .TAT K
: • Hl SI S
(f you cannot cal I. write for sympton blank and circa
lar Inclose 4 cents in Mam ph .
THEO. GEE WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO.
162121 irst St., Cor Morrison,
Fort laud, Oregon,
Pleuae Mention This Purer.
THE REAL COWBOY.
Kind.
When Johnny Hobbs left his home
up among the New Hampshire hills to
visit his grandmother In Worcester,
Mass., he was cautioned by his mother
thut tie would find tilings in the city
strangely different from those at home.
Johnny arrived in the early ufter-
noon, and long before tea time his
grandmother, who lived most simply,
told him to run out to the puntry and
get a I h > w 1 of milk which she bad left
there “for a hungry boy."
A moment later she followed him,
and. to her amazement, beheld her
grandson bravely at work on a bowl
of s|M-armint tea which she had forgot-
fully put in the place where she bad
told him to And the milk,
“Why, child,” she cried, seizing the
bowl from poor Johnny, "don't you
know this isn’t milk?’
"I—I knew it wasn’t like Hlllbury
milk,” stammered Johnny, with a final
gulp, "but 1 thought maybe it was the
kind folks had In Worcester.”
KASPAR ILLA
This sterling household remedy is most
successfully prescribed for a "world of
troubles.” For derangements of tlie di
gestive organs it is a natural corrective,
operating directly upon the liver and ali
mentary canal, gently but persistently
stimulating a healthful activity. Its
beneficial influence extends, however, to
ayery portion of the system, aiding in the
processes of digestion and assimilation of
food, promoting a wholesome, natural
appetite, correcting sour stomach, bad
breath, irregularities of the bowels, con
stipation and the long list of troubles
directly traceable to those unwholesome
conditions. Kasparilla dispels drowsi
ness, headache, backache and despond
ency due to inactivity of the liver,
kidneys and digestive tract. It is a
strengthening tonic of the highest value.
If it fails to satisfy we authorize ail
dealers to refund the purchase price.
H oyt C hemical C o . Portland, Oregon
Mo
l.ontfrr an Auiiugted Mattery,
but a Brouchu Butter Still.
It is quite true that the cowboy of
: to-day is not a college man, nor one
at all familiar with the manners and
customs of polite society, says Out
West. Neither does he go about his
dally task with a brace of six-shooters
slung at his hips and a repeating rifle
held in the crook of bis arm.
Barbed wire fences, steam railroads,
. [>ollce courts and ¡<eultentlaries have
rendered such appurtenances superflu
ous. And immediately after pay day he
does not sweep down upon the nearest
town, shoot out the lights and take
part in a gun tight or two.
For the $30 or $40 a month which he
receives a strict attention to the duties
of his job is exjiected, and in these days
of strenuous competition a job is a pre
cious thing. The life of the modern
cowboy is as full of hard and monoton
ous work as that of an eastern farm
hand, and there is very little difference
in the intellectual and social standing
of the two.
Though thousands of cattle are graz
ed on the plains of the Southwest, very
few are shipped direct from the range
to the market. The places of individ
ual cattle kings have been taken by
great stock companies which own nu-
rnerous tracts of range land in various
parts of the West.
A few years ago a dry season in
southern Arizona meant the death of
many cattle and very frequently the
financial ruin of their owners. The old
timers still tell stories of having walk
ed for Incredible distances on the car
casses of dead steers.
But all that is past—they do things
differently now. Let a dry year come
uimhi the southwestern ranges and the
cattle are hustled on board a train and
transported to tlie cattle companies
ranges in Colorado or Montana or Da
kota, where tlie season is gbod and the
feed abundant.
No long drives of hundreds of miles
in search of new range as in the old
days. Simply a day or two of round
ing up, then a few hours' drive to the
nearest shipping point on the railroad.
Then perbajis a day in town for the
cowboys and back again to the home
ranch and the regular grind.
Though the cowboy is not a college
graduate he is by no means an igno
ramus. Usually he is American born
and fairly well read, taking the same
active interest in current topics and
politics that other American citizens do.
As a general rule he has been raised
in the section in which he is employed
and is of youthful appearance.
lie
differs very little from the average
American working youth, western dia
lect stories to the contrary notwith
standing.
In all cowboy bunkhouses there is a
pile of current magazines, the contents
of which are devoured with avidity.
And one is not infrequently treated to
the amusing spectacle of a youthful
cowboy becoming so enamored of the
kind of punchers pictured In modern
Action that he purchases a pair of ut
terly useless six-shooters, commences
to walk with a swagger and to imitate
'he dialect of Red Saunders.
But if marksmanship is no longer a
qualification of the cowpuncher, horse
manship is. The modern cattleman is
as proud of his ability to ride anything
on four legs as was ever broncho buster
of bygone days, and this is Hie first fuct
impressed upon a tenderfoot.
Soapoida.
Do you wash? It Is a well-known
medical fact that scrubbing the face
and hands with chemical detergents Is
K} £3! Fl
A Flavoring. It maker a absolutely ruinous to the delicate outer
fabric of the skin. You would not pour
S® syrup better than Maple.
| w * «“u a
Fw® Eaa ■ 1 ” OGfl
J»
Sold by grocers. a can of petrol on the side of an aero
plane to make it go, would you? Why,
then, attempt to open the pores of the
cuticle and keep them working by the
external application of saponaceous
tablets and other Inferior frauds of
the kind? Beware of these as you
would of a poison.
Water is equally dangerous. Why is
it that you meet so many people ev
BUSINESSCOLLEGE
ery day in the street with gray smut-
PORTLAND. OREOOS
stained faces and toil-begrimed hands?
Simply because they abrade and de
BEHNKE-WALKER STUDENTS SUCCEED. WHY?
stroy the elegant envelope with which
They are Trained for business in a business-like way.
nature has provided their bodies, in
Why not enroll in a reputable school that places all of its graduates?
stead of treating it rationally from
within. The only way to be clean is
I. M WALKER. Pres.
SEND FOR CATALOGUE
O. A. BOSSERMAN. See.
to swallow soapoida, with their wonder
ful internal operation on the fibers and
nerve tissues. However dusty or grit
ty you may be, one does of soepolds
will set you right, The pores will
spring open and shed off the unnatural
accretion of foreign substances as a
snake sloughs its skin.
Think, too, of tlie time and money
you will save. No more tedious ablu-
tlons and ruinous water rates, You
can swallow your soapold as you walk
to the office and be as bright as a new
K C Baking Powder will do it I Get
pin.
Our final word is if you have t*cn
a can. Try it for your favorite cake
washing, stop it; if you have not, don't
it dpesn't raise better, more evenly, higher,
begin. Spare your eplrdermls, and
swallow soapolds. Try nature's way
if it isnt daintier, more delicate in flavor,
and be clean.—Punch
Improve
Your Bakind
—we return your money. Everybody
agrees K C has no equal.
BAKING
E'i U POWDER
Pure, Wholesome.
Economical
• •
♦
e
•
•
•:
• «
e • •
The Ivory Hunter.
First catch your ivory, then get it
home—If you can. A man's troubles
have barely begun when the tusks of
the fallen monsters are chopped out.
wrapped In sacking and taken back to
camp. Each weighs 50 or even 100
pounds. I have seen specimens that
are on record as tipping the scales at
250 pounds. Stipih.se I have got to
gether $100,000 worth of flue ivory. I
am perhaps a thousand miles from any
where with this load of 50.000 or 00,000
pounds, There are no railroads, no
wheeled vehicles, even no draft animals.
*
The stuff must be carried across th*
wild# of Africa on the backs of native
porters, who think nothing of dropping
thetr loads and deserting If the fancy
•happens to seize them. The worst of
the hunting is nothing to what such a
homeward march may mean. I haw
had my men shot down by hostile tribes
from ambush with poisoned arrows. I
have seen them die In agony from the
bites of noxious insects. I have been
attacked by bands of Dinkas, who knew
the value of Ivory as well as I did and
who tried to help themselves to mine.—
Everybody's Magazine.
VENOM OF THE MOSQUITO.
Agency in Spreading Di-eaxr Wax
Discovered Many Years A«o.
At the time of the discovery of tlie
mosquito’s agency in breeding disease
it was not dreamed that far more than
the germ of the trutli had been reveal
ed many years before, says the New
York Sun. The truth was told in 1853
in the obscure columns of the Faceta
Office, published at tlie port of Camuña.
Venezuela, and a little later in a brief
note or two that the discoverer wrote
to the Academy of Sciences in Paris.
It was buried in those pages and for
gotten, and has now been resurrected
by tlie Havana Crónica Medico and the
British Medical Journal.
In May, 1853, Louis Daniel Beauper-
thuy, a native of Guadaloupe and
health officer at (Tamaña, wrote to the
Gaceta Official that for fourteen years
he had made a microscopic study of the
blood and secretions in every type of
fever and had discovered that yellow
fever resulted from the stings of sev
eral species of mosquitoes. “'The mos
quito plunges its proboscis into the skin
and introduces a poison which has
properties akin to that of snake venom,
it softens tlie red blood corpuscles,
causes their rupture, and facilitates tlie
mixing of the coloring matter with the
serum.”
Beauperthuy said a good word for
the much maligned swamp, whose repu
tation as a breeder of malaria and oth
er fevers was widespread. "Marshes
do not communicate to the air any
thing more than humidity, and the
small amount of hydrogen they give
off does not cause in man the slight
est indisposition in equatorial and in
tertropical regions renowned for their
unhealthfulness, Nor is it the putres-
cence of the water that makes it un
healthy, but tile presence of inosqui-
toes.”
In one of his short communications
to the Paris Academy of Sciences, dat
ed from Camana, June 18, 1856, he
wrote that as early as 18311 his Inves
tigations in unhealthy locations in
South America liad convinced him that
the so-called marsh fevers were due to
a vegeto-animal virus “Inoculated into
man by mosquitoes.”
Beauperthuy’s facts and deductions
were so remote from all the medical
teachings of the day that they were
doubtless laughed at and promptly for
gotten. Probably the priority of his
discovery will now be acknowledged,
but it might have been a profound
blessing to the world if scientific re
search had been able in the middle of
the last century to proceed along the
lines suggested by Beauperthuy’s an-
nouncement.
•‘FlKhtinu
Before
I.adlea.”
The Hou. Thomas Sharkey, refereeing
a lightweight bout at the Englewood
carnival, rebuked a too energetic pugi
list. “Remember,” he said, severely,
“you are fighting before ladies.”
The refining influence of women upon
all conflicts, from polo to politics, is a
pleasant theory. A greater man than
Sharkey once disputed it. Telling how
tiie wife of an opponent had been ad
mitted to u famous ring side, he said:
"Refinin’ influence of woman, huh 1 I'd
got him good an’ licked when site sings
out ’Give it to him 1’ an’ in less'n a min
ute he'd spiked me in the shin.”
Women watched the fiercest jousts oi
helmeted knlghtn in the days of chival
ry, when broken necks were not uncom
mon. They witnessed the combats of
gladiators, as they still do the bull
fights in Spain and Mexico. They joy
in the hot fights of the football field, a
more prolific source of injury than the
prize ring. Women are tlie cause of
most private warfare, as land is the
cause of most national warfare.—New
York World.
Steel
from
the
Fixed.
“I want to tell you, old man,” said
Krotchett, “how thoroughly ashamed I
am of the temper I displayed last
night. Your wife and sister must have
thought me crazy.”
“No; they didn't,” replied Brightly,
“I fixed that all right.”
"Ah; so good of you, old man.”
“Yes; I told them you were drunk."
—Philadelphia Press.
Before a girl marries, she prays that
she may make him a good wife; after
she marries, she asks the Lord i> make
him a better husband.'
Young blood is powerful ; but It cun
„I* too yo'ung,
•
• i
•
Swollen glands about the neclc, weak eves, pale, waxy complexions,
running sores and ulcers, skin diseases, and general poor health, are the
usual ways in which Scrofula is mmifested. Tlie disease being deeply
intrenched iu the blood often attacks the bones, resulting in White Swelling,
or hip disease, and the scrofulous and tubercular matter so thoroughly
destroys the healthful properties of the blood that Scrofula sometimes
terminates in consumption, an incurable disease. The entire circulation
being contaminated, the only way to cure the trouble is to thoroughly
purify the blood and restore the circulation to a strong, healthy state.
S. S. S. is the very best treatment for Scrofula; it renovates the entire
blood supply and drives out the scrofulous aud tubercul ar deposits. S. S. S.
is the greatest of all blood purifiers, and it not only goes right down to the
very bottom of the trouble and removes the cause, but it supplies the weak,
diseased blood with the healthful properties it is in need of, and in this way
builds up weak, frail, scrofulous persons and makes them strong and healthy.
S. S. S. is a gentle, safe, vegetable preparation and is suited for persons of
any age. Book on the blood containing information about Scrofula and any
medical advice free.
JH£ SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA ISA.
OWARD E. RURTOK.—Assay er ari Chemist.
Ax a Safety Valve.
I«eadville, Coloritelo. bpei iiuc»i pri<«'s: Gold,
H
Silver, L ad, $1 ; Gold, Silver, 7 •< ; Gold, hue ; Zinc or
“Scorchley doesn’t have any more of
those terrible epileptic fits Lx used tc
have, dot's he?”
"No; whenever he feels one of them
corning on he goes aud takes a spin iu his
automobile.
One
I kpper, 11. C> anido tesis. Mailing envelopes and
full pricelist .senton application. Control and Vtu
piré w or k solici led.
luiureuco: Carbonaie N'r
Uuual Bank.
Reason.
Bella—What do they want to dis- '
cover the north pole for?
Stella—What for? Why, for the I
sake of getting some picture postcard!
from there, of course.—I’iek-Me-Up.
Mothers will find Mr«. Winslow*« Bo<.thine
Syrup tin- b. s’ remedy to use Ioi their cU lur a
luring the teething period.
Kven
«'hunicr.
“You sjM'nt a month at the seaside. Did
it pay?”
“I can’t say it paid, but I came out
exactly even.”
“How?"
“Paid out $150, but gained
twelve
pounds. Same thing, you know.”
New
York
The cleanest.—
lightest. —and
most comfortable
SLICKER
at the same time
cheapest in the
end Decause It
wears longest
'3QP Everywhere
Every gorrr.enl guar
anteed waterproof
Catalog free
. , TOWfo CO BOSWW u S .
* ■■- > •
’ >
Jewx.
The Jewish community of New York
Is now tlie largest in history or tra
dition. It represents 10 per cent of
the entire Jewish population of the
world.
CRESCENT
EGG-PHOSPHATE
BAKING POWDER
Ht. Vitus’ Dance and orvous
perma
cared by Dr. * Ine's Great Nerve Re
m neatly
storer. Send for FREE $2 00 trial l>ottle and treatise.
ihmwoii
Dr. K. H. Kline, Ld., 931 Arch St., Philadelphia, Fa.
Circular Ambition.
Slocum -Curious fad that Boxiey, the
baseball pitcher, has taken up, isn't it?
lie's building an airship.
Gofast—No; it’s perfectly natural, lie
thinks he can make one that will de
scribe a shorter curve than anybody else's
machine.”
It Cures White You Walk.
Alien’s Foot Ease is a certain cure for hot,
sweating, cal Ins, and swollen, aching feet. Sola
by all Druggists. Price 25c. Don't accept any
substitute. Trial package FREE. Address
Allen 8. Olmsted, I.e Roy, N. Y.
When the Wind Blows Rlxht.
A modern leaver.er 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 MULL POUND - 25c
Stranger—How far is it to the stock
yards?
Native—Kight here. Can’t you tell b>
your nose?
Stranger—No; been smelling just like
this ever since I came in sight of the
town.—Chicago Tribune.
How’s This?
We offerOne Hundred Hollars Reward forany
rase of Catarrh thut cannot be cured by Ha 1',
Catarrh Cure.
F J. CHENEY 4 CO., Toledo,O
We, the undersigned, have known F. j.
Cheney for the last 15 jeurs, and believe him
perfectly honorable inali buisness transactions
and financially able to carry out any obliga
tion made by nis Him
WALDING, KINNAN 4 MARVIN,
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo.O
Hall's Catarrah Cure is «ken internally, act- 1
Ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur
faces of tlie system. Testimonial; Bent free.
Price 75 cents tier bottle. Sold by all Druggists. I
Take Hall's Family Pills lor Constipation.
t'ncle
Allen.
“I see the government is going info tlie
airshsp business,” said Uncle Allen
Sparks. “Sooner or later the airship w ill
get into polities, and then we’ll have ma
chine politicians and flying machine poli-
’icians.”
Symmetry.
N your mouth aimihir in any way io the «hove? If
-o i o need to wear it wohhly, unuHiibh* partial ¡»late
<>r ill lifting, ordinary bridge work. Thu Dr. V\ it»e
■«ytttein of
“TEETH WITHOUT FLATES”
The result of 21 years’ esperience. the new why of
replacing teeth in the u outh teeth in fact, teeth in
appearance, teeth to chew your food upon, an you
did upon your natural one*
Our force in no organ
ized we can do your entire crown, bridge or plate
work in a day if necessary
Ponitively painioM ex
tracting. Only high-class, scientific work.
The smoker who eat directly opposite
WISE DENTAL CO., INC.
had put bls foot on the edge of the seat
Dr
A.
iae. Manager . 21 )eam in Portland.
occupied by the professor.
Hecond Floor. Fail mg lntilding. third and U aah.
It was encased In one of those easy ington Street* Offi« e hours, k A. M. to H P M. Hun.
days, 9 to 1 P M. Painles* I itructing, 5Gc, piate^
going, hygienic shoes that look like a can tfi up. Phones A and Main 2(129.
vas covered ham.
No. 40 08
P N U
"My friend,” said the professor, eying
it disapprovingly, “oblige me by removing
yiTflKN writing to advcrtlien píeme
that thing from my seat. It’s bad form."
▼ V mention this paper.
—Chicago Tribune.
Ore.
Two Australian Inventors have found
a new process for the continuous treat
ment of iron ore, which is to be exploit
ed throughout the world. It is a pro
cess for directly converting the ore into
malleable iron or steel, and is said to
effect a saving of 25 per cent. After
the ore is concentrated It is passed
through a revolving cylinder and
brought into contact with the deoxldlz-
Ing gas; thence it falls into a bottle
of molten iron and Is converted into
steel or malleable Iron, the whole pro-
cess being automatic.
All
THE CURE FOR
SCROFULA
Til«* Kind You lluv«« Always Bought lias borne th«* Rigna
ture of Chas. it. Fletcher, and has been inade under his
personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one
to dee«*ive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and
“ .Jiist-as-g-o«,«l ” are but Experiments, and endanger the
health of Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTOR IA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drupe ami S«a>thing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wiml
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates tlm Food, regulates the
Stomach and tlowels, giving healthy mid natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
TH« CCNTAUN COMPANY. TT MUNRAV UTRt<T. NEW VORM CITY.