\ -m m n BABY’S ECZEMA Top of Head Covered with Scales Which Peeled off Taking Hair with Them. CURED BYCUTICURA Now Six Years Old with Thick Hair and Clean Scalp. Cure Permanent. “ M y baby was six weeks old when the top of her head became covered with thick scales, which would peel and come off, taking the hair with it. It would soon form again and be as bail as before. M y doctor said it was Eczema, and prescribed an ointment, which did no good. I then tried Cuti- cura Soap and Ointment. I washed her head in warm water and Cuticura Soap and gently combed the scales off. They aid not come back and her hair grew out fine and thick. She is now a rear and a half old, and has no trace of Eczema.” MRS. C. \V. JU’ RG ES, Iranistan Ave., Bridgeport, Conn., Feb. 2 1 , 1898 . CURE PERMANENT Mrs. Burges writes P'cb. 28 , 19 0 3 : “ My baLy, who had Eczema very badly on her her \ as I told you before, after using the L u ’icura Remedies was cured. She is now six years old, and has thick hair ¡and a clean scalp.” Instant relief and refreshing sleep for skin-tortured babies and rest for tired, worried mothers in warm baths with Cuticura Soap, and gentle anoint­ ings with Cuticura Ointment, purest of emollients and greatest of skin cures. This is the purest, sweetest, most speedy, permanent, and economical treatment for torturing, disfiguring, itching, burning, bleeding, scaly, crasted, and pimply skin and scalp humours, with loss of hair, of infants end children, as well as adults, and is sure to succeed when all other reme­ dies and the best physicians fail. Sold throughout the world. Cuticura Renolvent, fiOc. (In ---- n of Chocolate Coated I'Ll», k>e. per vial of 60). Oint- meoLâOc.,Soap,2óc. Poller Drug St Chem. Corp., Bo»k Sola Prop», aar Scud for M The Great Humour Cura." C H U R C H D IR ECTO RV . Preaching hour» at 11 anil 7 :30. M . E. C H U R C H , Preaching Sunday morning and ev­ ening. Sunday school at 9:45. Ep- worth league at ti :3* Prayer meet­ ing Thursday evening.— .faa. Moore, paator, B A P T IS T C H U R C H . Preaching Sunday morning and ev­ ening. Sunday school at 10. B. Y . P . U . at (1:30. Prayer meeting W e d ­ nesday evening.— .1. II. Thompson, pastor. P R E S B Y T E R IA N C H U R C H . Preaching Sunday morning and ev­ ening. Sunday school at 10. (Chris­ tian Endeavor at 0:30. Prayer meet­ ing Thursday evening.— W , T. \Var- dle, pastor. C H R IS T IA N C H U R C H . Preaching Sunday morning and ev­ ening. Bible school at 10. Senior Christian Endeavor at 6:30. Bihle class and prayer meeting Thursday evening. K V A N C E M C A I. C H U R C H . Preaching Sunday morning and ev­ ening at the Dallas college chapel. Sunday school atlO. Christian En deavor at 0:30. Prayer meeting Thurs­ day eveniug.— 1). M . Metzger, pastor, Breeding Horses For Farm and City _ l.orits, but for the past ten years th* I navy and dark red. never yellow Tbit ranchmen hM*t been using Porcheron. color muat be reserved for a dark Shire and loach stallions until tunny browed little damsel, who may also of them hav* hands of horses as good wear poppy red If the skin la bright as are raise«’ In Iowa and Illinois. We and clear or cardinal if she is p ile. Navy and white may be w« hi by the Isiuglit 8 A*>) from South Dakota. Among them we got twenty-one In* browu haired and bright d i" k'-Y I ' d * lussie. and some fair children with I-or fed Frow n and Derman coach stal brow'» eyes look sweet iu brown with lions. a touch of red.—Philadelphia Ledger. F r «n fh C o a c h S t a llio n . T H E H A R D Y C H E V IO T llie o p W e ll A d u p c d F o r H u n t U n it o n Iliilj 1'cM turCM . Tlie Cheviot she *p. being origin all from the 8 otch a *e i t h. hardy and better adapted to I i . is . a L i » p. for their food over billy pasture*, where the feed is often not very a bun Taut, than Is tbe more closely built Shrop­ shire, that has come from a section where food Is easily gathered, says E Van A Is ty ne in Rural New Yorker. ’I'lio Kind You Have Always Bought, aud which has hern While 1 urn an admirer of the Shrop iu use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of shires and have kept them for many and has been made under his per­ years with goxt success, I know that sonal supervision since its infancy. In many instances they have not giv m Allow no oiio to deceive you in this. satisfaction, and without question the All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good” are hat reason is that they have lacked the Experiments that triile with and endanger the health o f English care, feed and shelter that to a Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. large degree they must have to do their liest. The Cheviots are excellent shear ers and of a kind of wool that is now much in demand. Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare­ The same rules as to management ol goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It Is Pleasant. It Cheviots will apply to all mutton contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic breeds. First, don't turn out too soon substance. Its nge is its guarantee. It destroys Worm» in the spring, or, If they have an early ami alluys Feverishness. It eures Diarrhoea and W ind run, where they can get green grass. Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Coustiputlou Frozen grass or stubble Is always ul * injury. Keep tip the feed of good fod­ and Flatulency. It assimilates tlie Food, regulates tbe der and some grain until the grass gets Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy aud nutural sleep, Its full strength. Better to shear before Tlie Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. the sheep go out at all If they can be well housed for a time Immediately after the fleece is taken off. They wifi be less likely to take cold than if it is done after they have suffered the ex­ Bears the Signature of treme heat of their fleeees and then are left to lie out in the damp. There will then be less loss of wool from Its com­ ing off and getting dirty. After shear­ ing dip sheep and lambs in any of the carbolic petroleum dips. If the pasture is scanty a field of D w arf Essex rape to which they enu run will help very materially. Shelter from the cold fall rains In dry, well ventilated stables. Fetid good, wholesome fodder, clover hay preferred. Supplement with enough ▼ M l C E N T A U R C O M PA N Y. T T M U R RA Y S TR E ET. NE W YO R K C ITY. protein feed, grain If necessary, to keep them In good condition. Feed plenty of roots or silage. Let them have access at nil times to good, clean water. These are the essentials, but success will only come with sheep as j gain than hogs fed on milk alone. The j well us anything else by attention and average o f the Utah experiments show- I care and looking after the little details. • ed 100 pounds o f milk to he equal to i about tw enty-four pounds o f grain. CASTORI An Indlanu reader wunta to know if boraea with docked tulls will sell Paladin champion French coach I for more money and more readily In X e r v o u a H a b i t * In C h ild r e n . | market than horses with their natural stallion, whose picture is reproduced Curing the nervous habits or “tricks” tails Certainly not. saya Breeder's from American Cultivator, is at the | of children Is one of the most insistent Gazette. A farmer could not do a problems facing parents. The problem Is made particularly difficult because more foolish thing than to dock the the habits come so quietly that we tall or pull the mane or cut off the find them established before we have forelock on a Imrae that be Is sending i really noticed them. Some habits are to market. All these operations Ihill- caused by disordered nerves, and in cute a "ai-eoiidhaud" horse, and such such a case the doctor must be con­ horses ordinarily command lower sulted. Twitching of the face or limbs, prices and will not sell at all to some opening of the mouth, blinking of the buyers. Leave the hair on your bo-ses. eyes, hesitation of speech, are all Indl- Clean them, groom them until tlielr . cations that something Is wrong, and coats ale ill good condition, bill do ; no child must be punished for them. not under any circumstances touch | Indeed, mere punishment never docs dicurs tv their manes or forelock» of any good either to the tricks depend- nocking Irons to tlielr tails. leave I ent on had health or on those of Imita­ (lie Job of hairdressing to the Wart tion. Defective sight is the cause of who buy * the horse. This warring | many so called tricks. A child whose lias been repeatedly given III tfesc < H Z t i r i l l N P A L A D IN . vision is faulty screws up his eyes or columns. The same inquirer wan's | bead of the Oaklawn farm atud of scowls In his efforts to adapt his pow­ u know If docking «alls of horses vlll 1 Fren;b coach horse* of Duuhaui, ers of sight. In such a case an optician ■make theiu more stylish." The pres­ leuner A Coleman. Wayne. Du Fug* or oculist should be called in and the ent fashion In pleasure horses for liar- sight tested. A had habit is simply re­ ii. as and »addle purposes runs to dock­ | coupiy. III. peated action, and It Is only by persist­ W h e n a H o ra e Han ln < H *e «tlo n . ed tails. It Is the favorite style with ently stopping It that one can hope to A correspondent of American Agri most users of such horses, although eradicate It.—Woman’s Life. tin re are many exceptions to this prac­ culturist has u horse that lias a poor tice. But the farmer has nothing to appetite for buy or graiu and Ids hull The Grouping: of Food. Is tough. The veterinary editor ad do with this matter. He does not i>I Many otherwise excellent “provid­ vis*s niin to give one quart of raw fin illnarily sell direct to this class of ers” do not seem to understand the purchasers. If he does get an order seed oil at a dose. After the physie grouping of food. This may seem au operates give one ounce each of tine- from u bluer who wants a dock tailed horse It will then be time enough to tur* of ginger and gentian at n dose odd expression, but it means Just this, take jtt the tuil. Meanwhile he Is three times a day in one-half pint of the keeping of meals to an average as mere y reducing the price on Ids horse cold water before feeding. Continue it far as their nourishing qualities are for several we»*ks if needed. and narrowing his market by attempt concerned. For instance, the heavy, t l t a a o n r l tint«*» C o m e U t a h . lug to "111111 him up" when sending rich soups, such as pea, bean, mock At a farm sale recently held in Cald­ him i n the open market. curt la anti oxtail, should l>e reserved well county. Mo., a team of mules for the days when the meat course is I lls l* on IV rd lM S lo lly . brought $898. a correspondent says. It lighter or even absent altogether. To One o l 'die worst practices for colts was one of the finest pairs of farm ani­ serve a thick black bean soup with a is to o-cii*ed with grain. 11. A. Briggs of Elk horn. \Vis„ evidently out of ex­ mals that have ever been produced tri roast beef dinner one day and a light that section of the state, and tin* Cald­ cream soup with a fish dinner the next perience and careful study, gives the following suggestions In the Massa­ well section is becoming one of the Is not maintaining the average. Tills best stock raining localities of Missou­ also applies to desserts. The rich, satis­ chusetts Ploughman: "Feed as near as you can a oalanced ri, good horses and mules receiving ► fying desserts should be served to help out an otherwise limited meal. Most ration consisting of a variety of feeds, great (Jen I of attention from farmers housewives seem to regard desserts using oats, bran, n little corn In th, merely trom the standpoint of being winter and roots If you hav-- them. good to taste. As a matter of fact u ■'I pref.-r clover hay If cat early and good pudding is a very nourishing ar­ G r ln d ln t r G r a in F o r llo r H P «. clean, with some timothy and eo n fod­ A l f a l f a F o r S o w n . ticle of diet. Rice pudding, tapioca At the North Dakota experiment sta der, with plenty of gras- in s.-i.-on, cream, bread pudding and “browu tiou ground oats and bran gave slight : Governor Hoard o f Wisconsin advo­ and always a place where they can get Betty” are all dishes of high nutritive ly better results than unground oats i cates keeping the sow’ on a lfalfa until exercise. If fed all they will clean up 3he farrows. H e says the pigs are iuu Illy .—Hanger’s Bazar. and digest well, they will alwuys tie and bran. This was found true at the j stronger and do better. He gave an The tot days and nlgl.t^ of August ready for the market. If not sold when Iowa experiment station. It Is the! MISS M ARIO N S. PA R K E R . Illustration o f raising seventy-six pigs and early September are the most try­ T a r t I n U r «N N , three year* old they should he broken opinion of horse breeders that colts,! Tact in dress is necessary to every brood mares and horses with defective out o f seventy-eight produced. Such ing to t ie average butteramker, writes to drive, and put the dr*ft colts at light Civil Knicliieer and DeMlftner of Structural Ironwork. woman who hopes to become represent­ teeth do much hotter on ground feed . 1 figures speak for themselves and com­ a Georgia dairy woi:!..n in Farm Prog­ farm work, and they wld pay for their Often after churning a long .Miss Marion S. Parker of New York, ative of that refinement which is the At the Maryland experiment station it j ing as they do from such a high source ress. keeping for the next yrur. Then they ought to be convincing. time the butter will l:e soft and white should be fed for the market, and that a civil engineer, is the designer of chief ornament of womanhood or girl­ was found that ground corn and oats R a t i o n F o r C o lt*. and the butte? maker discouraged. means they should have about 2 UU- every Inch of th«* structural steel work hood. It is rare that one sees French were more thoroughly digested than | Crushed oats and good wheat bran This Is especially the case if she does pounds more Refill than they usunlli from foundation to roof of the Broad people dressed out of keeping with tbe unground grain. mixed ufcike an excellent grain ration not have very much cream and saves have in the average farmer's core Exchange, the biggest office building their surroundings or positiou. Iu the for grow in g foals, says St. 1*0uls Re­ it several clays to got enough for a Then they will bring from $2f> to $00 In the city, which every day has with­ latter half of the nineteenth century a public. Some mix it in equal propor­ churning. Then many housekeepers note.l woman of France, Mine, de Gi more per head than they would if sold in its walls fully 8,000 persons. tions, but most prefer tw o pints of do not have a good cool place to keep ardin, said: “Style ought inevitably to But this is not the only monument POINTS ON FEEDING while still thill. Ib filet, there Is no oats to one o f bran. W here crushed their milk and cream, and ice Is out of better business for a stock feeder or to Miss Parker’s mechanical skill. As vary according to position and age. It oats cannot be obtained mix the bran j the question. It is to such as these hould fit itself to the fortune, to tin* farmer than to feel draft horses for a part of her dally work in the office Some succulent food should be fed to with whole oats iu the proportion that 1 want to tell one woman's plan the murket ns a good, growthy y.aing of a Arm of consulting engineers on habits, to the form, to the clrcum breeding ewes at all times, though It draft bora* if prop rly fell, will put on Fifth avenue she has designed the Tunces and Indeed to every detail in is very easy to feed them too much named. It is more economical to feed of making sweet, hard, yellow butter ilesli nt tin rate o" a hundred pounds structural steel work, including the ihe life of those who wish to appear just previous to lambing, says John A. crushed oats than whole ones, especial­ in hot weather or cold—butter that will ly i f the colt eats so fast that he sw al­ always sell above the market price. ts leaders.” This truism Is as real to- foundation, of the great Whitehall per month for two or three months. Craig in Farm Home. When turnips lows some o f the grain whole, as in She usually churns from four to six lay as at the time it was written, but "When t|iey nre put up for feeding building on Battery place, the twenty or silage nre fed to breeding ewes iu such cases no nutriment is derived quarts of cream at a time, and before give tlicm light ■ntloua on the start story structure known generally as •mfortunately outside of la belle too liberal quantities weak lambs are she skims any cream into the cream and gradually Increase the ration unf-l ‘*42 Broadway,” the Barclay building France this fitting of self to one's likely to result. Before lambing three from those that are not masticated. ar she puts throe pounds of salt into phere is honored more in the breach R a tio n F o r G r o w in g P ig ». they get alt the. will eat and properlv at Broadway and Duane street and pounds of any succulent food, such as t. and then every time she puts in ban in the obs mince. W h ile rather the best ration for the Bank of the Metropolis. ¡Jlgest.” mangel wurzels, sugar beets, corn or •ream she siirs i( thoroughly, so as to grow ing p gs Is skim milk and ship M an ge H om e«. That Miss Parker is doing this work clover silage, will be found sufficient. I D nat C ap. stuff, a very good ration can be made mix tlie salt well through the cream. A South (.final a correspondent of an is not so much the result of her own After lambing unlimited quantities of j The churning is done in the usual man­ The purchase of a nine cent eighteen agricultural paper says: If the peopl* talent for mathematics, she modestly these may be fed to stimulate the milk o f bran, ground oats and oilmeal, one neb handkerchief iu white, with a in the east lu ce any Idea that th* asserts, as It Is due to the present day bushel o f bran, one bushel o f oats and ner, nr.d the butter always comes firm flow. ind yell >w. The butter is washed, range liorsv business is a thing of tie* demand for “specialization." Although hemstitched border and a scrawlly one gallon o f oilmeal made into a slop. C lo v e r F o r Pin;*. which takes out all the buttermilk blue pattern above it. resulted in the past they tire greatly misled, as ou • The Oregon experiment station pub- | - F a r m Home. with very little working, and uo salt prettiest kind of a dust cap, easy to fishes the result of pigs on clover. It ! firm alone IsauJit and sold on this mat is ever put into the butter. The salt ket nearly 40 »00 range horses during put on and off and very becoming. says: The value of clover pasture for I B R ICH T’S°DiSEASE. put into the cream makes the butter the past your A few years ago it wa/ Die handkerchief was folded in the growing pigs was tested with twelve , T be largest sum ever paid for a pre­ just salty enough. Of course the but­ w ell middle and the two short edges sewed animals about three months old. hur- , cei scription changed bands in San F ia n - termilk is too salty for use. but the ease halfway up. This formed the back, died on twenty-six square rods of good cisco, August 30,1901. The transfer with which the butter is ( burned and rbo front edge was rolled back like a clover pasturage. In three months involved in coin and stock $112,500, Its superior quality more than compen­ Puritan bonnet, a few plaits put above there was a total gain of 253 pounds. The Leading Paper of the and was paid by a party of busi­ sate for that loss. 'acb ear to tit the tiling and two nar­ According to the showing, one acre of ness men for a specific for Bright’s Pacific Coast row ribbons sewed to tbe corners at good clover for growing hogs repfe- disease and diabetes, hitherto incura­ A W o r d F o r 11» e G u e r n s e y . the back to hold tbe cap close to the | sents a value of $44. 8 d. ble diseases. Professor E. B. Voorhees o f the N ew bead, and behold a bead covering that Feeding* Skim Milk to II ok ». They commenced tbe serious inves­ Jersey agricultural experiment sta­ was dust defying! The Utah experiment statiou has tigation of tlie specific November 15, | from time to time made some very 1900. They interviewed scores of tbe tion in a carefully prepared address ->n ‘ W hat the Guernseys H ave Dem­ U ren ain a th e H a ir. I valuable experiments in feeding milk. Styles in hairdressing change with The testimony on tlie value of skim cured and tried it out on its merits by onstrated In Public and Official Tests’ * styles in dress, and no woman can ! milk for hogs us a food Is convincing. putting over three dozen cases on tbe says: “ In the first test o f breeds that hope to look smart, however up to date Hogs when fed milk and grain require treatment and watching them. They was carried on at the New Jersey ex­ The very best weekly Newspaper her costume, if her coiffure is hopeless­ much less matter, to uiak/» n nomwi «*+ also got physicians to name chronic, periment station the Guernseys showed MISS M A lii ON ti. I’ A lik Lit. incurable cases, and administered it very clearly that they were superior published In the entire West. ly behind the times. Nevertheless there the course she look to get her civil en­ with the physicians for judges. U p to all others in the cost o f the pro­ gineer’s degree might naturally have ■ire certain general rules which should to August 25th 87 per cent of the test duction o f n pound o f batter and In the been expected to lead her into archi­ guide her in altering her hair to suit caeefr were either well or progressing cost o f tlie production o f a pound of the modes. Seldom, for instance, is In clu d in g iNihiitgtt to any i a rt o f the tecture as a profession, she put that favorably. I'liito d Staton. Canada Mini M ex ico more artistic profession aside to apply there a period in which both high and There being but thirteen per cent Sow coiffures are not permissible, and, It Is best because, besides herself to construciive engineering as <>f failures, tbe parties were satisfied printing all the news of the world therefore. If she looks a guy in high she saw she was better fitted for it. and closed tbe transaction. The pre- each we;k in an Interesting way “How did l get into this work’/” Miss dressed hair she should wear It low , cedings of tbe investigating commit­ and ful l y illustrating many forever, no matter what the majority Parker said iu response to a leading tee and tbe clinical reports of the test aftlcies, it has special depart­ question. “Oh. 1 always had an In of other women are wearing. ments devoted to— cases were published and w ill^ e mail­ Have been suffering from Impure Blood ed lree on application. Address John clination for mathematics, and after AGRICULTURE soiled Vella. 1 for many years, having Bods aud otliet I was graduated from the Detroit HORTICULTURE Apropos of the complexion problem, Eruptions. Having heard of S. S. S. I de J. Fulton company, 409 Washington High school I went to the University POULTRY which seems, judging from the craze cided to try it, and am glad to eay that ii street, San Francisco, California. of Michigan with tbe determination of LIV-- STOCK for “treatments.” to be one of the has done me a great deal of good. Iintend being a civil engineer. When I left MINING most abaorl^ng cares of the modern continue to use it, as I believe it.to bt LITERATURE college 1 bad an offer to come to New the best Blood Medicine on the market FASHIONS York, and I accepted It. O f course my woman, many difficulties arise from Cleveland, Tetin. W. K. D et e r s . and S OKTS friends suggested that I take up archi­ the too frequent habit of wearing soiled ' veils against the face, so that it is For over fifteen years I have suffere< tecture, but I'm not tbe least bit of These are presided over by editors having a thorough knowl­ an artist, and I’ve stuck to this work well for those who wear veils to set* more or less from Impure Blood. About*, ouKiuraar c ow. that they ure constantly renewed, for year I had a boil appear on my le* 7ca ago - edge of their specialties. The ever «¡ne’e. That’s all there Is to it." below the knee, which was followed b\ total solids. It was shown, further­ in town the amount o f soot and smoke pages devoted to Agr culture. in the beginning Miss Parker's du three more on my neck. I saw S. S. S 1 more. that thc-«e animals, representing Horticu'ture, Poultry and Live ties were simply to make drawings of which is absorbed by such materials advertised and decided to try it. Aftei 1 their breed, showed it to be one which Stock ar-* well illustrated and Is enormous and certainly threatens taking three bottles all Boils disappeared j Individual beams and girders, but it filled with matter of the greatest produced a large flow of milk of a very any sine since was not long before she began to have to complicate the question o f how to and I nave not been troubled anv interest to all engaged in these high quality—superior, in fact, to all G k o . G. F e r t i g . more important tasks assigned to hei, preserve a g >od Complexion. industries, every l i ne b e i n g others. In the breed tests begun at 1 ri 4 W. Jefferson St , Louisville, Ky. and for the last five years her tim# written by those who are in close the New York experiment station the Staroli R e c ip e . .. . touch with conditions prevailing has been taken tip entirely with the , , , , - »1 Newark, Ohio, May 23 , 1903 . same general facts were established, A good out lime housewife offer* tlie From chill,h(xM i haJ t i en boU,T«1 | on this Coast. plans of such immense buildings as PO RTLA N D -TH E D A L L ES RO U TE. though in that experiment other breeds following rule for starch. Mix one with bad blood, skin eruptions and boils ! have been named. SEND FOR SAMPLE COPY. than the Jerseys were quite us good in In the five years Miss Parker has tablespoonful of starch with four table- j had boils ranging from five to twenty ii. 1 It will be sent free. showing a low cost of production.”—W . been working on plans for these great spoonfuls of cold water and pour ou number each season. The burning ac H. raid well. Secretary of Guernsey Do you wart the Chronicle skyscrapers and "tlie little ones of | this three quarts of boiling water. Boll companying the eruption was terrible j Cottle Club, in National Stockman. for tweutv minutes. Then add one tea- . S. 8. S. seemed to be just the medicim j ten or twelve stories that don't count” of Milt and a pleoe of p.niffln » . « ''« > ,t.'irov' out «>> >mPu she has designed building« costing $ 10 . ! Hjtooiifill . ,, «tir rities and l*ad blood, giving me perma- D :* lr y F a r m P r o jg r r e * «. OOO.OPO. New York Press. w ” half *hp “'«■ * ni ,n 7 nrnt rrlirt f om the .kin rruplion an, Showing the United States. Do­ The separator has for a number of mull I lie w u i I* dissolved, then eool koiu_ ,las W n tcn year, , minion of Canada and Northern years been the keystone of progress and strain through cheesecloth. 10 have never had a return of the disease. n resftti«« Ruby G irl*. Mexico on one side. MAP OF in dairy fanning. It has been tbe most M rs . J. D. A t h e r t o n . Mothers should cultivate taste In | add luster soak the articles In this prep­ THE WORLD, presenting to view potent of dairy educators, aud Its in­ dressing their baby girls. Will th.* j aration for six hour«. Write f o r o u r in one continuous map. with all troduction has almost Invariably prov­ areas in true propoxtion, the en­ sterner sex forgive us when we add hook on blood and C o n n e ctin g at Lyle with the ed tbe stepping stone to advancement tire surface of the Earth on the W u h Y our Ink W e ll«. that It does not much matter in the skin diseases. in every feature of dairy work and other side. Keep your ink wells clean. Four out case of little boys so long as they are Medical advice i character of methods and utensils. It the Ink once a week and thoroughly j comfortably and suitably clad? Send $2 and get the Map and or any special in- ’ R ailw ay Com pany for is jin object lesson in up to date ma­ ''Weekly Chronicle” for one year, Rut ns a baby girl gets oil Into her wash the bottle In hot water. Then ! formation a b o u t 1 W a h k a i c u s , chinery. It Is usually soon followed postage prepaid on Map and Daly, aecoiul year and begins to look ”en | rub perfectly dry. If this Is carefully by a Babcock tester showing the actual Paper. your case will coat C e n t e r v ille gaging” do let her wear such colon* ns attended to, tlie pens well wiped with C o ld en d a le butter fat value of the milk of each you nothing. _ anti all other K lickitat Talley point*. will suit her skin, color of hair, etc. A a Mt •t d c i ■ * a f h f h u m w i . y«»u cow by the weeding out of the poorer will to t * po»vl*h *t your do*k Tk# Sw|f, SpM |flc Company. Atlanta. 6 a florid face with ruddy hair should nev Steamers leave Portland i ! m I> , except Sundsv, at I By mail, poatajr* paid cows, an up to date churn, the use of ! 7 a. m., connecting at L yle with C. R. a N . train for er have red in any shade except that of when you have a hurried note to write Qolttomtale at 5:30 p. m., train Arriving *t OoMen- l»etter salt, better color, greater cleanli­ dull ruby in proximity. Even that tint and’ find no w- i h v mnoMlllll-tILIilf______ Jale at 7.!»6 p. m. Steamer* arrive T lie Dalkss 6:9» ness and a more intelligent understand­ p. m. Steamer leave* The Dalle* daily, except Sun- should be Judiciously displayed, a mere I day, at 7:90 a. m. C R A N. train leavintr Ooklen- ing of huttermaking generally. Such suspicion of It being seen. ! dale at 6:16 a m connect* with thi* -teatner for Port- | Address T W J k W W V E G E T A B L E S I C I L I A N improvement must necessarily lend Its White, cream, navy, moae green and arriving a t I’ortUm a t 6 pm. M. H. de YOUNC, influence to other lines of farm work, a good shade of coffee browu may all Proprietor and tlie “leaven” of progress which the he woru. hut pale blue or mauve should * **8an FranoiaeO Pbrooicte," For doUilod information of (iekoU, of tlie separator provides he avoided. 9 San Francisco, Cal. ■ !.es the hair { re v long and heavy, and keeps it soft and glossy, I berth reservation*, etc., call or write introduction is Inestimable iu its widespread re­ A delicate, pale face may have blue C 1B C L L A T IO N U ftP A K T M K X T •ops falling hair and cures dandruff. And if always restores I to Alder atreet wharf, Portland, Or. sults. S. E. Steveuson Before Oneida Of certain shades mixed with ••»»»* **■ H. O. CAM PBELL, Manager. What is CASTORIA G EN U IN E CASTORIA The Kind You Have Always Bought In U s e F o r O v e r 3 0 Y e a rs . ¡W O M A N S 1 W O ttljh The San Francisco Corvallis and Eastern Railroad. T IM E CARD NO. 24. No. 2 for Yaqiiinn : Leaves A lb a n y ....................12 :45 p in Leaves C o r v a lli s .... ......... 1:45 p m Arrives Y a q u i n a ................. 6:45 p m No. 1 returning : Leaves Y a q u in a ................ 7:15 a m Leoves C orvallis................. 11:30 a ni A rriv e s,A lb a n y .................... 12:15 p in No. 3 for Albany-Detroi t : Leaves Albany for Detroit. . 7 :30 a in Arrives D e tro it............. 12 :30 p in No. 4 from Detroit Leaves Detroit ......... . . . . 1 :80 p ni Arrives Albany ................. 0:30 p m No. S for Albany Leaves C o rv a llis ................. 0:30 a m Arrives Albany ............... 7 10 a m No S fo rC o rv a llis Leave Albany lor Corvallis 2 40 p ni Arr \e Corvallis ............ 3 20 p in No. 7 for A lb a n y- Leaves Corvallis........... 6 00 p ni Arrive* Albany ti :40 p in No, S for Corvallis Leaves Albany . . . . . . . 9 K ip ni Arrives Corvalli*........... 9 :55 p in Train N r. 1 arrives in AII ihii ) in time to connect with the 8 . P. southbound train. Train No. 2 connects with the 8 . P train* at Corvallis and Albany giving direct service to Newport and adja­ cent beaches. Traill No. 3 leaves Albany for Detroit 7 ; 30 ». m., arriving there in ample time to reach the Breitenbusli hot apring* that day. Train No. 4 beiween Albany and Detroit cuiniects with the Eugene local at Albany, also with local from Cor­ valli*. Train No 5 leave* Corvallis at 6 : 30 a. m.. arrives at Albany 7 :30 a. ni. in time to catch Eugene local to Portland and train to Detroit. Train No. 8 leave* Albany for Cor­ valli* at 2:40 p. in., alter the arrival of 8 . P. noiihhouiid overland. T jaiu No. 7 leave* Corvallis at 6:01) p. m , arrive* in Albany at 6 .40 p ni . in time to lonnect with the 1 . cal lor Eugene and way point*. Train No. 7 leave* Albany for Cor­ vallis at 9. 15 p. in , after the arrival i f the 8 . P. local from Portland. For further information apply to J . C . MAVO, General 1‘aasenger Agent T. Cockrell, agent. Altiany. U . H. Crunise, agent, Corvallis. ALW AYS Chronicle The Weekly Chronicle $1.50 a Y ear Regulator Line. Steamer«: Bailey Gatzert Regulator Dalles City Metlako Reversible Map? Columbia River and Northern The Daily and Map Only $S./5 a Year T AL* H air Renewer