> o t e n u i(h f
“ Ship It to M e ”
SAYS SMITH
Smith want» every dressed veal and hog
in the country. He never charges com-
tnias on. Vt ** will pay as follows for good,
fat atutf. Ship by express.
Dressed Veal, up to 130 Ibe........12' _C.
Drtssed P o rk ................................... 11c.
Live Chickens....................................16c.
Dressed Chickens.......................... 17Vi*C.
E**ra ....................... Market P r ic e
Address
Ill»
W o n d e r f u l '1’a c t .
Wheeler— Why, Miss Snooper, how
costumes completely alter people!
I
hardly knew you.
Miss Snooper— Do I look such a
fright, then?
W heeler— On the contrary, you look
most charming.— Illustrated Bits.
fRANK L. SMITH MEAT CO.
“ fighting the B eef Trust”
PORTLAND. OREGON
L lte r u lly
E x c e p t io n .
The early bird hud caught the worm
Thinking the Incident self-axplana-
tory and the moral perfectly obvious,
the bird refrained from trying to sa>
anything «mart.
t
Thereby introducing a startling in
novation and establishing a new rec
ord.
So.
“ I hear your girl has a good trade
CAR STRIKERS RIOT
Philadelphia Terrorized by Angry
Mob o( Union Sympatbers
STRAY BULLETS INJURE MANY
Boys Set
Fire to C art—Passengers
Are Stonea in Many Localities
T w o tlaraa-n ed N u t lo n s .
now.“
— 3,000 Deputies Sworn In.
Bay Mackerel— Thanksgiving and
“ Don’t speak of it as a trade; it Is Christmas may be seasons for the dis
a real calling.”
memberment of Turkey, but I know a
"W hat is it?“
nation in even a worse case.
"She Is a telephone operator.“ — Bal
Shad Rose— What is that?
Cars wrecked, 297; car windowe j
timore American.
Bay Mackerel— Lent, when occurs
broken, 2,608; arrests made, 40; j
the baiting of fin-land.
j women shot, 2 ; extra police or- j
C o n d it io n a l.
• dered, 8, 000; total employed by
The man who had been shot by the
E x p e c te d T ro u b le .
| company, 7,000; strikers’ estimate
bunter opened his eyes.
One evening Fred, aged 4. says the
■‘Fnratv > me," said the person with Chicago News, saw a shooting star for j of men out, 6 ,2 0 0 ; company’s esti- j
5 mate o f men loyal, 3,600- strike
the gun.
the first time.
Running
into
the b r e a k e r s imported, 176.
“ N ot yet,’ replied the sufferer, "but house, he exclaimed: "Oh, mamma, I ’ll
I f you can prove to a Jury that I look bet there’s going to be trouble In heav
lik e a squirrel I ’ll think about It."__ en to-night. Somebody let one of the
Philadelphia, Feb. 22.— Rioting in
Philadelphia Ledger.
every section of the city followed the
stars fall.”___________________
r
D e p r a v ity .
H a lt e d
Goodman Gonrong—W hat d’ye reck
on is the deadest of the dead lan
guages?
Saymold Storey— My guess is that
It’s the one you use when you’re
cougl: in’.
0 »
T h a t.
“ There is a wide difference
ion as to the desirability of
wedding.”
"W ell?”
“ But everybody wants an
tatious divorce."— Louisville
Journal. ___________________
o f opin
a quiet
unosten
Courier-
S i m p l i f y i n g It.
“Joslah, what is the house of lords?“
M o re In fo r m a tio n .
“ It’s one branch of the British par
Mrs. Chugwater—What Is animal
liament. You’ve heard of the house of
magnetism, Josiah?
commons, haven’t you?”
Mr. Chugwater— Well, you know
“Ye-es.”
’Well, the lords are the uncommons.“ what an animal Is, and you know what
magnetism is. Just combine the two
and you get animal magnetism. Isn’t
T h e R e a l V ic tim .
Mrs. K aw ler— Isn’t the cost of living tiiat plain enough0
frightful these days?
Mrs. Renntur— Indeed It Is. It’s so
hard to save enough out of It to pay
the ktill greater cost of m oving!— Chi
cago Tribune.
She
K n ew
H im .
He— The Joneses w ill be wondering
w hy we are so late.
She— No, they won’t; I told them
you were going to drive.— Judge.
Th on e L o v in g
L o o k ed L ik e a D og,
“ This,” remarked Mr. Cane, "is my
photograph with my two French poo
dles. You recognize me, eh?”
" I think so,” said Miss Softie. "You
are the one with the hat on, are you
not?”
___________________
C o in in g
E
E
J.
D
F r ie n d s .
Catalogue for
the Asking
Send for It.
S
J.
W ord .
W illie — Pa, may I ask one more quea
tlon?
Pa— Well, what Is it?
W illie— I f a man from Portugal li
a Portuguese is his little boy a Por-
tugosling?
Pa— Right to bed with you.— St
Louis Times.
Maybelle— Do you think this photo
graph looks like me?
Gladys— Not in the least, dear; but
It’s a splendid picture.
S
A n o th e r
S u re
of
H im .
“ I ’ll give you a position as clerk to
itart with,” said the merchant, “ and
pay you what you are worth. Is that
latisfactory?”
T Z E R
“ Oh, perfectly,” replied the college
Portland, Oregon
graduate, “ but— er— do you think the
Irm can afford' It?” —Catholic Stand-
krd and Times.
B U
188 Street Front
WE PAY CASH
For homestead relinquishments, and can sell your
farms and ranches quickly. Let us handle your
business and we will guarantee your satisfaction.
Give full particulars in first letter.
U n p r e m e d ita te d S a rca sm .
Eminent Musician— Among my pro
fessional friends I-----
Reporter (gasping) — Professional
D A V iS & E U IT K A M P
Portland, Ore friends! Are they living?
810 Delcum Bldg.
$2,000 A Y E A R
11
Is being earned by hundreds o f Chiropod
B a d B reath
“ For months I had great trouble with my
•tomach and used all kinds of medicines.
My tongue has been actually as green as
grass, my breath having a bad odor. Two
I weeksago a friend recommended Cascarets
and after using them I can willingly and
cheerfully say that they have entirely
cured me. I therefore let you know that 1
shall recommend them to any one suffer-
I ing from such troubles.” —Chas. H. Hal-
pern, 114 E. 7th St., New York, N. Y .
ists. The work is easily learned, competi
tion slight, returns lucrative. A thousand
graduates could be
placed tomorrow.
W rite for particulars
The W estern
School
of Chiropody
Portland, Oregon
CUT THIS OUT. mail it with your ad-
dress to the Sterling Remedy Company.
Chicago. III., and rec ivp a handsome sou
venir Gold Bon Bon FREE.
A Broken Down Foot-Arch.
FE R R Y ’S ' S e e d s
R W
To grow the fln-
cst flowers and
W
m o s t luscious
’ vegetables, plant t h e b e st
seeds. Ferry’s Seeds are beet
because they never fall In yield
or quality. The best garden
ers and farmers everywhore
know Ferry 's Feeds to be the
highest standard o f quality
yet attained.
For sale
everywhere.
| FERRY’S 1910 Seed Annual
Free on request
F . }T
. ■ M
Don’t waste tim e and money plant
ing' poor seeds. Our seeds won First
Grand Prize at the Seattle Exposi
tion.
Our prices are reasonable.
B ig Catalogue free. Send fo r a copy.
Vogeler Seed Co.
0. M. FERRV A CO,
S a lt L a k e C it y , - U t a h
DETROIT, MICH.
MOOfRN
CXPCRI
DENTISTRY
At Prices that Defy Competition
iir m
w it h o u t p l a t e s a s p e c ia l t y
P A IN L E S S E X T R A C T IO N .....................
60c
S IL V E R F IL L IN G S ..................... . SOC u p
G O LD F I L L I N G S .............................. # 1 .0 0 UP
■2K G O LD C R O W N .................................. §5 .0 0
GOOD R U B B E R P L A T E .......................... #5 .0 0
TH E BBS I' R U B B E R P L A T E S ................ #8 .0 0
W H A L E B O N E P L A T E S ........................*1 0 .0 0
Out-of-town patient« can obtain perfect work
and rave money by catling at oar office
M O STUDENrs
NO G AS
NO COCAINE
All work imaranteed for tan yean
CHICAGO PAINLESS DENTISTS
3 2 m Washington St.. Car. Sixth
II.hoi 15 yean
Here to
roR
.
attempt of the Philadelphia Rapid
Transit company to operate its lines
here today.
Passengers and crews were driven
from carsjby infuriated mobs of strike
sympathizers and in nearly a score of
instances the abandoned cars were
burned or otherwise destroyed.
A t nightfall every car waa with
drawn from service.
Stern measures
were adopted by the police to quell the
disorders.
Five persons were ar
rested, charged with inciting to riot.
Two women were taken to hospitals.
Mayor Reyburn tonight orders*1
. Di
rector of Police Clay to swear in 3,000
additional police and to issue a pro
clamation enforcing the riot act.
The executive committee of the Cen
tral Labor union this afternoon pledged
both moral and financial support to the
strikers. It also decided to call a
sympathetic strike of every union man
in the city in case the authorities put
into effect their threat to operate the
cars with policemen and firemen.
In the morning cars were run on
every line with little difficulty except
in the mill district of Kensington,
where cars were stoned by mobs. A t
11 o’clock transit company officials
announced that cars were running on
their regular schedule. Shortly after
ward riots wqre reported from scores
of widely separated localities.
In the Southern section a mob of
boys drove a conductor and motorman
from their posts, and, after the four
women passengers had left the car, set
it on fire.
The car following was stopped also
and was being set on fire when a de
tachment of police and a chemical en
gine reached the scene. In this same
section Mary Devlin, aged 16 years,
was shot in the leg when the police
fired their revolvers in an effort to
check the mob.
In the usually quiet residence sec
tion of West Philadelphia, mobs for a
time baffled the police. Iron bars and
stones were piled on the tracks and
several cars were wrecked.
Mounted
police were powerless to disperse the
mobs, and a fire hose waa brought into
play.
Contradictory claims are made by
the opposing forces as to the number
of men on strike.
Leaders of the
Amalgamated Association of Street
and Electric Railway employes say
that 6,200 of the 7,000 employes of
the transit company have left their
cars. Officials o f the company say
that 3,500 of their employes are loyal
and that regular service will be re
sumed at daybreak tomorrow.
The importation of 175 strikebreak
ers from New York led to an attack on
the barns and main offices of the com
pany this afternoon.
Windows were
broken by the mob, which was finally
dispersed, after 35 arrests had been
made.
Union leaders say they will force
the company to arbitrate.
They
charge that the company for months,
by a series of petty persecutions, has
been endeavoring to force the union to
strike, and finally, by discharging a
large number of union men, practically
declared a lockout.
Asiatic Employer* Taboo.
San Francisco, Feb. 22.— I f the var
ious unions affiliated with the San
Francisco Labor council obey the reso
lution adopted last night by that or
ganization none of their members will
be permitted to work in a house where
Asiatics are employed. The resolution
followed the voting down o f a recom
mendation that no more saloons where
Asiatics are employed be unionized,and
_ _
_ _ _
_ _ - .
it was adopted on the plea that k was
X »
“ a a ( J
¿ j not fair to single out the saloons for
boycott when other business houses
is not a “ food” —it is i medicine, inii tlie
only medicine in the world for cow* on y. employ them.
Made for t lie cow and. as its name indicates,
a Cow Cure.
Ba reness, retained after
C a sta w a y C h ie f o f C a m p .
birth. abortion, scours, caked udder, and nil
Juneau. Alaska., Feb. 22.—Captain
similar affections positive y and quickly
cured. No one who keeps cows, whether W. P. H. Porter and a few members o f
manv or few. can afford to be without K< IW- the crew of the wrecked steamer Yuca
KUftK. It is made especially to kecncow-
bealthy. Our book "Cow Money” sent FREE
Ask your local dealer for KOW -KURE or oend
to the manufacturers.
DAIRY ASSOCIATION CO.
PINK EYE
LHoerfe, Yl.
D IS T E M P E R
C A T A R R H A L FEV ER
A N D A L L N O SE
A N D T H R O A T D IS E A S E S
Cares the sick and acts as i p eventive for other*. Liquid
e ven on the tongue. Safe fur brood mares am! nil others. Best
kidney remedy; 60cents and IX a Imttle; |.‘> ami |10 the doren.
Sold by all druggists and horse g o d s houses, or tent, axpresi
paid, by the manufacturers.
SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists, Goshen, Ind.
IN
THE
OF
m
THE DESCHUTES V A L L E T
The Place Y o u ’v e Been Reading About
W r ite for Information
COOPER & TAYLOR, Selling Agts.
1 DA.7J L 4 Heavy BW».. Partien#. Orasen
S T R IK E S A T H ASH .
A
P h y s ic ia n
In
W ho
la
Not
a
B e lie v e r
F le te h e r ia iu .
The human race seems bound to be
come bald and toothless. I f we do not
give our teeth euough hard work they
are bound to decay and the dentists
have their Innings, so to say. I f we
do not use our muscles they become
flabby and weak. The same principle
holds good with regard to the stom
ach; If w-e do not g ive this organ a
sufficient amount of work In digesting
food, it suffers In consequence, and
the whole scheme of digestion and is-
sim ilation goes w-rong.
On all sides we hear Inexpert dletlsta
talking about selecting foods and cook
ing them In a way to be “ easy o f di
gestion"; and because this Is the al
most universal practice, we are becom
ing a race of dyspeptics. Close stu
dents o f the subject are w ell aware
that It is the meat-eating nations and
lea vy meat-eaters everywhere that are
the chief sufferers from inflammation
of the bowels (falsely called “ appendi
citis,” either through Ignorance or for
commercial purposes); and this is not
altogether because animal food Is nas
ty stuff, but from the practice of chew
ing It or eating it in the form of hash.
A ll meat-eating animals bolt their
food— not because they know more
than human beings, but simply because
it is their nature to^ do so. It is as
unphysiological and unwholesome to
chew meat as not to chew the grains
and other starchy foods. Feed a dog
on hashed meat and he w ill have dys
pepsia, and very likely inflammation
of the bowels; and If his owner has a
good bank account there m ight be an
operation for "apendlcitis."
When a piece of meat of reasonable
size Is tak’en Into the stomach, It can
not pass into the Intestines until It
has been dissolved completely by the
gastric juice;
but when It Is first
chewed or taken In the form of hash
it passes Into the intestines unfitted
for intestinal digestion and absorp
tion; hence, "ptomaine poisoning" and
all sorts of mischief.
As for the question o f baldness, we
know that women are practically never
bald, and this Is because their hats bal
ance on the top of their hair, with no
tight band around the head; but men,
with their derby hats fitting tightly
around the head and cutting off the
free
circulation of the blood from
crown downward, often have the head
as smooth as a btllard ball before 30
years o f age. I f we went bareheaded
altogether we would never lose our
hair, except in case of some special
disease, as typhoid fever; and even
then It would usually grow again.—
Charles E. Page, M. D., In New York
American.
Wit of the Youngsters $
M l a fo r l o n e o f D o lla e a a .
Don’t Wait
F^r Spring to c »me, l*ut begin to build up
j 4 >ur system now by cleansing your blood
o f those impurities that have accumulated
in it during the w liter.
To build up your system now will help
you through the sudden i r.d extreme
changes of w a her at this reason and very
like!y s ve you from serious sickness later.
H o o d 's S a r s a p a r i l l a
is the medicine to take. It purifies the
blood and gives strength and vigor.
Gat it today in u.unl liquid form or choeolatad
tablet« caliad SarxataL.. .00 Do««« $1,
L iv e d
Too
F a ir ,
F a s t.
“ Poor fellow !
He Is qu it, broken
down, and the doctor says that hli
«ondltion Is due to fast living.”
"F ast llv iu i? "
“ Yes; you see. he is a traveling man,
and he was obliged to eat so many
dining-car meals and lose so much
sleep In sleepers that his constitution
gave w a y " - Brooklyn Citizen.
The
o illa t 'k - lla iid ”
I)u « ln e a «.
Mrs. Bart— My husband got a letter
to-day saying something
dreadful
would happen If he didn’t send the
w riter a sum of money.
Mrs.
Smart— My
husband
gets
dunned for his bills, too.— Boston
Transcript;___________________
Quick As Wink.
I f your eyes ache with a smarting,
burning sensation and dizziness, use
P E T T I T ’ S E Y E S A L V E . A ll druggists
or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y .
A n d It
D id .
"R oll on, thou mighty ocean !"
The poet wrote hie song.
Ah, well, the bard has had his way.
For ever since that fateful day
The ocean has, in ceaseless play,
Been rolling right along!
—Chicago Tribune.
Squa b illin g
A b o u t N o t h in g .
"T o-d ay my wife and m yself had the
most foolish squabble of our married
career."
"And what was the subject of your
discussion ?"
"H ow we would Invest our money If
we had anv."—Kansas City Journal.
Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow's Soothing
Syrup the b. st remedy to use for their children
d u rin g the teething period.
A«
He
(.r o u n d .
Tennyson had Just begun to write the
“Charge of the Light Brigade.”
“ H alf a league, half a league,.
H alf a league onward----- "
Then he stopped.
"Sounds a good deal like ‘O ff agin,
on agin, gone agin, Finnegan!” he said,
knitting hla brows.
But he went ulit-ad with It, and the
jingle made a decided hit.— Chicago
Tribune. ___________________
D id n ’t E s a e tlr M e a n It.
The Olrl— Isn’t this play tiresome!
The Young Man—It's an awful bore.
But there is no use, Miss Pinkie, of
your trying to conceal a yawn with
that fairy little hand of yours; It can't
half cover—er— 1 mean— that la----- "
—Chicago Tribune.__________
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY
"H ave you an ear for music, Edna?"
asked a caller of a little 5-year-old
miss. “ Yes, Indeed!” was the reply.
“ I can hear a hand organ three blocks
away.”
"W h y are we admonished to cast our
bread upon the water?” queried the
teacher of the juvenile Sunday school
class. " 'Cause the fishes have to be
fed,” replied a small pupil.
It was small Helen's first trip across
the lake and she was 111. "H ow do
you feel, dear?" queried her mother.
“ Oh,” answered Helen, faintly, “ I feel
like I wanted to unswallow my din
ner.”
"Papa,”
said
5-year-old
Johnny,
“ please give me a dime to buy a toy
monkey.” "You don’t need a toy mon
key,” answered his father. “ You are
a monkey yourself.” "W e ll,” continued
the little fellow, “ then give me a dime
to buy peanuts for the monkey.”
I * o le
Faker
of
Lons
Aaro.
It is told of a titled Englishman
that when his son explained his folly
in going down a coal mine by saying
that he spoiled his clothes so as to
be able to say that he had performed
the feat, replied: "W h y did you say
that you had been down the mine and
did not go?” This method appears to
have been followed by one James Knox
de Bolduc, a monk, who, according to
a Paris contemporary, made his Polar
voyage in 1665. This is the Pole as
described by this Bolduc:
"A t the Pole one finds the place
where all the waves of the sea con
centrate to
disappear In the same
whirlpool.
Four great
Islands, sur
round this precipice, separated by four
great canals, succeeding which are ths
divided seas. An enormous rock, quits
black, and 23 miles In circumference,
marks the Pole Itself.
“ The unfortunate ships which ven
ture Into these latitudes are Imme
diately lost, i f they are not assisted
by favorable winds.”
The C ivil and M ilitary Gazette of
Lahore, India, suggests that the ac
count of Bolduc may he found In the
“ Teutsche Acta Erudltorium ” (1742),
which has been described as an excel
lent periodical, edited by J. O. Rabener
and C. G. Jucher, and contlr ed from
1740 to 1751 as "Zuverlaesslge Nacb
rlchten.” — A rm y and N avy Journal.
hill
Fa«
and
T ld e -y .
A Kansan sat on the beach at Atlan
tic C ity watching a fair and very fal
bather disporting herself In the surf
He knew nothing of tides and he did
not notice that each succeeding wav«
came a little closer to his feet. A t Iasi
an extra-big wave washed over hli
shoetops.
“ Hey, th ere!” he yelled at the fair
fat bather. “ Quit yer jum pin’ up and
down!
D’ye want to drown me?” —
Everybody's.
PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS
PAZO OINTMENT is guarante.\J to cure any case
of Itching. Blind, Bleeding or Protruding File« in
6 to 14 days or money refunded.
fcOc.
Does Not
Color H air
A y e r’s H air Vigor, os now
made from our new improved
formula, does not stain or color
the hair even to the slightest
degree. G ray hair, white hair,
blonde hair is not m ade t
shade darker. But it certainly
d o e s scop f a l l i n g hair. No
question about that.
Does not change I he color o f the hair.
Formula with eaoh botti*
« ijers
S h o w it to your
d o c to r
A sk h im «borni li,
then do *a ho o*yo
Indeed, we believe it will stop every case
of falling hair unless there is some very
unusual complication, something greatly
affecting the genera) health. Then you
should consultyour physician Also ask
him about the new A yer’ s H sir Vigor.
•—
M a d e b y th e J . C . A y e r C o., L o w e ll, Mono.— -
H er
Ilr lffh t
Id e a .
The
daughter of a Providence
Girl W ith the Fur Jacket— E v ery clergyman was reading In her eccle»
body speaks well of the preacher &! lastioal paper an account of a religi
ous ceremony in a western diocese:
your church.
Girl W ith the Y ellow Buskins— H e’s “ The solemn eucharlst was sung by
Just as nice as he can bo. When there’« Bishop Weller, with Bishop Grafton
only a few people at the morning ser pontificating from the throne."
vice he never gota cross and roasts
"W hat does pontificating mean?" shs
them because the congregation isn’t asked her father.
largsr.
"H a v e you studied Latin and don’t
G e n u in e A la r m .
know the meaning of a very simple
“ Madam, your pot dog bit my little word?” was the reply.
boy In the face this morning.”
"Oh, yes, 1 see. It means he bridged
“Oh, you alarm me! Had your little I t ” — Boston Transcript.
boy’s face been anttseptlcally washed?”
T h e W lM tlom o f S ile n c e «
“Of course not. I----- ’’
“Good heavsn, woman! How could
The late Judge Silas Bryan, the
you let the little darling run such a father of W illiam J. Bryan, once had
risk!
James, telephone at once for several hams stolen from his smoke
the veterinarian.” — Baltimore Am er house. He missed them at once, but
ican.
________________
said nothing about It to any one. A
few days later a neighbor came to him.
L ig h tn in g C h an ge.
"Say, Judge,” he said, “ I hear'd yaw
“ Marla, who is the spider legged
gawk that comes to aee Bessie two or had some hams stole t’other n igh t.”
"Y es,” replied the Judge, very con *
| three times a week?”
“ Why, don’t you know, John? That’s dentlally, “ but don't tell any one. You
young Mr. Welloph, the Junior partner and I are the only ones who know It *
In the firm of Spotcash A Co.”
— Success Magazine.
"W ell, confound her, why doesn't she
give him a little more encouragement?”
T o ( h e Iln H e iiie n t V i a W l r e l e
— Chicago Tribune.
The janitor neglects the heat,
A customary trick!
Ia T h is T r u e !
The tenant kicks a register
"W h y don’t the common people get
T o register a kick.
more?”
— Kansas City Times.
"Because thev don't exist as a body.
E very Individual thinks he Is slightly
superior to the general run of human
REDUCE THE COST OF LIV1N*
ity ."— Louisville Courier-Journal.
T act.
The
P o in t
of
use CRESCENT
V ie w .
Because each rose must have Its thorn.
The pessimist Fate’s plan opposes;
The optimist, more gladly born,
Is glad because the thorns have
roses.
— Nixon Waterman, In Baturday E ven
ing Post.
BAKING POWDER
25c. FULL POUND
Take LAXATIVE RROMO Quinine Tablets.
Druggists refund money if it fxils to cure. E. W .
G R O V E ’S signature i« on each box.
25a.
H I«
Portland is the big market place of the
Northwest.
I ’ u r n u lt .
"W hat does Ardup follow for a liv
ing ?’’
“ Just now he la following old Scad-
well’s daughter. In the hope that ha
will be living In the Scadwell fam ily
m e day.”
F lt fa lle
•<
fro m
th e
Write Us.
M cEw en &
Lucky
K o sk e y
JUST RIGHT
CLOSSET fi DEVER3
PORTLAND. ORt.
T r ia l
B o ttle
F ree
B y M e li
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
129 Front S t,
Portland, Ore.
i'u n t .
Croesus was counting his gold.
"F or the life of me,” he said, " I can’t
make It come up to the published esti
mates of my w ealth !"
Reflecting, however, that John D.
Rockefeller probably had the
same
kind of trouble, ha amlled grim ly and
kapt on xxintlng.
U ir
BAKIN0 POWDER
- EXTRACTS
Send Your Produce TH ERE
Host (In In d ia)—Do you see that
fanatic over there?
Ha has sat on
that corner and In that posture, w ith
out moving, for six months.
Traveler ( f r 6m Am erica) — Gee!
That’s going some!
Leaaon
COFFEE!- '
TEA SPICES
We are handlers o f Eggs, Butter,
Veal, Dressed Hogs, Poultry, live or
dressed; also Apples, Onions, Pota
toes. Consignments, whether large
or small, are solicited. We can give
you good prices for good stuff.
S la n g .
Best fo r Children
CURE
Age.
“ Speaking of the Wright brothers,
ft’s a good thing for people who like
to travel by water that Fulton lived
l good many years ago.”
"Why that?”
“ He would undoubtedly be trying to
get an Injunction on all tha boats
afloat.” — Boston Herald.
X U U S X fttlY U U TO«
H
1
I
I
DR. W. H. MAY, 548 Purl Strati, New Ysrt.
G iv e s instant relief w hen little throats
are irritated and sore.
Contains
no opiates and is as pleasant to take
as it is effective.
^
1
I f yon Buffer from Epilepsy, Fits, Falling Sickness,
Hpasms, o r h a v e ch ild re n that ___
d o so,
my 1 New
.my
_ D ir
coveiy will relieve them, ami all you are asked t-
do ia to send fur a Free Trla 1 $2 Bottle o f Dr. May*!
C p ll o p t lo l d o
O u r « !
I t haa cored thousands where everything etui
fulled. Guaranteed by May Medical Laboratory
Under Pure Food and Drugs Act, June 80th, 1009
Guaranty No. 18971. Please write for Special Free
Bottle and (rive A G E nod complete address
A ll D ru xiU t., 28 ea
ainless Dentistry
Out of tow* people
Í hovo their plat#
bridge work
Bh#d
Wo will vivo yov • |
22k fold or porci
crown lor
$3.
Molar Crow»« 5 .
22k Dridf«Tooth 3 .
Sold Filling*
1.
Enamel Filling« 1.
Silvor Filling«
Pleasant, l(e/resl|jg, Benc/icial.
InUy rilli.lt
Syrup of Figs and Elixir of
Senna appeals to the cultured
and the well-informed and the
healthy because its component
parts are simple and whole
some and because it acts with
out disturbing the natural func
tions, as it is wholly free from
every objectionable quality or
lubstance. In its production a
pleasant and refreshing syrup
of the figs of California is unit
ed with the laxative and car
minative properties of certain
plants known to act most bene
ficially, on the human system,
when its gentle cleansing is de
sired. T o get its beneficial ef
fects, always buy the genuine,
for sale by all reputable drug
gists;
one size only, price
fifty cents a bottle. The name
of the company — California
Fig Syrup Co.— is always plain
ly printed upon the front of ev
ery package of the genuine.
tan are standing by the vessel, which
lies more than half out of water. M.
Walsh, who was shipwrecked in the
Farallon on Cook Inlet last month, and
who was obliged to spend four weeks in
camp after that steamship went down,
was a passenger on the Yucatan and
made good use o f his former exper
W h e n M a li-b e e W e r e la t r o d n e e d .
ience as a caataway. It it said he did
The Atlas, a London newspape,,
more than anyone else to make the
published on Jan. 10, 1830, the follow
Goose Island camp comfortable.
ing paragraph under the bead of "In
stantaneous Light” ; “ Among the dif
A viation S c h o o l Planned.
Los Angeles, Feb. 22.— Plans for ferent methods Invented for obtaining
the establishment o f 8 ‘ ‘ school for aer light Instantaneously ought certainly
ial research” were presented to the to be recorded that of Mr. Walker,
He sup
city authorities and the various civic chemist, Stockton-on-Tees.
bodies today when members o f the plies the purchaser with prepared
Aero club o f California asked the may matches, which are put Into boxes, but
or and the beads o f the various associa are not liable to change In the atmos
tions to name member* o f a commis phere, and also with a piece of fine
sion to direct such an institution. Ex glass paper folded In two. Even a
perimenters and
invsntors
in all strong blow will not Inflame the
branches o f sviation and meteorology matches, because of the softness of ( a
l
i
/
will be aided by the proposed plan.
the wood underneath, nor does rubbing
upon wood or any common substance
Sumpter Survivor Dies.
produce any effect except that of spoil LOUISVILLE.
Erie, Ps., Feb. 22.—James Gibbons, ing the match. But when one Is pinch- I
the last o f the little garrison that sur ed between the folds of the glass pa
rendered with Major Robert Anderson per and suddenly drawn out It Is In
Mr. Walker does
in 1861 when Fort Sumpter was fired stantly Inflamed.
upon, died tonight. - Gibbons waa not make them for extensive sale, but j
credited with sighting the first gun only to supply the email demand la
hla aw i neighborhood
fired by the Union forces.
2 .
Good Rubhor
m
Plat««
5 .0 8
B««t Rod %k- _ mm
bor Plato,
7 .8 Q
. w. L win, r
Palnloaa Extr’ilon
l i tum irrmtiMtt n h it u m
W O X K G U A R A N T E E D F O R IE Y E A R !
| Pain!*«« Extraction h r**o when plot*.'«or bridge x
to ordered. Oonaaltatlon Free, Yon oannot nwtbotto*
1 p * ln l* M w o rk d o n e a n y w h e ro . A l l w o r k f u lly r n a r >
•nteod. Modern electric equipment. Moot mot beds#
W ise Dental Co.
F a il in '* B u ii . d me _ _
T r i h d * W # i h .B t i . P O R T L A N D , O R E G O N
ovrxci HOUU: f a . M- to • » . M. iendeya. I t t i
C. Gee Wo
Thi Chinesi Doctor
Thin womleful man ham
made a life ntudy o f tb «
roperties o f Root«.
lerbe and Barks, and
U Hiving the world tlM
benefit of his servieea.
R
No Mercury, P a l a a f
or D rugs Used. N «
Operations or Cut tin«
Guarantees to c u r « Catarrh, Asthma, Lung.
Rtomarh and Kidney troubles, and all Frl«afc«
Diseases of M n and Women.
A S U F ÍCANCER CURE
Jast received from Prkln, China-sofa# M M
and reliable. U..failing inIta works.
I f you cannot call, write for symptom blank
and circular. In c h «« 4 cents In stomp«.
CONSULTATION PREC
The C. Gee Wo Medicine Co.
IS m
o
KY.
r
n
i
a
j
1
S
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
PUTNAM
J. i.
Dullness means a lack of Iroaglna
tlon, and without Imagination life and
happiness are both Impossible.
Re
llgion and art. from one point of view
•hag# the some mission. They b rln i
to man the sense of amazement. They
teach us that the world is a wonderful
fairy palace, the place of hourly mira
cles. Then we discover that we our
selves are most amazing creatures. The
dull man Is not Interested in him self
has no self-love. I am certain that nc
man can lore his neighbor unless h<
has learned to love himself. From our
selves we discover humanity.
y
r
u
p
(
o
N E W Y O R K , N. Y
P N
W
n m U . , car. M w -rio««, Part lank. Or.
N a * —’ 10
U
i n s w r itin g to ad .a r i
m - n t l o a t h la p a p a r .
FADELESS
DYES
brlgHtor an# la o U i colors than any other d y*. O n* 10c p a c k s « « color* aUk, w o o l and cotton «tj'.ially t
s t p a id x -------------
t 10c a p a c -----
k age. W rite —
l o r ----—
ftc a l
Ito
-------------- !«ctr«au U a. A ak itoator. or w « w i l l — nd i r p o ------
’a £ T £ t£ o
M O NRO E D R U O C O M * A N T . Quincy, DUI