The Athena press. (Athena, Umatilla County, Or.) 18??-1942, January 17, 1913, Image 4

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    POULTRY AND GAME
Can get too fancy price for Wild Ducks
and other game in Mason. Write na for
cub offer on all kinds of poultry. Pe. etc.
Pearson-Page Co., Portland
Machinery
Second-Hand Machin
ery bought, aold and
tnr. eswroills, etc. The J. E. Martin Go.. 83 1st
Bt, Portland. Bend for Stock Lilt and price.
LIME FERTILIZER
Also Land Piaster, Lime, Cement. Wall Plas
ter and Shingle. Writ for price.
NOTTINGHAM & CO.
102 Front Street POHTLANt), OB.
MAKE CHRISTMAS MONEY
Boss and Girls wanted to manufacture and
sell Perfection Furniture Polish. Agents pay
15c. Retails 25c. Send 60e for formula and
direction!. Material costs 8c. Artis Mfg.
Co., Dept. G, 811-12 Bernice Bldg., Tacoraa,
Wash.
When in PORTLAND stop at
NEW SCOTT HOTEL
Large, light rooms: steam heat; big lobby;
clean and orderly; close to business section;
best place for family in city. BOOMS 60c UP.
Seventh and Ankeny Streets
v i . . All T"v A- L r'
SAVE MIDDLEMAN'S PROFIT
of $100 or more by buying your
Piano or Player Piano direct
from factory store.
BUSH & LANE PIANO COMPANY
355 Washington St., Portland, Or.
TURKEYS WANTED
We want dressed Turkeys, Ducks and Gees
for Thanksgiving trade. Writ for our print
ed booklet on dressing and marketing to get
highest prices. Write today. We also want
Veal, Pork and all kinds of Live Poultry.
F. H. SCIIMALZ A CO.
Psld-up Capital $10,000.
141-143 Front Street Portland, Oregon
Economical Lighting Co.
Gasoline Hollow Wire Lighting Systems
Mantles and Glassware
' Mantles for Canchester, Aladdin, all the differ
ent makes of Kerosene Mantle Lamps. Junior
Rag Mantles 60c per dosen. Writ us.
Agent! Wanted. 597 Williimi An., Psrtlind
Insane Asylums.
The great Greek physicians had de
Toted much attention to insanity, and
some of their precepts anticipated
modern discoveries, but no lunatic asy
lum appears to have existed In an
tiquity. In the first period of the
monastic life a refuge is said to have
been opened for the insane at Jerusa
lem, but this appears to have been a
..nOlltarv instance, arlalns; from otI.
gencies of a single class, and It may
be said that no lunatlo asylum ex
isted in Christian Europe until about
the time of the fifteenth century,
Daniel In Second Place.
' Little Willie's grandmother had
buijiua uiui jjiuio aiurittB. msj
favorite being that of Daniel in the
lions' den. At the age of four he was
taken to a circus for the first time.
When the lion-tamer put his head into
the lion's mouth little Willie's excite
ment knew no bounds. Jumping up
and down, he gleefully screamed:
"Oh, myt That knocks the spot off
Daniell-
Courage of Their Opinion.
Thirty-five is a very attractive age.
London society Is full of women who
of their own free choice have remain
ed thirty-five for years. The Tatler.
f His Line of Work.
' "Sam, have you got a Job nowt"
"Oh, yes, sah." "What are you doing.
Bam?" "Why, !' gottin' my wife
washin', boBS."
CONSTRUCTING GOOD ROADS IN WISCONSIN
X'
4
X".r
1
r
The illustration given above shows a nine-foot stone road, built on a
sand foundation, near Portage, Wis.
GOOD ROADS IN TENNESSEE
SOLVE GOOD ROADS QUESTION
Thing to Do Is to Get Every Farmer
to Buy an Automobile and Prob
lem Will Be Worked Out.
A few years ago the bicycle came
Into use and the good roads agitation
was born. In a few years afterward
the auto came. At first its home was
chiefly confined to the city streets. In
a few years it became a friend to the
countryman and the villager, and now
it is found in every section. The bi
cycle is passing and the auto is now
serving a splendid purpose in awak
ening the people to a betterment of
road conditions, and when the farm
ers of the country adopt this modern
way of travel there will not be any
great trial in getting the pubiio high
ways in better condition. The thing
to do is to got every farmer who can
afford it to buy an auto and in less
than 60 years the good roads question
will be solved. The autos must come
before the good roads question can be
solved. The auto tours that are be
ing made throughout the country are
proving to bo builders of the highest
order. We need more of them. Good
roads associations will follow in the
wake of every auto tour and theBe as
sociations will Improve public high
ways, Lamar Republican-Sentinel.
CAMPAIGN FOR GOOD ROADS
Rheumatism
Neuralgia
Sprains
Mrs O. Majtonkv, of 2708 R. St.,
W. Washington, . C, writes : " I suf
fered with rheumatism for fire yours
and I have just got bold of your Xlni
uient, and ft has done me so iniu U
good. My knees do not pals and Uie)
welling Las gone."
Quiets the Nerves
Mrs. A.Wkidmam, of 403 Thompson
St., MarvTille. Mo., writes : " The
nerv tu my leg was dentrojed five
years ago and loit me with a jerking
.at ttlglit so that 1 could not slitep. A
frleuil told me to try your Liuiuieul
and now 1 could not do without it. I
tlud after Its use 1 can sleep,"
SLOAN'S
LINIMENT
"Is a good Liniment I keep it on
hand all the time. My daughter
sprained her wrist and used your
Liniment, and it has not hurt her
since."
Joseph
Hatcher,
of Mma, N. C,
B.FO.7no.4,
At All Dealers
Pric
85c, 60c., $1.00
loan's took oa
bunwe, rattle, boss
iMt poultry isbi
(n. Aaitoss,
Dr.
EarlS.
Sloan,
Boston,
Mass.
il
WPS
EL; HyiMw,na
lilasMOraiklynis. TsrtM Ow4. I'm I"!
f ,1 " SoM y Prstslrt. f . I
Fall 8eason Is Good Time to Take Up
Question of Better Thorough
faresFew Reasons.
.
Now that the fall months are here
after the crops are secured, it will be
a good time to take up the matter
of good roads building. This work
can often be done to better advantage
in the fail and winter months, or in
tho early spring, and where gravel
or other binding material has to be
used, It will pack and harden better
at this season.
Another reason for the fall and win
ter campaign for road building is that
there is usually more time, and the
work can be done cheaper.
No town or community can well
make a better investment than by the
judicious spending of labor and money
in the construction of pubiio highways,
if properly applied, and that Is cer
tainly one of the problems that Idaho
needs to work out.
Uncle Sam should set the pace in
this matter, and the various states
should co-operate. It should, further
more, be a perpetual campaign. Gem
State Rural.
Macadam Road Economy.
' I have no doubt that it will sur
prise most people here to learn how
little material is used in the making
of some of the finest roads of Europe,
writes Ernest Flagg in the Century.
The average thickness of the national
roads of Fiance is only five and one
eighths inches; 11 per cent of them
are less than two inches thick, and 42
per cent are less than four inches
thick. Yet they stand constant and
often heavy traffic with impunity, and
are always in a perfect state of re
pair. Torfect repair is, Indeed, essen
tial, for it needs no argument to show
that roads so thin must be free from
Irregularities if they are to stand at
all.
Good Roads.
When will we learn that the best
way to make good roads is to hire the
ditching, drawing and dragging done
by competent men, instead of the
present bungling system of "every
man" working out his own road tax?
Weeds In Corners.
Fence corners full of dead weeds
make fine hibernating places for all
kinds of bugs which will get busy
with your crop in the spring.
Having Houses Ready.
Build good hog houses before bad
weather sets In. Houses In the end
are cheaper than feed at present
prices, and hogs will not do their best
when compelled to sleep out of doors
In bad weather. A good feeding floor
pays well.
Poultry Breeding.
To succeed with poultry breed that
which you like best One must have
pride In appearano of hit birds
In order to become interested in thus
tod suWaeed. . - -
All Pubiio Thoroughfares Laid Off
Into Districts, and Then Let to
Responsible Corporations.
A few years ago it was the good
fortune of the editor to visit the
state of Tennessee, and he was forcbly
struck by the beautiful turnpikes that
traversed almost every section of the
state. These roads were properly laid
out by engineers, and the editor of
the Co-Operator was very anxious to
learn how these roads were built and
maintained.,
We were told that the law In Ten
nessee provided that the proper court
shall lay off all public roads into
convenient districts, and then let them
out to responsible corporations, who
enter into a contract to build and
maintain a perfect highway through
out the district covered by said con
tract for a period of ten years, and
the lessees are in the meantime em
powered to establish toll gates and
collect such toll as the law prescribes
for building and maintaining such pub
lic roads. These are under the juris
diction of a watchful supervisor whose
duty it is to see that the road . is
kept in accordance with the contract.
If the lessee falls to keep and main
tain such road as specified in the con
tract, then it becomes the duty of the
court to forfeit said contract, and the
road becomes the charge of the coun
ty. Each citizen of the county is per
mitted to buy a road permit that en
titles him to the privilege of traveling
the public roads of the county for the
period of one year without let or hin
drance. ,
Tnese roads are laid out by ex
perlenced engineers, and are car
ried around the bills and mountains
so that all grades are the Bame and
all grades are made easy of ascent
These roads are properly graded with
graders and then macadamized by
putting stone over, the surface while
the grade is new, or during the, wet
times, so that the sharp edges of
the stones will be easily pressed into
the ground and make an even, smooth
surface for horses and vehicles to
travel over.
All along the public highway wher
ever there is a stone quarry you can
see great piles of broken stone ready
to be hauled upon the public roads.
This stone is sold to the lessees of the
roads for so much a car load.
It costs from $2,000 to $8,000 per
mile to build these roads if no other
materials used in their construc
tion. The bridges and culverts are all con
structed out of concrete and are very
strong and durable, and with the prop
er care and attention will last for
ages.
The state levies a small tax as a
sinking fund to maintain these roads
after the lease expires, and to keep
and maintain any districts where the
lease has been forfeited.
By this system of public highways
the state has a uniform system of pub
lic roads that cover the entire state
and through this system the roads are
kept in perfect repair, giving that ac
commodation that is so necessary to
facilitate our growing commerce.
The slogan of the town and coun
try should now be good roads, and
tnls slogan should be .echoed and re
echoed until Texas has a system of
roads that meets the domands of her
people and her growing commerce.
Texas Farm and Co-Operator.
Suggests the Mounting of American Boy Scouts
WASHINGTON. Curtis Guild, Jr,
American ambassador to St Pe
tersburg, desires to see mounted boy
scouts. He believes the United States
government should furnish ponies for
ine boys, give them instruction In
horseback riding and train them In
kill la riding and develop their hardl-ness.
He outlines his clan in a letter to
the state department, which has been
referred to James E. West chief scout
executive of the Boy Scouts of Ameri
ca. West is enthusiastic over the
scheme. The scout leaders are taking
the matter up with Ambassador Guild
and the officials in Washington.
Ambassador Guild got his inspira
tion from seeing 70 Cossack boys drill
before the czar last spring. "At recent
events," he writes, "in the presence of
the emperor at Krasnoe Selo, there
was one thing of particular importance
as it opened a new vista of the possi
bilities of the boy scout movement
'Early In May some Cossack boys,
ranging in age from eleven to four
teen years, left their villages and as
sembled at Lepslnsk, mounted on
small and rough but hardy ponies.
They marched 600 miles across coun
try to Kabul-Sal on the Tashkent rail
road where they entrained for St Pe
tersburg toward tho end of July.
"Arriving in St Petersburg, the 70
boys rode around the city seeing the
sights for several days, and they were
then given a place in the grand re
view. The next day they gave a spe
cial drill before the emperor. The
drill consisted of a little troop work
In close order, of the Cossack exer
cises In the saddle with the pony at
full speed, and ended with all the
boys standing in their saddles, advanc
ing la line and singing their native
songs."
"It was difficult to Bay who enjoyed
It the most, the few spectators or the
boys themselves. It made a very pret
ty light and the thought at once oc
curred to me: Why, If Russia can do
this much for its boys, cannot. Ameri
ca at least do as well for its sonBT
"Would It not be possible out of the
vast annual expenditures to devote a
few dollars as a reward to some small
troop of boy scouts to equip them
temporarily with the few things need
ed by a troop of boys, to give them a
trip to Washington and let them see
the president?
"The horse and all that pertains
thereto is fast being forgotten by the
people at large. . Is it not worth while
to again Instill the love of riding?"
Washington's Sewerage System Pronounced Best.
Medal for Paving Blocks.
An advance in road paving for
which a British engineering firm has
been awarded a bronze medal by the
Royal Sanitary Institute should be of
more than ordinary importance.
Clinker residue from the collection
and burning of house refuse is used
for the paving blocks, and by special
machinery is ground, thoroughly
mixed with oil and Trinidad asphalt
and then pressed Into blocks 9 by 4 1-J
by 3 inches In size, each weighing
about ton pounds. At the destructor
works at Kensington more than five
hundred blocks an hour are made.
They are passed directly through a
water-cooling process, and are then
ready for immediate laying. Some of
the blocks under test have been laid
over four years. They have not only
provided an exceedingly durable and
noiseless pavement, but It la claimed
that they are sanitary and take little
scavenging; that they do not become
slippery, and that they are not In any
way affected by rain, frost sunshine
or other ordinary conditions.
WASHINGTON'S sewerage system
has been pronounced the finest
in the world by a party, Including
some of the foremost sanitary en
gineers. This party, which included
Dr. John Watson, chief sanitary en
gineer of Birmingham, England, and
formerly chief sanitary engineer of
Toronto; Dr. George W. Fuller of
New York, author of the standard
work on sewerage systems; Dr.
Soper, president of the Metropolitan
Drainage commission of New York
City, and James C. Webster, chief
sanitary engineer of Philadelphia,
were escorted over the system by Su
perintendent Asa E. Phillips just at
the close of the Congress of Hygiene
and Demography. It was the unani
mous opinion of this party that no
city had a better system except the
German municipalities, which were
considered to be a model In this re
gard. Washington is underlaid by
600 miles of subterranean rivers, an
average of nearly nine miles of river
to every square mile of land. These
are really underground rivers, be
cause they take off the flowage from a
half dozen or so streams which used
to drain through what is now the
central portion of the city. In addi
tion, they handle all the drainage
from Washington houses and all the
Immense amount of rain that falls an
nually in the District The system
was started In 1810, when an initial
appropriation of $120 was granted for
that purpose. The present sewerage
system has so far cost $12,000,000
and the annual expenditure for sew
erage runs about $350,000, and the
annual Increase in mileage is about
25 miles. To get rid of mosquito
breeding, all of the catch basins, of
which there are about 6,000, are
thoroughly flushed biweekly, and then
dosed with mosquito oil during the
season. It is estimated that the av
erage cost for this treatment is about
six cents a basin. In the hot dry sea
son these basins, uncared for In other
cities, hold water and offer breeding
places for bugs, mosquitoes and other
inlets. Washington can well feel
proud of the splendid reputation for
her sewerage system given by these
eminent scientists.
Uncle Sam Makes It Much Easier to Secure a Farm
GENEROUS Uncle Sam who for over
a century' has been giving away
homesteads in the west through his
general land office here, has decided
that In order to make these lands
more attractive to the prospective set
tlers he must make some concessions
which will render them easier to ac
quire. As a result of the constant
granting of homestead tracts, ranging
from 40 to 820 acres, since the enact
ment of the homestead act of 1868,
during which time the government has
given away gratis more than 123,540,
85S acres in final homestead entries,
the land office has found It had on Its
hands lands less suitable for cultiva
tion and farming purposes than In for
mer years, and consequently fewer ap
plications for homesteads.
According to the latest report of the
land office there still remain to be dis
posed of in homestead, timber, coal,
mineral and stone lands 696,401,259
acres, situated in what are commonly
known as pubiio land states. About
one-quarter of these lands have been
surveyed.
In order, then, to Induce entries on
the remaining lands, congress recently
passed a law providing that certain
restrictions on these entries In the
way of cultivation, residence, etc., be
moderated bo that settlers would find
It less difficult to live up to the speci
fications set forth in homestead laws.
One of the most attractive features of
the new law is th three-year resi
dence clause. Thif 'provides that In
order to entitle a person to a patent
upon a homestead it must be shown
that he has resided on the farm for
three years. Honorably discharged
soldiers and sailors are entitled to
claim credit for the period of service,
after they have resided upon, Im
proved and cultivated the land for a
period ofat least one year.
Pasture for Horses.
Have plenty o.f pasture for the
brood mares and colts. If the mares
work during the week, let them graze
on Sundays. Pasture is cheap feed
tor all classes of stock, but dont pas
ture them too closely.
Raising Dairy Heifer.
Raise the best heifer calves. The
first stx months or year's care of the
calf determine largely the future
usefulness of the cow. Here we can
develop the tendency to take oa tat
aad nsla the milk Qualities.
Railroad Puts Engine in the City Fire Service
ONE of the big railroads having ter
minals here has equipped a loco
motive with modern flre-flghtlng ap
paratus and put it in commission to
assist the district firemen in extin
guishing flames In the railroad yards,
particularly near New Jersey and
Virginia avenue.
Because of the high speed of which
the engine la capable and the fact
that it has right of way ail the time,
Its service will be invaluable, as has
already been shown by its efficiency
in putting out small flames In the
yards without the assistance of the
municipal department The excellent
switchboard service, operated from
the towers, can give it right of way
with scarcely any delay.
The primary use of the engine will
be in the yards, but it can be brought
to the Union station or elsewhere
along the road if necessary. The ter
minal has been so constructed that
water can be reachel at any point In
the yards.
Thisyis not an Innovation, as the
road has equipped a large number of
similar engines. In many places they
have grown more efficient than the
fire department and are called npon
to do most of the work. No fewer
than 150 fires have been extinguished
by the locomotive fire engines In the
various yards and stations of the
company.
The railroad has a special organ
ization which becomes effective when
ever a fire breaks out The assistant
chief yard master acts as chief of the
department; he gives general dlree
tlons In case of a fire and conducts
drill from time to time. '
What We Are Made Of.
The average man contains the to
gredlei ts to make fat for seven bars
of soap, Iron for a medium-sized nail,
sugar to fill a small bowl, salt to fill
a shaker, lime to whitewash a chicken
coop, phosphorus to make 1.200
match tips, magnesium for a dose of
magnesia, sodium to neutralize a pint
and a half of water, potassium to ex
plode a toy cannon, sulphur to rid a
log of fleas and albuminoids to make
a ease of eggs. American Wine
Fiestv, .
Periodical Drinker.
A doctor's patient in Excelsior
Springs the other day was answering
the usual list of queries, prior to en
tering upon a course of treatment
"Are you a steady or a periodical
drinker?" asked the physician.
"Periodical." was the reply.
"How long between periods?
The poor fellow studied a moment
that he might answer correctly, and
replied: '' ".
"About twenty rain u t e s," Kansas
Ctty Star.
IMPORTANT!
For the protection
of tho public we have
brought suit against
a firm of dentists
near our office, to
prevent them from
placing our nam in
largo white letters on
the front of their
building. It has tak
en us 25 you of con
scientious, painstak
ing and skillful work
to mak THE WISE
DENTAL CO. known
thru'out the North
wast as absolutely re
liable and at the top
of tho profession. Wo
In personal attendance.
n s
? I
f llllll)
DR. W. A. WISE
Ask to see kirn, so that you can be
will not allow ear
good nam to be jeo
pardized by men who
have no connection
with this office. We
have only ONE of
fice, and that Is la
the FAILING build
ing, southeast corner
Third and Washing
ton streets. Tho en
trance Is on Third 8t,
and aa elevator car
ries passengers to
our floor. Do sot be
misled, aor forgot
these important in
structions.
you are In the rltht plaoe. ,
llllf
liar X
7
i SEE THAT SQPT UPf
PLATES, WITH FLEXIBLE SUCTION
The very latest in modern dentistry. No
more falllnc plates.
We Give a 15-Year Guarantee.
25 Yrs Active Practice in Portland
Our Interchangeable
Facing, a "Wise" Idea
' Our Bridge Work has been brought to
the highest state of perfection. The teeth
on this bridge are interchangeable at will
without removing from the mouth.
WISE DENTAL COMPANY
Failing Building, Southeast Corner Third and Washington Sts., ENTRANCE en THIfiD ST.
Phones: Main 2029s A 2029. Portland, Oregon.
ii
EAD SHOT
DR. PEERY'S
VERMIFUGE
FOR WORMS
ROMAN EYE DALSAM
For Inflamed Eyelids
Prepared by
Wright's Indian Vegetable
PILL CO.
NEW YORK :
NEW PERKINS HOTEL
Hair Mussed by Lightning.
Edward Kones prefers in the future
to comb his own locks and wishes
lightning would leave them alone.
When his house, in Sullivan county,
was struck the electricity plowed
small furrows about his skull, taking
the hair off his head in every place
It touched. His Injuries, besides de
stroying his hair, it is , said, were
slight Philadelphia North American.
FOR EYE
DISEASES
Others Could Tell Him.
"Have you any object in piling up
wealth? Peruana you have an amhl
tlon to gratify. Is there Anything you
want to do?" "There is. When I am
fixed financially I nronosa to see If
there is really any money In the chick
en business. Louisville Courier.
Journal.
Hsr Experience.
Mrs. Bacon "1 understand one run
learn different lanmiaees from th
phonograph?" Mrs. Ebert "Well,
since our neighbor got his I know my
husband has used language I never
heard Mm use before."
Red Cra HaJ 11 bin Ivtut Mninir nTna
b the whole world, makes the laundress smile.
Anolents Knew of Elevators.
That the anoient Romans knew
how to works lifts is the latest discov
ery reported from Rome in connection
with the Palatine excavations. Pre-
Romulan remains have been found, in
cluding 12 ancient lifts. One of the
latter, which descends into the earliest
Known city, is now being cleaned and
put Into working order for the Arch
oeologlcal Congress.
Whale Whips Five Crews.
The largest whale ever cantnred In
that vicinity was caught In Tred Pe
res fish nets, near Santa Cruz. Five
launches tried to tow the monster to
the pier without success. Nets and
ropes broke and the task was aban
doned. The whale was fifty feet long.
Mother vtn flnif Mrs Wtmlnv nmtfih.
ByruD U"e beat reraedr to nn tar tholrahUdnut
during Ae teething period.
No Wife for Him.
What do I want with a wife?"
snorted Bachelor Bockwedder, on read
ing an old maid s reasons for ' not
wanting a husband. "I have a earns
rooster that Is vain about his fine
feathers, a goat, that chews the rag,
an aeroplane that sets me un In the
air, and an automobile that keeps me
all the time broke!" Judge.
- Unforgivable.
Blobbs "Why do those two girls
both hate you so?" Blobbs 1 once
Innocently remarked that they looked
alike. Philadelphia Record.
NEW XSo
PORTlAND.OREe.
ieT'WmiOliTBATH
INTHEHEARIOf THECTtY
5V
RATES
EUROPUlf
WITH BATtff
NOTE REDUCED RATES
Most Centrally Located
Proanostlcs.
The Cinnamon Scimitar's financial
editor writes: "The dental profession
is looking dowa ijj the mouth. With
the scavenger, utrwesir, everything Is
picking up. The steeplejack's busi
ness, if he Is not careful, will be fall
ing off. In the automobile and rail
road line everything is running down.
The sausage and scrapple trade is oa
the pig. With the astronomer, how
ever, things are looking up."
Red Cress Ball Blue will wash double as many
clothes as any other blue. Don't put your money
into any other.
To Make Tires of Paper. I
Experiments have recently bees
made la Europe looking to the utilisa
tion of paper in the manufacture of
pneumatic tires, tests recently made
having convinced the experimenters
that paper has the strength' of metaL
the elasticity of rubber, and a cheap
ness that is to be found in neither of
these materials: all important QueV
ltles.
Still at It .
"I wonder what has become of mr
husband. Three days ago I sent him
to match a sample at a department
store. He hasn't been seen since."
"I saw him yesterday. Ha was at the
third counter of the fourteenth aisle,,
and was just starting for the four-"
teenth counter of the third I1a.i
Washington Herald.
Coughs
and Colds
You could not please us bet
ter than to ask your doctor
about AVer's Cherry Pectoral
for coughs, colds, croup, bron
chitis. Thousands of families
always keep it in the house.
The approval of their physi
cian and the experience of
many years have given them :
great confidence in this'
standard cough medicine.
Sold for seventy years.
OH! "You
f Mealtime"
Do you look forward to .
mealtime with real pleasure
or do you have that "don't
care" sort of feeling? Then,"
by all means, try a bottle ef -
- . . . :'
Hos tetter's.
Stomach Bitters
It coaxes the Appetite, aids
Digestion, prevents Consti
pation, . Biliousness, Colds,
Grippe and Ualarial Dies
ders. '
Any good doctor viil tell yen that medi
cine like Ayer's Cherry Pectoral cinnet
Is Its best work if the bevels are kon-
trfpttea. Ask your doctor if be knew
anything better than Ayer's Pills for cor
fictiBg this slulshaets of lbs liver.
TTHin ITI1 1T I ITIll. SfslM
: f " i
i !."' . '
I Tn n " - i
OF TOWN
PEOPLE
Ms. roOG i Tfc) PTOTB Bt
mental of Ksev-4
Bveita-MUUl
uvsi
iC GEE WO
tasOOsmSootea, -
Trr once more if yxm b.r. beea iontottu wtlk
thlOMnd thtoend aotoMtinod m.
muent relief. Lot this stmc bmu hWr iU
IwjowoM ui prewriiw some nnwdr
io u quick. Kin Hit rwripum
an MKopouBdl from Bows. Herbs. iindiVoJ
Brkj tht hy been smtoeral tmmmryBW-
are k ksm itoth. Kiu.de world, outbi,
tsithesta Caias. r
COXSCXTATIO.T FBFR
If ro U eat of tows and esaaot emit, write fee
rsptoat biaakaad elroulu, mtaUiSkiiaiZall
rerUaad. Ortgec.
TEE C. SEE WO CHIKESE IIECICIXE C3.
1 62 first St, Cor. Morrises)
P.N.U.
Ko.4s-na
WHEW WTWag