MAN -A-LI 1
vim- 1
m i n s v nii':y.,m
Copyright loot, brTiu Manilla Ob
MAN - A - LIN Is An
Excellent Remedy
for Constipation
There are many ailments
directly dependent upon con
stipation, such as biliousness,
discolored and pimpled skin,
inactive liver, dyspepsia, over
worked kidneys and headache
Remove constipation and all
of these ailments disappear.
MAN -A-LIN can be relied
upon to produce a gentle ac
tion of the bowels, making
pills and drastic cathartics en
tirely unnecessary.
A dose or two of Man-a-lin
is advisable in slight febrile
attacks, la grippe, colds and
influenza.
THE MAN-A-LIN CO.
COLUMBUS, OHIO, U. S. A.
Time Tables for Clothe.
"I was walking on Pennsylvania
avenue In Washington one day at high
noon when a 'nigger' loomed up on my
horizon coming rapidly toward me,"
said a well-known negro comedian.
"He was wearing the most outlandish
outfit I ever saw on a human being,
on or off the stage. His trousers were
frayed and torn above his snoetops.
He wore a musk-colored woolen shirt,
a celluloid collar and a tattered sack
coat.' On his bead was a sombrero
which looked as if several dogs had
been trying to pull It to pieces. But
the crowning effort was a new and im
maculate full dress vest He had pull
ed back his coat and shoved his
thumbs Into the armholes of that vest.
As he came sailing before the wind
he certainly was the most comical fig
ure I ever saw. I couldn't resist the
temptation to stop him.
"'Look here,' I said, 'what do you
mean by appearing at this time of day
in such a dress? Don't you know that
you're de trop?'
'"De what what's that?'
" 'Don't you know that you're de
trop?' I repeated, 'that It Isn't permis
sible to appear In full dress before 6
o'clock In the evening?
"The darky drew himself up very
proudly.
" 'Look bean,' be said. 'I'll have you
to know that I don't 'low nobody to
make time tables for my cloas.'"
Kansas City Times.
Reapecta Work.
"I am afraid you don't like work."
"Yes I do," answered Plodding Pete.
"I have so much respect for work that
when I see a piece of it to be 'tended to
I alius feel like turnln' it oVer to some
body else that wouldn't be as likely to
spoil it as I would." Waahlnglon Star.
Buy Hair
at Auction?
At any rate, you seem to be
getting rid of it on auction-sale
principles: "going, going,
g-o-n-e!" Stop the auction
with Ayer's Hair Vigor. It
checks falling hair, and always
restores color to gray hair. A
splendid dressing also. Sold
for over sixty years.
" M hair cam out 10 badly I nearly loit It
all. I bad heard io muoh about Avar's Hair
Vigor I thought I would give It a trial. I did
o and It completely stopped tha falling, and
made my hair grow very rapidly."- JURY H.
Field, NorthiieUJ, Man.
by J. O. Arer Oo., Lowell,
am mannnwrorwe ox
In
K SARSAPABU.LA. ,
tiers
wmmmmmmm
PILLS.
cnem PECTORAL.
Snioklnir Meat.
In the homo smoking of meat I have
learned something by experimenting
that Ib a great saver of work and of
much more consequence keeps the
meat In better shape during the mok
Ing process. I used a low smokehouse,
and, handle the little necessary fire as
beBt I could, It would sometimes heat
the meat more than was good for It
had the fire covered In a little pit
In the center of the smokehouse. Then
I tried a pit outside several feet from
the building with an underground flue,
but fill the heat generated In that went
Into the smokehouse, so It was unsat
isfactory. I placed an old heating stove, with
the legs taken off, on the ground about
eight feet from the side of the smoke
house, put an elbow on the stove and
ran a pipe In through the side of the
smokehouse. Then I started a pttle
fire In the stove, and as the smoke
poured from the funnel It occurred to
me to turn the smoke down, so I put on
an elbow with mouth pointing down,
and as that worked all right I put a
length of pipe on that and watched to
see what the smoke would do. In a
moment It poured from the pipe right
NO HEAT, MO DANQEB OF FIHE.
down near the ground. The end of the
pipe Is four or five inches from the
ground and nearly on a level with the
bottom of the stove. It works finely,
The cooled smoke rising from the
ground conveys no heat to the meat
though quite a little fire Is kept in the
stove. The fire needs but little atten
tion, as the stove Is kept about closed
all the time. It is very satslfactory.
Kansas Farmer.
The American Carriage Horae.
The development of the American
carriage horse at the Colorado Agrl
cultural College and Experiment Sta
tlon Is progressing very favorably, says
Prof. W. L. Carlyle of the Colorado
Agricultural College, In the Twentieth
Century Farmer. At the present time
twenty-two brood mares are to be
found on the farm, and of these nine
teen are expected to foal this year.
Fourteen very high-class yearling colts,
by the stallion Cannon, are exemplify
ing the success of the work undertaken.
At the present time seven very fine
foals have come to hand this year and
the Indications are that they are supe
rior to their brothers and sisters of last
rear. Tue station ana conege, in co
operation with the government, will in
crease the brood mares to thirty-five
head during the summer, and only
those of the very highest class will be
secured. ,
Moat Ralae Many Cropa.
Twenty years agq, hundreds of North
Dakota farmers bought butter, eggs
and even potatoes and cabbages at the
village stores, but they were not real
farmers, merely wheat raisers. They
depended entirely upon one crop, and
when that failed, distress followed.
James J. Hill quickly taught them the
folly of that kind of farming, and to-day
the State's diversified crops are equal
to those of any other Northern State.
The educational movement was not
that Mr. Hill had any love for the
farmers then, nor has now, but he had
a big railway to feed and was forced
to teah the farmer how to produce the
freight Now the experiment stations
are carrying on the education com
menced by Mr. Hill (and are doing-It
Derter. ,
Algeria Want Oar Wasp..
The American wasp Is to be used In
a campaign of extermination of the
horse fly In darkest Africa. By re
quest to the Louisiana crop pest com
mission, Abraham Rosenheim, assist'
ant entomologist, is sending a consign
ment of these "horse guards" from
Cameron parish, La., where the wasps
atttaln unusual size and ferocity. A
band of embryo stingers will be ship
ped from New Orleans by way of
Havre on the steamship Louisiana July
12 in refrigerated baskets with the
j pupae of the Insect
Feed Com Their Own Milk.
An endless chain arrangement that
on Its race appears to oo me most
economical scheme ever devised has
been started by Prof. Erf, of the Kan
sas State Agricultural College. Prof.
Erf takes the milk secured from cows
on the college farm converts It Into
a powder and feeds It to the cows, mak
ing what Is declared to be the cheap
est of all the cow foods.
The food Invented by Prof. Erf Is
made of buttermilk. He has perfected
system of drying buttermilk and
then converting It Into a powder. This
dried buttermilk contains about 70 per
cent of protein, twice as much as cot
ton seed meal contalnns, and can be
manufactured for one and a half cents
a pound. Thus a food twice as rich as
cotton seed can be manufactured at
approximately the cost of the latter.
One hundred pounds of buttermilk
will make from nine to ten pounds of
the finished product and as the esti
mated waste of buttermilk In the
creameries of Kansas Is 500,000
pounds daily, It is figured that by the
adoption of this progress a saving of
J400.000 can be made yearly In Kan
sas alone.
How to Grow Celery.
Dr. S. B. Partridge of East Bloom
field, N. Y., Is raising celery on a large
scale on the bed of a reclaimed swamp,
He set 125,000 plants last year, of the
dwarf golden self-balancing, and pro
duces from 1,500 to 1,800 dozen
branches of celery per acre, marketable
at from 20 to 30 cents per dozen. His
celery kept for winter market Is placed
In trenches made by means of a crib,
16 feet long and 14 Inches wide, which
Is placed in the row and filled with eel
ery. Then a deep bank of earth Is
thrown up on either side to the celery,
after which the crib Is taken up and
moved forward Its length, and the
same process Is repeated. The trenches
are left open at the top until the ap
proach of cold weather, when they are
covered with straw and earth. New
England Fanner.
Managing the Workers.
Managing the workers on a farm is
a science la itself. It is a science that
few have studied sufllclently. Plan
ning out the work so that It may be
done in the best manner and In the
least time Is equivalent to a saving In
dollars and cents. Not only should the
work be properly done and at the right
time, but the time between different
pieces of work should be as small as
possible. Here is a point at which
great waste occurs. It is like a man
forgetting something at the store and
having to drive back miles to get It No
man can properly manage a set of
workers without putting some thought
on it Thinking is not so easy as It
seems. To think in a loglce.l manner
requires effort
Effective Wagon Jack.
A Is of oak 2x4x33 inches; B is 2x4x
14. inches; 0 Is 12 Inches long, and
lever D Is 5 feet long, the short end
being 1 foot The drawing explains
Itself.
"Don'ta" Concerning the Cow.
Don't be unkind to the milk cow.
Don't allow cows to sleep In a muddy
shed.
Don't permit the cow to drink Im
pure water.
Don't use a club, but kind words In
stead. Do not feed the milk cow "rotten"
or decayed corn. '
Don't allow your finger nails to grow
long If you are a dally milker.
Don't allow any loafers around when
milking, such as dogs, children or cats.
Don't fall to keep some sort of salt
handy so the cow may have free access
to It
Don't, when milking, beat the cow
for stepping backward when files are
numerous. '
Don't expect a cow to give as much
milk when half fed as when properly
cared or.
Don't allow your cows to be chased
by dogs or be hurried when going to or
from pasture.
Don't milk until dusk during the hot
months so as to avoid the presence of
the flies which so vigorously attack the
cow just before sundown. Indiana
Farmer.
UK
c '
SKIN DISEASES
HUMORS IN
When the Hood 13 pure, fresh aM
find free from blemishes, but when (jme
lation its presence is manifested py a skm eruption or disease. These
humors get into the blood, generally because of an inactive or sluggish
condition of the members of the body whose duty it h to collect and carry
off the waste and refuse matter of the system. This unhealthy matter 13 left
to sour and ferment and soon the circulation becomes charged with the acid
poison. The blood begins to throw off the humors and acid3 through the
pores and gland3 cf the skin, producing Eczema, Acne," Tetter, Psoriasis,
Salt Rheum and skin eruptions cf various kinds. Eczema appears, usually
with a slight redness of the skin followed by pustules from which there
flows a sticky fluid that dries and forms a crust, and the itching i3 intense.
It is generally on the back, breast, face, arms and lears. thouch other Darts
of the body may be affected. In Tetter the skin dries, cracks and bleeds;
the acid ia the blood dries up the natural oils of the skin, which are intended
to keep it soft and pliant, causing a dry, feverish condition and giving it a
hard, leathery appearance. Acne makes its appearance on the face in the
t j., . fnn
years and could find nothing to 1 soriasis comes in scaly patches on differ-
.rriVtS-t&fteh? rtpaart? ?nAvrorat
lag and bumine: pnatules would forms of skin trouble 13 Salt Rheum;
-?SyfflS??ffd?SS.4o2 !ts ff oriate P!nt ' ,fack i!
the skin and whea scratched off Sometimes causing baldness. Poison Oak
!S w1a?V1Sn "J raw " ? plPf9 and Iyy are aIso disagreeable types of 6kin
of beef. Z suffered agony in tha j. ' m,i, " jjiit. . ...l
longr years j. was aullcted, But
years I was afflicted, but
when I used S. S. S. I found a per
fect cure. There has never been
any return of the trouble.
Stockman, ITeb.
PURELY
VEGETABE
because they do not reach the blood. S. S. S. goes down into the circulation
and forces out every particle of foreign matter and restores the blood to it3
normal, pure condition, thereby permanently curing every form of skia
affection. Book on Skin Diseases and any medical advice desired sent free
to all who write. S. S. S. is for sale at all first class druar stores.
THE SWIFT
Wisdom and Valor.
' "It takes a wise man to know when
to change his mind," said one states
man.
"Yes," answered the other, "and a
brave one to own up to It when it Is
accomplished." Washinaton Star.
riTp St. Vitus' Panes ana all Nervous Diseases
1 1 1 O permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great
Serve Restorer. Send for FREE S2 trial bottle and
treatise. Dr. K. H.Kllae.Ld.( 31 Arch Bt.. PljUa-.Pe.
The Hlta and the Hlaiei.
What are the requisites of a suc
cessful musical comedy?"
"Oh, about a dozen song hits."
"Tea?"
"And twice that many attractive
misses." Washington Herald.
Mothers will find Mrs. Wlnslows Soothing
Byrup the best remedy to use lor their children
luring me teeming penoa.
Odd Coincidence.
Not many years since a pastor In
New York State read In his1 pulpit this
portion of a hymn:
Well, the delightful day will come
When my dear Lord shall take me home,
And I shall see his face
Just then he was stricken with paral
ysis and died In a few moments. Thirty-three
years before vIn the same pul
pit another pastor was reading the
very same stanza when he, too, was
stricken and died. Scran Book.
CASTOR I A
lor Infants and Children,
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
An Expert Opinion.
"What we want to do," said the mor
alist, "is to strive for the uplifting of
our fellowman." : '
"That is easy," said the flying ma
chine Inventor. "The difficulty is to
keep him from dropping back to earth
with a rude Jar." WasMneton Star.
The Word Etiquette.
The very high sounding word eti
quette bad a very humble origin, for
etiquette meant simply a label. It re
ceived its present slgniflcatloa from
the fact that a Scotch gardener who
laid out the grounds at Versailles for
Louis XIV. was much annoyed at the
courtiers walking over his newly made
paths, and at length had labels placed
to Indicate where they might pass. At
first these labels were not attended to,
but a hint from high quarters that in
future the walks of the courtiers muBt
be within the "etiquettes" or labels
was promptly attended to. To keep
within the etiquettes became the cor
rect thing. The meaning of the phrase
was afterward widened. ,
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3.00 & $3.50 SHOES THESWORLD
tt78HOE8 FOR EVERY MEMBER OFrr
THE FAMILY. AT ALL PRI0E8.
Reward morm wa.so aom
"" thmn any other mmnufmoturmr.
THE REASON W. L. Douglas shoes are worn by more people
in all walks of life than any other make, Is because of their
excellont style, easy-fitting, and superior wearing qualities.
The selection of the leathers and other materials for each part
of the shoe, and every detail of the making Is looked after by
the mostcompleteorganlzatlonof superintendents, foremenana
skilled shoemakers, who reoeive the highest wages paid In the
shoe Industry, and whose workmanship cannot be excelled.
If I could take you into my Urge factories at Brockton, Mass.,
and show you now carefully w. L. Douglas shoes are made, you
would then understand why they hold their shape, fit better,
wear longer and are of greater value than an
toit OtlfStcMiuicdcxcliuivdv. t'atolw mailed
MMum tatmrnaUMB Gold Bond Shorn cannot bm qumlMmt anyprtcm,
W. 1j. Doug as stamps his name and prioe on the bottom to protect you airalnst uikE prloee
ftua interior snoes. Take No Substitute. Bold by the best shoe dealers everywhere.
THE BLOOD
healthy, the skin will be soft, smooth
acid humor takes root in the circu
of pimples and black heads, while
mciiuiuw jjiuuucing iue irouoie
lies dormant in the blood through the
Winter to break out and torment the
sufferer with the return of Spring. The best
treatment for all skin diseases Is S. S. S.
It neutralizes the acids and removes the
humors so that the skin instead of beingr
irritated and diseased, 13 nourished by a
supply of fresh, healthy blood. External
applications cf salves, washes, lotions, etc.,
while they soothe the itching caused by
skin affections, can never cure the trouble
SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, CA.
Parlor Magpie.
Mr. Kybosh, who was in search of a
late copy of a monthly magazine, absent
mindedly stepped- into the parlor.
He was just in time to see the young
man hastily remove his arm from the
beck of the chair in which Mies Kitty
was sitting.
"Pressed l.O! Change !" he muttered,
instantly stepping back into the sitting
room.
For Mr. Kybosh remembered that he
was a young man himself many years
ago.'
BRING YOUR TOOTH TROUBLES TO US
Before Gu.ng Elsewhere.
DR. B. E. WRIGHT.
342VS WashingtonSl. Portland Oregon,
E
NGRAVING
Write Us
PLATES
FOR PRINTING
HICKS-CftATTEN
Portland Oregon
TEZ DAIS?
FLY KILLER
destroys all the
files and afford
comfort to every
home in dining
room, sleeping
room and every
place where files
are troublesome.
Glean, neat and
will not soli or
Inliim anvthlna.
'ry thom onoe and you will never be without them.
not kep' by dealers, sent prepaid for 20o.
BAB0LD 80MER8, lit DcKalb Ave., Brooklyn, H. T.
ST. HELEN'S HALL
PORTLAND, OREGON
A Girls' School of the highest class. Collegi
ate department. Music. Art. Elocution. Gym
nasium. Fall terra opens September 1ft. ,
SEND TOR CATALOGUE
usTftliMLTGL
TENTH AND MORRISON STREETS
PORTLAND, OftEOON ,
A. P. ARMSTRONG, LL. B., PRINCIPAL
Quality is our motto. We educate for success,
and send each student to a position when com
petent many more calls for help than we can
meet. Individual Instruction Insures rapid prog
resa. AU modern methods of bookkeeping; are
taught; also rapid calculations, correspondence,
commercial law, office work, etc. Chartier Is
our shorthand easy, rapid, legible. Beautiful
catalogue, business forms and penmanship free.
P. M. U.
No. 35-07
WHEN writing to advertiser please
mention thla paper.
Di-ovW.L.
mm Urn A mmll
i are
ape
the
res. W.lXtOUULAa.UrucktoiiiM
y other make. T