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About The Athena press. (Athena, Umatilla County, Or.) 18??-1942 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1913)
FURS IN MILLINERY Styles Are Prettier and More Varied Than Ever. Ermine-Trimmed Toques a Present FancyHeavy and Filmy Materl ' als Used In Combination Handsome Fur Sets. aEW YORK. Never in the his lI fnrv of fashion have .the small IM fur trimmed neck mult and hat sets been so varied and bo be witching aa they are this season; The materials in vogue lend themselves delightfully to such purposes and furs are to be" had of so many kinds and at such a wide range of prices that the fur trimmed set seems to be with in almost any clever woman's reach, though the smart little 'imported sets showing decidedly clever and orig inal features are priced so high that they are but little less expensive, if at all, than handsome all fur neck and muff sets. At the same price the latter are of course the more practical Invest ment. They are sure of at least a few seasons modishness, while the combination sets, owing their vogue to the whim of fashion, rather than to intrinsic value, are likely to lose their smartness with the passing sea Bon; but if a woman can make up a pretty and effective set herself and a iurprlsing number of women can do that sort of thing or can have one made by some.little furrier or milliner under her own careful directions, then the combination set is altogether de sirable and will give cachet to a sim ple costume. Among the conventional neck and muff furs the fox sets hold their popu larity. They are not . of necessity ex travagantly high priced though If one wants to spend money one can dis pose of a very largo sum in the buying of silver fox. Even the cheaper vari eties of fox when imported in fancy and beautiful sets bring high prices; but one can buy a very good looking muff and neckpiece of pointed fox or white fox or dyed brown fox or even 'good cross fox for a price by no means extravagant, aa prices of good furs go, and black fox is distinctly rea sonable. Fox Fur With Velvet. For tlie younger contingent there Is nothing in the lino of furs more suit able and. more practical than fox and with the omnipresent velvet and velveteen frocks and Biiils of this winter white fox will be enormously worn. Ermine ia smart for the ' youthful wearer and effective with velvet; but it is" hardly so becoming or youthful as the fox, and when real, Is more expensive, "When real," one says; and the reservation is neces sary, for an unbelievable number of rabbits and cuts and other humble beastles perish nowadays In ., order that ermine may be worn. : Some of the Imitations are not bad, aro, In fact, quite effective and protty enough to .use for , little touches of trimming; but one must be Biire to pay the price of Imitation; and unfor tunately one does not. always find hon esty in this regard. The reputable fur riers are reliable in matters of this kind, but importing milliners, dress makers, etc., are utit. invariably so, and only within the last week a wom an who purchased a velvet and er mine set from n certain Fifth avenue shop noted for chic models and paid tho price of real ermine was told by a furrier to whom eho happened to go wearing the' set that her' ermine was only an Imitation. And the moral of that is to recognize your cat or rabbit; but, ns has been said, a great deal of the imitation fur is at tractive. One of the most pleasing details of the fur fad this fall is the clover use of fur in millinery and the piquant harmonizing of hat and muff or of hat, neclt piece and muff. Tho idea, to be sure, Is now new. There have been fur hats and fur trimmed hats before; but not wilhiu the memory of this generation has the thing been so well done or done with such infinite variety. All Materials Utilized. No material is to filmy or too rich to be combined with fur. and tho mil liners, going upon that theory, have produced sets for morning, afternoon and evening, for sports and for smart social functions, for tho woman who does not care what she pays and for the woman who, like Mrs. Boffin of blessed memory, is "a high flier after fashion" but has little money to spend on dress. Among the girlish sets adapted for winter sport, but quite as suitable for street wear i a handsome white fox set whoso muff and neckpiece are con ventional enough but whose hat takes tho piquant form of a little pointed crown cap of black plush ' trimmed round the lacs with a band of the white fox. .Simple? Of course, but eminently gii-titm and becoming. There are many of the close cap like fur hats for girls and for wom en, some of the prettiest draped a lit tle and trimmed only with a single cluster or blossom of dull gold or silver or color; ami there are still more of the small draped toques and hats made of velvet or plush or silk and fur trinmsed. And then there are the small hats of two furs in corablna tion. It seems useless to attempt description, so varied and so numer ous are the models, but citing a few may give some ij,ea of the general tendency. , Among the close small toques, for example, there was in one well known and exclusive millinery establishment a low, bowl crow ned shape of ermine, Coats cf Colored Plush. According to the Dry Goods Econo mist, an unusually good demand has developed this season for smart-looking coats, of colored plush, particular ly seal brown and taupe. Many of the taupe-colored .plushes are made of pressed plush,-" which gives the ap pearance of mole, aud is meeting with remarkable eucceta. As these coats are taken principally by women who are in tenrch of something new, they frequently show the latest stylo fea tures., Tho cutiwsy . .Toct la very pro- the pun white ermine which has al most pushed the white and black er mine out of sight. The closely rolled brim of this hat was of mole and the trimming was in the form of two osprey feathers crossing each other and posed at the two sides near the back of the hat. Next to this model was another which was all of ermine, a little higher than the last, though still closer and draped Just a trifle. A single line of large . brilliants ran around the crown, half hidden in the fur, and the trimming was a single ostrich feather at the back. A charm ing evening hat, this. . Mole and Ermine, Mole and ermine are much used to gether by the milliners, but one sees less black and white fur in the new millinery than one did last year. Hats with draped crowns of rich moire, corded silk, velvet or brocade and with brims of fur are popular, and manv of them are exceedingly likable. The Rembrandt tam Is easily and suc cessfully developed In this combina tion, and there are countless oiner shapes, small and large, that are as adaptable. . The big hat whose crown Is entirety of fur while the brim is of chiffon or lace fur trimmed is considered exceed ingly chic and is otfen very lovely. Sometimes the crown of the big hat is of white and silver brocade or of brocade In some darker coloring, and the wide brim is of chiffon, its fiat lay ers edged with narrow lines of fur, and often the whole large shape is of velvet or satin or brocade and the fur Is used merely in a scarf or band around the crown or perhaps In a scarf and as a border to the brim. Whole muffs and draped hats of stunning brocade, with very slight trimming of fur, are among the Im ported sets, and some of them are very good looking, though others are rather conspicuous for anything eave evening wear. Velvet and plush are used in the same way, and any one who has even a few scraps of good old fur can easily find use for them in these sets. Long Scarfs Much Admired. ' The very wide long scarfs of fur in which the whole body may be swath ed have their counterparts in similar scarfs of chiffon, lace, silk, etc., fur trimmed, with big hats en suite, and Borne, of these sets are wonderfully lovely, though not every woman can wear such a Bcarf gracefully. A set OLD STYLE ROAD IN PENNSYLVANIA , i ' ' ' t 1 , , - i - ( " vxv . '"V , ' The illustration shows a strip of highway along the famous "Scogglliver Narrows," in Tioga county, Pennsylvania, before it had been, macadamized.. POULTRY AND ,GAME Can get you fancy prices for Wild Duclu and lher same in aeaaon. Write aa for . ' cub offer on all kinds of poultry, pork. etc. Pearson-Page Co., Portland GOOD DIRT ROADS ON THE PRAIRIE VEAL HOGS POULTRY Check eent by return mail for veal, pork, poultry. liides. Highest prices guaranteed. Taira, price liat fn. Ant von receiving honest weiithte, top -prices and check by return mail? If not, ship us. F. H. SCHMALZ LU. - Paid Up Capital $10,000 141-143 Front Street, . PORTLAND, OREGON Chief Assistant In Information De partment at Washington Says First Cut Down the Hills. . ' '$M -A IptW vAVti1 f , ' M , n,w iif,i i" " STATE HELP FOR ROAD WORK Wisconsin Highway Commission- re ceive Reports That Large increase In Fund Has Been Voted. Full reports have been received by the Wisconsin highway commission of the money voted for state aid, road and bridge construction in 1913. There are 1,195 towns in Wisconsin, of which 8C5 voted foe state aid road-construc tion on 1,207 different pieces of road, asking for state aid to the total unouut of $707,273. Two hundred and Ave towns voted for the construction of 337 bridges, a total amount of $107,751, which calls for $53,877 state aid. In all, 883 different towns in (58 counties -voted for state aid, a total amount of $805,027, calling for the sum of $811,150 in state aid. These figures show a very large In crease, bor.n in numner or towns vot ing and amounts voted, over last year. Last year 511 town voted a total of $422,200 for roads, and 125 towns vot ed S55.100 for bridges,, in all, 532 towns in G5 counties calling for $452, 800 state aid in .1912. . The state highway fund ' for 1913 work is $350,000, to which is added In accordance with law, one-quarter of tho net proceeds from the automobile licenBO of ptT car, amounting to about $28,000. This total sum of $378,000 is $133,150 less than the full amount of state aid requested. Some few counties will get the full state aid requested, as the votes of the towns were light, but about GO of the coun ties will get less than, they asked for, many of them getting loss than ono fifth, of the amount requested. . It Is hoped thaMome method will be devised whereby the state may give each town what it expected to receive when it made its appropriation, says the Wisconsin Agriculturist. The growth of the movement for better onda in Wisconsin has been so rapid that legislation has not kept pace with It. In 1907 permanent toad construc tion was practically nothing; in 1913, if tho state could pay its full share, it would ho fully $2,512,000. There, tias never been in the Vnlted States a movement for better roads so state wide, or so generally popular and the results bo far securod under the- state aid road law promise well for the fu ture development of the roads of Wisconsin. that attracted much attention in one shop, though, as one woman put it, "It would be dirty in a moment and It is a sort of imitation which I despise and yet it fs pretty," consisted of a hat, muff and enormous scarf of white plush, the very handsome silk deep pile plufh which, as every woman who lias priced It knows, is not ex actly cheap. The trimming was of ermine or of imitation ermine tails who shall say which?- set on the plush scarf and muff to make deep bordering bands and holding the drap ery of the toque, An evening set in better taste, though the plush set did have a cer tafn charm, was made of white satin embossed in velvet In a floral pattern of many soft rich hues. The big drap ed muff was shirred Into a narrow hand of white fox at one side and drooped lower at the other side to dis appear under a whole white fox pelt The neckpiece was a capellke shoul der drapery of the brocade on one side bordered narrowly with fox to be held by a whole fox skin that went over the right shoulder, tho head be ing brought around to meet the bro cade drapery In front and the tall hanging straight from the shoulder in the back. ; New Brocaded Coat The coat Illustrated Is In brocaded velvet on silk, with satin under-dress and skunk fur trimming. It Is an up- to date visiting gown design. The hat Is of white velours faced with black velvet, and trimmed with a fancy plume. nounce In some of the best selling models and the draped coat caught over at the left side is also one of the big favorites. Some of the city stores are taking these coats hi 45 and 50 inch lengths, sharply cut away la front AUTOMOBILE AND GOOD ROADS Farmer Who Bought Machine Imme diately Starts to Make Improve menta on Nearby Highways. UW M. A. COVICltnKFX.) Some months ago one of our neigh bors purchased a good, substantial automobile. Ho and another neighbor drew an oak saw log to the mill and had material sawed for two good road drags, the timbers being 11 feet in length, one foot wide and three inches thick. Tho edges that moved tho dirt were faced with pieces of iron four luches wide and three-eighths of nn Inch thick. After constructing this most effec tive implement for road-mnking our neighbor hitched three horses to the drag, climbed into it and proceeded to drag the read (he lives at a cross road), and how ho does improve every highway he traverses. lie mulu-s frequent trips with his drag to town, four miles away, and already good effect of his owning an automobile is being observed and felt on our roads, far and near. r ' 1 Second-Hand Machln- Machinery - boilers, aawmills. etc. The J. E. Martin Co.. 83 lt HU. Portland. Bend for Stock Lit and price. HUNTERS! TRAPPERS! Deal direct with manufac turer. We pay the hiirhegt prices for Raw Furs. Write jry for free price list and shippine lliliZ 191 SetenUi Sired. PORTLAND, ORE. V Hints for Pear Growing, The pear tree grows best and yields the most fn:it when planted upou land moderately moist, and yet not cold. To insure this condition there is noth ing better than a side hill location, though one more level may do well if uuderdrataed, and then it ia better for receiving a wash of sand from tho lands above it, which helps to warm it up. We have had a great deal to say In the last twenty years on the road ques tion. We have believed that, speak ing generally, in the prairie country we shall have to be satisfied with dirt roads, having macadam or other hard roads wherever the material Is avail able, which is only here and there. We have maintained that a very good road for most of the year could be made from dirt, provided the road bed had lost its vegetable matter in the course of travel, provided it was properly drained, graded and maintained by the use of the road drag, and'provlded the culverts and bridges are of concrete or iron and the grades reduced to the minimum. It affords ub some gratification tc know that Mr, M. O. Eldridge, the chief assistant in the information de partment of the roads division of the department of agriculture, at Wash ington, who Is now investigating the roads in Iowa, full endorses all these propositions, says Wallace's Far mer. He is apparently as firm a be liever in the dirt road properly man aged as he would bo. If he had been brought up on a drag. , In an Interview Mr. Eldridge says that he regards the first thing to do Is to cut down the hills, and remarks that Iowa has more steep hills than Switzerland. This Is no doubt due to our habit of laying out roads on sec tion lines. This reminds us of our ex perience in New York and Pennsyl vania. From Ithaca to Harrisburg we were never outside of the mountain section, and yet on that' whole trip we did not cross as many steep hills as wffl be found in going from Des Moines to Winterset, or across any of the counties in the southwestern part of Iowa. The roads there are not laid out on section lines, but take the. best grades. In Penijsylvanla, where tho same' custom prevails, we used to think they were determined by the springs. The cows who' roamed the woods made paths to the spring, and, being excellent engineers, they chose the best grades. The houses . were built at the springs. . The roads fol lowed the cow paths to the houses; and hence good grades, no matter how far around they had to go. Mr. El dridge believes that no road should have more than a five per cent, grade. One great difficulty in the hilly parts of Illinois, Iowa, Missouri and adjoin ing states Is that the roads have been laid out on section lines, and the nouses built with reference to the roads. We very much fear that they will remain there for all time, as the expense In cutting down the hills would be terrific. Mr. Eldridge further says: "When once a road is made, it is essential that it should be dragged after every rain of consequence. The only way to do this satisfactorily Is to have a su pervisor for each township or county, whose duty it is to get out men with drags. No man should have more than three miles of road to take care of. After each storm, then, the super visor can call upon the men to get to work at the right time. The man In charge must know when the time comes tondo the dragging." On this wo remark that tho county Is too large a district. There ia frequently a two- inch rain in one part of the county, which would necessitate Immediate dragging, iind a mere sprinkle over the rest of It, and there is never any good done by dragging a dry road. Mr. Eldridge next answers the ques tion aa to what kind of a road could be made under this system, as fol lows: "WUh the right kind of work, a solid roadbed can be made from the soil in this state. It should be round ed, and traffic should be in the center and not one road on each side of a ride, that will soak up the water." lie then adds: "Good roads will come when the farmer realizes the benefits that wtll accrue to his land from having them. With good roads tho farmer can raise products that will pay better profits than those he now raises. It eo?ta more now to transport grain from a farm nine miles from a railroad than it does to transport the same grain from New York to Liver pool." All of which is undoubtedly true. - 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. LIME FERTILIZER Also Land Plaster, Lime, Cement, Wall Plas ter and Shingles. Write for prices. NOTTINGHAM & CO. 102 Front Street. PORTLAND, OR. rraernt Done So BatfTy. 1 might have married a million sire," declared Every woman. "One of my old schoolmates ia now one." "And several of your schoolmates are working right in this town for f 10 a week," retorted Everyman, "while one of them is in Jail. I guess in marry ing a chap getting $1,500 a year your average is fairly good." And then Everybaby set up a howl and they bad to stop quarreling to attend to him. Pittsburg Post. For a New Umbrella. Before using a new umbrella inject a small quantity of vaseline into the hinge portions of the frame. Vase line will not spread like oil and spoil the covering, and is a sure preven tive against rust. Wet umbrellas should be stood on their handles to dry; this allows the water to run out of them, instead of into the part where the silk and ribs meet, thus causing the metal to rust and the silk to rot. : . BANDMEKSSS . HOLTON and BUESCHER band instruments. The most complete stock of Musical Merchandise in the Northwest. Write for Catalogues. , . seibkrxingIlucas MUSIC CO. 134 Second Street Portland, Oregon RAW FURS WANTEDi 7? Highest Market Price Paid W "TW T H. LIEBES & CO. 1,1 WM J. P. Phgemann, Mgr. . $k Uj ' MANIirirrilRINfi FURRIERS ; .-. pa-mi' .' ! WD u e. r..L.u fu 'JH i &vo mornson at. lurreu Ding. Ret First Nat'i Bank. Porlland.Ore. . Marketing Poultry. , It la not stretching the truth to say that tf farmers marketed their poultry ia tho very best ppesibt'i condition their receipts would be Increased one third. Neither is It stretching the truth to say that less than 10 per cent pf all thd poultry marketed is in per fect condition when It reaches the con sumer, . Plenty of That "Won't you do something for the fresh air fund?" Breeding Sleek. "I'll make a speech." Breeding stock should ba mated at "Thank you., but we have all the least ' two weeks . be for mtng th wind ws need." J eggs for hatching purpose,-. Agricultural Wealth. Official estimates of the department of agriculture are that the total of agricultural wealth to be produced in the United States this year, including the crops, stock raising and dairying, will be $9,000,000,000, a half billion dollars more than last year. Seed Experiments. in a recent experiment oats, corn. dog fennel and seme flower seeds were exposed during US days to a tempera- lure or w degrees ceiow r.ero. Afterward nearly all of the fennel, oats and corn seeda and some others germinated. Egg Material. Wheat furnishes mere material for the white of eggs than corn. A bushel of w heat contains r.ht t one tenth more ptotela than a bushel of corn, but about one half less fat. Lucrative Find In South Africa. South Africa's possibilities as a pro ducer of vegetable oils aro wide in deed if the results of recent experi ments, under the auspices of the Mo zambique authorities are translated Into commercial realities. For in stance, the fruit of the "macua- macua" was Bhown to yield no less than 60 per cent of fine edible oil, and of the "pombula" B2 per cent (.aw of tho Harvest. The law of the harvest is to reap more than you sow, Sow an act and you reap a habit; sow a habit and you reap a habit; sow a habit and you reap a character; bow a character and you reap destiny. George D. Board man. ; " . Has Its Advantages. "Nations are not fed, clothed and housed by legislation," says a sapient contemporary. . Certainly not. But it sometimes pays well to be a member of a legislature, Just the same. Louis- vllle Courier-Journal. Uncle Pennywlse Says: Things political are moving so fast that some of thesold wheelhorses are having hard workto keep from being run over. Mothers will find Nn. WlnsloWs Bootaing Byrup tl e belt remedy to use f ot thai aliilutaj t uring iie teething jriod. Obliging Clerk. An out-of-town man walked into a Fort Scott store and asked If the "boss" was in. A clerk who sat laz ily gazing into space blinked several times, muttered his lips, and lapsed back Into his former stage. "I say,: is the boss In?" inquired the man in, not a very mild tone. "No, he's gone out," returned the clerk, without tak-, ing his eyes off the space. "Will he, be back after dinner?" inquired the man. "Nope,' yawned the clerk, "that's what ha went out for."--Kan sas City Star. Destiny of America. A nation Is not a conglomeration of voters, to be represented by hungry politicians empowered to partition the spoils, of office, but a people ani mated by a common impulse , and seeking to work out a common des tiny. The destiny of America is mu tual service; labor is the corner stone of our nationality, the labor of each for all. Ralph Waldo Emerson. ' His Best. "He's a brute." "How bo?" "When she promised to be his wife he said he would do everything in his power to make her happy." "Well?" "He spends all of his time at the club!" "Well, if he is really a brute that ought to help some." r. Red Crcds Ball Blue will wash double as many clothes as any other blue. Don't put your money into any other. What He Called It. "Are you troubled with insomnia sleeplessness?" "I should say I am. Some nights I don't sleep three hours." "That so? I've got it awfully bad. I've been afflicted now about two years. The doctor calls it neuris lnsomnis paralaxitls." "I've had it about eighteen months, and we call it Ethel." Ocean View Vldette. ; Why cough? Stop it! Stop coughing ! Coughing rasps and tears. Stop it ! Coughing i spares the throat and lungs for more trouble. Stop it I There is nothing so bad for a cough as coughing. StoDitl AVer's Cherry Pec toral is a medicine for coughs and colds, a regular doctor's medicine. Sold for seventy years. Use it! Ask your doc tor if this is not good advice. Unless there is dailv action of the bow els, poisonous products are absorbed, causing headache, biliousness, nausea, dyspepsia. We wish you would ask your doctor about correcting your constipation by taking laxative doses of Ayer's Pills. Ma4 by the J. O. iTEB CO.. Lowell, Hui. Concrete an Old Story." Rome was not built in a day, nor built as fast as Tammanytown, nor built In structural steel, but It turns out that most of Rome's mighty structures, temples, circuses, baths, aqueducts, were built in concrete, not reinforced with iron and Bteel, aa wa 'build now, but a good quality of sand. stone and cement nevertheless. On this powerful central core of cement was fitted an ornamental facing of finest marble. " Low Altitude. "Mr. Wombat, you ought to go in for aviation. Many of our prominent peo ple are taking it up." "I suppose I ought. Have you got a machine that will skim along nicely about seven feet from the ground?" Judge. Red Cross Ball Blue, all blue, best blufar value In the whole world, makes the laundress smile. One of His Worst. The Doctor Did you hear about that Methodist preacher's daughter down south who turned sleuth, hunt ed up the pickpocket who had robbed her of her purse, and finally landed him in the penitentiary? The Profes sorGood for her! She was an . M. E. sis, with a vengeance. Chicago Tribune. 4 ' Doing Good. We are to relieve the distressed, put the wanderer into his way, and to divide our bread with the hungry, which is but the way of doing good bs ourselves; for we are only several members of one great body. Seneca. Indexing Extraordinary. Indexers have been responsible for J many errors, but possibly the strang est example of curious Indexing oc curs in a law book. Turning over its Index, a,.correspondent of the London Chronicle noted the entry: "Best, Mr. Justice, Ills Great Mind," and refer ence to the page brought this: "Mr. Justloo Best said he had a great mind to commit the witness for contempt of court." Reasonable Stipulation. "Shall we admit Wombat to our Sub llknated Order of the Kibosh? He al ready belongs to seven secret socle ties." "I'm in favor of admitting hln if there's enough of him left to work our ritual on." Knnsss City Journal Had to Know the Time. "I understand," said the Judge, "that you stole the watch of the doctor who had Just written a prescription for you at the free dispensary. What have you to say to this charge?" "Well, your honor," said the prisoner, "It is true, but I found myself In a hole. His prescription said a spoonful every hour, and I had no watch, Andrew Lang's Handicap. The London Spectator says that Andrew Lang always had poor health, and most of hia work was dona when he was tired and sick. This being the case, it is easy to understand and forglT his frequent crankiness. Sliding Seals. "I'm a taxpayer," gibbered the citi zen, "and I demand consideration." "Lemme see your tax certificate," re sponded the city official calmly, "and then I'll know Just how much consid eration you are entitled to." Kansas City Journal. " London Largely Built on Marsh. Abundant evidence as to tho raarshj nature of the ground upon which i large part of the city of London wai originally built is still to bo discover ed in such names as Fenchurcl street FInbury and Moorflolda. . FOR WEAK SORE EYES Fame of the ozarks. Since the advent of the "hound dawg" song everybody has heard of the Ozarks. But the Ozarks have long been contributing to letters. The greater part of the lead pencils of the world are made from the red cedar of the Ozarks. Boston Transcript. To Exterminate Vermin. Mix and let stand for several hours one-half gallon of gasoline and ten cents' - worth of corrosive sublimate. Pnt the mixture Into a pint oil can. with a long spout, and spray into ev ery place where there are bugs. Air the room thoroughly. After a few ap plications the vermin will have entire ly disappeared. Resolutions Too Fragile. "Resolve to live a hundred years, and you will do it," declared a St. Louis physician. But being a physi cian, he ought to know that good res olutions are easily broken. Europe's War Material. Europe withdraws from industry 4, 600,000 men to make soldiers of them. They are kept from one to three years. What an appalling waste; how doubly preposterous if efficiency can be Insured with militia training; New York World. Mr. Meekton's-Mean Idea. "Why did you insist on having your wife Join the Suffragette Club?" "Be cause," replied Mr. Meekton grimly, "I want to see that Suffragette Club get all the trouble that's coming to it"' - '- . "-"" '-: Nautical. ' -Ancient mariner (at the first foot ball game) Where's the tackle wi hear so much about? . Smart Land lubber Don't you see the linos all over the ground? Judge. Wise Precaution. Shopper I . want to buy a necktie suitable for my husband. Salesman- Sorry, madam, but we are not per mitted to sell neckties to women who are unaccompanied by men. Puck. A 1 1 COLD WAVE 1 1 causes anxiety among: those who are sickly and run down, whose blood is impoverished, and vitality low; but don't remain in that condition. , HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS will buiW you up, strengthen the entire system and prevent Stomach Ills, Colds and Grippe. Try a bottle and be convinced. , Start today. I II1 I Painless Dentistry is our prlde-onr hobbj-onr tud for 7us n4 now our success, end con ia the iKJt palnleM work to be found enyvhere, no matter bow uaeb roa par. Compare our i'rtcus. -mgi. jr?,-" We finish pUt mi T U1,UK ..V.J. 4". ,.- ; &ot town natron ia ? one day if desired. Painless cxtractioa. ,free when, platea o ' i bridge work is order led. Constitution int. 1 MolsrCrownt $5.00 - j22k8ridffoTth4.C5 4 Gold "illrajt tea iEnasn!Fillir.gi t.Gff Silver Filling " .50 v 1 Plat. 5.C0 D.. fa-J n..LL.. "i vest neu HUUIrW w -m A ' Pl.1.1 1.3U Bit W.L WISE, rniunr in Minti Painlss Ertr'fiM .3V 11 run nifuwu mrum T mitmod , AU work fully Knaranie-nd for f.ftoea year. Wise Dental o.,inc Painless Dentists Fi!!ne Builiiin. Third and Wsshlngton. PORTI A.'"?), Oftl OJiQt Moam A. M. te 8 1. M. ais. sal T7v w h. . r itiHr i'ii' IjMi. ..a 1 In the Cyclone Belt. "I tell you what," said Gotham, en tertaining his western cousin, "every thing's to high here It's almost Impos sible to keep a house gotr.g." "Well," replied the Kansan, "the winds are so high out our way It's almost Impossi ble to keep a house from going." Cathollo Standard and Times. OUT Of TOWN PEOPLE on 11 reeftf re prompt trsat. riHIlTA Of Nott-PoiMWHlt, KtaUUa-biultii&s rwkMiM C GEE WO the ChlnM doctor, ' Try once more if you hxr bn doctoring wit this one and that otvp ud bave sot obtained per, manent relief. Let this preat nature hlr &img ncte our ov nd proTir om remedy vh-aLt ftion igqaicte, sureud tmf. His prfweripUonfl rpt compounded irvm Roc.itt. Btrbe, Bia4i nd Barks Oirt have been tntthr4 from evm-y quar ter of th fitobe. The e-Tft cf them x&dtciive are net known to th oiusxie world, but hav bwi handed aowc from iaUitar vu aua in Uur piiyuciauf fafilirtal MB sHfathaa- ... .. . COKSCLTATIOX FREE. If roo lire oat of town and eusot rail, write for arm plots Blanl an4 cu-euiar, eackatac eeaia ia TKE C. SEE WO CHINESE MEDICiKE CO. 1 621 Trst St, Cor. Mortisoa PerUaud. Ora. P. N. U. No. S2-"ll WEEK wrKis t ajrertiseva. nbase tarn. I " Una tki mir. I Color more roods well and u guu-antc