EIGHT PAGES THE INDEPENDENCE ENTERPRISE, INDEPENDENCE, OREGON. PAGE SEVEN Farmers and Merchants Wrlto us for our cmh offer on vour Farm and Dairy Produce. If we don't handle It will refer you to re liable buyer. rEAKSON-rAGE CO. J'ortland, OrswuH. JIOWAlin K. ItriRTUN - Amtft awl rUMtnlet .wwirui., iwKimUj ngiwiHivu ii'tbi iiiphi, rlllver, bnil. 11, Hold, Hllver, 7ki Onid . (pUdl Kliia or ( )iKir, II. MhIIIdji entralnlM aid full Jirli-.ll., pnn nn uriitiinMion. iimtnti a"- I'muin mmw Hulled. Uoleraauai UuUuute MeUnuaJ Uaua. MONUMKNT3 AND HEADSTONES RutalilUhod 1RH7, Quality end low prlcea. Wrlta fur allmalea. Op.iilntf fur local agent where we ara iwt raureeentMi refrrm-a imitilred: no p.rlenea nmtMnitry. 1'arlltc Marble a (Iranlte Warka, 1S77-7S-M Valencia (ft. 8ae Krancleeo. Cal, VOUNn MEN AND WOMKN WANTFD to pre. para fur iltkma aut telegraph operatnra for har-ty railrnada and Cily telegraph compenlea; tiuarantMd ltlona tt;r,(K) tu fWi.UU monthly, b hmira work. Una advancement, eaay to Inam, particular frra. Pari he Tl.(rapa. Hallway laallluta, Waahlnttoa Uulldlns. Heallle, Wain. Machinery Beeond-ITand1 Maehln. ary houe-ht, oold and exchanirod: enalnea. holler., aawmllln, etc. The J. t. Martin Co.. 78 la( bU. Portland. Band for Stock Llat and prlcea. Let Us Read the Papers for Yon GIppltiaTa of ovary kltid and character from tha proas of tha FacMe Coaat fumUhotl at reaeonabla rate. DAK K B PRESS CLIPPING BUREAU 483 8. Main 8U Lot Ananlaa. Cat. KODAK rolla develop., 10c, any nit. Lmrnmt and bmt hop In North wwt. Com nlvle pricw list on wvjumt, ileal result cuaranted. JACOBS SffSS0 R L Build', Seattle PANAMAS fMM WEAVII TO WIARII I'nn Imb worn unblrvlirxl I tf women. ItltM'kttd tn inytri. unrtiaA or trie for men. Jlrlms A Mint 6 imlins. lMuht Wcltfhl of rlftj. Monor refttntltHa tf mt iit Ufui'Uiry. (tut a dumbls, tyltsl. hat Tor the half tif wliht It wmiM oust you i-..wh.ro, A'l'tmMM-.w monk II A I mt. V. II. MiHi-mlnrff)-. I ron iK7 12 VVauiiiliiiftnti Ml Twenty )wr In t'orllatiti, e'orUtvuti, Or, Think It Over. A few more smiles of silent nym. pathy, a fw more tender words, a lit tle more restraint on temper, may make all the dltfarence between hap piness and half-happlness to those with whom I live. Stopford Brooke, Deepest Mutual Sorrow, Man" never knows what mutual Bor row really Is until be reads an edi tor's regrets. Llpplncott's llaeaztsa ITT ti a n n a rye nrmvay Wrak, Watry Kym and ornuulittad KjallO Ma ttiuarUng Jual Kt a Comfort. Luck. Fortune) unaided prevails over the plans of one hundred learned men. Plaiitna. - vytorUamd, Oraaroa ' av'RaiMant and Day nohool for Olrla ltT ai OoUlflala, AeUBlo and lBnntrr. DapartmaaU, Maals, Art, Elooatloa, Oymnailam. roroataloaaHdmaTllr: HINIKR Kll'EIlIOIl Offk30. Ht, Helena Hall Churchyard Made Play Garden. A church In upper Broadway, New Tork city, has made a play garden of Its churchyard, and Invites the moth ers and children of the neighborhood to make themselves happy in It DAISY FLY KILLER F'"'"7hkM filet. Nunt, limn, ormimnntiil, ooitvtm lent, chimp. Luta all uftion. Mnilu of metni, oon't pill or tipovazv will not noil or Injur Bnythtna, (luttritnUjfd eltititiie Sold by deal art or fi aunt itrniiiiiil for II. HAJtOLD SOMlIKtW lOODuKtilb k0. Brooklyn, JK. Tt Too Much Is Enough. "Don't you want to Join in and re form public affairs?" "Law, no!" re plied the quiet woman. "I've had trou ble enough reforming' one man, let alone a whole political party." FOR RANCHMEN. H. L Corbin, So. Platte, Colo., write 1 1 "I am a atockmnn here and if you lived near I could give you a box of Mustang Luilment bottlca we have used up on our horsea and cattle. We ride pretty hard herein the Rockies but Muatana Liniment flxaa tha) horaea good aa ever." 25c. 50c $1 a bottle at Drue & Gen'I Storea Painless Dentistry la oor prldeonr hobbT-our atudy for yeare and now oar auooeaa, and oura la the burt palnloaa work ' to be fnund anjwhern, no matter how much joa lay. Compare our A'rloaa. j, f j briUKe work Tot out- : i, i -" v" - ' "Hot town patrona in I . 'iV ' lone lay If de.ire.l. ' ' v si ll'alnlnna ortraotioa !", . . S free when platoa or X. ' 1 bridge work ia order- i ' Jod. Coniultation fna. .t iMolerCrowm 55.00 tC. i A , ' l22kBrldaTeath4.C0 4 1.00 1.00 .50 ' i T b Gold rilling! Enamel Fillinga Silver Filling! Good Rubber Plates 6.03 Plata! 7.50 Painted Extr'tirtl . 50 S. W. a. WISE, PitiiDiNT ao Miuiii it iua MTMiiHU w ranum BEST MITHOD! AU work fully ruaranteed for fifteen year. Wise Dental o.,mc Painless Dentists ... - .... . . . .in ..1 . nnnrnun ADC filling Building, iniru anunajiiiiiiii. run i auieeaVean: S A. U. 1 1. AC. Soadaya. S tel INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AND PROGRESS OF OUR HOME STATE INTERESTED IN OREGON. 8outhern Pacific Will Invest 8,00O, 000 In This State. Portland "It is only because the conditions in Oregon warrant vast railway expenditures and improve ments that the Southern Pacific has planned to spend upwards of $8,000, 000 within the next few years," de clared President William Sproule, of the Southern Pacific company, at a luncheon given In his honor by the board of governors of the Commercial club. "it Is very natural," said President Sproule, "that in appropriating money for Investment In this state there must be a justification. I am In the city on official business, which is the general cause of my coming here or , I i (PL- 1 1 ..... ! I going eaiewnere. iu bii.uhi.iuii in Oregon in relation to the Southern Pacific is one of peculiar interest to myself because the question- of what should be done here in respect to de velopmenta are put up to me. It is on my own recommendation that things are done. In assuming re SDonsibility for the large investments and appropriations in Oregon there of course is something to justify It. "The railroad business is the same as all other business conducted on le gitimate lines. The man who puts his money into It .must be assured of a reasonable return on bis Investment, or at least the same return as is real ized from other lines of business, "Money is not placed 1 into railroad projects unless tliere is a fair prospect of returns on the inveatent, and for that reason we must have something to go on before we can place the mon ey we have to spend In development and improvements , of railway lacui ties. "Our confidence in Oregon Is very apparent in our announced intention of making expenditures here. All we ask in return is for the co-operation of your business people to make possi ble the returns which we nave to have. It is the ambition of my worthy corps of officials over the Ore gon lines of the company to have the support of every community. , HOOD RIVER CLUB FORMED. West Side Ranchers Will Co-operate for Mutual Improvemet. Hood River A lively interest is being taken by the residents of the West Side of the Hood Kiver in a series of discussions tending to create a greater diversity of industries in the district .The organization of West Side ranchers, known as the west Side Improvement club, has arranged for a number of talks to be given in the near future, when the cultivating season is over and the citizens have leisure. Among the topics to be discussed are such subjects as "Hog Raising in the Orchard." "Poultry," "Garden Truck" and "Cover Crops." "It is the aim of the club," said one of its members, "to have every orchardist produce his own garden truck, his poultry and his own milk." The club is also planning for a Chautauqua, to last about a week, In the cool region of the upper valley, where the ranchers and their families will repair to enjoy the fishing of the district and to discuss matters of in terest among themselves." Hawthorne Is Appointed. Klamath Falls Irrigation matters always receive instant attention in this dry region. Thomas Hawthorne, of Eugene, for Several years in the legitimation service at Umatilla and on Klamath projects, has been ap pointed state engineer on the. Paisley project, which, is under the Carey act, The Warner and Chewaucan valleys contain much of the best sage land in this region and that section will be on the railroad when it is extended north from Lakeview. Paisley is about 100 miles northeast from Klamath Falls. An irrigation enterprise nearer home is in the Antelope valley, 15 miles northeast from this city. Jackrabblt Bounty Fixed. Burns The Harney county court has determined to place a bounty of 2 cents per head on jackrabbits. The system under which this bounty will be paid will relieve the county clerk b oflke of the necessity of counting Fcalps. Rabbit drives will be organ- zed in different localities and those participating will appoint a commit tee authorized to count and certify to tha number killed and upon this cer tificate the bounty will be paid, the money to be used in paying the ex penses of the drives. Gooseberries Show Good Profit. Salem Gooseberries in Polk county hills are good money-makers, accord ing to a report of L. D. Gibson, who lives' on the Oak Grove road a few miles from Salem. He is owner of an acre and one-half of gooseberries which brought him A check for $617.10 for 30,855 pounds, or a net sum of practically $500 for the patch. So fortunate has he been with the crop that he has set out two and one-half acres more. Hood River Camping Point. Hood River The midsummer camp ing aeaaon has begun here. Many Portland people have joined the local vacationists in seeking an outing in the foothills at the base of Mount Hood. Numerous camps have been established in the Lost Lake region, where excellent fishing is to be found, and many visitors are passing through the valley to and from Cloud Cap Inn. CLEMENT HITS OREGON. Lack of Corporation Law Causa of "Crookedness." Salem That Oregon is the stamp ing ground for crooked promoters1 from other states, who make it a practice to come here to organize fake companies because the laws of Oregon do not give the state authority to Iook into the affairs of corporations is one of the declarations made by E. C Clement, United States postofflce in specter. Among other things, he told of one person alone who was fleeced of $40, 000 by the Columbia River Orchards company and the Oregon-Washington Trust company, in which these com panies deliberately led bm into a trap to secure the money and branding him as a "sucker" In letters which passed back and forth between those inte rested. "I am now on the trail of certain men who did not dare organize in the state where they live, but have come to Oregon to file their papers and have already floated millions of dollars of worthless stock all over the West, he declared. "The Columbia River Orchards com pany affairs furnishes a good illustra tion of the way In which grafters noes: to this state to float their crooked en terprises. These people bad to have a dummy corporation to act as a trus tee. They couldn't; organize it under the laws of Washington, so they came to Portland and organized the .Oregon Washington Trust company under the laws of Oregon. This company was supposed to hold $125 worth of securi ties for every $100 worth of the obli gation of the Columbia River Or chards company. When ' the crash came it developed that their alleged securities were absolutely worthless. Even the office furniture was not paid for and the stenographer was cheated out of" her salary. The public was fleeced out of about two and a quarter millions of dollars on this graft, which would not have been possible if there bad been a state law providing for the sunervision of corporations, such as the proposed blue-sky law, which 1 earnestly hope may be adopted. I do not know of anything that would be of greater benefit to honest corporations than some such act to give the state control of crooked promoters and cor porations. TARIFFS PLACED ON FILE. Roads Named on Which Interchange able Books Are Good, Salem Tariffs for the new inter changeable mileage books have been filed with tha State Railroad commis sion, to become effective August 15. The mileage books will be good at the rate of one coupon a mile on the following roads: Camas Prairie; Chicago, Milwaukee Puget Sound; Corvallia & Eastern: Idaho, Washing ton & Northern; Northern Pacific; Oregon Electric; Oregon Trunk; O. W. R. & N. ; P. R. & N. ; Port Town. send Southern; Salem, Falls City & Western; Spokane & Inland ; Spokane International ; S. P. & S. ; Southern Pacific in Oregon, including towns on Klamath Falls branch via Weed, Lai. ; Tacoma & Eastern, and Washington, Idaho & Montana. The roads on which mileage from mileage books will be accepted on the basis of the local fare are as follows Coeur d'Alene & St. Joe Transporta tion company, Great Northern in Brit iah Columbia on loeal lines, Pacific & Eastern, Reid Transportation com pany, and United Railways. Brook Trout Planted. Portland The work of stocking Oregon streams with brook trout is going forward rapidly. Ten cans of trout fry were taken down the river to be liberated in streams near Scap poose. The work of distributing these fish is being shared by members of the Multnomah Anglers club. Cans of fish are being transported to various pointB in automobiles belong' incr to club members. Another ship ment of Eastern trout is soon to be taken into the mountains of the Cas cade range for liberation in the lakes Fair to Get New Buildings. Astoria At the meeting of the board of directors of the Lower Ca lumbia Fair association, the bid of Fred Elliott & Son, of Gearhart, for the erection of four of the exhibit buildings was accepted and President G. L. Rees was authorized to enter into a contract with them at once. The buildings are to be completed by Sep tember 1. Mr. Rees was also appoint ed to arrange for the clearing of the grounds. "Business Form" is Lost. Orecon Citv The business form of government proposed for Oregon City in place or the present counciimanic form, was voted down at a special election by a vote of 342 to 65. Like wise the proposed bond issue to the amount of $17,000 to erect a munici pal elevator to take the place of the long stairsteps leading up to tne resi dence section, was voted down by 222 to 175. Hawley Secures New Route. Salem After repeatedly having the proposal to establish rural route No. 7 from Oregon City rejected, Represent ative Hawley continued to collect facts and arguments from the people living along the Wiltamette river on the Clackamas county side, opposite the town of Willamette, and has at last secured a favorable decision from the department permitting the desired service. PINEAPPLE SHERBET 13 NICE Instructions for Making It In Way That Is Not Only Easy But Cheap. flneappls sherbet Is easy to make, cheap and very delMous: Three cups granulated sugar, two cups water. Stir until sugar Is dissolved, then boll five minutes. Add the juice of one good-sized lemon and one large pineapple. If one has a vegetable press it will not be necessary to be particular about peeling the pineapple Put It through the food chopper first, then press the Jules out In this vege table paess. In this way every bit of ths juice is extracted. The juice from one can of pineapple might be used as welL Keep the mixture all together In a large bowl standing In a vessel of cold water until cool, then pour into freezer. When partly frozen add the stiffly beaten white of one egg and continue freezing. Let stand an hour or so to ripen. Any other fruit may be used instead of pineapple if preferred. Strawberry la very nice also orange, When Your Eyes Need Care fry Marine Eye Remedy. No Smarting Tel Fine Acta Quickly. Try It for Red, Weak, Watery Eyes and Uranulated Eyellda. IUua trated Book la eaca Package. Murine la compounded by oar Ocallau-nut a -ratena jnea lelne" but need la socceeefal Phyatclana' Prao Eim for tnany ynara. Mow OMlicated to the Pub s and aold br Vmatfele at 2to and Mc per Bottle, anno JCye Balrela Aaeplla TuDee, 26o and atlo, Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago vregoman mixture. , Typographical errors are usually funny only when you discover them for yourself In your own paper. Only occasionally are clipped examples hu morous. One believes that this, from the Portland Oregonlan of Jan. 80, ts one of the latter sort: "Mr. Jones was last aeen at breakfast in the Hofbrau, drinking a cup of his favorite broad cloth and black necktie. He also wore a coffee with cream. He was dressed as usual In a suit." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Mother will And Urs. Win alow" a Boothln Syrup the beat remedy tonaelo ttteUcUUdred luriDg la teething period. Swedish Bridal Lore. The Swedish girl prays for a rainy day on which to get married. Then be fore she goes to the ceremony attired In her we,ddlng clothes she milks ths cow, feeds the calf and steals a breast feather from the hen. This is to bring her the necessities and luxuriea ol life. Friends. W trpeak with awed tenderness of our gruardlan angels; but have we not all ha our gullng angels, who cams to ua In visible form, and, recognized or unknown, kept beside us on our difficult path until they had done for in all that they emii t,.kv Larcom. Exposure to Sun. Winda and Duet. Murine Eye Kerned y freely applied Afforde Reliable Relief. tio tomarUna J uat feye xjmiorv kii aaniw Lesson In Humility. "As long es I wuz po" said Broth er Williams, at a revival, "I wuz hum. ble enough ter be thankful for what I wuz 'bout ter receive. But one day I found $10 in de big road. .After dat I went about holdln' my head so high dat I couldn't see what waz befo' me, an' I fell In a dry well, an' staid dar three days, hollerln' fer folks ter pull me out. Satan hlsself wuz once an angel In heaven, but he couldn't stand prosperity, an' look whar he is now I " Red Crosa Ball Blue crivea double value for vour money, goes twice as far aa any other. Ask your grocer. Two Hostile Empires. Everywhere the human soul stands between a hemisphere of light and an other of darkness; on the confines of two everlasting hostile empires. Ne cessity and PYeewlll. Carlyle. Re thriftv on little tbinca like blninflr. TVmt- nr. cept water for bluing. Ask for Red Croaa Ball lllue, tne extra good value blue. Why Can't They Keep Quiet? The trouble with most men who make fools of themselves is that thv Insist on calling public attention to It Treatment for Burns, Sweet oil and limewater spread ott a piece of cotton and applied to a burn is very soothing. Every medl :lne closet should contain a bottle of his remedy. Chance for an Inventor. Our scheme of civilization will not be perfect until somebody invents a bureau which will set flat on the floor, so that collar buttons cannot roll un 1er It. No Need for Depression. It is no business of ours to suppose that the saints are asleep because the affairs of the nation take a surprising urn. Electrlo Bed Warmer. A metal box In which an lncandes cent lamp can be Inserted for warming a bed has been patented by an Idahc man. R Cures While You Walk. Allnf. V c - ... . . . i m-i-jionD is ui-uriaiu cure ior not. weating,callus,and swollen, aching feet. Sold aubstituto. Trial package FKEK, Addreal alien B. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. - Keeping Air Fresh. A good way to keep the air of a room fresh and slightly perfumed Is to place a jar in some inconspicuous place in the room and put in the Jar a small block of ammonia, over which pour some ordinary cologne water. This makes a faint, pleasant odor of which one is harc'v conscious. New Luxury for the Chinese. Barber shops are being opened ll the far east and the Chinese are learn ing to appreciate the dellghta of American hair clippers. (Tnrnprfofa rM J- va jj. A SHOP DISPLAYS IN HONGKONG Articles of Dress or Personal Adorn ment Shown on Wax Figures Cause Chinese to Wonder. Several of the more pretentious Chinese shops in Hongkong are com mencing to use wax figures for dis playing various articles of dress or personal adornment j It has been a subject of considerable wonder on the part of foreigners that the Chinese people have evinced such! a marked Interest in wax figures die- J played In foreign establishments, says' an exchange. A balr-dresslng estab- llshment in Hongkong's principal re tall thoroughfare has displayed several wax busts showing late styles In hair dressing for some time, and there if scarcely a time during the pleasant days when there Is not a crowd ol Chinese women, business men, cool Us and all about tho windows of thai establishment Chinese merchants In Hongkong'! Chinese quarter who have adopted thli Gazing at Wax Figure. means of displaying goods have dress ed a wax manikin In a Chinese glrl'i costume and are thus presenting goods like toilet articles, patent medicines foreign novelties and notions. Anothei establishment has a wax figure of s girl in Chinese costume a figure with Chinese features and made to resem ble a Chinese girl In all respects d!s playing a somewhat forelgnlzed model Chinese gown In a somewhat forelgn lzed Chinese bedroom interior, a mod el apartment designed to appeal tc wealthy Chinese with more or less foreign experience and ideals. MAKING A BASE BALL CURVE Nebraska Man Invents Attachment for Hand That Causes Sphere to Take Deceptive Twist. ' In describing a baseball curver, the invention of R. W. Jones of Lincoln, Neb., the Scientific American says: Mr. Jones provides means in this case readily attachable to the hand Base Ball Curver. '.or causing a ball to curve whei thrown from the hand. A vacuum cup is held In position by a band made of a 6lze to fit a finger, but Is preferably made of a size to fit two or more fingers so that the cup may be shitted or adjusted to any position with re spect to the fingers. , In this way the cup may be adjusted nicely to any point for giving a great or small curve, or various kinds of curves. The illustration showns a hand grasp ing a ball having an embodiment of the Invention applied to the hand and pressing against the ball. VIRGINIA REEL FOR YOUTHS Known In England as Sir Roger de Coverly, Is Enjoyed by Old Peo ' pie as Well as Youngsters. At almost all children's parties they finish up with a dance which in America Is called the Virginia reel and in England Sir Roger de Cover ly. Grown people are just as fond of this dance as the youngsters, but It naturally belongs to the children, as the idea of It was taken from a very old children's game called the shep herdess, which is still very popular in France. The children form a line and then the leader stands a little to the left and the next child a little to the right and they raise their hands as high as their heads and from a barrier, which all . the Bheep must pass through. The next child in line be comes the shepherdess and calls to her little lambs to follow her through the barrier, which they do. while sing ing a little French song. After the last sheep has passed safely under the two children that formed the barrier drop into line at the end, and' the two at the head of the line form the next barrier and so on, until every child has had a turn at being part of the barrier for the others to pass under. How He Came. Teacher Who discovered America? Bright Boy Columbus. Teacher That's right. Now, how did he come to do.it? Bright Boy He came by water. I 1! II "OBWaWHSaaaaaBWanaBwi l I Hair Falling? You certainly cannot lose your hair and keep it, too. Which shall it be? Lose? Then do nothing. Keep? Then use Ayer's Hair Vigor. That is about all there is to it. Ayer's Hair Vigor Is also a splendid hair-dressing and hair-tonic It keeps the hair soft and smooth and greatly promotes its growth. It does not color the hair. Consult your doctor freely, v Doctors are studying these hair questions much more than in former days. fade kr the M. O. ITBm CO., lreW, Ma. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE-80 A. NEAR EHOLT JTTNCTIO", B. C. Can.: a) a. cult: 4 r. bouee. bane. OTtbtdcaf SO fruit treea, best eub-imseted i, Box 819, Uncaa-o. FOR 8ALE-1W A. IN YAIE CO J ft. CLl J A, cult.: -atory f r. houaa, barn, ootbldaa, I M ay aDDlo orchard, etock, wiachTrwsrr. rtc EarllM fruit ranch, easily divided. Seibel. Ba Sim, I Life of the 80IL Tha soil may be said to be alive. ! a matrix auDDortlnr various of definite micro-organisms, and tte Investigations of the pan few yearn Indicate the possibility of detersolar in bv bacteriological diagnoses tbm crop producing capacities of differ" soils. It has been abown mat toe ae tion of the nitrifying bacteria, espe cially in samples. - of soiV correlates fairly well with the producUveness of the same soils under field conditions. Harper's Weekly. S In the Natural Course. Life la ever unfolding from wtthtS. and revealing itself to the light, and thoughts engendered in the heart a last reveal themselves In words, ae tions and things accomplished. James) Allen. Take Time to Replace. , A lost thumbnail will be generally replaced in five months and a great oenall requires twice as long. TESTIMONY OF FIVE worn Proves That Lydia "PinIk ham's Vegetable Conv pound Is Reliable. Eeedville, Ore. "I can truly weorai mend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to all women who are passing through the Change of Life, as it made me a well woman alter suffering three -ye are. Mrs. Mary Bogabtv Eeedville, Oregon. New Orleans, La. "When passing through the Change of Life I vis troubled with hot Cashes, weak and dizzy spells ami backache. Iwasnotfitfor q anything until I took Ly- udia E. Pinkham s Vege a taDie compouna wnicna nrYVaCkl TXJArtVl ira WAichate. usS in roldtome."-Mrs.GA3- UMr C&JeauH TON BLONDEAU, 1541 Po- U EoilymruSt.NewOrleana. ET XacU 4 Mishawaka,Ind.-"Wo- X men passing through the jj Change of Life can take 9 nothi no-better than Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable MnCta Bauerfl tiompouno. x am recom--31.-- -J mendinpitto all mv friends P 5 kapnucn nf wrmt. tt hn K 1.r,v5 " I done for me. "-Mrs. Chas. S VLT t 3 Bauer, 523 E. Marion St., if iT Mishawaka, ind. kMtfd Alt? Station,Ky.-For u,' 'm --rrv ui monms x sun area irons Ea troubles in consequence of K S?r" amv B9 and thought I ja could not live. jLyuia m. 1 Pinkham's Vegetable 9 Compound made me well a and 1 want other surlerinjr 1 women to know about it " Mrs. Emma Bailey, Altoa Station, Ky. Deisem, No. Dak. "I was passinsr through Change of Life and felt very bad. I could not sleep and was very nervous. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound restored me to perfect health) and I would not be without it." Mrs. F. M. Thorn, Deisem, No, Dak. OUT Of TOWN PEOPLE enn roetT dtooii menti of Noa-JFoletto HeftltA-baUldliiff r from C. GEE WO tli Cbinet docto Try once more If yon have been doctor!. wftfc thia one and that one and have not obtained pw. manent relief. Let thia great nature heW Ola nose your case and prescribe aome renawlj waost action is quick, sure and safe. His praaoiiptioM are compounded from Roofs, Herb, Hnda svott Barks thut have been gathered from erery urn tor of the globe. The secrets of these ine4iba are not known to the outside world, but hare ben handed down from father to son in the pbjnielamr fouiUitwin China. CONSULTATION FREE. If yon Hvb oud of town and cannot call. wrHe far symptom blank and oircnlar, enoloeina 4 oemta im stamp, THE C. GEE WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO. 1 62 i first St., Cor. Morrison Portland. Oregon. f. N. U. MO 29 3 WHEN writing to adrartlaera, 11 tion thia naner. iff SOT f.FM Thorn Jjl