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About Condon globe. (Condon, Gilliam Co., Or.) 189?-1919 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 1904)
, i : . Distress JIfter Eating Kue between nae&ls, belching, Tom Iting, flatulence, fits ot nervous head ache, piu ia the stomach, are all ymptoms of dyspepsia, and the longer It U neglected the harder it it to cure it Hood's Sarsaparilla - and Pills KadicAlly and permanently cure it trengthen and tone the stomach and other digestive organs for the natural performance ot their functions. Accept no substitute for Ilood's. "I bad dyspepsia twenty-fire JJi and took different medicine but got no belp nntll I began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. Bars taken tour bottles ot this medicine and can now eat almost anything,, sleep well, bav no cramps In my stomach, no burning and no distress.1 Mas. Vnuu O. Btnm, 14 Olney, St, Providence, S, L Hood'0 Sarsaparilla promlaea t eure and keeps ths promise. Bra all Has a Fine Tea. United States Consul Ayuie write from Tara a recommendation of a Bra sillan beverage, y'erba mate tea, which Is prepared from the roasted and pul verised leaves of an evergreen forest tree. Tf " ' ' ' . v Terba mate is largely consumed in Paraguay and In the Bratillan States, where it is made. It is extensively consumed In Argentina, in Uruguay, and to a less extent In Chili. There is a small consumption in other States of Bratll, a small quantity is exported to Europe and still less to the United Statee and Canada. Estimated exports rosy reach 45,000 to 57,000 tons annu ally. : Verba mate has s peculiar bitter, smoky taste, which is usually consid ered unpleasant, and this has largely operated to prevent Its more extensive nse as a beverage, ' This smoky bitter ness, is chiefly due to the rude meth od employed for drying the leaves and It seems likely that -the improved methods of drying the mate on iron or copper pans would give a much more delicate and agreeable product Mate is said to have all of the best qualities of coffee and tea. as a stimulating health beverage, witbout the disadvan tage of either. , It is a more gentle stimulant than' either and is said to be much used in the hospitals of Paris. The tree could probably be grown In Southern California, perhaps in southern Texasr certainly 'In many parts rthe "Philippines.- Could Get No Rest. Freeborn." Minn.' Oct. J 17 (Special) Mr. R. E. Goward, a well known man here, is rejoicing in the relief from suf fering he has obtained through using Dodd's Kidney Pills. His experience is well worth repeating as it should point the road to health to many an other in a similar condition. "I had an aggravating case of Kid ney Trouble," says Mr. Goward, "that gave me no rest day or night but using a few boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills put new life in me and I feel like a new man. "I am happy to state I have received great and wonderful benefit from Dodd's Kidney Pills. I would heartily recom mend all sufferers from Kidney Trouble to give Dodd's Kidney Pills a fair trial as I have every reason to .believe . it would never be regretted." Dodd's Kidney Fills make yon feel like a new nan or woman because they cure the kidneys. Cured kidneys mean pure blood and pure blood means bounding health and energy in every part of the body. Four Thousand Godfathers. Princess Irene of Prussia is better provided for in the matter of god fathers than any other woman In the world. She can boast of no fewer than 4,000 godfathers, and bow she came to obtain so many is a pretty story. When she waf born the war of 1806 was drawing to an end. and peace be ing concluded Just at the time of ber christening, her father, Prince Henry of Hesse, requested all tai officers and men of the regiments under his com mand to stand godfathers to his little daughter, whom he named Irene (Peace) in commemoration of the end of the war." London Tattler. I am compelled by a sense of gratitude to tell you the great good your remedy has done me in a case of Contagions Blood Poison. Among other symptoms I was se verely afflicted with Rheumatism, and got almost past going. The disease got a firm bold upon my system; my blood was thor oughly poisoned with tbe virus. I lost in weight, waa run down, had sore throat, eruptions, splotches and other evidences of the disease. I was truly in a bad shape when I began the use of S. 8. S., but the persistent use of it brought me out of my trouble safe and sound, and I have tbe courage to publicly testify to the virtues of your great blood remedy, S. S. S., and to recommend it to all blood-poison suffer ers, sincerely believing if it is taken ac- cording to directions, and given a fair trial, it will thoroughly eliminate every . t .1 ; r . ... r - . parocie oi me virus, iaucs v.ujuua Stark Hotel, Greensburg, Pa, Painful swellings in the groins, red ernp tions upon the skin, sores in the mouth and loss of hair and eyebrows, are some of the symptoms of this vile disease. S. S. S. is an antidote for the awful virus that attacks and destroys even the bones. 8. 8. S. contains no Mercury, Potash or other mineral ingredient We offer Ji,ooo for proof that it is not absolutely veget able, ilome treat ment book givln the symptoms ani other interesting and valuable infor mation about this disease, mailed free. Our physi cians advise free those who write us. The Swift SpeoEflo Company, Atlanta, Gsj SElff I syfiiTfMitti ail L(i isiis. Cr I I Beat Couaa Syrup. TuIh Good. CM f I I I lo tlm. SolJ bf drwmrlata, t I . B v . " - - The so-called canals ot Mars bare been reproduced by M. Baumann, of Zurich, In the' cracks and fissures ippearing In cylinders and spheres sub jected to great pressure. An expert of the Bureau of Plant Industry reports that the Salton Basin in California Is actually better adapt ed for the culture ot the date-palm than are those parts of the Sahara Desert, where the best exported dates are produced. It is believed that this part of California could yield datee enough to supply the entire United States. There are also places In Neva da, Artsona, New Mexico, and Texas where this characteristically Oriental fruit, dear to the memories of all read era of the "Arabian Nights, could. It Is said, be cultivated with success. Tbe electro-stertllsator of M. Otto Is an attempt to solve the problem of otonUIng water at the home of the consumer. " The apparatus includes a little box containing a transformer and an ozonator, with a commutator for reversing about one hundred times per second If the current is continuous. The oaone generated passes through a Alter of wadding to an emulser, where the water and osone are energetically mixed before passing from the spigot The oaonator may be connected to an ordinary lighting circuit, and the cur rent required Is about tbe same as for a simple incsndescent lamp. r k An Ingenious Englishman, Harrison Marttndale, has Invented a radium clock, which, it Is computed, could run 30.000 years If unlnterfered with. It consists ot a tube containing a small quantity ot r&dlam, supported on a quarts rod In an exhausted glass ves sel To the lower end of the tube Is attached an electroscope, consisting of two long strips of sliver. The natural action of tbe radium sends an electric charge into the strips, causing them to separate until they touch the sides ot the vessel, whereupon they are In stantly discharged and fail together again. Tbla operation la repeated au tomatlcally every two minutes, so that each beat of this singular timekeeper may be said to be two mlnutea long. Professor Elrod, of the University of Montana gives a striking description of the treasure that bis State possesses In sapphires. The only systematic mining for these precious stones in the United States is done in Montana. The annual output amounts to 420,000 or 500,000 carats. Including the stonss that are suitable for cutting ss gems and those that are only useful for me chanical purposes. It is said that the lapidaries In 'Helena do finer work than Is done on the stones that are sent to London to be cut Perhaps some body will suggest that Montana should be called the "Gem State," In view of the fact that her output of precious stones exceeds the production In that line of all the rest of the United States. INTERESTING TREES OF INDIA. Eagle or Aloe Wood and Chine Tallow Tree Much Prised. Two . Interesting numbers of the Agricultural Ledger hare Just been issued In Bombay. They are devoted to a description of two trees which grow snd sre much prized In India the tagle, or aloe wood, and the Chi nese tallow tree. David Hooper, the director of the industrial section of the Indian Museum, who Is responsible for both these papers, describes hi sn extremely readable manner the various uses to which the products of these trees are devoted, how they are collect ed and where they are found. The aloe wood tree is s native of the moun tains east and southeast of Sylhet, In Burmas, and In Bengal. It la valua ble on account of a dark, resinous, aromatic juice with which the wood Is sometimes gorged. This resin, or sugar as it Is colloquially termed, Is used for Its perfume snd supposed medicinal properties. It Is very costly and is used both for Incense In re ligious and other ceremonials and also In the preparation of a perfume called agar attar, which Is practically as costly as attar of roses. The most in teresting feature In connection with the aloe wood tree is the uncertainty as to whether any particular tree will be found to contain the precious resin. A tribe of hill men known to the na tives as agar kumlabs make It their business to search for the resinous wood. Their trade Is a secret which they always endeavor to preserve from all natlvea of other tribes. A party of , agar kumlahs goes off Into the mountains with provisions for as long as three months, and they prosecute their tedious search in districts where probably a human being is not seen from month to another. Trees have to be chopped down and backed to pieces before it can be ascertained whether they contain any of the' resin ous deposit, and sometimes, after a wearisome search through half a dozen trees, young and old, not a single piece of agar Is discovered. Again, it may be that a rich find is made, and then the collector Is repaid for half a month of work. Tbe forest department preserves the tree and col lects the agar. Some years ago the officials of that branch of the service were disposed to believe that the tree was becoming extremely rare. How ever, year by year, the sales of tbe department Increase, so that it may be assumed that as yet there Is no ground for the fear that the tree may become extinct : The Chinese tallow tree grows in the United Provinces and in the Punjaub. It Is valuable because of a species of vegetable tallow which It produces. Bombay Gazette. GH03T 8TORY FROM INDIA. Ita Truthnine Vonched For by Two . Women and a Man. The latest ghost story Is recorded in tbe Friend of Burmah, and it is at tested by several eyewitnesses, who saw the ghost, not during the night, as is usually the case, but in broad daylight. It happened in the Monyin su quarter of Pakokku a few days ago. In that quarter of the town lived a married couple; the husband's name is Maung Yun and his : wife" May Neaia. They bad a little son 2 yean 1 eld, who, after a" serious Illness, died. The baby was burled tn thr cemetery outside of the town, bis cradle serv ing ss a cefin. f " t I The father was very much dejected at the loss of his little one, and. uu ( able to -repress bis grief, went to the cemetery two days after the burial. It waa about 8 o'clock, in the morning. ) At the entrance ot every Burmese , burial place there Is a say at. or rest ( bouse, wherein people gather and chat and smoke and take shelter from the ' sun or rain whenever they accompany 5 a funeral. On entering the graveyard Maung tun waa not a little surprised , to see his son, or at least some one looking exactly like his son, playing In i the aayat, near the cradle. He was at j first horror-struck, but paternal affee-: ttoa getting the upper hand, he ap-i preached the baby, and, to entice htm, j gave him one pice. The boy took the coin readily and offered not the least resistance when 1 the father took him In his arms and carried htm away. Maung Tun could j make nothing out ot it but that ths j child had been burled' alive and that ! somebody, attracted soon after by the sounds coming from the grave, had dug him out and placed hlin In tut sayat Full of Joy, he carried his treasure home. At the entrance of the town, and about a call's distance from his house, he met a neighbor, Mab Sln Pwlu, who, wondering at- What ; she' saw, streamed out: "la that you, Ko'Yun, carrying home your little sour" As aoonaa the child beard the voice be began moving about lu bla father's arms. Msh Seln Pwln and another woman came to take It, and a short struggle ensued between them and the boy, and Maung Tun suddenly lost his senses and fell heavily to tbe ground The two women made a dash for the little one, but, lo! nowhere was he to be found; he bad disappeared com pletely, leaving no trace behind The unfortunate man was carried home by some kindly neighbors, but he waa a long time In recovering his senses. The child was a ghost and ths man had been carrying nothing but an apparition from the other world. That it appeared real enough, the two wom en are ready to swear, since they not only saw, but touched It It was uo smoke or vapor, but seemed to be flesh and bone. As soon as Maung Yon was well enough to explain how It happened, a hurried visit was made to the cemetery in the hope of, per haps, seeing the boy in the sayat But they were disappointed; neither child nor cradle was there, and the grave was exactly as It had been left on tbe burial day, not In the least disturbed. London Globe. EACH RACE ITS ODOR. Oriental 8aid to Object Strongly to Western People oa that Score. Western nations, with their usual conceit imagine that they sre superior In every respect to the races of another color aud consequently to those of the Far East. One of the charges which white men bring against the negro Is that the odor emanating from him is the reverse of pleasant and occasion ally, In hot weather, Is almost unbear able. The Caucasian never pauses to think that possibly the odor of bis skin Is by no m ens pleasing to the sense of smell of tbe negro or the Indian. Nev ertheless, It Is stated that the smell of the white man Is not so fragrant to tbe negro as It Is Imagined, but is. In fact objectionable to a degree. According to a recent issue of the New York Times, a Japanese medical man has published a treatise concern ing the odor of the Occidental races. declaring that It takes some time for the Oriental to become accustomed to It ; The writer advances the theory which has been discussed before that each race has its peculiar odor, that It hi partly radical, but-Is in a measure Influenced by dic-tary and other condi tions. The Japanese do not smell each oth er, but the perfume from their bodies is wafted by the breezes to the Rus sians, who can distinguish the smell of thr enemies at a long distance. Tbe writer, however, states that It Is noth ing like the pungent and penetrating emanation proceeding from the West ern nations, in which traces of garlic and ancient cheese and the volatlzatlon of a coarse and over-abundant dietary are sure to be found. There are reasons to think tfiat the Japanese doctor may be right and per haps each race has its characteristic odor. ' ' '. ' : 1 ; Certain it is that primitive races hare a much keener sense of smell than the members of a highly civilized race. With civilization and the art of living in an artificial manner, from dis use tbe senses of sight and smell be come less acute. The Japanese hav not embraced civilization for so long a period as to lose the qualities of a people living In a state of nature. In deed, the great majority are not civ ilized at all. Chicago Chronicle. By Elimination Jokes about twins are more numer ous than twins themselves. For al' that, there need be no hesitation In re peatlng a Joke which passes current In at least one section of the country. "There used to live over on Paint er's farm," said the humorist who told the story, "a couple o' twins nam ed Dan and Abe. They moved a way since. At the time I remember 'em they were grown men, but they were as near like as them two gallon Jugs. The only difference was that Dan had good, sound teeth and Abe, he'd lost most o' his out o' the front part of ma face. "The only way to know which wan which was to stick your finger In Abe's mouth. If he bit ye It was Dan." Bald Fact. The Barber Try some hair restor er? . . The Philosopher Oh, no; I have long ceased to regard hair as one of the necessaries of life. Brooklyn Life. The average woman of any experi ence knows men so well that no male can deceive her, unless It Is her son, from five on up. A man's last complaint Is that he is sick and old. f i i mil iii i mini mi i in 1 Do you like your thin, rough, short hair? Of course you don't. Do you like thick, heavy, smooth hair?, Of course you do. Then hy flair Vigor not be pleased? Ayer'sIIalr Vigor makes beautiful heads of hair,. that's the whole story.'; Sold for 60Vcars. - " t a ! km Hair VW for 4 tor tlm. li to, ludMd, a udr(iil hair t.wle, rtfl,i hlib to Hit katr aiid .'l. ami. al U hum Uit, prortiia a , pVn.lt.) drwli. -Da. J. W. Tavvm. NidlU. luT. T. I H twill. . O. A TIN CO., for Weak Hair A l.lltle Too UtMul, Husband -Why do you Khun st Slogu & Co.', inVNul of at Pastime's? Wife Pastime's has some new sort ot electrical contrivance which br'uigi your vbauge so quirk you U n' bav time to change 'your mind ij j k,l?eCyLIOUOIH40ltFHINC-T08ACCCj L.CUre nCTi rLWWstniLT vunu ' roe run ATtcuisj The late Anton Tchechnff was au lutl mate friend of ttorkl aud Tolstoi, snd it was the remarkable success of tlie former that encouraged him lu his literary efforts. Plsos Cure U a noOtt couth medicine. It has cumt coiipha and colds for lorty year. At druggists, 23 coins. So Many Have. "Here Is au article alnnit our cor rupt police," said the reporter. "How should I head It?" "Oh. Just sny the city baa a bad case of the blues," replied the great editor. You Can Oct Allen's Foot-Ease FREE. Write Allen S. Olnnted, Le Roy.N. V., tor a tree sample ot Allen ' Fwl Kw. It cure wealing, hot twollen, chln feet. It make aew or tiitht nhoen e-jr. A i-ertaln cure lor corns. Inirrowtn j nail and Mintont. All droir gist sell it. iic lou'tarcit any lutxtltul. 11 - 1 111 i ' Her Mother's Prognostications. He Why does your mother lunist ou your having au elaborate church wed dins? '" "' ' She She says it's the last rhsno I'll ever have to show off In good clothe. - Mrs. L C. Glover, Vice-Pres- ident Milwaukee, Wis., Business Woman's Association, is another one of the million women w ho have been restored to health by using Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vege table Compound. De a.b Mrs. Puikiiam : I was mar ried for several years and no children blessed my home. The doctor said I had a complication of female troubles and I could not have any children un less I could be cured. lie tried to cure me,' but after experimenting for sev eral months, my husband became dis gusted, and one nlpht when we noticed the. testimonial of a woman who had been cured of similar trouble throuph the use of Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vegetable Compound, he went out and bought a bottle for me. I used your medicine for three and one-half months, improving steadily in health, and in twenty-two months a child came. I cannot fully express the joy and thankfulness that is in my heart. Our home is a different place now, as we, have something to live for, arid all the" credit is due to Lydia E. Pinkharn's Vegetable Com pound. Yours very sincerely, Mas. L.C. Uloyf.b, 6M Grove St., Milwaukee, Wis." Vice President, Milwaukee Business Woman's Association. 5000 forfeit If original of about tttttf proving gtnuin mm cannot lit produced. OREQOIf PORTLAND ST. HELEN'S HALL ' A GIRI.'H SCHOOL OF THE IUGHKHT CLAHScorpaof teachen, location, build inil equlpiueut the belt, bend for cat alogue. Term Opens September IR, I (- PRICES THAT TALK. Bent galvanized man lard wrought Iron jie K Inch, . jier luu Int. Heat galvanized standard wrought Iron pipe, 1 Inch, IT.'J per UK) feet. All alzea in black and galvanized pipe at loweat market price). Wood pnm in capacity one barrel per minute, ll Kubbiir. leather and canvas belting, hose and packing at wholenale prices. Wriie n for your wants in the machinery line, irrigation planta pecia'.ty. Rderaoa Machinery Co., Port land, Oregon. Dr. C. Gee Wo ' WONDERFUL HOME TREATMENT Thla wrmdfrful Chi. um doctor la callnd great bwauM ha etir J peopl without opera- .uw. .1. i,.a np lo dla. Ha curaa with Hum wonderful t hl nw herb, roota, hudft, fearke and vegtarla lhat are ntirlr un known lo medical art. nc In lii It country. Tnroufli the oae o Ihoe barmlraa remidle thla famoua doctor knowa the action or over 600 different rem edlea, which he urrraaf'uIlT naea In different dlaeaaea. He euaranteea to cure cattarh, aath ma, lung, throat, rlitumatlim, - nervoiianeas, tomach, liver, kiduera, ete.: nae hundred of teallmonlala, Charge moderate. Call and ee him. Pattenta out of the city write for blanka and circular. Send atamp. CONSUL TATION Jl'KKU. AUJJKUS The C Gee Wo Chinese Medicine Co. 253 Alder St., Portland, Oregon. -Miii.om paper. . P. N. U. No. 43-1904 n HEN writing; to advertisers plea mention ini paper. I r i a r atNslyVV'Js . Mrs. Autfer I can't see wliy my h bantl should be Jealous of me. Hot Friend No one can, my tlear. -. Mrs. Wlmlycliy I hear that Mrs Packer la yutte a collector. What U Iter fiidV Mrs. Iakesitle Hunbands, Stranger IH express trains stoy here? - lit Hank (station agent) Only fer railway officials au' trau robbers. Ex.' , . "I doubt If you know the difference between grautloKra aud comic opera." "Oli, but I do. Grand opera is comic," ruck. , "What would you suggest as a name for my new yschtr "Why, it seems to me the Floating Debt would be ap propriate." Evelyn Yes. my grcat-sramlmothet eloped with my great-grandfather, Cholly Just fanoyt Old people 'Ilk that! Siusrt Set. ' Hoy Father, If there should he a strike of the dog catchers Jn the I'hll lpplnes, would the Igorrotea take to eating beef Ex. . ,., "Mr. Smith had hard time to :ot his daughters off his hands." "Yes. and I hear be has to keep their bus bands on their feet." Kutcker Yes. Johnny, there Is only one way to lt-aru, and that Is to ImtIii at the bottom. Johnny How about swimming? New York Suu. Flrse Nurse I won't be able to go to the picnic to-morrow. Second Nurse Why not? First Nurse To tell the truth, I'm afraid to leave th baby with Its mother. Ex, Continuous: Nell Yes, he actually had the Impudence to kiss me. liclls The Idea! Of course, you were in dignant? Nell Oh, yes. Every time. Philadelphia Ledger. Chauffeur You'd better be a little careful, sir. My machine might make your horse run. Farmer Oatmeal lo telll Well, it'll be the first time lu thirty years. Chicago News. "I don't have to work for a living." said the shirtless Individual. "Of course you don't," rejoined the busy man; "If you did It's a safe bet that you wouldu't be living." Chicago News. "I'm trying to find the idea In your poem," said the editor of the Squlnt uary Magaxlne. "Oh, don't "worry about that," said the anxious ytnmg poet; "there Isn't ary. You can use It without the slightest fear." Chicugo Itecord-nerald. "Do you think you can cure me, doc tor?" asked the society woman. "I think so, with Jhe help of Providence," replied the good physician. "Why not Newport? The climate there Is surely the same as that of Providence." Phlladelphls Press. " Mrs. Honeymoon (to husband lu rail way train) Do you love me? Old Party (confidentially from other seat to bridegroom) She's asked you forty seveu times already. I get out here, but I'll leave the score with this gen tleman by the wiudow. "Glad to meet you," said the polite cannibal chief to the new missionary. "I shall expect to see more of you to morrow. We dine at high noun," "Kr thanks, awfully. I shall be delighted "Not at all. The pleasure will be all mine, I assure you. It Is human to doubt. DlHplay a sign with the Inscription "lieware of Paint," and nine men out of teu will draw their forefingers across the newly painted surface to see If the sign Is not merely "an invention of the en emy." The tenia man never leurned to read. , : Dashaway You say your sister will be down in a minute, Willie? That's good news. I thought perhaps she wanted to be excused, as she did tbe other day. Willie Not thla time. I played a trick on her. Dashaway What did you do? Willie I said you were another fellow! London Tit-IUts. Wiseman To look at thut English man you'd think he was a tramp, wouldn't you? Jokeley Well, I know for a fact that be hHsn't a place that he can call home. Wiseman Non sense! Why, his mansion in London Is Jokeley Sumptuous, yes; but he calls it " ome." Cuthollc Standard Times. Helen and Malda were at play when Malda was overheard saying; ".My mamma does not allow me to use a bit of slang. She says it is coarse and vulgar." "That's Just what my mam ma says, "replied Helen. "My! but I'd get it right in the neck if she heard me using slang like some little girls!" Llpplncott's. Teacher of Physiology Now we will dissect this odd little animal. But first, Jimmy Phallg, will you tell me, what we have here? Jimmy Faith, and it's called a bat, sir. Teacher Very well. Now, how many kinds of bats are there? Jimmy There are folve. The black bat, the red bat, the acrobat, the baseball bat, and the brickbat, sir. A tourist In a remote part of Ire land, having stayed the night at a wayside inn not usually frequented by visitors, Informed the landlord In the morning that his bools, which had been placed outside his room door, hud not been touched. "Ah, shure," said the landlord, "and you molght put your watch and chain outside your room door In this house, and they wouldn't be touched." The King. Away from the Past. "In my plans for your new home," says the architect, "I have provided for a large, ornate frieze In the wall." "Don't want It," asserts Mrs. Con Jeeled. "What?" "Not a bit of It Can't take any chances on having someone being re minded that I ' used to drive au Ice wagon." Judge. Many a man's so-culled gems of thought are nothing but paste. Too many family Bibles are more ornamental than useful. .J.-V ' . t . . 1 ,i AYe.cljlle rrcparftlionibr As slmUatlng UieFoodatulRcfittla ling flic Stomachs nnrtUovwb d Promotes DifteslbivClnf rfur ne.s ntvl HosiContalHS nolltur Opluni.Morrluiie nor Mineral KotNahcotic. ..T .f.we Av"vw - Apotfccl Remedy forConsllprt Hun, Sour Stouvuh.DiarihtKvi Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ncss mid Loss of Sleep. Fat Simile St'CiwIurs of "NEW VMIK. EXACT COPY OF WBAP-PCfl. IKuneatlo llapptnta. Mr. Neighbor Meu burs different ways of niiiUiiit hoiii hippy. Mrs. i lamer How so? Mr. Neitfhlior S.itu do It by t.iy Init at borne and some lr atnylng away. Stats or Ohio. Citv or TokUns I lA i l ol'NTr, I FkaNk ). i itr.NKV make oath thai h la aeutur rmer of I ho ilrmuf K. J. mkmmv ,t Co.,i1oIiik bu-lttr-i In th I llyof Tole.li,! nun tv an. 1 Mute afrr.Wl, and that Mlil firm 1 ). Ih KU.MI of UNK 111 MKKl IX'I.I.AKH for e h ami every (! of l' itkiu that eamiot 1 Oliett (y I ho U of IULI MjTiHkil J'H. KKANK i. IIKNKY, Hworn to hefor Tri mt atiroierlheil In my prvnenco, Uili Ha Uay ul lei-emtrr, A. I.,i.v, J (.11 A. ii.r..vM .Notary I'ubllc. llall'a Catarrh Curn la taken Internally, anj a.'tt tin-etly ou the I'IimhI atnl min-oua aurfacua uf Iho j trm. tknol f.r irsttmoiitala, fro. V. J. fllKMSV W It)., Toledo, 0. flol.l it lniifk.n, 7.V. 1111 faintly t'Ul ace the beat. TIip Wsjthtnston Monument, In Wruh- Itik'toii, D. ia the hlglieat in the world. It towers r.V feet In the ulr, and U coin Hxet of 1!,MKI blocks ot uiurlile, mcli two foot thick. I rermaiienny i ami. Kontaarnnnrouanaas aft.T nnnUy'u.if lrKlun'a(lrt Nnr lonlnn'r. Hen. r.ir Krr vi inljitleanrllralia Dr. H. It. K II ih 1.LI..U.- Art b M., rbluulolplii, i' Thoroughly KsNrlenoeiL ' Oiili-ial Ye.i, we httvfl room for a fw mors "L" roud guard. Had any expo-' rience? ' Applicant (eionOrnuslyl Sclimxiwoo niowwoystreet! Wake up! Ikm'tticull iluj! Steplively! Shukiileu! 'When t. Jacobs Oil The. old monk cure, strong, straight, sure, Ucklcs Hurts, Sprains, Bruises The muscles flex, the kinks untwist, the soreness dies out. Price 25c. and 50c. "DIDN'T HURT A BIT" By Our We are enabled to extract from una In VI teeth at one alttlnu, ponlilvely and a unt imely wlilmiii .alu or la. I alter eltecta. I'eopla In ilellcam lieallri tie. d tiavs no fear a our method of extracting la nl lively ai and nholntely palnle-a. Almolutn elraiilllic Ik nur miitto. Wedu crown and lirlduu work w ithout -T- pain. Our 17 year' work enalilea i:h to tit iy. i ne iient in trie. cncael in tl euncl. have (eelliiK aa well aa you. pen dreiilnn till tit. I. r, i- mono Ai WISE BROS., Dentists, RUSSELL HIGH GRADE MACHINERY ETJGIRES BOILERS SAW MILLS The A H Averiil Machinery Co,, P0R0SS 4..v . ... f . . . ' - ... W li not carried by local grocers, wriuiadauu 4., who will adyUe where obtsluaois. C3 till For Infants and Children. ' Tho Kind You 'Have Always Bought Boars tho Signature In Use For Over Thirty Years 1 111 , vms mntv . mm vaa rr. ClioU HcUctlon. "I lenrn ttmt the Van Itiutona allow their chickens to diet mi their neigh bors' flowers. Do they keep It so tret?" "Well. I should think not If you dine with tlieiu the simve Mr. Van lluxton will ask If you prefer vluleU fed fowl or 'chicken do roue.' ", SpKial Card to th HuMlc. tr r. ; , ( hlo Mettlelii Co.. 3&I Aldvr mi . I'urttaiiil. t'reg.in. rogruia tlng mm. tuet with iHH-tor Ijo Mii( Noii. who aa killed rerun ly In lorllaiid lr Wo not dead, an.l la raellc fat ram location, Z.-S Alder htrert. Moine rwopl iboughl trier was ouly un t bliir.e diMtur. A Son' NuKgcatlon. 'Tspa," said little Arthur, after his mother had pnnUli. him, "will Jou do something for mif "What is It you wsnt?" "Marry somebody stn) I'd wlah you'd pick out grnuilma. becaua aba's nhvy kind to me." Clncnso iteeord Herald. Votberiwlll find Mr. WIikIoW Hoothlng Pyrup the bait rtmady tous lor tuolr chlldraa during th tartlilng prlod. Clood Joke t Church Kalr. "Ilnd a great time at the church fair last night!" "So? Whitt whs doing?" "They hud some strawberry short cake, mid I nearly luughiHl myself to lentil thinking how I fooled 'em. I didn't cat it." IS WHAT THEY SAY Method ex eileni'e tn Jrt your munth eon.foit- Himdava from 9 to I hiii &i c.i. liil. H. ,,. ,h.. '388 THRESHERS STACKERS Write for Catalogue' and Prices . it .. f V , li II f 1 tlH hm Air mm u 1 ' cd...:ZS