GHOSTS IN FLANDERS HER "LOVE" RETURNED WHY NOT 9 KC is pure. KC is health ful. It really does make lighter, nicer biscuits, cakes and pastry than the old fashioned single acting baking powders. And you pay only No baking powder JACKS, JENNETS & HORSES for SALE Sixty head of the finest bred Mares and Colts, including' 3 to 5 year old Geldings, bred for Saddlers and Racing. Will consider trade in cheap land. Forty head of extra large Jenneta with an elegant Jack for herd header. A Bargain for a Short Time CauBe for Belling- is the herd law in Morrow county, and the transforming of my 3000 acre stock farm into a wheat field. 1 must close out this stock. Will consider trade. What have you got? B. F. SWAGGART, Prop. Lexington, Oregon. Hep Criticltm. Wee Mabel hud a little disagree ment with her grandmother one day. She was relating the affair next morn ing to her parents and In conclusion she said with a sigh, "Well, drandma Is certainly a very tweer lady." Wanted Point Remembered. When little Billie was visiting at lunch one day he had strawberries and there were but a few on each one's plate. Billie looked at the small assortment at his place, then whis pered: "Remember, Aunt Marie, that I'm company." REMARKABLE CASE of Mrs. HAM Declares Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Saved Her Life and Sanity. Shamrock, Mo. "I feel It my duty to tell the public the condition of my health before usms your medicine. I had falling, inflamma tion and congestion, female weakness, pains in both sides, backaches and bear ing down pains, was short of memory, nervous, impatient, passed sleepless nights, and had neither strength nor energy. There was always a fear and dread in my mind, I had cold, nervous, weak spells, hot flashes over my body. I had a place in my right side that was eo sore that I could hardly bear the weight of my clothes. I tried medicinei and doctors, but they did me little good, and I never expected to get out again. I got Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable. Compound and Blood Purifier, and I cer tainly would have been in grave or in an asylum if your medicines had not saved me. But now I can work all day, sleep well at night, eat anything I want, have no hot flashes or weak, nervous spells. All pains, aches, fears and dreads are gone, my house, children and husband are no longer neglected, as I am almost entirely free of the bad symptoms I had before taking your remedies, and all is pleasure and happiness in my home." Mrs. Josie Ham, R. F. D. 1, Box 22, Shamrock, Missouri. If you want special advice writ Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., (confidential) Lynn, Mass, Satisfaction In Work. All thinking men and women get the main satisfactions of life, aside from the domestic joys, out of the productive work they do. Charles W. Eliot. Nervous Emotional from the Mr. Addle Carttlnger, ot Cedar SL, Calm, 111., wrote Doctor Pierce follow t 1 send 31 cutt for your "Com mon Sense Medical Adviser' for my daughter wto ha. recently married andlknowthe book will beof much value to her. Shave read and used for 25 yean the valuable treatments contained la the "Medical Adviier" and have taken many bottles of Dr. Fierce'! Favorite Preemption, and have been restored tohealth each time I used it. Itissgreat remedy for women as a strength builder, fine for the nerves and general health. ' matism. P. N. U. No. 22, 11S WHEN wrltiaf to advertisers, please I ' tioa this saper. P Dizzy f Depressed 9 a fair price for it. should sell for more. DAISY FLY KILLER. ftA-EftB; all Neat, clean, ornamental, conven lent, cheap. Last, all season, Madeol metal, can'tspill or tip over i will not coll or Injur. . ny thing. Guaranteed eHecttn Sold by dealer., or 6 .ent br expreu pfo. paid lor (1. EAfiOlD SOHLH, ISO S.XaU An., Brooklyn, a. T. His "Daughter-ln-Liw." My husband and I had Just been married and my small brother-in-law overheard his mother refer to me as "my daughter-in-law." A short time after that the little fellow visited me In my new home, and upon sending him to the store the groceryman, see ing he was a stranger, said: "Well, lit tle boy, I have never seen you before. Do you live In this neighborhood?" "No, sir," said the child, "but my daughter-in-law lives across street and I am visiting her." the Odd Wedding Custom. In northern Africa they have a way of providing for the wedding of their daughters that is interesting. When the guests arrive a man at the door receives the pence they give, and writes it down in a book. This means that when any of these guests have a wedding the host will give each of them Just what they gave him. Aa it is, the guests pay for the wedding, and each one has either already re ceived as much as he gives or will receive It later on. Optimism Not Always Reassuring. "I read with Intense interest," said Noyes E. Brewmore, "the story of the boy with a smile who worked his way up rung by rung until he became pres ident of a trust company. Personally, however, whenever a man with a smile approaches and gives me the glad hand, I feel Instinctively that I am due for a touch." Kansas City Star. YOUR OWN DH11GOIST WILL TELL YOU Try Murine Eye Remedy for Red, Weak, Watery Byes and Granulated Eyelide; No Smarting lust-Eye Comfort. Write for Book of the Bye by mall Free. Murine Eye Kemedy Co., Chicago. Human Nature. It Is human nature to want to throw something. The babe of yesterday which started in by throwing Its dishes on the floor is today throwing a ball, tomorrow he will be throwing a brick and it won't be long before he is a man throwing the bull. Philadelphia In quirer. Buying "On Tick." Buying "on tick" Is not new slang. but goes back to the seventeenth cen tury. It is stated in a letter dated 1661: "The Mermaid Tavern Is late ly broke, our ticks amounting to 1500." And In another document little later It is said: "Every one runs upon tick." Stone That Is Elastic. There Is a stone that is as flexible as rubber and that, when set up on edge In a thick plate, sways to and fro In the wind like a piece of leath er. This stone Is called ltakolumlte, anr? the Scientific American says it Is the mother rock of Brazilian dia monds. Dally Thought. What we want is the old spirit of our forefathers; the firm conviction that not by criticism, but by sympathy we must understand: what we want is more reverence, more love, more hu manity, more depth. P. W. Robertson, Wasted Energy. Some day the people who are con cerned In conserving energy are go ing to turn their attention to the man who sits up all night working out chess and checker problems. J "170MEN who are restless, with v v constant change of position, ' 'fidget iness," who are abnormally excitable or who experience fainting or dizzy spells, or nervous headache and wakefulness are usually sufferers weaknesses ol their sex. DR. PIERCE'S Favorite Prescription is the soothing, cordial and womanly tonic that brings about an invigorating calm to the nervous system. Overcomes the weakness ana me arag rrincr naina which resemble the Dains of rheu Thousands of women in the past forty years can bear witness to its benefits. Tour dealer In medicine sells It In liquid or srnrsr coated tablet form; or you can send 60one-cent stamps for a trial box ot Dr. Pierce's Favorita Prescription tablets. Address Dr. V. M. Pierce, Invalids' Hotel and Sursical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y. IlllIIIIllMllIlHIIIItllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUIUIllllIl Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets Refalata aid Umforats Sbmack, liver sad Bowels, Safar-Cutea1 Tiiy Gramlea, HUHHIIH',"""" lllllllillimillllllllllllKIIIIMIUlin Some Truth In This. "Et some men," said Uncle Eben "sot up as late o' nights thinkin' ai dey does playln' cards dey'd go an' tell it doctor dey bad Insomnia. SURELY OLD SOLDIERS REVI8I1 SCENES OF BATTLES. Five Centuries Ago English Warrior. Fought Over the Territory That Is Now the Scene of Euro pean Warfare. I think that old ghosts must be astli In Flanders, now that an English arm; is encamped there again, with Edward prince of Wales, on the headquarters staff. Out of the mists of time there must surely come some of those Eng lish gentlemen and men-at-arms whc more than five centuries ago cam with another prince of Wales, called Edward,' to fight against heavy odds In and about all those towns In Bel gium and France which, again, hav become familiar In our mouths as household words St. Omer, Ypres, Arras, Soissons, Reims, St. Quentin, Oravellnes, Dunkirk, Calais and Abbe vllle, Lille and Armentieres. Perhaps "Eye-Witness" knows the names of those silent ghoBts, though he has not yet written about them in his dispatches, owing to the severity of the censor. He knows, I am sure, that among those who watched the destruction of Cloth Hall were Sii John Chandos "the flower of knight hood" and Lord Thomas Percy, Sii Godfrey de Harcourt and Lord Regin ald Cobham, Lord Thomas Holland and Lord Delawarr, Lord Robert Ne ville, Lord Thomas Clifford, Lord Bourchler, Lord Latimer, Sir Waltei Manny "sans peur et sans reproche" and many other knights and squires, whom," as old Frolssart said, "I can not now name." The ancestors of British officers who are now fighting in Flanders rode un der their banners over the flat marsh lands, they banqueted in many of the grand halls which now He in ruins un der the German eagle, they stormed at the gates of many towns which are now filled with British soldiers, their lances glittered down many of the roads where the winter sun now glints upon the lances of French dragoons; and with the chivalry of medieval knighthood they did many acts ol courtesy and valor and heroic adven ture upon the same ground where the men under Sir John French have up held the old traditions of their breed with no less courage. Also, according to the way of war they, ravaged the countryside through which they passed, burned farmsteads and peas ants' cots, swept It clean of all food, looted Its treasures, and laid it waste, so that there was desolation and fam ine where the English army had passed. It was Lord Henry Spencer, bishop of Norwich, who undertook the siege of Ypres in the days when English arrows sung with a shriller note than the modern shell. "Day after day," writes Frolssart 'the assault continued, but the place still held out. At last the English, find lng that they could not take the town by storm, and that they had expended all their artillery, resolved to have a quantity of faggots collected with which to fill up the ditches, so that they might advance and fight hand to-hand with the garrison, undermine the walls, and. by throwing them down, effect an entrance." Every road and dyke round Ypres was moistened with English blood In those old days, and now, fighting side by side instead of against the French and the Flemings, English blood drips down to the same soil, which is mixed with the dust of heroic bones, of Eng llsh arrowheads, of steel breastplates and richly chased casque, and of all the panoply of medieval knighthood. now dissolved Into the chemistry of the earth's graveyards. If ghostly warriors keep the watches of the night, Sir Charles Chandos, Sir Walter Manny, Lord James Audley Lord Reginald Cobham, and a thou sand other knights of old renown, sa lute the men who challenge death for England. The Black Prince ralseB his visor and kisses the sword hilt to Ed ward, prince of Wales, who is walking the same fields of fame and blood- London Chronicle. The Spaniard In Mexico. When Cortez landed at Vera Cruz and in honor of the day being "Good Friday," gave the place the sacred name, he set the style of Mexico for the land to be called after saints and sacred things rather than people. The glory of the spirit of Crusader ap pealed more to him than perpetuating his own name as the cognomen of country. Following in the wake of this warlike Spaniard came troops of friars, some of them pious and truly noble, while others were no more hu man than the average type of men of that day and generation. A Catholic priest, Hidalgo, occupies a prominent place In the calendar of the country i liberators; while dreams and vlslonB actuated others to explore the country and set up the cross. Blnk't Good Luck. BInks Isnt It about time out daughter began to think about getting married? She Is getting on and she'll be an old maid the first thing she knows. Mrs. BInks Yes, but she'a me all over again. I was the same way un til my mother warned me that if I was to marry at all I had no time to lose. BInks Um er I suppose so. Mrs. BInks Yes, Indeed. I made up my mind to take the first stick that offered, and that very evening you came. WHEN HUSBAND HAD MADE HIM SELF FAMOUS. But Now, Despite Her Pleas, He Does Not See Why He Should Take Her Back His Concise Explana tion of His Reasons. They had been deeply In love when they married. That was ten years ago. Much had happened In ten years, and in their case they had drifted apart At first there were little scraps, mended with a kiss and a few loving words. By degrees the rift be came larger. She wanted the com forts, If not the luxuries of life, and told him many times of the, motor cars and theater boxes she could have had if she had married Tom, Dick or Harry Instead of him. Once he used to. weave stories of a tomorrow, but to morrow never came, and finally the friction became too much for him. "You are never satisfied," he said after one of their quarrels, according to a New York letter to the Cincin nati Enquirer. "You have no belief in me. Perhaps I don't amount to much. We don't get on. You remain here and I'll find a place for myself. I'll let you have enough to keep you going $25 a week." She agreed to this joyfully, and in a few days he removed to a furnished room not many blocks away. Each week she received an envelope with the stipulated amount In it. Other wise they lived as Btrangers. The man had only left himself enough out of his salary to keep him self alive. There waB no overplus for amusements, and his chief recreation was reading at the public library. One evening, having finished his evening paper, he took up a pencil and began to draw on the edge. He had a sense of humor and was making a comic picture of something he had lust read. He was fond of drawing and had given much time to it before his marriage. Then he took a sheet of paper and drew several comic sketches, and they amuBed him bo much that Just for fun he sent one to a comic paper. It was accepted and the editor asked for more. He kept on drawing, and in three years had attained a reputation under the name of "Scorn." Meanwhile his wife lived on in the old house, perfectly contented and only slightly curious when her allowance was gradually in creased. When one day the envelope contained fifty dollars she decided to go after him. She called at the place where he had been employed when they parted and asked to see him. The clerk grinned. "He left over a year ago. She rushed to the house where he had roomed, "He left over a year ago," she was informed. Still the fifty dollars arrived regularly. In California lives a thin man who Is something of a cynic. His reputa tion as a comic artist is established and money comes easily to him. Once a pretty woman asked him why he lived alone. "I have a wife," he told her. "I left her because she didn't believe In me, I am never going back to her. It hurts a man to be tied a bundle of pessim ism In petticoats." "And did she love you?" the pretty woman asked. "I hardly think so." Once his agents wrote to him that she wanted to know where he lived. Tell her." he wrote, "that I am In the Town of Tomorrow." And she understood. Want Market Commission. California women are anxious to es tablish a national marketing commis sion as suggested by the United States delegate to the International Institute of Agriculture in Rome. According to this plan, the president of the United States will appoint the national mar- president of an Influential chamber of keting commission, consisting of the commerce, the mayor of three of the largest cities in the United States, three members of the leading mail order and department stores, a leading railroad man. a parcel post man, a leading banker, a leading workingman, two congressmen, a senator, making fourteen in all, and in addition to this fifteen farmers from various sections of the United States, making twenty nine members of the commission. There would also be state commis sions, appointed by the governors, and bo on down to township commissions There would be places In each town and city for sales, and farm produce would be put on sale at different hours in the week. Barrle Puzzles Gaby Deslyi. Miss Gaby Deslys' comments on Sir James Barrie, in whose first venture in musical burlesque the Farlslenne is about to appear, makes piquant reading. The lady complains that Sir James is "strange author." Appar ently, "he not like me to know what he means. When he look glad then I know I doing It all wrong, but if he look trlste, then I know I doing It right" Moreover, Mile. Deslys com plains, and this Is really a grave In dlctment, that she does not know whether the author likes her dresses or not, and that he Is of opinion that she should do her hair with "nice lit tle round bump at back." A Gentle Hint. "Sir, does your boy call his dog Rome?" "No; why do you ask that?" "Oh, merely that I noticed seems to like to make it howl" he mm &m j ipij sl,oes s Whole F JItl I At Fire Sale Prices! m II . . I A Ul shoes' 10c Girls' Shoes 50c I! ll J VJy Children's Shoes, 49c Ladies' Shoes, 75c I W lj CV 1 Boys' Shoes, 50c Ken's Shoes, $1.00 1 U DAVH Clint fA 229 Morrison Street, Between Mushrooms Somewhat Neglected. The artificial production of mush rooms is carried on In Europe to an extent never attempted here, though the growing of them In America Is rapidly increasing, mushroom "barns" being available in cellars, caves, stables, fields, outhouses of all kinds. It 1b one of the many attractive spec tacles of the great markets of Paris to Bee high pyramids ot mushrooms, fresh from the "farms," white as snow and ot whose luscious edible qualities there can be no doubt Aiding the Memory. Concentration and practice are the chief needs In memorizing poetry and dramatic lines. Competition seems to be the best way to stimulate concen tration In children if they are not suf fering from nervous troubles, and youngsters will find it most interest ing to do these memory feats against time. A race to learn a poem may be as Interesting as a hundred-yard dash. Adding columns of figures against time is not only Interesting but 'ex ceedingly practical. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets reeu- late and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules. Easy to take as candy. Bound to Be Seen. Little Mr. Einstein, a traveling salesman, found himself far away from home, and naturally very lone some. He knew not a soul in the ho tel at which he was staying and be decided that he must attract some at tention at any cost Presently a bell hop came through the lobby paging a Mr. Murphy. "Mr. Murphy! " he shout ed. At this point Mr. Einstein jumped up and hollered: "Say, boy, vat Ini tials?" Everybody's. Tribute to the Ancient Romans. The Avezzano region was not un known to the Romans and the old Roman roads across the mountains may Btill be traced In places. A man beside the way of whom the distance was asked, replied: "By the Roman road It Is bo far." Thomas Nelson Page in Scrlbner's Magazine. Her Way of Putting It. "When I proposed to Blanche she asked me if I was a new recruit." What did she mean?" "She wanted to know if I had ever participated Id an engagement befor"." BoBton Transcript. Wise Kid. ' A confirmed tippler remarked In the presence of hiB little son that at one period he didn't touch a drop for two years. "Pa," said the little fel low, "was that your first two years?" Hood Disorders Quickly Driven Away Astonishing Results With t!io Greatest Blood Purifier Ever Discovered. Strength, Power, Accomplishment are all Typified In S. S. S. Borne blood disorders become deeply rooted In the glands and tissues, and the mistake Is made of resorting to draatio drugs. These only aggravate by causing other and worse troubles. A host of peo ple know this to be true. They know from painful experience. To get right down Into where the blood Is vitiated require S. B. 8. the greatest blood purifier ever discovered. This remarkable remedy contains one Ingredient, the active purpose of which Is to stimulate the tissues to the healthy election of Its own essential nutriment and the medicinal elements of this match lees blood purifier are Just as essential to well balanced-health as the nutritious elements of the meats, grains, fats and sugars of our dally food. Mot only this, but If from the presence of some disturbing poison there Is a local or general Interference of nutrition to cause bolls, carbuncles, abscesses and kindred troubles, 8. 8. B. so directs the local cells, that this poison la rejected an4 ID, ORE 1st and 2d, A GENTS Sell Oresron-erown stock, the finest there is; oik demand; Rood commiaaloac SALEM NURSERY CO., Salem. Oregon. LEARN AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING AND DRIVING at the best equipped, most up-to-date and only practical Automobile School in the Northwest. L.&M. Auto Repair Co.. 369 (Mm Am. Pwtkai 0 YOUNG HAN, BE A BARBER. Learn a Trade. Be Independent Trade taught In eight week; tools free. Commissions paid while learning; positions secured. Write for free catalog. MOHLER COLLEGES, Portland, 48 N. 2nd SW Spokane, 226 Main Ave.; Seattle, 109 Main St WEEKS' BREAK -IP-A-COLD TABLETS A guaranteed remedy for Colds and La Grippe. Price 25c of your druggist It's good. Take nothing else. Adv. "USE THE RIVER" Dalles -Columbia Line Stats of Washington, for The Dalles dally et. Sunday 11 p. m. Leave Dalles daily . Monday 12 M. Steamers J. N. Teal. Inland Empire an Twin Cities for Upper Columbia and Snake rhreff points. Taylor SL Dock. TeL Main 613. Willawlle tat CslimsU Kmc Tminf Ce Ptrtlua. Eligible is a Graveside Orator. "When I die," said Noyea E. Brew. more, "I would like Tennyson J. Daft to make a few remarks at my grave. A man who can write such ambigu jus poetry ought to be able to deliver a well-sounding funeral oration with out really exposing my true history." Kansas City Star. 1 Same Bread. The men and women who would b willing to use the Constitution to wrap a nickel's worth of liver In would not halt at carrying their salt mackerel home in the Declaration oi Independence. Houston Post OVERALLS'! ALU RIGHTS RESERVED Keep KidsKleen The moit practical, healthful, playtime firroenti ever Invented (or children 1 to 8 yean ol age. Made in one piece with drop back. Easily lipped on or off, Bail if warned. No tlfbl elastic banda to nop circulation. Made In blue denim, and blue and white hickory ttripea for all the year round. Alio lifhter welrbi material (or lumtner wear All garment! trimmed with fait red or blue galatea. Made in Dutcb neck wltb elbow ileevei and blgb neck and long aleerea, 75c the suit If your dealer cannot tupply you, we will tend them, charrei prepaid on receipt of price, 75c eacb. A New TOW H They Suit I IUjU Kip Made By i, Levi Strauss & Co, San Francisco PORTLAI ft rL, f 1 ffl Jogging Your Horses? Your stallions, as well as your racing prospects, are shed dins; their coats, or have done bo, and are susceptible to the weather changes. Have on hand your "standby'1 SPOHN'8 COMPOUND. It has stood the test tor 17 years. All drug- SlHtH sell It, or horse goods houses. Bottle, 60 cents and 1; ozen, $5 and 110. 6POHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists, Goshen, Ind. eliminated from their presence. men, too, M. t). a. has such speolM stimulation on these local cells as to pre serve their mutual welfare and a propel relative assistance to each other. In a very brief time 8. 8. 8. has the reconstructive process so under control that remarkable changes are obseved. All eruptive places heal, mysterious pains and aches have disappeared, and from head te foot there Is a conscious sensation of re newed health. From the fact that B. 8. 8. is purely a botanical preparation, It Is accepted by the weakest stomach and has (rest tools Influence. Mot on drop of drugs or minerals Is used In Its preparation. Ask for 8. 8. 8. and Insist upon having It. And If you desire skillful advice upon any matter concerning the blood and skin writ to The Swift SpectSo Co.. lOS Swift Bldg, Atlanta, Ga, Do not allow some zealous clerk to larrup the atmosphere In eloquence over something "Just as good" sa 0, S, S, Eewar of all cauntsrfeUsV