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About Mosier bulletin. (Mosier, Or.) 1909-19?? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 23, 1912)
D IR TY EG G S C AU SE BIG LOSS Farm ers and M erchants Write as for our cash offer on your Farm and Dairy Produce. If we don’ t handle it will refer you to re liable buyer. PEARSON-PAGE CO. Portland. Orrgon. Second-Hand Machin ery bought, sold and _ exchanged: engines. ___ j sawmills, ate. The J. E. Martin Co.. 76 1st fit* Portland. Send for Stock List and prices. Machinery Had Wra, UublodteJ PANAMAS rna wiAvia n « a m Can be worn unblocked by women. Blocked in any size, shape or style !for men. Brims 3 and 8 Inches. Liaht weight Sent postpaid on receipt price. Money refunded if not satisfactory. Get a rable. stylish hat for the half of what it would cost _ elsewhere. Address NEW MODE H \T OO H. Meuasdorffer. Prop. 287 1-2 Washington 8t. Portland. Or. wenty years in Portland. K O D A K rolls developed. 10c. any size. Largest and best shop in Northwest. Com plete price list on request» Best results guaranteed. JA C O B S n,o?° P.-I. Build’ s, Seattle DAISY FLY KILLER S Ä S T S a S ; flies. Neat, clean, ornamental, conven ient. cheap. Lasts all ssason. Made of metal, can’t spill or tip over; will not soil or injure anythins. Guaranteed effective Bold by dealers or 6 sent prepaid for SI. ■ASOLO BOMUa. liODeKaib Ave., Brooklyn. If. T. SELF-SETTING PLANES ■ * Vineland, N. J. 8 .n t on trial where not kept. Sold in the large Coast Cities. 9 Portland dealers sell them. Try Element of Decay. Indirect influence had Its nearly per fect work In the Persian empire, where the Queen Mother was permit ted to exercise an Injurious influence over the king, the court, and the em pire. It was one of the tendencies which leads Sayce, the historian, to ■ay, after touching upon It: "In short, the empire contained within It from the first all the elements of de cay.” _________________ Condition Brought About by Allowing Broody Hen In Same Neet With the Layers. While there are a few egg producer» who take the best of care of their product, the average farmer con- alders the egg produced on the farm a by-product and makes very little provision for their care, aside from gathering them. A large loss is caused by dirty eggs, the number being enormous, and according to the esti mate of Secretary Wilson of the de partment of Agriculture this money loss to the farmers In the United States amounting to about $5,000,000 annually. This loss Is very largely brought about by not gathering the eggs often enough. In wet weather more dirty eggs are found than at any other time. This Is caused by the fact that the hen’s feet are often covered with mud or other filth, and In going on the nest to lay she soils the eggs already In the nest. An Insufficient number of nests Is often the cause of many of the dirty eggs found. Eggs are laid on the ground and around the hay and straw stacks, and becoming stained, are classed as “dirties." Again, when too many eggs are allowed to remain in a nest some are broken and many of the others become smeared with broken yolks. This condition is often brought about by allowing the broody hens to use the same nests with the layers. On a farm where one nest to every four hens Is provided and the nests are kept clean and well bedded, It Is found that very few dirty eggs are produced. After gathering the eggs, care should be taken not to put them where they will become heated, or near oil, onions, or other vegetables, as they readily absorb odor«. Although dirty eggs may be per fectly fresh, they Invariably sell as “ seconds,’’ and when but a few dirty eggs are mixed with an otherwise fresh, clean lot, they materially de crease the price of the clean eggs. P R E P A R E H O R S E FO R SPRING Animals 8hould Be Hitched for Short Time Each Day and Amount of Wisdom In Action. Work Gradually Increaaed. The times are waiting for men who shall serve and not merely Inquire; Aa the time approaches for the •trlve and not merely Investigate; heavy work to begin, the horses should give to their age and their kind not ao be hitched for a short time each day. much learning In bulk aa wisdom In and the amount of work gradually In action; great doing aa the only true creased as they become hardened. It fruitage of great thinking; the conse la necessary to not only harden the cration to the uplifting of one’s fellow- muscles of the horse, but to harden men of one’s best rather than the con the shoulders to the collar aa well. serving by mere culture of one's self. v There are a variety of feeds, all of —Henry Potter. which are well suited to the needs of the horses, and will give satisfactory Blessed Sympathy. results when judiciously used. For a Sympathy with animals blesses and long time oats and timothy hay have humanizes men and women. To get been considered a standard for work Into real relations with an animal is a ing horses, and I think there Is noth liberal education. It Is something to ing better, says a writer In the Farm be really Interested even In a plant Progress. and to observe the working of life in Timothy Is not very palatable. any sphere not our own. How much Horses are not likely to gorge them more when that life Is directing a selves with It, and oata, having personality which consciously looks large, coarse hulls, are bulky, and as up to us and will love us If we will let a result they become more thoroughly ltl—Christian Register. mixed with saliva during the process of mastication, and when they enter Longevity In French Villages. the stomach are more readily acted A remarkable record of longevity Is upon by the digestive juices. Because to be found In some of the rural par of this fact a horse Is less subject to ishes of France. In the village of St. deranged digestion and colic caused Thomaa de la Fltche there have been by careless or Improper feeding. only fourteen parish priests in three Good, pure water Is Important, and hundred years, the fourteenth being this the horses should have In plenti ■till In possession. The parish of SL ful supply at all times. Germain du Val, In Paris, has had only three pastors In one hundred years, Providing Dry Crops. while that of Glvry en Argonne has Set your brood coops a few Inches had but five In 130 years. above the surrounding ground to In sure perfect dryness. A coop that is No Wonder. thus treated will always be dry lf It Nerve Specialist—My dear sir, l is rain and water proof. Make all can't understand your case at all. Her« coops wind and water proof with tar you were practically cured a few dayi paper. There la nothing ao harmful ago and now your nerves are lc to young chicks as dampness. Bank frightful shape again. Have you had up the coops and dig trenches, so all a sudden shock of some kind? Patient water will run away from them. —I received your bill yesterday. Many coops are set so that the wa ter that falls on their roofs and the surrounding ground runs beneath The Moat Original Authors. The most original modern authors them. No hen can keep a brood warm are not ao because they advance whai In such coops. Any coop will get wet la new, but simply because they know In rainy weather lf the floor Is lower how to put what they have to say ai than the surrounding surface of the If it had never been said before.— ground. Goethe. Lime Will Sweeten the Soil. Ueefut Instrument In Farm House. When green-manure crops are Every farm house should have a plowed under, there Is more or less harness needle In It. One of the many tendency of such material to sour the uses to which the needle can be put la land, and applications of lime after to sew rips In shoes that may save an plowing under such crops sweeten the extra trip to the cobbler’s.—Home De soil and secure a more favorable con partment, National Magazine. dition for the growth of clover. It Is very Important to work In clovers as often as possible, and a sweet soil Is necessary to get good results w ifi M EXICA N them. MUSTANG L IN IM E N T The Household Remedy. I Jmhm 1 M Y«*t. Ut»h. w ritM : “ We h are been using yon r Mexican M as- I | tan g Liniment in our fam.ly ever since M and find it to b e a rood article to ▼e in the house and are never w ithout it. I hare recommended it t o many o f my friends w h o have also found the same very valuable. I 2Sc. 50c. $1 a bnttla at D rag Jk G «a ’ l Stares I K Painless Dentistry Is mmr pet d a -o ur hobby-our study for years and MW oar sum see, and oun i a the b iit painless work la ba found anywhere, t o matter how maoh jam We da lek plata and bri<l«e work for ont of town patrons iu ona day Lf desired. Painless extraction freo whoa platea or bridpa work is ordsr- W ise Dental Co.9 i>e. Painless Dentists ,le t P. M. U. | W ■ M S A .— No. 24—'11 Cow to Feed to Advantage. 'When feed la scarce or high in pile« do not stuff the old stripper to bring up her milk flow. A spring fresh cow can rarely be made to give a good flow of milk at thla time of the year Milk this cow if you want to, but It la not worth while to try to force her by feeding. The cow fresh this fall or the cow coming fresh now la tha one worth feeding. Influence of Good Cow«. It would be easier to keep good men on the farm lf the dairy farmers would keep better cows. A man ap preciates the opportunity of handling good stock, and he realizes that some responsibility la placed upon him If he knows that nothing but valuable and profitable cattle are kept Weeds and Bad Roads. Quite often the worst atrechea of the country highway during the win ter months are caused by the road side weeds that were left standing and served to catch the drifting •now. ACQUIT DARRO ff IN 34 MINUTES Jury in Famous Bribery Trial Agrees Quickly. Remarkable Scene Follows, Jurors Embracing Defendant and Judge Congratulating Him. Los Angeles— Carence S. Darrow was acquitted Saturday of the charge o f bribery by a jury, which was ex actly 34 minutes considering the case. Notwithstanding the verdict in this case, according to District Attor ney Fredericks, Mr. Darrow’s ordeal is not over. Fredericks declared he would insist upon the trial o f the law yer on a second indictment As he . sat in a cafe a few blocks from the scene o f his trial and acquit tal, surrounded by a few intimate friends and finding more relish in the perusal o f scores o f congratulatory telegrams than in his luncheon, Dar row apparently was unconcerned in the statement o f the prosecutor. A l though declining to discuss the threat ened second long ordeal, he said he was too happy to feel alarmed at any thing. Mr. Darrow was showered with tel egrams from all parts o f the country, which began pouring in within an hour after the verdict was given to the world. They came from [labor or ganizations, leaders o f organized la bor, intimate friends and many of whom he does not know. Most of them came ¿from Chicago, his home and the scene o f ¿most of his profes sional activities for a quarter o f a century. The court room scene which fol lowed the reading o f the verdict, just 34 minutes after the jury had retired, was one that had no parallel in the court annals o f this city. Jurors whose ^phlegmatic countenances had given no hint o f their feelings throughout the three months and more which elapsed since |the trial began, embraced the man they had tried and with tears running down their cheeks declared it was the happiest day of their lives. Court officials, including Judge Hut ton and the h ilf dozen bailiffs, joined in the congratulations and Mr*. Dar row, to whom the trial was a contin uous nervous strain, stood speechlessly happy with one hand in her husband’s and with the other wringing those of the jurors. FEDERAL ADVANCE SLOW. Mexican Rabela [Leave Big Job for ' Railway Repairers. ■ Juarez, Mexico— It is considered by railway men that federal troops can not occupy Juarez before next Monday at the earliest date. In advance of the federal army, under Generals Ra- bago and Tellez, ia a repair train, and two trains left Juarez to repair the road from this end. Determined to have some vestige of civil government, the citizens o f Juar ez met and named three commission- era, each with equal power o f ballot. In this way Juarez bears the distinc tion o f being the only city in Mexico with a commission government. Infantile Plague Serious. ¡1 Sacramento, Cal.— According to a statement issued from the office o f the state board o f health, there have al ready been 60 cases of poliomyelitis, commonly known as infantile paialy- ■ia, so far this month. Most o f the cases were reported from Southern California, although there were two cases found in Stockton and one in San Jose. In Los Angeles city there were 43 cases and in Los Angeles county 48. During July there were 188 cases in all and 36 deaths. In Los Angeles county there were 162 cases and 28 deaths. In June here were 31 cases and five deaths. Wild Buffalo Flourish. Washington, D. C— Lieutenant Colo nel Brett, commanding the Yellow stone National Park, has reported to ¡Secretary o f the Interior Fisher that his men have aeen more buffalo in the wild herd in the park recently than for ten years. They counted 48 buf falo, he said, all o f which appeared to be in fine condition. The tame herd which ia kept in an enclosure in the park, said Colonel Brett, now num bers 144. Nearly one half o f the buffaloes in the United States are in the Yellowstone park. Taft Signs Panaion Bill. Washington, D. C.— President Taft has signed the $160,000,000 pension appropriation bill. The pension office was immediately notified and tele graph orders were sent to the 18 out lying agencies to start payment at once o f the money ao long held up by the delay in congress. Each pension er in the United States will be paid by Tuesday at the latest. Paymaster General Smith, o f the army, baa auth orized payment to enlisted men of the regular army for July, leaving the June pay to be distributed later. Civil War Hsroins Dsad. Oakland, Cal.— Dr. C. Annette Buckel, famous nationally aa the “ lit- tie major” o f the Union army because o f her services during the Civil war, ia deed. Dr. Buckel was bom in Warsaw, N. Y ., August 26, 1833, and was graduated from the Woman’s Medical college o f Pennsylvania. At the outbreak o f the Civil war she vol unteered for hospital service in the Union army and accompanied the troops through some fierce battles. 8TARTS CLEARING-HOUSE PROBE Attorney-General Wickersham Investi gates Money Changers. Washington, D. C. — A collateral phase of the so-called money trust, It developed recently, ia being investi gated by Attorney-General Wicker- sham. The Inquiry, which may affect clear ing-house associations throughout the country, revolves about the rule of the New York Clearing-House Association requiring its members to charge a specified sum for the collection of out- of-town checks drawn on certain parts of the country, and at the same time giving them discretion whether to make charges for similar collections in other localities. A careful study of the workings of this rule Is being made by the Attor ney-General, It Is said, to determine whether the Sherman anti-trust law or the National bank act is being vio lated. If action is taken it will take prece dent for all clearing-house associations having similar rules. It is learned that the Attorney-General may refer the whole question to the Secretary of the Treasury for remedial measures if It is found that the law is being tech nically violated or that the practice, while not Illegal, seems against public policy. POSTOFFICE BILL PASSES. Upper House Restricts Rights of Em ployes to Join Organizations. Washington, D. C. — The annual postoffice approplatlon bill was passed by the Senate at the end of two days’ sharp fighting over propositions relat ing to parcels post, good roads Im provement and the affiliation of postal employes with labor organizations. As It goes back to the House it con tains some restrictions upon the right of postal employes to Join outside or ganizations; and an entirely new sys tem of parcels post based on the “ zone plan" with varying rates for varying distances. The measure will go into conference with many Important differences to be settled. The House provided that no employe of the postal service should be subject to reduction or removal for Joining an organization having for its object Improvement in conditions of labor or compensation. After a fight Involving the right of Government employes to strike, the Senate approved this In part, but pro vided that employes should not Join an organization "which Imposes an obligation or duty to strike or to as sist In a strike against the United States.” Under the terms of the bill as It passed both Houses, employes have the right to appeal to Congress for redress of grievances. BALDWIN RANCH IS SOLD. 14,000 Homes to Dot Late Turfman’e Last Holding, Just 8old. Los Angeles.—H. A. Unruh, execu tor of the will of the late Ellas J. (Lucky) Baldwin, has filed final pa pers completing the sale of the Rancho Clenega O’Paso de la TIJera, the last of the great turfman’s hold ings, to the Los Angeles Investment Company, for a stated consideration of $6,036,560. The total area Involved Is 3143.28 acres. One million dollars was paid In cash, with nine notes for $500,000 each for the remainder. The whole of the money paid will be clear cash for the heirs, Mrs. Anita Baldwin McClaughry and Mrs. Clara Baldwin Stocker, all of the debts of the estate having been liquidated by previous sales. The officers of the purchasing com pany announce that the entire hold ing will be cut up Into lots, of which it will make 28,000. Half that number of homes will be erected by the concern, construction to begin as soon as pos sible. The entire ranch will provide about 2500 city blocks and 900 miles of street frontage. Southern Pacific Sued. San Franeisco.—Suit has been filed by United States District Attorney John L. McNab against the Southern Pacific Company for alleged viola tions of the Federal law limiting to 16 the hours of trainmen engaged in in terstate commerce. In this suit, which Is one of 31 to come up for trial here on October 3, it is alleged that on the line between Red Bluff and Roseville, the company violated the law by al lowing a train crew of six to work from 5 a. m. to 10:45 p. m. On each count the company Is liable to a maxi mum fine of $500. 8hlppera File Big 8uit. Los Angeles.—What was said to be the most voluminous and heaviest law suit ever filed In California and per haps In any other commonwealth went on record in this city. It was against the Santa Fe Rail road, and the mere complaint com prised 16,000 pages of separate charges of alleged violation of the long-and-short-haul clause of the state constitution. Piled up, paper on paper, the lawsuit stood more than four feet high and required the combined ef forts of several strong men to move it. Maryland to Carry Knox. Seattle. — The cruiser Maryland, which is to sail from Seattle August 22 with Secretary of State Knox and his suite, who will attend the funeral of the Emperor of Japan, arrived at the Puget Sound Navy Yard from Seward, Alaska. She will begin load ing coal at once and then will ba painted and burnished. On August 21 she will proceed to Seattle to receive her passengers. Captain J. M. Ellf- cott commands the Maryland and will proceed to the Orient with her. Slandtr on Woman Goes. Milan.—The recent admission of women to the Masonic Order of Italy has caused considerable discussion as to the relation of this step to the Ital Ian women’s movement. Signora Troiae, the well-known au thor of Milan, and a leading suffra gist, declares that the matter la of very serioua note, if for nothing else than that It "removes the eternal slan der on woman that she Is nnable to keep a secret." Encouraging Disease. Old rotten applet, plums, grapee and pruntnga serve as excellent winter Rebel Attack Repuleed. homes for many Insects and bacterial Insurance Man Uninsured. Corinto, Nicaragua. — The govern diseases These "mummies” and New York— A fter spending a life ment troops at Managua succeedad In primings should be gathered up and time writing millions o f insurance repulalng the attacks of the revolu burn ad. policies, Archibald C. Haynee died tionary army under Generals Louis without any insurance on his own, Mena and Zeledon. Their victory, bow- Right Mating. life. In hie will just filed here b e ' “* " w\* not pronounced The bom- .w . tKn/. _ fc- . . , hardment of the city was discontinued, The right meting now la like bndt . . . . ^ wh,' h * ° !? to but It Is thought to be only temporary, that gradually unfold In the spring u. his widow. Haynes was at one time ^ American marines and blue- time and ripen Into richness of fruits one o f the beet-known insurance men At tb# |AKatlon am all well, the coming fall. in the country. He was general agent ¡Telegraphic communication between o f the Equitable. I here and Managua haa been restored. HEAVY RAINS DAMAGE CROPS ( f l g a Storm Is General Throughout f Northwest. oayt ^ - flakes / GOLDEN ROD' ! M I L L I N G CO. REDUCE YOUR LIVING EXPENSES Eat Golden Cereal Foods and recommend them to roa r acqaalnt- ancee. You set better quality and more for your money. They are made in your home eta to from tha beat Ore son Oata and Wheat. Larse pack-urea contain a Handsome Premium and all soada are guaranteed. Aek your srocer. Golden Rod Oats. Golden Rod Pancake Flour. Golden Rod Wheat Flakes. Ralston Select Bran. Golden Rod Wheat Nuts. Golden Rod Chick Food. Mirage Easy to Be Been. Spring-Sown Grain Hit — Hay a,.d The celebrated Fata Morgana, a Hops Suffer Mott By Strong presentation of natural “moving pic Wind and Rsin. tures” on an Immense scale which la ___ occasionally seen In the Straits of Messina, Is explained by a scientific 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 writer as being a mirage, such as fre ♦ 4 quently occurs In various parts of 4 Rain Storm Affects Northwest, -e the world; "In fact,” he says, "one ♦ --- ♦! 4 Salem—No gleam of hope for 4 may see a mirage any day by looking ¥ farmers' plight, as continued ¥ through the stratum of air overlying ¥ rains spell ruin to Spring-sown ¥ a hot stove, or adjacent to the side ¥ grain. 4 of a wall heated In the sunshine.” ¥ La Grande — Small percent- ¥ Young scientists will be Interested In ¥ age of total hay tonnage lr- ¥ verifying this statement ¥ reparably damaged by wind 4 ¥ and rain. 4 Displeased the Widow, 4 The Dalles—No crop damage ¥ A Philadelphia traveling man, hav ¥ reported. 4 4 McMinnville — Hop damage 4 ing gone upon that Journey for which ¥ greater than at first dntlclpat- ¥ there la no return ticket, his many ¥ ed. ¥ friends of the road consulted together ¥ Dallas—Hardest storm kuown 4 as to the remembrance to be lent by In Summer seasou passes over ¥ them, and finally decided upon a de ♦ section. ¥ sign which was not only original, but 4 Philomath—Hopyards suffer 4 which they considered peculiarly ap ¥ and late-sown grain, yet In 4 propriate. They never could under 4 field, soaked by rains. 4 Albany—Vetch, Linn Coun- 4 stand why the widow would not re ty's leading crop, greatest suf- 4 ceive the beautiful suit case, made of ¥ ferer lf rains continue. 4 white flowers, with the words, “ His 4 Seattle — Heaviest rain on 4 last trip," In purple violets, on one _________________ ¥ record throughout state. ¥ side. ♦ 4 Liquid blur is a weak solution. Avoid it. Buy 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Red Cross Ball Blue, the blue that's all blue. Ask your grocer. Salem—Drizzling rain off and ou throughout this week offered no gleam of hope for the farmers’ plight In thla section but added somewhat to the damage done to some of the crops, the grain in particular. Three or four more days of similar weather, farmers predict, will practi cally spell ruin to the Spring-sown grain. This has been considered a remark ably excellent season for grain which was sowed during the Spring months until the latest rain found a large share of It shocked and drenched It through. Today offered no Improve ment, even had there been no rain, as It was cloudy and lowering and the grain was soaked. Reports continue to be received of hop acreage going down, but the re ports did not indicate that as much acreage dropped as on previous days during the storm. After summing up the reports Sa lem hop men say that propably their estimate of 500 acres of hops going down was somewhat strained, but they believe that now fully 500 acres of yards have gone down in the state. Some of the hop doalera have sent reports to their Eastern houses plac ing the acreage down at all the way from 300 to 600 acres. So far but little damage Is reported to the hops, II being possible to put up the great majority of the vineB in yards where they have dropped. A few more days of the present weather, however, will result In the hop situation taking on something of a serious aspect, how ever, according to some of the deal ers. R ESEN TS JO U R N E Y OF KN O X. “ Dollar Doctrine” Seen In Visit to Funeral of Mikado. Parle—A Japanese financier, whose official mission In Paris prevents the publication of his name, in reply to a question by a correspondent as to the truth of the statement that the visit of Secretary of State Knox to Japan to attend the Mikado’s funeral was resened In that country, said: "Mr. Knox's presence at the Mik ado's funeral Is viewed by Japanese, highest and lowest alike, aB an evi dence of gross bad taste. Evidently the Japanese foreign office Is unable to say so as courtesy Is the primordial factor In my country. Nevertheless we Japanese who will see him at the Mikado's funeral will feel he ia In our country on business, that he 1» working his dollar doctrine. “ We regarded the Mikado with ven eratlon and the presence of any busi ness element at the coming sacred rite Is to us an Impertinence. He may as sure us of America’s friendship, but we do not need to be taught what we well know.” Noted Outlaw Captured. Salt Lake City.—Bert Dalton, al leged murderer of Marahal Dan Han son, of Cokeville, and a member of the notorious Whitney brothers gang of outlaws, who escaped In the jail break at Evanston, Wyo„ last week, wai captured near Sandy, Utah, by Sheriff Joseph C. Sharp, of Salt Lake County. Dalton was caught on a ranch, where he went to work. He Is now In the county jail here and refuses to divulge the whereabouts of Ernest Crutcher and Walter Van Fosser, who escaped with him. Secretary Wilson Is 77. Washington—"Tama Jim" WlUon. Secretary of Agriculture and the old est man In President Taft’s Cabinet, enjoyed his 77th birthday Friday. Secretary Wilson said he was looking forward to quitting public life on March 4 next, ao that he might go among his grandchildren, "don bis overalls and move around among the common people.” Wllaon has exceed ed by four years the record for long service In the Cabinet, and under bis regime the scope of the Department of Agriculture has been widely extended. Worth of Clothes. The Influence of clothes muat con tinue to be, as it has been from the beginning of blstroy, either “sacred or or profane," a foremost factor In those forces by which man’s destiny Is guided. His health and comfort, alms and purposes, social standing and bualneaa prosperity; everything Indeed that makes hla life worth living maj) be affected by it In directions never dreamed of by the tailor who. If he does not actually make the man, la largely Instrumental In making him what he la. THE PACIFIC LUTHERAN ACADEMY AND BUSINESS COLLEGE. OPENS SEPTEMBER 24 LOCATED NEAR TACOMA—Christian; co-nin- cational; large campus; modern equipment; ath letics; new $5000 gymnasium under construction. PKKPARKS thoroughly, and in the shortest possible time, for College, Business, Teaching, Civil Service, and Citizenship. Languages a Spe cialty. Eight Coursee; no entrance examinations; spe cial classes for foreigners. EXPENSES LOW: Tuition, board, room and washing, nine months. $180; eighteen weeks. $96; nine weeks, $50. You ask: How can you furnish all this for le«« than the usual price of board and lodging? We answer: By the aid o f our church we are enabled to give our students more than they pay for. We can’t tell all here. Our free 50-page cata logue will do it. Send for it. Address N. J. HONG, Principal Parkland, Wash. Lacking Important Point. Can a woman be a successful "ns* glcian?” A contemporary wizard says that she can, and that In London there are many society women who have taken a course In wlzardy as a means of becoming proficient In some kind of “ parlor trick” by which to enter tain company. It does seem, though, that a magician without coat sleeves to pull back, as a preliminary to do ing his marvels, would be fatally de ficient In paraphernalia. MOTHER OF LARGE FAMILY Thslr Proper Place. The folks who are perpetually pro testing that their consciences an clear and that they have nothing foi which to reproach themselves are gen Tells How She Keeps H ei erally in a bad way, for the probabil Health — Happiness For ity is that their much-vaunted con Those W ho Take sciences have stopped working and are of no further use. Such people Her A dvice. never allow that they are In the wrong; their favorite sentence Is, ” 1 told you s o l” and their proper placs Seottville, Mich. — “ I want to tell you Is on a dosert Island with thick how much good Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- skinned turtles for boon companions etableCompound and Sanative Wash have Hair Fabrics. done me. I live on a farm andhave worked In the manufacture of hair fabric* very h a r d . I am the hair la reduced to a paste by a sol forty-five years old, vent and all kinds of hair and fib«-9 and am the mother are used. The paste Is run through of thirteen children. zn artificial silk spinner and drawn Many people think from the spinner in threads. Some of it strange that I am these are a yard or more In length. not broken d o wn They can be braided or woven like ar with hard work and tificial horse-hair. Hair composition tile care of my fam of superior quality la kept for the man ufacture of wigs and braids.—Harper’s ily, but I tell them of my good friend, Lydia E. Pinkham’a Vegetable Com Weakly. _________________ pound, and that there will be no back N o thoughtful Person uses liquid blue. It's a pinch o f blue in a large bottle o f water. Ask for ache and bearing down pains for them if Rad Cross Ball Blue, the blue that’s all blue. they will take it as I have. I am scarcely ever without it in the house. Ancient Italian City. “ I will say also that I think there ia Asolo, which Inspired two of Brown no better medicine to be found for young ing’s verses In "Asolando” and which girls. My eldest daughter haa taken Is observing the centenary. Is a forti Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com fied town In Trevlao, In northern Italy. pound for painful periods and irregular It waa the ancient Acelum, and pos ity, and it haa helped her. sesses a cathedral and a ruined aque “ I am always ready and willing to duct The former palace of Catha speak a good word for Lydia E. Pink rine Cornaro, queen of Cyprus, Is In ham’s Vegetable Compound. I tell every the neighborhood. There are beauti one I meet that 1 owe my health and ful seats In the vicinity, and tha town happiness to your wonderful medicine.” has n population of under 6,000.—Lon —Mrs. J . G. J o h n s o n , Seottville, Mich., don Globe. R.F.D. 8. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound, made from native roots and herbs, Paator’a Merited Rebuke. When Samuel S. Colber was preach contains no narcotics or harmful drugs, ing In an old log schoolhouae In Johu and today holds the record of being the •on county, Missouri, In 1852, hla most successful remedy for woman’s ilk congregation waa quite small. One known. Sunday all wars sitting at the desks forward near the puncheon floor. His Grounds. The sermon waa monotonous and tha By a queer trick of politics an 1» old log seats had no backs. Observ ing the sleepy, downcast look of tha norant and pompous old darky was congregation, the minister woke them elected Judge of a minor court In a cer up by shouting: “ Arouse, heaven Iv tain western state. Iu the first case over which he presided he made a not under the floor!” ruling ao absurd that tha lawyar whose M others w ill And Mr». W inslow 's B ooth ia« case waa affected by It aald: “This la ly r u p t h . host rem edy to une for thsD chU d xsa a very strange ruling, your honor. durin g l*to teeth in g p eriod . Upon what grounds do you make ItT” “What grounds—does you aayT Why, Have You Noticed TheaaT deae yer* co’thouse grounds, of co’sel” An Inventor In America has earned replied the Judge.—Judge. J the thanks of all who have been seek; Ing after a really sanitary form of Ite Only Purpose. kissing. In certain parts of that great “ O Willie, Willie," cried a teachei country, when young ladles go to par to a hopelessly dull pupil, "whatever ties and places where they klaa, they do your think your head ia forT” are provided with a sterilized Ivory Willie, who evidently thought this an ring, mounted on a silver handle. Thla other of the troublesome question* la Interposed between Ihe kisser and that teachers were always asking, the ktaeee, and the resulting sensation pondered it deeply. “ Please, miss,” la known aa "pasteurized pleasure,” or he replied at length, “to keep my "gormless Joy.”—London Answers. collar on I"—Youth’s Companion. •tabbed by Umbrella. Perhaps the strangest weapon ever , used for killing was an umbrella. In October, 190$, a man named Ernest Smith was found dead In Chiswick High street, England. He had a punc tured wound In the eye which had reached hla brain and which the doc J. D.’s Estate Guardad. tors agreed had undoubtedly been Tsrrytown, N. Y.—John Rockefel caused by the steel ferrule of an um ler’s estate at Pocantlco Hills was brella. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is not a — guarded by a number of deputy she' stimulant. It does not make Uncls Pennywise Says! iffs, because of fear of violence on the Countless ages of time passed, as we you feel better one day, then part of discharged employes. Several compute time—before the earth waa as bad as ever th e n ext men recently were let go by the fore prepared for the advent of man. The men of laborers and trouble ensued, oldest civilization known Is that of There is not a drop o f alco culminating In an attempt to hum the Egypt, and the pyramids are things hol in it Ayer’s Sarsapa cottage of Foreman Antonio Dl Marco Mr. Rockefeller Informed Sheriff o f yesterday compared with the fo r- j rilla is a tonic. You have the Doyle of the situation and aaked for mat Ion o f the alluvial plains of the steady, even gain that com es Euphrates, or the delta of the Mlssle- aid. ■Ippl. not to mention the Lnurentlan from such a medicine. Ask Turks Slay Christiana. rocks. your doctor all about this. Cettlnje, Montenegro— Reports are Trust him fully, and always The Peanut Flux. circulating here of another massacre Tha last thing to recover from the of Christians by Mohammedans In Al do as he says. He knows. bania A band of Mohammedans sup effect* of a big celebration Is the five- ported by Turkish troops attacked cent hag of peanuts. It dwindles pain Who makes the best liver pilli? The a section of the Christian population fully during the Influx of greet crowds J. C. Ayer Company, of Lowell, Mate. In the Berna district of Albania. A Other foods remain comparatively They have been m*kii*g Ayer's Pills foi tierce fight ensued and women and ■table In quantity for a fixed price ever sixty years. If you have the slight eat doubt about using these pills, ssl children are reported to have been murdered by wholesale. Little girls bnt the mob diminishes the allowaace your doctor. Ask him first, that’ s best ---------- ’ U a * r a v i a oc - “ uts for a nickel hr halt. were made captives. Stimulant or Tonic?