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About Mosier bulletin. (Mosier, Or.) 1909-19?? | View Entire Issue (June 14, 1912)
'INSURING AGAINST HEN LICE •ood Spray Pump Will Do a t Much In an Hour aa Bruah Will In a Day—Beat Formula. The time to tight lie« I" "11 the ■1me. Absolute cleanliness must be maintained at all times. The drop -n o t t e a pings should be removed at least one« i week. -n o t c o ffe e Twice a year. In spring and au tumn, a general clean up should take It's the most de- place. The perches should be re moved and burned until the outside 1 1/ lightful Breakfast Me thoroughly charred. The building should be thoroughly whitewashed. Drink you ever tasted For this purpose a spray pump not )nly facilitates the work, but does a — and the mast wholesome and I much .hotter Job, the spray putting the invigorating. You cannot but whitewash Into cracks and crevices like its rich “ g r a in g " flavor and that would be difficult to reach with a spicy aroma. A ik your grocer for | brush. I A good spray pump will do as much In an hour as could ordinarily (G O LD EN G R A IN G RA N U LES) se done In a day with a brush. The —if he hasn't got it he w ill get it for perches should be thoroughly sprayed you. It’s good for you 3 times a day. ¡very week or so with kerosene to keep A nd remember that there j lown the red mites. These mites at- is no substitute for 3 G’s. | tack the fowls only at night, and are found on th« perches, or In cracks and :revlces near the roosting place. Kerosene Is an effective remedy, but OW A RD E. B U R T O N - Aooayer a n a r h e m t a t !t should be applied frequently. H L ead villa, C olorado. S p e c im e n prut*«: Gold, tiilv e r . L oad. SI. G o ld . S ilv e r. 75o; G o ld . 60c: Z inc The litter should be replaced with o r C opper, SL M a ilin g en velope* a id f u ll p ric e lis t on application. Control and Umpire work ao ;Iean material at least once a month. E nt sited. Reference: Carbonate Nat tonal Bank. The nests should be looked to fre- juently. Straw Is a poor material for Second-Hand Machin nests, as the hollow straws make nice ery bought, sold and exchanged: en g in es, biding and breeding places for red boiler", sawm ills, etc. The J. E. Martin Co.. 76 1st mites. Excelsior Is preferred by S t.. Portland. Send for Stock Liat and prices. many. However, the best material for nesting purposes Is tobacco stems. I T A H û I T C A N D KODAK When the house has been thor- A i U l i / i l i d S U P P L I E S pughly rid of the pests the fowls W rito for Catalogues and L iterature. W e do D e There are velop in g and Prin tin g. Mail orders g iven prompt ihould receive attention. a tten tio n . B l u m a u e r P h o t o S u p p l y C o . 343Vii W a sh in gton St., Portland many lice powders on the market, but the safest plan Is to make your own at home aa needed. The Farm and Home says the best formula Is two ounces Caution’s Choice. *A man of your energy and talents ;rude carbolic acid, four ounces gaso should take an active part In politics." line and one pound alr-slaked lime. "No," replied Dustin Stax. "I prefer The carbolic acid and gasoline should big business. In politics when you be thoroughly mixed and poured over decide to forget the details of a trans the lime, stirring the whole mass thor action some one is sure to pull an old oughly. Keep away from Are. After standing for several days a fine pow icrap book on you.” der Is the result. Use In a sifter-top T r y F l o r in © E y e R e m e d y f o r R e d , can. Experience has shown that this W e a k , W a te r y E y e« a n d G r a n u la t e d E y e lid * powder la very effective. iS'o S m a r t i n g —J u s t E y e C o m f o r t . f TROOPS LAND ON CUBAN SOIL Havana Believes Move Is Begin ning of Intervention. Intention la Ostensibly to Protect American Lives and Property— W arships En Route. Havana — American marines have landed on Cuban soil. To the number of 450, under command of Colonel Lucas, they came ashore at Cai- maneria and proceeded by train to Guantanamo City. While it is officially asserted this action was taken solely, to protect American and other foreigon proper ties, the impression became general that it was a preliminary step to American intervention. This caused excitement at the capital. Later it became known that the landing was in response to an urgent appeal to the commandant of the United States naval station by the Chamber of Commerce of Guantanamo, to afford protection to the numerous foreign estates in the vicinity. One hundred and twenty additional marines were dispatched to Guantan amo and the American force probably will be ample to safeguard the foreign properties in that district. There was great excitement in Havana on the circulation of a report that four American battleships were on their way from Key West. The rumor was current that the ships had been signalled off Moro Castle and were expected to enter the harbor within an hour. The excite ment subsided on receipt of the news that the warships had been ordered to Guantanamo. The senate approved the recom mendation of the committee on laws that the president be authorized to suspend the constitutional guarantees, but only in the Province of Oriente. This was approved also by the house of representatives. The senate passed some Self-Denial Necessary. IMPROVING QUALITY OF MILK a bill authorizing President Gomez to We all have to put up with one an other; one cannot do that even In our Most Effective Single Factor In Keep expend $1,000,000 for increase of the armed forces. own homes, without conceding a ing Dirt Out Is Use of Small- good deal which we should very much Topped Pall. like to retain. An Inexpensive means of Improving anywhere, at the sanitary quality of milk should In DAISY FLY KILLER placed tra c t« and k illa all fliee. N e a t, cle a n , terest alike producer, handler and con Washington, D. C.—George S. Nix o rn a m e n ta l, oonven sumer. The demand for purer milk on, United States senator from Ne ie u t. c h e ap . Last» Is Increasingly Insistent, especially ell season. M ade ol vada, died in a hospital here of spinal m e ta l, c a n 't s p ill 01 ti|> o ver; w ill n o t soil near cities, and the producer must meningitis. o r i n ju r e a n y th in e . frequently meet thlB demand, without G u a ra n te e d effective Senator Nixon was one of the con- Bold by dealers 01 much, If any, Increase In returns. So 6 s e n t p re p a id f o r SI. he must make the Improvement, If spicius mining men in the West and HAROLD 80 ME Eft. tfO D e K a lb A ve.. Brooklyn. N. T was intimately associated with the possible, without much added outlay. gold operations in Goldfield in his The most effective single factor In home state. He was 52 years old keeping dirt—and the bacteria which and a native of California, having Wouldn't Try It On Himself. “And you didn't know it was load accompany It—out of milk. Is the use gone to Nevada early in life. He ac ed?” “No, Judge, I swear I didn’t.” of the email-topped or covered pall. quired large interests at Reno, Gold “But before pointing It at the de In extended tests at the New York field and elsewhere and began his po ceased. why did you not look Into the agricultural experiment station, at litical career with service in the barrel to see whether or not It was Geneva, with several forms of covered Nevada legislature. loaded?” "Why, Judge, that would palls, the reduction In the numbers of have been a fool thing to do! It might bacteria ranged from one-half to two- m c n a m a r a s l o s e c r e d i t s .; have exploded and killed me.”—Hous thirds. This was In a stable already under good sanitary conditions, so B rothers Refuse to Abide by Prison ton Post. that much less reduction was to be W arden's Rules. expected than In the ordinary farm San Francisco—James B. and John stable. It Is perfectly safe to say that MEXICAN the use of the small-topped pall In J. McNamara, the former serving life any country cow stable will exclude and the latter 14 years at San Quentin more than one-half the bacteria now in connection with the Los Angeles found in the milk from that stable. dynamiting cases, are both under the One of the most efficient of such palls ban at San Quentin prison for failure Is made by attaching a simple cover to do the work assigned them. The two ex-union labor leaders have to the common open pall, the making and putting on of this cover being had their credits taken from them, simple operations. Any tinsmith and must remain without privileges FOR SPRAINS. should do the work for less than $1. until they show a disposition to con G . M . N orthrop, B u b c e , A riz., w rites: Full details of these tests are given form to the rules of the prison and "I h a re been using M exican M u sta n g L in im en t for a sprained fo o t w ith great re su lt,. In Bulle*ln No. 326, of the station, perform the daily tasks allotted to I t ’s an a w fu l lin e r e m e d y for such ailm en ts." vhlch will be sent free to applicants. them in common with the other pris I t penetrates quickly, rem oves a ll inflam . oners. Warden Hoyle has admitted m o tio n and reduces the swelling. that the McNamara brothers had 2 5 c . 5 0 c . $1 a b o ttle a t Drug & G en 'l S toree No General Rule for Balkers. Balky horses seem to have an Indi fallen foul of the prison laws of dis rlduality. Just like folks, and a rule cipline. Actions a Criterion. Their position is precisely that oc A slender acquaintance with th< that will work with one may not with cupied for 30 days by Abraham Ruef. another. Brutal treatment seldom world must convince every man tha' One of the tasks assigned both actions, not words, are the true crl tends to fetch a horse out of Its balk, brothers was handling 100 yards of neither does a loss of self-control on terlon of the attachment of friends; cloth in the jute mill each day. They and that the most liberal professloni the part of the driver. Sometimes proved stubborn, and after repeated of good-will are very far from beini Ignoring the fit the animal Is having warnings that they must do the work the surest marks of It.—George Wash and pretending to fix the harness or exactly as other prisoners did, were rapping on the animal's foot with a lncton. stone will cause It to forget the recent removed from the mill. inpleaBantness. Three G's Machinery SENATOR NIXON, NEVADA MILLIONAIRE, IS DEAD MUSTANG L IN IM E N T HOW GIRLS MAY AVOID PERIODIC PAINS The Experience of Two Girl* Here Related For The Benefit of Others. Rochester, N. Y. — “ I have a daugh ter 13 years old who has always been very healthy until recently when she complained of dizziness and cramps every month, so bad that I would have to keep her home from school and put her to bed to get relief. ‘‘After giving her only two bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound she is now enjoying the best of health. I cannot praise your Compound too highly. I want every good mother to read what your medicine has done for my child.” — Mrs. R ichard N. D unham , 811 Exchange SL, Rochester, N.Y. Stoutsville, Ohi». — ‘‘I suffered from headaches, backache and was very irreg ular. A friend ad vised me to ta k e ! Lydia E. Pinkham’s V e g e t a b l e Com pound, and before I had taken the whole of two b o t t i es 1 found relief. I am only sixteen yean old, but I have bet ter health than for two or three yean. I cannot express my thanks for what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done for me. I had taken other medicines but did not find relief.’’-M iss C ora B. F osnaugh . Stoutsville, Ohio, R.F.D., No. 1. Hundreds of such letten from moth- e n expressing their gratitude for what Lydia E. Pinkham’a Vegetable Com pound has accomplished for their daugh ters have been received by the Lydia E. Fink ham Medicine Company, Lynn, Maas. Grays H arbor Fires Burn. Foaling Time. As foaling time approaches give the mare a rest, but let her have exercise In the open air every day. Watch the colt when born and see that the um bilical cord la not severed too close to the bod- nor too soon, as the colt might bleed to death. The little colt should get nourishment from the mare within the first hour or there may be trouble. The watchful eye of the own er should be on the alert at such lmes. A Good LlnlmenL A good liniment for all kinds of swellings on dairy cows, as well as on all other farm animals Is made by mix ing equal parts of turpentine, sweet oil and spirits of camphor. Apply lib erally and frequently to the swollen farts. Cooling Milk la an Art. Cooling off milk Is an art Dot all o us know. If you have an aerator, well and good: that will do the work for you. If not, turn your milk from one can to another till the animal heat Is out of I t It Is a good plan also to let It stand In water all night It the vater Is running, so much the better Well-Trained Farm Man. The “hired” man on the farm, win has mastered his business Is a skilled laborer, and should be so treated, yet It Is usually Impossible for him to get a small amount per month, a mere trifle, over the price paid the ineffi- tlent laborer. Soil for Onions. Aberdeen, Wash. — Fires in the logged-off lands and slashings sur rounding the Grays Harbor district continue to burn and are being fanned by winds, which will endanger green timber unless rain falls soon. A large area has been burned over in the South Bay district, and the wind is driving the fire at a fairly fast rate. The logged-off land in this district covers several sections, and will take some days before the fire reaches a fine body of green timber, directly in its path. Two Sleep Walkers Fall. San Francisco — Walking in his sleep, Thomas Gorman, chief engineer of the steamer Charles Nelson, fell through a window in his room in the Harbor hotel and plunged through a skylight three stories below. His skull was fractured and he received other injuries believed to be fatal. Chicago—While asleep and attempt ing to slide down the brass pole in a fire engine-house. Lieutenant Joseph T. Bslak fell from the second floor of hii quarters and was killed. Yaquis Surround Garrison. Tucson, Aril. — Surrounded by s strong force of Yaqui Indians the fed eral garrison at Santa Maria, near Mayortorena, Sonora, sent an appeal to Hermosillo for reinforcements. The beleaguered garrison sent word it eould not bold out long. Help cannot be sent immediately, however, as the federal forces in this vicinity were de pleted when 504 men were dispatched to join the forces of General Huerta in Chihuahua. Onions require a deep, melloa loam soil with a large per cent, organ ic matter. You will be disappointed If Battery C ar Travels Far. you plant onions on close, clammy and Seattle, Wash.—With a capacity of compact soil. carrying So people at 30 miles an hour running 3(0 miles without a recharge, Keeping Books on Birds. the first Edison electric storage bat The poultryman who fallt to kee, tery railroad ear to be used west of an accurate account of hie transac the Rocky Mountains has arrived in tions Is traveling over the road of Seattle and will go to Alaska on the Uncertaintr that leads to Fallons. steamship Edith. PLANS HARD FIGHT. E x-Pretident Hill Says Great North ern Will Fortify Self. Spokane—The Great Northern and other Hill railroads in the Northwest will fight the Canadian Pacific and Harriman lines at their own game, ac cording to a statement made in Spo kane by Louis W. Hill, of St. Paul, ex-president [of the Great Northern railway. Wherever either of the com peting lines build into Hill territory, they may look for a retaliatory move on the part of the Great Northern. “ We are going to fortify ourselves as no railroad [in the Northwest is fortified,’’ said Mr. Hill, "by control ling with north and south and east and west lines all of the desirable terri tory of the great Northwest. “ We*were the pioneers and we don’t expect to lose our heritage. In Central Washington, particularly to ward the Canadian boundary and across, we are going to absolutely con trol the situation. The vast tonnage of that country will be hauled by our lines, those which exist, those under construction, and those contem plated.” In regard to the situation on the Sanpoil, through the Colville Indian reservation, the railroad right-of-way of which is being contested by the S. & B. C., a Canadian Pacific property, Mr. Hill reiterated that the Great Northern would ultimately triumph. "That is giving us little concern,” said Mr. Hill. “ It did worry us until I made my automobile trip into that ‘neck of the woods.’ Now I am sleep ing better and worrying little.” Mr. Hill declared that the Great Northern will strengthen its position in the Palouse by acquiring new right- of-way and building a limited amount of mileage this year. “ We have secured terminal facili ties for one of our properties at Lew iston and we have a right-of-way from Genesee to Lewiston. In that great wheat belt we hope soon to be mater ially strengthened,” Baid M. Hill. Further than to state that the Hill lines will push the Spokane & Inland south to Lewiston, Mr. Hill refused to commit himself. “ But take my tip ,” he said, “ we are growing more secure in our posi tion in the Northwest every day.” BAGGAGE RATE HELD UP. Increase on “ Excess” to Be Investi gated By Commission. Washington, D. C. — New regula tions for transportation of baggage proposed by nearly every railroad in the United States, which, in effect, would advance the rates on “ excess” were suspended by the Interstate Com merce commission. The suspension becomes effective July 1, and contin ues in force for 120 days, pending investigation. The new regulations not only sought to amend the excess rates, but to prohibit the carriage of certain size pieces of baggage. The proposed regulations follow; “ On and after July, 1 for any piece of baggege (except immigrant bag gage checked at port of landing) the greatest dimension of which exceeds 45 inches, there will be an additional charge for each additional inch equal to the charge for ten pounds of ex cess weight. “ On and after July 1, 1912, no piece of baggage, the greatest dimension of which exceeds 70 inches (excepting immigrant baggage), will be trans ported in baggage cars.” The commission believes that the fixing by the roads of the dimensions of baggage will work an unnecessary hardship upon travelers. Irrigation Is Studied. Washington, D. C.—The engineer ing work of the United States for the reclamation of the arid lands of the West is receiving the close attention of numerous foreign governments. Representatives sent by France and Germany now are en route to the West to study the work the reclama tion service is doing there. An itin erary has been arranged for the visi tors, who will devote several months to a tour of observation. The French government is represented by M. Da- bat, director of waters and forests. Hepner Wool it Sold. Heppner, Or. — About 1,000,000 pounds of wool was sold here at the sales Thursday. Prices ranged from 14 to 18 cents. The principal buyers were J. R. Hooper, N. S. Sinsheimer, C. F. Angell, Otto Kuhn, Charles Green, S. F. Frankenstein, E. J. Burke, Charles Ryder, M. H. Com- mings, Dufour, and The Dalles Scour ing Mills. The growers seem to be fairly well satisfied with the prices paid, and there was less kick than usual on that point. There will be almost as much more here by July 1. FIRE AND LAVA A FROM PEAKS “DRAUGHTSMAN” BUNGALOW Alaskan Volcanoes Cover Land With Stones and Ashes. Sea it Pelted With Hail of Red Hot S tones—Air Stifling With Sul phurous Gases. »1425 to build. Complete plans and specifications 510.00. DE LUXE BUILDING CO.. Union League Building, Los Angeles, Cal. Second edition of Draughtsmans now ready for mailing, 25c. COULDN’T REPEAT THOUGHTS A MODEL Newly Married Man Would Not Tell Wife What He Was Thinking •» When He Missed Train. CHAUTAUQUA Sitka, Alaska — Ashes from the Aleutian range volcanoes began to fall here Sunday, and the sun shone like a Conditions at Gladstone “Alfred,” she asked, cuddling up to Park Appioach the Ideal ball of fire through the cinders. him, "do you tell me all your Sitka is 200 miles in a direct line thoughts?” T h e W il l a m e tt e V a lle y C h a u t a u q u a , w h ic h c o n v e n e » a t G la d s to n e P a r k . O re g o n from the volcanoes. "Why do you ask that, you foolish C ity . J u l y 9 to 21. 1912, ia m aking- e la b o r a te little girl?” p r e p a r a ti o n * to a c c o m m o d a te t h e l a r g e s t Seward, Alaska—Four volcanoes in “Because I love you so. You prom c ro w d in i t s su ccessfu l c a r e e r o f e ig h t e e n y e a rs. A lw a y s lo a d in g in C h a u t a u q u a the Aleutian mountain range have ised that you would tell me every p r o g rtm aive n e ss, t h e d i r e c t o r s a r e c o n - burst into activity and are throwing thing. Do you?" B tr u c tin g a l a r g e s e p ti c t a n k a n d b u ild iiy f a n e w B e w a re s y s te m , w i t h a ll m o d e m “Oh, you wouldn’t want me to tell out great quantities of smoke and hot I you s a n i t a r y d e v ic e s f o r t h e c o m f o r t a m i c o n everything, would you?" v e n ie n c e o f i t s p a tr o n s . A largre f o r c e o f ashes. The awakened peaks are She drew away from him In sudden w o r k m e n ia e n la r g in g o ld b u ild in g s , a n d e re c tin K n e w on»a. a n d t h e P . R . L . & P . Uiamna, St. Augustine, Redoubt in fright. Her worst suspicions were t r a c k f o r t h e c a r s e rv ic e , w h ic h g o e s r i g h t the Cook Inlet country, and Katmai, verified. i n to t h e p a r k , ia b e in g r e -lla lla s te d . W ith a n a r r a y o f p e e r le s s p l a t f o r m t a l - which overlooks Shelikoff strait. Nu "You are deceiving m et“ she ex n»it. a n d w ith G la d s to n e P a r k m a d e e v e n merous shocks were experienced here claimed. “You—” m o re id ea ! b y t h e l a t e s t m o v e o f t h e d i r e c t o r s . W illa m m e tte V a lle y p e o p le c a n and the sun was almost obscured by “No, no. my dear, don’t think thaL w e ll be p r o u d o f t h e i r p o p u l a r i n s t i t u t i o n . vapor coming from the west. I wouldn t deceive you for the world.” Land and sea for miles in every di “You have Just admitted that you rection from the mountains in erup don’t tell me all your thoughts.” tion are covered with ashes. Lava “Well, there are some that—" and rock are pouring forth and devas “Don’t! Don’t!” she cried. “You tating all in their path. ff are going to He. I hate lies tha worst ^ P o r tla n d . O regon / -_ _ — That all life on Kadiak island and of all things. I—” ^ R e s id e n t a n d Day dc h o o l f o r G irl« li^ P m the mainland has perished in the fiery c h a rg e o f R iatent o f S t. J o h n B a p tis t (K plaoopa))« Her feelings overcame her, and she Calloglato, Academic a nd E lem entary D epartm ents, I rain belched forth is the belief of oovered her face with her bands. M usic. A rt. Elocution. O ym natlum . I those aboard the mail steamship Dora, F o r c a ta lo g addroaa T i l t : S l S T l . l t S U P E R I O R I "Don’t be silly," be begged. * O f f ic e 30. S t. H e l e n a H u l l plying to points along the Alaskan "Silly!” she tragically replied. “Do peninsula and Kadiak island. you call It silly for me to refuse to ba The Dora’s master says that 1600 deceived?" By Natural Reasoning. persons engaged in the salmon can “You are not deceived. I never—” A keen student of human nature ning business may be dead, as it is the “You have Just admitted that you height of the cannery season and large have thoughts which you cannot tell must have written the following: "When you see a young man sailing crews are employed. The Dora has me!” arrived at Seldovia. “Oh, I could tell them to you; but 1 down a street shortly after midnight Mount Katmai's outbreak was de don’t think you would care to have | with hts collar crumpled, you can scribed by the crew of the Dora as me do so." make up your mind that there’s a young girl crawling upstairs not far terrible in its violence. Deafening "Then what are they?" subterranen explosiona, they said, are "They are the thoughts I think when distant, with her shoes under her arm occurring at short intervals and the I have to run to the station In the and an extinguished lamp in her hail of hot ashes and monster boulders morning owing to a late breakfast, hand.” has covered the earth four feet deep. and see tha train moving out of the The sea in the neighborhood of station." When Your Eyes Need Care Mount Katmai, they reported, was T r y M u r i n e E y e R e m e d y . No S m a r t i n g — F e e l « M oth ers w ill fin d Mrs. W in slo w 's S o o th in g F in e — A c t a Q u i c k l y . T r y i t f o r R e a , Weak» lashed into foam by the plunging of Syrup th o b e s t rem ed y to u se fo r tb e lr cb U d reu Watery f y — and Granulated E y e l i d s , i i i u s - red-hot missiles hurled from Katmai’s l u r i n g th e te e t h in g p erio d . t r a t e i l B o o k in e a c h P a c k a tr e . M u r i n e ia c o m p o u n d e d b y o u r O c n llN tH -n o t a “ P u U 'n t M e d throat into the sea. The vessel was i c i n e ’’ — b u t n»»*d In 8iice»‘s s f u i P h y s i c i a n s ’ P r a c t i c e f o r m a n y y e a rs . N ow d e d ic a te d to th o P u b struck by a number of |small boulders Emerson on Woman Suffrage. lic a n d a o ld b y h r u e g is t s a t 26c a n d 60c p e r R o ttto . and its deck was banked a foot and a It a woman demands votes, offices M u rin e E y e S a lv o in A s e p tic T u b e s , 26c a n d 60»% half deep with ashes. and political equality with men, as M urine Eye Remedy C o., C hlo ag o Shelikoff strait, from where the among the shakero an elder and elder- Dora fled, resembled a monster steam ess are of equal power—and among Modern Witches. ing cau dron. Smoke from the blaz the Quakers—It must not be refused. A little boy who went to the same ing mountain obscured the sky for It Is very cheap wit that finds It so school I did w b b reading a story about hundreds of miles and the day was as droll that women should vote.—Ralph witches. When he finished the teach night. So dense was the smoke the Waldo Emerson. er asked him if he knew whether Dora’s captain was obliged to steer a witches still existed. “Oh, yes,” he Red O ran Ball B lue w ill w ash double aa m any said, "only they call them old maids course 50 miles from her usual route clothe« aa any other blue. D on’t p u t your m oney in order to pass Kadiak island. now.“—Exchange. Into any other. The wave indications in Shelikoff F a s h io n 's D a n g e r s . strait were Buch that the Dora's mas Two or Four Kinds of Women. Fashion is dangerous, not only be ter did not attempt any landings, Someone—probably one of those cause it swallows up fortunes and vir- fearing that there had been a general Frenchmen whose life Job It was to shifting of the ocean bottom near tues, but because It reveals your most make epigrams—once said that there Intimate thoughts to all who can read shore. For this reason, as well as are but two kinds of women; good because of the smoke and ashes, the women and bad women. Ever since Mother’s Responsibility First. Dora did not dare to approach Kadiak. problem playwrights have been Before the state, before her hus then Katmai has always been regarded as putting that fiction into the mouths extinct. The natives have no tra band, a mother Is responsible for her of wronged husbands and building dition of any former activity of the ihlldren’s upbringing.—Exchange. their "big scene” around 1L But mountain. There are four Red C ro u Hall Blue, all blue, b eet blu in g value don’t you believe It. In th e w hole world, m akes th e laundreaa sm ile. kinds; good women, bad women, good DOWIE’S FORTUNE IN BANK. bad women and bad good women. And For Bon«-8etters. A recently Invented aluminum appa the worst of these Is the lasL—Amer Widow in Want, Ignorant of Great ratus makes the most minute details ican Magazine. Secret Hoard. of a fracture distinctly visible. Alum Chicago—While Mrs. John Alexan inum ta no more an obstacle to the der Dowie, widow of the late “ Proph X-rays than clear glass is to the sight. e t” Elijah II, has been living in pov As the metal Is transparent to th6 erty, often in actual want, in her cot rays tha operating surgeon can oxam- tage in Zion City, watching the grave Ine the fracture without haste or dif A T on ic A lterative and R ctolvcn t. The rem ed y for K idn eys, L iver an d R owels. of her husband, for fear his successor, ficulty, closing hln apparatus only bent Kratlicatea P im p les, Rruptioun an d Disorder* Wilbur Glenn Voliva, will have the when every fragment has been put In o f th e s k in . Purifies th e Rloo»l and give* T one, S tren gth uud V igor to th e en tir e sy stem . body removed, a fortune in the name place. of Alexander Dowie has been lying Separating Lady’s Finger Tips. idle in a bank in Edinburgh, Scotland. Many boys pride themselves on Every Saturday afternoon for seve ral years before his death Dowie their muscular strength. Let a girl would sit at his typewriter in his pri place the tips of her forefingers togeth The DIRECT plan of buying or selling vate office, write a letter to his for er, keeping her elbows on a level with Real Estate. No commissions to pay. eign banker, inclosing a check for a her shoulders, and challenge any boy List your property or wants with us. large sum of money. In all, it is be to take hold of her wrists and sep We put you in touch with interested lieved, he sent several hundred thou arate them by a steady pull. Unless parties. If you wish to buy, you deal sand dollars away in this manner she be unusually weak or be be very direct with owner. Address DIRECT REALTY CO. without saying a word to his wife. strong, he will probably fall.—Wom 401 Yeon Building. Portland, Ore. Only one servant knew of these pro an’s World. ceedings and this servant now has told A u t o m o b i l e E y e l n . u r n n r p n e e d e d lif t e r the story. E xp osu re to S u n , Wind« end D uet. M urine Eye INVESTIGATE Express Hit by Flyer. Fargo, N. D.—The Winnipeg flyer, fast Northern Pacific train from Win nipeg to Minneapolis, while running 40 miles an hour, crashed into the Pa cific Coast express, running from Chi cago to Seattle, at Winnipeg Junc tion, near here, injuring a dozen per sons, but none seriously. Fsilure of the brakes on the flyer to work was assigned as the cause of the wreck. The express train was standing at a crossing of the two lines, waiting to make connections. The dining car on the express was cut completely in two. C ruiser Coming North. Homedy freely epplied A ffords Kelieble R elief. N o S m a r U n s -J u e t E y e C o m fo rt-T ry Murine. Too Shabby for a Servant. Coleridge was one day riding In K» gent’a park in an unusually strange, shabby dress, wben a number or bis friends rods up and met him. Cole ridge offered to fall behind and pans aa one of the party’s servants. “No,” one of tbem said, “I am proud of you as a friend; but, I must say, I should be ashamed of you as a servant.” Painless Dentistry Is o u r p r l d ( - o a r h o b b y — o o r « tody f o r y e a n a n d now o a ria i< « M , a n d ou r« i« t h e bv«t paini««« w o rk t o be fo u n d «ny w h e n ., n o m a t t e r h o w m u c h you p ay. C o m p a r e o u r Prie.’«*«. W e f in is h p i s t e a n d b rid a* work fo i ou t- o t to w n n a tro n « In o n « d a y i f d e s ire d . 1‘a ln le a a e x tr a c tio n fr»ve w b e n p late « o r b rid g e w ork in o rd e r- ion fro«. ire». •d - Consultation Molar Crown« 5 5 . Î 5S-Ö3 Gold .'U llnn Enamol Filling« Origin of Diamonds. i Von Bolton thinks that diamonds were formed In nature by the action of metal vapors, such as Iron or mag 1:S8 22 k B r id f , T m U -4 Silver Filling« *5 Good Rubbor _ Platoo 6 .0 0 Boit Rod Rubber _ IR . W. ft. W ill, f nuotar >•• * m uais Plot«« 7 .6 0 Paint««« E x t r a it * . 5 0 nesium. on carbon dioxide. He baa f l TIM I MTMIMMO « fOOTlMB B U S T M IT H O D O Cherbourg—France suffered another succeeded In making mlcroscoplo dia A l l w o r k f u l l y g u a r a n t e e d f o r f i f t e e n y e marine disaster and lost her fourth monds by tbe action of mercury va submarine when the Vendemairie, in lor on carbon. Painless Dentists the mimic warfare off Cherbourg pen FiM Inf Building, Third and WaahlectM PORTLAND. OMR ------ ------ O ffle o B o a ro : • A . M . to • F . a t. ia a d s y a . • t a b insula, was crushed down by the bat tleship Saint Louis and disappeared in 150 feet of water. The submarine ------- \ was undoubtedly ripped apart by the OUT O f TOWN steel prow of the battleship and all PEOPLE hope of saving her crew is abandoned. c a n r e »*e c e b l* e p r o m p t An official statement issued by the m en ta i of lfon-Poie ___ H e a lth - k a il d in g minister of marine fixes the number fro m Soldiers Use Postal Bank. of men aboard aa 23, including the Vancouver, Wash.—After being in commander, lieutenant and ensign. GEE W O Are you easily tired, lack your operation one year, the United States the Chlaeae doctor. Ruef is Not Paroled. posts savings bank announces that usual vigor and strength? T ry o n c e m o r e I f you h a v '« e b e e n d o c to r! n g w ith there is on deposit a net balance of San Quentin, Cal.—Abraham Ruef’s t h i s o n « a n d t h a t o n e a n d hi_ have _ _____ n o t o b »am ta in e ad d per» m « n « n t rw lle f. l e t t h i s g r e a t n a t a r e h [««lar i.___ d iag- $41,0(6- There are now 347 open ac application for parole, backed by a pe Then your digestion must be n o«« y o a r c o m a n d p r e ■ «arib s c r ib e s t o m e re m ed y w h o se a c t io n la q u ic k , ou re an nd d s oaf a fe R io p resc rip tio n « poor, your blood must be counts in the bank. In Msy the with tition from Fremont Older, managing a r e co m p o u n d e d l fr o m n Roo»«. ]f»>rba B uda an d B ark a t h a t h a v e b e e n _ g a th e r e d fr o m « v a ry q nar- drawals were $6735, much of this be editor of the San Francisco Bulletin, thin, your nerves must be t e r o f th a g lo b e . T h e H mm «secret« *rata o f t tl| h e s e m adiOlnao ing taken to Honolulu by the First In was denied here by the state board of a r e n o t k n o w n t o t h e o u ta ld a w o r ld .__ weak. You need a strong h a n d e d d ow n fr o m f a t h e r t o s e n In t h e fantry, which left here May 9. The prison directora. The board based its f a m il i e s i n C h in n . soldiers sre taking advantage of the decision, not on the fact that Ruef tonic. You need A yer’s C O N S U L T A T I O N FREE. postal savings bank. I f you l i v e ow t o f to w n a n d o a n a o t q a ll. w r it e f o r failed to win the signed support of Sarsaparilla, the only Sarsa s y m p to m b la n k a n d o Iron U r . e n c l o s i n g 4 oasis I s Judge Lawler, who sentenced him, bat Riot Ends in Elaction. on general grounds that this was not a parilla entirely free from alco THE C. SEE WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO. Santa Fe, N. M.—The house, after fit time for the application to be hol. We believe your doctor a turbulent aeaaion, in which members made. will endorse these state- 1621 rira» Si.. C ot . came to blow* and the sergeant-at- P artirn e. O n ta . ments. Ask and find out. Fire Coat Totals 8 5 0 0 ,0 0 0 . arms had to clrsr the galleries of spectators to restore order, rescinded Tacoma, Wash.- With a loss total If you think constipation Is of trifling its resolution not to vote for United ing near the $500,000 mark and throw-1 consequence, just ask your doctor. Ha no H - m SH. U States senator and proceeded to re ing out of employment fully 600 men, will disabuse you of that notion in ehort elect United States Senator Fall, for fire destroyed the plant of the St. Paul order. “ Correct it at once I " he will Then ask him abou Ayer’s Pilla. the next six-year term, beginning A Tacoma Lumber company in this | •ay. ^ y U K N w rttlac ta u tr m iÏM n , y k m m S M » I A mild liver pill, all vegetable. March 4. 1913. eity. I I ——- « a , J. o. A im s co .. U v m . - — Vallejo, Cal.—Word was received at Mare Island that the cruiser Maryland would call at Portland to take aboard the Oregon naval militia for a practice cruiae, beginning about June 16. The vessel will remain at sea during the period of the m ilitia’s stay on board, with the exception of two days, to be passed at San Francisco. After disembarking the militia the Maryland will proceed to Tacoma, re maining there until after the Fourth. French Submarine ia Lost. Wise Dental Co.,iw. N ervous? Thin? Pate? G