Mosier bulletin. (Mosier, Or.) 1909-19??, August 13, 1909, Image 3

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    The Pirate of
rupert ' sarc Ë nt Alastair
HOLLAND
R A IS E CH ILD R E N OR TOIL.
Author o f “ TTio Count at Harvard,” «te.
C o p y r ig h t . 1 0 0 8 , b y J . B. L ip p in c o t t C o m p a n y .
C H A PT E R IV.
I happened to be sitting in my den.
writing, the following afternoon, when
glancing out of the big window that looks
up the beach, I caught sight of a woman
walking near the water. I picked up my
binoculars and focussed them on her. It
proved to be Miss Graham, dressed in a
riding-habit, and with a broad felt hat
on her head.
She was walking in a
somewhat aimless fashion, skirting the
wares as though she were playing w’ ith
them. I saw her glance once at the Ship
aud once iu the direction of my house.
I put down the glasses and laid my
papers nslde. When 1 went down stairs
I routed Charles out of a sound sleep in
the kitchen.
“ I)o you remember how to make tea—
good tea?" I asked him.
"\es. Mr. Felix.
Aren’ t you feeling
well, sir?"
"Quite well.
Please make some tea
that shall be ready to serve in about an
hour, and get out a box of those salty
biscuits. Set the small table in the din
ing-room out In front of the door, with
two chairs, and be ready to serve a lady
and myself."
"\es, Mr. Felix." Charles showed no
surprise, though he had never received
Buch an order since we had been at Alas-
talr.
I picked up a cap. and left the house.
As I did so I noticed that Miss Graham
had stopped walking and was gathering
shells. H alf way to her, and she was
still absorbed in the shells, which are
quite unusually beautiful h ere; three
quarters of the way, and she was still
playing with them. I had almost reached
her. and was raising my cap to speak,
before she turned and saw me. A flush
o f surprise rose to her cheeks.
“ Good afternoon.”
"Good afternoon, Mr. Hermit. Am I
poaching on your preserves?'
“ Xot in the least . I make you free
of the city.”
Ih ere was a light In her blue eyes
which I discovered that I remembered,
but a found her riding-habit new and
wonderfully prepossessing. I was taking
stock of it when she interrupted me.
"I left my horse tied back in the
woods. Haven’ t you ever seen a riding'
habit before?”
to get my guest. We couldn’t have sat
there drinking tea all night."
"No, of course not, sir, of course not.”
I turned to do indoors. “ By the way,
Charles, that tea was splendid; you did
yourself proud.
By the time supper was finished I was
still thinking about the Penguin Club,
which was a very singular thing, because
ordinarily I had no use for the place.
(T o be continued.)
A i l r lg h t a r a a e r v e d .
young, and I knew many a story of the
sea-gulls. Miss Graham was a flattering
listener, her lips slightly parted, her eyes
alight with intetest.
“ You must be hungry," I said at last,
“ lunch at noon, no supper until 8 . I
should like to offer you my cottage's hos­
pitality.”
I was looking for the flush that I
knew would come, and was not disap­
pointed.
"Thank you," she answered, "but, you
see— what would people think If they
looked in your dining-room window aud
saw me taking tea alone with you?”
“ People don't look in my dining-room
window,” I answered.
She shook her head so decisively that
I knew she meant it.
"A t least, we will have a cup of tea
on the beach,” I said, "out of doors— oh,
a dozen yards from the cottage, where
all the world may see us if they choose.”
"Splendid !’ she cried, and, jumping up,
led the way down from the heights.
On the smooth sand some distance
from my door Charles had placed the lit­
tle table. Tw o chairs faced each other;
plates, napkins, and a center-piece of
beach-marshmallows were the decorations,
and my man, as straight and rigid as an
Egyptian idol, stood a short distance off.
Miss Graham gave a little cry of pleas­
ure.
“ It’s like the Arabian N ights!” she ex­
claimed.
“ The whole thing seems to
have sprung out of the sand.”
I seated her at the table.
“ You may serve the tea, Charles,” ’ I
ordered.
He brought forth the tea-pot, and was
about to pour the tea into our cups when
Miss Graham expostulated. “ It’s the
woman's place to do th a t!” she exclaim­
ed, and Charles surrendered the tea-pot
Into her care.
“ How many lumps of sugar?”
she
asked, with the delicate superority of a
hostess to a guest.
"T w o.”
“ Will you have lemon or cream?”
There were both ; I thanked,my stars that
Charles was so thoughtful.
“ Bemon.”
I received my tea-cup and a moment
later had the satisfaction of hearing Miss
Graham say that the brew was delicious.
“ Yes. I beg your pardon, but it’s so “ And such pretty cups ! I don't believe
very becoming."
you're a bit of a-hermlt, but a very pam­
Again the quick flush, and an Instant's pered old sybarite.”
look at the sand. Then she laughed and
“ W e use these only on state occasions,
shook her riding-crop playfully at me.
for our honored guests,” I explained.
"Beware, Mr. Hermit. Any man might
“ But I don’t feel ns If this were a state
say a thing like that, but I expect other occasion," she answered. “ It seems quite
things from you. That's one of the pen­ as though we'd been doing this all sum­
alties of your position : you must be dif­ mer.”
ferent. I look for the flavor of romance
“ I wish we had,” I said, quickly.
and adventure at Alastair.” She laughed
“ I mean, It seems so usual,” she said.
at my puzzled face. “ Shall I go back “ And yet, in reality, you hardly know
home again?”
me at a ll; why, you haven't even met
“ No. I will try to remember. Did you Aunt Elizabeth yet.”
“ No, that's true," I agreed. "B ut then,
come to see the sunset from the cliff?”
"le s.
My aunt has a headache and on the other hand, you don’t know such
has stayed in bed all day. I bribed our a very great deal about me.”
“ It’s the very fact that we know so
waiter to save me a little supper and
send It ui> to my room at 8 o'clock, so. little about each other in the usual ways,
you see. I’ m free o f the club and din­ and so much in other ways,” Miss Gra­
ner." She spoke impulsively, as I Im­ ham attempted to explain, “ that makes
agined she might do many things, and everything so nice. W e’re both so much
glanced at me whimsically to see of what interested in the Ship and its history,
I was thinking.
She had some o f the you know.”
"W e are,” I answered. "That reminds
artlessness of a child playing truant
from school. "I do hate stupid conven­ me that I was to tell you all about the
tions, such as chaperons,” she added, “ es­ Ship some time.”
“ Yes.”
She looked off to where the
pecially in summer.”
We walked past my cottage,
which boat lay shinuing like mahogauy In the
Miss Graham looked at with much curi­ yellow afterglow. “ But don’ t you think
osity, asking me a hundred questions we'd better wait until we're on board
about it— how I had discovered it, why again. The Rmell of tar and the feel of
I had bought it, how it was fashioned in­ the wood will make it so much more
side, and how I did my marketing. I real.”
“ Then, you’ ll come-------” I began, and
told her I had the same butcher they had
stopped, for Miss Graham was looking
at the club.
I
"Oh 1” she said. “ I half hoped you past me at the door of my house.
lived by hunting and fishing, but I sup­ turned to see Isllp there, a broad smile
pose you’d rather indulge in ocasional wreathing his face.
“ Well, well, w ell!” he remarked, ad­
beefsteaks.”
" I ’d rather live that way,” said I, “ but vancing. "W hat a charming id y l! Real­
Charles, my man, wouldn’t like that. He ly, I had no idea when I came in at the
back door that I should find such a pretty
has a very cultivated palate.”
When we came to the top of the cliff picture awaiting me in front.” He bowed
I felt like another Balboa discovering the to MiRS Graham. "W here is the horse,
Pacific. In front of us lay the entrance Barbara, that goes with your habit?”
“ I left hint in the woods. He's used
to the river, the sloping away of the
She turned to me. “ Mr.
dunes to the low, level fields of meadow- to standing.”
grass, and the distant background of the Selden, have you met Mr. Isl.ip?”
"Yesterday,” I answered. "H e lunched
pines.
Here and there the fields were
dotted with beach marshmallow, windfalls here.”
“ Yes," put in Islip; “ and he gave me
delicately pin k : along the sedgy banks
grew clumps of cat-tails, their brown pen­ as good a lunch as he’s giving you tea.
nons stiff like so much bronze. At a lit­ Really, Selden, you're not living up to
tle landing-stage, where the river had your reputation as a recluse.” He paused,
hollowed out a harbor In the bank, rode looking from Mias Graham to me. “ I
my cat-boat, the sail tightly furled, the hate an interloper, but I'm afraid that's
mast rocking gently with the tide. As the part assigned me. When you didn’ t
we looked a flock of sand-snipe rose from appear at dinner, and couldn't be found,
the tall rank grasses beyond the river and I volunteered to hunt. I was getting
disappearance.
spread themselves like a sail against the quite worried over the
western sky. Nature never looked so ab­ Your Aunt Elizabeth------ ”
solutely peaceful.
"Is ill in bed with a headache," said
“ Book,” I said: a heron, red-legged, Miss Graham.
white-bodied, rose from the sedges and
“ Quite s o ; so we didn’ t like to tell her.
flapped his way up the stream. He called I took all the responsibility on myself.”
to his mate, a low, plaintive cry.
I may have looked somewhat sharply
"I t is beautiful,” said the girl.
"I at Islip at these words, for when I turn­
don’ t wonder that you love It.”
ed to the girl I caught an amused gleam
"Book,” I said : the sun’ s kaleidoscope in her eyes.
was changing, the pale yellows deepen­
‘Thank you, Rodney. Aunt Elizabeth
ing, the pinks turning to reds, to oranges, would thank you, too, if she knew.”
to brilliant, blazing golds. Again it
The young man flushed and bit his lip.
shifted and softened; red and yellow Miss Graham had a provoking tons when
were saffron, orange the color o f coral. she wished. I felt sorry for him.
Yet again, and the whole west was gold­
“ W on’ t you sit down and have some
en with a purple border, and then as the tea?" I asked.
purple gained and the gold sank we could
He shook his head. “ I must be getting
see the army of pines sllhoutted against back, now I have found her.”
the dropping fire.
He was too polite to look at bis watch,
"Tney come, the armies com e!” I cried. but we both knew wbat he was thinking.
"See the spears, see the crested horse­ “ I left my horse in your back yard.”
Miss Graham rose. “ I must go, too
men. see the banners in the rear!”
I turned and her eye were shining, Thank you, Mr. Seldon, for the sunset
exulting in the beauty of the scene. Then and the tea. Mr. Islip will find my horse
we were silent for a time, until the blaze and go back with me.” Her eyes were
had softened and the battle dropped to a dancing as she looked from one to the
other of us men, and I hardly wonder,
harmonious peace.
I found a seat for her, and stretched for I felt distinctly out o f sorts ail of
myself beside it.
a sudden, and Islip's face wasn't
as
"Tell tne what you think,” she said— cheerful as usual.
Charles brought Islip's horse down to
“ the stories you make up when you come
the beach, and we three walked up to ths
here night after night.”
I had known how that view of the sun­ point In the pines where Miss Graham
set quiets.*yet I was surprised to find her bad left her mount. There we separated.
"B y the way, Selden.” said Islip, "ths
so still and calm. It seemed as though
we had known each other for some time. market's shaky; slumping all yesterday
I have romanced to myself idly from i and started in to-day. Better look out
that cliff when the yellow light lies over for a squall.” He grinned as be disap­
the sea and the river and the pines, and | peared.
I drew upon my memory only to find It
Charles was clearing away ths remains
well stocked. Moreover, I learned much of the tea-party when I returned.
of the river people, of the birds that live
“ Sorry, Mr. Felix,” said he. " I tried
in the marsh and o f the animals of the to keep the gentleman away, but he
woods. I had watched the purple grackle would come out. Said be wanted to see
build his nest and the blue jay forage for you on pressing business.”
Ms offspring »Ueu
the summer was
"That’s all right, Charles. He
-T o a c h
and
G o.
“ Good morning, air," said tha tall
man In the suit o f faded black, open­
ing his valise. "M y name Is Glaaspy.
I am the Inventor o f a little device
for------’’
"I am g la j to meet you, Mr. G lazs-
py," interrupted the man In the d oor­
way. "M y name Is W ashabaugh. I
have the sole right In this county to
take subscriptions for a new and c o ­
piously illustrated edition o f the works
o f------ ”
"G ood day, sir."
"G ood day.” — C hicago Tribune.
E c o n o m is t S a y s T h a t O n e T h in g or
th v O th e r M a s t B e l lo n e b y h l v w .
D is c o r d a n t
R ip e n in g
B an an a«.
It la a fam iliar fact that bananas
are Imported green, but It came as a
new thing to a visitor to the banana
district In Colom bia to find that ba­
nanas are not permitted to ripen on
the plant even down there. They are
cut and set to hang som ewhere until
they w ither ripe, as the phrase is. Ba­
nanas do not have to be yellow to
be ripe. That is only the color o f the
skin when it has dried up. T o the
person who is accustom ed to eating
bananas only when they are yellow It
seems odd to peel them when they are
green and find that they are perfectly
ripe within and fit to eat.— New York
Suu.
U . e f o l K n o w le d g e .
Tommy— Paw, I’ve beard you talk
about Easy street. Where ia It?
Mr. Tucker— It's at the farther end of
a long, rough, and hilly thoroughfare,
called Hard Work etreet, my boy.
H er G ifted
R e la tiv e .
‘T ’ va got a cousin on my m other's
aide,” rem arked Mrs. Lapsling, "w h o
can do a nyth ing with her left hand
that she can do with her right.
I
tell you. It's a great thing for a per­
son to be am phibious.”
The
O ld
A daaz.
“ I w onder why three-fourth* o f the
stenographers in business offices are
w om en ?” “ I guess it is because men
like to feel that there la at least one
U n r e a s o n a b le .
class o f w om en whom they can dictate
“ My husband is so very unreason­ to ."
able.”
M u s ic a l.
“ Most husbands are. W hat did yours
Yeast— It is said that the cate o f
dor
“ He fixed a fishhook in one o f his Berlin are all registered and w ear a
pockets because he pretended to e u p - 1 tag-
pose that I robbed him at night, and ! Crlm sontnak W ell, the cate around
then he blamed me been use he forgot
^ouse
to be registered, too,
and som e o f 'em are pretty - strong
tn
It wae there.” —Cleveland Plain D ealer. *"'1
- - - - - •-
the upper register.— Y onkere States'
C o a r s e l y D e f in e d .
man.
___________________
"W h a t Is the distinguishing quality
The salamander looks like a Heard, bat
o f the problem pla y?”
...a
v
,L i .
gk . . . - It* character is that o f the frog. The
“ It m ake, you think. Tha flrat h alf , )d Itory th4t th, H lio u f e c u
keep# you wondering what the quM- | |ur, firt
„„fo u n d «!.
tlon la, and the second h alf keep« yon
guessing w bat’a the answ er.” — W ash­
ington Star.
Ik e
R o o .t e r e .
Knicker I'M you sleep well In
conn try?
Bother— N o ; there w ere too
cMoWfio ftifmki I d tiie m orn in g
U m
^
W
u
M o te .
"M r. Meekuu, don't you think a wom­
In the way o f practical plans fo r the
amelioration o f conditions leading up an should receive a man's pay when the
doee a man’s work?”
to unhappy matrimony, tw o Interesting
“ Why— er— look at the other side of
suggestions have been forthcom ing In the question a moment, will you? Think
recent weeks, says the New York H er­ how many men are doing women's work
ald. One o f them happens to be only and not getting a cent for it 1 ”
a new variation o f the old proposition
O u e D is t in c t io n .
o f taxing the unmarried, but the other,
Stranger (at Crown P o in t)—W hat's
by P rof. Patten o f the University of tb» difference between this sort of
Pennsylvania, adopts an entirely d if­ thing, in principle, and a horse ra ce?
ferent attitude lu advising that in all
Autom obile Enthusiast— Great Scott,
You
fam ilies whore there are no children look at the possibilities, man!
the women should he bread enrners. can get a million m ors thrills out o f
The tw o news items in the matter fol­ it.— Chicago Tribune.
F o o d Sen r o e .
low :
"T h is circu la r describing the Mount
That wives should be largely self-
supporting is the view taken by Dr. ingvue says you can sit at the dinner
Simon Nelson Patten o f the chair of table and see the beautiful m ountain
econom ics o f the U niversity o f Penn­ peaks,” said the man who contem plat­
sylvania. He cam e here last week to ed going.
“ That is true.” replied the one who
tell the League for Political Education
o f his ideas and returned to Philadel­ had been; "au d that’s Just about all
phia, where he is at present the center you can see."— Y onkers Statesman.
o f a storm o f criticism .
It e m l u l .i - t - u t .
The doctor, whom I saw yesterday,
"H ow long will eggs keep, an y h ow ?"
still maintains that his w ife should go said the cusual custom er at the lunch
out to do a day's work, as her husband counter.
“ I have met som e in my career,"
does, so that by the Joint Income the
fam ily reveuues may be kept at a fig­ answ ered the dark, gloom y man with
the deep, tragic voice who eat next to
ure large enough to Insure a good
him, "that I am w illing to sw ear had
home and the proper care and educa­ been kept for not less than tw o years,
tion o f the children. He finds that wo­ by J u p ite r!"— C hicago Tribune.
men o f all rauks o f life are entering a
I n c o m b u s tib le .
leisure class, to the dim inution o f the
j The sweet girl graduate is gone,
birth rate, the degeneration o f society
The sweet boy graduate is, too;
and the peril o f the state.
He'll mow the whiskers on the lawn
“ It ail resolves to this," said he,
And she will learu to build a stew ;
"th a t woman is ceasing to become a Both of these tasks are worth their while
And should not rouse their bosoms' iss,
producer in an industrial way.
Her
work has been taken aw ay from her. And they should buckle down and smile—•
They can not set the world afire.
In other generations she worked. With
— Houston Post.
the Introduction o f m achinery and o f
O n e T h l u g Beyruud A n y P o w e r .
the departm ent stores much o f her vo ­
T ip knows other places where trav-
cation has been taken from her.
A
wae eling is o f the agony brand.
A fter
large part o f the w ork which
once hers is now done outside o f the j w aiting for nearly four hours in Shan-
house.
Once she made clothes and nonville, Canada, between Toronto and
even w ove the cloth from which she j Montreal, fo r a "m ixed
17 freigh t
fashioued garments. She went into the t cars and one coach I asked an lmpa-
garden and raised vegetables; she tient clergym an if he had been able
milked the cows. There was a time to learn when the train would arrive,
when the farm ers sneered at the man . He eyed me up and down with pity,
who milked.
A woman alw ays did i "S ir ," he said, that Is the only thing
that.
I have traveled
extensively | that the A lm ighty does not know,
through the farm ing districts o f the New Y ork Presa.____________
W est without ever having seen a farm ­
T h e P o in t o t v i e w .
er's w ife milk a cow.
"T h is man Is not Insane,” said the
“ Form erly the woman was the man’ s law yer, “ and never has been. T o keep
industrial partner. H er work now has him in an asylum is a blow, sir, di­
gone out o f the home and nothing re­ rected against human rights, an as­
mains for her but to leave the home In sault upon the sacred Institution o f
search o f It. There is no use fo r her liberty, an— ’ ’
to w aste her time in trying to do that
“ But did you not prove last week,
which is now being better and m ore when he was on trial for m urder, that
chenply done by other means.
| he had been from birth a raving m»-
"I t is far better that she should toil n ia c?" interposed the court,
nt some rem unerative occupation and I The law yer sm iled in a superior
leave to other agencies the production way. "S u rely ,” he said, “ your honor
o f articles for household consumption." would not have It believed that this
court Is on the Intellectual plana o f
D lv ia lo n o f L a b o r .
that Jury.” — Philadelphia Ledger.
“ G ot any work this m ornin’, Mlstah
A n o ld T r o t h ,
B oyd ?" usked old Billy Bulger, safe
in the knowledge that no work would Skigga ran away with Skeggi’ wife.
Left no addresa behind ;
be entrusted to him.
But very toon Sk'ggz envied Sktggs
“ No," w as the response; and then,
And had a change of mind.
before Billy could ask for the custom ­ Skeggs advertised, Skiggs sent her back.
ary con trib u tion ; "B u t w ait a minute.
Herein tha moral lies:
now
believes— not so with
Law yer Phillips has ow ed me $20 fo r Skiggs
Skeggs—
twenty years. Collect it and I ’ll give
It pays to advertise.
,
you h alf." And the merchant, knowing
— Boston Herald.
bow bad was the debt, winked at a
B o y h o o d o f G r e a t M e n .— .V o. X X I .
waiting customer.
"Papa,” said littla Eddie, “ I gotta
T he old man found the law yer in the
middle o f a group o f prospective clients have another pair o’ shoes. These is all
and influential citizens.
Thrusting wore out.'
“ That makes seven pairs this yea r!”
through the group, he called, in sten­
groaned the unhappy parent.
torian to n e s :
e
e
e
e
e
“ Mlstah Phillips, suh !”
This Incident took place more than
“ W ell?” queried the law yer, much sixty years ago. That boy haa become
an old man. His name 1« Edward Pay-
annoyed.
’ ’Mlstah Boyd
done
tell me that son Weston, and he wears o u t shoos fast­
you ’ve ow ed him $20 for about a hun­ er than ever.— Chicago Tribune,
dred y e a r s ; and lie wants to know kin
In to x ic a tio n o f P o w er.
you pay him, suh.”
P ow er w ill
intoxicate the best
The law yer hurried to B illy's side. hearts, as w ine the strongest heads.
“ You idiot,” he said sotto voce, “ do No man Is w ise enough
nor good
you want to ruin my business? H e re !" enough to be trusted w ith unlim ited
and he thrust a $10 bill Into the old pow er; for, w hatever qualifications he
man’s hand.
may have evinced to entitle him to the
Back to the merchant toddled the old possession o f so dangerous a privilege,
man.
yet, when possessed, oth ers can no
"W ell, B illy,” said the merchant, lon ger answ er for him, because he can
no longer answ er fo r him self.— Col­
“ did you get it?"
ton.
The old man grinned.
“ I got my half,
all
right,”
he
N o t Y e t, b a t S o m e tim e .
ch uckled ; ‘ ‘ but you'd better look out
Man from tha City— You intend to
when you go back to get your half— keep bees, I suppose.
he's right smart hot over It, s u h .
Suburbanite— Some day, perhaps. At
Success Magazine.
present we are devoting our entire ener­
gies to keeping a cook.
’
A L C O H O L 3 P E R CEN T.
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similaiin$thcFbodaiKlRii!ula
(ingüic Siomadis aiulBoMclsof
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W h a t is C A S T O R I A
Promolcs DigpstionOritM
ness and li.’st.CoiUains neither
k
Opium.Morphinc nor Mineral.
N o t N a r c o t ic .
0
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H m ftcfohi D cS 'xau m m
í\aofJíi¡t StvJm
jilx . Savia «
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JkcMteSdti-
jtm Sttd ♦
Harm S lid -
lanàri/ S
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare­
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its ago is its guarantee. I t destroys Worms
aud allays Feverishness. It- cures Diarrhoea ami W ind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. I t assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach mid Dowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’ s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
^*a® e
U
-a n t
Apeiferl Remedy for Consfipi
t Ion. Sour Stomach.Dlarrtea
Worm s .Convulsions .Feverish
ness andLoss OF SLEEP.
GEN UIN E
C A S T O R IA
ALWAY9
Bears the Signature of
Facsimile Siglature of
a*;
CL
NEW YORK.
fi
A t b m o n th s o l d
j 5 D
oses
-3 5 > £ ™ ”
Guarani ceil undcrtlicFo^ ^
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 3 0 Years
Exact Copy o f Wrapper.
T N C CKNTAU M O O M P A N V , T T M U R R A Y S T R E E T , N E W Y O R K CITY*
FOR TEN DAYS ONLY
CRESCENT m
baking pow der that
does all that the
W e will send you 5 Splendid Souvenirs o f the
h ig h priced baking A L A S K A -Y U K O N -P A C I F I C E X P O SIT IO N ami
pow ders w ill d o and does a B eautiful Map o f tho grounds fo r 60c, E n joy
it butter. It raises the the principal featu re« o f an expen sive trip for
d ou gh and m akes light* this «m all sum, w ith ou t leaving hom e.
Good for
er, sw eeter an d bettei Ten Days Only.
risen fo o d s . Sold b y g r o
YUKON NOVELTY CO M PA N Y .
cers 2 5 c per pou n d . JJ
tt> B ell St.. S e a ttle , W.»*h.
y o u w ill sen d u s your
nam e and address, w e
•rill send you a book on health and baking pow der.
BAKING
POWDER
CFESCENT MFG. CO. Seattle, Wn.
ALBERTA WHEAT LAND
$15 Per A cre
10 Year»* Tim©
T h ese lands o f Canadian P acific R ailw ay
p rod u ce from 35 to 50 bushels o f w heat, 75
to 100 bushels o f oats, per acre. A ll near
railw ays, tow n s and schools.
P ositively
th e best w h eat land p roposition fo r men
o f m oderate m eans.
N o crop failures.
Send t< day fo r fre e illustrated literature.
S pecial rates 1st and 15th o f every m onth.
ALASKA-YUKON - PACIFIC EXPOSITION
T h e W onder o f the W est; you 'll like it. F ine Al­
bum o f Plates o f the buildin gs sen t fo r 30c money
order, and another o f the city o f Seattle, the
“ G EM O F T H K C O A S T ,” very fine, tor $1.05,
postpaid. L ive in S eattle and be happy.
JARED W . SMITH 4 1 7 Sullivan B ldg.
L ock B o x 1 9 1 2 .
S ea ttla , W ash in gton
D A IS Y F LY K IL L E R
placed
«ay.
w here, a ttra cts
anil k ill, all file*.
Neat, clean, orna­
mental, c o n T e n *
lent. Cheap. La«ts
a ll icksoii . Can
not hi in or tip
over, will not soil
or injure a n y ­
thing Ouaranteed
IDE-M 'C A R T H Y LAND CO.
G enl. Land A g ts . Canadian P acific R. R.
425-26 L u m b erm en ’s B u ilding
P O R T L A N D . OK.
dealers, or sent prepaid for *0 centa.tfOCti,re'
(I tM
B U S I N E S S COLLEGE
“ T H E SC H O O L O F Q U A L IT Y “
Tenth and M orrison 8 Portland, Oregon
A . P. A R M S T R O N G , L L . B.. P R I N C IP A L
The high-standard com mercial school of
the Northwest. Open all the year. M ore
calls for help than we can meet— position
certain. Class and individual instruction.
Bookkeeping from written forms and o f­
fice practice. Shorthand that excels ¡a all
re s p e cts . S p ecia l penm anship depart­
ment. Call, phone or write for catalogue.
° f *U
HAROLD SO M ERS, 16 0 DeKalb Ave.. B ’klyn., N. Y.
D renaed a «
S c h o la r « .
At the w edding lately of the head
m aster o f
Eastbourne College, Eng­
land, the three pages in the bridal pro­
cession were garbed as scholars
In
black satin knee breeches, buckled
shoes, scarlet silk gowns, with white
shirt front». Each carried a m ortar­
board hat and a scarlet-bound prayer
book.
E a rly -
Show ed
C0FFEE(
TEA SPICES
BAKING POWDER
*> EXTRACTS
JUST RIGHT
<mnnBEinziE>
G re a tn e a «.
D R. W . A . W IS E
22 Years a Leader in Painless Dental
W ork in Portland.
A ndrew Jackson was a m arvel of
precocity. He carried a flintlock mus­
ket, as a soldier o f the revolutionary
arm y, at the age o f 14. At 23 he was
appointed by W ashington district at­
torney o f Tennessee. He was a Unit­
ed States Senator at 30. He did not
reach the presidency until he was 62.
— Sunday Magazine.
Out-of-Town People
Should rem em ber that ou r fo rc e is so arranged
that W K C A N DO T H E IR E N T IR E C R O W N .
B R ID G E A N D P L A T E W O R K IN A D A Y if
necessary.
P O S IT IV E L Y P A I N L E S S E X ­
T R A C T IN G F R E E w hen plates or bridges are or­
dered
W K R E M O V E T H E M OST S E N S IT IV E
T E E T H A N D RO O TS W IT H O U T T H E L E A S T
P A IN . N O S T U D E N T S , no uncertainty.
M o th e rs w ill fin d M rs. W in s lo w 's S o o t h in g
B yrup th e b u s t r e m e d y to uso f o r t h e ir c h ild r e n
d u r i n g th e t e e t h in g p e r io d .
D ae
to
Score
N ext
M l .t o r r
« .w r it t e n .
W ith much reluctance K ing George
III. had decided to let hia Am erican
colonies go.
“ Mark my words, though,” he said,
"they'll be governed som e day by a
monarch ten times us absolute and
despotic as I a m i”
I f any doubt exists that hit Britan­
nic m ajesty had the api-It o f prophecy
upon him, look at Mr. A ldrich.—C h ica­
go Tribune.
A
S tu d ie d
F or th e
T im e .
"Y ou refuse me, do you, proud g irl?"
he howled.
"W ell, you ’re not doing
anything original!
This is the third
time I’ve been turned d o w n !"
"Bo I’ m the third sacker, am I?”
m errily responded the girl, thrusting
her tongue in her cheek in a well
m eant but only partially successful e f ­
fort to look like Mr. Steinfeldt.
>0U<
S H O E S S -4 5 0
W. L. DOUGLAS 8H0E8 are Better
Value for the Price Than Ever Before.
9 « oo
and
Í * 00
hOM
B oy«'
Shewn
»1 00
to
I* 00
The finality, workmanshipnml stylecannot
he excelled. A trial 1« all that la needed to
convince anyone that W . L. Doupla* sho**
hold their shape, fit better and wear longur
than other mnkea.
W. L. I tuny Ins reputation forthe bent shorn
that enn l>e prodm-ed for the price In world­
wide. he nt.indn hack of every pair ami
(niaranfees full value t< Ihe wearer.
C A U TIO N . — Ree that W, T„ Douglas name and
tha retlll prte* la stamped nn Min bottom.
tak e
n o s u b s t it u t e #
S h oes f o r K v e ry M e m b e r o f t h e F a m ily ,
M e n , R o y s , W o m e n , M lm e n n to l C h il d r e n ,
Wherever you live, W. I„ D oiik I hh nhoen are »Ithln
yonr r**»nh. If y o u r dealer cannot fit yon, write f 0,
Vlail Order Catalog. W .UDOL'O LAS, Block ton, *'
G e llin g
DYSPEPSIA
•’ H aving taken your wonderful ’Casca-
reta’ for three months and being entirely
Cured o f stomach catarrh and dyspepsia,
I think a word o f praise is due to
Cascarete’ for their wonderful composi­
tion. I have taken numerous other so-
called remedies hut without avail, and I
find that Cascarets relieve more in a day
than all the others I have taken would in
« y e a r .”
James MrGune,
108 Mercer St., Jersey City, N. J.
P 1 .si.n t, Paiatsbl«. Pntsnt. T a sta Good,
o G o o d . N . v . r Stck*fi. W .a k r n o r G ripe.
c. 2 V tOc N e v e r .o ld in bulk. T h e tan*
Sine tablet «tem p ed C C C . G u aran teed to
o u t or r o a r m o a e r beck.
Uf
e
G R E A T
~ F O
R
P A
1 N
D ays
ALL W O R K G U ARAN TEED 15 Y E A R S
Dr. W . A . W i s e
President and M anager
The Wise Dental Co.
(IN C .)
Th ird «n d W ashington S ta
PORTLAND , OREGON
P N U
w
N o. 3 3 - 0 »
IIK W w r i t i n g t o a d v e r t i s e r « pl<
■ n u o t in o t i l l , i m p u r .
FOR COUNTRY HOMES
" [u’ lol
\
fl n r
M E ,1 i w
J
f •
T h e best and m o*t logical m ethod o f fu rn ish ­
ing w ater y e t d evised. T h e tank ia placed in
the basem ent or In the ground near t h « hous«
and keeps the w ater cool in sum m er and p r o o f
again st fre e z in g in w inter. It never leak«.
It is im p ossible f o r im p urity to get into it. It
i outlasts the buildin g in w h ich it is installed,
i It costs a little m ore to begin w ith, bu t th er«
is no second cost. W e have a ca ta log u e w hich
illustrates and describ es th « L ea der sy st«m .
Ask m fo r It.
STOVER
G A S O L IN E
ENGINES
ar« especially adapted to p u m p in g d u ty
and in fa c t any d u ty that requires a
strong, reliable pow er. T h ey are econom «
ical. sim ple and easily understood. It ia
an e n g is e w hich anyone, no m atter how
Httle he know s sh ou t such engines, can
op era te as su ccessfu lly as an ex p ert. In
short, it is an ideal en gin e fo r any kind o f
w ork . Send fo r S T O V E R E n gin e Cata­
log— Fro«.
Full Line of
Implements
and
O il
F ifte e n
WATER SUPPLY SYSTEMS
B ack.
"Captain, what tlma does tha boat
sta rt?’
“ It starts, madam, when I give ths
w ord."
"T hen I’ ve slw a ys had tha wrong
Idas. I thought it started when tha
anglnaer pulled a lever, or did eom e-
thlng. Thank you evar zo much.” —
C hicago Tribun«.
N ext
W e will g iv e you a good 22k gold or p orce­
lain crow n f o r ...................................................... S3.50
22k bridge t e e th ...................................................... 3.50
Molar c r o w n ...............................................
6.00
Gold or enam el fillin g »........................................... 1.00
Silver fillin g »................................................................... 50
Good ru bber p la t e « ................................................ 6.00
T h e beat red ru bber p la te s ................................. 7.00
Painless e x tr a c tio n s ...................................................... 50
LEADER PNEUMATIC
E x p la n a tio n .
"W ill you be able to explain your
attitude on the tariff?”
"Y e s," answered Senator Sorghum
I’ll have my explanation ready when
the tim e comes. But I'll w ait till my
constituents are Interested In other
things and will carefully make it a lit­
tle hard to understand.” — W ashington
Star.
iz a r d
1
The Kind You nave Always Bought, and which haa been
U 9 U
i t i
o 3 v 0
r
j years,
«
in use
for u over
has borne the signatnre o f
and has been made under bis per­
sonal supervision since its Infancy.
Allow no one to deceive you iu this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations aud “ Just-as-good” are but
Experiments that tritle with and endanger the health o f
Infants and Children—experience against- experiment.
Vehicles
PORTLAND, OR.
SPOKANE, WN.
BOISE, IDAHO.
AGENTS
EVERYWHERE