Image provided by: Washington County Cooperative Library Service; Hillsboro, OR
About Forest Grove press. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1909-1914 | View Entire Issue (April 18, 1912)
F a r m e r s a n d M e rc h a n ts Write us for our cash offer on your arm and Dairy Produce. If we on’t hardle it will refer you to re- able buyer. PEARSON-PAGE CO. P ortlan d, Oregon. BDED CTAMPQ Feals, S ten cils and Brass B D t l \ j l n i i i r o S ign s. Celluloid B u ttons Ribbon P »dires. Good Good». Quick S e r v i» , d for com plet« CaUdoirue N o. 26. Acme Stamp -kfc 1015 A S t . Tacoma. W»»h. Second-H and Machin ery b ought, sold and _ exchan ged : e n g in e s . saw m ills, etc. The J. E. M artin Co.. 76 1st , Portland. Send for S tock List and prices. achinery RTLAND FREE EMPLOYMENT BUREAU HI fu rn ish you any kind o f h elp you w an t, m ale [female, skilled or u nsk illed , farm , saw m ill, log- g or any m iscellan eou s labor. Call, w rite or me No fees o f any k ind charged in th is office, n es— A 5624; Main 3555. 215 Second St. PortLu»!. Or. WOOL & MOHA R, HIDES & PELTS Ì Wrtle for prices and shippae lags. ■ W e Wanl A t H Yon Hare. T H E H. F. N ORTON CO M PA NY . 313-315 F r o n t S t. P o rtla n d , O re. J OWARD E. BURTON - Asoayer an d Chem ist, I L eadv.Ile, Colorado. Specim en prices: Gold, liver. L ead. Î1. G old, S ilver. 75o; G old, 50c: Zino a: Copper, $1. M a ilin g en v e lo p es a d f u ll p r i c e l is t int o n a p p lic a tio n . C on trol and U m pire work so cited. R e fe r en ce : Carbonate N ational Bank. r Reindeer and Yak for Alaska. symbol is c e n t u r ie s old Swastika’« Origin Goes Back Beyond the Known Hlttory of the | “We have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla for a spring tonic ard as a blood puri- Human Race. | tier. Last spring I was not well at all. ; When I went to bed I was tired and More than 3,000 years ago was this nervous and could not sleep well. In strange cruciform symbol, known as the morning I would feel twice as tired; my mother got a bottle of the Fylfot cross, ! i Hood's Sarsaparilla, which I took. I reverenced In In felt like a new person when I had fin dia. It is a sacred ished that bottle. We always have of Hood's medicines in the house.” symbol in the some Hilvey Roselle. Marinette, Wis. tombs of Egypt | There is no ‘just as good" medicine. and in the cata Insist on having Hood's. combs of Rome. It | Get it today in usual liquid form or is graven on the chocolated tablets called Sarsatats. prehistoric tem ples of both the Parchment From the Greeks. easiern and western hemispheres. The Greeks of Pergamus are said to The heralds of the middle ages bla have prepared parchment from the zoned it on the shields of warriors. skins of the goat or sheep. They Today It Is used as a mystic symbol were curried, deprived of all fat. thin among the secret societies which ape ned uniformly by the knife, dyed, or the form, but have lost the soul, whitened, and finally rubbed down which animated the brotherhood of with pumice stone to a smooth and those ages. Modern heralds term It even surface. Called pergamenunt gammadlon, and crux gammata, con from the city of Its origin, the new ma sidering It as composed of a four-fold terial became “parchment” in the Eng repetition of the Greek gamma. The lish tongue.—National Magazine. Buddhists call It “Swastika,” or In the Missed Heaven for a Penny. Pali form, "Sutl,” meaning “It Is One of the most curious stories ot well,” or “So be it,” and It Is the sym bol of resignation. Its use extended a man down on his luck Is Clephan frcSa 4he earliest day to the present. 1 Palmer's tale of the poor fellow who It Is found on early Hindoo coins and missed heaven for want of a penny, seals and is used today by women j Weary of the struggle for life, he went both as an ornament and as a charm to bed and turned on the gas tap In against evil, few, however, being ) a well closed room. Just as his feet were on the threshold of the mansion aware of Its origin or significance. above the gas ran out, and there was not a penny In the house to put In the W IT C H ’S C A U LD R O N . slot.—London Chronicle. The reindeer used to be known chiefly In the Christmas picture book, while the South American yak Is still known chiefly through his occasional visits with the circus. The scarcity of game, and therefore food for flesh eating dogs, Is reviving a demand in An attraction at Frensham church, Alaska for herb-eating beasts of bur four miles south of Farnham Station, den. Reindeer are being shipped west England, is an old from Labrador, and it is hoped also to witch’s cauldron get some yak from the Andes to help of great antiquity. out. _______________ As a matter of D O N 'T B U Y W A T E R . fact, an account of it appeared in When you buy bluing for your the Gentleman’s laundry work, get RED CROSS BALL Magazine of 1793. This cauldron is a BLUE. A pure solid ball of blue, not huge copper vessel with a diameter of a bottle of colored water. Used in thousands of homes for 20 33 Inches and a height of 18 inches, years. Makes clothes pure white. Its rounded bottom resting on a great Price, 10 cents. AT ALL GROCERS. iron tripod, giving it a height of 28 Inches. Legend tells how the ancient Revolutionized Fire Fighting. cauldron used to belong to Mother Steam revolutionized fire fighting, Ludlam, an old hag who had the repu as it did many other interests. It took tation of olng her worst in the way of th e romance from it, and put efficiency brewing storms. Ultimately a bold Into It. The giant steam got behind person of Frensham carried off the the aqueducts and forced streams vessel, placed it In the church, wash through pipes and lio3e with g re a t ed it out with christening water, and power. Firemen continued to “ run thus crippled old Mother Ludlam's w ith the macheen,” b u t it was a hose power. reel, I9th century Invention. A N C IE N T R ELIC . Real Optimism. A real optimist hopes for the best, So quickly has the evolution from even when his son marries a chorus rush torches to electric light taken girl. place that one I cannot reconcile the existence of i such relics as our s q u ir r e l illustration de .THE BRAND THAT KILLS r U l w V I l scribes. It is sim ply a torch ex D e s tro y s S a g e R a ts, S q u irre ls , G o p h e rs a n d P r a ir i e D ogs. R e q u ire s n o m ix in g o r p r e p a r a tinguisher—a serv t i o n —A lw a y s re a d y fo r u se . D e a d lie s t o f a ll. Y o u r m o n e y b a c k i f n ot a s c la im e d . ant of the days C l a r k s , W o o d w a r d D r u g C o ., P ortlan d , Ore. w h e n 1 Inkboys served for electric lights. This par ticular one is fixed on the doorjamb of a club in the quaint capital of Lanca —T h e prreat sk in re ju v e n a to r, if you h a v e sallow shire, and just above it, hanging over s k in , w rin k le s, p im p les o r ro u g h n e s s o f th e face or a rm s , th e ap p lic a tio n of F U C H I w ill b rin g back the center of the door, is an electric th e glow an d fre s h n e s s o f y o u th . P r p a c k a g e . $1. are lamp, thus giving a striking ex- (B ra n c h ) Fuchi la b o ra to ries. S uit 9, 342 1-2 W ash ample of the advance of lighting meth in gton S t., Portland, Ore. ods.—London Tit-Bits. WOODLARK FU C H I a k D r .W m .P f u n d e r ’ s , f r \ OREGON bloc T d PU R If I [ R C U T YOUR OW N H AIR. Some men would almost as soon sit In a dentist’s as in a barber's chair. These men shave themselves, and wish they oould mow their own hair. A few of We Make Yoa Competent to Earn them have tried $25 to $50 per Week this, but with dis to 8 week*. W e g iv e com p lete astrous results. course in d riv in g , rep airin g, etc . a ll k in d s o f au to m o b iles. Every stu d en t g e ts personal Now, however, comes F. E. Fookes of a tte n tio n and a ctu a l road ex p e r ie n c e . W r ite fo r term« 1617 East Baltimore street, Baltimore, ' and gets a patent for an Invention of Rflmenl Aule School A Ga»«e. la n d M orrison S ts.. his which will enable any man to cut P j iA I o rtla n d . Ore. his own hair without making a hash of it. It consists of a comb attach ment that may be placed upon any ra zor. The hair Is then combed with the razor, which cuts off the enda of ¡VÂLÏfslROS ;|i] the hair at precisely the right length. A T o n ic , A lte ra tiv e a n d R e s o lv e n t. The b est r e m e d y fo r K id n e y s , L iv e r a n d B ow els. E r a d ic a t e s P im p le s , E ru p tio n s a n d D is o rd e rs o f t h e S k in . P u rifie s th e B lood a n d g iv e s T o n e , S tr e n g th a n d V ig o r to th e e n t ir e sy ste m . DAIRY FEED! 8choolboy Light, on History. A Scotch child, misled by an Eng BEST AND CHEAPEST^ lish teacher’s pronunciation of bricks, made It clear In a written paper that Hi!__________ LLLll the task set the Hebrews was to make Ask your dealer for it. If he doe. trousers for Pharaoh without straw. not handle it drop us a postal card and we will furnish you the name of The silly question In relation to quite little boys. “Compare Caesar and Al a dealer who does exander," produced from one bewll- 1 dered boy this table: Caesar, Caesarior, Caesarimus. ALBERS BROS: Alexander, Alexandrior, Alexandria- ilmus. •j; MILLING CÒipi The same examination—th« en trance to a great public school—sup jjPORTLAND, OPIGOtf plied a delightful historical mixup. “What were the circumstances of Sir Walter Raleigh's Introduction to Queen Elizabeth?” Queen Elizabeth was riding one day from Kenilworth to Coventry with nothing on and Sir Walter Raleigh met her and offered I , our pride—otir hobt>7-«*r t t u d j to r ju m ru u u * her his cloak.”—Glasgow Herald. Bow m t e i i w » , *n-i tier. i . th e b w p .ln l'» . Painless Dentistry to be frond nnrnhere. n r m atter how mnon »00 ---- C o m p a re o u r P r ices. ------W« finish plate and t>r<i«c work ’of tw»c 1 of tow» patron* in Iona day U desired. Painletu a i t raction (free when p a w or bridge work i* order • ed. C w i i.it >.» tree. BeltrCrrwr, $5.00 Z f t B r i d n T w '* 0 0 Captured by Eagles. Sage hena abound In the Powder River Valley of Oregon. Like the ! grouse family, these birds fly with great swiftness, but they have ene mies that are swifter still. A man driving along started a covey of aage 6.4 Jim«» 100 hens, which flew down the valley. Sud Enamel FlSiitf* 1 . 0 0 denly an eagle, which had been be Sihmr Fllinft .50 hind a rock, rose up under the birds. 5.00 They naturally rose higher in the air, and then another eagle swooped down from above. The terrified birds scat Pant«.« Eat-’I'm. . a s w > w * .......... - - < tered in all directions, but the eagles ■ ia T a rraaot M -urn iim— ■ Wl each singled out a .hen. and, like a I w o r k f u l l , *wmr n teed t o r fit t e « » j «maw- W i s e D e n t a l C o . , a * . shot from a gun, seized the luckless victims, and the pair flew off to a Painless Dentists neighboring cliff to din* tfitfne Kuilrffft* TkH and W u N V tM POflTlAHO C«% S s L la u t: S A B . ta I » . IL H a ta » I N i Qood Spring Tonic HUNGRY? But afraid to eat — Afraid of the distress that al ways follows. Cheer up Get a bottle of HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS today and notice the great im provement in your general health. It has benefkted thousands — will aid you, too. BOY HAD BEEN REASONING tis Brothers' Names Supplied With Extensions, He Provided O n . for Himself. Gabrielle E. Jackson tells the fol- owing story In her book for girls, 'Peggy Stewart:” Peggy’s father has just returned from an extended absence and his laughter 13 showing him over the es tate. They come to one of the cab ins In which lives the family of Joshua lozadak Jubal Jones. “I want you to see this family," ex plained Peggy to her father. "They might all be of one age, but they are not—quite. Come here, boys, and see Master Captain," called Peggy to the three pickaninnies who were peeping tround the corner of the cottage. “Hello, boys. Whose sons are you? Miss Peggy tells me you are broth ers.” “Yas, sir, we is. We's Joshua Joza- iak Jubal Jones' boys. I’se Gus, da al'es’.” "And how old are you?” “I'se nine, I reckons.’’ “And what is your name?” “My name? Gus, sah.” “That’s only half a name. Your whole name Is really Augustus, re member.” The “Massa” Captain's voice boomed with the sound of the sea. ‘‘And your name?” continued the questioner, pointing at number two. "I'se jist Jule, sah„” was the shy re ply- ¡-4 “That's a nickname, too. I can’t have Buch slipshod, no account names for my hands’ children. It isn't dig nified. It isn't respectful. It’s a disgrace, Miss Peggy. Do you hear?” “Yas, yas, sir; we hears," answer ed the little darkies in chorus. “Please, sah, wa's his name ef 'taiu't Jule?" Augustus plucked up heart of grace to ask. “He is Julius, Jul-i-us; do you under stand?” “Yes, sir; yes, sir.” Another dimo helped the memory. “And your name?" asked the “Massa Captain” of the quaking num ber three. There was a long, significant pause, tten contortions. At length, after two of three futile attempts, he blurted out: “I’se—I’se Billyus, sah!” There was an explosion of laugh ter. Then Nell Stewart tossed the re doubtable Billyus a quarter, crying, “You win,” and walked away with Peggy, his laughter now and then borne back to hi3 beneficiaries. W. L. D O U G L A S SHOES • 2.25 * 2.50 * 3.00 * 3.50 MOO & * 5.00 For MEN, WOMEN and BOYS T H E S T A N D A R D O F Q U A L IT Y FOR O V E R 30 Y E A R S W E A R W . L. D O U G L A S S H O E S Y ou c a n sav e m oney b e c a u se th e y a r e m o re econom ical a n d s a tisfa c to ry in style, fit a n d w e a r th a n a n y o th e r m ak es. W . L. D o u g las n a m e a n d p rice s ta m p e d on th e b o tto m g u a ra n te e s full v alu e a n d p ro te c ts th e w e a re r ag a in st h ig h p rices a n d in ferio r shoes. Insist u p o n h av in g th e g en u in e W . L. D ouglas shoes. ■J'Siif,“ ”. If ir y your o u r d dealer e a le r c cannot a n n o t su tmpply p p ly w W. . u I- n Dontrlas o n p lu s shoes, «hoe*, w rite W. . T ... f)(U{ip|a« Rr.i.AlAn Uu«s » . . r »• c a ta lo c . QR am «a-..* ontrlas, B ro c k to n , M ams ., to Sbo»*« sent e v - e ry w l h e re M liv il e ry c h a rg e s p rep a id . J-’oa* C o l o r K y r l r t * u*r<l. DISTEMPER For | \ | P T C f t i n c n Pink Fye, Fpizoouc, Shipping fever and Catarrhal F a i l S u re c u r e en d p o s itiv e p rev e n tiv e, no m a tter how h o rses a t a n y a*r« a r e m fected o r * \'ip o se d ." L q u d, Riven on t h e to n g u e : a cta on th « B ood and G lands, e x p e ls t h e poi -onous g erm s from th e body. C ure» D is tem p er in D ors a d S h e e p and C holera in P o u ltry . L a r g e st s e llin g liv « •to c k re m e d y . C ures I.a G rip p e am on g h um an b ein g s and is a fin e K i d n ey rem edy. 50c a n d $1 a b o ttle; $5 an d $10 a d ozen . C ut this o u t. K e e p ¡t. S h o w to y o u r drucrfflst, w h o w illg ret it fo r yo u . F re« B ooklet, “ Dip* tem p er. C auses an d C ure«.'’ S p e c ia l A g e n ts w a n te d . SPOIIN MEDICAL CO., valuable C rucifix. Ten years ago a carved Ivory cru cifix was bought at a rag fair at Reus. On her death, soon after, the pur chaser left the crucifix to her daugh ter, wife of the deputy, Senor Mayner. A visitor to the house offered Señora Mayner $500 for It, but It was refused. ; An antiquarian, learning of the exist ence of the crucifix, offered $75,000, but this, too, was declined. It Is now known that the crucifix la one of the finest carvings of Leonardo da Vinci. An offer of $125,000 from an American collector is now being considered. A SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY! T h e b e s t o p p o r tu n ity f o r in v e s tm e n t o ffers to d a y th e G ra y s H a r b o r d is tr ic t, w ith A b e rd e e n a n d H o q tiiam . tw o o f th e b e s t c itie s in th e e n tir e N o r th w e s t, w ith th r e e tr a n s c o n tin e n ta l railro ad » a n d a s p le n d id d e e p w a te r h a rb o r, w h e re lan d can s till be b o u g h t a t $15 to $30 p e r a c re o n v e ry easy te r m s , o n ly five to 12 m iles fro m to w n . T h is land w ill p ro d u c e all c ro p s in a b u n d a n c e a n d in clu d es r .v e r b o tto m la n d . School a n d s to r e s a r e located c n th e la n d , w’h ich c a n b e re a c h e d by Rood co u n ty ro ad a n d n a v ig a b le riv e r» . R e m e m b e r th a t w e w ill lo c ate y o u in a th ic k ly s e ttle d co m m u n ity , a n d n o t in a w ild e rn e ss, a n d t h a t s im ila r < p p o r- t u n i ty to b u y Rood la n d a t a b o v e p ric e s w ill n o t p r e s e n t its e lf to you a g a in h e r e on th e h a rb o r. A w o rd to th e w ise \ * F u r f u r t h e r in f o r m a tio n w r ite a t o n c e to WASHINGTON STATE COLONIZATION CO., JSJL GOSHEN, IND., U. S. A. K 2 11! -n o t - n o t c o ffe e Ifs the most de lightful Breakfast Drink you ever tasted —-and the mast whole ome and inviyora'ing. i'ou cannot blit like its rich "grainy" flavor and spicy aroma. Ask your groctr tor Three G*s (GOLDEN CRAIN GRANULES) — if he hasn’t got it ha will get it for you. It’s good for you 3 times a day. A n d remember that there is no substitute for 3 G ' Aberdeen, Washington. Purely Speculative. "I have always been Interested,” eald little Blnks, “In the utilization of f / M E X IC A N waste. Now where do you suppose all ; Radiates Good Humor. these bursted tires go to In the end?” There Is a certain submerged book “I don’t know,” said the Genial Phil A L L D R U G G I S T S keeper, a man whose work Is but a osopher, “but if they go where most bit of routine, not vital to any process peoplo consign ’em there must be a of the complicated corporate machine terrible smell of rubber in the here- ! which pays his wage. But this ob- j after.”—Harper’s Weekly. 1 scure copyist of accounts Is valuable; | num orm s i a i K on Grammar. On« "BROMO Q U ININ E" F or SO RE TH R O A T. George Ade, at a dinner In Chicago, he has not forgotten, and lets no one T h a t la L O A nly X A T IV E BR O M O Q U IN IN E . l o o k I tp e n e t r r t e » q u i c k l y , rem o v e* n il in fln m - I delivered an amusing little address on who knows him forget, something fo r t h e s ia m a tu re o f E . W . G R O V E . Uaocl th e m u tto n a n d reduce* th e « w ellin g o f th e I grammar. “Don’t,” he began, “don’t most of us lose early—that life Is in W orld o v e r to C u n a C old in O n e D ay . 28c. g lu m ly. T o o b ta in b e s t r e . u l t s s a t u r a t e I u l i m n h in d f itte a n d bind a b o u t th e th r o « t f say, ‘Mamie and me have been to tended to be rich in Jolly moments. u few h o u r s o r o v e r n ig h t, r e p e a tin g n e x t Wooden Leg Joke. church,” when you meau ‘Mamie and I Business itself cannot quench him, d .iy 11 i.t ,i re v e re caae. 1 and If you hunt him out at his desk Why Is It, as a writer in the Bell have been to church.’ Why, though, 2 S e . 5 0 c . 71 a o o t t lj at D ru * A C e n ’l 3 t o r . i I lie about it at all? Don’t use the he will glance up at you with a blink man points out, that the general sense word ‘got’ too much. It Is Inelegant. ¡o f his tired eyes, Rnd Immediately of humor Is stirred when anything Doubtful About the Joke. ’I have got a million’ Is not nearly«so there will come over his queer face happens to a man’s wooden leg, such My daughter had tried to lnculcat* refined as ‘I have a million.’ From such a look of roguery, so delicate an as Its loss or a knothole coming In It, whom you got It Is, after all, nobody’s expression of unconquerable glee, that or getting It under the cars? It Is or courage In h r two-year-old boy by! you have to smile vigorously to fore-, was the same way with stealing a telling him when any cccldent befell affair but your own.” 1 stall an outburst of apparently mean man’s horse In the Far Weit. Both him that ”lt waa only a joke.” On«| M oth er* w ill fin d Mr*. W in slow *» B o o th ia * ingless laughter, an appalling thing of these accidents are serious. Yet bight a tornado struck the neighbor« Syru p th e t»-st r e m e d y to u*o to r t h e ir ch U tlrea in the quiet of a room where fifty they are supposed to be subjects for hood, and while trees were crashing: l u r i n g t v.e t e e t h i n g p e r io d . clerks are somberly crouched above mirth.—Minnennolls Journal around them and they expected mo their scratching pens. Wherever you Allen Property Holders. mentarily to be carried away h© crept! “ Pink E y « ” I . Kpldemlr In th« Spring. meet him he will endanger your rep The law of the land respects th« Try Mnrin« E y , Remedy fo r K t-liabl. R elief. up to his mother and, pulling het! right of citizen and alien alike to have utation for sanity. He sees life as a dress, said. “Mamma, ia this Just a! All Active. and to hold property. The alien res pageant of preposterous episodes, and joke ?”—Exchange. Don’t be a clam, my son; but If an ldent in the United States may dls his lean, dry face assumes such subtly Cause and Effect. pose of his property by will with the absurd expressions, and he emits such old friend comes to you and asks for Miss Elizabeth Marbury, a New* same feeling of security as the Ameri odd Intonations, that he will victimize the loan of $5 until Saturday night. can. This Is equally true of the and reduce to maudlin mirth the grav Just close your shell for repairs. It fork theatrical agent, was con* alien who has taken steps to make est of men, and send him buoyantly may look rude, but under some cir 1 turning the shrewish, scolding typ« ipon bis way.—Atlantic Monthly. cumstances It Is better to leave than of woman. "You can always tell her,” himself a citizen of the country. laid Miss Mnrbury. “If you can’t telll to be left. her in one way you con tell her In T R Y M U R IN E E Y E R E M ED Y Birds as Gem Finders. T O N IC for Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes another. I said to a woman the other andGranulatedEyelids. Murine Doesn’t Attracted by the glitter, many a Pettits Eye Salve FOR EYES Sunday: ’Why, my dear, how ho&rsd Smart—Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists hen has picked up a diamond lost you are!’ ‘Yes,’ she answered angrily, Desirable Pew. Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid. 25c, from a ring, and It Is a well-known my husband was out late last night.’ ’* A pnper In the neighborhood ol 60c, $1.00. Murine Eye Salve in fact that crows will take big risks of Aseptic Tubes, 25c, $1.00. Eyo Books losing their heads in order to steal a Johnstown advertises a church pew and Eye Advice Free by Mail. tor sale, "commanding a beautiful gold thimble or a shining locket. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. A young woman of Newburg, N. Y., view of nearly the whole congrega Miss 8ophie Alexander, not long ago tion.”—Altoona Gazette. Good to Forget Self Sometimes. lost the solitaire from her engage Thousand* of country people know the To try to make others comfortable valti-- of Ilt-mlin* Wf/.tiri! Oil, the he»t Is the only way to get right comfort ment ring. Hunts were made, re family medicine in c a s e of accident or sud able ourselves, and that comes partly wards offered and suspected servants den iffnc»». For the safety of your family put through the third degree. Finally of not being able to think eo much buy a buttle now. A s a rut«, a te w drmem o t M unyan’s Cold R em ed y about ourselves when we are helping time eased her grief. And then a pigeon, a pet of the family, died. Miss w ill break u p any cold and p revent pneum onia. I t What Fleet 8tr«et Wants. other people. For ourselves will al reliev es th e head, th ro a t and lunir» alm ost in Alexander had the bird’s body mount The Newaboy—“Yus. lady, the only s ta n tly . P rice 26 c e n ts a t an y druirffiat* or s e n t ways do pretty well If we don’t pay them too much attention.—George ed by a taxidermist, and lo! In the thing wot’U do ua much good now Is postpaid. pigeon’s crop was the solitaire. I f you n eed M edical a d v ice w r ite to M unyon’a a good ’orrlble murder reg’lar once a Macdonald. D octors. T h ey w ill ca r efu lly d ia g n o se you r caa* In Lakewood a little time ago a man week!”—London Opinion. and g iv e you a d v ice by m ail, a b solu tely free. PIL E S CURED IN « TO 14 D A T S saw one of his hens choking over a A ddress P ro fesso r M unyon. 63d and J oL ^ n oO T our d r it r e u t w ill rotund m oney i f PA Z O O IN T He M EN T f a i l , t c cur« a r y euro o f Itch in g . Blind. string that hung from its beak. str e e ts. Philadelp h ia, Pa. Blending or P rotru ding Pile* in 6 to 14 d a y s. 60c. ! went to the aid of his egg supply and found the “string” was a thin gold Only Made I t Worse. | chain. On the end of It was a beau James Payn tells of a whist player tiful shiny pebble that Mrs. Hen had O U T o r TOW N ieing told by an opponent that he swallowed to aid digestion. In conse- PEO PLE tould always tell by his face when ! quence, a certain society woman re esn renelv«j>rompt treat le had a good band. This he resent- covered her diamond lavalliere loi-t m ents o f IVun-Potdaneea, Hr*, th- build in* r«m«41ea ?d exceedingly, and applied to his at a dance. from >artner for a refutation of It; but he ras still more Irritated by his form Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is not a C. GEE W O Sovereigns as Collectors. >f corroboration, "that he had never % • stimulant. It does not make the (Tiinose doctor. The ex-Sultan Abdul Hamid had in lotlced any expression In hla coun- Try oni-e more It roe bare heee <lor*orln« « tth you feel better one day, then hla palace the finest collection ot enance whatever.” till« one end that on« and have not obtained per manent relief. I^tt th is ffr««r nature healer «lion- precious stones ever brought together, as bad as ever th e next. » ■ I wmu.r, ,1 - m m . n i r u i w t i j WIM II IU • quirk, end sefs Hi« pmH-rtption* some of which were recently sold in Bran as a Cleaner. lipoanded from Root«. ft ode und There is not a drop of alco irta that h*»« »Rxtn «nthored from every qnar- Few people seem to know the Talus Paris. The tastes of the Czar Fer r o f th e g)ot>e. Th« «<M*ret« of thiw« mi-dt<-in*e Ayer’s Sarsapa- [ er« not known to th« mitsirf« world, hot heve l e n of dry bran for cleaning purposes, dinand of Bulgaria run in the same di hol in it. hnndod down from father to aon in the physicien#’ writes a correspondent of Good House- rection. His collection of diamonds, niJiee la C hian. rilia is a tonic. You have the keeping. I have kept a very light gray sapphires and emeralds Is estimated to CONSULTATION FREE. steady, even gain that comes I f yon liv e out of town «n<! nm not cell, w rite for suit In the best condition for two years be worth £600,000. symptom blank and circular. «n« toeing 4 orate i from such a medicine. Ask by simply rubbing it down with dry The kaiser, we are told, has a pas bran. Rub the spots harder than th« sion for old uniforms and boots and your doctor all about this. THE C. GEE WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO. rest, then brush It all off. shoes of antiquity. Bavaria’s regent Trust him fully and always haa a love for old beer pitchers, espe 1611 First St., Cor. Morrison do as he says. He knows. Wise Philosophy. cially those of hla own country of the P o rtla n d . O r. y e . When anyone haa offended me, I try middle ages. Who makes the best liver pills? The to raise my soul so high that the of The late King of Sweden possessed J. C. Ayer Company, of Lowell, Mass. fem e cannot reach It—Descartes. a magnificent collection of rare hooka, They have been makirffc Ayer's Pills for P. N. U. No i t - ’i i engraving* and medals, while Ludwig •ver sixty years. If you have the slight In the Capitalist Claas. L of Bavaria rejoiced In a collection of , est doubt sbout using these pills, ask W H E N » rilin g U a your doctor. Ask him first, that's best. T he man with health and strength umbrellas. U aa Hale pepar. X r i e b y t h . / . o . A T MM CO.. L e w e ll. tt.u u . ad rood character la a caoltaKaA. M U S tA N G [ lin im en t COLDS CURED IN ONE DAY Stim ulant or T o n ic ? ¡Ok Sr