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About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 16, 1906)
When the Hair Falls Then It*« time to act! No time to study, to read, to expert- meat! You want to save your hair, and save it quickly, too! So make up your mind thia very minute that if your hair ever comes out you will use Ayer*a Hair Vigor» It makes the scalp healthy. The hair stays In. It cannot do any thing else. It's nature’s way. TlMbM “ □old lor Sixty jroar».’ «lib im i ' fills . ■ *ito* © a t. • J i b , ’’ u M Lera* D omo , “ y** »aght ,*< to OOOM u d moot OM by ateshfc. It b a t rlfbt. H j (amjly wouldn't Ilk, It." “ JJl’s (air in loro or war, Lorn*,” ckucklto John RUM, “and tfcfe U both.” Bat Mr. Blackmon, baria« that A b light » b y • : th* tataUoet waa not suited to oa hoary a o u i aa Big John, omitted all BMOtion of tho incident in writing th* atory. BURTON — I m yw Hd ChoaM. Q U II aosctMO ariesat «old. H °£ Uta*. SO 80 toc rotate; OoULtec; M in i. L -**,f 1 I I Uold. . 1*0 ! Uold. Me ; » Bla« * * or or O onarr.sa C r u l O M l . Molilo« snvalow* an* OdTprio» MM aste o * posi li « S s , OotetM on* V m - Mrs woe* solicit** M W m Carta**!* Bar GASOLENE ENGINES . o ìm , powor telly warranted, lite. All «1»«» aatl ■fata* at lowoot prtooa. Write lor catalog. REIERSON MACHINERY COMPANY _ Parti«**. Orar**- Th * tourist never forgsto U i first •paolng In Venice. for It b a lively oc enalon of raal sightseeing. One* th* traralar crosses th* long brldga croas- lng th* lagoon b* la In yarltabb fairy land. At th* quay o f th* Grand Canal tbs gondolas ar* drawn up In attrac tive array. Riding in a gondola b not g naw sensation to thoa* who rial ted the Columbian Exposition. Thaaa cabs o f Yanles can b* hired for about 15 cents, with a alngle rower, and 8 cents aech for large pieces of luggage The gondolier« are very graceful and ex pert and send the boat shooting fo r «rant with one dexterous torn of the w rist Venice Js In truth the fair crowned queen of the Adriatic, enveloped In a mist o f romance which b like a rosy cloud. There b an air o f color every where—o f flowers, o f rippling water, e f roofs, o f clinging vines, o f marbla that reveab the fascinating impress o f mys terious yean, whose deeper impress time will cover over with bto shadowy wring, and aplte the stern hbtorian’s conscientious efforts. The Grand Canal la a picture, with its carved facades of palaces that face this ancient avenue o f aristocratic Venice. Hare b the palace o f Vendramln Cal- ergi, whore Richard Wagner died in 1888. Here, on the rig h t b the Palas- aa Pasaro, ornamented with grotesque heads of atone, and beyond It the Palax- bo Corner della Regina, built In the seventeenth century on the alto of Cath arine Cornsro’, birthplace, she who waa queen of Cypress. To-day the building b used aa a pawnshop, "Monte di Pla t a ” But beyond b the On Doro, the golden bouse, a perfect Gothic palace in the pointed style. Here b the flab market an interest ing scene by morning light, and, beyond, the vegetable market where the fa mous Gobbo o f the Rialto stands, the column where were promulgated the law* o f the republic. A little farther along b the Dogana, or custom house. T e e Ktoda o f P e lle ***. We have In America two kinds of pel icans, the white and the brown. O f the former, I can only say that it does not encourage the advances o f the avian psychologist. Invasions a i Its strongholds on remoto lake Islets la Manitoba and la Nevada bava resulted In their complete desertion by every whits pelican old enough to spread a wing ; and suocees here b doubtless not to be looked tor so long as thb snowy- plumaged bird remains a shining mark for every roving rifleman.—Century. with a modern figure o f a Hon above its door, and then the handsome Pal- asao d’ Camerbnghl, once the residence o f the chamberlains of the officers of finance. Next b the Rialto, and the arched M e e s e m te rr M elan o*. windows and pillared balconies o f the “ Mr. Spotcash," said the reformed Palaaso Resaonlco, where Robert Browning died. There is, too. tba sport, “ we want to buy a thousand crul lers for th* waifs’ picnic. Can yon give house where Deedemona lived and . ns something?” Othello died, the plaaaa o f 8 t Mark, I “ Tee," answered the merchant. “ Hers’s the Cathedral, the doges’ palace and the , W . ” Bridge of Sighs. T b b latter has no | "Thanks, Mr. Sp*tc*sn. I told the longer those famous prisons under tba boy*, by George, It was dollars to dough leaden roof, which were destroyed over nuts you’d couch up liberal 1” S' hundred year* ago. The gloomy dun erro St. V toe' Boo»-« »• « oil karroo* Dte-aaao i l o prrwianaatlr carad br Dr. Kiiaa’a Gr*-*t geons and torture chamber still remain, f Ji*m Baa.orar. Band Ac KHKK fit rial batte* and Usati**. Dr. B. H-Klla .LA. SSI Arch SC,FbUa.,Pa. however. S t Mark’s b wonderful— a poem— the color o f glass, o f transparent W a l l V y fas th e Cl ass i* «, alabaster, o f polished marble and lus The principal o f one o f Washington’* trous gold. high schools relates an Incident In con- The aide streets o f Venice tell a atory nec-tlou with the last commencement o f greatness, weakness, riches, power, day o f the Institution mentioned. A victorias.and defeats. Tim e and man clever girl had taken one of the prin have wrought together marveb on thaaa cipal prices. At the close of tba exer Ulanda of the see. Fugitives from tba cise« her friends crowded about bar to mainland strengthened the muddy Isl offer congratulations. and* along the coast with dikes aad "Weren’t you awfully afraid you rows o f driven piles. They dog canals, wouldn’t get It, Hattie,” asked one, which they lined with timber and stone, "when there were so many contest and changed the coarse o f hostile cur aste?" “ Oh, no!” cheerily exclaimed Hattie. rents o f the deep. Riches came slowly through bard work and close economy. "Because I knew that when It cam« to The people tilled their fields contented English composition I had ’em all ly and raised cattle; they fished also, skinned alive I” — Harper’s Weekly. and prepared salt for the market on MotkesswOl And M o . Winslow’s toothing the mainland. From the first they rec Syrnp the heat remedy wnee lor their efefldreu during the teething farted. ognised the sea ns their avenue . t o op W le r e He’d tec. portunity. It was leas than 300 years after the Huns drove them upon the . Mrs. McSeeh— I wish ell the saloons little archipelago that Venice had» the In creation were in the bottom of the finest fleet o f vaaseb of any Italian sea ata. Mr. McSosh— Gee, yon gotta mean dia- port o f the time By the ninth century p’sltlon ! Wanner get dm drown’, ehV— there waa here a great maritime re 1 Cleveland Loader. public, and by the fifteenth century she ha Cared Catarrh b at the height o f her power. The com merce o f all Europe centered here Her with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, os they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is * magnificence waa the marvel of the na I blood or constitutional die. ase, and in order to cure U yon most toko internal remedies. tions. But her rise and fall It would I Hall's Catarrh Cure U taken internally, and take a volume thick with facta to de ' acts directly on tha blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cur* it not a quack medicine. scribe It woe prescribed by one of th* tost physicians in this country for year*, and is a refute ecrlptlon. It U com; known, combined * tiers, acting directly The perfect com bln* ion of th* two ingredient* is what produce« such wonderful results In curios Catarrh. Send for testimonials free. r. J CHXNEY A CO.. Prop*., Toledo, O. Bold by druggists, price 75c. Hall's Family Pills at* tha hate. PROPOSED PALACE OP PEACE AT THE HAGUE. th e da o mm to y n r « U t a esotroy» •» u « aomkrt toar ary horn*-In dia i f A e h ie r * * e * a t . X p ^ vri'l/, ~ * ;; ^ ~ -t ' ' h '' t place, « h u * ni»-..!« trouble- « » • . Cloni», • s r ¿/v\* arai aad will not noli or ta 'h\\< v/,,i\'T llirò u r tb ln i. Try thorn onoo will n*ror and r fu* i* «mi oarer bo without them, if lrn not kepi br doe ora, seat oreyaldlbr tec. Harold 1« Dofialb aro.. Braaklyu. S. f Two hundred and seventeen architect* from almost every country in the world competed for Mr. Carnegie's "Palace o f Peace,” and no fewer than S,- 038 drawings were sent in. The first prize has been awarded to L. M. Cor- donrler o f Lisle, France, for the design here reproduced. The chief feature o f the Interior will be a magnificent Hall of Arbitration. A FA M O U S 8 C IE N T I8 T . BORAX muie T eam P rof. H s s ry A. W a r * , W h o Ho* a T r s g ls Death to B s « * lo . tile fabrics rich In color and full of strange designs. These were dug up from burial places in Peru aud Bo llvlia and are tbe rich remnants In drees o f tbe celebrated Inca race, which in pre-Spanish times had at tained to a high degree of clvilzatlon In the new world In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Tho Bandeller expedition recovered thousands of gorgeously colored pieces of cloth. These have recently been put on exhi bition and open up an entirely new field for tbe a rtb t Afer hundreds and possibly thou sands o f years of entombment thb tex tile work la as fresh and rich In color ns when first deposited In tbe graves. Tbe fabrics era decorated in fruit, animal and geometrical patterns and are woven from the wool o f tbe llama, alpaca and vicuna. By a clever method o f duplicating and combining these or namental feature* the art students pro duce some striking designs, which later find their way Into commercial use. being sold to purchasers who are on the constant lookout for novel effects. Only the other day Dr. Rafael le Sorgnac, one o f the lecturers at tbe Sorbonne In Pnrb, declared that tuber- quloals b spread broadcast by the swathing o f mummies. The germs, be aaid, retained tbelr vitality In tbe tomb for ages and were as virulent as ever when exhumed. He was pretty generally laughed at by experts, however, and—anyway, the art stu dents o f New York are evidently not frightened by hb warnings. Prof. Henry A. Ward of Rochester who was killed by an automobile re cently in Buffalo, was famous In many lands as a scientist and traveler. He was born in Roch ester In 1834 and educated at Har vard. He was a member of the tec- All deolor* Fro* bom pio Borax and l’ora* Hoop, Booklet a»d eoa real* natura la O dore, (br 10 reato . ulty o f the Univer aad Dealer's nana PACIFIC COAST BOKAX OCX, Oaitlasd. C*L s i t y of Rochester, 'and through hb [■•’work It was placed tba front rank of scientific institu R. A WABD. tions In tha United States. He waa, without doubt, tha greatest living authority on meteorite*. This W railed Although more than TO year« o f age, ha completed, lees than two months ago, Uaa that are (Ivan aa a Journey that took him hundred« of la dio. Be oarea with thaaa waudarfol Ohl- miles up tba Magdalen river, in Colom aeae beaba, roots, boda, borke aad o »■aladee bia, and then more hundreds o f m il«« that are eatlrdy es over tortuous, dangerous Andean moun tain tralb to Santa Boca and Bogota tes satte* e» a ear Me dlSbreat real odia* whteb and back to tba coast Ha had made be ■ a n ee« telly aeee I* gH . reat dleeaeaq He more than 28 trip» to Europe, visited ¿ft every continent and almost every coun oeye, «M.I baa baa dre di et testi mo e lala t Verged tee derate. Call aad eoe hlm. PaMeaU try tba aun shines upon, aa wall as all oat er wo dty errile ter Meakr aad circolar* Bead atomo. COBSOLTATION f u i * the important Islands o f tha seven seas. Ha waa known to nil tha older scien 10 tists o f the world, and tor many years 1M ’ » rire» IL . S. t Cm. Merrteea the highways of the earth converged liant loe papar POS P OUT LAND. OREGON. a t 'h b Rochester home. At hb table •cores o f man hav« set whose names ara household words among lovers of P o t H er 1* • Hoi*. nature. Prof. Ward spoke a dozen lan guages or more. Ha said that ha never A provident w ife is an Income In found but one language that ha could herself— but a virtue may be carried Portland Trade Directory not master, and that was Chines«. Ha to extremes. “ Youf husband'll be all right now,” said tbe doctor. “ What a to A 4 e rra te * ta Partiis t o * U tero- leaves hb w ife and two sons. « n in n a* I V o ^ yer mean?" demanded the wife. "You N S W ID EA S PON A R T IS T S . told me be couldn’t live a fortnight.” CBJCAM SKFABATORS— Ws (marmato* th* U. A "W ell, I ’m going to cure him, after our te te tea MM. Witte ter So* —so* Co, FUIS aa* Oak. to im rt ftete Aaotaat P s n r i u Too* Mil.” «aid the doctor; "rarely you’re Ml* Fakriss. glad!” The woman wrinkled her 1 A rt students o f New York City have brows. "Puts me In a bit of an ’ole,” discovered • new source tor fresh she said. ” 1 bln and aoM all hb Ideas, eays the New York Tribune. clotbas tor bla funeral. • • • Mean- Ft ANOS A OBOAVte-Maay los lastras*«* so- y«r< t* os ocooaat s efcoosa sr removal effeayw Probably the oddest drawing cteaa In’ well. • • • How soon’ll ’* be Writ* hr Aooor ptlon «# p aa*« aa— *« hoe*. 'About town can ha seen at Intorvab In strong?” — London Chronicle , tew W rite Is ta f. o u ters O a , Fsrtlao* Peruvian Hall o f tha Mnaeum o f Nat There Is on« very pleasant feature ural History. Tba Interest o f brush P. R. U. and pencil puplb la thb somewhat met in tbe reminiscences of an old Bomber department, given up to things couple : They wars not married under t to «S u a Ms antiquated, U doe to e display of tex a canope- By SoAesing the Water makes the Skin Clean Removes Pimples and Blackheads; White» the Hands; frees the Scalp from Dandruff and makes Beautiful Hair. Dr. C. Gee Wo minar Mtw IRE C. HE CHIESE DEDICHE CO KC costs one-third the price o f ___ pow der anywhere near K C quality, and makes better, purer, m ore healthful baking. 25 ounces fo r 25c. m. * Dsttsss th * Csart’a D aty. A. G. Jewett, lawyer, politician and man o f sarcastic wit, waa once trying a case In the supreme court in Belfast, Me., hb borne city. The Judge presid ing. before being called to the bench, bad tried many cases against Jewett, who did not entertain n very high opin ion of bis ability. In his closing argument, Jewett, In defiance o f the rules o f the court, start ed In to rend some law t o the Jury. The court pen d ed on the bench and said: "Mr. Jewett, you must not read law to the Jury In your closing argu m ent” Jewett kept *n reading, with out so much as a glance a t the court The court in thunderous tones ordered him to atop. Jew ett who bad by thb time read all be Intended te read, turned calmly to the Judge and said: "D id your honor address me?” " I said,” roared the Judge, “ you must not read law to the Jury in your closing argument I w ill give the law to the Jury. What do you suppose the court b here for?" "W hat la the court here for?” re sponded Jewett In high falsetto. " I suppose you know, sir, to keep order with the aid o f the sheriff, sir, with all due respect to the sheriff, sir.” — Boston Herald. No L e s s e r la IB * U a s l i f h t . Then old Vesuvine checked kb rage. And straightway called « truce. "There’s too much competition now.* He muttered. "What’s the u s e r H ERITAG E O F C IV IL W AR. Thousands o f Soldiers Contracted _ Chronic Kidney Trouble While in the Service. Tbe experience of Oept. John L . M y . of Co. E, 17th Ohio, bow living at 800 East Second street, Newton, K ansas, w ill interest tbe tboo- smk U of vetersae who came beck front tho C ivil war suffer lag tor- tores w i t h kidney c o m p l a i n t . Oapt. E ly Bays: “ I con tracted kidney troublo during the C ivil w a r ,. and the occasional at tacks finally developed into n chronic case. A t one time 1 had to use a cratch and cane to get about. My back waa lame and weak, and besides th* aching, there waa s distressing re tention of the kidney secerdons. I waa in n bed way when I began using Doan’ s Kidney P ills in 1901, bat tho remedy eared me, and I have been w ell ever since.” 8old by nil dealers. 50 cents a box. Fueter-Miiburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y . A a r t k ls a bat Friendly. “ You astonish me. Your engagement H I* G o o * Rcstao*. with Mias Welloph is broken, b it? Are "W hy does Smithy visit hb wealthy the relation* between you still friendly?” aunt so often?’’ . “ I should say not! The relations be " I f be didn't be might have to visit tween us ere her relations, and they’re hb ‘uncle.’ ” — Houston Post my bitter enemies.” THE OF BLOOD PURIFIERS Prepares for Dramatic and Operatic Stage and plaoes Graduates. Recog nized by leading theatrical managers. Send for Catalogue and liat of gradu ates and their success. FRAME C. EGAS. Principal. BAKING POWDER KING O p eratic School Season and 1907 Opens Sept 1 5 Egaa Hall Arcade Balidiaf. Seattle. E very day in «v ary yea that cornea, more housewives are giving up their exhorbitant priced B a k i n g P o w d e r s and turning to K C , the honest and reliable, which has stood so w ell the test o f years. T hey are find ing out that Ridi Unde— Leonard, hav* you ever succeeded in carrying out one tingle pur pose in all your life? Spendthrift Nephew (deeply hurt)— Unde, I have! Six years *g j I formed s resolution that I would cut loose and have a good time, and to-day I owe $13,- 000. Egan D ram atic and Egan Dramatic and Operatic School More Converts Every Year j P CLASSIFIEDADVERT1SING J B w nrra SPECIFIC, N o o th er rem ed y has g iv e n such perfect satisfaction as a TH E ORKAT blood p u rifier and tonic or is so reliab le in the cure o f blood dis BLOOO eases o f e v e r y ch aracter as S. S. S. I t is know n as “ T h e K in g o f B lood P u rifiers,” and the secret o f its success and its r ig h t to th is title is because “ IT CURES DISEASE.” I t is an honest m edicine, made e n tire ly o f p u rify in g , h e a lin g roots, herbs and barks, which are acknow ledged to be specifics fo r diseases a ris in g from an im pure o r poisoned condition o f the blood and possessing tonic properties that act g e n tly and ad m irab ly in th e up-building o f a run down, w eakened o r disordered condition o f the system . O n e o f the greatest points*in fa vor o f S. S. S. is that it is the o n ly blood rem edy on th e m a rk et w hich does not contain a m ineral in gred ien t o f some kin d to derange or dam age th e system . I t is the one m edicine that can be tak en w ith absolute safety by tbe you n gest ch ild or the old est m em ber o f the fa m ily , and persons w ho h ave allow ed th e ir system s to g e t in such condition th a t most m edicines are rep u lsive to the stomach w ill find that S. S. S ., w h ile thorough, is g e n tle and pleasant in its action, and has none o f the nauseating effects of th e d ifferen t m ineral m ixtu res and concoctions offered as blood purifiers. A s e v e r y part o f the body is dependent on the blood fo r nourishm ent and stren gth , it is necessary that this v ita l fluid be kep t free from germ s and poisons. S o lo n g as it rem ains uncontam inated w e are fortified again st dis ease, and health is assured : but a n v im p u rity. . GenUemen:—8. 8. 8. Is used ns a family medicine In oar i____ \ J A J * home. I m yself have taken and alw a ys found it w hat it Is hum or or poison nets in ju rio u sly on th e sys- otalm*d to b*. It thoroughly o I m i m i tho system of lm- tem and affects th e g e n e ra l health. Pus- p»rtu#« lncrsa««« th« appetite, improves th« digestion, .„ i., ..J baUds op the general health. I have given it to my tUlar eruptions, pim ples, rashes and the ohUdren with fine results. I t prompUy restores th* nppe- differen t sk in affections show that the blood olsars the skin of nil eruptions. It is a very fine is la « feverish and diseased condition as a “ * s " S 5 ? E L ' S ? S ! 7 " “ ~ ~ t H o m f s o m . result o f too m uch acid or th e presence of some irrita tin g hum or. Sores and tJlcers are the result o f m orbid, u n h ealth y m atter in th e blood, and-R heum atism , Catarrh, Scrofula, C on tagiou s B lood Poison etc., are a ll deep-seated blood disorders th at continue to g ro w w orse as lo n g as th e poison rem ains. B ut a ll blood diseases are not acou ired; some persons are born w ith an h ered itary taint in the blood and w e see this grea t affliction m anifested in m an y w ays. T h e skin has a w a xy, p a llid appearance, the eyes are often w eak, glan ds o f the neck enlarged, and as th e taint has been in th e blood since birth the en tire health is u su a lly affected. In a ll blood troubles S. S. S. has proved its e lf a perfect rem edy and has w e ll earned the title o f “ K I N G O F B L O O D P U R I F I E R S . ” I t goes down in to the circulation and rem oves a ll poisons, hum ors, waste o r fo reign matter, and m a k is th is stream o f life pure and health- su staining. N o th in g reaches in h erited blood troubles lik e S. S. S.; it rem oves e v e ry particle o f the taint, purifies and strengthens the w eak, deteriorated blood, and supplies it w ith th e h ealth fu l properties it needs and establishes the foundation fo r good health. A s a tonic this great m edicine has no equal, and it w ill be found esp ecially b racin g to w eak, anaemic person*. R h eu m atism , Catarrh, Sores and U lcers, S k in Diseases, Scrofula, C on tagion s B lood Poison and a ll oth er blood troubles are cured perm a n en tly b y S. S. S., and so thorou gh is the clea n sin g o f the blood that no trace o f the d is ease is left to break out in fu tu re years or to be transm itted to offsprin g. I f you are in need o f a blood pu rifier get “ T H E K I N G ” o f them all, S. S. S.— and good results are assured. Book on th e blood and an y m edical advice desired furnished without charge to all who w rite. PURELY VEGETABLE THE SWIFT SPECIFIC OOMPANY. ATLANTA, OA.