Is Your Hair Sick? That's too bad ! We had no ticed it was looking pretty thin and faded of late, but naturally did not like to speak of it. By the way, Ayer's Hair Vigor is. a regular hair grower, a perfect hair re storer. It keeps the scalp clean and healthy. "I am well acquainted with Arsr1 Heir vlKor and I Ilka It very ranch. I would espe cially recommend it as an excellent dressing for toe hair, keeping it soft and smooth, and preventing the hair from splitting at the ends." MiBHia Fritz, Veedum, Mich. ! A Hade by J. c. Ayer Co., Lowell, Hiu. I y Alao manufacturers of filler's SARSAPAKILU. PILLS. CHERRY PECTORAL. Hia Hani Luck. ' Brown Jigsmith is anything but grateful to Dame Fortune. Green How's that? Brown He found a two-carat dia mond in the gutter the other day, and what do yon suppose he said? Green Give it up. What did he say? Brown "This is hard luck." Marketing Potato Crops. In line with the classic - case of tbe oyster shippers, cited by President Hadley of Yale university in his book on Railroad Transportation, is the case of the Aroostook potato growers brought by President Tattle of the Boston & Maine railroad before the senate com mittee on interstate commerce. Noth ing could better show how a railorad works for the interest of the localities which it serves. A main dependence of the farmers of the Aroostook region is the potato crop, aggregating annually eight to ten mil lion bushels which find a market large ly in Boston and the adjacent thickly settled regions of New England. The competition of cheap water transporta tion from Maine to all points alone the New England coast keeps railroad feright rates on these potatoes always at a very low level. Potatoes are also a considerable out put of the truck farms ef Michigan, their normal market being obtained in and through Detroit and Chicago and other communities of that region. Not many years ago favoring sun and rains 'brought a tremendous yield of potatoes from the Michiagn fields. At normal rates and prices there would have been a glut of the customary markets and the potatoes would have rotted on the farms. To help the pota to growers the railroads from Michigan made unprecentedly low rates on pota toes to every reachable market, even carrying them in large quantities to a place so remote as Boston. Tbe Aroos took growers had to reduce the price on their potatoes and even then could not dispose of them unless the Boston & Vaina i lsn A nJnA-J ; -1 J l ajMA icuuum i to niroauy low rate, which it did. By means of these low rates, making possible low prices, the potato crops of both Michigan and Maine were finally marketed. Every body eats potaotea, and that year every body had all the potatoes he wanted. While the Michigan railroads made rates that would have been ruinous to the railroads, had they been applied to the movement of all potatoes at all times, to all places, they helped their patrons to find markets their. The Boston & Maine railroad suffered a de crease in its revenue from potatoes, but it enabled the - Aroostook farmers to market -their crop and thereby to obtain money which they spent for the varied supplies which the railroads brought to them.' If tbe making of rates were subject to governmental adjustment such radical and prompt action could never have been taken, because it is well established that if a rate be once reduced by a railroad company it can not be restored through the red tape oi governmental procedure. If the Mich igan railroads and the Boston & Maine railroad had been subjected to govern mental limitation they would have felt obliged to keep up their rates as do the railroads of France and England and Germany under governmental limita tion and let the potatoes rot. Ex change. . Natural Deduction. "You should stable your cows in wet weatner, . remarked tne customer who never overlooked an opportunity to regis ter a kick. - "How do you know but what I do? queried the owner of the village dairy. "Because your milk has a rain flavor," eipiainea tne party or the first part. - Never expose the eyes needlessly t dust or flying particla of any kind. IF YOU WE CAN CURE YOU The Lewis PhonoXetrfo Institute and School for Stammerers of Detroit, Michigan. Established eleven ?ar?5. BaT caml thousands. Gold Medl awarded Wlds Fair, St. Louis, 1IXH. Rerommanded or pS2 lans, educators, clergymen, and irradnatea nTwh.m This institution hasTwern Branch "SrtJ PoruSS rUh ry large class of pupils in attendance--men Md women, girls and boya-allages, ten to rtxt-rManrhtrS been cured in three' weekbSt firetort? weeks Jutll 14th. Will accept pupils until BentemW lit POSITIVE, ABSOfUTB CTJIb2stEED' Write at; once for parbculars and terms. If youmenUoi this paper and send Scents in stamps, to Borer postoge. Iwill send rou our cloth bound, SOO page book "The Origin and Treatment of BfmmiZ&?fo. Tef cnarge! Address TOUiH I. ErwiS Western Kepreaautative Associate Princtoal 8- W. Cor. ISth and Raleigh Streets POHTLAKD. OKEOON . VoteHo pupils accepted at Portland after Sept. 1st. CUHt WHtlit ALL USE FAIL. Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time, gold by druggists- ' t 222 23 0LD ISBrkrSnrVWBnfVV WWVAVWWrV The Miller of tne See, There was a jolly miller, Lived on the River Dee; He danced and sang from morn to night; No lark so blithe as he. ' And this the burden of his song - Forever used to be: 'I care for nobody; no, not I, If nobody cares for me! ' . Thee linftSL nn HnnKt anaotMrr1 thst poem of Charles Mackay, here given: There dwelt a miller, hale and bold, Beside, the river Dee; He worked and sang from morn till night No lark so hllthe 11 h! And this the burden of his song Forever used to be: "I envy nobody no, not I, . And nobody envies me!" "Thou'rt wrong, my friend," said good King Hal; "As wrong as wrong can be; For could my heart be light as thine, I'd gladly -change with thee. And tell me now, what makes thee sing, . With voice so loud and free, While I am sad, though I'm a king. Beside the River Dee?" . The miller smiled and doffed his cap; "I earn my bread," quoth he; "I love my wife, I love my friend, I love my children three; I owe no penny I cannot pay; I thank the River Dee, -That turns the mill that grinds the corn That feeds my babes and me." "Good friend," said Hal, and sighed the while, "Farewell, and happy be! But say no more, if thou'dst be true, That no one envies thee. ' Thy mealy cap is worth my crown; Thy mill, my kingdom's fee; Such men as thou are England's boast, O miller of the Dee!" Charles Mackay. The Child's First Griei. "Oh, call my brother back to met I cannot play alone; The summer comes with flower and Where is my brother gone? "The butterfly is glancing bright . Across the sunbeam s track; I care not now. to chase its flights Oh, call my brother back! "The flowers run wild the flowers we sow'd Around our garden tree; Our vine Is drooping with its load Oh, call him back to me!" "He could not hear thy voice, fair child, He mar not come ta Him- The face that once like springtime smiled un earth no more thou It see. "A rose's brief bright life of joy, Such nnto him was given; Go thou must play alone, my boy! xny brotner is in heaven!" f 'And has he left his birds and flowers. And must I call In vain? And, through the long, long summer Bours, Will he not come again? 'And by the brook, and In the glade. Art all our wanderinc n'arl Oh, while my brother with-me play'd, wouia 1 haa loved nim more!" -Mrs. Hemans. WILES OF THE HORSE TRADER. Tricky A rts to Make Old One Young; and Doctoring; and "Doping;." Probably In no business are so many tricks and wiles practiced as In that of horse dealing. It la safe to affirm that thousands of horse? are , sold throughout the country every year un der false conditions, and. so skillful have "fakers" become that it takes a very clever" and experienced man to detect the doctoring tricks of those who are anxious to sell a bad animal to the best advantage. - Perhaps the commonest of all faking or blshoplng, as it Is often called a term derived from, a man named Bish op, who during the eighteenth century obtained a great reputation for making old horses appear young Is in relation to a horse's teeth. At full age a horse has forty teeth, and not until the fifth year are they all visible. Six months later the "nippers" or iront teeth be come marked by a natural cavity and it is the presence or absence of these marks that certifies the animal's exact age. A the horse gets older, these marks wear away, and it Is then that the co per or faker sets to work to make fresh cavities, as found In a horse of the age he wishes to represent The surface of the teeth is cut out with a steel tool and the black lining of the groove, which must be visible, burnt in with nitrate of silver or some other chemical. In this way horses which are often over 8 or 8 years of age are sold as 5-year-olds. The age of a horse -is often increased as well as reduced by means of faking the teeth. A 8-year-old will often be transformed into a 5-year-old by means of chiseling out the side milk teeth with which horses are furnished up to their third year, when they are sup planted by the permanent ones. The extraction of the former, of course, brings on the latter much quicker than would be the case In the natural order of things, thus making a horse appear much older than It really is. . -There are various ether things, how ever, besides the teeth, which give away the age of a horse and which have to be faked if the animal is to fetch a fair price. In old horses there le generally a certain curlty or depres sion of the skin in the forehead im mediately above the eyes. This disfig urement is remedied by a process known as "puffing the glims." A fine pointed blowpipe Is introduced under the skin above the eye, through which the coper blows gently until the deep hollow is filled and Is replaced by a perfectly smooth surface. The faking of broken-winded horses la an art in itself, so to speak. It is generally accomplished by means of drugs, arsenic being chiefly used. The "coper" also pays strict attention to such an animal's diet previous to a show. If during the trial a horse is a little short-winded the owner will turn furiously upon the groom for giving his horse too much hay, when in all prob ability it has had nothing to eat or drink for hours. The groom will thereupon explain how the animal got loose and ate a bushel of oats and half a truss of hay in the night and that he was afraid of losing his place if he said anything about It This explanation will, In nln cases out of ten, satisfy the intending purchaser and remove any doubts which he might have had. A singular dodge is resorted to by the "coper" when he comes into po session of a lame horse out of which he desires to make some profit The method is called "beanlng" and con sists In making a horse which is lame, say, for Instance, In the left fore foot, lame In the right one also. Perhaps a small pebble is Inserted between the shoe and the hoof of the latter foot,' the pain of which causes the animal to limp with the right as well as the left leg, one thus counter 'balanclng the other and making It ap pear as though It was the horse's nat ural gait In lieu of a small pebble a small iron wedge is sometimes driven underneath the foot corresponding with the lame one, thus causing both legs to go lame alike, which only gives the horse a different motion. "Doping" Is a term usually applied to the trick of making horses appear spirited and high-steppers by means of drugs or chemicals. An animal Is oft en made to pick up its legs In the quick, nervous style of a thoroughbred by having the back tendons of the leg rubbed with turpentine, cow-Itch and ammonia, which burns like fire and makes the animal prance with pain. Occasionally, says a writer In the Boston Herald, the "coper" Is success ful In selling what is known as a "rogue" horse one who resists all at tempts to be put into harness. With a sharp razor the sides of the horse will be shaved in certain places, mak ing It appear as though the animal was just out of harness and a thorough car riage horse. . The same performance will be gone through just below the withers, where the collar chafes, while, If the horse be a tricky one,. chloral hydrate and opium will be administered. It is not until the unlucky purchaser tries to harness the horse to a carriage that he discovers the animal's temper and its unmanageable ways. TAKES -TOOTHPICK'S PLACE. Dental Cleared by . the Dm of a Gam ' Band. The dentists have been preaching for the past decade the virtues of dental floss and the dangers of the tooth picks, but without much avail. Un fortunately, dental floss is not often conveniently available, and a good sub stitute that is always at hand is a slen der rubber band. The illustration, to TAKES THB TOOTHPICK S PLACE. repeat the circumlocution of the in ventor, shows "a device for removing obstructions from between the teeth." It comprises a forked handle having branches provided with slots adapted to secure a rubber strip slipped there in. Tiny knobs fixed on said strips pre vent the rubber from pulling out and likewise serve to protect the cheek and tongue when , using the device. The elasticity of the rubber permits It to enter the interstices between teeth, even when these are abnormally mln-, ute. " ': : Women Not Artistic During the last hundred years ' In France and England the education of women has been more artistic than that of men. Far more emphasis is put upon music and drawing In girls' schools than in the corresponding In stitutions for their brothers. And yet Galtotf found, In Investigating nearly 900 cases, that 28 per cent males and S3 per cent females showed artistic tastes. In spite of the larger oppor tunity which the modern woman has to develop her artistic faculties, the re sults in the two sexes are practically the same.- -: A Discrepancy. Johnny Pa, half -fare la 3 cents and whole fare 5 cents. Isn't It? . PapaTea, my boy, that Is right Johnny But you said two halves always equal a whole. Puck. He I hope you don't make a fool ol your husband? - She No; I don't have to. Tonkers Statesman. Appropriate. A Southern cornetlst, named Burst has three children- Alice May Burst, Ja.mes Wood Burst, and Henry Will Burst . : . So Natural. Mrs. Cassldy 'Twas very natural he looked. Mrs. Casey Aye, shure he looked fur all the wurld lolke a lolve man layin there dead. Breaking the News. Mistress If you want eggs to keep you must lay them In a cool place. Bridget Ol'U mlntlon It to the hens at wanst mum. His Experience. "Regarding a woman," said Hen peek, "To this said conclusion I've come: When man puts a ring on her finger He puts himself under her thumb." Awful. Uncle Hiram They say that the sun never sets on the British Empire. Aunt Hannah Doesn't it now? And we have such lovely sun sets over here! Very Likely. "Have you any taste for Thackeray?" asked Mrs. Oldcastle. "No, I can't say that I have," replied her hostess; "Is that anything like this paprika they're puttin' In everything now?" Correct "Pa," said little Reginald, "what is a bucket shop?" .""A bueket shop, my son," said the father, feel ingly, "Is a modern cooperage estab lishment to which a man takes a bar rel and brings back the bung-hole." Insinuation. Patron (In restaurant) What are you bothering me for? Head Usher The gentleman at the next table wanted me to ask if you wouldn't please face the other way. He says he was nearly eaten by an al ligator once and can't bear to see you eat" The Realist Alexis came home one night with Ms clothes full of holes. "What has happened to you?" exclaim ed his mother. "Oh, we've been play ing shop ever since school closed," Alexis replied. "Shop?" echoed his mother. "Yes. We opened a grocery, and everybody was something," Alexis explained. "I was the cheese." Could Do Without It "You remem ber that I gave an order for a pound of liver a while ago?" "Yes," was the reply. "Well, I find that I do not need it, and you need not send it" Before she could put down the telephone re ceiver she heard the market-man say to some one in the store: "Take out Mrs. Blank's liver. She says she can get along without it" Recommendable." "My husband Is so poetic," said one lady to - "ther in a car the other days. "Poor dear!" In terrupted a 'good-natured looking wom an with a market basket at her feet who was seated at the lady's elbow and overheard the remark. "Have you ever tried rubbln his j'ints with hart shorn liniment inum? That'll straight en him out . as quick as . anything I know of." ... . The Secret of Harmony. Young Mrs. Mead had just engaged two ser vants, a man and his wife. "I am so glad you are married!" she said to the man. "I hope you are very happy, and that you and your wife never have any difference of opinion.' "Faith, ma'am, I couldn't say that" replied the new servant "for we have' a good many; but Oi don't let Bridget know-of thim, an so we do be getting along well." Generals Saved Him. When Gen eral Robert E. Lee was fighting Grant in "the last days" an old darky be sieged headquarters with requests to see "the gin'ral." "Well, where do you belong?" demanded General Lee. "I b'longs to y'r company, gin'ral," re turned the darky. "No; you don't" declared the General, snarply. "Every body in my company has been shot How Is it that you haven't been?" The darky scratched his head. Then from his twisted mouth camt. a confidential whisper: "Well, yo' see, gin'ral. It's this a-way. I ain't been shot "'case when dey's a fight goln' on I always stays with the gin'rals." Took It for Granted. ' When Lady Davy was advanced In years there came to Rome a very fool ish Russian on " whose credulity his friends used to practice. Among other things they informed -him that there had till shortly before been in the city an English lady at whose house her friends used to assemble. After her death they found it so inconvenient to lose their point of meeting that they had her embalmed . and placed every evening on her accustomed ottoman. As he became very anxious to assist at one of these strange reunions, some one agreed to take him there. When he arrived, there, sure enough, sat the shriveled old lady. He circumnavi gated the ottoman several times, find ing all that he had been told was too true, then threw up his arms and with the cry, "It is too horrible!" rushed from the room. Sir Grant Duff's "Notes from a Diary." Took It as Personal. . Daisy Why was Maude Oldglrl so angry about her photographs? Didn't they flatter her? Maiale Oh, they were as pretty as the artist could make them, but on the back of each one it said, "The orig inal of this picture is carefully pre served." Cleveland Plain Dealer. There are times when a man doesn't want things to com hla way bills, fof exampla. .-. - . i GOOD BLOO TELLS ITS OWN STORY And tells it eloquently in the bright eye, the supple. fiSSh vFaA sth, soft skin, glowing with a W 8(nd M 831 bniin, good EdrdlgeS0n rereshinS "kep. energy tor- - , vjuu pan oi me Dody: 3;?Tle' fa!S?e' Slnew and bone is dependent on it fof nowishrnent and strength, and as it circulates through the system Dure and ffli flSrllslleS,to these diffepent Part all the hlalthfri fqtStiS Mature Sfc a'diffSV111 thf blood becomes impure or distil tells a different story, quite as forceful in its wav Itrninr WJrwt .its- diseases, nmddy, sallowcomplcxions, dZ'so&hinS etc., show the presence, in the blood, of some foreign matter 72' enmatismj Catarrh Contagions , Blood Poison and sMa? ?efftf of a deeply poisoned blood circulation. These may either be inhentedwae- the bWd. tb, r,,i i,; irUS? imparities are expelled from life. Rheumatism, Catarrh, Scrofula, Contagious Blood Poison and all rW vfce!fbrrd,byS-S-S- B-thebloodTnTanym aavice, free of charge, StWiT SPECIHG CO.. ATLANTA. GA. Retort Courteous. He Girls are - queer creatures they marry the first fool who asks them, as a rule. I suppose you would do the same, wouldn't you? - She Suppose you ask me and find out . , CITQ Permanently Cured. No fits or nervousness II 10 after nrstday'suseof Dr.Kline'sOreatNerve Restorer. Send for Free J2 trial bottle and treatise. Dr. K. H. Kline, Ltd., 921 Arch St. Philadelphia, Pa. The Proper Word. . Clara I was tempted to give her a piece of my mind, only I didn't want to make a scene. 1 Minnie You mean, dear, you didn't want to make a production. That's the proper word nowadays. Boston Tran script To Break in New Shoes. Always shake in Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder. It cures hot, sweating, aching, swollen feet. Cures corns, ingrowing nails and bunions. At all arirggi8t8 and shoe stores, 25c Don'taceept arty substitute. Sample mailed FREB. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Lucky, Indeed. "This Is what I get for marrylns a poet," pouted the tall brunette. "We are too poor to hire a girl, so I have to cook the beefsteak and onions." "My dear girl," ; said jthe matron, whose husband is an editor, "you should be very proud." j-. "Proud of what?" "That you should have found a poet who can really afford beefsteak and onions." For forty year's Flso's Cure for Con sumption has cared coughs and colds. At druggists. Price 25 cents. The Last Perry Expedition Survivor. The newspapers chronicle tbe death, June 22d, of two members of tbe Perry expedition to Japan, 1853-54. The July Century contains tbe personal re collections of this expedition of John S. Bewail, who was a member ot Com modore Perry's party, and who is prob ably the last survivor of the famous expedition. ... Mothers will find Mrs. Wlnsiow's Soothing Byrnp the best remedy to use for their children dozing the teething period. Yellow Art. Tommy Figjam Paw, whose picture is that feller there where you're read in'?" Paw Figjam Why, that's a half tone of a second cousin of the step brother of an( aunt by second marriage of the foster sister of the chap who Is' suspected of being in possession of information as to who was an accom plice of the mysterious unknown who assisted in kidnaping Sloppy Sadie the Sad-Eyed Shop Girl." Baltimore American. The Kind You Have Always - . .uoa. x icwuer, aim uas neen maue imuer nis personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-good" are but Experiments, and endanger the health or Children Experience against Experiment. ' What is CASTOR. A Castona is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing 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 Wind Coljc. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving, healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. - The Kind You toe Always Bought .Bears the In Use For Over 30 Years. TH CSHTMII CWMIY. TT MUMMY .TIlttT. Rr TO.K eiTT. CURE Horses oi HEAVES, COUGH, , -- - CUED &4 HORSES. : ' : T?21 nf rT"8?'" Hoove Powders the put eight months sod In that time h.re f Hesres. 14 of Distemper and 9 of Chronie Cough. The Prtuslaa BemKJos hare gained a great reputation In this sectionErnest Behncke, Newark, if. y. PRICE: AT DEALERS, SOe; BY MAIL, OOo WEE?gJ?gg-g?e.r's Hand Book. Prubsuh Rimkpt Co.. St. Paul. Minn. VOttTIUW UUU 0OM quirea, crat the seat oftrouble is the same the blood. S. S. S., a purely vegetable blood remedy, cleanses and purifies the circulation and makes it strong and clean. Under its purifving and tonic ef- Answered the Purpose. The woman whistled at a car, It stopped with sudden jerk; Her whistle was a failure but Her face got in its work. THE DAISY FLY KILLER destroys all tbe mes ana anortlS comfort toevery home-in diuino; room, sleeping room and all places where flies are trouble some. Clean, neat and will notsoilorinjnre anything. Try . mem once ana utter m; wutiuui uem. it not sept by dfai?rft seM Prepaid for c H arold Somen, 149 DeKalb Ave., Brooklyn, 25". Y. Iowa Improved SEPARATOR LOW CAN Waist High Skim Cold or Warm . Milk 50 Per Cent Cream IT'S THE BEST EVER SEND FOR CATALOGUE - MITCHELL, LEWIS & STAVER CO. PORTLAND. OREGON SEATTLE SPOKANE BOISE Or. G. Gee Wo Wcaierfal Rom ' Treatment This wonderful Chl neM doctor la called great because he cures people without opera tion that are given up to die. He cures with those wonderful Chi nese herbs, roots, buds, barks and vegetables that are entirely un known to medical sci ence la this country. Through the use of those harmless remedies this famous doctor knows the action of over 600 different remedies which be successfully uses in different diseases. He guarantees to cure catarrh, asthma, lung, throat, rheumatism, nervousness, stomach, liver, kid neys, etc; has hundreds of testimonials. Charges moderate. Call and see him. Patients out or the city write for blanks and circulars. Send stamp. CONSULTATION FKEE. . . ADDRESS Tbe C. Gee Wa Chinese Medicine Co. 251H-253 ALDER ST., PORTLAND, OREGON 1 mw r-fuuvu pnfc P. N. U. No. 281905 HEN writing to advertisers plea lueuuua inn yapflr - Bought has borne the sisriia- Signature of - rsrtlamt, O. Oammt Amnta