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About Estacada progress. (Estacada, Or.) 1908-1916 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1908)
MY O W N F A M I L Y U S E PE-RU-NA. J® W ith erin g K lu d . P ep p erm in t an d HON. GEORGE W. HONEY. George W. Honey. National C haplain U. V. U., ex-Chaplain Fourth W isconsin Cavalry, ex Treasu rer State of W isconsin, and ex-Q uarter- niaster General State of T exas (i. A. R . writes from I70w hirst St., N. K., W ashington, 1) C . as follow s: “ I cannot too highly recommend your preparation for the relief of catarrhal troubles in their various form s. Som e members of my own family have i d it with most grati fying results ..h e n other remedies failed. Peruna proved most efficacious aiul I checrfu y certify to its curative excellence.” Mr. bred I,. Hebard, for nine years a leading photographer of K a n s a s City, Mo., located at the northeast corner of 12th and Grand A v e s. cheerfully gives the following te sti m ony: " It is a proven fact that Pe runa will cure catarrh and la grippe, and as a tonic it has no equal. Dru^ gists have tried to make me take something else ’just as good,’ but Pe runa is good enough fo r me.” Pe-ru-na in T ablet Form . I’ or two years Dr. Hartman and his assistants have incessantly la bored to create Peruna in tablet form, and their strenuous labors have just been crowned with success People who ob ject to liquid medicines can n- w sectu <• l Viuna tablets, \\hich rep resent the solid medicinal ingredient of Peruna. H er A n oth er When Johnny Hobbs left his home up among the New Hampshire hills to ! visit his grandmother In Worcester, Mass., he was cautioned by his mother that he would find things In the city strangely different from those at home. Johnny arrived In the early uftcr- tioon, and long before tea time his grandmother, who lived most simply, told him io run out to the pantry and get a bowl of milk which she hud left there “for a hungry boy.” A moment luter she followed him, an<l, to her amazement, beheld her grandson bravely at work on a bowl of siiearmint tea which she hud forget fully put in the pluce where she had told him to find the milk. “Why, child,” she cried, seizing the bowl from poor Johnny, “don’t you know tills Isn’t milk?” “ I I knew It wasn’t like Hlllbury milk,” stunnnered Johnny, with a final gulp, “but I thought maybe It was the kind folks had in Worcester.” Scorn. 44My dear, is it possible you puid $7.«’V) for that bathing suit? Why, it doesn’t weigh more than about four ounces, and I could hide it in my fist !” “George Alfred, if I had known that you judge a bathing suit by its size and weight I would have bought a gunny sack.” 4‘20-Mule-Te«im” Borax lends io stop the development of blight and mildew, and destroys paras tical insects. Stalks young leaves and buds affected should be care fully sprinkled with Borax solution, and ,420-Mu!e-Tcdm” Borax should be used frrely around the wains« »ling and floors »f buildings to protect from insects. In your mouth sim ila r in nny way to tho above? I f no. no nooil to wonr a wobbly, u i i u h u M o partial pinto o r ill-tittln g, ordinary bridge work. T h o Dr. Wine «yntoin of 44T E E T H W I T H O U T P L A T E S ” T h e ronuIt o f 21 yearn’ exp erience, th e now way of rep lacing te eth in th e m outh—te eth in fa c t, teeth in appearance, te eth to chew your food upon, an you did upon your natural ones. Our fo rce in no or^an- lie d we can do your e n tire crow n, bridge or plate work in a day if necessary. Positively painless e x tractin g . Only high-class, scie n tific work. W I S E D E N T A L C O ., I N C . I)r. W A. Wise. M anager . 21 years in Portland. Second F loo r, ( a ilin g Building, T h ird and Wash ington S tre ets Office hours. N A. M. to 8 P. M. Hun- £tiys. 9 to I P. M Painless E x tractin g , ude: platen. Phones A and Main 2029. Tobacco. If you have a boy who has begun Biuoklng too early and whom you wish to cure of the habit, feed him pepper mints. I)r. O. Clayton Jones of Sliver- ton, fcJngland, writing in the London Lancet, is authority for this simple cure. I>r. Jones w rites: “To break the smoking habit in a youth there is noth ing better than pepi»ermiut drops. He cannot smoke with a ‘bullseye’ in his mouth, and even for some time after It is dissolved tobacco will not blend kind ly with the taste that remains. Social- I.v fhe cure may seem worse than the disease, but from a medical point of view the sucking of peppermints Is far less hurtful. A common ‘bullseye’ will prevent smoking for nearly an hour, so the amount of sweets used need not be great.” A G ulf Sto ry . B U S IN E S S COLLEGE PO R TLA N D , OHKOON BEHNKE-WALKER STUDENTS SUCCEED. WHY? T h e y a r e T ra in e d fo r b u sin e ss in a b u sin e s s-lik e w ay. W hy n o t e n ro ll in a r e p u ta b le school t h a t placafc a ll o f it s g ra d u a te s? SEN D FO R C A TA LO G U E O. A. BOSSERMAN. See. Improve Your Baking K C Baking Pow der will do I t! Get a can. T ry it for your favorite cake. If It dpesn’t raise better, m ore evenly, higher, — if it isn’t daintier, more delicate in flavor, — we return your money. Everybody agrees K C has no equal BAKING POWDER L OUNCES, Wholesome, Economical. Pure, Uls mafi ' 6 C Long Continued Drouth in East Has Been Broken at Last. Village in Adirondacks Had Ju s t Been Destroyed When Downpour Cam e ■ Snow Fall Is Reported in Mid dle W est—Cold Wave Due E ast of Rocky Mountains. W ashington. Sept. 29.—T h e drouth which has prevailed over the entire eastern section of the United States for m onths is broken. Rain has been general over the entire affected area T h e weather bureau announced last night that the heavy rains would b followed by a drop in the temperature today. F orecaster G arriot said it would he about 25 degrees cooler Rains will cease tom ororw in the Mid die A tlantic states, hut may continue for 24 hours longer in the New E ng land States, which, until late yester day, had not shared in the general precipitation. Adirondack Village Burned. U tica, N Y., Sept. 29.— Rain began falling at Clearw ater and Long Lake yesterday and it is reported that indi cations are for a sufficient downpour to stop the lire ravages. A fire which destroyed the village f L ong Lake W est, causing a loss of $125,000, swept through the forest so rapidly that the firefighters had tc flee for their lives. It is reported that during the fir<? four tons of dynamite which had been sent in for use upon the railroad and in fighting the fire exploded, causing great destruction in the immediate vicinity and badly twisted the tracks. Reports indicate that many exten sive private preserves in the vicinity of L ong Lake W est are being fire swept. Chasane Park, Dr. Seward W ebb’s estate, is burning and there are fires in Harry Payne W hitney’s 80,000-acre estate. L. C. Hull, the young American who won nearly all the important events In the Freshman sports at Oxford Uni versity, is good at every game blit golf. At Shinnecock Hills, one afternoon, a New York athlete saw Mr. II111 retir ing towards the dressing rooms discon- sol nte»ly. “How many holes have you played? the New Yorker asked. “Only three or four,” said Mr. Hull. Rain Falls in New Y ork. “Only three or four In two hours?” New York. Sept. 29.—T he long cried the New Yorker. drouth in New Y ork, New Jersey and “Well,” explained Mr. Hull, “it takes Pennsylvania, which has resulted serious forest fires, ¿topped industrial me so long to put the turf back.” pursuits and caused a water famine in many districts, has been broken by T h o u g h t O n ly of th o D y n a m ite . Some grim stories are told of Lord rainfalls. T he droyth, which has been the Kitchener, says the United Service Ga most prolonged in many years, ha zette. and we have read one which, al lasted about eight weeks. So serious though we cannot vouch for the truth have been its effects, especially in the of It, has a decided Kitchener flavor country districts, that prayers have about it. A young subaltern who was been offered up in many churches for In charge of some works that were In relief. course of construction In the Punjab Rain Puts Out F ires had the misfortune to lose some na tive workmen through an accident with Glens F alls, N. Y., Sept. 29.—The dynamite. Fearful of a reprimand from forest fires that have been raging in headquarters, he telegraphed to the the foothills of the Adirondacks in commander In ch ie f: “Regret to report this section for several weeks were killing of twelve laborers by dynamite extinguished yesterday by heavy rains. accident.” Back Is said to have come WHAT IS HAWAII? the laconic message: “Do you want nny more dynamite?” Ju d g e Dole to Decide Important Case Pnannw ernblc. Involving Statu s o f Islands The lion was sneering at the awkward, Honolulu, H. I., Sept. 29.— Is H a uncouth, and generally ugly appearance waii a territory of the United States, of the elephant. ” 1 may not be as graceful as you are,” as Arizona and New M exico, or is it observed the elephant, “but I ’m nearer an insular possession, as P orto Rico akin to the human family than you are. and the Philippine islands? T his is The knees of my hind legs bend forward, the question that Judge D ole of the as a man's legs do, while yours bend back United States district court lias been ward, the same as a hyena’s, or a hog’s, called upon to decide and attorneys all or a skunk’s. You belong to a lower order over the islands are awaiting the an of creation, and I’d rather not associate swer to the question, as it will effect with you on terms of equality if it’s all the status of nearly every legal prob lem that has come up for solution the same to you.” Whereat the lion, observing Chat the since the annexation of the Hawaiian elephant was waving his trunk threaten islands. T he issue was raised in the case of ingly, went back among the wolves and coyotes, where he still retained some pres Manuel P erez and Augusta W alsh, indicted under the Edmunds act. A tige. plea of form er acquittal was filed by the attorneys for the defense, it being N o O b ject. “How,” wrote Anxious Querist, “do you alleged that the defendants were distinguish the mushroom from the poison prosecuted for the same offense and acquitted in the district court last ous toadstool?” “Here,” wrote the information editor April. T h e point of law raised by this plea of the agricultural paper, in response, “we have an interesting example of the use is whether there are two sovereignties or one in Hawaii. If there are two less questions that come to this office ev ery day of the week. Our answer to this as in a state or territory of the United query is that we don’t. All we ever do States, a form er acquittal in the courts along that line is to distinguish the poi of one jurisdiction is not a defense in a court of another jurisdiction. But if sonous toadstool from the mushroom.” Hawaii is not a full territory and there is only one sovereignty, an acquittal in any court is a bar to further prose A . Flavoring. I t makes a cution on the same charge. syrup b e tter than M ap le. Sold b y grocers. C h olera Claim s Many Victim s MÂPLEINE I. M W A L K E R . T re s. FOREST FIRES EXTINGUISHED St. P etersbu rg , Sept. 29.— T h e num ber of new cholera cases ill the mu nicipal hospitals for the 24 hours ended at noon yesterday was 263 and the deaths 103. T he statistics for the previous 24 hours were 268 and 143, respectively. E ight hospital attend ants have come down with the disease and the other attendants are in a state of panic. Great difficulty is being en countered in persuading them to re main at their posts. Prem ier Stolypin lias w ritten a sharp letter of censure to the m ayor of St. Petersburg re garding the conditions Flood Drowns P rison ers. Manila, Sept. 2 9 — A belated official telegram has ju st been received here which reports that a cloudburst struck the penal colony at Iwahig on Sep tem ber 23 and that eight persons were drowned, including Harold Macknight, the superintendent of the farm. The officials of the colony report that the prisoners behaved heroically during the cloudburst, many of them plung ing into the water at great personal risk to rescue com rades wlio were in danger. Iwahig is a model penal co l ony. and is conducted without armed guards. S tern b e rg ’s S u cce s so r Named Bet ¡in, Sept. 29.— W hile there is no official confirm ation as yet, it is he lieved here that Baron Munim von Schw artzenstein, present ambassador to Japan, will he tfic su ccessor.o f tho late Baron Speck v o n Sternhurg as am bassador to the United States. It is known that Baron von Schwartzen stein has indicated his desire for the W ashington post and from inform a tion obtained it seems that he is con sidered the m ost likely aspirant. C holera Declines in Manila. M anila, Sept. 29.—T h e cholera con- tinues to decline. But 10 cases were reported during a period of 12 hours yesterday Mr- 1 A Carter, an American school teacher, is among those stricken VENOM OF TH E MOSQUITO. IGNORANCE O F SAN ITA TIO N. Low er C la sses in Russia Refuse to Be Vaccinated. St. Petersburg, Sept. —Sirn-e tli Legiuuing of the epi.lemic there huv been 10.68;t eases of Asiatic cholera re ported in Russia and 7,10*2 deaths. 1 St. Petersburg alone, since the presene of the disease was officially admitte September 8, there have been 4,931 cases and 1,871 deaths reported. The figures with reference to the in vasion of this city by the disease can not be relied upon as on a number o occasions authoritative sources showed the number of cases and deaths in single day to be far in excess of that auuounced by the authorities. There ii an appreciable betterment of the sani tary conditions and consequent decrease in the disease as shown by the figure given out Sunday. For the 24 hours ending at noon the number of new cases in the city was 268 and the number of deaths 143, as compared with 312 new cases and 153 deaths for the previous 24 hours. D ifficulty has been experienced in dealing with the workmen of St. Peters burg, who with their families comprise three fifth s of the population for they were unable and unwilling to comply with tho sanitary precautions. The ignorance of the lower classes and their superstition greatly increase the d iffi culties of the situation. During the earlier stages of the epidemic few could be prevailed upon to undergo preventive inoculation, which is provided free of charge, but latterly the authorities have made inoculation compulsory some quarters of the city. SITU A T IO N M O ST S E R IO U S Unbroken Drouth in East Is Raising Havoc With Industries. Pittsburg, Sept. 29__ With losses ag gregating several million dollars from forest fires, and heavy damage to crops and livestock, and the reported loss of i number of lives due to fighting tim her fires; the enforced idleness of thou sands of workmen owing to suspensions because of lack of water; the authori ties anticipating serious epidemics of ontagious diseases, and many small streams dried up and practically oblit orated, the drouth of 1908, which has held western Pennsylvania, eastern Ohio and W est Virginia for two months remains unbroken. While in the Pitts burg district the water supply is suffi eient to carry on all business, the low stage of the rivers has caused a con gestion of much coal in this vicinity, Every available barge and float has been loaded with coal, and a t present there are almost 20,000,000 bushels in the Pittsburg harbor. About 15,000 miners employed in the river mines along the Monongahela val lev are out of work. In all sections of the dry zone pray rs are offered up daily and these pray rs will continue until they are an swered with rain. S T U D E N T S FIG H T D ISE A S E . Drafted in Manila to Battle With Epi demic o f Cholera. Manila, Sept. 29— There were 14 new cases of cholera and three deaths re ported for the 24 hours ending at 8 o'clock yesterday morning. Practically the entire staffs of the bureau of sci nces and the local medical schools have been drafted into the service to fight the disease. The two senior classes of the medical schools are acting as nurses. A serious situation is caused by the supply of disinfectants running very low. The bureau of sciences is experi menting with electricity and sea water to produce chlorine for use until the new supplies of disinfectants arrive. Enormous quantities of disinfectants have been used in vigorous efforts to leanse the entire city. New Party in Cuba. Havana, Cuba, Sept. 29__ That the Liberal party will lose the entire negre vote in the coining election seems as sured, as the result of an attack made on a mass meeting of negroes by a mot f Liberals. The fact that the negro element proposed to form a national party angered the Liberals, as they saw that such a party would draw more from their ranks than from the Conserva ives. General Estenoz, leader of the negroes, has announced that his party i certainty, as his followers cannot hope to secure their rights without a party of their own. Diamonds of New Variety. San Francisco, Sept. 29.— Among the assengers who arrived here from the Orient Sunday is Fred J . Fletcher, in spector of schools of the Transvaal. said in an interview: “ In the northern part of the eolonv great de posits of copper have been partially pened. Louis Botha, premier, is pr<* paring to import thousands of immi grants from England and Scotland. Re cent diamond discoveries promise to be most important. Near Peniel, on the Vaal river, gems have been found which seem to be of a newr v ariety .’ ' New Road to P eace River. Vancouver, B . O., Sept. 29.— A special dispatch from Winnipeg says: The Ca nadian Pacific is rushing its stir vev through from a point near A tha basca leading to Grand Prairie, north of Edmonton. Alberta. From there the main line is being extended to Pine Pass. The company is concentrating its efforts on a survey through Pine Pass an«! from that point tre line will be ex tended through British Columbia to a point north of Prince Rupert. New Coal Field Found. Victoria. B. Sept. 29__ A rich find of good coal with a seam eight feet in width has been located as a result of the boring at Deep Bay, Vancouver Is land, about three miles south of Union j Ksy. by the Wellington Colliery com- puny of R. D a M M b l Suns. The seam will l e worked as soon as a r r a n g e m e n t s can be made to sink on it. TH E CURE FOR . SCROFULA Avvney |u «preadiu« U !»•«•« Waa 1J l* « - u v e r t - t l M u iiy Y ea rs A gu. At the time of the discovery of the mosquito’s agency In breeding disease it was not dreamed that fur more than the germ of the truth had been reveal ed many years before, suya the New York Sun. The truth was told iu 1853 In the obscure columns of the Faceta Ottiee, published ut the port of Camuña, Venezuela, and u little luter In a brief note or two that the discoverer wrote to the Academy of Sciences in Paris. It wus buried iu those pages uud for gotten, and has now been resurrected by the Havana Crónica Medico and the British Medical Journul. In May, 1853, Louis Daniel Beauper- ihuy, a native of Guadeloupe and health olfieer at Caiuanu, wrote to the Gaceta Official that fo r fourteen years he hud made a microscopic study of the blood und secret Ions In every type of fever und hud discovered that yellow7 fever resulted from the stings of sev eral species of mosquitoes. “The mos quito plunges Its proboscis Into the skin und Introduces a poison which has properties akin to that of snake venom. It softens the red blood corpuscles, causes their rupture, and facilitates the mixing of the coloring matter with the serum.” Beuuperthuy said a good word foi the inuch-maligned swamp, w hose repu tation as a breeder of m alaria and oth er fevers was widespread. "Marshes do not communicate to the a ir any thing more than humidity, and the small amount of hydrogen they give off does not cause in man the slight est indisposition in equatorial and in tertroplcal regions renowned for their unheal th ful ness. Nor Is It the putres cenee of the water that makes it un healthy, but the presence of mosqui toes.” In one of his short communications to the Paris Academy of Sciences, dat ed from Camana, Jun e 18, 1856, he wrote that as early as 1839 his Inves tigations in unhealthy locations in South America had convinced him that the so-called marsh fevers were due to a vogeto-animal virus "Inoculated into man by mosquitoes.” Beuiqierthuy’s facts and deductions were so remote from all the medical teachings of the day that they were doubtless laughed at and promptly for gotten. Probably the priority of his discovery will now be acknowledged, hut It might have been a profound blessing to the world If scientific re search had been able in the middle of the last century to proceed along the lines suggested by Beauperthuy’s an nouncement. Soapolda. Do you wash? It is a well-kuow7u medical fact that scrubbing the face and hands with chemical detergents is absolutely ruinous to the delicate outer fabric of the skin. You w ould not pour can of petrol on the side of an aero plane to make it go, would you? Why, then, attempt to open the pores of the cuticle and keep them working by the external application of saponaceous tablets and other inferior frauds of the klud? Beware of these as you would of a poison. W ater Is equally dangerous. Why is It that you meet so many people ev ery day In the street with gruy smut- stained faces and toil-begrimed hands? Simply because they abrade and de stroy the elegant envelope with which nature has provided their bodies, in stead of treating It rationally from wTthln. The only way to be clean is to swallow soai>olds, with their wonder ful Internal operation on the fibers and nerve tissues. However dusty or g rit ty you may he, one does of soapoids w'ill set you right. T he pores will spring open and shed off the unnatural accretion of foreign substances us a snake sloughs its skin. Think, too, of the time niul money you will save. No more tedious ablu tions and ruinous water rates. You •an swallow your soapoid as you w7alk to the office und be as bright as a new pin. Our final word Is if you have been washing, stop I t ; if you have not, don’t liegin. Spare your epirdermls, and swallow soapoids. Try nature’s way and be clean.— Punch S teel from th e O re. Two A ustralinn Inventors Imre found a new prow«« for the continuous treat ment of Iron ore, which Is to lie exploit ed throughout the world. It is u pro- ess for directly converting the ore Into malleable Iron or steel, und Is suid to effect u saving of 25 | *r cent. After the or»! Is concentrated It is passed through a revolving cylinder and brought Into contact with the deoxidiz ing g as; thence it falls Into a bottle of molten Iron and Is converted Into steel or malleable Iron, the whole pro cess being automatic. All F ixed. I want to tell you, old man,” said KrotChett, “how thoroughly nnhamod I am of the temper I displayed last night. Your wife and sister must have thought me crazy.” “No; they didn’t,” replied Brightly. I fixed that nil right.” "A h ; so good of you, old man.” “Y es; I told them you were drunk.” —Philadelphia Press. R l* h l In HU L in e . Howell— Rowell, the fruit grower, Is married. Powell—He always said that he was wedded to his art. Howell— Well, he married a peach.— Judge. HU F irst A ct. Ilyker— I f you had a million dollars hat would you do first? Pyker—The tax assessor. Married women always look pitying y at old malda, and the old malda look as though they could cry over the trou bles of the married women. Before a girl marries, she prays that the may make him o good w ife; after she marries, she asks the Lord u mnke him a better husband. Many a man la eoiupelled to stnnd punishment who never fought a prix fig h t Sw ollen glands about the neck, weak eyes, pale, w axy com plexions, ru n n in g sores and ulcers, sk in diseases, and general poor h ealth, are th e usual ways iu which Scrofu la is m anifested. T h e disease being d eeply intrenched in tile blood often a tta ck s th e bones, resu ltin g in W hite Sw ellin g , or hip disease, and the scrofulous and tu b ercu lar m atter so thorou ghly destroys th e healthful properties of th e blood th a t Scrofu la som etim es term inates in consum ption, an incu rab le disease. T iie en tire circu lation being contam inated, th e on ly way to cu re the trouble is to thorou g hly purify th e blood and restore th e circu la tio n to a strong, h e a lth y state. S. S . S. is th e very best treatm en t for S c ro fu la ; it renovates th e en tire blood su pply and drives ou t the scrofulou s and tub ercu lar deposits. S . S . S . is the g reatest of all blood purifiers, and it not o n ly goes rig h t down to th e very bottom of the trou ble and rem oves th e cause, but it supplies th e weak, diseased blood with the h e althfu l properties it is in need of, and in th is way builds up w eak, frail, scrofulous persons and m akes them stro n g and healthy . S . S. S . is a gentle, safe, vegetable preparation and is suited for persons of any age. Hook on the blood co n ta in in g inform ation about Scrofu la and any m edical advice free. T H E S W I F T SPECIFIC CO., A T L A N T A .* 3A. An a S afety M O W A R D J.. BU R TO N '.—ARtnyer n r l Chemist. 1 : . Zlno or •lope» und lu ll p rie - list se n t o a ap p lication . C on trol und Urn* pin-w<>rk so lici led. liv lu r e u c e t ( ar Lionate S u r iio n al lii.u k . V alv e. “Seorchley doesn't have any more of those terrible epileptic fits he used to have, does he?” “No; whenever he feels one of them coming on he goes and take» a spin in his automobile. One The cleanest.— \ lightest.—and most comfortable SLICKER M o th e rs w i ll fin d M rs. W in s lo w 's S o o th in g Byrui> t h e b e s t r e m e d y to 1130 io « t h e i r c h M r a l u r i n g t h e t e e t h i n g p e r .o d . Kven C h aiiK e. Y ork \ V\ at the same time cheapest in ihe end because it wears longest “You spent a month at the - ’aside. Did It pay?” “I can’t say it paid, but I came out exactly even.” “How?” “Paid out $<»0, but gained twelve pounds. Same thing, you know.” N ew r w © Itean on . Bella— W hat do they want to dis cover the north pole for? Stella— What for? Why, for tho sake of getting some picture postcard* from there, of course.—Pick-Me-Up. *309 Everywhere Every garmenl qua'- arCeed woferproof C a ta lo g fr e e * J TOWCO CO BOSTO N U S A ' ' •••■ ' O 1 -n T g P TQI Je u a , KASPARILLA The Jewish community of New York is now the largest In history or tra dition. It represents 10 per cent of Tl.is sterling household remedy is most the entire Jewish population of the successfully prescribed for a “ world of world. troubles.” For derangements of the di gestive organs it is a natural corrective, F IT « VRus’ D ance un«l 1 rvoua Diseases rerma- operating directly upon the liver and ali ■ I • J neatly cared by Dr. i .¡lie 's G reat Nerve R e sto rer. Send fo r FREE $2.00 tr ia l bo ttle und tre a t h e. mentary canal, gently but persistently D r. U. U. K lin e . L d .. ftil Arch S t . P h ila d e lp h ia Pa. stimulating a healthful activity. Its beneficial influence extends, however, to C i r c u l a r A in l»i l i o n . every portion of the system, aiding in the Slocum—Curious fad that Bosley, the processes of digestion and assimilation of baseball pitcher, has taken up, isn’t it? food, promoting a wholesome, natural He’s building an airship. appetite, correcting sour stomach, bad Ciofast— No; it’s perfectly natural. He breath, irregularities of the bowels, con thinks he can make one that will de stipation and the long list of troubles scribe a shorter curve than anybody else’s directly traceable to those unwholesome conditions. Kasparilla dispels drowsi machine.” ness, headache, backache and despond An U n fo rtu n a te M 1 ■* u l i d e r x t a m l 1 n g . ency due to inactivity of the liver, “I had to leave my last situation be kidneys and digestive tract. It is a cause the missus said they were going strengthening tonic of the highest value. to lead the sinful life, and they wouldn't If it fails to satisfy we authorize all want any servants about the place.”— dealers to refund the purchase price. H oyt C hemical C o . Portland, Oregon Punch. It C u r e s W h ile Y o u W a lk . A lle n ’s F o o t- E a s e is a c e r t a i n c u r e fo r h o t , s w e a tin g , c a ll u s , a n d s w o lle n , a c h in g fe e t. S o ld by a l l D r u g g is ts . P r ic e Hoc. D o n ’ t a c c e p t a n y s u b s t it u t e . T r ia l p ack ag e F R E E . A d d re s s A lle n s . O lm s te d , L e R o y , N. Y . W hen th e W in d Itloxvn CRESCENT EGG-PHOSPHATE R ight. BAKING POWDER Stranger— How far is it to the stock- yards? Native— Right here. Can’t you tell by your nose? Stranger -No; been smelling just like this ever since I came iu sight of the town.—Chicago Tribune. S arliig j* j* A modern leavener at a moderate price; is 30 per cent, more efficient than “Trust” or Cream- of-Tartar products and absolutely free from the health-racking Rochelle Salts residue invariably accompanying their use. Tim e. “Well,” bawled the bill collector In the hallway below, through the mouthpiece pertaining to the occupant of the top flat, “are you ready to settle that little ac count? Will it be of any use for me to climb the stairway? Why don’t you speak ip?” "Because, sir,” answered a soft, gentle voice through the tube. "I am trying to speak down. No. It won’t be of any use.”—Chicago Tribune. Get it from your Grocer 25 c'FULL POUND * 25 c How's This? W e o ffe r O n e H u n d r e d D o lla r s R e w a r d f*>r any c a s e o f C a t a r r h t h a t c a n n o t b e c u r e d by H a 1’» “ a t a r r h C u re . F . J . C H E N E Y A C O ., T o le d o ,O W e , t h e u n d e r s ig n e d , h a v e k n >wu E. J . C h e n e y fo r t h e la st If? y e a r s , a n d b e lie v e h im p e r fe c t ly h o n o r a b l e in a l. b u is n e s s t r a n s a c t io n s a m i f in a n c ia lly a b le to c a r r y o u t a n y o b lig a tio n m a d e b y h is firm . W A D D IN G , K IN N A N A M A R V IN , W h o le s a le D r u g g is ts , T o le d o ,O H a l l ’s C a t a r r a h C u r e is a k e n in t e r n a l l y , a id in g d ir e c t ly u p o n t h e b lo o d a n d m u c o u s s u r fa c e s o f t h e s y s te m . T e s tim o n ia ls s e n t fre e . P r ic e 75 c e n t s p e r b o t tle . S o ld by a ll D ru g g ists. T a k e H a ll’s F a m ily P i lls fo r C o n s t ip a t io n . U n « *l o A llen . “ I see the government is going into the airship business,” said Uncle Allen Sparks. “Sooner or later the airship will get into politics, and then we’ll have ma- hine politicians ami flying machine poli ticians.” Sy m m etry. The smoker who sat directly opposite had put his foot on the edge of the seat occupied by the professor. It was encased in one of those easy going, hygienic shoes that look like a can vas covered ham. “My friend,” said the professor, eying it disapprovingly, “oblige me by removing that thing from my seat. It’s bad form.’’ —Chicago Tribune. C. Gee Wo T h o well known rollabia CHINESE Cool and Herb DOCTOR Hu* in mb* n life Htudy o l roots nnG hnrlm, and in th a t study di-M-ovori'i! mid is uitr. in« to th o world his wonaor- lu l ron'odios. N»> M e rcu ry , P o is o n s o r D r u g s U se d H e f u re $ IV dhout O p e r a t io n , o r W ith o u t th e Aid o f a Knif» Ho Kiiiiriinti • s to ('lire ( ’iitnrrh. Asthma, I.iing, fh ro ftt. Rheum atism . N.-rvou-, . ■ - Nervous D ebility, i oh Hon boo«. Voiiiale W eakness and A ll P r iv a te Diseases A SU R E CANCER CURE Ju s t R e c e iv e d fr o m P e k in g , ( h in d S a f e , S e r f a n d R e lia b le . I F YOTT ARE A F I.K T F .D DON’T DELAY. DELAY'S A R E DANGEIUM S. C O N S U L T A T IO N F R B B I f you can not c a ll, w rite for s> mpton blan k and clrctfc hir lnolnse 1 < en*s in Hamini. T H E ('. EH WO ( ’MINI E M E D I C IN E C21-U F ir s t S t .. Cor. .M orrison, Portland, Oregon. 1'lease Meat ion T h is Paper. GO. , l y i l E N w ritin g to a«lv ertiserg p le a se »V m en tio n th is papar. SSL T h e l i i n < l Y o u H a v e A l w a y s l l o u ^ l i t h a s Ix tr n o t h e s i g n a t u r e ot* Clnis, II. I ' l e t r l i r r , a n d lia s b e e n m a d e u n d e r liis p e r s o n a l s u p e r v i s i o n l o r o v e r :t«> y e a r s . A l l o w n o o n e t o d e e e l v e y o u in t h i s . C o u n t e r f e i t s , I m i t a t i o n s a n d “ <!nst-as_-jjood ’ • a r e h u t K x p o r i n i e n t s , a n d e n d a n g e r t h e h e a l t h o f C h i l d r e n —K x p e r i e n e e a g a i n s t e x p e r i m e n t . What is CA STO R IA C a s t o r i n is a h a r m l e s s s u b s t i t u t e f o r C a s t o r O il, I ’a r e - R o rle , D r o p s an il .S o o t h i n g S y r u p s . It, is I'lo u su n t. It eontains n e ith e r O pium , M orp hin e n o r o th e r N arcotic s u b s t a n c e . I t s a g e is i t s g u a r a n t e e , i t d e s t r o y s \> man s a n d a l l a y s F e v e r i s h n e s s . II « t i r e s O i a r r l m m a n d W i n d Colie . It. r e l i e v e s ' I 'e c t li i n g T r o u b l e - , «'tires C o n s t i p a t i o n and F latu len cy . I t a ssim ila te s t b e I'ond, r e g u la te s t h e S t o m a c h a n d 1 t o w e l s , g i x i n g h e a lt h « a m i n a t u r a l s l e e p . T h e C h i l d r e n ' s 1‘n n a e e a —T h e Moth« r ’s l ’r i e n d . The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 3 0 Years.