jvvays ilaking Friends Is the fortunate experience of Hood's Sarsapa rilla. Whole neighborhoods love and praise it for the cures it has made. "I know by ex perience that Hood's Sarsaparilla is a grand, good medicine. I am more. glad in taking it ' than its proprietors are in selling it. In ma laria and loss of appetite it drove out the chills, gave me a good appetite and digestion. For twenty years I have known and used it, so I call it a good old reliable family medicine. We recommend it to all our friends." James John son, 551 E. Indiana Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. In. thousands of homes all over the country Hood's Sarsaparilla jlll AW.'.:., Is used as a Spring Medicine and blood purifier. It should be in yours. POULTRY AND GAME Can get you fancy prices for Wild Docks and other game in season. Write na for cash offer on all kinds of poultry, pork. etc. Pearson-Page Co., Portland PATENTS Watson E. Coleman, Patent l-awyer.'WajililiiKtoi), D.C. Advice and books free. Bates reasonable. Highest references. jBest service. MONEY TO LOAN Lowest rates. Writs for application blank. West era Bond & Mortgage Co., CodbrcuI Club BU(.. PsrlUsi Machinery Second-Hand Machln. ery houKht, sold and exchanged: engines. boilers, sawmills, etc. ' The J. E. Martin Co.. 83 1st St. Portland. Send for Stock List and prices. WRITE FOR FREE ADVICE information and booklets of value to you. PACIFIC GUANO & FERTILIZER CO. 182 Madison St. Portland, Or. BANDMEN:-K,' HOLTON and BUESCIIER band instruments. The most complete stock nf Musical Merchandise in the Northwest Write for Catalogues. SEIIIERLING-LUCAS MUSIC CO. 134 Second Street Portland, Oregon $100 TO $500 SAVED On Each Automobile. Our co-operative sales plan en ables you to buy a brand new au tomobile; only $475 required, bal ance easy terms. For full partic ulars address GERLINGER MOTOR CAR CO. 690 Washington Street. PORTLAND. OREGON. LIKE FLAVOR OF. CHOCOLATE Be Honest. Being honest is the greater part of achievement. When you know that you're doing the best within you, you can't be downed. Self-respect is an eternal life preserver no matter how often circumstance wrecks you, you're bound to float back to solid ground again. When men strive for posts of trust, they must be somewhat post like themselves and stand steady. Herbert Kaufman. Feminine Ambition Rebuked. The instinctive masculine attitude toward feminine ambition is some times manifest in early years. Three-year-old Richard was observed In the barnyard one day, following witn so licitous attention the movements of a hen who was trying t6 crow. Finally he Inquired kindly, though with evi dent disapproval: "Is anyfing the mat ter wlf you?", . v, , , . Three Babes Walked Fifteen Miles. Three children Ida Farrow, eight years old, Willie Farrow, five, and Linda Benton, six, of Peterborough walked 15 miles to Whaplode Drove one recent Sunday to see their grand mother. The children, who undertook the Journey unknown to their parents, arrived exhausted, and after boing fed and rested were driven home again. London Mall. Addition to Custard Makes Little Ex tra Work, and the Children Are Sure to Appreciate It. It is no more trouble to make a chocolate custard than It Is a plain one, and the chocolate is a change. Children especially enjoy a custard made in this way. The proportloni are two cupfuls of milk, one ounce ol chocolate, two eggs, sugar to taste, usually about three tablespoonfuls, a pinch of salt and half a teaspoonful of any preferred flavoring. Melt the. chocolate in a double boil er. Pour the milk in and let It come to a boil. Beat eggs, sugar and salt together, and pour the boiling milk over the mixture and strain into cus tard cups or one large dish as pre ferred. Set in a pan of hot water and bake In a moderate oven. - I suppose you know how to tell when the custard is done. If not, then the test is a knife put Into th middle of the custard. If the knif comes out clean the dish is ready to be taken from the oven, while if th custard sticks to the knife it must bf left a little longer. Exchange.- - Cures While You Walk. Allen's Font-Ease is a certain cure lor hoi sweating, callus, and swollen, aching feet. Sold by all Druggixts. Price 25c. Don't accept any ubHtltuta. Trial package FKEE. Addresi Allori 8, Olmsted , Le Koy, N. Y. Need Care of Home. A Philadelphia physician who en joys a handsome practice and excel lent hospital connections told me an interesting although terrible thing, About 90 per cent, out of every 10Q babies that are sent to hospitals foi bringing up die. The death rate among such unfortunates is seven times ai great as with infants who have th Immediate care of mothers. Trulj there is something needed in a chlld'i life besides food, shelter, and clothing Philadelphia Record. Squeaky Boots. Often when one has purchased a pair of boots, one doesn't know till they are home that they creak. How ever, the disagreeable noise may b stopped by taking them back to tat Bhoemaker and asking him to spring them on each side and insert between the soles a teaspoonful of French chalk. This process costs only a trlfU and answers admirably. Don't buy water for bluing. Liquid blue la at most all water. Buy Ked Cross Ball blue, Uu Diue mat a ail Diue. WATER REQUIRED FOR SHEEP Animal With Bountiful Supply Pro duce More Mutton Than Those That Are Deprived of It Experiments carried on with cattle showed that cattle given plenty of water with their pasture contained more moisture and less dry matter than did the carcasses of cattle given pasture but no additional moisture, (t is a generally accepted principle of feeding that it costs more and more to produce meat as the moisture de creases and the dry matter increases. From this we are able to deduce the tact that It costs less to grow the iteers that had plenty of water, and so made watery carcasses, than it did to grow the steers that had no water other than that in their food and re produced a dry carcass. ' , What is .true in the . case of steers would hold equally true in the case of sheep.' Sheep given plenty of water will produce mutton more cheaply than will those deprived of it. Muscle expansion will be more active in the one case than in the other, and that Is another reason why mutton pro duction, would be cheaper. There is considerable water in any of the pasture crops that sheep eat, And they get still more moisture from the dew that collects on the grass blades in early morning and late eve ning; but from these two sources, while It gets enough water to keep it alive, a sheep still does not get enough water to keep it in the very best growing condition nor to keep all its bodily processes going on in the most effective manner possible. There, is not an organ in the body that can function properly without water to aid tl. Being one of the chief constituents of blood, water is carried to every, part of the system, and not alone helps it in getting its nourishment, but also in ridding it of its impurities. It is obvious that a large amount of water must be neces sary to keep the sheep doing,; well. Enough is not gotten with the food, even in summer, and ' this amount should be supplemented by all that the sheep will drink when given con stant access to it. CULL OUT UNDESIRABLE HENS Rather Flimsy Excuse. The case of 'any excuse" was ex empllfied recently at Capetown (S Africa) criminal court. A native when asked by the magistrate why he had signed his evidence "Tom Harris," hli real name being April Phalander, re plied that he did so because the pei was a bad one and his hand was sbak ing. . Child's Pathetic Death. A bad school report, which h thought would Induce his parents t punish him, caused a boy of twelvt years to commit suicide at IUtnlcken dorf , a. suburb of Berlin, a few dayi ago. The child crept at dusk into i stable and hanged himself with a hal ter from a low beam. All Fowls That Have Passed Their Term of Usefulness Should Be Marketed at Once. It is always seasonable to cull out the undesirable birds from a flock, says the Poultry Journal. All hens that have passed their term of useful ness should be marketed. While cull ing should be continued throughout the entire year, the most heroic work should be done in the fall. What we call yearlings in poultry are those which were hatched the year before the pullets. They are nearer two years old than one, and make ex cellent breeders. After breeding pick out of this flock such as are consider ed unprofitable. What we call the two-year-olds are the ones that are going into their second molt Very often some excellent layers are found among these, and It pays to keep such, but at that age the closer we cull the better will be our profits. This cull lng, however, can only be successful by close watching. No matter how valuable a hen may be, if she proves to be a feather puller or an egg eater, she, too, should be sent with the lot of culls to market IMPROVING HEN FLOCK Great Deal Depends on Selection of Setting Eggs. Bhould Be Those From Year Old Birds, at Chicks Will Be Larger and ' Stronger .Than Those From Pullets. (By A. J. WILDER.) Care should be taken to save for settings only the eggs from the best bens. A very great difference can be made in a flock in a few seasons by the selection of the eggs for hatch-tag. By choosing the largest eggs -the fowls will be much larger In size, but there Is a great probability that they will not be good layers. The hen that lays an unusually large egg is quite likely to lay only every other day. By setting her eggs and again the next season setting the largest eggs, you will develop a strain of large fowls that will lay very large eggs, "but will lay only every other day, or even less. On the other hand, it you set the eggs from the hens, that as pullets laid during their first fall and win ter, an continue to set eggs from Buch hens, you will develop a strain of early winter layers. The eggs for settings should be from year old hens, as the chicks will be larger and stronger than those from pullet eggs. It is best to mate 1 Ml i- 4 -i m fil y ; wmmwm y ft.. I X ' 0 Keeping Mind In Condition, No mind is first class that Is not continually reading books and con versing with men that require an ef fort to be understood. The novel-soaked intellect, gormandizing upon easy reading, grows flabby. GOOD DIGESTION IS THE BEST SAFEGUARD AGAINST ALL BODILY DISORDERS. THEBESTSAFEGUARD FOR A GOOD DIGESTION IS sew- f. 7 Tactful Mr. Cumrox. "I want to talk to you about becom lng your son-in-law," said the younj mart. "I can't advise you," replied Mr Cumrox, "on the subject of becominj a member of the' family. As your sin cere personal friend I ought to speak freely, but as a husband and father ) am restrained." Oh, Sugar, Gradually, but surely, the world li being Americanized. A Paris restaur ant advertises: "Kakes de buckwheat de Amerlcalne." Exempted from Taxation, For reasons of public policy the law exempts from taxation churches and church property, cemeteries, school and college property, buildings used for educational, literary, scientific or charitable purposes and property own ed by a city, county, state or the Uni ted States. The rtbme Sentinel. It Is each woman's duty to under stand the preparation of food bo thai It may be fit for human consumption It may not be necessary for her to at tend to the actual work, but sh should be the sentinel, always oi guard. Way Out. Knlcker "A Judge has ruled that t woman shouldn't spend more on clothes than on rent" Mrs. Knickei "Well, then, we shall have to pay t bigger rent'sNew York Sun. The Chance. The man who complains that he hai not succeeded because he has nevei had a chance expects somebody els to furnish the chance. White Wood Work. Inside painted woodwork can b made to look like new by rubbing i' well with a rag dipped in whiting. At ter the whiting dries it should be thor oughly removed with a soft cloth. Th paint is not injured, as it usually ii by the application of soap and water and the process Is easy. with snonarr ft collects th tnvf c't.1 . Terms of disease spreads) them orer war ivoa ana poisons us witn typnold. The Mosquito r lm onrTelns MALARIA. 1 "lATE ARE all exposed to such" dangers our only armor Is good rtd blood! Let your stomach be of pood disrestlon, your liver active and your lungs full of good pure air and you don't surrender to any of the disease bearing; perms. The beet known tonle and alterative, that corrects torpid livsr, and helps digestion so that good blood Is manufactured and the system nourished, is Dr. Pierce's This famous medicine has been sold by medietas dealers In Its li.ml.l f,rm rn rer forty years, riving great satisfaction. If you prefer you ran bow obtain Dr. Pierce 'e Golden Medical Discovery tablets of your druggist st $1.00, also in 60c slse' or by mail send 60 one-cent stamps, R.V. Pierce, M. D, Buffalo, N.Y, for trial box.! OllCStiona fif Life fI,sr1?d. prePwIysnssMeedln e People's Medical Ad. v. vim- by K. V. fierce, al. U All the knuwMtre young orwnan.wueoraausnursiMMUiioare,M contain! in lot bi( Home 1 Hie tor buuk fioldenjjedical Discovery , cor Ui nina luutf bm with ena-ravtwrs bound in dot a, seat free to anyone sendius U tmii ' sent stiuuiM to pmMty oust wriin asd postage. t HOMEMADE LAWN ROLLER Practical and Substantial Implement Will Keep Grass In Fine Shape and Discourage Moles. , Frequent rolling with a heavy roller keeps the lawn in fine shape and helps to discourage moles from working in it, says the Farm and Home. A prac tical and substantial roller for this purpose may be made of cement with gasplpe axle and handle. It should weigh about 2Q0 pounds and should S Homs-Made Lawn Roller. be about two feet long. A piece of 16-lnch salt-glazed sewer tile makes a good form. Forms can also be made of wood from narrow slats or galvanized iron. In the latter case the form may be left on the roller. Every Poultry Home Should Have Some Convenience for Confining Broody Hens. cockerels Instead of old cocks with these hens.'as the eggs are more apt to be fertile and there will be a larg er percentage of pullets. Choose the medium sized, well shaped eggs and be sure the shell is firm and strong. A weak shell Is sure to be broken, aud, besides the loss of the egg itself, will likely ruin sev eral of the other eggs in the nest and may even teach the hen to break and eat them. Feed the hens a little air slacked lime in the mash to give the eggs a good strong shell. Be sure the lime is well slacked and give two tablespoon fuls to 100 hens every day. Do not force the breeding stock for egg production. Feed them mostly whole grain, wheat, oats, corn and barley. Let the mash be a light feed and give them fresh sweet meat scraps twice a week. Feed plenty of green food, unless the fowls have range where they can find it for themselves. Keep them supplied with pure, clean drinking wa ter and have , charcoal, grit, oyster shell and dry bone always before them. Don't forget a little salt in the mash. It should always be salted as much as the same quantity of food would be for the table. The hens must be made to exercise by scratching for their grain in the litter. They must be healthy and in good condition if you are to raise strong, healthy Thicks. A diseased condition of the hen is transmitted to the egg and will ap pear in the chick when hatched. PROPER CARE OF CUT GLASS Tenant Farming Data. The subject of tenant farming is be ing studied by the bureau of plant in dustry of the department of agricul ture with special reference to the con tract between owner and tenant Where tenants have assurance of long tenure it has been found that they frequently furnish at their own ex pense many of the permanent improve ments, such as fences and farm build ings and usually adopt a system of farming that will maintain and often: improve soil fertility. Data now on" hand from a large number of tenant farms is being analyzed for the pur pose of finding the most satisfactory division of the proceeds between labor, working capital and investment in real estate. This study has already revealed certain general principles that enable the bureau to offer valu able suggestions concerning the de tails of lease contracts. , Do Not Feed Moldy Corn. Moldy corn will produce blind stag gers in horses, and it should never be fed to them. Every year there Is con siderable trouble with this disease la the west, and in almost every case the cause Is moldy corn. If this corn does not produce blind staggers, it will tend to Injure the physical con dition of the animal. So don't feed It, and be careful about pasturing the horses in stalk fields where there Is moldy corn ; Ewe After Lambing. After lambing, ewes should not be fed too heavily for a week or two. Bran alone is a good ration for the first few days. Gradually the ration can be Increased, using one part bran, one part oil meal and five parts corn. Sheep may be turned out earlier than other farm stock, for they seem to thrive better when allowed to keep down rank growth of grass in their pastures. But when they are first turned out they should be fed some dry supplementary foods until they get somewhat accustomed to grass. Protection for Trees. Some orchardlsts have been suc cessful in protecting their trees by smearing the trunks near the ground with mixtures which are distasteful to rabbits. For this purpose white wash, admixture of glue and copperas, decoction of quassia chips and blood or grease, have been used. Mechan ical protection by means of some wrapping is more permanent and ef fective han any form of wash. Effect of Animal Husbandry. Live Stock make It necessary to diversify crops and grow more crops upon which there, is a wider margin of profit.- Animals also distribute la bor, furnish employment in time of bad weather, or when field work is cot possible. Animal husbandry is the logical way to insure soil improve ment, as, the increased fertility from manure is often sufficient to justify raising animals. Elaborate Precautions Necessary to Preserve the Beautiful But Ex .: tremely Delicate Article. Cut glass is very fashionable now, and is used upon the dinner table and in the drawing room with great suc cess. But, alas! How easily it can be chipped and spoiled. What precau tions can be taken with the precious pieces? Cut glass must be handled very care fully when It is washed, so that no risk is run of chipping it. A wooden bowl will help, Place in a wooden bowl some shav ings of mild white soap and pour over these boiling water. When the water has become luke warm wash the glass in the suds, us ing a soft nail brush. Then dip the glass in a second wooden bowl, this time filled with clear lukewarm water, until all traces of soap is removed. Now dip the glass into a third bowl of luke warm water to which bluing has been added (for the bluing will give a brilliance to the glass) and then dry it with a very soft cloth. Polish it with soft tissue paper. Gilded and patterned china may well be washed in the same carefnl way, but the blueing should be omit Converted Wagon. From the standpoint of convent ence, the farm wagon that has been made over into a low-down vehicle with wide steel tires has a strong ap peal. It is easily loaded, and over comes all the objections to high wag ons of the old type. Hearty Eaters. All cows that are hearty eaters are not profitable producers, but all profit able producers are usually hearty vaters. When Your Eyes Need Care Try Murine Eye Remedy. No Smarting' Feels Fine Acta Quickly. Try it for Red, Weak, Watery Eyes aud Granulated Eyelids. Illus trated Book la each Package. Murine is compounded by our tcullsis not a "Patent Med Iclna" but need in SDCceBKfnl Physicians' Prao- Mce for many years. Now dedicated to the Pub llti and sold by Druggists at 26o and 60c per Bottle. Muriue Kye Salve In Aseptio Tubes, 25o and 60& Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago Banana Pie Mix one-third cupful of sugar, two And two-thirds tablespoonful of flour, and one-eighth teaspoonful of salt; then add yolks of two eggs, slightly beaten. Pour on one cupful of hot scalded milk gradually, while stirring constantly, return to double boiler and cook 15 minutes, stirring constantly until mixture thickens, and afterward occasionally. Cool and add one-fourth cupful of thin cream or rich milk, three-fourths tablespoonful of lemon Juice and one large banana cut in one eighth inch slices crosswise. Chill thoroughly and turn into a pastry case. Just beror serving beat the whites of two et ,s until stiff, and add grad ually, while beating constantly, two tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar and one-fourth teaspoonful of lemon ex tract. Spread evenly over pie and brown under gas flame. Woman's Home Companion. Compressed Sponges. A compressed sponge is a bit of toilette daintiness intended specially for travelers, though it appeals as well to the stay-at-home who is an ultra hyglenist. The sponge is of com pressed absorbent cotton about the size of a twenty-five cent piece, and half an inch in thicknes.. Dropped into water it becomes saturated and expands to the size of a small face cloth, large enough to wipe the face free from dust and grime. : In the Telephone Book. Dear Old Lady (using call-office tele phone for the first time, to operator at the exchange) "And as you ve been so nice and attentive, my dear, I'm putting an extra penny in the box for yourself. Punch. ff the f5LJr Dough Ij Better!., fffi U ' 25c HHP Pound Can All Grocers ' - Lucky In Love. The optimist had lost heavily. "Oh, well!" he remarked, as he rose from the gaming table, "unlucky at cards, lucky at love." "Is that true in your case?" sneered the pessimist. "Sure," replied the optimist. "At any rate, I have never been married." Philadel phia Record. HUSBAND NAILED RUBBER ON GATES Wife so Weak and Nervous Could Not Stand Least Noise How Cured. yes fS'Y Munford, Ala, "I was so weak and nervous while passing through the Change of Life that I could hardly live. My husband had to nail rubber on all the gates for I could not stand it to have a gate slam. "I also had back ache and a fullness in my stomach. I noticed that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound was advertised for such cases and I sent and got a bottle. It did me so much good that I kept on taking it and found it to be all you claim. I recommend your Compound to all women afflicted as I was. "-Mrs. F. P. Mullendore, Mun ford, Alabama. An Honest Dependable Medicine Is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. A Root and Herb medicine orig inated necrly forty years ago by Lydia E. Pinkham of Lynn, Mass., for con trolling female ilia. - : Its wonderful success In this line has made it the safest and most dependable medicine of the age for women and bo woman suffering from female ills does herself justice who does not give its trial. , If Ton have the slightest donbt that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound will hel p you, write to Lydia K.Pinkham MedicineCo. (confidential) Lynn.Masa,forad vice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. VJ. L. 3.oo 3.50 SA.oo '4.50 AND 5.oo SHOES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BEST BOYS SHOES In t WORLD t2.00, 12.60 and tl.OO. The largei t maker of Men' $3.50 and $4.00 noe in the world. Ask your dealer to show yon W. L. Doue-la S3.SO, 4.00 ai .ou anoeam dust a arooa in style, t and wear as other make costing- as.00 to S7 OO me oniy amerence is me price, anoea in all leatnerg, style ana an apes to salt everybody. If you could rislt W. L. Douglas large facto ries at Brockton, Mass., and see for yourself how carefully W. L. Douelas shoe ai-e made. yon would then understand why they are warranted o Dt Detter, loon netter, noia tneir snape ana wear longer than any other niaxe lor the price. If W. L. DongUi shoes an not for sale In yonr tleinlty. order oircec rrora me iaciory ana save ine minutpman i pront. onoes tor erery mfmneroi tneianmy, st an iincea, oy rarcei rose, ppsiaKs xnw. nriu lur i iiratf.u Catalog-. It will show you how to order by mall, and way you can ta.it money on your footwear, "W. I DOCOLAS Brockton, Mass. saw FT I TAKE NO 8UB8TITUTE m sr.-:. ft i-.:- i-. va:''.v m fir f-f V.1 1 iLr if - i' I'll I id &f-&Xr MiSIII t m f : 111 afr name In stamped I on the bottom. BEEF ' BRAISED A - LA BRISSE Change From the Familiar Roast Is Something That Will Be Appre ciated By the Family. Take a rump piece of beef, weigh ing at least eight pounds, and lard it with half a pound of salt pork, cut in long, half-inch square pieces. Season well with allspice, chopped parsley, and a little garlic. Tie up firmly and place in the stew pan with four ounces of melted beef suet; fry brisk ly until a crisp brown all over. Drain off the fat, add a quart of broth made from bones and trimming, two cups tomato sauce; a bunch of parsley; two onions, and about a quart and pint of quartered turnips. Let boil up, then cover and let simmer gently for near ly three hours. Take out the beef and place on a platter and rub the vegeta bles through a sieve into the sauce pan, skim off all fat from the gravy and reduce to the consistency of their sauce, then press the . turnips, etc., through a fine sieve to make a puree. Turn onto the platter and place the meat on the. puree. Pour "some of the gravy over the meat and serve. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAT Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablets. Droa-rlsta refund money if it fails to cure. L W. GROVE'S signature is on each box. 25c : Good Dumplings. Many cooks fail with dumplings from letting the mixture stand after it is blended or from letting the water under, them get below the boiling point, says the Commoner. Mix and sift two cupfuls of flour and four tea spoonfuls of baking powder and one half teaspoonful of salt. Work into this three teaspoonfuls of butter, us ing the tips of the fingers, then add gradually three-fourths of a cupful of sweet milk; put out onto a floured board and without working, roll out to half an inch thick; cut in any shape desired, or in strips, dip In flour and lay the pieces close to gether in a well-greased steamer; set this over a kettle of boiling water, cover closely and steam for fourteen minutes, keeping the water below rap idly boiling. Serve as soon as possible with portions of meat. Mother win find Mr. Window; Soothing Syrup the best remedy to use fof their ohUdren during the teething period. Baked Peas. . Now that it is between times of old and new vegetables, try this recipe: Baked peas: One-half pound dried green peas, one onion, one carrot, one teaspoonful sugar, pinch of soda, a generous tablespoon of butter, water. Soak peas over night, put in bean crock .in the morning with the other ingredients and cover with water. Bake six hours or all day in slow oven, adding water when it evaporates. When ready to serve remove onion and carrot. This dish will be found very nutritious and appetizing. Laziness and Logic. Why are we still indolent and negli gent and sluggish, and why da we seek pretenses for not laboring and not being watchful in cultivating our rea son? Epictetus. Water in bluinjr is adulteration, Glass and wa ter make liquid blue costly. Buy Red Cross Ball Blue, makes clothes whiter than snow. Guy de Maupassant as a Clerk. Guy de Maupassant's manner of life as a Junior clerk in the French edu cation office is the subject of an in teresting article by one of his old col leagues. We gather that he absented himself from his duties on the ground of illness on an average about three days a week, and that was how ho obtained leisure for literary composi tion. None the less he was very , anx ious to retain his clerkship until his literary prospects were secure. West minster Gazette. Three Cheers. . . A town meeting had been called to devise ways and means to provide for the poor of the community" After many speeches had been made and many resolutions offered and much time wasted and nothing done,- a be nevolent German arose in the back part of the hall and said: "Mister Chairman, I move, before we adjourn, we all shtand oop undt gif three cheers for de poor!" Water and Ore Mixed. Nearly fifty tons of water were lift ed from the mines of South" Stafford shire, England, last year fof every ton of mineral. IULES CURED IS f TO 14 BAYS Tour drag-gist will refund money if PAZO OINT. HEKT fails to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protrudirm Piles in 6 to 14 dan. 60c Roses From Italy. ; The rose, so long considered the floral emblem of England, was not known in that country until the early part of the fifteenth century. Rose trees were then brought from Italy and planted in the royal gardens. They were sent as presents from the holy father and highly esteemed by royalty. It became the custom to carve them over the doors of the confessional as holy flowers, hence the term sub rosa (under the rose) used to mean with secrecy."- Ave Maria. -r . ; Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets first put up 40 years ago. They regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels- Sugar-coated tiny granules. Er-Yee, He Had. "Pardon me, Mr. Peever," said the chance acquaintance as the two helped hold up the cafe bar, "but have you ever had a serious accident?" "Well." replied Mr, Peever, "I met my wife by accident!" a -LjX, Molasses Pudding. Mix together one . cupful of finely chopped beef suet, three-cupfuls of sifted flour, one teaspoonful and a half of salt, one teaspoonful of cinnamon, a half teaspoonful each of mace, all spice and cloves, and one pound of seeded raisins. Add one cupful of milk, one teaspoonful of soda-dissolved in a lifcle hot water and stirred into one cupful of molasses. Turn into a buttered mold and steam steadily for four hours. Serve with a hard sauce. Flowers on Wrong Grave. After periodical pilgrimages extend ing over 15 years to the cemetery at Beeston, J. Daniels of Nottingham was informed by the local urban council, under whose control it Is, that during all this time he ha3been visiting and placing flowers on the wrong grave. The blunder, they said, was due to a former sexton getting the numbers of the graves mixed in entering them in his book. London Chronicle. s "FIGURE IT OUT" How can you expect to possess good health if you are careless with your Stomach, Liver and Bowels. These organs are the "controlling power" and must be guarded against weakness. To this end y ou really should try a bottle of HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS MB. A. H. POWELL, -t "' - Manufacturing Ohemilt, . i Spokane, Wash. : ' ; - - Pear Birr- Having raftered with stomach trouble for a number of rears, and tried a great many doctors and a great many pro prietary preparations but obtained no per manent relief until 1 took jour stomach remedy, and am pleased to sar that I have no further stomach trouble and can eat any thing I desire and suffer no bad results. I am a professional nurse, havlna nursed for 90 years, some ot the time for Dr. Holb of Mew York Otty, the frreutest specialist on child ren's diseases : alee had charge, of Wardner' Hospltul at Wardner, Idaho, for two years. Since learning by my own experience the great benefit from the use ot Powell's Stom ach Hemedy. I have recommended it to a great many for children and adults, and in each oase It has been remarkable for the -good it has done.; I cheerfully recommend it to snyone suffering with any kind of stoai. ach trouble, as I am anxious to ald anyone Buffering from sickness of any kind, and I have never known of medicine to compare with Powell's Stomach Hemedy for all kinds of stomach trouble. Yours truly. ' . ELSIE 8TE1NEB. 2120 Boone Ave. r "DIDN'T HURT A BIT" .. s - .? is what ihey all say 1 cfc Painless Methods of Extracting Teeth. Out-of-town peo ple can hare their plate and bridge. attMlr An InnA In Mn day if necessary. An absolnta guar antee, backed by 26 years in Portland. ULW.a. Witt. ranaaissiMisMss Wise Dental Co. OrriCE HOURS: A. M. to 8 P. M. Sunday 9 U t Phones: A 2029; Main 2029. railine; Bldf.. Third and Waahlnso Portl.n? Vv . : ' ; OUT Of TOWN ) PEOPLE v , - , en receive prompt trass. ' s i meats of lroa-rolMau, 1 v Bsalth-kaUaiag r .tus ' : ? C GEE WO i .A..,: i-' ,-, ' the Chinese doctor.- Try once more if you hsve bees doctoring with this one and that on and hsve not obtained pe. anneal relief. Let this great Mm healer dW none your case and prescribe some reined, wbwe aciioa is quick, sure sad, safe. His preoptions re compounded from Roots. Herbs, Kuds and Harks that have been gathered from every quar ter of the globe. The secrets of these msdician are not known to the outside world, bat have ba handed down from fsthflt to son in the i.i-t 3 fasuliesia China. iwrMan CONSULTATION FREE. ''. ' ' If yoa lfve owt ot town sad cannot: call, write for sywjpsoss blank and eiroeiar, Trlnini 4 oemw ta THE C.6EEW0 CH1MESE VEOICIKE CD. 1 621 First St, Cor. Morrison P.N. U. No. it-na. EX vrltfaw te advertisers, aim- ties thia paper. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color mors) roods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. On 10c packay colors silk, wool and cotton ecruaDv well and is suajantced to tiv perfect result. A&K de-ler. 9 wo will send postpaid at lOc a packare. Writ forfrsvai iMoaet how lo blac& an4 mix colo.-a. UOHKOt ciua COMPANV. QuincyIaoi7