Washington County news. (Forest Grove, Washington County, Or.) 1903-1911, November 30, 1905, Image 5

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    M A T T IN G S H E L P A R O O M .
* . |ITTn n . |
y
f
I
THE BLOOD
-
'
“ S. S. S. for the blood” has grown to be a
household saying. When the blood is out of order, or
needs treatment from any cause, this great remedy is the first thought of
and used by thousands of people all over the country, because it is superior
to all other blood purifiers. It is a purely vegetable remedy, and while it
penetrates the circulation and forces out all poison and morbid matter, it
also builds up the entire system by its fine tonic effect. During the win*
ter months the natural ave-
.
_ .
.
.
,, ,
,
,
„ t i_i*i
I was suffering from impure blood and a general
nues of bodily waste have run.down condfUon of tl£ Iystem. .1 had no ap-
become dull and weak and petite, was losing flesh, and an all-gone tired fee 1
tailed to perform their fuil lng that made me miserable. I began the use of
duty, the blood has been slug- S. S. S. and my blood was restored to its nor-
gish and an extra amount mal, healthy condition. My appetite retimed, I
of poisons and waste mat- increased in weight, that “ tirea feeling” left and
ters have accumulated in I was agaiu myself.
the system and been ab-
Columbus, Ohio.
V ic t o r S t u b b in s ,
«orbed by it. W ith the com-
Cor’ Barthman and Washington Avea.
in g of Spring and warm weather the blood is aroused and stirred to quicker
action and in its effort to throw off these acids and poisons the skin suf­
fers. Boils, pimples, blotches, rashes and eruptions break out and con­
tinue until the blood is cleansed and made pure. S. S. S. is the ideal remedy
for this condition; it clears the blood of all impurities, makes it rich and
strong and these skin troubles pass away. Rheumatism, Catarrh, Chronic
Bores and Ulcers, Scrofula, Contagious Blood Poison and all other diseases
of the blood are cured by S. S. S. Book on the blood and any advice de­
sired, free of charge.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC C O .. ATLANTA. GA.
G lo ry o f A n o t h e r K in d .
Si r John Furlbert, who has been
Identified with the National Red Cross
* ♦Society since Its organization in 1868,
and Is said to know more about Red
Cross and ambulance work than any
other man In Europe, is also an old
experienced volunteer.
Soihe years ago, as he relates In his
recent book, “ In Peace and W ar." Sir
John accompanied the British volun­
teers to Belgium, where, encouraged
by the sight o f many Belgian com­
rades with bemedaled breasts, some of
Y the Britons were Inclined to follow
1
their example, and consequently re-
'
quired to be closely inspected.
One day Sir John spotted a man on
parade who astonished him by the
number of his medals. He was evi­
dently flattered by Sir John’s notice,
and swelled out his chest quite no­
ticeably.
“ You seem to have seen consider­
able service,” observed the knight. “ In
^ w h a t wars have you been engaged?”
*
“ Bless you, I'v e never been In a
war,” returned the resplendent mem­
ber o f the citizen army. “ My father
and I were awarded these medals at
agricultural shows for a special breed
o f pigs, for which we are famous.”
C lr c u m s t a n t l a l E v i d e n c e
A t a lawyer’s dinner the subject of
circumstantial evidence was discuss­
ed. One lawyer, says the New York
Tribune, said that the best Illustration
o f circumstantial evidence as proof
was In a story he had recently heard.
A young and pretty girl hud been
out walking. On her return her moth­
er said:
"W here have you been, my dear?”
"Only walking in the park,” she re­
plied.
“ With whom?” pursued her mother.
“ No one, mamma,” said the young
girl.
“ No one?” her mother repeated.
“ No one,” was the reply.
“ Then,” said the older lady, “ ex­
plain how it is that you have come
home with a walking-stick when you
started with an umbrella.”
A L e a p - Y e a r H in t.
“ Do you know. Miss Clara,” »aid
young Singleton, the other eveuing. “ that
your face reminds me of a perfect mir­
ror?”
"Hoe» it?” she queried. “ And why,
pray?”
“ Because,” he answered, “ it reflects
nothing but the truth.”
“ Oh!” she exclaimed, in a tone that
savored of disappointment, “ I thought
the answer would be altogether differ­
To Break In New Shoes.
ent.”
A lw ays shake in A lle n ’s Foct-Ease, a powder.
“ What did you expect me to say?” he
■Ttcurea hot, sweating, aching, swollen feet.
A ’nres corns, in g row in g nails and bunions. At asked.
“ I thought,” continued the blushing
all druggists and shoe stores, 25c Po n ’t accept
any substitute. Sample m ailed FREE. Address maid, “ that it was becau^ every time
A llen 8. Olmsted, I e Roy, N. Y.
you looked in my face you saw your
own.”
And the next morning she announced
H is E xcu se.
“ Ah-hah, squire!” chuckled H i Spry, her engagement at the breakfast table.
the village wag and cut-up, upon en­
T h e V it a l Q u estio n .
countering the old codger next morn­
The teacher o f the class in history
ing after the dute of the appearance
wan describing to the children the
of the greatest show on earth. “ Ketch-
opening of some o f the ancient tombs
ed ye In a yarn! Told me ye was goin’
in Egypt, and enumerating several c-f
to take boy to the circus and I seen
tbe interesting antiquities therein dis­
e right smack up on the tip-top seat
F l i last
t s night, without a single sign of a covered.
“ To show you how wonderfully
boy with ye!”
tinny o f those things have been pre­
"Took the boy I used to be, years
served,” she said, “ I may mention that
and years ago!” returned the veteran,
crabbedly. “ I ’m in my second child­ in one of the oldest of those tombs a
jar o f honey was found. It could not
hood, golram y e !” — Puck.
have been less than four or five
thousand years old, and yet in that
W o r l d ’» S to c k o f G o ld .
i jar o f honey was a flea, in perfect
The amount o f gold in Europe when preservation.”
America was discovered is believed
“ Was it alive?” asked one o f 'he
^Atot to have exceeded $225,000,000. In little girls, with a breathless Interest
^Tlie 404 years until 1896 the world's not entirely unmixed with alarm.
production Is estimated at $9,000,000,-
N o t th a t K in d o f a B ir d .
000— half of which was added to the
money supply. Including the esti­
Most travelers who have gone Into
mate for 1905, in the ten years begin­ the wayplaces o f the Far West have
ning with 1896, nearly $3,000,000,000 brought back clear remembrances of
In gold has been mined— almost a the voices o f the sure-footed little pack-
third as much as during the preced­ burros which go out there under the
ing 404 years. This despite the fact pseudonym of “ Rocky Mountain ca­
that the Boer w ar lor two years closed naries.”
t o e Transvaal mines. The production
The meaning o f the phrase Is not
ff. 190» was $325,000,000; in 1904, always so well known to those who
$350,000,000 and for 1905 it is esti­ have always lived East. So It hap­
mated at $400,000,000. The world’s pened that a Boston woman, who was
stock o f money gold in 1897 was ap­ Introducing n young Denver music stu­
proximately four and a quarter bil­ dent to her guests’recently, caused no
lions. By the end of the present year little confusion when she said:
It Is estimated that it w ill be almost
“ And now, ladies. Miss Converse,
Hjx billions— an increase o f nearly 50 our little Rocky Mountain canary, will
sing for us.”
per cent in nine years.
T h e K in d Y o u H a v e A lw a y s B o u g h t has b o rn e th e signa­
tu re o f C bas. I f . F le tc h e r , a n d lia s b e e n m a d e u n d er his
p erson a l su p ervision fo r o v e r 3 0 years. A l l o w n o on e
t o d e c e iv e you in this. C o u n te rfe its , Im ita tio n s a n d
“ J u st-a s-g o o d ” a r e b u t E x p erim en ts, an d e n d a n g e r th e
h e a lth o f C h ild ren —E x p e r ie n c e a g a in s t E x p e r im e n t.
<
What is CA STO R IA
C a sto ria is a h arm less su b stitu te fo r C a sto r O il, P a r e ­
g o ric , D ro p s a n d .Soothing Syrups. I t is P lea sa n t. I t
con tain s n e ith e r O piu m , M o rp h in e n o r o th e r J ia rco tic
substance. It s a g e is its g u a ra n tee. I t d es tro y s W o r m s
and a lla ys F everish n ess. I t cu res D ia rrh o ea an d W in d
C olic. I t re lie v e s T e e th in g T ro u b les , cu res C on stip a tio n
a n d F la tu le n c y . I t a ssim ilates th e F o o d , re g u la te s th e
Stom ach a n d B o w e ls , g iv in g h e a lth y a n d n a tu ra l sleep.
T h e C h ild r e n ’ s P a n a c e a —T h e M o th e r 's F r ie n d .
,The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
Japanese V a r ie t y o f G re a t V a lu e in
A d o r n in g a Boom,
There was once a time when mat­
ting meaut a covering for tlio floor
consisting o f mi unbroken succession
o f dark and white squares that made
the floor look like a gigantic checker­
board. it was heavy and stliT and
shiny, was fastened down with big
double clamp tacks and bulged in nice
little hillocks at stated intervals.
It
had a “ best room” smell, strongly sug­
gestive of horse hair furniture and big
four-post beds, and was always asso­
ciated with long, hot summer after­
noons. Time and fashion, assisted by
the Japanese, have wrought such
changes that nowadays matting is one
of the most satisfactory and artistic of
household furuishiugs.
The old checkerboard patterns are
still to be seen and are preferred by
some people, but the materials are
as with joyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play— when in health
much finer In texture and more easily
— and how conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor
handled than the old-fashioned kind.
The regular Japanese matting, how­
life they enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and
ever, is really a thing of beauty, and
the
wholesome diet of which they should partake. How tenderly their health
besides being used as a covering tor
should be preserved, not by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of
floors is put to other uses not dreamed
o f by the methodical housekeepers of
every medicine of an injurious or objectionable nature and if at any time a
the good old times, who put down
remedial agent is required, to assist nature, only those of known excellence
their strips o f shiny squares In May
should be used; remedies which are pure and wholesome and truly beneficial
and took them up In September or Oc­
in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs, manufactured by
tober.
This Japanese matting, while not
the California Fig Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs has come into general favor in
particularly inexpensive, costing as it
many
millions of well informed families, whose estimate of its quality and
does 75 cents a yard, or 70 cents If
excellence
is based upon personal knowledge and use.
purchased In the piece o f forty yards,
has the advantage o f wearing remark­
Syrup of Figs has also met with the approval of physicians generally, be­
ably well. It Is soft and pliable, anil
cause they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform
when the strips are sewed together, us
all reputable physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs, obtained,
they always should 'be, the matting
by an original method, from certain plants known to them to act most benefici­
may be laid ns smoothly as a carpet.
For sunier use particularly there Is
ally and presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Californian
nothing more satisfactory than this
blue figs are used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret rem­
typical product of the orient, with its
edy
and hence w e are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do not
light background and the big. vague-
looklng flowers done in indefinite pink i
approve of patent medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication.
and blues and reds, with probably only
Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup
one design to the yard, thus giving an
of
Figs
always has the full name of the Company— California Fig Syrup Co.
effect o f space and naturally of cool­
— plainly printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in
ness and harmonizing well with rugs
o f any description. For carrying out a
bottles of one size only. If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty
Japanese effect the matting Is used to
cent
size, or having printed thereon the name of any other company, do not
cover walls.
accept it. If you fail to get the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects.
It is tucked on at the top and bottom
anil between the widths are run strips
Every family should always have a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial
o f n contrasting color, covering the
for
the parents and the children, whenever a laxative remedy is required.
seams and giving the appearance of
panels. Owing to its flexibility this
matting is also largely used in upnol-
8tering summer furniture. Settees and
settles, porch chairs and other pieces
A H a n d y M a id .
A s She Is S p o k e n .
Never k i c k nor s c r e a m a t a horse, not
o f seml-outdoor furniture are made
“ Are you going to take that little
Mrs. De Vere— Professor, I'm afraid j e r k the b i t in his m o u t h .
very attractive when covered with it. trip with me I spoke about last my waltzing is not perfect. Do you
•—Brooklyn Eagle.
week ?”
think I ought to take a few more les­
sons?
“ I haven't thought about It.”
F R E N C H D O M E S T IC IT Y .
“ Well, think o f it this week, will
The Dancing Master— Will, madame
you?”
be so kind us to show me how she
F a m ilie s A r e N o w h e re M ore U n ited
"Yes, If I think ubout It, I ’ ll think executes ze movements?
than They A r e in France.
Mrs. De Vere (to her maid)—Marie,
Curiously enough, one of tlieir about it.”
“ By the w a j, I saw you on the show the professor how I waltz.— De­
greatest qualities, domesticity, is about
the very last tiling that foreigners of street the other day and you never troit Tribune.
f f l ïM
M o th e r »w ill And Mr». Window's Soothing
any nation ever think them capable noticed me.”
“
I
never
noticed
you.”
—
Puck.
Syrup the best rem edy to use for their ch ildren
of, says a Fans correspondent of the
W
J o y T h e y B r in g
T o E v e r y H o m e
h a t
AGAINST
T H E STORM
Loudon Globe. And yet In no country
in the world does one see families so
united as in Franca The heurtless-
ness of the French marriage system
is often commented upon, and yet
French marriages turn out, on the
whole, Just as well as any other, if
not better.
French parents under­
stand that in bringing children into
the world they undertake a responsi­
bility, and from the moment a girl Is
born her “ dot” is begun to be hoard­
ed up. Then when site arrives at a
marriageable age u young man of
somewhat about her own age and so­
cial position and possessed o f a sim­
ilar fortune Is searched for by friends
and relatives, and when found a mar­
riage is "arranged.” I have known
one woman who bitterly complained
o f thus being thrown into the arms of
a stranger, but only one. And she—
although she complains about the
want of romance of her young days—
lias made a most admirable w ife and
mother, and certainly a useful mem­
ber o f society.
French husbands and wives are
usually the very best o f friends ill
the world, seconding each other in
whatever state of life they happen to
be, and considering the bringing up
mid marrying off of their children ns
things o f the very greatest importance.
I have before me a letter received the
other day from an old friend, now a
widower, announcing the mnrriage of
one o f his two daughters. Curiously
quaint to Engl'sh ears sounds the man­
ner o f his announcement: “ Aujourd'-
bui Je vlens vous fa ire part dm*
mnrlage de ma fllle Marie avec M----- .
C'est un charmant Jeune homine dont
je connais la fnmllle depuis longtemps
et qul me presente toutes les assur­
ances de bonheur qne Je puis sou-
halter.”
I can harriiy imagine an
English father announcing his daugh­
ter’s marriage in these terms!
Of
course, during the engagement the
young man and bis “ flaneee” will not
have many opportunities o f becoming
better known to each other, as they
will never lie left for one moment
alone together. But that, as experi­
ence has proved, is no reason why
their marriage should not turn out to
be a very happy one.
T r e e » th a t
F u r n is h W a t e r .
No one need die o f thirst In An*
tralia if eucalyptns trees are near. Bv
cutting a sapling into sections o f about
ten feet and standing them perpendic­
ularly with the small endi down half
a pint o f water may be obtained in
fifteen minutes.
D e c e p tiv e A p p e a r a n c e .
" I t doesn't pay to bank on appear­
ances,” remarked the w ist guy.
"T h at’s right,” agreed the simple
mug. "Nonjetimes a fellow wears a
yachting cap who actually owns a
yacht."— Philadelphia Record.
THERE IS Hit
PROTECT®
THE Wp«
M ike
nmsiüam
d u rin g the teeth in g period.
r i T Q Permanently Cored. No fit»or nervousness
r i l u after Ural day’s u»ei,fI>r.Kll»e’sl,reat Nerve
Restorer. Send for I rev S .* trial bottle and trei tlse.
Dr. it. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 A n b U l, Philadelphia F a
W o rd to the W iee,
A fter a swing around the circle the
happy couple had settled down lu a
cozy flat.
One morning as she took her cus­
tomary place at the breakfast table the
bride placed a large revolver by the
side of her plate.
"W -why, my dear,” stammered the
astonished husband, "w -what does
that mean?”
“ It means, George,” replied her
brldelets, “ that we have biscuits of
my own construction for breakfast anti
that no adverse criticism will be toler­
ated.”
H e'd Do the Rest.
“ Darling,” queried the young man
with the noisy tie, “ do you love me
well enough to dwell in a furnished
room and live on bread and wuter a ft­
er we nrc married?”
“ Y-yes, I think so,” she replied.
“ And, say, dearest,” he continued,
“ Is your er-salury ns typewriter large
enough to enable you to furnish tbe
room and the bread?'
For coughs amt colrt« there is no better
medicine than Piso’s Cure for Contuufp-
tion. Price 25 cents.
Most of the farms in Denmark are
from 5 to 2."» acres, and are owned by
the peasantry. About half of the land
is in oats, hay, pasture and root crops
for the horses, milch cows and sheep.
$100 Reward» $100.
In proportion to her size, Denmark has
The readers of this paper w ill be pleased to more cattle than any other country in
learn that there is at least one dreaded disease Europe.
that science has been able to cure in all its
stages, and that is Catarrh. H all’s catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure know n to the
medical fraternity, catarrh being a constitu­
tional disease, requires a constitutional treat­
ment. H all's Catarrh Cure is taken internully,
acting directly upon the blood and mucous
surfaces of the system, thereby d stroying the
e, and f givin
'
foundation of the disease,
g the pa­
tient strength by building up the constitution
and assisting nature in doing its work. The
proprietors have so much faith in its curative
powers that they oiler One Hundred Dollars
for any case that it fails to cure. Send for lint
of testimonials.
. ^
Address.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Bold by druggists, 75c.
H airs Family Pills are the best.
—
SOSTON NEW r o u
CHICAGO
TO WE« CAHAMAIt CO.LMtM.TOIOITO. UN.
£ O U C M T / £7 A/
C lip this out, return to us with the names
and addresses o f y o u rse lf and two of your
frie n d s, and the date w hen yo u w ill probably
e nter a business college, and we w ill credit
y o u w ith $5.00 on our $65.00 scholarship.
O u r school offers exceptional advantages to
students o f Business, Shorthand, E n glish, etc.
B est I nstruction —L owest T uition
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE 10— IT'S FREE
THE M ULTNOM AH
BUSINESS INSTITUTE
ee
yPVPISO 'S C U R E T O N
■ ¡ | CURES
| | | WHERE
| | | A n l l « USE
i i i i FAILS.
iiiiiM
I Best Cough syru p. T a n te « (¿«aid. Uae
In tim e. Hold by Unnurt-ts
-*?: C O N S U M P T I O N
s ix t h
M. A ALBIN, PRCS.
» t .
P ortland , O re .
e
P. N. U.
Y
T T r ili:N w riting to H«tver&Isers plo aio I
montiti
1
Jon ttiig p a p e r.
No. 44
\\ »■ do crown an 1 hr t!g -work without |>a n.
Our is y «r.V e x p r.rmr * In pinto work on-
ables us to fit jrciur mouth com for tab v. I>r.
W. A. \V iso has found a *alo w ay to i>xtra<t
leetli a* s'»iut*'ly without pairi. Dr. T. P.
W ise is an export at go <1 tilling and crown
and britlgpwork.
E x tra ct'll^ ir.nt when
plates <>r oridgcx are < rd rni.
D id n ’t L ik e th e Sam ple.
A Harvey county (Kansas) widower
took hi* second wife- home and intro*
duced her to the children by saying: j
•'This is your new mamma/'
They looted at her critically and the
youngest blurted out: “ Is that the best
you could do, papa?"— New York Trib­
une.
_
] ale
BYALLTHE ;
i
IEST DEALERS '/J/rnO»
A. J. TOWER CO. ESTABLISHED 1836
- &,
1 90 5
'-/jk
1
W B
4P j
V#.
WISE BROS.
J
P L
DENT I S T S
F a 'Ln g Kid«., T h T d and Washington Htx.
Open ovenlriKR till 9 «.'• lock. Hu inlays Iron»
9 to 12. Or Mam *129.
dr . w. a . wist
.ir
o r . t . p . w is e .
Compare
Piilsbury's Vitos with other cereal* (
you will instantly recognize
P IL L S B U R Y P U R IT Y
In the rich, whits color of
Hammer blows, steadily ap­
plied, break the hardest rock.
Coughing, day after day, jars
and tears the throat and lungs
until the healthy tissues give
way. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral
stops the coughing, and heals
the torn membranes.
which is actually Ihe ’'Meat -* the V/h«*t
It is ths white heart ot Ihe wheat
kernel, sterilized. Nothin, added;
no tiling taken away.
• 'I always keep Ayer** Cherry Pectoral In
the bonne. It gire « perfect relief whenever
any of u« hare roughs or hard cold«. I hare
used it for a great many yer»rs and ao know
all about
MR*. M a r t o k k r t b a n . Varya-
T ry th is C o m m o n Sense Breakfast Food and you w ill never change
Made byJ.C Ayer Co . Lowell, Mesa.
Also manufacturers o f
5 APSAPA 0 LLA.
PILLS.
■ a : « >100*.
•t I* H CALTHFU L—SUBSTANTIAL— ECONOMIC*).
.A 2-POUND PAC KAG E M AKES 12 POUNDS C O O K E D -S ee the Economy
nice 2 * CENTS.
—
4 r A r o u r G ro cer T o - D o y
-
P ILLSB UK Y.W A SIIR LIK N FLO UR MILL CO . Ltd, M ln n.ap.il., M i n »