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About The Athena press. (Athena, Umatilla County, Or.) 18??-1942 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1912)
Farmers and Merchants Write us for our cash offer onyour Farm and Dairy Produce. If we don't handle it will refer you to re liable buyer. PEARSON-PAGE CO. Pnrtland. OrcffOn. L- J rlr":." ru.ln R.imon Dried! Hold. .iTifIlri LH Hold. SiW. 75o; Gold, 6Uo Kino f Mlli onvnloDM a Id fall price Iw not on application. Control and umpire wore m ftmt oa Uoited. jiefcraaoe: Jl " '" Second-Hand Machin- maemmry 55;- bouent, sawmills, etc The J. E. Martin Co.. 76 1st bt Portland. Bend I or owe i"- mRAT. FRUIT PICKERS' BAG. Snd ua one dollar and we win mall you sample of Ideal Apple Pickers' Bag. Positively the beat picking bag on tne market, both hands, Barker Manufacturing Co., Si Am "brose St, Rochester, N. Y. LWIKl MIMA. i BUSINESS COLLEGE WASHINGTON ANDTINTH STS, I I I PORTLAND. ORISON I J WRITE FOR CATALOG I Haul Wong, Uublecked PANAMAS FROM WEiVtl TO WEARER lOan be worn unblocked iuy women. Bloolted in inraize. snspe or styte i for men. UrimsBanae 1 Inches. Light weight. itpi Mill oarable," styltah bat for the luilf of wlmt It would cost yoa elsewhere, aaiirem ctrvv mujirjniii int. 0. H. Meiwadorfrer, Prop. 227 1-2 Washlnirton St Twenty yean is Portland. Portland, Or wflm sis Hy Father keeps A Wild Weif Show- 0e cause he XAtd, hefd o'ot ?iry hatr-'-s BOYS ON A STOCK EXCHANGE "Hunt ftOfltnaid on reowlpt of nrice. Money refandfd if not BHtKiietory. wet a KODAK rolls developed, 10c, any size. Largest and best shop In Northwest Com plete price list on request. Best results guaranteed. JACOBS P.-L Build's, Seattle $Zs jir RATES "NEW HOTEL PERKINS PORTLAND,! -JH THtHEART Or THC OTY EUSOPLAH BATH SlgPCRDAYUP WITHOOTBATH I12 UP Most Centrally Located. e NOTE THE RATES. The Modern Aesop. A dog, who was accustomed to over eat, held a piece of meat In bis mouUi fti be crossed a placid stream by meant of & plank. Looking in, he saw -what be took to be another dog carrying another piece of meat Snap ping greedily to get this as well, he let go the meat that he had and lost It In the stream. As a result his Indi gestion felt much better all the rest of the day .Lire. A. ' . , 5cPPUi i M onc IN BOX WITH A GOAT Only One Real Road. There la only ono real road to hu man prosperity, end It is the same for a nation as for an Individual. That Is the honest road of bard work un fler free institutions, and when they tried to teach people that they could be made rich by some short cut, they were doing that which was thorough ly dishonest. Walter Long. You can rely on HOSTETTER'S Stomach Bitten to help you in cases of INDIGESTION DYSPEPSIA POOIt APPETITE CONSTIPATION MALARIA FEVElt AND AGUE REMEMBER it has served three generations faithfully. Try it today but insist on having HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS Worked That Time, Anyway. In the IrlHh rebellion a bombshel whizzed toward an Irishman's head Pat dodged it with a low bow. and 1' vent by, taking off the head of a mat behind him. 'Tulth, exclaimed Pat "ye niver knew a man to lose any thing by belu' perllie!" Nervous? Thin ?Pale? Arc you easily tired,lack your usual vigor and strength? Then your digestion must be poor, your blood must be thin, your nerves must be weak. You need a strong tonic You need Ayer's SarsapariUa, the only Sarsa parilh entirely free from alco hol. We believe your doctor will endorse these state ments. Ask and find out If you think constipation is of trifiiag cor.jfquence, Just ask your doctor. He will divabuse you of that notion in short nlcr. "Correct it at once!" be wilt say. Then tk him about Ayer's Pills. A mild liver pill, all vepetable. . I f. O. At MM 00.. lews!. Amsterdam Youths' Privilege for Dis covery of Gunpowder Plot En Joyed Nearly 300 Years. Of the many quaint and curious customs, traditions and privileges pre vailing in Holland none la more ex traordinary than a certain privilege that has been enjoyed by the boys of Amsterdam for nearly 300 years, the Boston Evening Transcript remarks. At a fixed time each summer these boys gather by the hundreds in the great square called the Dam, situated the center of the city. Each boy has a drum slung over his shoulder. 1 Facing this square Is the stock ex change, and on the occasion in ques tion Just as soon as the day's business is over as many of the boys as possi ble crowd into the building. They proceed to the floor of the exchange, where, pursuant to this old custom, they are permitted to march about, inglng and beating their drums. The origin of this custom, it is said, Is as follows: One afternoon of the year 1622 a crowd of boys playing In the Dam lost ball in the canal that in those days Bklrted ono side of the square. One of the lads, while climbing in among the plleB on which the building stood, found instead of his ball a boat moor ed in a dark corner and loaded with boxes of gunpowder. This showed clearly enough what was afterward ascertained with certainty, the Inten tion of the Spanish conspirators to blow up the stock exchange while it was crowded, as it was every day, with the leading citizens of the city. The boy who stumbled upon the gunpowder at once hurried to the town authorities with his news. The boatload of explosives was quietly sunk in the canal and the Spanish plot thus frustrated. When the burgesses asked the boy wnat reward be desired for the serv ice he had rendersd the town be re plied that so long as there was stock exchange In Amsterdam the boys of the town would like to be permit ted to make the floor of the exchange their playground during a certain part of the year. The request was granted; and so the custom survives. REMAINS OF BABY AND ANIMAL . DUMPED IN 6AM E COFFIN. Infant Dies at a City Hospital, and Mother Claims That 8he Was Not Notified of Its Demise Undertaker Makes Discovery. St. Louis, Mo. The mutilated body af their four-months-old son, Joseph, wrapped in a rag with a dead Angora goat, was recovered the other day by Mr. and Mrs. Stanislaus Maggos, 2003 Cass avenue. The parents at the time were on their way to the grave in pot ter's field, following the child's death at the City hospital. Only the front of the skull, the arms and the chest of the Infant were :ontained in the box, in which they and the goat were to have been bur led together. The rest of the child's iody had been cut away in an autopsy held In the morgue at the City hos pital. The lower part of the body had jeen kept at the hospital for an atonal- al study. Crazed with horror and grief at the fate of her only child, the dis tracted mother, Rosa, . 30 years old. old the tale of her Infant son s fate. Being In poor financial clrcum- itances, and with a husband out of work, the woman has been forced, al though paralyzed in her left arm and eg, to work for her living. Unable to take her four-mouths-old baby to work with her, the mother Has been leaving it at the Nledring iaus Memorial Mission, where she paid a few cents a day to have it ared for while she was at work. She left the baby there the other morning, she says, and went to work. When she returned at five o'clock the matron in charge told her the baby svaa sick and had been sent to the Zlty hospital about an hour before. Mrs. Maggos then walked to the llty hospital to see her baby, she says. rhere she was told she could see the ittle one the next morning. The fol lowing morning she went, saw the shild for a few minutes, and then went o her work. At 12:35 that afternoon the baby lied, according to the City hospital ecords. The tracer was notified of he death and instructions given to notify the child's parents,, at 2008 Morth Twentieth street. " Investigat ion shows there is no such number, md the baby's parents were not notl-led. "I called up the City hospital," Mrs. vlaggos said through an interpreter, ind was told the baby's condition was he same. "I called again the next day, and was told Joseph had died the day be fore at noon, and that I could have .he body any time. "When the undertaker went to the 3ity hospital he was told the baby lad been buried. He telephoned the Potter's Field, and was told the body was then on Its way to the grave. "The undertaker ordered the body leld, he says, and went out and got it. When he brought the box supposed to jontain the child's remains, he found :he parts previously named and tire toat wrapped together." ' PROMPTER IS ALWAYS HANDY Little Device Held In Hand Enables One to Deliver Long Speech Without Trouble. Do you want to make a speech and have your audience think that you're so all-fired smart that you can quote figures and facts without looking at any notesT There's more ways than one. Outside of learning your speech "by heart," the best device Is the Invention of a man in Australia. It consists simply of a small metal case, no larger than the metal matchbox used. A roller is at either end of the case and one of the rollers is folding with GIRL IS TREED BY BEARS vllnnesota Girl While 8eeklng a Lost . Cow Has Thrilling Encounter. Ever-Ready Prompter. paper on which appear the notes of speech. The box is held in the palm of the hand and people standing right beside the orator would never sus pect its presence. The paper is un rolled either by pressure of the thumb or by the manipulation of a milled screw on one of the rollers. Her Flowers Melted. Little Minnie, who had been spend ing the afternoon at a neighbor's, was presentad with a bouquet of beautiful flowers. Upon her arrival at home her mother told hor to put them In a vase filled with water and they would keep fresh for several days. A few days later Minnie appeared with the wilted flowers in her hand and said: 1 desa 1 11 frow em away now, mam ma, 'cause they is all melted." Hotel Would Do. Small Willie was out walking with his mother, oue afternoon, when she stopped to give a nickel to a beggar. "vny aont no go home, mamma?" asked Willie. "Th poor man has no home." she replied. "Then," continued the little fellow, "why don't be go to a hotel T" A Brick Problem. If a brick balances with three-quar tera of a brick snd three-quarters of a pound then how much does a brick weigh? Answer: Three pounds. Low Down Dog. -SmaU Edna was out walking with her mother wben a dog with unusually short legs passed them. "Mamma." said Edna, "did you ever see suck a low down dog as that?" Kinney, Minn. While hunting for lost cow In the woods adjacent to ler father's homestead, seven miles lorth of this town, Mary Mclnnes, lfteen years old, encountered a black ear with two well-grown cubs. She was almost upon the animals before the saw them. Screaming, the girl scrambled over 'alien logs and dead brush, the en- aged bears coming after her. Coming x a small tree, she grasped the low- ir boughs and drew herself up until mt of immediate danger. The bear lung around the tree and made sev iral attempts lo climb it, but its efforts vere failures, owing to the small girth the trunk, which prevented the mite from getting a solid grip. The weather was very cold, and as the jvenlng wore on it became almost im possible for the girl to retain her lold on the houghs through cramps in' ler arms and the stiffness from cold. When darkness came on the parents and elder brother became alarmed1 ind started out with lanterns to find ;he girl, calling loudly as they pro seeded through the woods. Miss Me Innes heard the calls and endeavored ;o answer them, but at first found it Impossible to make even the slight tst sound because of the cold and aervousnesa. As the searchers drew aearer, however, she was heard call ing faintly. The bears must have een frightened by the lantern light, is nothing was seen of them by the rescuing party. Miss Mclnnes collapsed when taken .Tom her perilous position. She had been in the tree six hours. EXCELLENT RULES GIVEN FOR IMPROVING SWEET CORN SEED Farmers Who are Most Successful Plant Early, Use Plenty of Manure and High Grade Commercial Fertilizer and Keep Plants Clean From Weeds and Thoroughly Cultivated. . . mm J HSVf SJWW i Prize Winning Seed Ears. (By CHARLES D. WOODS.) General observation shows beyond any question that the farmers who are most successful with sweet corn, are those who employ the following rules: Plant early, use plenty of ma nure and high grade commercial fer tilizer, keep the corn clean from weeds and well cultivated, do not plant too thick, use seed well adjusted to the locality in which it Is to be grown. The following detailed plan is drawn up for the guidance of farmers who desire to improve their sweet corn seed. ' ' First Year's Work. In the first year's work towards an Improved strain of seed, only the field selections of plants from which ears are later to be used for planting can be made. These selections should be made of the growing plants in the field. In choosing plants to be eaved for seed look out for the following points in the order named. In going over the field one should provide himself with some strips of cheap bright colored cloth, about 2 feet long and 2 to 3 inches wide. Wben a stalk is select ed to be saved for seed one of these cloths ehould be tied around It just below the tassel. This marks the Ducks Clear Hotel of Files. Chicago. The champion fly catch ers of Chicago are said to be a flock of yellow ducks at a local hotel. Ac cording to the manager, they keep the restaurant free from files every day. The ducks are kept in a fountain in the main entrance and each morning are carried to the dining room, where the chase for files begtus. Costly Ham. Chicago. Frank Morlarty stole a ham worth $1.92. Patrolman Friends followed the trail of grease and ar rested Frank. The ham cost Morlarty 3. ,V Wins Eating Contest. New York. In an eating contest at College Point Philip LommeU de voured seven and one-half pounds of iteak. eleven rolls.' ten ears of corn md ten cups of coffee. Seeks Ons-Legged Man. Philadelphia. Dr. Oberholtier, di rector of the historical pageant wbScl Is to be held here, la trying to find a sne-legged descendant of Peter Stuy veaaut to appear for the Dutch gov wraor. , Rack for Drying Sweet Corn. This may be made rat and mouse proof by covering top, bottom and sides with wire screen. plant so that it will be saved when the rest of the crop is cut. 1. Whatever other good points a stalk may have do. not save It for seed unless it is conspicuously earlier than the others around it. This is most Important. 2. Take only stocky plants with broad leaves bearing good sized, and so far as can be judged at this stage, well-shaped ears. 3. Take only stalks which show the characters which are typical for the variety you are working with. Avoid freaks. The field in which selections are made must obviously be cut by hand, so that the marked plants may be left standing to mature their ears. Save about twice as many plants In the field as you expect to want ear j for planUng the breeding plot of next year. , When the selected plants are well matured (stalks and husks dead and drying) thoy should be harvested, and the ears should be husked and cared for In the following manner. In the winter, after the ears from these plants are well dried on the racks, the best of them should be picked out for shelling and planting. Special at tention should be paid to the follow ing points. 1. Take only ears having small well packed grains in straight rows, and with the grains set firmly on the cob. Select no ears with fewer than 14 rows (better 16.) 2. Aim to select ears of medium size, nearly cylindrical in shape, and with butt and tip fairly well covered with gra 8.' TeBt the germination of each ear by taking 25 kernels from the middle of the ear. Reject all ears from which more than two kernels out of the 25 fall to germinate within ten days. Having selected the ears for plant ing shell them, keeping the grain from each ear by Itself In a paper bag. Do COSTLY LESSON IN HAY BALING not save the kernels from the butt and tip, say for about inch from each end. Each ear selected, should be given a rfumber. This number ma be written on a slip of paper and pul in the bag with the shelled seed. -Second's Year's Work. The corn should be planted eacli year In two plots, one the breeding plot and the other the propagation plot. In planting the corn for seed use the best corn land you have, and manure and fertilize it welL Plant the rows 3 feet apart and the Mill 18 inches apart in the row. Plant 4 kernels to the hill and thin to leavi the two best stalks standing in th hill. Give the plots the best cultiva tion you can. ; I In the breeding plot should b planted the selected ears. Each eai should be planted In one row by it self. (This is called the ear-to-ro system.) The rows should be giver, the number borne by the ear planted in it. Careful .observation should b made throughout the season. Each row - should be harvested separately Its yield determined and the ears from it kept separate from the ears from all other rows. The seed from the best rows, thos showing greatest earllness and high est yield of good quality corn and stoJ jver, should be used to plant the propa gatlon plot the third year. Reject all nubbins and poor ears.. In the propagation plot of this yeai plant the good ears from the previoui year selection which were not used in the breeding plot. It is desirable though not absolutely necessary in the propagation plot to detassel every alternate. Detasseling is done by pull ing out and throwing away the tasse! (spindle) as soon as it appears. The ears from the detasseled rows are tc be regarded as the best seed, and those from the rows where the tasseli were not removed as second best The two classes should be harvested and cured separately. Seed from the de tasseled rowB will probably be found to yield better than that from the oth ers. . ; Just as in the previous year the best individual plants from both the breed ing and propagation' plots should be marked with clothes and saved sepa rately to furnish seed for the follow ing year's ear-to-row breeding plot Third and Succeeding Year's Wock. Plant on tho ear-to-row system, the individual ears selected the previoui year in the breeding plot. In the pro pagation plot plant seed from the best rows of the preceding year. In the propagation plot detassel everj alternate row. The seed from the do tasseled row will be the best 6eed From your individual plant selections take the seed for the following year'i breeding plot. , REDUCE YOUR LiMG EXPiJSES Eat Golden Cereal Foods and recommend them to your acquaint ances. Yon -et better quality and more for jour money. They are made In your boma state from the best Oregon Oata and Wheat. ,. Lars packages contain a Handsome Premium and all groda are guaranteed. Ask yonr grocer. Golden Rod Oats. Golden Rod Pancake Flour. Golden Red Wheat Flakes. Ralston Select Bran. Golden Rod Wheat Nuts. Golden Rod Chick Food. SG-30ES Ox $3.00 $3.50 '4.00 $4.50 AND $5.00, FOR MEN AND WOMEN Days all wear IV. L. Douglas $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00 School Shoes. Best In the world W. L Douscla makes and sell more $3.00. S3.50 and $4.00 ' hoes than any other manufacturer in the world because .('; they look better, fit better, and wear longer than ordi-- nary shoes. ,' CAUTION. When you bur shoes be sure W. L. Douglas 11 name is stamped on the bottom. It guarantees protection to you against inferior shoes. Beware of substitutes. W. L. Douglas shoes are sold in 78 Own stores in large cities and retail shoe dealers everywhere. . .fmtt Color Eytiett. Write for Catalog. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. Original Amen Corner. The) origin of the name "Amen cor ner" Is interesting - and throws a pleasant light on English Catholicity of the days before the apostasy of Henry VHL Each year on the feast of Corpus Christl the faithful went in procession to St. Paul's cathedraL Mustering )n Cheapside, the proces sion moved toward the cathedral, the clergy chanting the "Our Father" as they passed along the street still called Paternoster "row, reaching the "Amen" as they turned the corner known for years as Amen corner. ive Maria. :: : - 'v . Ked Uras Ball Blue will wash double as many clothes as any other blue. Don't put your money inro any otner. Damage by Lightning In Cities. Investigations made over Europe teem to justify the belief that the dam tge by lightning, in the cities particu larly, has decreased to a very marked legree in recent years, and It Is ex plained by the presence of electric (fires, which act as a protection in di verting the electric bolts. : As the wires are put underground, it is ex pected that there will be noticed a treat increase in the amount of dam age by lightning and a return will be generally made to the use of lightning rods. : Mothers will find Mrs. Whitlow's Boothlns Byrup the best remedy to use for their chUdrea unng tie teeunng perioa. Strong Cholera Serum. Farmers are now storing their prod uct for future use. This is easily poa slble, and until the scourge, so dlsas trous last year, is stamped out, nc chances should be taken. If last yeai a large supply of hog cholera serum had been available,' it is reasonable to suppose that comparatively little damage would have been done. Gov ernment as well as private - planti were wholly inadequate to meet the demand of 1911, and as a consequence hog cholera losses were unprecedent ed. . Scientists are convfneed thai properly stored hog cholera serun will keep for three or four years. Thli being true, there ought to be little complaint hereafter should cholera break out forme Who Had Fifty Acres in Grass Cwt it Too Soon Better io Feed, to Animals. , By XL A. OLMSTEAD.) One of my neighbors learned a les ion In hay baling this year. Ha had never been a hay farmer until last year when he put In a crop of timothy .ed top mixed. He cut a pretty fair srop in July but he was so eager to jet at the new work that he cut it a little too soon. Ha has about 50 acres in grass and concluded to bale the crop and sell it I suggested that ie ought to stack it and let it stand tt least six weeks for cutting before saling it, but the hay looked pretty lry and he concluded to haul it direct rom the cocks to the baler. It looked eery nice as it came out of the baler and our neighbor stacked it all up .hree tiers deep. Of course the bulk of the hay spoiled Rotation of Crops. If we use but one crop on the land and cultivate it clean all the time the soil will quickly be robbed of its hu mus; therefore we must follow a proper rotation in order to supply humus, without which we can do lit tle. Some men have never discovered this fact however. and it will. be a total loss. I never think of baling timothy hay on my place until It has gone through a sweat and la practically cured, there fore, I stopped selling baled hay sev eral years ago because 1 discovered that It paid much better to feed the bay to make beof and obtain manure to put back on the land to raise more hay. This season I cut an average of three tons of timothy on 40 acres and It was as fine hay as I ever saw. Some of the neighbors who are hay sellers got only oa an average of two tons and they do not seem to under stand where the trouble is. Origin ally their land was as good as mine but they have yet to learn that they cannot keep on selling off their hay crops without putting anything back oa the land. The Calf Pasture . Calves ought to have a separate pas ture, and one In good clean order. They cannot thrive on short or soiled grasa, nor hold their own In pastures with older animals, as the latter will monopolize them or take th choke portions. Chinese Barbers In Hard Luck. Barber shops were the exception, rather than the rule, in China in the old days, Itinerant barbers attending to their customers' wants in the streets or In the customers' home. There appears to be no tendency to ward the institution of barber shops ince the change of hairdresslng; In tact, the tendency locally is to do away with the barber altogether. Thus many families are purchasing hairclip pers, which seem to be regarded as the uily essential to haircutting. Red Cross Ball Blue, all blue, best blulnr value in in wnoie world, makes the laundress smile. What Could He Mean? A young woman went to a grocery jtore and asked the polite clerk 11 he had some good cheese. . "Yes, In deed," he replied, "1 have some lovely cheese," - "It is not correct to call cheese lovely,'." she" said.; "How Is that?" he inquired. "Because 'lovely should be used to qualify only some thing that is alive." "Well," retort ed the clerk, "I'll stick to 'lovely.'" Way of the Truly Great s It is easy in this world to live aft er the world's opinion; it is easy in solitude to live after one's own; but the great man Is he who in the midst of the orowd keeps with perfect sweet ness the independence of solitude. Emerson. : ' - Discovery of Carborundum. Carborundum first was produced by a chemist who, while experimenting with electricity, happened to place car bon electrodes connected with a dy namo into a bowl containing some crushed coke and clay,. JFRUnilS DESPONDENT IVOMEf Find Relief in Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound -Their Own Statements v- So Testify. v - Flatea, Pa, "When I wrote to yoa first I Was troubled with female weak ness and backache, and was so nervous that I would cry at the least noise, it would startle me so. I began to take Ly dia E. Pinkham'a remedies, and I don't have any more cry ing spells. I sleep sound and my ner vousness Is better. I will recommend your medicines to all suffering women." -Mrs. Maky Halstead, Platea, Pa., Box S3. Here is the report of another genuine case, which still further shows that Ly dia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound may be relied upon. . . Walcott, N. Dakota. "I had inflam mation which earned pain in my sid and my back ached all the time. I was so blue that I felt like crying if any one even spoke to me. I took Lydia E. Pmkham's Vegetable Compound, and I began to gain right away. I continued its use and now I am a well woman, -Mrs. Amelia Dahx Walcott, K. Dakota. If yo want special advice write fa lydia E. Tiaksam Slcdicine Co. (ronfl oYatial) L) an, Mass. Tear letter will be opened, rea l and answered by a voiaaa and hell ia fctxict elinee. THE ' - ; V!':i'.'!;'V""p I PACIFIC LUTHERAN ACADEMY AND BUSINESS COLLEGE. OPENS SEPTEMBER 24 Mil LOCATED NEAR TACOMA-Chriatian; co-educational; lar?e campus; modern equipment; ath letics; new $5000 gymnasium under construction. PREPARES thoroughly, and In the shortest possible time, for College. Business, Teaching-, Civil Service, and Citizenship. , Languages a Spe cialty. . Eight Courses; no entrance examinations; spe- cial clauses for f oreiKners. EXPENSES LOW: Tuition, board, room and washing-, nine months, $180; eighteen weeks, $95; nine weeks, $50. You ask: How can you furnish all this for less than the usual price of board and lodging! We answer: By the aid of our church we are enabled to give our students more than they pay for. We can't tell all here. Our free 50-page cata logue will do it. Send for It Address N. J. HONG, Principal Parkland. Wash. Born; Not Made. "Professor," said Miss Skylight, n want you to suggest a course in life for me. I have thought of Journal Ism" "What are your own incllna tlons ?" "Oh, my soul yearns and throbs and pulsates with an ambition to give the world a life-work that Bhall be marvelous In its scope, and weirdly entrancing in the vastness of its structural beauty!" "Woman, you're born to be a milliner.' QUICK RELIEF SORE EYES Locomotive's Diet Young Freddie is a natural student and observer, and he Is especially in terested in railway matters. The oth er day, waiting with his mother In s train mysteriously "held up" at a way side station, Freddie pondered: "Mam ma, I guess this is where the en gine gets its dinner. They feed it on coal, hot water and matches, and 1 guess they let it have all the hot air ii wants for dessert" Varying Grades of Caviar. ' The finest caviar is the bieluga, pre pared from the roe of the-white stur geon; little less fine is the sevrluga, prepared from the sterliated sturgeon. Both are put up at Astrakhan, Russia. XlWttJ- i THE POULTRY REMEDY. Mr. Stephen Holbrooke. Sec'y I acoma ( wash.) roultry Ass n writes t "I will give Mexican Mustang Liniment an unequivocal endorsement as a remedy for Bumblefoot and Canker in the Throat. Hitherto I have fonnd these diseases of my poultry very dithcalt to cure but Mustang Liniment proved to be a positive remedy." I 2 5c 50c. SI a bottle at Drag & Cen'l Stores g Painless Dentistry b oar pride onr bobby oar study for years aal Bow oar success, and ours Is the jk.st painless work to be fonnd anywhere, no matter bow maoa yom fay. Compare our Prices, v e noun plate ana r at. w. s. wiu, nn.Tsw i as iusi atnsum ntiuss I brides work for out. oi tnwm patrons la ton. j)sy It desired. Painless .strocUoa frits when pl.tes of - bnlgo work ia order fed. Csatahstws tna.- ' MolarCrowKi $5.C3 ,22l8ri(lrTsth4.Cd 6id TSUna ' 1C3 Enimsl Fillings t,C0 JStrFi!lins .50 Hiioi Ruse ' i pitt 5.C3 ,iMtH4 getter- Flstss : f.BU P!n(s EitrMIw .63 ' 1ST MKTMODS) AU work fully guaranteed for f.fteea yean. Wise Bental Co.,ic Painless Dentists Fsflfrtf BtiiMhit, Thlrt aid WMtM. PORTUUffl, CHS SmssHMM! t A. M. f. X. Suauji. Ui f - 1 " OUT Or TOWN PEOPLE en receive prranot treat ments of Hoa-foisoaMs, BMlta-Bsiliuag tssMtiM C GEE WO the Chinese doctor. Try once more if job hr b-wa oWtortnc rMl thwooesjsd that on and hava nirt ot..lrid r,t Buneitt r-Urt. Lei ih sroat nature bwt ler ilim. iwwe rwr and piwailn sot tmmMy waow ertiou m quk k. nr and anfe. )iia pwncrlptkiRS are eons!OMiiwd from Koofe. Herha, bud. d barks that ha re been gat hwl from ewery ena. two! 8ii elabe. TiM avnu of t&a. mdlivmss are not taown to the ootaid world, hot b.va ten Eiaa-1wl damn froai father to sou to. the fi&jaiaiaaa7 Usuiisa ia Cause. CONSCT.TATIOX FREE. If yon tin oat of Mnra and cannot T1, writ fW SUUBtA THEC.6EEW0 CElXtSEKB! 1 621 first St Cor. Uomsaa Partial, Orefaav 2 1! 03. P. N. U. No. as-'tt ttm this paiwir.