What is Castoria W ives of Cesarais vards Chief Bail Among and /^ASTOEIA is a harmless substitute for Castor 00, Paregorio, Drops and ^ Boothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teothing Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Pood, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has home the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervirion since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive Jon in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. Ed­ Social Leaders at W hite House. GOLD LACE H AS G REAT H E Y D A Y Presidential Affairs Made Through Presence o f Land ' Sea Fighters o f Nation. Washington correnpondence: When Mrs. Taft, in her official role «aa first lady of the land, surrounded herself with a coterie of the cleverest and brightest officers of the twin branches of the service, everybody in Washington society recognised that the era of the army and navy eet had arrived. In brave array the military men form a moving background at Mrs. Taft’s at homes, and in their im­ maculate dress the officers of the land and aqa forces are a splendid attribute at Mrs. Taft's fascinating garden par­ ties. At the White House entertainments scarcely has the line of guests passed until Mrs. Taft la surrounded by a group of officers and their wives, daughters and sweethearts, whose persiflage and laughter Instantly die sipate any indication of an oppressive or a "military" perfunctoriness. Replacing Col. BromwelL who with Mrs. Bromwell were dominant factors In the social life of the capital in the last administration, to Col. Spencer Cosby, whose career baa been marked with dlsttnetloa. Col. Cosby to the first of the administration bachelors to announce his engagement, and in the fall Mias Yvonne Shepard, daugh­ ter of Mrs. Charles R. Shepard of New York and Washington, will fall heir to the position vacated by the withdrawal of Mrs. Bromwell. Miaa Shepard la tall and svelte, her well-carried head ia graced with quan­ tities of silky, fair-brown hair, and her pretty complexion Is eet off by the taste Mies Shepard displays in the se­ lection of the color of her gowns She wears large hats, flower trimmed, and long, sweeping gowns which accen­ tuate the graceful slenderness of her figure. As the wife of the President’s aid sad constant attendant Miss Shepard will be thrown constantly In associa­ tion with the White House family; and her adrOltaeaa and social graces will be put to a severe teat In the Carrying of a role not leas Influential ant role to carry. Mias Sally la a than difficult dancer who has won acclaim at the O » « . ■ e l l 's W i f e a P o w e r. As wife of the chief of staff. Mrs amateur dramatic productions which 3. Franklin Boll, wMl have a high hays been features of Washington's position in the full tide of the official smart life for the last few years, while her skin as a horsewoman gives her a Not content with standing at the forward place In the gay little com­ head of tho serried ranks of army- pany of “ paperebaaere" who gallop dom, Mrs. Bell Is no loss popular with over the hills two or three times a the diplomatic aa well as tbs con­ gressional and president set As a great friend of Mrs. Ed son Bradley of New York, she to In touch with the smart life of the little coterie of the rich and Important who . come to Washington each winter to enjoy Its season. Gen. and Mrs. Bell last winter took possession of a commodious home at Fort Myer and there throughout tho season Mrs. Bell challenged the ad­ miration of society by the conduct of a series of delightful entertainments, her guests Including the grlssled vet­ erans who surrouqd the chief of staff, the young officers eager for an oppor­ tunity to display their mettle, the debutantes, the foreign “guests” of. the nation and tho general everyday-man and woman who goes In for Washing­ ton’s social good times. Associated with Mrs. Bel* In the so­ cial life of the army set Is Mrs. Woth- erspoon. the attractive s fie of Gen. Bell's first assistant. Mrs. Bell’s sis­ ter. Mrs Ernest Garllngton. wife of Gen. Garllngton, Is another army ma­ tron whose power In society has to be reckoned with. Mrs. Garllngton Is a pretty, fair-hatred woman, endowed with a liberal share of the good fel­ lowship and good humor Mrs. Bell displays In such a marked degree. In the childless home of the chief of staff Miss Sally Garllngton, Mrs. Bell’s Jolly, good-natured and good-looking young niece, has a large and tmport- Mrs. Aleshlre, wife of Gen. Aleshire. la one of the army matrons whose wit and poise count In tha proper equip­ ment of an army officer's wife. 8he ia large and nice-looking: noticeable chiefly for tha. sweetnese of her ex­ pression and her general air of ex- treme good breeding, She la the moth- er of a debutante daughter, who has the distinction of being one of Mis* Helen Taft’s best chums One of the'handsome homes of the army set established In Washington la presided over by Mrs. Clarence Ed wards, wife of Gen. Clarence Edwarde. chum to the President and general good fellow. Gen. Edwards, who is one of the most generally liked officers of the service, has bis honors to look to when It comes to a discussion of his wife’s popularity. Everybody likes Mrs. Edwards and her place In the fa­ vor of the community waxes as the years Increase. In girlhood, as pretty and vivacious Bessie Porter, she made her first ap­ pearance In Washington, coming over to visit her great-aunt. Mrs; Saunders Irving,' widow of Washington Irving’s nephew. Mrs. Irving maintained a menage second only to the White House In point of social importance, its gentle mistress, who was an in­ valid, being one of the few women up­ on whom the wives of the Presidents fdlt it Incumbent to leave cards ARMIES AND TH E AEBOPLAN E. Remarkable Photograph Bhowing a Cavalry Horae «hying at tha Approach of a Monoplane r Letters from Prominent Physicians T W P r--------- --------- addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. ill ^----- | ffPPWfc) [3*0$^ j ALCOHOL 3 PEK CENT. T i l .t. J . T M M C L ltf S ell I n t a n t s / C h iid k ik Promotes Digesttonfhm^ n ess and ifesLCoaUrins nrifcr Opium .Morphine Mrs. Edwards is a slender, delicate- looking woman, whose eh lei beauty lies In her sweetness of expression, her well-bred air and her lovable manners She looks at life through two jolly, twinkling eyes and she has sympathy with everybody and with everything that lives, without regard to place or position.. Her servants adore her and pay her the sovereign compliment of remaining in her service two decades or more. A very great-great-granddaughter of the first white man that settled in the western >art of New York, Mrs Ed­ wards’ family, the Porters of Niagara, N. TV, held the original grant of the immense tract of land which included the falls until the taking over of the property by the State government Oen. Peter B. Porter. • Mrs.- Ed-' wards’ great-grandfather, served as secretary of war in the cabinet of President John Quincy Adams Oen. and Mrs. Edwards’ daughter Bessie Is a pretty little woman of 10 years who to a chum of her father and the boon companion of her mother. The Edwards hpme la a reflex of the character of its owners Beginning with the general’s office on the first floor photographs of familiar friends— men, women and small children—run riot and overflow into the attractive drawing room on the second floor, gay in Its dress of summery English chintz and filled with line old mahogany and Interesting things picked np In the out of the way corners of the army of fleers’ world. The Edwardses keep open house in and out of sehson and aside from din pensing a hospitality as smart as the smartest, Gen. and Mrs. Edwards delight in having friends to lunch or dine en famine. Tfce M ir a c le o f P o lite P e r s is te n c y . Says Orison Swett Marden, wrltim. in Success Magazine: When genius has tailed in what it attempted, and talent says Impossible; when every other faculty gives up; when tact re tires and diplomacy has fled; when logic and argument and influence and "P «iT have ail done their best and retired from the field, gritty persist ency, bulldog tenacity, steps In. and by sheer force o f holding on wins, gets the order, closes the contract, does the impossible. Ah. what mlr acles tenacity of purpose has perform ed! The last to leave the field, the last to turn back. It persists when all other forces have surrendered and fled. It has won many a battle even after hope has left the field. Confederate commanders In the Civil War said that the trouble with General Grant was that “ he never knew when he was beaten.” When Grant’s generals thought that his army, with only two transports, would be trapped at Vicksburg, they asked him how he expected to get his men out, urging that in case of defeat he could get only a small part of his army upon two transports. He told them that two would be plenty for all the men that he would have left when he surrendered. It is the man in the business world who will not surrender, who will not take no for an answer, and who stands his ground with such suavity of man­ ner, such politeness, that you cannot take offense, cannot turn him down, that gets the order; that closes the contract; that gets the subscription; that gets the credit or the loan. He to a very fortunate man who combines a gracious manner, suavity, cordiality, cheerfulness, with that dogged persistency which never gives np. Before n woman ban returned from her wedding trip aha baa all her plane laid for framing out his kip, and auk tag • boma tor her own. N ÍOT o t N a rco o t ic . Dr. F. Gerald Blattner, o f Buffalo. N. Y., anya: “ Your Castoria to good lor children and 1 frequently prescribe it, always obtaining the desired results." i>r. Gustave A. Etoengraeber, o f S t Paul, Minn., rays: "I have used your Castoria repeatedly in my practice with good results, and can recom­ mend It aa an excellent, mild and harmless remedy for children." Dr. B. J.,Dennis, of S t Louis, Mo„ says: "I have used and prescribed your Castoria In my sanitarium and outside practice for-a number o f years and And it to be an excellent remedy for children." Dr. 8. A. Buchanan, o f Philadelphia, Pa., says: "1 have used your Cas­ toria in the case o f my own baby and And it pleasant to take, and have obtained excellent results from Its use." Dr. J. E. Simpson, of Chicago, I1L, says: "1 hare used your Castoria in cases o f colic In children and bare found it the best medicine of Its kind on the market" Dr. R. EL Esklldson, o f Omaha, Neb., says: "I And your Castoria to be a standard family remedy. It to the best thing for Infants and children I hare ever known and I recommend i t " Dr. L. R. Robinson, o f Kansas City, Mo., says: "Your Castoria certainly has m erit Ia not its age, Its continued use by mothers through all these years, and the many attempts to Imitate i t sufficient recommendation ? What can a physician add? Leave It to the mothers." Dr. Edwin F. Pardee, o f New York City, says: “ F ot several y e a n I have recommended your Castoria and shall always continue to do so, as it has invariably produced beneficial results." Dr. N. B. Sizer, of Brooklyn, N. Y , says: "I object to what are called, patent medicines, where maker alone knows what Ingredients are put in them, but I knout the formula o f your Castoria and advise its use." GENUINE’ CASTORIA ALWAYS Sean the Signature of_____ FkcSbdr Signature a NEW YORK. 35 D o sts - 3 3 c MS u ip io H M r . T h e r e A r e O th e r*. “ Isn’t there some talk that Gringo is "Binge Is afraid that he may be pros­ going to enter the ministry?" ecuted for polygamy." - "The ministry? Why—O. I see. That*» "Why, he la married to only one What he really wants, but be intends te r5»ff R try for a consulship first.”—Chicago person, ain’t he?” “That Is what he thought for a Tribune. while, but now It appears that he mar­ H Is S p ee d o m e te r, ried her whole family, and there are Inqnistive Person— How do you tell seven of them.”—California Weekly. how fast you are going? Chauffeur—I watch the expression of M M h en w ill And Mrs. Winslow*« Boothfnr the faces of the policemen aa I whia past Syrup the best rem edy to use foe th eir ch lhlrs j du rin g the teething period. them. A v e r o s r e s A l l R ls r h t. Merely Friendly. f TEA COFFEEf SPICES •AKIM POWDER • EXTRACTS JUST HIGHT Tenant (of flat)—One of the radiator* Elderly Relative—Mortimer, what art in that large room of mine is alwayt your intentions in regard to Mias ftiul- cold, winter and summer. lio n ? Janitor (with a scowl)—Well, I’vt Scapegrace Nephew—Strictly honoew heanj yon say that the other one is al­ ble and praiseworthy, ancle. ways hot, winter and summer. Ain’t it Eltfwly Relative— I am glad to heat " T H R O ID R E L IA B L E a standoff? _________ that, Mortimer. I was afraid you were going to try to persuade her to marry H is l a s a l W a y . . The new waitress sidled np to a you.—Chicago Tribune. lack dapper young man at the breakfast table, who. after glancing at the bill, CAPSULES opened his mouth, and a noise issued F or CATARRH or r m BLADDER. forth that sounded like the ripping off URINARY DISCHARGES e t c . of all of the-cogs-on one of the wheels “ Before I began using Cascarets I had AT MUenSTEOR TRIAL BOX BY HAIL 5 0 c in the power house. The new waitress made her escape to the kitchen. “ Fel­ a bad complexion, pimples on my face, FROM PLANTEN.93 HENRY3T.BROOKLYNJGE low out there Insulted me.” she said. and my food was not digested as it should „ — BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.’— ^ have been. Now I am entirely well, and The head waiter looked at him. “ I’ll the pimples have all disappeared from my get it,” he said. “ That’s just the train face. I can truthfully eay that Cascarets caller ordering his breakfast.”—Argo- are just as advertised; I have taken only two boxes of them.” paut Clarence R. Griffin, Sheridan, Ind. A t . i t « ft m u . "Jones says that he always gets to Pleasant, Palatable. Potent, Taste Good. D o G ood. Never Sicken. Weaken o r Gripe. tha bottom of anything he under­ 10c, 2Sc. 30c. Never sold In bulk. Thegenn- takes." Ine tablet stamped C C C . Guaranteed to core or ro a r m oney back. 927 “ Don’t doubt- i t At school he was always at the foot of the class.’’— Baltimore American. B . Bad BLOOD DAISY FLY KILLER A P a r ts t a t L arge. "Let ms see— the census gives your town about 6,000 doesn’t It?” “ No, sir; our town gives the census 5.00Q." “ Clifford,” asked the teacher, “ who »rote tbs Junius letters?” “ I—I don’ t know, ma'am,” answered :he terrified little boy. “ 1 didn’t !" Seelen , or ssot prepaid for St Mete. HAROLD SOMERS. IB0 DeKalb Ave.. B’ klyn.. N. Y. W h e r e T h e y D o n 't M a s s le 'B ra . Suburbanite— You are half an hour late thia morning. Letter Carrier—Yea, ma'am; the eec- :ions of stovepipe 1 have to wear inside my trousers legs on account of the dogs roo keep along this street hamper my movements, ma'am.—Chicago Tribune. that WE CAN DO THEIR ENTIRE CROWN. BRIDGE A N D PLATE WORK IN A DAY if neesssaw. POSITIVELY P A I N L E S S EX­ TRA CTftNG FREE when ptmiee or IMdrea are or­ dered. W E REMOVE THE MOST SENSITIVE TEETH AN D ROOTS WITHOUT THR LEAST PAIN. NO STUDENTS, no uncertainty For tta* N ex t Fifteen D ays W e will give you a good ZZk gold or parse ■ n e a p in g b y t T e c h n ic a lit y . Teacher—Tommy, what It an Improper fraction? Tommy—You don’t ’«pact me te men­ tion it ’ fore ell theee people, do you? D r . W . A . W is e ^ W iz a r d O il BT T T 7TW 7 rrY M n r ’ T L J - T l 3 1 1 P la n ifie n t e n d M a n a g e r The Wise Dental Co (INC.) Third and Washington Sts. P O R T L A N D , OMEQOM