The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, February 10, 1917, Image 7

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    TILE HKBMISTON
AN OLD RECIPE
TO DARKEN HAIR
Sage Tea and Sulphur Turns
Gray, Faded Hair Dark
and Glossy.
Almost everyone knows that Sage
Tea and Sulphur, properly compound­
ed, brings back the natural color and
lustre to the hair when faded, streak­
ed or gray. Years ago the only way
to get this mixture was to make it at
home, which is mussy and trouble­
some.
Nowadays we simply ask at any
drug store for “Wyeth's Sage and Sul­
phur Compound.” You will get a large
bottle of this old-time recipe improved
by the addition of other ingredients for
about 50 cents. Everybody uses this
preparation now, because no one can
possibly tell that you darkened your
hair, as it does it so naturally and
evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft
brush with it and draw this through
your hair, taking one small strand at
a time; by morning the gray hair dis­
appears, and after another application
or two, your hair becomes beautifully
dark, thick and glossy and you look
years younger. Wyeth’s Sage and
Sulphur Compound is a delightful toil­
et requisite. It is not intended for the
cure, mitigation or prevention of dis­
ease.
Unprofitable.
Lott—One never loses anything by
keeping an engagement punctually.
Scott—Except half an hour’s time
waiting for the other fellow.-
HERALD,
Down the Y
Wet Coa^
of Mexico "
. (LN4
941
poto
ad)
- %
1)
Mi),"
j*
02.
■ ‘A . >
EC
: . home to King Philip, the Mex-
7 lean west const hus lured the
restless pioneer. First it was the ad-
venturer, scattering his bones over the
trackless hills; then the gold hunter
and miner—and finally the farmer and
1 Try this yourself then pass
cowman, building up homes and for­
•
It along to others.
tunes. It is one of the world’s garden
I
It works!
spots, this rich west coast ; a country
of singular charm, of striking contrasts
Ouch !?!?!! This kind of rough and varied opportunity. Nowhere on
talk will be heard less here in town if earth is life more easy. As one idler
people troubled with corns will follow cleverly phrased it, “You can kick your
the simple advice of this Cincinnati
authority, who claims that a few drops breakfast off a tree, any morning in
of a drug called freezone when applied the year.”
to a tender, aching corn or hardened Here, with the advent of peace, far-
callous stops soreness at once, and reaching progress must inevitably
soon the corn or callous dries up and dawn. Linked with California by rail
lifts right off without pain.
and sail, and with two hundred Ameri­
He says freezone dries immediately can millions already invested, the fu­
and never inflames or even irritates ture of the west coast is peculiarly
the surrounding skin. A small bottle
of freezone will cost very little at any tied up with that of the United States
drug store, but will positively remove —a question of big trade and mutual
every hard or soft corn or callous human betterment, says a contributor
from one’s feet Millions of American to the Los Angeles Times.
women will welcome this announce­ It is a kaleidoscopic, colorful trip—
ment since the inauguration of the
high heels. If your druggist doesn’t the train ride from the border south,
have freezone tell him to order a small into West Mexico. Scenic, startling
and full of bright, buoyant life it is,
bottle for you.
after you have passed Guaymas and
Making Assurance Doubly Sure.
plunged into the primitive Yaqui coun­
The pupils in a certain class in try.
hygiene were told to set down on Flocks of screeching, squawking par­
paper the reasons why, in their opin­ rots flap noisily overhead. Skulking
ion, cremation was superior to bur­ coyotes twist oddly away into the palo
ial.
verde thickets. In smoky, scattered
"Cremation is good,” wrote one camps along the railway, Yaqui troops
little boy, “because the person might
only be in a swoon, and if he is burn­ —patrolling the line against their wild
ed he can not recover.”—New York brothers of the hills—are on duty.
You see them making sandals from
Times.
green cowhide, or cutting up a beef
Enigmatical.
into shreds and hanging the meat on
“You certainly don’t believe in stunted mesquite trees to dry. From
hanging es capital punishment?”
their outposts comes the dull rattle of
“I believe in letting the subject the tomtom. “That Yaqui drum,” one
drop.”—Exchange.
Mexican officer told me, “always gives
“Vanessa says she will wear no the enemy an earache.”
At the crowded adobe stations,
man’s collar.”
"I commend her decision. This fluffy where your train halts leisurely to load
stuff is more becoming to her style of beans, hides and crated chickens, a
beauty.”—Louisville Courier-Journal. horde of tattered, but bewitching
bright-smiling ninas come shyly up,
peddling tamales, oranges and odd na­
tive dulces.
American Influence Grow«.
Not so long ago the Spanish impress
lay strong on the west coast—a sur­
vival of that romantic age when treas­
ure-laden galleons sailed between
Acapulco and Manila. But now the
boats that drop anchor and unload at
Acapulco, Mazatlan and Guaymas
come from San Francisco—or Seattle.
And the trains that crawl down the
long coastline from the Arizona border
use Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointment—
are loaded with American machinery,
full directions with each package. Sold
and American miners, cattlemen and
by all druggists and toilet departments.
farmers. Only of late has this been
true—the rail-head reaching Teplc less
Naturally.
than ten years ago. But already Yan­
“He showed his grit when he was kee customs, habits. Influence and im­
hurled out on the road from his ma­ plements are making themselves felt ;
chine.”
"No wonder when he had to bite the slowly, but hopefully.
Even certain reform waves, popular
dust”—Baltimore American.
in the United States of America, have
swept over the border and engulfed the
Mexicans. Licensed gambling on the
west const Is practically abolished.
Bull fights are giving way to baseball.
THAT IS
One day In Hermosillo I saw soldiers
carrying demijohns of tequila—the
once universal alcoholic drink—carry­
ing them Into the street, and smashing
is often needed in cases of them in the gutter. Pungent smells
floated In the air. “What Is it you
do?
” I asked a native sergeant. “El
POOR APPETITE
Estado es seco” (the state is dry) he
HEARTBURN ’
said, punching his bayonet into an­
other demijohn. Prohibition had been
INDIG ESTION
decreed. Today you can't legally buy
BILIOUSNESS
a drink from Nogales to Mazatlan (nor
illegally, either, without risk of pris­
OR MALARIA
on.) It Is so in some other parts of the
republic. Order is better, drunken
and you will make no mistake brawls a thing of the past. Tequila,
the old curse of the land, is effective-
in trying
ly suppressed.
To stop dandruff
and loss of hair
Assistance
Dependable
"owe. BT
rg: 3 t
tropical comfort, spacious and elegant.
Motoring, tennis, golf, pleasure
launches and the west coast’s incom­
parable hunting grounds are enjoyed
the year around.
For shooting and fishing, the Guay­
mas coast waters are unexcelled.
Trolling for toro, skip-jacks, Spanish
mackerel, yellowtail, Cabrillo, and oth­
er fighting fish affords unparalleled
sport.
Ducks? By the thousand! For the
west coast is right on one of the great
wild fowl migration Toutes.
Last
March in the Yaqui valley, standing in
a flooded rice field, I got 22 “red-
heads” in less than an hour, working
my 16-gauge as the evening flight came
in.
Here is this world’s happy hunting
ground for those who love the rod and
gun. Some day—when its charms are
known to tourists—Guaymas must be­
come a famed winter resort, balmy,
healthful and healing, a garden spot of
soft breezes, blue seas and ideal Jan­
uary outdoor days.
At Agua Fria Ranch, in Sonora, the
Americans keep a professional lion-
hunter, with a pack of trained dogs.
Unless their prowling raids were re­
sisted, the lions and “spotted tigers”
would soon overrun the ranches. Last
year the lion-slayer on the ranch just
named killed over 50 wild beasts, in­
cluding lions, tigers and wild cats.
Singular Plant Life.
Even in vegetation this is a land of
odd contrasts.
Weird and sinister-
looking plants there are, like the
strange “creeping cactus” of the Mag­
dalena bay country. Lying flat and
oddly resembling giant caterpillars,
this singular cactus grows forward and
dies behind, thus actually traveling in
the course of time a considerable dis­
tance. Mr. E. W. Nelson of the United
States department of agriculture said
after exploring the north section of
the west coast : “Here is the most ex­
traordinary desert flora in the world.
The combinations of species were won­
derfully picturesque, giving the land­
scape an individuality unlike anything
to be found elsewhere. Many of these
strange scenes seemed fit abiding
places for the animal life of an earlier
age.”
From such inhospitable wastes, the
descent Into the green, fragrant, wa­
tered coastal plain Is a welcome
change. Here is cane, corn, rice, fruit,
wheat, beans, melons, garbanzos—the
food of millions.
Down this historic West coast from
St. Xavier and Tucumcari In Arizona
to Guadalajara, there stretches a
string of picturesque massive old
churches—churches built by adventur­
ous Jesuits, churches standing In loop-
holed compounds for Indian defense.
Inside cisterns stored water for use
during sieges. The thrifty padres
grew their own grain, vegetables and
fruit, using Indian labor. Near some
of these ruined churches—built 300
years ago—traces of old irrigation
works are plainly discernible. As late
as 1879, Apaches attacked the old
church of San Ignacio, in Sonora; Its
scarred walls still show plainly where
Indian bullets chipped angrily at the
fervent defenders.
The women and girls of Mexico are
deeply religious. Five masses a day
are celebrated in some of the larger
churches, and often the music is ex­
cellent. One bright moonlight night I
sat In the palm-shaded plaza before
the old cathedral of Magdalena; in­
side a woman soloist lifted a voice—
strong, clear and wonderfully sweet—
such a voice as must have given pause
to even a Melba or a Farrar, “undis­
covered” though this woman was.
Life’s Poetic Time.
“Did your husband use to write you
Daily life among foreign merchants poetry before you were married?”
and planters on this west coast is not ] “No, but he used to write me what
unlike that of the colonials in India, we both thought was poetry.”
China or the Philippines.
Servants
are numerous and cheap. Fruits and
Facts in the Case.
It is an excellent tonic and vegetables grow In abundance. No­ The Widow—Is your husband a
appetizer.
Get the genuine body hurries. Nervous breakdowns truthful man?
The Wife—Yes; except when I ask
and “worry’ headaches are unheard-
him for money.
of.
Stomach Bitters
Pt N. u.
no .
e,
1917
will help you.
Its goodness
. recommends
•
it.
.
fi.
I Laugh When People
j Step On Your Feet
HOSTETTERS
KG B aking P owder
1
1,
it
EL
Life and Sports.
In Either Case
l
ere VER since Cortez came, and Some of the American-owned mine
8-4 wrote such graphic letters and plantation homes are models of
1
HERMISTON, OREGON.
Shows Promise.
Friend—What is your baby going
to be when he grows up?
Financier — A blackmailer. I’m
afraid.
Friend—Impossible! What makes
you think so?
Financier—We have to give him
something every little while to keep
him quiet.—Tit-Bits.
The Kind.
“Do you do much light reading in
your family?”
“Oh, yes, we have volumes of gas
furnished by the meter.”—Baltimore
American.
Safety in the Home
Part of Womans Daily Duty
g
Every woman in charge of
■ a household realizes that it is
la large part of her duty to
I keep that household well.
3 In this task she must know
y the simple home remedies to be ap-
■ plied at the first symptom of illness.
G Coughs and colds are two
■ of the foes she must constantly
I combat, and digestive disturbances
need immediate attention. Thous­
ands of American housekeepers have
found the most help to come from-
cver-ready-to-take
PERUNA
Because
Peruna
has
estab­
lished itself as the reliable family medicine
of America, in the 45 years it has been be-
fore the public, the forehanded housekeepers
keep it ready for instant ministration in the
period of depression that precedes a cold, or
when stomach troubles manifest themselves.
Both of these disorders are caused by
inflammation of the delicate membranes
lining the bleat hing apparatus and the diges­
tive tract. Peruna clears away the waste,
aids the membranes In recovering from in­
flammatory conditions and tones up the sys­
tem. its effectiveness is the reason that so
many depend upon it, and its
long record of merit main-
_tains it as the dependable
home tonic.
Tablet or liquid form
-both good.
Our free booklet may
help you. At your drug­
gists or write us.
THE PERUNA CO.
Columbus, 0.
The Porter—"Dere am tickets sold
foh 28 berths, an' dere am only 20
berths in de car. What’ll we do?”
Conductor—“Just tell the engineer to
pull out three minutes ahead of time.”
Constipation can be cured without drugs.
Nature's own remedy—-selected .herbs-—is
Garfield Tea.
W ell K nown P ortland WOMAN S peaks
ITS THE SAME IN ALL OREGON.
Portland, Oregon, — "I send this
e
statement with
PS great pleasure,
pin .
My daughter owes
Olii her life to the use
‘was o Reati, of Dr. Pierce’s Fa-
/ y
/ mixï Push vorite
Prescrip-
‘
‘ tion. She was a
Mrsi very delicate girl
Wh before using your
1/3
4 I medicine.
I ■
i. ) "I have used
the ‘Prescription’ for weakness pecu­
liar to women and found it perfectly
wonderful. I have used Dr. Pierce’s
medicines for over thirty-five years.
" My husband has used the ′ Cough
Syrup ’ and thinks it is great.”— MRS.
L. A. F oster , 1502 E. 8th St., W.
When a girl becomes a woman, when
a woman becomes a mother, when a
woman passes through the changes of
middle life, are tho three periods of
life when health and strength are most
needed to withstand the pain and dis­
tress often caused by severe organic
disturbances.
At these critical times women are
best fortified by the use of Doctor
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, an old
remedy of proved worth that keeps
the entire female system perfectly
regulated and in excellent condition.
Mothers, if your daughters are weak,
lack ambition, are troubled with head-
aches, lassitude, and are pale and sick­
ly, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is
just what they need to surely bring
the bloom of health to their cheeks
and make them strong and healthy.
For all diseases peculiar to women,
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a
powerful restorative. During tho last
50 years it has banished from the
lives of tens of thousands of women
the pain, worry, misery and distress
caused by irregularities and diseases
of a feminine character.
“Was it a runaway match?”
“You might call it that. Ho tried
to run away, but she brought him to
time by threatening a breach of
promise suit.”—Boston Transcript.
A Suspicion.
“Why is George Washington de­
scribed as ‘First in war and first in
peace?’ ”
“I dunno,” replied Senator Sorg
hum. “I suspect somebody was try­
ing to square him with both the pre­
paredness people and the pacifists.”
—Washington Star.
WANTED Agents everywhere; big money. Write
n HIT I LU F Barrett Co.. Box 396, Shelton. Wash
FRED P. GORIN, Patent Attorney
Organizer and Developer; patents secured or FEE
REFUNDED; free book on patents. Suites 701.
701 -A, 7Û1-B and 701-C. Central building, Seattle.
A. 12.
lachinery
J
Second-Hand Machin-
ery bought, sold and
exchanged; e n g i nes,
boilers, sawmills, etc. J. E. Martin Co.. 83 1st
St., Portland. Send for Stock List and prices.
O regon V ulcanizing C ompany
moved to 333 to 337 Burnside St., Port­
land, Ore. Largest Tire Repair Plant
in the Northwest. Country service a
specialty. Use Parcel Post.
HEMPHILLS TRADE SCHOOLS.
Largest and best equipped in the West. Gas.
Electrical and Tractor engineering.
Special
courses in vulcanizing and tire repairing. Prac­
tical work, short term, low cost. Write for in­
formation and catalog. 20th and Hawthorne ave.,
Portland, Ore.
ELECTRIC MOTORS
Bought, Sold, Rented and Repaired
WALKER ELECTRIC WORKS
Burnside, cor. 10th. Portland. Ore.
HIDES, PELTS, CASCARA BARK,
WOOL AND MOHAIR.
We want all you have.
THE H. F.
Write for prices and shipping tags
N orton C o .
Portland,
Ore.; Seattle, Wn.
TUMORS, GOITERS
Appendicitis, Rheumatism, Cancer, Bowel Trou­
bles, Skin Diseases, Etc. Chronic diseases of
every description and kind cured in the shortest
time possible at the least cost. I have cured
thousands of people in the last ten years without
operations by the use of Radium, X-Ray, Electric
Currents, Lights. Heat. Bake Ovens, Adjust­
ments, Manipulations, Massage and Baths. Cali
and see the wonderful office equipment. Consul­
tation free. Write.
DR. W. E. MALLORY
600 to 604 Broadway Bldg.
TYPHOID
Portland. Oregon
is no more necessary
than Smallpox. Army
experience has demonstrated
the almost miraculous effi­
cacy, and harmlessness, of Antityphoid Vaccination.
Be vaccinated NOW by your physician, you and
your family. It is more vital than house insurance.
* Ask your physician, druggist, or send for "Have
you had Typhoid?” telling of Typhoid Vaccine,
results from us , and danger from Typhoid Carriers.
THE OTTER LABORATORY, BERKELEY, CAL
PnoDUCiHG VACCINES a •>su>s UNDER u. 8. Gov. LICEESB
Agnes—No, I would never marry a
man to reform him.
Ethel—Well, I don't think myself
that harsh measures are the best.—
Boston Transcript.
Probably Not.
Will the smoke inspector please
explain why so much of the soft coal
soot settles on the white-haired dog?
—Minneapolis Journal.
Ready For a Crime Wave.
“Had any burglars out your way?”
Little Miss Malaprop.
“No,” replied Mr. Growcher. “I
“Come, Doris, dear, tell Miss Brown
have set my boy’s new cornet and how old you are.”
his shotgun where no burglar could
“I’se free, Miss Brown. How old
fail to find them, but so far 1 haven't is you?”—Browning's Magaine.
had any luck.”—Washington Star.
At The Theater.
"Does your husband go out to
NEW MODERN DANCING.
E. Fletcher Hallamore. the leading Dancing Ex: smoke between acts?”
and Instructor in New York City, writes: "I
"No. He comes in to watch the
Take Salts to flush Kidneys and pert
have used ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE, the antiseptic
powder to be shaken into the shoes, for ten years, play between drinks.”—Froth.
IF KIDNEYS AND
BLADDER BOTHER
neutralize irritating
acids.
Kidney and Bladder weakness result
from uric acid, says a noted authority.
The kidneys filter this acid from the
blood and pass it on to the bladder,
where it often remains to irritate and
inflame, causing a burning, scalding
sensation, or setting up an irritation
at the neck of the bladder, obliging
you to seek relief two or three times
during the night. The sufferer is in
constant dread, the water passes
sometimes with a scalding sensation
and is very profuse; again, there is
difficulty in avoiding it.
Bladder weakness, most folks call
it, because they can’t control urina­
tion. While it is extremely annoying
and sometimes very painful, this is
really one of the most simple ailments
to overcome. Get about four ounces
of Jad Salts from your pharmacist
and take a tablespoonful in a glass of
water before breakfast, continue this
for two or three days. This will neu­
tralize the acids in the urine so it no
longer is a source of irritation to the
bladder and urinary organs which
then act normally again.
Jad Salts is inexpensive, harmless,
and is made from the acid of grapes
and lemon juice, combined with lithia,
and Is used by thousands of folks who
are subject to urinary disorders caus­
ed by uric acid irritation. Jad Salts
is splendid for kidneys and causes no
bad effects whatever.
Here you have a pleasant, efferves-
cent lithia-water drink, which quickly
relieves bladder trouble.
and recommend It to all my pupils.” It cures and
prevents sore feet. Sold by all Drug and Depart-
A postal card to Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn,
ment Stores, 25c. Sample FREE. Address, Allen N. Y., asking for sample will repay you.
8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
Inquirer (at South Station)—Where
does this train go?
Brakeman—This train goes to New
York in 10 minutes.
Inquirer—Goodness! That's going
"You say Dibling's allegiance to his some.—Christian Register.
alma mater has never wavered?"
"Never. Dibling has been out of col­ “Anuric” cures Backache, Lumbago,
lege 20 years, and he still borrows Rheumatism. Send 10c. Dr. V. M.
money from his college chums exclus­ Bierce, Buffalo, N. Y., for large trial
package.
ively."—Birmingham Age-Herald.
Constipation, indigestion, sick-headache
and bilious conditions are overcome by a
course of Garfield Tea. Drink on retiring.
FEWER PEOPLE GROWING OLDER
The Public Health Service reports that more people live to
the age of forty years to-day, but from forty to sixty years
mortality is increasing from degenerative diseases.
Thousands of well-informed men and women to-day are
learning the true value of
SCOTT’S EMULSION
OF NORWEGIAN COD LIVER OIL
as a powerful blood-enricher and strength-builder
to ward off the headaches and backaches that mean
weakness. SCOTT’S helps fortify the body against
grippe, pneumonia and weakening colds, through
its force of medicinal nourishment.
Refuse Alcoholic Extracts That Do Not Contain Cod Liver Oil.
Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J.
16-1