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About Mosier bulletin. (Mosier, Or.) 1909-19?? | View Entire Issue (July 12, 1912)
You Get Spot Cash. You Pay No Commission Ship us your good choice produce. W e w ill pay fo r same aa follows: Veal under 140 pounds.................. 12'4e pound Block H o r s .................................... 10c pound Freeh Country Kjrira..................... 20c dozen L iv e H e n s .................................... . 12c i ound L iv e S prin g Chickens................... 1 Sc pound Address F R A N K L. S M IT H M E A T CO. “ F ig h tin g th e B e e f T ru s t" P ortlan d , O regon . CONTROL OF INJURIOUS PEAR 20 DIE FROM SLUG IS DIFFICULT PROBLEM HEAT IN EAST H e lle b o r e , L e a d A r s e n a t e a n d P a r i s G re e n A m o n g l e a s t E x p e n s iv e o f S p r a y s f o r E r a d ic a t io n o f P e s t W h ic h Is C o m m o n In S e v e r a l S t a t e s In C e n t r a l P a r t o f C o u n try . (B y R . U W E B S T E R .) Nearly every year cherry and plum trees In the central states suffer a large amount of damage on account of the common pear slug, or cherry slug. While the control of this Insect has not been considered a very diffi cult problem, yet It often happens that foliage Is greatly damaged before the owner Is aware that any slugs are 'Y m .P f u n d e r ’ s .v n on his trees. The pear slug, or cherry slug, Is a dark, almost black, slimy slug, about two-flfths of an Inch long when full A To n ic. A lte ra tiv e and Resolvent. The best rem edy fo r K idn eys, L iv e r and Bowels. grown, which feeds on cherry, pear Eradicates Pim ples, Eruptions and Disorders and plum leaves. o f the Skin. Purifies the Blood and gives Tone, Strength and V ig o r to the en tire system. These slugs feed on the upper sides of the leaves, eating out all the tissue except the veins and the lower surface. Have Used Spare Time Well. The Injured leaves become dry and On the question of how working brown and fall from the trees, which people, on the whole, have spent the are sometimes left entirely bare of added hour or hours of freedom from foliage In midsummer.. work, an author says that where cyn Trees are often killed as a result of ics prophesied more drunken Idleness repeated defoliation. A short crop of and rowdyism, fairer observers found fruit follows a severe attack by this a kind of regeneration— no sudden mellennlum, hut wherever sufficient time has elapsed an extraordinary ad vance In physique and morals. Why Deep Streams Run Still. Deep streams run still— and whyi Not because there are no obstacles, but because they altogether overflow these stones or rocks round which the shallow stream has to make its noisy way.—William Smith. K N blood M iri F [R Mothers w ill And Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup ih e b e . t re m ed y to use fur tta.it children during the u-ettaiug period. Always Have Something to 8ay, Speak not at all. In any wise, till you have somewhat to speak; care not for the reward of your speaking but simply and with undivided mind for the truth of your speaking.— Carlyle. When Your lutlon Is then diluted with water, while still warm, to the required amount To obtain a ten per cent solution one part of the stock solution, prepared aa stated, should be diluted with 6 2-3 parts of water. Whale oil Boap, one pound to two gallons of water; white laundry soap and Ivory soap, one ten-ounoe bar to two gallons of water, have proven ef fective. The soap is merely dissolved In water by boiling, and sprayed while still warm. Hellebore, lead arsenate and parts green are the least expensive of these treatments. It a spraying Is neces sary while there Is fruit on the trees, hellebore or some other material than arsenical should be used. Cultivation under infested trees Is of value, since it disturbs the cocoons in the soil there. Since the slugs spend the greater part the year In the ground under the trees Infested In the summer It follows that a thorough stirring of the soli would tend to break up the co coons containing the slugs, and so ex pose them to the elements. Berleae has suggested this measure against this Insect In Italy. This cultivation would be most effective in the fall so that the cocoons might be exposed during the winter. Spring cultivation Eyes Need Care T r y M u rin e E y e R em ed y . N o S m a rtin g — F e ela F in e — A c ts Q u ld b ly . T r y i t fo r R e a , W ea k , W a t e r y E y es a n d G ra n u la te d E y e lid s . Illu s tra te d B o o k in ea ch P a c k a g e . M u rin e is compounded by our Oculists—not a “ Patent Med icin e” — but used in successful Physicians’ Prac tice fo r many years. Now dedicated to the Pub lic and sold by Druggists a t 26c and 60c p er Bottle. M arine Eye Salve In A septic Tubes, 25c and 60c. M urine Eye R em edy C o., C h loago Would That This Were True. The principal authors met and form ed a union for the sake of publishing a set of rules of writing. As a prelim inary, they agreed that after this no hero would be permitted to flick tha ashes from his cigarette or cigar. Also that no heroine shall hereafter bur) her head in her hands or drop het eyes to the floor. The full set of re strictions will be announced later.— Life. ' Red Cross Ball Blue, all blue, best bluing valu « In the whole world, makes the laundress smile. Since the Telephone. In 1876, the year In which Alexandei Graham Bell Invented the telephone, there were no skyscrapers, no trolley cars, no electrto lights, no gasoline engines, no self-binders, no bicycles nor motor cars.— Magazine of Ameri can History. The Pear Slug. Insect, on account of the weakened condition of the tree. Trees that have been damaged by the slugs appear as if they had been damaged by fire. The leaves turn brown, curl up and finally fall. Cherry trees, under such conditions, are forced to put out a new growth of leaves, weakening the tree and re ducing the crop of fruit the following year. The slugs appear twice during the year, and trees should be sprayed as soon as they appear. They first make their appearance about the middle of June, and the second appearance Is about the third week In July. Insect powder can be used against these slugs by merely dusting It over the leaves. Hellebore may be used either In a dry or liquid form. It must be fresh for effective use. For a dry appllca- SEVEN YEARS OF MISERY H ow Mrs. Bethune was Re stored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta ble Compound. Easter Beurre Pear. would also be of value In disturbing the cocoons. According to Dr. L. O. Howard, chief of the bureau of entomology at Washington, the slugs may be easily washed off of small trees by a strong stream of water applied from a gar den hose under heavy pressure. When washed to the ground they are unable to regain their places on the leaves. Such a measure as this would be quite feasible on a small scale In cities, or where water pressure is available. Spraying Is undoubtedly the best remedy for the pear slug. Of the two generations the first Is the harder to combat, especially on cherry trees, since the fruit Is present on the trees at about the same time that the slugs are abundant. Consequently due care must be taken In the use of arsenical poisons at that time. Arsenical poi sons may be used freely for the sec ond generation In the late summer. The pear slug Is rarely destructive In any locality for many years at a time. This alternating abundance and scarcity of the Insect Is due for the most part to the activity of Its natural enemies, the most abundant of which are two email egg parasites. More Egg Farms Wanted. W e want more commercial egg farms In this country, and there it gqod money In the business If proper Angouleme Pear. ly conducted. The demand for fresh tlon use hellebore, one pound to five eggs Is growing every day, and will pounds of alr-slaked lime. For a continue to grow. To meet the pres liquid application use It one pound to ent demand It would be necessary to Increase the egg production of tha a barrel of water. Lead arsenate (prepared), two country at least 100 per cent pounds In 60 gallons of water, Is ef * Vegetables In China. fective. In China the natives preserve vege Paris green, one pound In 160 gal lons of water, Is also effective. Some tables by coating them with salt and quicklime, about a pound to each 60 drying them In the sun. Hams are gallons of water, should be added to cured by means of an alkaline earth the spray/ to prevent burning of the and common salt. Pickled eggs are preserved with a compound of com leaves. Kerosene emulsion— kerosene, two mon mud, salt, saltpeter and soy bean gallons; hard soap, one-half pound; sauce. water, one gallon—Is good. The soap Is dissolved by boiling In water and Breeding Worms and Trouble. Is then churned up with the kerosene The lazy farmer who stacks new until the two are emulsified Into a clover on the site of the old stack li white, creamy mixture. The stock so- breeding worms and trouble. Sikeston, Mo. — “ For seven years I suffered everything. I was in bed for four or five days at a time every month, nnd so weak I could hardly walk. I had cramps, b a c k a c h e and headache, and was so nervous and weak that I dreaded to see a n y o n e or have anyone move in the room. The doc tors gave me medi- 1 cine to ease me at those times, and said that I ought to have an operation. I would not listen to that, and when a friend o f my husband’s told him about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg etable Compound and what it had done for his wife, I was willing to take it. Now I look the picture of health and feel like It, too. I can do all my own house work, work in the garden and entertain company and enjoy them, and can walk as far as any ordinary woman, any day in the week. I wish I could talk to every suffering woman and girl, and tell them what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done for me.” —Mrs. D e m a B e t h u n e , Sikeston, Mo. Remember, the remedy which did this was Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. I t has helped thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, j An Implement for covering and ridg inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irreg ing potatoes Is shown In the Illustra ularities, periodic pains, backache, that tion. The runners, A, A, are of hard bearing down feeling, indigestion, and wood, 6 feet long, six Inches high and nervous prostration,after all other means I Inches thick, with Iron plates on have failed. Why don’ t you try i t 7 COVERING AND RIDGING POTATO Painless Dentistry 1. our bobby—our itutT for j » » u 4 -■ v o u ia m M , and co n la tha b.at potalvw aork > ba found iBrnhcr., bo matter bow mack ram W . f a l i k plate and bri dm i -ora for aat- of tow* patron« in j on« <i«f if d««lr«d. Inin!«*« «itra rtio l fr*-« w h n p i t a of bride« work is order- •<L Contattiti«« tra«. Molar Crows« $ 5 . 22k Bridf*T««tk4»C Go.d rUIUtp lei E «u »l F W -« 1.C Silvsc Fining« 7. N M sts Csfv'flss .1 • ■ S T MCTMOD« A ll w ork fu lly r u r a n t r e d fo r f.fU on W ise Dental Co., Painless Dentista FMHs| Imkflii«. TkM «n . WasStwtes SOOTuni. M g M m I m h : i a h t e i r . l t . lu d tr v I W i ». * U. W H E N irritine te Ite» th i. pater. ( No 20-n *. TEACH COLT TO BE HALTER-WISE f o u n t H o r s e » S h o u ld B e T a k e n to H a n d W h e n L it tle F e llo w s n n d Q u it. L a s tly H a n d le d . (B y M. C O V E R D E L L .) Tou often see a man kick and cuff the colt around every time It happens to get In the way. After a while you will notice this same fellow with the family out help ing him to hem up a two-year-old colt while he can put a halter on him. And for the first two or three times they get the halter on they have a reg ular circus In teaching the animal to lead and be halter wise. It’s mighty hard and dangerous work, too, this breaking in big, atreng, two-year-old colts. Why not take the little fellows In hand when they are small, easily handled and quick to learn? Slip the halter on the rolt occasionally. By alow degrees get It accustomed to bottom. Front crosspiece'E Is '3 feet long and rear crosspiece C Is 1 foot One man drives while another hcfldi rear end In place by the handle JX Th# devloe Is handy and In e x p e n s iv e leading up when the leadwatrap ii tightened and you move. But don’t get In a hurry. tThe coll has been used to going aheal of you so don’t expect It to follow too soon. A lump of sugar or a few oats held la the hand just In front of the little fellow are much better trainer* la teaching It to lead than dragging II by the lead strap and having son»» one behind It with a club or. a flshlni pole to "shoo” It along. Origin of the Potato. The potato, which waa already cult! vated In America when the continent waa discovered. Is spontaneous If Chile. It waa Introduced to Europe Is 1680 and 1583 by the Spaniards, ant almost at the same time by the Eng llsh, who brought It from Virginia where It had appeared about 1660 The sweet potato and tha Jerasaleis artichoke are also auppossd to com« from America. . Wet Plowing. If the soil leaves the plowShara shiny and wet, wait a day or two. JN# .plowing makes cloddy groun«. Mad Dogs Add Terror to Chi cago Weather. Many Prostrations— Horses Fall In Streets — Hot Wave Helps Crops In Country. Chicago, July 8.— Twenty deaths in the two days o f torridity Chicago has experienced was the record tonight when the statistics were footed up. In addition there were half a hundred serious prostrations and 18 persons were bitten by rabid dogs. Meanwhile the heat wave has “ flat tened out,” to use a technical expres sion of the weather forecasters. Over the grain fields o f the West and Southwest the blazing sunshine was making millions in agricultural wealth. The suffering in the cities meant the fortunes o f the farmers. The temperature today did not reach yesterday’s extreme height and the humidity was 71, or four degrees be low that o f yesterday, but men and horses continued to drop in the streets, which were like hot tunnels. Some relief came in the afternoon, when shifting winds brought a light breeze off the lake. It was confined to that portion of the city within a half mile o f the lake front, however, as the breeze was so light it lost its coolness after traveling over belching chimneys. By way o f comparison, it may be noted that San Francisco, with a max imum o f 60 and a minimum of 60, was the coolest spot in the country. Port land had 62 and 62, I-os Angeles was next, with 78 and 68, more than 20 degrees cooler than Montreal and To ronto. Phoenix, Ariz., claims the heat record, with 104. Boston report ed 90, New York 82 and Washington 90. Various Texas points had an av erage o f 96, Cincinnati was compara tively cool at 80, or eight degrees cooler that St. Louis, which had pre cisely the same temperature as St. Paul, 88, and was four degrees cooler than Madison, Wis. Sault Ste. Marie, usually the abiding place of the chilly wave, sweltered at 92, 10 degrees hotter than Memphis, Tenn. Green Bay, Wis., also one o f the “ cold spots” on the tourist circulars, reported 94, or 10 degrees warmer than Denver. In addition to 20 deaths in Chicago, five deaths were reported from Phila delphia, one from La Crosse, Wis. and five others from various points. T. R. O U TLIN E S FIGHT. Colonel Intends to Appeal to Farmers and Laborers. Oyster Bay, N. Y . — A campaign along novel lines has been sketched in bare outline by Colonel Roosevelt. As the candidate o f the new progressive party for the presidency. Colonel Roosevelt intends to make an appeal largely to the farmer and the wage worker on the ground that neither the Democratic nor the Republican party is attempting seriously in this cam paign to deal with the fundamental economic and social conditions which confront the country. Particular at tention w ill be paid to the high cost of living. Colonel Roosevelt said that Senator Dixon o f Montana, who managed his campaign for the Republican presi dential nomination, in all probability would be his campaign manager in his fight at the head o f the new party. The senator's headquarters probably will be in New York, where he has passed most o f the time since the Chi cago convention. This program has been agreed upon as definitely as pos sible in advance o f the national con vention in Chicago next month. Colonel Roosevelt has been engaged in a study o f the platform adopted in Baltimore last week, and o f the Re publican platform, and he believes he has found in them valuable campaign material. He said neither o f these platforms showed the slightest under standing o f the social and industrial movement which is under way in this country. They have taken up, he said, the old policies and the battle cries o f other years. BATH ING S U IT S DEFINED. Venice, California, Mayor to in Model Costume. Parade Venice, Cal.— H ereafter Sunday vis itors to this beach w ill see Mayor Hol brook parading the principal thorough fare clad only in a model bathing suit, i f the intended 'bathing ordinance fathered by Trustee Lorenz goes through as indicated. Section 2 provides that this shall be done as a public example. The par ade shall be between 12 and 1 o ’clock and the wearer shall have on no other garment. According to section 1 it shall be unlawful for any person to appear upon the beach in the ocean or in any public place in Venice in a bathing suit unless it shall match the model. The suit shall have sleeves that come to the wrists, collar a half inch high, bloomers and a bona fide skirt at least 30 inches long hung from the waist. Women shall wear stockings o f sombre shade. H air rib bons must be worn by girls under 14 years old. AM ERICANS WIN HONORS. Men’s suits shall consist o f the'same garments but may be made in manish Tw o World’s Records Broken at style. The penalty for violation is Swedish Olympiad. $300 fine. Stockholm, Sweden— The glory of the opening o f the Olympic games o f C H IN A T O 'C O M P E T E . 1912 should he divided between Swed en and the United StateB. Sweden New Steamship Line Is Promised for gets the lion’s share, for the impres Trans-Pacific Trade. sive stage setting she provided for the Los Angeles — That three large contests, which, with the natural beauties o f Stockholm— its parks and steamships o f the type o f the Man palaces and lakes— and the moving churia will be built at Long Beach and ceremonial with which the king in that five large steamships are to be augurated the meeting, makes it by leased from a defunct Hong Kong line far the most memorable international within eight months is the statement o f Goon Lee, representing the Chinese festival ever held. Am erica’s share o f the honor is due organizations that are promoting the to the remarkable fashion in which Los Angeles-Hong Kong steamship her brawny young men set to work on project, on his return from a tour o f the cinder path. They ran away with Seattle, Portland and other Pacific heat after heat in the first rounds of Coast cities. Lee announced that the Chinese the 100 meters and 800 meters; they outdid the expectations o f their train along the entire coast desired a line of ers and completely upset the calcula ships that can compete with the Jap tions the public had made. They left anese lines now operating between the their old-time British rivals far be Orient and SaD Francisco and said that funds practically were assured. hind. The Chinese o f Mexico, the United The smashing o f the Olympic record by D. E. Lippincott, University of States and South America are to raise Pennsylvania, in the 16th heat o f the one-half o f thé $12,000,000 necessary 100 meters event, puts that runner in and are now endeavoring to secure rec ognition for the new republic o f the hero class. The world’s record with the javelin, China, because, they explain, it will made by E. Lemming, the Swedish provide the other half o f the fund i f it champion, was not unexpected, but is recognized and thus enabled to es the Hawaiian swimmer “ Duke” Ka- tablish Itself on an operative basis hanamoku, covered himself with glory whereby it can negotiate a loan or by winning the United States the sec issue bonds. ond world’s record o f the meeting. Fuel Oil Laws Conflict. Champion Roper Roped Vancouver, B. C. — The Canadian Baker, Or.— John Spain, o f Union, shipping act make* it compulsory that reputed to be the champion roper of fuel oil used on steamers shall flash the world, may never rope again as above 200 and the customs regulations the result o f an accident at an exhi permit the free entry only o f fuel oil bition at Halfway. While lassoing a that will flash below 200. The steamer horse the rope caught around his arm, Washtenaw, here with 26,000 barrels his horse stopped suddenly and the o f California oil for the Canadian Pa taut rope cut his arm to the bone, sev cific, is tied up by a demand for 2| ering the veins. The arm may have cents a gallon duty, more than the ac to be amputated. Spain was brought tual cost o f the oil. I f the customs to the St. Elizabeth hospital here. ruling is adhered to, the oil burning Spain appeared at the Pendleton liners that ply to American ports will Roundup and the Union Stock make Seattle their bunker port. Show. Five Injured at Tacoma. Steel Cars Fave Live*. Tacoma— A t a performance o f “ The Jackson. Miss.— Steel coaches prob Conquest o f Mexico,” staged in the ably saved the lives o f more than a stadium before an audience o f more score o f passengers when Illinois Cen than 26,000 persons, five participants tral passenger train No. 3, south in the spectacle were injured by the bound, was wrecked Sunday aftemoons backfiring o f a large cannon and the two miles south ’o f Jackson. Several discharge o f a musket in the face of Three were seri passengers were badly shaken up and one o f the victims. bruised, but only five required more ously injured and two slightly. The than passing medical attention. most seriously injured o f the men was These were (brought to Jackson and Dr. Richter, o f the United States ship placed in a hospital, where it waa said Oregon, now in Tacoma harbor. He their injuries were not serious. The sustained a badly burned face, neck wreck was due to a soft roadbed and breast from the cannon explosion. caused by heavy rains. N «w National Flag Fliaa. Work to Come to Coast. Washington, D. C.— The new Na Washington, D. C.— Senator Jones tional Flag bearing 48 f stars, emble has secured an amendment to the na matic o f all the states including the val appropriation bill providing that recently admitted Arizona and New four o f the eight submarines author Mexico, waa flung from all Federal ized, to cost in the aggregate $4,440,- structures in the country and from the 000, shall be built on the Pacific American navy throughout the world C«>ast; also an amendment authorizing July 4. Thirteen stars only will be per th f erection o f a large wireless station mitted in the blue square o f the flags on the coast o f Washington and one in that are less than five feet wide, to Alaska. Senator Heyburn secured an avoid overcrowding. The red field on amendment ypproviating $76,000 for the president’s flag is changed to blue. developing and mining Alaskan coal. Misting Yacht Maks* Port. W atf Virginia Governor Signs. Honolulu— The overdne’trana-Paeiflc Charlestown, W. Va.— Ex Governor racing yacht Natooah, o f ^Victoria, ar Dawson announced that he had signed rived here safely, foor days behind the the call for the national convention of winner, Lurline, in the race from Los the Progressive party, to be held in Angeles harbor. When »oe failed to Chicago August 10. Dawson was appear on time It was feared that she chairman o f the Roosevelt state com had either been disabled * or gone m ittee in the primary campaign in astray. Heavy weather held her back W est Virginia. and blew her off her course. AIRSHIP BURSTS; FIVE PERISH Farm ers and M erchants Write us for our -cash TiffeKon your Farm ' and •Da’iryt‘ PrtrtHS*.V “ we don’t handle i t will r e f e r v o ii to re- liable 'OTyCr r F tA R S O N ^ P A GE CO. * Vaniman Dirigible Balloon Ex plodes in Mid-Air. Wives o f Four Men See Ship Break Into Flame and Plunge IOOO Feet to Earth. Atlantic City, N. J.— Mrs. Vaniman and the wives o f three members o f the dirigible balloon Akron’s crew, stand ing on the veranda o f the Vaniman cottage near Brigantine beach, early Thursday, saw the great dirigible ex plode and then dart down from midair, carrying their husbands to death in nine feet o f water in about a second. The women Bcreamed and covered their faces and Mrs. Vaniman fainted, but all shortly recovered and rushed with 2000 other spectators toward the place where the balloon fell, killing Vaniman and four others. As the mighty dirigible plunged downward a body was seen to deatch itself from the blazing mass and fall into the water 60 feet from where the balloon sank. It was recovered by Councilman Harry Cook and A. T. Bell, who put out in a motor boat, and was identified as that o f Calvin Vani man, brother of Melvin. The center dynamo and the badly mutilated and burned couditon o f the body showed that the main force o f the explosion must have been directly opposite the middle o f the car. W illiam H ill, United States revenue official, who saw the accident, said: " W e were watching the big ship closely, remarking upon the beautiful spectacle, the morning sun making the huge bag glisten like gold, when I noticed a whirl o f smoke at the stern. I remember glancing at my watch and noting that it was exacty 6 :42. The ship was between 700 and 800 feet up, in my estimation. “ The smoke gained in volume and the ship seemed to stagger. The Bmoke continued to increase for a minute or two, running apparently the whole length o f the engine room beneath the great bag, and then there was a frightful concussion, like the firing o f a great gun. “ The next instant the ship appeared to be a great mass o f flame. It seemed to me that the stern had been entirely blown out. Then I saw the whole thing was tumbling down to the sea and I closed my eyes. There was a great uprising o f gas and flames and then it waH all over, but the folds o f the big yellow bag just visible above the sea.” Captain Frank Adams, o f the light house, and Captain Frank Doughey, of Inlet Fleet, were among the first to reach the scene o f the disaster.. They found only tangled wreckage and no sign o f life. Captain Parker, o f the lifesaving station, rushed out in the government’s high-power boat and confirmed the report o f the yachts men. He reported the Akron lying in nine feet o f water in a slough at the end o f Brigantine beach, with the top o f the big yellow gas bag billowing in the gentle breeze. The body o f W alter Guest was re covered from the wreck o f the d irig ible about two hours later. I t was mangled about the head and legs, and most o f the clothing was blown off. C O N FED ERATE LEADER DEAD - P o rtk a i O m w . aa YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN W A N tK D to pre pare for positions telegraph operators for near-by railroads and City telegraph companies; guaranteed positions JA.WO-OD monthly. 8 hours work, fine advancement«.' easy‘ to learn, particulars free. Pacific Telegraph 4k Railway Institute. Washington Building. Seattle. Wash. Machinery Second-Hand Machin ery bought. Hold and _ exchanged: engine«, boilers, sawmills, etc. The J. E. Martin C ol . 7« 1st St.. Portland. Send for Stock List and pries«. K 0 DAK rolls developed,.* 10c; any «ize. Largest and b e s t «hop in Northwest.* Com plete price list on request. Best results guaranteed. J A C OB S P.-I. Build’g, Seattle Hand Woven, UiMacked PANAM A? (MM W U V II T* « u m Can he worn unblocked by women, blocked« in any «ixe. «hnpe or style for men. Brims 3 and f ” iaht weight, ia on receipt j.optpaia of price. Money refunded if not*saki«faotoryc ___ a — Get durable. *tylinli hat for tiie half of what it would oo ou elttowhere. Addrea« NEW MODE. HAT OQ. I. H. M*‘ u«ndorffer. Prop. ¿27 1-2 Washington 8t. wsnty years in Portlund. Portland' ~ d. Or. i The Modern Voice. “ The voice what Is eryln’ In the wil derness this day an’ time la advertla- lng real estate— stakin’ off mansions on earth; an’ If the voice la only loud enough lt’a sure to catch the crowd.* —Atlanta Constitution. A u t o m o b ile E y e In .u r a n c e n e ed e d a ft e r Kzpoaur. to Sun, Winds end Duet. Murine Eye Remedy freely applied Affords Rtltable Relief. No Smarting—Just E y . Comfort—T ry Mariam Inevitable Result. " I am surprised to hear that Dub- hlelfth has broken down,” said Stubbs. "H e used to have a splendid comstl- tutloti.” “ Yes,” said .Wjggletrope, "but ho began amending It."—TArper’s Weekly. Rost <1t*nt nnd Day school fo r G irl* >f Sisters o f Ht. John Baptist ( Episcopal)l I«, Academia and Slsmsntary Dsp^stassats, I Art. gioenti «a. •ytotoatmm.* •** I dog ailtlrtMMi T H E B IS T E R S U P E R IO R I O ffic e 30. St. H elen s H u ll • * I •n Heart Controls Llfa. As the fountain. from ' the hidden ■prlng, so Issues man’s lire from the. secret recesses o f his heart. All that he Is and does Is generated there’. All that he will be and do will take Its rlss there.—James Allen. Red Cram Ball Blue w ill wash double aa many Don’t put your mono? an any other blue. »to any other. I lothes " 1 ii m » • m g. •* * ‘ Simple Curo for Indlgeetfan. . • When suffering from Indigestion drink a cup of hot water,’ and at onoe lie on the right side, This will -pfo mote the passage of the food from tbs- stomach to the Intestine! T ry fftartne Rye Remedy for Red. W atery E y e . ami Urnmrlated I Vale, o Sm arting—J u .t Eye Comfort. KyaUUa. Tw o Uses for Burmese Tsaak .* The tea grown in Bunffi is used Almost entirely for plckllnx. A fter ward It I b eaten as a condiment. - v DAISY FLY KILLER ». piteo. Captain Walker One Who Surrender ed to Grant at Vicksburg. Santa Monica, Cal.— Captain W il liam A. Walker, a Confederate cav alry officer, who surrendered his sword to General Grant at Vicksbur, died here Thursday. Under the Cleveland administration Walker was postmas ter at Albuquerque, N. M. While holding that position he was called upon to speak for “ The Lost Cause” at a public ceremony on the occasion o f the death o f Grant. He surprised the assemblage with one o f the short est public speeches ever delivered; ‘ Ladies and Gentlemen: I surrender ed to General Grant at Vicksburg. I have nothing more to say.” Camorra Trial Near End. Viterbo, Italy. — The members o f the Camorra, who have been on trial here for nearly two years, now have assumed a most humble attitude and show the most profound respect for the judges and jury, placing them- selves entirely in the hands o f the court, which shortly is to deliver its verdict The presiding judge read a long list o f questions for the jury to answer to establish who were the in stigators o f the crime o f murdering Genarro Cuoccolo and Maria Cutinelli Cuoccolo in June, 1906. Wrecked Passengers Sue. Los Angeles—The wrecking o f the Stanta Rosa a year ago on Saddle Rock has resulted in a civil action in the United States District court against the Pacific Coast Steamship company for damages aggregating $40,000. -Neglect is charged to the officers o f the vessel and recompense is sought for loss o f baggage. They allege that at the time the vessel struck the sea waa calm and that when the wreck waa imminent and it wuuld have been safe for the passengers to go ashore, her officers refused. Ships 8ail Despite Strike. New Y o rk ’— Development* in the coastwise seamen’s strike do not tend to carry out predictions o f leaders that more than a dozen steamers at this port would be tied up immedi ately. Outgoing vessels o f lines against which the strike is directed, sailed on time, with improvised crews o f inexperienced men when necessary. Several leader* admitted the men were not responding to the strike or der as fast aa had been expected. K aiter and Czar to Meat. Berlin—Th# German emperor, ac companied by hie third son. Prince Adelbert, has started by way o f Dan- sig for Baltic Port, a seaport o f Roe- ala, near the entrance o f the Gulf o f Finland, where they w ill meet the Russian emperor. The two emperors met last in August, 1909. •íü > V cr.V * «' V - HAAOLD BOMEK b , ocDiimontal. o 1 "Lasts •»Art. oh«*p.' all ssason Mads o f mutai, c a n t spUI’or , ’ tlpovsr: will not soil or Injur« anything. Ü u aran t««d • ff«oti ys 6 sont prepaid IfiODeKalb A vs.. Broafclym, » . Y. Judgment of a Nation!, A nation should be judged,--If‘ -vr* oan judge nations, not by .It* ;we*Kh.'i or Its population, or Its military or n a .. val power, real or apparent, hilt it should be judged by the opportunity'.’ It gives men to make their lives.— David Starr Jordan. M EXICA N MUSTANG LINIM ENT FOR CUTS A N D BURNS.' Juno. H. Harley, Marcur, Utah, writ M i I “ I am railin g poultry and aa 1 h a rru rrd I your I.inimrnt with «accraa on myaelf and I my horae, I will try it on poultry. I u a lj the I.inimrnt for cot*, burn, or polar o f any I kind and gat good ra.u lu . T bit ia a g reat 1 gold mining camp, but for health you r Lin- | intent it aa good aa the best mine in cam p." 2Sc. SOc.»1 a bottla at Drag A Goa l S te m Genius Simply Concentration. I f there be anything that can he called genius. It consists chiefly - la ability to give that attention to a sub ject which keeps it steadily la the mind, till we have surveyed It s e e »1 rately on all *ldca.-r-%ijd. - Want Long Hair? And you would lik e long hair? Rich, heavy h a ir? Beautiful, luxuriant h a ir? That is perfectly natural, and we are here to help you. Ayer’s Hair V igor is a grfat aid to nature in producing just the kind o f hair you de: sire. D o not be afraid to use it.. N o danger o f Its col oring your hair. The ingre dients are all given on each label, thus enabling your doctor to wisely advise you concerning its use. Consult him freely. He knows. ■ « 4 « by th« J, O, A T I » OO.,