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About The Athena press. (Athena, Umatilla County, Or.) 18??-1942 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1913)
POULTRY AND GAME Cm eet you fancy prices for Wild Ducks and other game in season. Write na for cash oiler on all kindi of poultry, pork, etc Pearson-Page Co., Portland HOWARD B. BtJETOH '- Awerer sea Chemlrt, iLeadriJIe, tolorMO. opecimen pri Silver. Lead, O. Gold, Silver, 15os Gold. sum Sine "Copper, li. M'n8r?iPi,i? Second-Rand Machin ery bought, (old and boilers, aawmillg. etc The J. E. Martin Co., 83 1st Et. Portland. Bend for Stock List and prices. ; Machinery Ship os your VEAL, PORK, POULTRY, HIDES We guarantee top price and CHECK BY RETURN MaJlI Tarn. prle, coopn. free. We ill send for one year m request to all who make hlpmenui dprina Jiiaaarr one year's subscription to either Northwest Foaltrr Journal. Pftelflo Homestead. Poultry Lire, Korthweat Paolflo Farmer. Pleaae tell four neigh bor! about our liberal offer. Ship to F. H. SCHMALZ & CO. Pilt-a) Ofdal 10,000. 141-143 Fra St PORTLAND, ORE. RAW FURS WANTED Highest Market Price wt. H.UEBES& P. Ptaqemann, Mgr. MANUFACTURING FURRIERS ISSRarrlMaSt Urbdtl Ik FW Nail Biak. ftriasi. 7ml mm Ore, -Wtittt 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 Alao Land Plaster, Lime. Cement, Wall Plas ter and Shingles. Write for pricea. NOTTINGHAM & CO. 103 Front Street PORTLAND, OR. BANDMEN: SS? IIOLTON and BUESCIIER band Instruments. The most complete stock of Musical Merchandise in the Northwest. Writ for Catalogues. SEIBERLING-LUCAS MUSIC CO. 134 Second Street. Portland, Oregon HUNTERS! TRAPPERS! Peal direct with manufac turer, We pay the highest prices for Raw Furs. Write lor tree price list and shipping tags, N. M. UNGAR CO.. FURRIERS Wlr 191 Semith Street PORTLAND, ORE. I BAD ROADS WASTEFUL Antiquated Methods in Illinois Cause Big Loss. Courage. " As courage Is pre-eminently the vtr tue of men, so It is the virtue which moat powerfully challenge! the re spect and emulation of men. And It deaerrea this pre-emlnenoe, for it ia lao the virtue which gives security to all the other virtue.. LoweiL Pretty Sure. Whenever a man ia threatened by the deep sea he Is pretty sure to find me aevii on the other aide of him. WILLOW RIVER British Columbia. The first registered townalte on the Grand Trunk Pacific Hallway. ' The heart of a country larger than Oregon rich In natural resources, ; On the Frasor river with Over 1000 miles of navigable waterways. The terminus of the Pacific A Hudson Bay Rail. Way to the Peace Iliver country. Several other railroads laying plans to build Into the townBlte, Standing timber In large Quantities In all direc tions. Agricultural lands In abundance, that can be pre-empted or purchased direct from the govern, merit. - Gold In the sands of Willow River for placer mining and tho mining camp, Barkerville, only 110 miles away. Coal is estimated to be sufficient to last all Can ada fur a century; located in the Bear River dis trict, only IS miles distant. With these natural resources and tha railroads spending millions building into that great unde veloped empire. Isn't that enough to Insure a City of Importance?" What mora would you askt Lota are priced low. Terms are easy. Advance of Bloe per lot on January 18,'01S, When the Grand Trunk Paciflo trains art run ning into town next summer from Winnipeg and the East your lota will be worth several times What they are today. Willow River will certainly be another Edmon ton, Calgary or Prince Rupert. 8end for plat today that you may get good election before tho advance of prices. V. PAGE HARRIS, Agt for Oregon, tOO Henry Illdg., Portland. Or. This Weather Causes Sickness Grippe, Colds and Pneumonia Come From Run Down Condition. c. Gee Wo U 'Ax w" -'Hi 1 ..V-YV c. Gee Wo TUB CHINESE DOCTOR This wanderful man has made a life study of the properties and action of roots, herbs, buds and berks on the human system. Many of the rem, dies which this man uses are scarcely known to the scientists of this country, and In Chinese fam ilies are banded down front father to eon and kept a profound secret. Must of thexe remedies are Imported from far-off Asia to bis large laboratory at 16a First street. It seems almost a miracle to many patients who have called on this famous man and in such short time become well by hit treatment. If yoa live elsewhere than in Portland and wUh to procure bis medicines, send 4 cents in stamps and a symptom blank and circular will be for warded to you. This you will fill out and proper remedies will then be sent te you. Open evening and Sundays. The C Gee Wo Chinese Medicine Co. 1621 First St, Cor. Morrison PORTLAND, OR. ; P. N. U. No. l-ua. VHBN writing to advertlsera. nlsaaa " (ion this paper. " Conference Held at Peoria Approve Program for "Pulling Illinois Out of Mud" .Recommend State Prisoners to Be Uaed. Bankers, farmers, automobillsts, educators, labor and business men from all over Illinois met at Peoria the other day and approved unani- mously a general program for "null ing Illinois out of the mud." After three rouBing meetings they prepared a resolution to the next state legislature setting out the lines on which they think state legislation should be based. The Illinois highway improvement commission, which called the meeting, declared $55,000,000 will be wasted in Illinois during the next twenty years unless the present antiquated meth ods are changed. To prevent this waste the confer ence urges the creation of a small state railway commission to replace the present army of local commission ers, more active assistance by the state for the trunk lines, and more active Insistence by tho public on good roads.. It is proposed that prisoners in the state penitentiaries be used not only for the preparation of road building materials, as at present, but, it possi ble, tor actual construction work through the state. It is proposed to follow the Colora do method, using the honor system, and sending the gangs . out with guards. The legislation recommended by the conference would provide: State and county co-operation in the construction and maintenance of main highways and brldegs. A non-political state highway com mission of at least three competent members, who shall devote their en tire time to their duties. Improvement in such counties as elect to come under the provisions of the law, of main, continuous lnter county highways connecting county seats and other important cities, prin cipally at the expense of the state and county; such roads to be selected and Improved by county authorities, sub ject to the approval of the state high way commission and after improve ment to be turned over to the state for perpetual maintenance. Improvement, maintenance, and con trol of remaining road's (about 80 per cent, of the whole) under supervision of county and township authorities. Effective measures to guarantee maintenance after roads are once con structed. . Use of the state automobiles tax, together with such other funds as the legislature may appropriate in the im provement of highways. Use of state prisoners under state direction on an honor system, in ac tual road work when practicable. Payment of all road taxes in cash. Compulsory dragging of all earth roads. Proper construction and guarding of crossings at railroads and inter section of street and highways. The "platform" of the conference Includes resolutions in favor of fed eral aid for postroads and national highways, and calls attention of Illi nois congressmen to this position. Jesse Taylor of Jamestown, O., told the convention the difference between hauling oost in Belgium and America, 13 cents a mile,, meant a waste of 1127,500,000 in this year's farm crops alone. Had Kept Her Bargain, ... An Ingenious trick was recently played on some women of MauikJanJ, Madras, India. They handed sums of mon7 to a woman who said that she possessed the power of doubling the contents. The victims had their packets returned to them after seven days, when the silver coins they had contained were found to have been changed into copper ones. ' j J.. (t Cures Whifo VonW.ik .A".6."'" Fo,?t"Eaj! ' certain cure for hot. substitute. Trial package free aSrt?,i Allen b, Olmsted, Le Koy, N. y. Accomplishing. 1 . It Is very important that the young man select his life work early and bend every energy toward accom plishing something. One of the most common causes of failure In this life lies in the fact that men do not see the Importance of being thorough un til it is too late. Florence Vidette. ' Egg Material. The laying mash has become gen erally recognized as the most conve nient as well as economical method of providing a hen with egg material. The following Is a good formula: Coarse wheat bran, coarse middlings, ground corn and oats, alfalfa meal, meat scraps, each 100 pounds, linseed meal forty pounds, fine table salt ten pounds. This 550 pounds of feed, cost ing around $10, should be enough to last a flock of 100 hens one month and should produce during that time, at December and January prices, from $50 to $60 worth of eggs. There is not another animal on the ranch that will show this profit from the same amount of feed given in addition to the regular rations. Plant Food. When plants run to vines and tops it is a sure indication that the soil Is full of nitrogen and lacking in pot ash and phosphoric acid. This fre quently comes from the ubo of large quantities of stable manure. A fer tiliser low in nitrogen and rich in potash and phosphorto acid will bal ance up the plant food ration. Difficulty With Guineas. One difficulty about raising guineas is that the young birds are very easily killed by mites and lice. Grit Grit and shells are comparatively cheap, but the cheapest of all ways is to haul a load of sand and gravel and dump it In the poultry yard. Sand and gravel from some Btreams contain a large percentage of broken shells, which the hens will soon devour with a relish. It will be surprising to see how soon an average aUed flock will maks away with a box of grit Cull Out Poor Layers. Cull out all the poor layers a&d give the good nans a chaaca, English Stump 8peech. " A' correspondent, "Old Brlney," Bends us the following specimen of frenzied stump oratory: "Feller blokes! Thanks ter th' guv'ment, yer get yer d'mlnlshln' wage, and yer lit tle loaf, an' all that. , Wotcher got ter do now is ter go fer devil-ootion and local anatomy, an' go It blind!" (ITid cheers.) London Globe. Be thrifty on little things like bluing. Don't ae. cept water for bluing. Ask for RedT Cross Ball Blue, the extra good value blue. By Installments. The "epoch-making advice" of a bookmaker to a colleague In iHstre is related in Vanity Fair. The col league had been nald 2S nn n hot by a certain captain, who, in a fit of absent-mindedness, paid him the same amount again next day. "What shall I do about it?" asked the hnnh-maW of his friend; and prompt came the answer: "Ask him for It again." Steel Stays Stopped Bullet Steel stays have an s life. Not long ago Mary Henessy was taken to Bellevue hospital with a flesh-wound In th i,ia rw w-w, UUU AJl . Drury discovered that had it not been iur a meet stay wnich deflected the bullet the wound would have been fatal, for the slug had boon trnvoii toward a vital orjtan. , Clogged Sewing Machine. When a sewing machine will not work, stand it near the fire so that the oil may melt, and then clean with pure paraffin. mUtin It into everv oil hole. Work tho machine well, and then wine every riart with a p.lfinn cloth. Whon perfectly clean, lubri cate with machine oil. As a Man Thinks. Jennie "He must have a soft spot in his heart for me." Wennle "Why so?" Jennie "He says he is always thinklntr of me." Wennle "But vou know,, a man doesn't think with his heart The soft place must be In his head. London Telegraph. MnffcaM w(1f lf- wt.1nHj. a Syrup ti e beat remedy to usofortheUrubildMa Happiest Home. . But the happiest home : is built when the twain together meet the trials and catastrophes that corns from the outside world with the good health, the common sense, the humor, the patience and courage that will rout them. It should not be necessary for these qualities to be used by the one to combat the faults of the other. Barbara Boyd. Learning by Love Letter. . "Love letters between young men and women are an excellent method of teaching literature," says Dr. Ar thur Holmes. But it must be done tactfully. We have known a young lady who broke off an engagement because her fiance returned her love letters with the spelling errors neatly corrected in red Ink. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAT Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinina Tablet. GROVJi'S signature ta on each box. 26c. Scientific Fact Established. A number of rabbits upon whom coffee was tried to determine the effect of the caffeine it contained died, prov ing beyond a doubt that coffee never was intended as food for rabbits. Louisville Cour! Journal. Not All Owing to Wife. "Biggins says he owes everything to his wife." "That isn't true," replied Biggins' father-in-law. "His wife quit lending him anything years ago and then he started in owing me." Wash ington Star. Not Inconvenienced, "Did the dissolution of your gigantlo corporation cause you inconvenience t" "Not the slightest," replied Mr. DuBtin Stax. "I needed an enlarged and im proved system of branch offices, any how." . Wanted to Live In History. Some men's idea of fame is cer tainly a distorted one. A murderer in South Carolina pleaded for the privilege of being the first man to be electrocuted when that new mode of execution was introduced into the No Use for Boys Any More. Somebody has invented an electric devioe that will split kindling wood. Gradually we are getting it so ar ranged that the world will have ab solutely no use for small boys. 3,1111115;, i-ir -hi BTin ii-, ii i f mi n.iiiiiif iiiiTrrir ni-iiniT-nr-:Bi Hiiiii Tn'rf""-- ii'l SeMOtsth Synia. Twtaa Uoud. I te I J f-4 ta time. M4 DnurUM. l i WASTING OF ROAD MATERIAL Estimated That $9 Out of Every $10 equanaered Annually In State of Corn Belt ItWOUld be difflnillt in rrt v w ()IIU lu Vi- tual figures the amount of money that tuuiuany wasted in road Work In the states of the flnrn Isolf TV now $9 out of every $io is uselessly squan- "c,cu "'a e putting It too strongly ior some communitiea . , " V TV UUiU not be wide of the mark In others, says the Ioa Homestead. Strange r " Beem, tnose.very localities having the worst roads are stanchest in their support of the old-fashioned system whereby the highways are in charge of those who nothing about the scientific construc tion oi roads. We are not asHiimiTiir t vice on how to build roads, because ruau mamng is not our profession, but It is sometimes In out how not to build them. While u-aveiing recently on a highway that has almost a nation-wide reputation for its excellent condition due to drag ging, we found at one place twenty or thirty teams applying gravel. Al ready several miles hat 7 vuvu feACwT- eied, application being made to a nunace tnat was In many places at least thirty feet vM rttirt., slightest attempt having been made to maite a grade. For a distance of many rods in rjlacos thn the highway was considerably lower man at eitner side and yet these faith ful "gravelers" were dnmninK thai. loads in the very middle of what mignt te called the "saucer" grade. No attempt whatever was made to pack down the loose itravel. so that all traffic was being diverted to the siaeB. Heavy traffic following wet Bpells had resulted in cuttlna- thn an. tire surface into well-nigh impassa- Die ruts,, the situation therefore pre senting the pleasing DrosDect of hv. lng the ground freeze up this fall witn tne surface In frightful condition. It requires no expert knowledge of roaa maKing to conclude at once that labor expended in this way is prac tically wasted. Instead of first get ting rid of the water, which has al ways been the fundamental principle of road making, and then aDDlvine the gravel, those in charge of this, road simply oecause the cash was avail able for putting so much labor on the surface began at the wrong end and it may safely be predicted that not two years will ' elapse befofe this gravel has disappeared into a bot tomless bog. Here was an expendi ture of $500 a mile that was In our opinion worse than wasted because this loose unpacked gravel by its di version of traffic to the sides sim ply means that where formerly some good could be accomplished with a arag, now this benefit cannot be ex pected because dragging the soil to the center will only the more quick ly bury the surface material the gravel. While we have given but one in stance we believe that similar cases could be found in a great many coun ties of the corn belt where gravel is available and If this is true It is high time that some system is developed whereby every dollar that is spent on a highway must be for labor that is superintended by someone who is schooled in a practical wav on the scientific principles of road making. BETTER ROADS ARE COMING Recent Convention Held at Peoria Gave Powerful Impetus ' to the Movement In Illinois. The recent good roads convention at Peoria gave a powerful impetus to the good roads movement in Illinois. Prospects are that some sort of road legislation will be passed by the leg islature this coming winter. Opposition to the hard road move ment will eome mainly from two sources. The first Is that class of peo ple who do ndv trust the state to spend money wisely and economically. They believe that the township or county can use the road money more effec tively. The second and largest source of opposition is from the northern part of the state, where the main roads are now pretty thoroughly graveled or macadamized. The people there say with some Justice that after having taxed themselves to build their own roads, they should not be compelled to help build roads for the rest of the state. This should not block the progress of the good roads movement, however. It should be easily possible to devise a law to provide for an equitable dis tribution of the state road money. In the sections which already have mac adamized roads, the money could be spent for concrete pavement on the roads where traffic Is heaviest As for the first objection, the state, with a force of trained road makers, ought to be able to put in permanent roads much better and at less cost than the township or county. Expe rience does not show that misuse of funds is any more likely to occur un der state than under county adminis tration. It ia important that the good roads question be thoroughly threshed out this fall and winter. We should like to hear from our readers on this sub ject and will be glad to give space In the paper to as many letters as pos sible. Prairie Farmer. Kicking Habit of Mule. If a mule IS properly trained he will not develop the kicking habit any more than a horse will. Mules have a bad name on this score simply be cause they are not as well broken as horses are. Disposition of Cripples, The cripple and the malformed chicken should be put to death im mediately after hatching. Such little unfortunates will bring nothing but disappointment They will give you more care than ten well and whole ones. They will make you sick of the chicken business and give your en tire flock a black eye from the first Kill 'em the Instant they are born. . Creen Feed Necessary, A hen should have all the trees. tad sh will eat every day of bar Ufa and Tin in Horticulture mm Mil ixi IT GRAPES FOR USE IN WINTER Placed In Department of House Cellar Without Any Artificial Heat Some Keep Well. j What a pity it is that grapes will inot keep longer. Every autumn I .place in a department of my house cellar, where there is no artificial heat, ibaskets of various varieties of grapes, isays a writer in Green's Fruit Grower. 1 1 do not "expect the Worden, Concord, Delaware and Niagara to keep long, !therefore I consume them first After (these I consume the Brighton, which :1s a fairly good keeper, but which 'shrivels up considerably. Barry has ikept well with me this season. Gaert ner, a red grape, has kept perfectly up to Thanksgiving. Mills, a black grape with very large .compact cluster, is the best keeper oi all that I have tested, being in per feet condition on Thanksgiving day. I hear of many methods of keeping WW .ftKM l Y 2 WW IT "Father, I'm Glad You Smoke Duke's Mixture" Before we tell you about the boy and his air rifle, we want you to hear about Liggett ifyert Duke's Mixture the tobacco that thousands of men find .' just right" fo a pipe the tobacco that makes "rolling" popular. I'ift " -iZ i wit. A Good Keeping Variety. grapes through the winter, but I hav never succeeded in doing so in mj ordinary fruit room. The grapes must not be placed In piles in baskets oi boxes With me they do the best in single layers. If one layer is piled on top of another they are inclined to rot Some people cut off portions of the vine with clusters on It and place the ends of the vine In a bottle of water and report good results in keeping the grapes plump and fresh. Others in sert one end of each stem of grapes in a bottle of water, but when the water evaporates it must have atten tion, therefore this is rather an ex pensive method. The Catawba has the reputation of being the best keep er of the hardy nothern grapes. The Catawba and even the Delaware are kept, as I assume in cold storage, and put on the market in western New York all through the winter, but I ob serve there is difficulty in keeping even the Catawba in prime condition for the holidays. INSULATOR FOR THE TREES Wood Used Should Be Thoroughly Waterproofed to Prevent Branches From Forming. Part of the telephone lineman's work consists in keeping the wires clear of trees and their branches, whieh often afford a good ground. The Morse tree insulator here shown is simple and quickly placed on the wire, This favorite tobacco is fine old Virginia and North Carolina bright leaf that has been thoroughly aged, stemmed and then granulated. It has the true tobacco taste, for the very simple reason that it is pure tobacco. Pay what you will it is impossible to get a purer or moro likeable smoke than Duke's Mixture. It ia now Liggett $Mym leader, and is unsurpassed in quality. ' ; In every fic sack there is one and a half ounces of splendid tobacco and with each sack you get a book of cigarette papers FREE. How the Boy Got His Air Rifle In every sack of the JAggttt $ Myert Duke's Mixture we now pack a free Present Coupon. These Coupons are good for all kinds of useful articles something to please every member of. the family. There are skates, sleds, balls and bats, cameras, um brellas, watches, fountain pens, pipes, . . - opera glasses, etc., etc. As a special offer, during Jan uary and February only, we will send you our new illus trated catalogue of presents, FREE. Just send us your name and address on a postal. Coufont from Duke't Mixture may bt assorted with tags from HORSESHOE, J. T., TINSLEY'S NATURAL LEAF, GRANGER TWIST, coupons from fUUK kusu uuc-ttn atmoie coupms. una Kirv di i tp. airT DicrtM a iv-irv a wa a ave m CIGARETTES, CUX CIGARETTES, and other tags or coupons issued by us. Premium Dept St Louis, Mo. atSSmi lJOW fMiill i ip I : III! ' ' . Hindu Charm. "The God-given Almighty Power Is moving within me to give health, suc cess and happiness. I shall be shown the way to help bring about all these conditions. Love, Light and Kindness .wait upon me. I shall be shown the way."' ' ' -. Tree Insulator. says the Popular Electricity. It is a rectangular piece of wood that may be placed on a wire by means of two crosswise grooves deep enough to meet a shallow groove on the face. The wire passes from one crosswise groove along the 4ace groove and out by way of the second groove, the mid dle of the insulator thus held by the wire bearing against the limb or tree without the use of nails or other fas teners. The wood for the insulator is thoroughly waterproofed. Quantities of Water. V Consider the kind of plant you are watering. ; Soft-stemmed kinds, espe cially those with large leaves, will require much more water than hard wooded, slow-growing kinds. .While the former, easily recover from drouth, the hard-wooded suffer permanently from extremes. The seasons and time of day should also be watched. Plants not in active growth should be watered sparingly until they have regained their foliage. Watering in the evening Just before dark greatly aids fungous diseases, as the foliage remains wet through the night Figure the Cost The orchardlet must figure the value of the land per year on which the ap ples are grown, the cost of pruning, spraying, cultivating, picking and packing, the cost of the barrel and the cost of delivering the barrel in fall wagon loads at the nearest railroad station. V Cool the Ashes. Ashes for fertilizing the grape vino should be cooled before applying them and then they should be so placed that they will not come la contact with the vine Itself but rather enter the ground and f fertilize the roots. Sprsy Apple Orchards. Apple orchards ought to be sprayed three times a year, and when it comes to taking ear of 50u to L000 trees It Till readily be stea that it Is mo small uadirUkla. TURNOVER! NEW LEAF Start the new year right. Take care of the Stomach, Liver and Bowels, and they will serve you welL Make the appetite keen, digestion per fect and Liver active by the daily use of HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS It promotes and maintains health, strength and vigor. Try it today. I 1 Air Flight for Consumption. If you have incipient consumption take a flight lit- an airship.. Doctor Flemming, an eminent authority on tuberculosis- lecturing before the Berlin Aeronautical . association, de scribed tho benefits of high altitudes upon those afflicted, and asserted that fifteen mint9 exposure to the sun's rays during an airship flight at high altitude was certain death to the bacilli of tuberculosis. . We Are a Nation of Frog-Eaters, v Frogs legs, at which people turned up their noses in disgust only a few years ago, have now become so popu lar an article of diet that no fewer than 6,000,000 frogs a year are killed In Minnesota alone to supply the de mand.. The northwestern frogs are the most delicate, but the biggest are the southern bullfroes. The latter are not so sweet or tender as the former. Emphatic Comment It was held by the duke of Welling ton that tho true story of the battle of Waterloo had' never been written. A contemporary relates how he onca sat In a carriage with the duke and "watched him read a ponderous quar to recital of the battle of Waterloo. Against paragraph after paragraph ha traced the letters 'L. or 'D. L.' with a great muni enoea pencil, l venturoa to ask what these mystlo letter meant Tho pithy reply was: "Lia" and "Damned He," to be sure.' " Red Cross Ball Blue rives double value for yoa money, goes twice as far as any other. Ask your srocer. Willing to Please. ' "During an anti-fly campaign," writes E. K. O. to the Cleveland Plain Dealer, "one of the teachers in our public schools urged the children to bring in all the flies they could cap ture. The reward was to be ten cents a pint On the following day the schoolmarm was astonished to get this question from one of her small charges: "'Teacher, we ain't got ho flies at out house. Will bedbugs do lest as welir" Many Deadly Weapons. Some persons attribute all trim to the pistol, forgetting that history tells us that more crimes were com mitted in the world before there wera pistols. What is to prevent a person murderously inclined from obtaining and using a carving knife, an ice pick, an ax, or hatchet a razor or baseball batt These all make deadly weap QUICK RELIEF EYE TROUBLES Desire for Long Life. There appears to exist a greater desire to live long than to live well! Measure by man's desires, he cannot live long; enough; measure by his good deeds, and ha has not lived lone enough;, measure by his evil deeds, and he has lived too long. . Fault Finding. : ' ' V If we had no faults, we should not take so much pleasure in noticing the faults of other people. La Rochefoucauld. PILES CURED IS TO 14 DATS Yonr dnurarist wiU refund money if PAZO OINT MENT fails to cure any ease of Iu-hina. Blind. Bleeding or Protrudina FUee in S to 14 days. &j& Too Good to Lose. Jack "Now that your engagement is broken, are you going to make Blanche send back your letters?" Harry "You bet I am. I worked hard thinking out those letters; they're worth using again New Idea In Fruit Growing. An electric motor to vibrate gently a fruit tree so that the sap Sows to tho buds and blossoms and enables them to resist frost has been patented by a Colorado orchardlst - Greek Fir to Bo Used Again. To stop following hostile vessels or oven tor purposes of attack when tho oonditkms are right a Gorman naval eSoer bas invented a Greek fire that rU fesra while oatlag oa vata& Best roys Dandruff Ayer's Hair Vigor keeps the scalp clean and healthy, destroys all dandruff, and greatly promotes the growth of the hair. You will cer tainly be pleased with it as a dressing for. your hair. It keeps the hair soft and smooth and promptly checks any falling of the hair. It does not color the hair, and cannot injure the hair or scalp. ' Consult vour dorfnr about these hair problems. Ask him w!::.t he thinks cf Ayer's lli'j A'i-cr. atxe y c, tttm en , ,.:. wm