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About Estacada progress. (Estacada, Or.) 1908-1916 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1912)
s i n BULLETS 111 GROSS tea •not coffee It's the m ost de lightful B reakfast D rink you ever tasted - a n d the most wholesome an d invigorating. \ o j cannot but like its rich “ g rain y " flavor and spicy arom a. Ask ^ f lr o c „ for Three G ’s (COL DEN CRAIN GRANULES!) t f he hasn 't pot it he w ill yet it for you. I t ’s m ud fo r you 3 times a day. A n d rente m he- that there is no substitute for 3 C ’s. , Second-Hand Machin «*ry hour ht. »old aru ... exchanges!: m iri ne boiler«, sawmills. etc. The .1 K Martin Co.. 7tí Ul c l., Portland. Send for Slock Liât and prices. Machinery rwrr govfhnmt nt ia n d I*“ "* "*• a ll'a lfa lan d in Oroaon. 10. 40o r lb •c r e a , wilt out ir o n e y a n d w it h o u t i>ri«’H, to u fu rore« fe w w lu i M ill h I i . i re «•> i >«* iih ** o f put 11 uu water o n hh him ■JhHHK llO liH O N . ;> 2 b Ity Kxchu nge H id «, i ’ortl.m « The Retreat From Moscow. Napoleon's army for the Invasion of Russia numbered (¡60,000. Only twen ty thousand returned. During the re treat thousands of horses lay groaning on the route, while thousands of nnked wretches were wandering Ilka specters, who seemed to have no sight or sense, and who only kept reeling on till frost, famine or the Cossack lance put an end to their power or motion. T ry H la rln fl E y e It e n ie d y fo r H od, Watery Kyra and ornnuiuteU Kyciida. _______ _________ _ N o ¿ S m a rtin g -J u s t E y e C o m fo rt. Curious Lore. It has been remarked as a curloui rlrcumstHiico that Bonaparte and Wel lington were born in the same year, and that Burns and Hogg, the Scotch poets, were both born on Jan. 25; but It is more remarkable that the two greatest dramatic poets of modern Eu rope, Shakespeare and Cervantes, both died on the same day in the same year. April 23, 1G16. It Is further re markable that Shakespeare, like the great Raphael and Sobieskl, died on the anniversary of his birth.— From Fennell’s Shakespeare Repository, 1*4« A u t o m o b i l e Kyt* I n s u r a n c e n e e d e d a ft e i E xposure to Sun, W inds and Dust. M urine Ey« Rem edy fre e ly applied A ffo rd s R eliable Relief. N o S m a rtin g—Just E yo C o m fo rt—T r y M urine Mexican Rebels May Fire Into American Territory. Leader Says Mexican Consul Is Re cruiting Troops on American Side— Government Denies. Naval Forces Prepare fo Remain In Island Many Weeks. Washington, D. C.—-Naval officers are o f the opinion that their task of policing eastern Cuba will be a long one, for orders show that colliers are being made ready to carry supplies to the vessels in Cuban waters sufficient to meet their needs for weeks. The collier Hector is scheduled to leave Hampton Roads for Key West, and probably will proceed from there to Guantanamo. The collier Celtic is under orders to leave Boston within a fortnight, and her cruise also in all probability will end at Guantanamo. The commander o f the gunboat Pa ducah reports great uneasiness in San tiago and vicinity. Reports also came of ominous movements o f the insur rectos and of appeals for help from plantation owners. From one source came a rumor that Cuba itself had fostered the insurrec tion for certain political purposes, but that the movement had gone beyond its control. The State department knows nothing to confirm this rumor. There was talk at the War depart ment o f sending some army officer to Cuba to make an impartial investiga tion o f conditions there and if possi ble to act as an intermediary in re storing peace between the factions. It is the common belief that if in the end intervention in Cuba is a nec essity, there must be sweeping changes in the organic law o f the re public to guard against the recurrence o f conditions that have made the pres ent insurrection possible. El Paso, Tex.— Mexican inaurrectos would not hesitate to fire into Am eri can territory from Juarez if any troops recruited by the Mexican fed eral government on American terri tory attempted to cross the Rio Grande here. Colonel Pascual Orozco, Sr., father o f the rebel chief and head of the Juarez garrison, in this way re plied to the demand o f Colonel Steev- er, commander o f the department of Texas, that no rifie shota or bombs or shells must cross into the United States from Juarez at any time. Colonel Pascual Orozco said that while he would direct his men to avoid as far as possible firing into El Paso in case of fighting, yet if any men re cruited, as he alleges, in El Paso by E. C. Lorente, the Mexican consul here, composed the attacking force, he would feel justified in givin g his men no instructions. The Mexican government officials deny that any force has been enlisted by them on American soil. RATE R EDUCTION ORDERED. The arrest of General Campa, who is one o f the few rebels, it is ¿aid, whose aim is to help the poorer Medford Merchants Win Contention classes, is believed to have placed With Southern Pacific. General Orozco in jeopardy with his Washington, D. C.— The Interstate troops. Sixty picked men le ft Juarez for Chihuahua Sunday to form a per Commerce commission has ordered a reduction o f from 11 to 12 cents a sonal bodyguard. hundred pounds in class rates one to four, inclusive, on traffic over the C ALIFO R N IA IS FLOODED. Southern Pacific from Medford, Or., Thousands o f Acres Inundated, \yith to Hornbrook, Klamath, Ager, Mon - 4 , tague, Gazelle, Edgewood, Weed, Sis Great Loss. son and Dunsmuir, Cal. This reduc San Bernardino, Cal.— Flood scenes tion is based on the showing o f Med are common along the treacherous Col ford merchants that existing class orado Kiver. Through a dozen or rates complained o f are materially more breaks in the dykes between Old higher than class rates over the same Fort Mojave and Yuma, the flood- road and for similar distances in Cali waters are pouring over thousands of fornia. acres o f alfalfa fields and truck farms. Figures were produced to show that Lincolnville, the first town inundated, the Southern Pacific maintains two has been almost obliterated, and the classes o f rates, one on each side of pe iple o f Blythe and Randall are leav the Oregon-California line. The road ing their homes in boats. The entire contended that the higher rates in Palo Verde valley, one o f the richest Oregon were justified by the mountain in Southeastern California, is threat grades, but the commission found ened by inundation and the Imperial there was little difference between the valley, with products valued at many grades o f Southern Oregon and North millions, is said to be endangered. ern California. The new rates w ill go The high tide o f the tfoodB is not ex into effect July 16. pected for two weeks and while there is said to be no immediate prospect HOUSE FAVORS BORAH BILL. that the great river will break over and race again into the Salton Sea, Irrigation Committee Urges Home men are laboring to strengthen weak stead Measure Be Passed. places. Btwck Sho«p Nut Wanted. Australian wool growers have been officially warned by p.n English chain RAINS HEAVIEST KNOW N. her of commerce not to breed from black or gray sheep; to take the greatest care in selecting rams from Northwestern Railroad is Tied Up flocks as tree as possible from black for Long Time. hairs; to slaughter all black and gray Baker, Or.— The rains, which have limbs. been the heaviest known in this part o f the country, have caused much Lesson All Should Learn. damage. In the Snake river region Plutarch said to the Emperor Tro there have been more waterspouts jan: “ Let your government commence than have ever been known. The In your own breast, and lay the foun Connor creek and the Fox creek dation of It In the command of your bridges were washed out, and dams temper and passions.” Here come In on the Basche and Baker ranches de the words, self-control, duty, and con stroyed. science— S Smiles The Northwestern railroad is tied up for an indefinite time because dirt several feet deep has been washed on DAISY FI.Y the tracks for several miles. The injury to the farmers will amount to high in the thousands. The outbuildings o f the Winslow and Flick ranches in the Connor creek dis trict have been swept away and crops destroyed. Near Durkee the water has Brooklyn, N. T destroyed many thousands o f dollars' worth o f •crops. The roads in the As to Buying. Burnt river district are almost impas- Whatever we wish to buy, we ought sable and the alfalfa has been beaten first to consider not only If the thing flat on the ground. Lumbering has been abandoned in be flt for us. but If the manufacture of It bo a wholesome and happy one; the Muddy creek district because o f and If. on the whole, the sum we are the roads. The crops in this and the going to spend will do as much good Haines district are not advanced far spent In thlB v.ay as It would If spent enough'to be damaged. In any other way.— Ruskta. Kaiser Don’ t Appreciate Joke. Kiel, Germany— The crown prince o f Germany has run afoul o f his father again. This time he did so by having a boat built which he intended to enter in the coming yacht races against his father’s craft. Further more. 'he intended to command the yacht himself, put the crown prince figured without his parent. The kais Doctors Could Not Help Mrs, er showed himself master o f the situa tion by exercising his parental and T em pleton — R eg a in e d military authority and ordering hiB son to remain with his regiment at Health through Lydia E. Danzig. RECORD OF A GREAT MEDICINE Pinkham’s Compound. Hooper, Nebraska.— “ I am very glad A) tell how Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has helped me. For five years I suffered from female troubles so I wai scarcely able to do my work. I took doc tors’ medicines and used local treatments but was not helped. I had such awful bearing down pains and my back was so Weak I could hardly walk and could not ride. I often had to sit up nights to sleep and my friends thought 1 could not live long. A t my request my Husband got me a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- etahle Compound and I commenced tc take it. By the time I had taken the seventh bottle (py health had returned and 1 began doing my washing and was s well woman. Atonetim e forthreeweekl I did all the work for eighteen boarders with no signs o f my old trouble return ing. Many have taken your medicine after seeing what it did for me. I would not take $1000 and be where I was. You have my permission to use my name if It will aid anyone.’ ’ -M rs . S u s i e T e m p l e t o n , Hooper, Nebraska. ThePinkkam record is a proud and peer less one. I t is a record of constant vic tory over the obstinate ills o f woman—ills that deal outdespair. It is an established fact that Lydia E. Pinkham’s V e g e t a ble Compound has re stored health to thou sands of such suffer ing women. Why don’t you try it if you CUBAN 1 ASK D IFFIC U LT. 2000 Harvard Men Dine. New York— Two thousand sons o f John Harvard— members o f 67 Har vard clubs throughout the world— dined amid a wealth o f crimson decor ations in the ballroom o f the Hotel As tor, , Joseph H. Choate, o f the class o f ’62. presided. Theodore Roosevelt, ’80, was to have been one o f the speakers, but he had hurried away to Chicago. The speakers in cluded President Abbott Lawrence Lowell, o f Harvard; A. L. Mills, a Portland, Or., banker, who rs an over seer o f the university, and Gen. Wood. Ship Truckers Strike. Vancouver, B. C.— A large number o f Industrial Workers o f the World invaded the wharf where the blue- funnel liner Cyclops, just arrived from Liverpool via the Orient, was unloading and induced 80 truckers to demand an increase o f wages. The stevedoring company engaged other men but work was temporarily sus pended The men who went on strike have been getting 26 cents an hour. Nineteen Truck Horses Burn. Tacoma — Shortly after midnight Sunday a fire of unknown origin was discovered in the livery bam o f the Tacoma Truck company, and quickly destroyed that structure, together with sheds o f the Union Iron works. Nineteen truck horses were burned to death and approximately $25,000 prop erty damage done. ASHES COVER ISLAND 'CANARY IS PLUMP AND HAPPY Volcano Katmai Exterminates All Animal Life On Kadiak. Absent-minded persons sorely try i he patience of girls In the New Ro- < helle telephone office. Not long ago a woman confessed hrself subject to extreme forgetfulness and requested the duy operator on her exchange to ring her up every morning at nine o’clock. A week later she said: “ Central, what was It I wanted you to call me for at nine o’clock?” "I don’t know,” said the girl. “ You didn’t tell me. You Just asked me to call at nine o’clock.” “ Too bad,’’ said the woman. “I know there was something I wanted to do every morning at nine o’clock, but I can’t for the life of me think what It was.” The nine o’clock calls continued, however, and several days later the woman took central into her confl- dence again. “ I have found out why I wanted to be called,’’ she said. “ A friend had given me a canary and I wanted to make sure of remembering to feed It. The poor little thing la nearly starved. Hereafter when you ring won’t you Just say, ‘Feed the bird,’ and I’ll go straight and do It?” Central promised, and the neglected canary is now a plump and contented bird. Only Water Fit for Use Is Distilled By Revenue Cutter Manning— Nativas Panic-Stricken. Cordova, Alaska — Wireless mes sages received from the revenue cut ter Manning, in Kadiak harbor, and from the Alaska Packers’ association fishing stations at Karluk, Chignik and Naknek, said that there has been no report o f loss o f life on the island. No word has been received from the settlements on the mainland at the foot o f Katmai volcano, where the greatest suffering exists, i f any o f the people o f that section survived the eruption. Captain Kireland W. Perry, o f the Manning, reported no more eruptions have occurred and the air is slowly clearing o f the smoke and ash, the re turning light revealing in greater de gree the real horror and devastation wrought by the outburst of the fiery mountains. The refugees who were aboard the Manning have regained a certain amount of confidence with the return o f normal conditions in the air and are leaving the ship to endeavor to reach their former homes, which lie in ruins. The people on the island have found it difficult to make their way about, the ash in some places being from 20 to 30 feet deep. Nearly all the houses are in ruins and those that withstood the attack o f the hail of ash and stones are uninhabitable because o f the fine silt which drifted through every crevice, making useless the stores o f food and clothing. The wharf at Kadiak, at which the Manning has been lying, was kept reasonably clear o f ash by constant playing of the cutter’s fire hose. Only a small place was cleared and the roads are virtually impassable. The problem o f feeding the desti tute people is a serious one. Efforts are being made to reach the govern ment experimental farm near Kadiak, which was stocked with a large herd o f imported cattle and sheep, which, i f found in fit condition, will be used for food. The only water the people at Ka diak are using is that distilled from sea water by the Manning, all other supplies being useless because o f pol lution. A t the fishing stations of Karluk, Chignik and Naknek, no loss o f life occurred, but great damage was done by the fail o f ashes. Preparations were made at the fishing stations to take all on board the cannery tenders and seek safety at sea, but the people have decided to stay near their prop erties as long as conditions are en durable. It is feared that the fishing season at all stations affected by the ash will be a complete failure because o f the polluted water, large quantities of pure water being necessary to prepare the salmon for canning. Total darkness covered the entire section about the canneries, which are on the shore o f Shelikoff strait, for 40 hours. Washington, D C.— The house irri gation committee favorably reported the Borah bill which has passed the senate, directing that patents be is sued to all homesteaders on govern ment irrigation projects as soon as they comply with the homestead law and cultivate half their entry, the government to retain a lien upon the land to cover all unpaid water charges. This will enable reclamation settlers to get title in three years instead of waiting ten or more, as now required by law. An amendment requiring payment A U T O PARADE GORGEOUS. of 40 per cent o f the water charges before receiving the patent, was Out-of-Town Cars Win Three Firsts struck out. at Rose Festival. Cuban Troops Are Active. Portland — Three o f the highest, Havana— News from Washington, prizes in the annual Rose Festival au that orders for additional warships at tomobile parade were awarded to Havana have been countermanded has neighboring Coast cities, Pasadena, been received here with the liveliest Cal., taking the highest honors of Fes satisfaction, dissipating the peril of tival week. The prize winner was immediate intervention. designed by a woman. The Seattle The government continues to im Ad club’s entry took first prize for the press the fullest confidence in its abil best decorations with artificial flowers, ity to stamp out the insurrection. and the Lyle, Washington, Commer General Montelgudo, who is in com cial club won first honors in the class mand o f the Cuban troops in Oriente, for clubs and societies. Several other is so satisfied with m ilit c y conditions out-of-town entries received liberal there that he does not deem it neces and cordial applause along the entire sary to augment the forces now in the route. field with a contingent o f 8000 veter The parade was by far the largest ans offered by General Juan Mario ever held in connection with the Rose Menocal, ex-president o f the Veterans’ Festival, 500 cars participating. association. Government reports show that the Czar Unveils Statue. troops are sti II pursuing the insur Moscow— A monument to Alexander gents in an effort to make an envelop I II was unveiled Thursday by the em ing movement, but the insurgents are reported as threatening the city of peror in the presence o f two-score Guantanamo despite the presence members o f the ruling fam ily and dep there o f a strong force o f marines and utations from Bulgaria, Servia, and all parts o f Russia. Seventy-nine a contingent o f Cuban troops. wreaths were laid at the base of the monument. The event was one o f the Government Prepares to Aid. most brilliant in the reign o f Nicholas Washington, D. C.— The Federal II. Thirty regiments took part in the government is moving sw iftly for the march along the Moscow river, while relief o f the volcanic sufferers. Cap hundreds o f thousands o f Muscovites tain Bertboldt, commandant o f the stood at points o f vantage and cheered revenue cutter service, has issued or heartily. ders to rush the cutter Tahoma or Mc Culloch to the assistance o f the refu South Feels Earthquake. gees. Delegate Wickersham, o f A las Augusts, Ga.— Three distinct earth ka, and Senator Jones, o f Washington, quake shocks were felt here, at Co both introduced resolutions for the im lumbus, S. C, and Savannah. Ga., mediate appropriation o f $50,000 for early Thursday morning. Houses the relief o f the volcano victims. The were rocked and the sleeping inhab house adjourned before action on the itants roughly awakened. L ittle dam Wickersham resolution could be taken. age was done and no one was hurt. Here the shocks were felt more dis Rain and Athea Form Lya. tinctly on the hills about the city and Cordova, Alaska— Although five days in the residence quarter. There was have passed since Katmai volcano considerable alarm among ignorant burst forth in eruption, there has been classes, and before the last shocks had little relief here from the volcanic ceased many were at prayer. The v i smoke and ash which hang low over brations were east and west. the mountains. The first real danger here from the volcanic action was Mississippi Again Rising. made apparent when a heavy rain be Washington, D. C.— The floods in gan to fall, the water mixing with the Louisiana again have become serious, ash in forming sulphuric acid, which necessitating another appeal to the burned painfully whenever it came in army for aid. A message to the War contact with the unprotected parts department tells o f the breaking o f o f the bodies o f people on the every protection levee west o f Bayou, street. Ix>uisiana. from Labadiville to the Gulf o f Mexico, about 90 miles, cover Strikers Threaten Violance. ing almost every estate in the vicinity London— In an inflammatory speech o f the river. Thousands are home to the dock strikers Ben Tillett, the less, and unless help is sent immedi leadpr, made a violent attack on Ix>rd ately many will be suffering for food. Davenport, chairman o f the Port o f China Wants «0 3 ,0 00 .0 0 0. London, whom he declared responsible for the strike. He continued: “ The Peking— Premier Tang Shao Y i has employers want the government to informed the financial group repre turn out the soldiers to shoot you. I senting the powers that he required want to say that if there is any shoot 90,000.000 Uels ($63,000,000) during ing, I am going to take a gun and June. I f he does not obtain this, he shoot Lord Davenport.’ ’ The strikers says, he will consider himself free to attempted to hold up a meat convoy. borrow elsewhere. Absent-Minded Woman Discovers Why She Wanted Telephone Opera tor to Call Her. WAS SOMETHING LIKE A RUN Munchausen Tells About a Bit Sprinting He Witnessed In Scotland. of “ Talkin’ about runnln’,” remarked Hon. Ananias Munchausen, “ about the finest bit of sprintin’ I ever saw was up in Scotland the shootin’ season be fore last. I’d been out all day deer- shootin’, and had had most awful luck when I spied a whoppin’ great buck about eighteen hundred yards away. Takin’ a careful sight, I let fly. But, bless your soul, the instant my bullet touched him, and before it had time to penetrate his hide, that beast was off like a flash! “ I never saw two such evenly matched things as that deer and my bullet. For over half a mile they sped on together, neither gainin’ on the other, the bullet Just managin’ to keep in touch with the deer’s skin. At the end of a mile, however, the pace began to tell on the deer, and he faltered Just for a moment. ’Twas fatal. The bullet sped on, and the poor beast keeled over. He deserved his freedom If ever an nnmal did. He’d have got it, too, if he could have stuck out for another twenty yards, for that’s about as far as my rifle car ries.” W . L . DOUGLAS SHOES W . L. Douglm. make, .nd . .II . mors $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00 .hoc. than any other manufacturer in the world « 2 .5 0 * 3 .0 0 * 3 .5 0 * 4 .0 0 * 4 . 5 0 * * 5 JD 0 ^ FOR M EN, W O M EN AN D BOYS W .I j .Douglas $3.00 A $3.50 shot*» ar« worn by millions of meu,because t hey ure l lie b<*st in the world for the price W . L. Douglas $4.00,$4.r»0A: $5.00 shoes equal Custom lieiieh Work costing $44.00 to $8.4)0 W hy doe» W. L. Douglas make and sell more $3. GO, $3.50 and $4.00 shoes than any other manufacturer in the world ? BECAUSE : he stamps his name and price on the bottom and 1 guarantees the value, which protects the wearer against high prices and inferior shoes of other makes. BECAUSE : they gre the most economical and satisfactory ; you can save money by wearing W. L. Douglas shoes. BECAUSE: they have no ! equal forstyle, fit and wear. DON’T TAKE A SUBSTITUTE FOR W LDOUGlAS l\\6l If your dealer cannot supply W. L. Douglas shoes, write W. !.. Douglas, Brockton, Mass., for catakg. Shoes sent everywhere delivery charge* prepaid. A RECORD-BREAKING YEAR Willamette Valley Chautauqua Plans for Largest Crowd in 18 Years. “ The Chicago Operatic Co.,“ Lou J. Beauchamp,” “ Rev. Wm. Spur geon,” “ S. Platt Jones,” “ Mexican Troubadours,” “ Judge F. P. Sadler,” ‘ Fred Emerson Brooks,” “ Lee Emer son Bassett,” “ John Mitchell” are among the well known names noted on the program of the Willamette Valley Chautauqua to convene at Gladstone Park, Oregon City, Or., July 9 to 21, 1912. These are only a few of the features their booklet tells us about, and it looks as i f the 19th year of the Chautauqua would be the best yet Extensive improvemens are being made in the beautiful Gladstone Park, the directors evidently expecting a record breaking crowd. Even the P. R. L. & P. Co. has caught the spirit and is reballasting its branch line which leads into the park and thereby facilitate and improve its half hour car service from Portland and Oregon City. __________________ i f act C o lo r JUytlct* LtotL !£t.*§elem ^ P o r t la n d . O reg o n / ^ Rest dent and Day ochool to r Girls rh »m e o f Histsnt o f St.John Baptist ( K pi sc op» 1)1 ColiagisU. Academic and Elementary Departments. I Ma»lc Art. Elocution, Oymnasium. j For catalog addr.-»» T H E S lS T IiK S i I'E IU O K O ffic e 30, St. H elen s H a ll A Tonic, Alterative and Resolvent. The best remedy for Kidneys, L iver and Bowels. Eradicates Pimples, Eruptions and Disorders of the Skin. Purifies the Blood and give9 Tone, Strength and Vigor to the entire system. Advocates Leaves of Soap. A chemical friend of the Sclentlfla American suggests that a campaign be Started against the common cake of »oap. About 60 years ago there was ■old a form of soap 1 r travelers, coa- alstlug of a booklet, about two lnchea by four Inches, In which small leaves of soap paper saturated with soap were bound. Each leaf contained enough soap for one washing of th« Learn Him Something. “ Poets are born and not made,” said hands. It Is suggested that one might the young man with the pale, interest profitably dispense, through a penny- ing face and the long hair. “ Are they?” lu-the-slot machine, a paper towel I d replied his wife. “ Well, I ’ll show you which Is folded a sheet of soap paper, that they are made sometimes. I’ll for convenient use In public lava, make you watch the baby while I go lories. shopping this morning or you shall Red Cross Ball Blue trives double value for you» money, goes twice aa far aa any other. Aak youi never have another dollar that my grocer. father sends to me ” Saw Nothing of Value In Pearls. Be thrifty on little things like bluing. Don’t ao- When the army of Galerius sacked rept water for bluing. Ask for Red Cross Bail Blue, the extra good value blue. ihe camp of the routed Persians a bag of shining leather filled with pearls Nervous Children. The nervous child has In him tht fell into the hands of a private sol- making of the brilliant man, but he la flier, but the latter, while carefully generally spoiled in the making. You preserving the bag, threw away its must be patient and long-suffering contents under the impression that with the boy or girl of nervous tem anything that could not bo used for perament, else you will do your child UBoful purposes had no other value- great Injury. Never scold or tease The One Thing That Counts. Never hold the little one to ridicule. Some persons, I know, estimate hap Above all never use the whip. It is only by the greatest means that the piness by fine houses, gardens and best can be brought out of the highly parks—others by pictures, horsea Six Years Building a Clock. strung child, but when the propel money and various things wholly re Twenty thousand minute pieces o. course is taken such children ara mote from their own speeches; but when 1 wish to ascertain the real wood entered into the construction of wonderfully responsive. felicity of any rational man, I alwayl an elaborately ornamented Notre Dame Inquire whom he has to love. If J cathedral clock made by James Cal- When Your Eyes Need Care find he has nobody, or does not lov# way of Skowhegan, Me. This clock, rry Murine Eye Remedy. N o Sm arting— Feels which is finely carved, stands seven Fin e— A cts Q uickly. T r y it fo r Red, W eak, those he has—even in the midst of aL atery Eyes and Granulated Eyelids. Illu s his profusion of finery and grandeur feet and ten inches in height and took W trated Book in each Package. Murine is Mr. Calway six long years to complete. compounded by our Oculists not a “ Patent Med I pronounce him a being deep in ad icine” — but used in successful Physicians’ Prac vereity.— From Elizabeth Inchbaid’l In the upper story six folding doors tice for many years. Now dedicated to the Pub and sold by Druggists at 2oc and 60c per Bottle. “Nature and Art.” open every ten minutes and the apos lic Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 26c and 60c. tles appear marching in time to an M urine Eye R em edy Co., C h icag o Worshiped in Ancient Days. air played by a large music box that In the National Museum, Washing is governed by the clock, each one Industry Coming Into Its Own. ton, there is a meteorite weighing lg bowing before the Savior as they pass, Guayule was for years overlooked except the fourth one (which repre *r despised; its rubber content was 400 pounds. In the Yale collection is sents Peter), who turns his back upon considered of little or no value, and one weighing 1,635 pounds, and one the Savior, and the devil comes out when at last acknowledged this was at Amherst 437 pounds. Some sacred of the top of the clock and blows a ■aid to be inferior to other rubber stones, as the black meteorite wor shiped at Emesa, in Syria; the holy trumpet in honor of Peter. because It did not come from the The second story is in the form of tropics. Yet in spite of all guayule Kaaba of Mecca; and the great stone a mansion with double doors in front has become an important source of of the pyramid of Cholula, in Mexico; which also open every ten minutes. rubber supply, millions of dollars owe their sanctity to the belief that Lazarus appears at the rich man’s have been Invested in the industry, they had fallen from heaven. door and on bended knees asks for factories have been erected close to j Original of Sam Weller. charity, the dogs licking his sores, and the guayule fields and towns have The original of Sam Weller was the rich man stands in the door swing grown up for the‘operatives and field Sam or Samuel Vale, who was well ing his arm as if he were throwing laborers. __________________ crumbs from his table. All these mov Mother? w ill flm l Mrs. W inslow’ s Soothing known as a London comedian who able figures are run by machinery con Syrup the best rem edy to use for thoitckilU reu acted in the farce called “ The Board ing House” and subsequently at Cov nected with a time movement, so as lu r in g t^e teeth ing period. ent Garden theater. Sam Vale was to work on the minute. The bottom noted everywhere for the Wellerisms, The World’s Greatest 8lave. story is a very elaborately designed Aesop probably is one of th « most such as “ Come on, as the man said foundation of fine Inlaid work.— Scien noted slaves that ever lived. The to his tight boot.” “ I’m down on you, tific American. fables and stories he told have de as the extinguisher said to the can lighted mankind for twenty-five hun dle.” "Where shall we fly, as the Raising Cotton. dred years, and there Is no telling how bullet said to the trigger,” and “ Let Ever since the United States block much longer the world will continue everyone take care of themselves, as aded the southern ports early In the to enjoy them. Aesop was so de the donkey observed when dancing Civil war European countries have forced that for a long time his Oreek among the chickens.” Sam Vale died been trying to raise cotton in their master could not soil him. Finally in 1848. Asiatic and African possessions. In he was sold, and tho master found A Confession. half a century they have not succeed Mm so wise that he was Ret free. “ Well,” he said, “ it is— let me seel ed in doing enough to make any par —three years since we met crossing ticular impression upon the world's Hard Luck Feared. he ocean, isn’t it? Are you married cotton markets. The area of the Nile •‘You should lay aside something fo. “ No,” she sweetly replied, valley is very limited. Cotton of a a rainy day.” “ And have the roo! yet?” "again.’ short staple is raised in India, but loak and spoil it.” only in a moderate amount, and the T o B re a i in N e w Shoes. culture shows little tendency to in lw a y s shake in A lien ’*- Foot - Kaae, a p ow d er. crease. Russia has long produced in It A cures hot, sweating, aching, sw ollen feet, M e x ic a n her Asiatic possessions a moderate l ures corns, in grow in g n ail* and bunions. Al ill druggists and «h oe .st er es, 2 .>e. Dolit a ccep t amount of cotton, and the little dis any substitute. Sample mailed FREE. A d d ress pute over passports for American Jews Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. increased the desire of Russia to re Some Proof. duce its imports fronT this country, Hunt Secretary (to Inexperlencec. to which end the minister of agricul ture has just visited central Asia, but assistant, who is telling him, after run, FOR RHEUMATISM. he has returned convinced that little about some poultry claim)—“ But hov» can be done to increase cotton culture. do you know they ever had the fowls 1 Mrs. O liv e Huntington, N o rto n s,O re..sa ys: Did they show you the corpses?” As sistant— “ No. not exactly; but it’s all Mrs. Fairchild’s Distinction. Mrs. George W. Fairchild is among right, don’t you know, they showed the best gowned women in the con me the empty roosts ” — Punch. gressional set in Washington One of her dinner gowns is a model on “ I consider y o u r M exican M u sta n g L in im ent Die best o f linim ents. I h ave used i which the ceremonial robes of the it fo r different ailm ents and it a lw a y s summer will be built. It is a trained g a v e s a tisfa cto ry results. I t is e «p o '.illy g o o d in cases o f In fla m m a to ry Rheum a robe of heavy cream satin, with pan tism and a ll form s o f lameness. els of blue chiffon extending back, 25c. pride— 5Cc. $1 a b hobby— ottle at our D rug en Stores and Is our our iin Sc d j G fo r 'l yoare front and on the sides from the low now uur im-ceM, and ours iv th© b<.at palnleee work cut bodice and ending at the hem In to be found anywhere, t > m atter how mach yoa tassels of crystal and cut steel beads The diamond necklace which Mrs Fairchild wears with many of her Ayer’s Hair Vigor keeps the ceremonial gowns follows the prevail ing style In resembling a delicate pat scalp clean and healthy, tern of lace. It Is about three Inches destroys all dandruff, and In width and fits as snugly as a glove Mustang Linim ent Destroys Dandruff The Kentucky Cardinals. Redblrds, known technically as Ken tucky cardinals, were never known to be so plentiful as this spring, and It is no unusual thing to see gangs of ten to fifteen at one time. Heretofore they have been seen only In pairs, a male and a female. The male Is a beautiful bird of bright red, the female being of a more brownish tinge. Couldn't Escape. Clinton— Did you get In without your wife hearing you last night? Clubletgh No; and I didn't get In without my hearing her. either. v greatly promotes the growth of the hair. You will cer-, tainly be pleased with it as a dressing for your hair. It keeps the hair soft and smooth and promptly checks any tailing of the hair. It does not color the hair, and cannot injure the hair or scalp. Consult your doctor about these hair problems. Ask him what he thinks of Ayer’s Hair Vigor. I Painless Dentistry 5.00 m«KT an Mansis I l 'U H N T IIIIU II ■ m n u i 7 :s 8 Ps'nl««« Ï «tr’ t'o« iM T M ETHOD» A ll w o rk fu lly gu a ra n tee«! f o r f-fte e n yearn. W ise Dental Co.,me. Painless Dentists M i n t Building. Third and Washington P0RTIAM0 0*1 O flic « H t t r i a A M. to S F M. iundays. 0 te i F. N. U. No 25—' ! * W H E N w ritin g t»< a d v e r t i r » . Nal this paper.