Cottage Grove leader. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1905-1915, April 30, 1912, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    F a rm e rs an d M erch a n ts
Write us for our cash offer on your
Farm and Dairy Produce. If we
don't handle it will refer you to re-
liable buyer. p e a k s ON-FAGE CO.
P ortla n d . O regon.
H O W A R D E. HURTON - A m y n r and Chamitt,
■ ■ Lead v. lie. Colorado. Specim en p ru e«: Isold,
» liv e r , Lead, f l G old, Silver, ìòo; G old 5Uo; 2, m o
or Cupper, 11. M ailing envelope« a id fu ll pri<-e lie#
■»•ut o u application. C ontrol and t'm p ire work <a>
liciteti. R ei unnica: Our Urn ate N ational lien *.
S econ d -H a n d M achin­
ery b ou g h t, aold and
_
e x ch a n g e d : e n g in e s .
boilers, saw m ills, etc. T h e J. E . M artin Co.. 76 1st
8 t.. P ortla n d . Send f o r S tock L ist and price«.
Machinery
no uimeuny.
Seorg* W Wilson was rehearsing
with Edwin Booth at the Boston mu­
seum. Wilson. In one seen«, asked
the star whet* he should stand.
"Where do you usually stand r* asked
B oot* “ Mr. Barrett had me over
there,- answered
Wilson.
-Yes.'*
mused Barrett. “I usually havs him
there"—Indicating the other aide of
the stage. "Suit yourself—I'll find you
wherever you are," aaid Booth.
THIRTY ARE RILLED
Household Remedy
Farming Districts Suffer Most—16
Dead at One Place—Wires Down,
Damage Immsns*.
Taken in ths Spring for Years.
Ralph Rust. Willis. Mich., writes:
"Hood's Sarsaparilla has been a house­
PORTLAND FREE EMPLOYMENT BUREAU hold remedy in our home as long as I
W ill fu rn ish you any kind o f help y ou w an t, m ale can remember. I have taken it In the
o r fem ale, «killed or unsk illed, fa rm , saw m ill, log ­ spring for several years.
It has no
g in g or any m iscella neous labor.
Call, w rite or equal for cleansing the blood and ex­
p h one. N o fees o f any k in d ch a rg ed in th is office.
pelling
the
humors
that
accumulate
P h on es— A 5624; M ain 3555. 215 Second St. Partial, Or.
during the winter. Being a farmer
and exposed to bad weather, my sys­
tem is often affected, and 1 often take
WOOL & MOHAIR. HIDES & PELTS Hooip. Sarsaparilla with good results."
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is Peculiar to
W* Waal Ail Y*u Hive.
Write far price* and diippm tag*.
Itself. There is no "Just as good.”
T H E H. F. N O R T O N C O M P A N Y .
313-315 F n»nt St.
P ortla n d . O re.
Get It today In usual liquid form or
tablets called Sarsatabs.
Arnold’s Asthm a and
Catarrh Remedy.
POULTRY KEEPING PROFITABLE
Guaranteed to cure Catarrh. Asthma,
bronch itis. Hay Fever and II oiw C o I i I k .
o r money refunded. Inclose 11.25 for
Asthma Kernedv, o r fiOe in stamps for
Catarrh o f the Head and Stom ach. Ask
fo r address o f |*-nple cured iu Portlulid,
Tacouia or Seattle.
A r n o ld ’ s A sth m a C ure C o.. 333-4 Arcade bldg.. Scalile. Wa
WOODLARK
THE
BRA n DTHATKIIL s
S Q U I R R E L
POISON
D e stro y s S a g e R a ts. S q u irrels, G o p h e r s a n d
P ra ir ie D ogs. R e q u ir e s n o m ix in g o r p r e p a r a ­
t io n — A lw a y s re a d y fo r use. D e a d lie st o f a ll.
Y o u r m o n e y b a c k i f n o t a s c la im e d .
C l a r k * , W o o d w a r d D r u g C o ., P o rtla n d , O re.
FUCHI
—T h e g reat nkin rv ju ven a tor. i f y ou h a ve sallow
sk in, w rinkles, pim ples o r rou g h n ess o f th e fa c e
o r arm s, the a p p lica tion o f F U C H I w ill b rin g back
th e g lo w and freshneaa o f y ou th . P r p a ck a g e. 91.
(B ra n ch ) F urhi la b o r a t o r ie s . S u it 9. 342 1-2 W a sh ­
in gton S t., P ortla n d , Ore.
K N B L0 Ú D P 1 IR IFI R
'Y m . P e u n d e r ' s
,r n
A T o u ic . A lt e r a t iv e a n d R e s o lv e n t .
The
b e s t re m e d y f o r K id n e y s , L iv e r a n d B o w e ls .
E ra d ica tes P im p le s, E r u p tio n s a n d D is o rd e r s
o f th e S k in .
P u rifie s th e B lo o d a n d g iv e s
T o n e , S tre n g th a n d V ig o r t o th e e n t ir e sy ste m .
We Make You
Competent to Earn
$25 to $50 per Week
s to 8 weeks. W e give com plete
course in driving, repairing,
etc. all kinds o f autom obile«.
Every student gets personal
attention and actual road
experience. W rite fo r term s
Brlmoat Auto Sch«ol f tin race,
E. 23d and M orrison Su ..
Portland, Ore.
Woman of Many Names.
The public examination was con­
cluded at the London (Eng.) bank­
ruptcy court recently, of a woman
who was sworn aa Alice Mabel Fran­
ce* Emllj* Paola Blanca Mary Cath­
erine Stewart, which, ahe said, waa
her full name.
When Your Eyes Need Care Try Murine Eye Remedy
N o S m a r t lo g — F e e ls F in e — A c t s Q u ic k l y . T r y
it fo r R ed , W ea k , W a te ry E y es a n d G ra n u ­
la t e d K r s i M a I ll u s t r a t e d B o o k In e a c h P a c k ­
a g e . M u r in e Is c o m p o u n d e d b y o u r O c u lis t a
— n o t a “ P a t e n t M e d ic in e ” — b u t u s e d in s u c ­
c e s s f u l P h y s ic ia n s ’ P r a c t ic e f o r m a n y y e a r s .
N o w d e d ic a t e d t o t h e p u b l i c a n d s o l d b y
D r u g g is t s a t- 25c a n d 50c p e r B o t t le . M u r in e
E y e S a lv e in A s e p t i c T u b e s , 25c a n d 60c.
M urine Eye R em edy C o .. C h ica g o
Dally Thought.
Be glad of life because It give*
you the chance to love and to work
and to play and to look up at tha
etars.”—Mosaic Essays, by Paul un­
der.
REAL E S T A T E
FUR H A L E - 80 AOKKM A L L CU LT. CASSIA OO..
ID A .; house, outbuilding«. com m ercial fruit orchard,
•to« k. m achinery, et«-.: 8CHI B. Box 319, Chicago.
«40 AC IN LINCOLN C O . W A S H : «25 AO. CU LT .7
near Irby: house. Irani, gasoline engine, m achinery,
grunuri)-«. etc.; sacrifice: BEN TLE Y, Hx 319. Chicago
" i l l S A C R IF IC E 00A IN M A RION CO.. O R .; 40 ao
cu lt.; 10 room bonne outbuilding«. 10 acre orchard, eto
near Brook«; 9 m. from Salem. JON ES, ilx. 319,ChiragO
FOB HALB—ABOUT S ACNES. A L L IN BEARING
fru it Trees.
Near Kennew ick. Wash.
Two ♦-
room House«. Barn. O utbid««., etc. W ill sacrifice.
Addre-n M EYER, Box 319. Chicago. III.
§0 ACRES IN RAN BERNARDIN O CO.. CAL. All
planted to Grapes. Pea«*he«. Apricot*. A lfa lfa , etc.
House. Barn. etc. 15 m ile« from Riverside. 40 m iles
from 1.0« Angele«. All convenience«. W ill sacrifice.
Addrem 1ILAKK, Box 319, Chicago. III.
M E X IC A N
DRY FARMING ALFALFA.
M U STA N G
L IN IM E N T
“ O K ” FO R H O R SES.
I Charles Locke, Stanford. Mont, writes t
“ Y o u w ill find en closed t w o c e n t stam p
I f o r w h ic h send m e y o u r H o r s e D o c t o r ’ s
j D ia ry . I a m a h o s tle r in a b a r n here o n
he G r e a t F a lls S t a g e T '
I h a v e v e r y so r e sh ou ld ers. I ’ v e used M u s .
t a n g L in im e n t a n d find it all right. I ree-
I o m m e n d it as the best on the m erket.”
I 2 Sc. 50c. $1 « b o ttle et Drug & G en ’lStores.
Prof. Dryden of O. A. C. Advises Farm­
ers to Increase Flocka.
Oregon Agricultural College, Cor­
vallis.—“ There ha» been an enormous
increase In the production of eggs and
poultry In the state In the past two
years, but In spite of this the demand
has far exceeded the supply, and prices
are still as high as ever," said Pro­
fessor James Dryden of the Oregon
Agricultural College In discussing the
abject of the present tour of the poul­
try demonstration car sent out over
the Southern Pacific lines by the col­
lege.
“If the farmers of Oregon would
keep, on an average. 100 hens Instead
ot about 50, it would shut out the Im­
ports and add $4,000,000 or $5,000,000
a year to the wealth of the state.
“ The purpose of the demonstration
ar Is to stimulate a greater production
af poultry and eggs. The quickest and
best way Is to increase the flocks of
the farmers rather than to have poul­
try keepers start large egg farms. The
demand cannot be met by the estab­
lishment of large, exclusively poultry
farms. If the general farmer goes out
af the egg producing business there
will soon be an egg famine— possibly a
serious financial panic.
“ Though there are opportunities for
profit along special lines In poultry­
keeping, the market for specialties is
limited, and It would be folly to advise
everyone to go Into special lines. I
am free to confess that we have kept
more people out of the poultry busi­
ness than have gone Into It as an ex­
clusive business. I have received
great numbers of letters during the
past year from all parts of the state
as well as from other states, In which
the writers stated that they were go­
ing into the poultry business on a large
scale, and a large majority of them
Bald they knew nothing of the busi­
ness. Our plain duty was to advise
caution. If every one of them had
gone Into the business as they Intend­
ed and Invested their all In It, It 1 b
safe to say that there would have been
thousands of dollars lost In every coun­
ty of the state, and the poultry busi­
ness would have received a black eye.
"Poultry keeping Is not a difficult
business unless we make It so. If
conducted along sane, common-sense
lines, there is profit In It The two
points on which special emphasis Is
laid In the demonstration car are feed­
ing for eggs and housing. Egg rations
are on display, feeding charts show re­
sults of experiments, breeding charts
show results of breeding for eggs, dif­
ferent grades and qualities of eggs are
exhibited, marketing possibilities are
demonstrated, and the equipment for
successful hatching and brooding o(
chicks Is displayed The walls of the
car are covered with signs and charts
containing lessons in practical poul­
try keeping. A ’knock down’ colony
house Is taken along and set up out
side the car at each stop.
"While chickens may be made to
lo well In different houses. It may be
said In favor of the colony system and
Tree range that there I b no noted poul­
try district In the United States where
poultry keeping has been permanently
successful, where the colony house
system was not followed. The colony
house, moreover, was the house used
st the Oregon Experiment Station last
year for the hens that made the high­
est egg records ever made in the Unit­
ed States so far as official or authentic
record Is concerned. The demonstra­
tors on the car explain how those hens
were housed and cared for, and answer
m y questions as to their feeding and
treatment.’’
I
I
I
I
I
j
I
Ask your dealer for it. If he doe*
not handle it drop ua a postal card
and we will furnish you the name of
• dealer who does
Prof. Scudder Sees Big Possibilities In
Alfalfa Seed.
Oregon Agricultural College, Cor­
vallis.—The growing of alfalfa on the
dry farming lands of Oregon In culti­
vated rows for the production of seed
aas been the special dry farming hob-
oy of Prof. H. D. Scudder of the Ore­
gon Agricultural College. He has ad­
vocated thJs plan widely through Eaat-
srn Oregon for the past five years, and
Is beginning to see practical results
in a large scale. A prominent wheat
farmer at Arlington has planned to
put In 160 acres of alfalfa on his dry
land, and has asked the agronomy de­
partment of the college for special In­
fraction and fsP the best seed. A n -
>ther man, one at «be largest wheat
armers in Gilliam coanty, Is to put In
.000 acres of alfalfa this spring. The
rest number of letters coming to Prof.
Scudder from all parts of Eastern and
Central Oregon on this subject indi­
cates the first great change for the
letter In dry farming agriculture there.
Towns Wrecked By Storm in Tex­
as and Oklahoma.
Oklahoma City—Thirty-one persons
are reported to have been killed by a
tornado that swept Southwestern Okla­
homa and the southeastern corner of
the Texas panhandle late Sunday.
A 'dozen towns were struck and
farming communities suffered.
Communication facilities are para­
lyzed andjit is impossible to confirm the
reports o f life or estimate the proper­
ty damaged.
The greatest loss o f life reported is
at Lugert, where it is said 16 persons
were killed. A specie) train sent from
Altus with physicians and nurses
picked up 10 injured persons and start­
ed back for Altus.
Two o f the injured oneB died on the
train.
It is reported that a Kansas City,
Mexico $ Orient train had been blown
from tha track and 20 persons killed,
but it developed that only two cars
had been derailed and no one was hurt.
The tornado started just across the
Texas border and first killed Beveral
persons at Kirkland, Tex., demolish­
ing 30 buildings, and blew a Rock
Island work train off the track.
Tearing on northward the storm
■truck Eldorado, killing four; Calumet,
killing three; and Lugert, Rocky,
where half the town is in rains; Yu­
kon, Warren, Martha, Blair and Lone
Wolf.
At each of these places many per­
sons were hurt.
Several of those
towns are cut off from communication.
What is believed to be the tail o f the
storm destroyed several buildings at
Mulhall, 60 miles north o f Oklahoma
City, but so far as known there were
no casualties there.
PRESIDENT AND SPEAKER
IN LEAD FOR NOMINATIONS
New York— The New York Herald
publishes the following estimate of
the relative strength o f the presiden­
tial candidates, as the result o f an im
partial reveiw of the situation:
Republicans,
T a f t ................................ 415
R o o e e v e lt ......................207
L a F o l l e t t e ................. 36
C u m m in s ..................... 10
j U n c e r t a in ........................ 5
N eed ed to n o m in a te . .540
Y e t to c h o o s e .................. 406
I
Democrats.
C l a r k ..............................149 B u r k e .............................. 10
W ilson .........................118
U n c e r t a in ......................101
M arshall ...................... 30 N eed ed to n om in a te. .768
U n d e r w o o d ................. 24
Continuing, the Herald says the
president is virtually assured o f the
nomination at Chicago at this writing,
adding:
“ Speaker Clark is gaining steadily
and Governor Wilson ia losing some of
the big lead he had two and three
weeks ago. Other Democratic aspir­
ants for the nomination are far in the
rear.
HIGHBINDERS KILL THREE.
Fourth Chinaman Wounded In Battle
at Salinas, Cal.
Salinas, Cal. — Five highbinders
broke into a room here where four
Chinese were playing cards, shot three
o f them dead, wounded the fourth ser­
iously and escaped.
Murdered and
murderers are alike unidentified. The
wounded man will make no statemenL
From the fact that none o f the com­
batants is known here, it is supposed
that all o f them were tong warriors
planning a raid on marked men, but
that the second party, having learned
the errand o f the first, tracked them
to the room where .they were hiding,
and shot them down.
The police believe both parties come
either from San Francisco or -Watson­
ville.
Steamer Harvard Afire.
Los Angeles— The steamer Harvard,
o f the Pacific Navigation company,
had a narrow ecaape from destruction
by fire while lying at her dock at East
San Pedro. There were no passengers
aboard and no one waa injured.
The
total damage
waa approximately
$3000. The fire started in the galley
from a defective oil pipe and it re­
quired an hour's work by the fire tug
Warrior to extinguish the blaze. The
entire galley and six staterooms
on the main deck were destroyed.
Mexicans Causa Wreck.
Mexico City— The wreck o f the
Mexico City-Guadalajara train last
week near Irmpuato waa credited to
the striking American railway men by
newspaper reports in Guadalajara. It
ia now ¡reported that Consul McGill
has filed a proteat fat this accusation
with the governor of the' state.
Fur­
ther investigation o f the wreck seems
to point to an explosion o f an oil tank
due to carelessness or ignorance on
Demure, But DstarmlnM.
A bride looks so modest and demurs the part of Mexican employes.
at a wedding that It Is hard to su »
Fir* 8weaps Damascus.
pect her of having bossed ths affair
Constantinople — The great bazaar
with an Iron hand.—Atchison Glob*,
quarters in Dam as cos have been de­
uosa to tne Lius.
Marks—“ Doss your wits play by stroyed by fire. Several persona were
earT" Parka—“ Yes, bat not by my killed and many ir.jured and the dam­
ear If I can help 1L”—Boston Tr**> age ia estimated it $10,000,000. The
fire begun at mid night Friday night
•ertpt
)
and lasted until If its Saturday nighL
PettitN
Eve
Salve
GLASSES
MIGHT
HAVE
SAVED
Titanic’s Lookout Was Rafusad Bi­
noculars Before Sailing.
Washington, D. C.— Like the miss­
ing horseshoe nail that cost a monarch
hia.kingdom, the failure to provide
binoculars or spyglasses for the look-,
outs on the Titanic waa one contribut­
ing cause of the ship’ s loss and with it
the losa of more than 1600 lives.
Two witnesses before the senate in­
vestigating committee agreed on this.
They were Frederick Fleet, a lookout
on the liner, and Major Arthur God­
frey Peuchen, Canadian manufacturer
and yachtsman, who was among the
rescued passengers.
Fleet acknowledged that if he had
been aided in his observations by a
good glass he probably could have
spied the berg in time to warn the
bridge to avoid it.
Major Peuchen
also testified to the much greater
sweep of vision afforded by binocu­
lars, and, as a yachtsman, said he be­
lieved the presence of the iceberg
might have been detected in time to
escape the collision had the lookout
men been so equipped.
It was made to appear that the
blame for being without glasses did
not rest with the lookout men. Fleet
said they had asked for the glasses at
Southampton and were told there were
none for them. One glass, in a pinch,
would have served in the crow’s nest.
Major Peuchen condemned in Btrong
terms the lack of experienced sailors
on board the Titanic.
He said that
when the call to quarters was sounded
not enough of the crew responded to
undertake the work required in lower­
ing and filling the boats.
Furthermore, he said, no drills had
been held from the time the ship left
Southampton, although it was custom­
ary to hold such drills every Sunday.
Herbert J. Pittman, third officer of
the Titanic, told o f his failure to turn
back the lifeboat in which he and his
passengers were idly drifting to at­
tempt the rescue o f sthers when the
Titanic went down.
Shuddering at the recollection, he
said the cries for help made “ one long
continuous moan.’ ’
The passengers
insisted that to go back to aid them
would mean their destruction, he said,
so that after starting in the direction
o f the cries, he rescinded his orders
and waited for dawn.
Twice he
begged to be spared a recital of the
facts, but Senator Smith pressed him.
The witness said the moans and cries
continued an hour and that he made
no effort to go to the rescue.
“ You drifted near the drowning
people and made no effort to give
them aid?” asked Senator Smith in
surprise. “ Please, sir, don’t ,” pleaded
Pitman. " I can’ t bear to recall it.
wish we might not discuss the scene.”
“ I have no desire to lacerate your feel­
ings,” said Senator Smith, “ but we
must know whether you drifted there
without offering aid.
Answer that
and I shall press you no more.”
“ I did, sir,” answered the witness
“ Did you ever hear anything of a
boat known as the Hellig Olav?” sud­
denly asked Senator Smith.
“ No, I did not. There may be a
boat by that name.”
The Olav docked at New York April
17, and is reported to have encounter­
ed an iceberg near where the Titanic
sank. It has been suggested that the
Olav may have been the boat whose
lights Fourth Officer Boxhall saw and
which he ineffectually tried to signal
with distress rockets.
By searching questions, Senator
Fletcher brought
out the fact
that when the collision occurred the
Titanic was going at the greatest
speed attained during the trip, even
though the ship was entering Grand
Banks and had been advised o f the
presence o f ice.
"Y ou say you were going at 21}
knots an hour at the time of the acci­
dent?” inquired Senator Fletcher.
"Y e s, Bir.
We left Southampton
under about 20} knots, which waa in­
creased to 21 and later to 2 1 },” said
Pitman.
“ Then, when the Titanic crashed
into the iceberg it was going at top
speed?” inquired the senator.
“ I suppose so, sir.”
England Gives S 899.976.
London — The Titanic disaster still
holds first place in the public mind.
The newspapers publish at great
length thrilling details o f the evidence
given before the senatorial committee
in Washington, while the extraordi­
nary flow o f money to the relief fund
is proof o f the wide felt sympathy.
The Daily Mail fund, contributed ex­
clusively by women, amounts to $120,-
000; the Lord Mayor’s fund $646,000
and the Daily Telegraph’s $87,775.
The fund at Southampton amounts to
$72,700 and that at Liverpool $64,600.
Lack o f Wirelqp* Fatal.
Portland, Maine.— Had the freight
steamer Lena been equipped with a
wireless outfit, she could have reached
the scene of the wreck of the Titanic
in time to save many lives. The Lena,
which arrived Wednesday from Eng­
land, waa within 30 miles of the Ti­
tanic when the great ship foundered
and went down.
Chief Officer Elias
said that those on the Lena did not
know o f the wreck until they took a
pilot on board off Portland.
Ohio Is Back in Banka.
Cairo, III.— After having been above
the danger mark for 33 day», the Ohio
river ia now back within its banks.
Mills which at one time were under 16
feet o f water will be able to resume
within ■ few days.
Stim ulate
Children ?
tea
-not coffee
A s k y o u r d o c t o r h o w o fte n
h e p re s c rib e s a n a lc o h o lic
stim u la n t fo r c h ild re n . H e
w ill p ro b a b ly s a y , “ V e r y ,
v e ry r a r e ly ."
A s k h im h ow
o fte n h e p re sc rib e s a to n ic fo r
th e m . H e w ill p ro b a b ly a n ­
s w e r, “ V e r y .v e r y fr e q u e n t ly .”
T h e n a s k h im a b o u t A y e r ’s
S a r s a p a r illa a s a s t r o n g a n d
s a fe to n ic fo r th e y o u n g . N o t
a d ro p o f a lc o h o l in it.
It’s the m ost de­
lightful Breakfast
Drink you ever tasted
— and the most wholesome and
invigorating. You cannot but
like its rich “ grainy” flavor anj
spicy aroma. Ask your grocer for
Three G ’s
<G OLD EN C R A IN GRANULES)
Always keep a box of Ayer’ s Pills in the
house. Just one pill at bedtime, now and
then, will ward off many an attack of
biliousness, indigestion, sick-headtche. I
How many years has your doctor krown j
these pills? Ask him all about them.
—if he hasn’t got it he will get It for
you. i t ’s good for you 3 times a day.
A n d remember that there
is no substitute for 3 G ’s.
M ade b y th e J . O. AV E R CO .. L o w , 11. M m .
W. L. D O U G L A S
SHOES
$ 2.50 $ 3 .0 0 $ 3 .5 0 & $ 4 .0 0
For M E N , W O M E N
and BOYS
W .L. DOUGLAS $4.50 8 $5.00
SH OES E Q U A L C U S TO M BENCH
W O R K C O S T IN G $ 7 .0 0 T O $ 8 .0 0
Wear W. L. Douglas Shoes. You
can save money because they are more
economical and satisfactory in style, fit
and wear than any other makes. W. L.
Douglas name and price stamped on
the bottom guarantees full value and
protects the wearer against high prices
and inferior shoes. Insist upon having the
genuine W. L. Douglas shoes. sTh,m.i*.
If your dealer <*annot supply W. L. Douglas ahoe«, write W. I*
Douglas, Brockton, M a m ., for catalog. Shoe« aent evervwhere
delivery charges prepaid.
Fast C olor
used.
Raft of Cocoanuts.
Jn the Philippine Islands one fra
quently sees a raft of cocoanuts be­
ing floated down the river to marlteL
The buoyant nuts are closely packed
Into a circle, braced across with bam-
boos, and tied with fiber; and the
queer craft, with Its native paddler, ia
then ready for the trip down stream
to a point where the raft will ba
broken up and the cocoanuts sold.—
Wide World M*—»1” .
Four Companies Conquered Empire.
In the sixteenth century a whole
empire was conquered with four hun­
dred soldiers and sixteen horses. This
was the extent of Cortes’ strengt!»
when he conouered Mexlso.
Busy Man’s One Complaint.
The busy man Is only aware of tlm«
because It goes so swiftly.—Florida
Tlmes-Union.
RED CROSS BALL BLUE
The blue that Is all blue. Best for
waehlng because It makes the clothes
clear and white, lasts longer than
liquid blue and produces better re­
sults.
Avoid liquid bluing because It Is
only a weak solution of blue in an
expensive package. RED CROSS
BALL BLUE is sold everywhere.
Price, 10c. ASK YOUR GROCER.
Peasant Woman In Hard Luck.
A peasant woman of Budapest, Hun­
gary, drew $40 from a savings bank,
and, on ber way home, bought a tame
hare for her children. For safety she
tethered the hare with a handkerchief
in which she had rolled the notes, but
the animal managed to get away—
tether and money and all. The poor
woman In her despair hanged herself
next day._________________
Mother, will find Mrs. W indow 's Boothia*
5yrup the best remedy to uso tor their cUUUreu
luring the teething period.
Credit.
Church Trustee—"Did you occupy
your last pulpit with credit?" New
Rector—"Entirely. There was never
\ny cash connected with It.”—Judge.
ARE YOU POORLY
Poor health and a gen­
eral run-down condi­
tion is the outcome
of a spell of stom­
ach trouble;
but listen—
HOSTETTER’S
STOMACH BITTERS
is just the medicine you need.
It aids digestion, keeps the
bowels open and induces per­
fect health. Try a bottle
today.
FREE ADVICE
Painless Dentistry
TO SICK WOMEN
Thousands Have Been Helped
By Common Sense
Suggestions.
Women suffering from any form of fe­
male ilia are invited to communicate
promptly with the woman’s private corre­
spondence department of the Lydia E.
Pinkham M e d i c i ne Co., Lynn, Mass.
Your letter will be opened, read and
answered by a woman and held in strict
confidence. A woman can freely talk of
her private illness to a woman; thus has
been established a confidential corre­
spondence w h i c h h a s extended over
many years and which has never been
broken. Never have they published a
testimonial or used a letter without the
written consent of the writer, and never
has the Company allowed these confiden­
tial letters to get out of their possasion,
aa the hundreds of thousands of them in
their files will attest.
Out of the vast volume of experience
which they have to draw from, it is more
than possible that they possess the very
knowledge needed in your case. Noth­
ing is asked in return except your good
will, and their advice has helped thou­
sands. Surely any
woman, rich or poor,
should be g l a d to
t a k e advantage of
this generous offer
of assistance. Ad-
iress Lydia E. Pink-
ham Medicine Co.,
(confidential) Lynn,
Mass.
Every woman ought to have
Lydia E. Ptnkbam ’ a HO-page
Text Book. It 1» not a book for
general distribution, aa It la too
expensive. It la free and only
obtainable by mail. W rite for
It today.
1% ou r pride—ou r hobby—ou r study f o r year« an4
now ou r auccMa, nnd o u n 1« th e bv*t palnleM w ork
to b e found anywhere, n o m atter how m uch you
pay. C o m p a r e o u r P r ic e « .
~
| W « flnlah p la t« and
bridge work fo r out.
o f town patron« In
o n « day If de«lrad.
Talnlftaa ex traction
fr«*e when p latte o r
bridge work ia order*
•d. Consultation ir*«.
Motor Crown* $ 5.00
22k Bridge TM tk4.V
Gild rilling,
1.1
Enomol Filling« 1.0 0
Pilvor Filling«
.50
Good Rubbor
5.00
Plat#«
B«tt R*d Rubber _ _ .
Plate«
7 7.50
.5 0
Pninlaa, Entr’tlon ..50
.S O
M. W ft. Will, Ptimnr urn Mu
■ l « T MKTMOD«
U i n « imauiNM ■ u m m
A l l w o r k f u l ly g u a r a n t e e d f o r f i f t e e n y e a r «.
Wise Dental C
o .,i» c .
P a in le s s D e n tis ts
Fiflfng Building. Third and Washington PORTIAMO, ORft
Office goora: I A K . t a l f . l L »undaya. $ U 1
OUT Of TOWN
PEOPLE
can rece I ven rom pt treat­
ment* o f lVon-Poli
C. GEE W O
th e Chlneee doctor.
Try once more If you here been d octor!n * with
this one and that one and have not obtained per­
manent relief. I-et this greet nature healer dla«-
noee your caee and pr»w ri f-e nome remedy whnee
action 1« quick, mire nnd aefe. Hi* prescription«
are com pounded from Roots. Herb«. Bud« and
Bark* that have been gathered from evnry quar­
ter o f the « lo t « . T he secret« o f theee m edicine«
•re not known to the outside world, but h e re been
handed down from father to «on In the physicians’
fam ilies in Chinn.
CONSULTATION FREE.
I f you live out o f town nnd cannot call, w rite fo r
symptom blank and circular, enclosing 4 cent« in
THE C. SEE WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO.
162| First St., Cor. Morrison
Portland, Oregon.
P. N. U.
N o Ift-n i.
W H E N w ritin g t e a dvertí««rs, plomeo «*• »-
TT tion th is paper.
$