FUNERAL TURNS
INTO REVIVAL
Farm ers and M erchants
Write us for our cash offer on your
Farm and Dairy Produce. If we
don’t handle it will refer you to re
liable buyer. ptARSON-PAGE CO.
Portland. Oregon.
_________________ _______ — --------- /
Many Repent Before Bier of
Dead Commander.
HOWARD E. BURTON - Asaayer an<J Che mi «t.
• ■ Leadville. Colorado. Specimen prices: Gold.
Silver. Lead. SI. Gold, Silver, 75c; Gold. fiUc: Zinc
or Copper, SL Mailing envelopes a id full price liel
sent on application. Control and Umpire work so
Lotted. Beiorencc: Oarbonate National Lank.
Machinery
Salvation Army Barracks in London
Filled to Overflowing—Mourn
ing Purposely Omitted.
Second-Hand Machin
ery bought, sold and
exchanged: engines,
boilers, sawmills, etc. The J. E. Martin Co.. 76 1st
6t* Portland. Send for Stock List and prices.
IDEAL FRUIT PICKERS* BAG.
Send us one dollar and we will mail you sample
o f Ideal Apple Pickers' Bag. Positively the best
picking bag on the market, allowing man to use
Loth hands. Barker Manufacturing Co., 35 Am
brose St., Rochester, N. Y.
S a ì 4
-tfio'
■
E b u s in e s s c o l l e g e
® |gl
E gg
I v i
h r a
W A S H IN G T O N AND TENTH STS
PORTLAND.
OREGON
i <JorìT Kn o w -
A Wild W e i t ”
0 ecA u sc
h e’ d
BM
i f f i W R IT E F O R C A T A L O G
J Thè Schiavi that Flare» You in a Good. Position
g ’ öt'
Unblocked
PANAMAS
Show -
h e
C a id ,
f ’W y
H a i t i s
fh y -in
|Hud Worm,
1 "tViink-
fia ffh e e
r \ y
M OLM ESi
J oàh
.1h e
io
b e a T~
ß oll-i And ße-w-S
FROM WEAVER TO WEARER
Can be worn unblocked
by women. Blocked in
any size, eha|>e or style
for men. Brims 3 and 6
Inches. Light weight
Sent postpaid on receipt
iy refunded
rerntided if not satisractorr. Get a
of price. Money
durable, stylish nat
hat for the
th( half of what it would cost
you elnewhere.
Address
C. H. Meussdorffer. Prop.
‘¿27 1-2 Washington St.
Twenty years in Portland.
Portland. Or
KO D AK
rolls developed, 10c, any
size.
Largest and best
shop in Northwest. Com
plete price list on request.
Best results guaranteed.
J A C O B S r£SZ°
P.-I. Build’?, Seattle
Moat Centrally Located.
NOTE THE RATES.
The Modern Aesop.
A dog, who was accustomed to oyer
eat, held a piece of meat in hla mouth
as he crossed a placid stream by
means of a plank. Looking in, he
■aw what he took to bo another dog
carrying another piece of meat. Snap
ping greedily to get this as well, he
let go the meat that he had and lost
It In the stream. As a result his Indi
gestion felt much better all the rest
of the day.—Life.
Only One Real Road.
There Is only one real road to hu
man prosperity, and It Is the same
for a nation as for an Individual. That
Is the honest road of hard work un
der free Institutions, and when they
tried to teach people that they could
be made rich by some short cut, they
were doing that which was thorough
ly dishonest.—Walter Long.
S u r e ly !
You can rely on
HOSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters
to help you in cases of
INDIGESTION
DYSPEPSIA
POOR APPETITE
CONSTIPATION
MALARIA
FEVER AND AGUE
BOYS 0N A STOCK EXCHANGE
Amsterdam Youths’ Privilege for Dis
covery of Gunpowder Plot— En
joyed Nearly 300 Years.
Of the many quaint and curious
customs, traditions and privileges pre
vailing In Holland none is more ex
traordinary than a certain privilege
that has been enjoyed by the boys of
Amsterdam for nearly 300 years, the
Boston Evening Transcript remarks.
At a fixed time each summer these
boys gather by the hundreds In the
great square called the Dam, situated
In the center of the city. Each boy
has a drum slung over his shoulder.
Facing this square Is the stock ex
change, and on the occasion In ques
tion just as soon as the day's business
Is over as many of the boys as possi
ble crowd Into the building. They
proceed to the floor of the exchange,
where, pursuant to this old custom,
they are permitted to march about,
singing and beating their drums.
The origin of this custom. It Is said.
Is as follows:
One afternoon of the year 1622 a
crowd of boys playing In the Dam lost
a ball In the canal that In those days
skirted one side of the square. One
of the lads, while climbing In among
the piles on which the building stood,
found Instead of his ball a boat moor
ed In a dark corner and loaded with
boxes of gunpowder. This showed
clearly enough what was afterward
ascertained with certainty, the Inten
tion of the Spanish cqnsplrators to
blow up the stock exchange while it
was crowded, as It was every day,
with the leading citizens of the city.
The boy who stumbled upon the
gunpowder at once hurried to the
town authorities with his news. The
boatload of explosives was quietly
sunk In the canal and the Spanish
plot thus frustrated.
When the burgesses asked the boy
what reward he desired for the serv
ice he had rendered the town he re,
plied that so long as there was a
stock exchange In Amsterdam the boys
HOSTAGES’ FATE FEARED.
of the town would like to be permit
ted to make the floor of the exchange
French Troops T oo Busy to Rescue
their playground during a certain
Officers From Moors.
part of the year. The request was
granted; and so the custom survives.
Paris— Public anxiety is becoming
intense over the fate o f the seven
French officers held as hostages by the
PROMPTER IS ALWAYS HANDY Moors under El Hiba, at Marakesh,
Morocco. Emissaries have been dis
Little Device Held In Hand Enables patched to Marakesh by the French
One to Deliver Long Speech
commander, but have obtained no in
Without Trouble.
formation.
General Lyautey, the
French resident governor, reported to
Do you want to make a speech and the foreign office that the volunteers
have your audience think that you’re who had undertaken the dangerous
so all-flred smart that you can quote duty had returned from El Hiba’s
figures and facts without looking at headquarters where they in vain tried
any notes? There's more ways than to effect a ransom, but could not as
one. Outside of learning your speech certain the lot of the prisoners.
"by heart,” the best device Is the
The French column commanded by
Invention of a man In Australia. It Colonel Mangin has been given full
consists simply of a small metal case, liberty o f action to proceed to the suc
no larger than the metal matchbox cor o f the hostages if such a step
used.
should be thought advisable.
The
A roller Is at either end of the case French troops, however, are too fully
and one of the rollers Is folding with occupied to do anything in that way.
REMEMBER it has served three
generations faithfully.
Try it today but insist on having
HOSTETTER’S
STOMACH BITTERS
Ever-Ready Prompter.
paper on which appear the notes of
speech. The box Is held In the palm
of the band and people standing right
beside the orator would never sus
Worked That Time, Anyway.
pect Its presence. The paper Is un
In the Irish rebellion a bombshel rolled either by pressure of the thumb
whizzed toward an Irishman’s head or by the manipulation of a milled
Pat dodged It with a low bow, and 1 screw on one of the rollers.
went by, taking off the hdkd of a mai
behind him. ‘'Faith,” exclaimed Pat
Her Flowers Melted.
“ ye niver knew a man to lose any
Little Minnie, who had been spend
thing by bein' perlite!”
ing the afternoon at a neighbor’s, was
presented with a bouquet of beautiful
flowers. Upon ber arrival at home
her mother told her to put them In a
vase filled with water and they would
keep fresh for several days. A few
days later Minnie appeared with the
wilted flowers In ber band and said;
” 1 dess I'll frow 'em away now, mam
ma, 'cause they Is all melted.”
Nervous ?
Thin? Paie?
Are you easily tired, lack your
usual vigor and strength?
Then your digestion must be
poor, your blood must be
thin, your nerves must be
weak. You need a strong
tonic You n eed A y e r ’s
Sarsaparilla, the only Sarsa
parilla entirely tree from alco
hol. W e believe your doctor
will e n d o rse these state
ments. Ask and find o u t
If you think constipation is of trifliai
consequence. Just ask your doctor. He
will disabuse you of tbit notion in short
order. "Correct it at o n ce !” be will
••y. Then aak him abou Ayer'n Pilla.
A mild liver pill, all vegetable.
. B U i a w i - o . exam oo . u n g , n a .
London— Funeral services for the
founder of the Salvation Army, Gen
eral William Booth, were held at the
Olympia.
In accordance with the
traditions of the organization, they
were held without pomp or symbols of
mourning, but were carried out with
moving fervor and impressiveness.
Thirty-four thousand persons partici
pated.
The body o f the late general, in a
plain pine coffin, rested high upon a
white catafalque in front of the big
platform across the end o f the hall,
where all the chief officers o f the or
ganization were seated and where 40
bands of music were massed.
The
crimson flag o f the “ army o f lire and
blood” which the general unfurled on
Mount Calvary was planted about the
coffin. A bank o f flowers, composed
of the tributes sent by royalty and by
many societies, was behind it.
In front rows o f chairs before the
coffin were filled with representatives
of various parties and also the equerry
for the king, several mayors in the
robes and chains of office, a delegation
from the Stock Exchange, clergymen
of all the Protestant churches and
Jewish rabbis.
But the rank and file o f the great
gathering was composed o f the plain
people, for whom the army works and
of whom it is composed.
The most solemn moments of the
long meeting were when the coffin was
borne along the center o f the hall to
the sonorous music o f the "Dead
March from Saul.” A small proces
sion, representing many branches of
the army’s activity, carrying the flags
of their respective countries, preceded
it.
Every seat on the floor and in gal
leries was taken when the service be
gan, and thousands o f persons were
hanked around the outskirts o f the
hall, half o f whom could not see over
the Bhoulders o f those in front, but
who could hear and take their part.
At the conclusion o f the ceremonies,
prayers and hymns alternated for half
an hour, after which a true Salvation
Army revival service was conducted
and an invitation given to sinners and
backsliders to come to the “ mercy
seat.”
Dozens o f persons forced
their way through the crowded aisle
to the mercy seats, where they knelt
in prayer. In some cases the police
were required to force a way for the
penitents.
The meeting was turned into a col
ossal revival.
The most impressive feature of the
service then followed.
All the bo I-
diera o f the army rose and recited the
covenant o f fidelity, pledging them
selves to be faithful soldiers o f the
Lord.
insane to Be Uniformed.
Sacramento — Brass buttons on
bright uniforms o f the army, uniforms
o f officers and men with gold braid
and distinguishing stripes o f rank will
be worn by the volunteer afmy at the
Agnews state hospital for the insane.
One hundred uniforms o f the obsolete
kind have been sent to the asylum.
The management has interested the
inmates in military problems.
Com
panies have been organized, forts
bnilt, dummy guns and dummy [field
pieces constructed and the ’ patients go
through military maneuvers.
Aviator Burns In Mid-air.
Douai, France’—[Lieutenant Louis
Felix Chandenicr, o f the aviation
corps, was burned to death while fly
ing in his aeroplane.
He started
from this city for Chalons on the test
necessary for the acquisition o f the
pilot’s certificates. When he reached
Qrecy-Sur-Seine, about half the dis
tance, his petrol tank burst into
flames and the machine crashed to the
earth. The young officer’s body was
completely consumed by the fire. He
had been attached only a short time to
the aviation corps.
Chinese Troops Mutiny.
London—The Chinese government is
endeavoring to hush up the mutiny of
8000 troops at Tung Chou, the Pekin
correspondent o f the Daily Telegraph
■ays. The authorities, he adds, have
taken precautions to protect all the
roads leading to the capital, but the
mutineers have defied the imperial
troops, seized the road leading from
A Brick Problem.
Tung Chou to Pekin, and are looting
If a brick balances with three-quar the adjacent villagea, defying all at
ters of a brick and three-quarters of tempts at capture.
a pound—then how much does a brick
Hail Strips Orchards.
weigh?
Answer;—Three pounds.
Logan. Utah— Huge hailstones driv
en by a heavy wind awept fields and
orchard« for 30 miles, stripping or
Low Down Dog.
Small Edna was out walking wltb chards, razing grain and clearing sug
her mother when a dog with unusually ar beet fields. The loss to agricultur
short legs passed them. “ Mamma.” ist« and fruitgrowers has been enorm
said Edna, "did you ever sea such a ous. The path o f the storm was five
miles wide.
low down dog as that T '
Hotel Would Do.
Small Willie was out walking with
his mother one afternoon, when she
stopped to give a nickel to a beggar.
"Why don’t be go home, mamma?”
asked Willie. "The poor man bag no
home,” she replied. "Then,” continued
the little fellow, "why don't he go
to a hotel?”
POSTOFFiCES CLOSE SUNOAYS
New Regulations of Department Af
fect Large Cities.
EAST SUFFERS
INTENSE HEAT
Washington, D. C.— Plans were
perfected by
Postmaster General
Hitchcock whereby the administration
o f the new law prohibiting the deliv
ery o f mail on Sundays will have no
serious effect upon the handling of im
portant mail matter.
Holders of lock boxes on first and Chicago Gives Up tp Humid W a v e-
second class postoffices will have ac
Five Die and Many Are Pros
cess to them as usual, although no
trated—Corn Crop Aided.
mail deliveries will be made by car
riers on the street or at postoffice win
dows. Mail for hotel patrons and i Chicago—All heat records for the
newspapers will be delivered to them season melted away Saturday when
through their lock boxes by the simple government thermometers registered
arrangement of having that mail approximately 85 degrees. This was
sorted on the railway cars before it on top of the Federal building, where
reaches destination. Such mail will breezes were blowing, but down in the
be regarde! as “ transit matter,” and cavernous streets the heat was above
will be distributed immediately upon the 109 mark. One death and many
its arrival at the office o f destination, prostrations were recorded by the po
thus practically insuring speedier de lice. That the death list is not much
livery to the addressees than hereto larger is due to the fact that this was
a half-holiday and thousands o f per
fore has been the case.
sons had quit work at noon
The maximum degree o f heat was
NOVELTY FOR ROUND-UP.
reached at 2 o’clock in the afternoon
Pendleton Show Will Stage Genuine and continued until after sundown.
The entire city wilted and gave up
Rabbit Orive,
the battle early in the day.
The
Pendleton, Ore.— Seldom is it given night had been hot and there was no
to an audience o f twenty thousand opportunity to store energy against
people to witness a coyote, wolf or the next day’s heat. The proprietors
rabbit chase but that is just what has of department stores and factories,
been provided as one of the features realizing the unusual situation, dis
o f the Round-Up which is to be held missed as many o f their employes as
in Pendleton this year on September possible and permitted the remainder
26, 27 and 28.
Real thoroughbred to drag around as they chose. An in
fox hounds trained to the hunt are to vading army of 16 enegetic men could
be seen and heard close in pursuit of have captured the entire city with
slinking coyotes, stealthy timber wol small resistance.
ves or sprightly jackrabbits by reason
Dispatches from cities and towns in
of a contract which has just been en Illniois, Northern Indiana, Lower
tered into by local the association and Michigan and Wisconsin tell of un
Leyn B. and J. Kenworthy of Dayton, usually oppressive heat, which half
Waeh.
baked the life ar d energy out o f man
The Utter Kenworthy
is a big and beast alike.
Prostrations were
stockman of Columbia county Wash reported in many o f the smaller cities,
ington and the owner o f a stable of and advices from Btnall towns and rural
thoroughbred horses and a kennel of districts tell of horses being killed
registered hounds.
The sage brush by the sun’ s rays.
about his ranch is alive with jack-
There was one bright spot in the en
rabbits and coyotes, while an occas tire situation and that stood out prom
ional wolf steals down from the tim inently in the general picture of mis
ber. He proposes to capture several ery.
The torridity is pushing the
of these animals, bring them to Pen great corn crop rapidly beyond the
dleton at the time o f the Round-Up peril o f early frosts, which now con
turn them loose in the park during the stitute the chief bugbear in the grain
performances, put his hounds on the markets.
trail and let the spectators see a little
Although the'weather Sunday was
excitement such as they read about. two degrees cooler than Saturday, five
However, lest any humanitarian shud deaths of adults from heat were re
der at the thoughts of such cruelty, ported. There were several prostra
the Round-Up directors have announc tions, one of which will result fatally.
ed that they have specified in their The temperature reached a maximum
contract that both dogs and their o f 93, and a 16-mile wind from the
quarry shall be muzzled in order that southwest served to dispel much of
neither shall be damaged when the the humidity, which added greatly to
pursurers overtake the pursued.
the suffering Saturday.
Riders will also follow close on the
The low death rate is due'to the
trail o f the hounds in order to rescue fact that few persons were at work.
rather than kill the victims o f the Thousands scattered to the northwest
chase. Round-Up park is a large en ern resorts to remain until Monday
closure and tightly fenced so that the night, and the streets were practically
chase will not pass from view o f the deserted. The lake, on the contrary,
audience. The novelty o f such a feat was densely populated, boats o f every
ure is expected to make it one o f the desciption being commandeered to
most popular of the three-day succes carry the sweltering populace out
sion o f thrills.
where they could get air free from the
dust and steam of the hot city.
PLANE DEEMED UNSAFE.
The death rate among babies was
high and a majority of them practical
Aviator Refuses to Fly in 316,000 ly suffocated or fretted themselves in
to a state o f apoplexy over their suf
Racing Craft,
ferings from the heat.
Chicago — There may be no Ameri
can defender of the Gordon Bennett
SCHOOL FRATS CONDEMNED
world’ s champion aeroplane trophy, in
spite o f the expenditure o f $15,000 by
a Chicago syndicate for a racing aero Chicago Judge Says Socletias Ara
Menace to Lew and Order.
plane designed to travel 125 miles an
hour.
Chicago—“ School frats” and secret
DeLloyd Thompson, who had been societes generally were condemned in
trained as pilot o f the Aero club of a decision handed down by Judge John
America’s monoplane, Nieuport, has Gibbons, in which he ordered reinsta
refused to fly the racer on the ground ted Edward Smith, a former pupil in
that it was “ obviously unsafe, ill- the Oak Park High School, who was ex
designed and unable to fly for a single pelled because he was believed to be a
mile as it stands.”
member o f the high school “ frat.”
This situation arose after aeronaut
The court held there was no evi
ical engineers, at Thompson’s sugges dence to show that the boy was a
tion, reported unfavorably to him on member o f the secret Bociety.
the soundness of the craft.
“ Societies are and always will be a
With Thompson’s refusal it became menace to law and order,” said Judge
known that Glenn H. Martin, the Pa Gibbon.
“ They inculcate in their
cific Coast aviator, had volunteered to members a spirit o f insubordination,
“ see what he could do” toward get prevarication and
falsehood, and
ting the racer in shape for use.
thereby indirectly, if not directly,
shield from punishment members
Suicide's to Evade Summons.
leagued together by secret pledges
Andover, Mass. — Ernest Pittman, and pass words.”
head o f the W. W. Pittman company,
Greeks Ask Turks to Go.
one o f the largest textile mill con
Athens — A bellicose mass meeting
struction companies in New Enlgand,
held in the Creek island o f Samos or
committed suicide here by shooting.
ganized and sent to the foreign con
He had been subpenaed by the Suffolk
suls a resolution demanding the de
county grand jury to testify regarding parture of the Turkish troope from the
alleged “ planting” o f dynamite to dis island end a revision o f the constitu
credit the Lawrence strikers. The tion. The Russian consul promised
summons followed the testimony be that the troops would leave the island
fore the grand jury against John as soon as the island police force was
Breen, who was convicted and fined organized. Samos, which lies off the
for planting the dynamite.
west coast o f Asia Minor, a short dis
tance southwest o f Smyrna, is an aut
onomous principality under the sover
Milk Cause o t Meningitis.
Vancouver, B. C.— “ Owing to the eignty o f Turkey.
■hocking state o f affairs in this city,
Lawful Osith Desired.
one o f my patients is dying from
spinal meningitis, contracted from
New York—Governor Dix will next
impure milk,” said Dr. A. A. Wilson. week receive an appeal from Mrs.
About four days ago, Miss Stainsforth Sarah Harris, 33 years old, a sufferer
partook o f some fresh milk purchased from paralysis for three years, for an
at the regular family dairy, and soon act o f the legislature which will make
after consumption o f the milk, symp it lawful for physicians to end her
toms o f poison were apparent, and Dr. suffemgs by a merciful death. For
Wilson was called to attend the girl. three years Mrs. Harris has not been
He diagnosed the case to be spinal able to move hand or foot because o f a
meningitis, and attributed it to the spinal malady which keeps her con
milk containing poisonous germs.
stantly in intense pain.
Her appeal
was dictated to a clerk at the Audu
Rebels Fire on Troops.
bon Sanitarium and will be forwarded
El Paso, Tex. — Making way with to Albany.
100 head of cattle obtained in a raid
Canal to Open in Yaar.
on the Culberson ranch, situated four
miles from the border and 36 miles
Los Angeles—Writing a personal
from Hschita. N. M., a band o f 25 letter to Clarence H. Matson, secre
Mexican rebel raiders exchanged shots tary o f the Los Angeles board o f har
with a troop o f the Third United bor commissioners. Colonel George
States cavalry stationed below Hachi- Goethals, chief engineer of the Pana
ta. according to reports received here ma canal, said that the big trana-isth
by Colonel E. Z. Steever. Colonel mian ditch would be handling inter-
Steever announced that additional oeeanic traffic in September, 191J1.
troops would be rushed to the scene. Such handling of traffic, however, ac
cording to Colonel Goethals, will be a
Treats for Surrender o f Captives.
"try-ou t,” in preparation for the for
Tangier—Negotiations were begun mal opening a year later.
here by Colonel Mangin, commanding
Two Marines Killad.
the French troope, with Elbiba, the
south Moroccan pretender, for the sur
Panama— Reliable information from
render of Vice Consul James Maigret Nicaragua received here la to the ef
and eight French officers, who were fect that two American marines have
eaptured when the pretender recently been killed there.
took the town of Marakesh
It is
Managua, Granada and Maaaya are
feared that the followers of Elhiba "till beleaguered, and the inhabitants
will massacre the prisoners unless o f the two latter towns are nearing
they are soon released.
the point of starvation.
Weather Bureau Registers 95,
Breaking All Records.
REDUCE YOUR LIVING EXPENSES
Eat Golden Cereal Foods and recommend them to your acquaint
ances. You get better quality and more for your money. They are
made in your home state from the beat Oregon Oats and Wheat.
Large packages contain a Handsome Premium arid all goods are
guaranteed. Aak your grocer.
Golden Rod Oats.
Golden Rod Pancake Flour.
Golden Rod Wheat Flakes. Ralston Select Bran.
Golden Rod Wheat Nuts.
Golden Rod Chick Food.
W. L. DOUGLAS
SHOES
*3.00 *3.50 *4.00 *4.50 AND *5.00
FOR M EN A N D W O M E N
Boy s all w o ar W . L. Douglas $2.00, $2.30
and $3.00 School Shoo». Best in tho world
W . L. Douglas make, and tell, more $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00
shoe, than any other manuf.ct-!'«r in the world b e c a m e
they look better, fit better, and wear longer than ordi
nary shoe*.
CAUTION.—When you buy .hoe* be .ure W . L. Dougla.
name i. stamped on the bottom. It guarantee, protection to you agaimt
inferior shoe.. Beware of substitutes. W. L. Douglas shoes are sold in 78
own stores in large cities and retail shoe dealers everywhere.
Fast Color fys/sts.
Write for Catalog,
W . L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mata,
Original Amen Comer.
The origin of the name ‘‘Amen cor
ner” la Interesting and throws a
pleasant light on English Catholicity
of the days before the apostasy of
Henry VIII. Each year on the feast
of Corpus Chrlsti the faithful went In
procession to St. Paul’s cathedral.
Mustering In Cheapslde, the proceu-
■ion moved toward the cathedral, the
clergy chanting the “Our Father" os
they passed along the street still
sailed Paternoster row, reaching the
“Amen” as they turned the corner
known for years as Amen corner.—
iv a Marla.
Red Creda Bull Blue will wash double aa many
clothe.-» as any other blue. Don’ t put your money
into any other.
Damage by Lightning In Cities.
Investigations made over Eu-ooe
leem to justify the belief that the dam-
Ige by lightning, In the cities particu
larly. has decreased to a very marked
degree In recent years, and It Is ex
plained by the presence of electric
wires, which act aa a protection In dl-
rertlng the electric bolts.
Aa the
wires are put underground, it Is ex
pected that there will be noticed a
great Increase in the amount of dam-
ige by lightning and a return will be
generally made to the use of lightning
rods.
_________________
THE
PACIFIC LUTHERAN ACADEMY
AND BUSINESS COLLEGE.
OPENS SEPTEMBER 24
LOCATED NEAR TACOMA-Chrmtian; coed u
cational; large campus; modem equipn :r.t; ath
letics: new $5000 gymnasium under construction.
PREPARES thoroughly, and In the shortest
possible time, for College, Business, Teaching,
Civil Service, and Citizenship. Languages a Spe
cialty.
Eight Courses: no entrance examinations; spe
cial classes for foreigners.
EXPENSES LOW: Tuition, board, room and
washing,’ nine months, $180; eighteen weeks. $95;
nine weeks. $60.
You ask: How can you furnish all this for less
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 hero. Our free 50-page cata
logue will do it. Send for it. Address
Mothers w ill find Mrs. W inslow 's Soothing
Syrup the host rem edy to use -or their- -UUdre-i
.'u rlu g i\ « too thing period.
N. J. HONG, Principal
Parkland, Wash.
Born; Not Mad*.
“ Professor," said Miss Skylight, **,
want you to suggest a course In Ilf«
for me. I have thought of Journal
Ism—’’ "What are your own incline,
tlons?” “ Oh. my soul yearns and
throba and pulsates with an ambition
to give the world a life-work that
shall be marvelous In Its scope, tbd
weirdly entrancing In the vastnesa ol
Its structural beauty!”
“ Woman,
you’re born to he a milliner.”
Chinese Barbere In Hard Luck.
Barber shops were the exception,
/ather than the rule, In China In the
old days, Itinerant barbers attending
to their customers’ wants In the
itreets or In the customers’ home.
There appears to be no tendency to
UICK RELIEF
ORE EYES
ward the Institution of barber shops P e ttits E y e S a lv e
•Inca the change of hairdressing; In
Locomotlve’e Diet.
fact, the tendency locally Is to do
Young Freddie la a natural student
away with the barber altogether. Thus and observer, and he la especially In
many families are purchasing hairclip terested in railway matters. The oth
pers, which seem to be regarded aa the er day, waiting with hla mother in a
inly essential to h-tron tttng.
train mysteriously “ held up” at a way-
Red CroM Ball Blue, all blue, beat bluing value side station, Freddie pondered: “ Mam
In the whole world, makes the laundreaa smile.
ma, I guess this la where the en
gine gets lta dinner. They feed It on
What Could He Mean?
coal, hot water and matches, and 1
A young woman went to a grocery guess they let It have all the hot air 1/
/tore and asked the polite clerk 11 wanta for dessert.”
he had some good cheese. "Yes, In
deed,” he replied, “ I have some lovely
Varying Grades of Caviar.
cheese,” “ It Is not correct to call
The finest caviar la the ble’.uga, pre
cheese ’lovely,’ ” she said. “How la pared from the roe of the white stur
that?” he Inquired. “Because ’lovely’ geon; little less fine Is the sevrluga,
should be used to qualify only ’some prepared from the sterllated sturgeon.
thing that Is alive." “ Well,” retort Both are put up at Astrakhan, Russia
ed the clerk, “I’ll stick to ’lovely.’ "
Way of the Truly Great.
It la e a B y In this world to live aft
er the world’s opinion; It la e a s y In
■olltude to live after one’s own; but
the great man la he who In the midst
of the crowd keeps with perfect sweet
ness the Independence of solltuu£—
Emerson. _____________
Discovery of Carborundum,
Carborundum first was produced by
a chemist who, while experimenting
wltb electricity, happened to place car
bon electrodes connected with a dy
namo into a bowl containing some
crushed coke nnd clay.
M E X IC A N
*
MUSTANG
LINIMENT
THE POULTRY REMEDY. I
I
Mr. Stephen Holbrook«, Soc’ jr
I
Tacom a (W ash.) Poultry A m ’ ii write«I I
“ I will ¿five Mexican M ustang Liniment ■
an unequivocal endorsement us a rem edj H
for Humblefoot and Canker in the Throat. ■
H itherto I have found these diseases o f my I
poultry very difficult t o cure but M ustang ■
Liniment proved t o be a positive remedy.11 ■
Painless Dentistry
NERVOUS
DESPONDENT
’/
WOMEN
la 25
our
-our
hobby—our
«tody
fo r l yeers
c . pride—
50c. $1
a bottle
at Drag
A Gan’
Store* m I d
Bow our «ucoeM, and oura 1« tho b* at palniesa work
to bo found anywhere», no motto»r how mooh yea
pay. C o m p a r e o u r P rice«.
| W e flnleh plate end
»Ugs work for out
town patron« iu
one H«y |f daeired.
Painless extraction
free when plntee or
I bridge work 1« order*
| **L Contulut•(.« tree.
9
MolirCrown«
Plates, Fa.—“ When I wrote to yon
first I was troubled with female weak
ness and backache,
and was so nervous
that I would cry at
the least noise, it
would startle me so.
I began to take Ly
dia E. P in k h a m ’s
remedies, and I don’ t
have any more cry
ing spells. I sleep
sound and my ner
vousness is better.
I will recom m en d
your medicines to all suffering women.”
—Mrs. M a r y H a l s t e a d , Platea, Pa.,
I
Box 98.
Here is the report of another gi-nulne
case, which still further shows that Ly
dia K. Pinkham’a Vegetable Compound
may be relied upon.
Walcott, N. D a k o ta .-“ I had inflam
mation which caused pain in my side,
and my back ached all the time. I waa
ao blue that I felt like crying if any one
even spoke to me. I took Lydia E
Pinkham’a Vegetable Compound, and I
began to gain right away. I continued
IU use and nor* I am a well woman.”
-M r s . A m e l i a D a h l . W a lc o t t , N.
Dakota.
I f yea want special advice write to
Lydia K. Plakham Medicine Co. (eonfl-
deatlal) Lyaa, .Wans. Year letter will
be opened, read aud answered by 8
waaina and held to strict ceafldaaaa
55. C
22k Brief,, Tr«th4. f
qndl R elief in Lydia E. Pink-
ham’« Vegetable Compound
— Their O w n Statement«
So Testify.
Q.H rillinn
Enatnal Filling« 1.C
Silver Filling« «1
Good Rubber
m
Plata«
5 .0 0
Be«t R«d Rubber _ _ -
Plate«
7 .5 0
Paint««« Ezfr*t!ee . 5 0
A l l w o r k f u l l y g u a r a n te e d f o r f i f t e e n ye « re.
W is e D e n t a l
Painless Dentists
M i n t M litlnf. Third (nSWMMnttan r M T U W O .M «
• U a ib a n : l A S . t a l l . k . l u S | i . l M t
OUT O f TOWN
PEOPLE
ran recelreprowpt treat
ment» o f poa-Peisaneas,
Roalth-building romediM
from
G GEE WO
the Chinese doctor.
Try once more if you have been doctoring with
thle one and that one and have not obtained per
manent relief, l et this greet nature heeler diag
nose your rang and prearril* some remedy whose
action 1«quick, sure end aefe. Hla prescriptions
are compounded from Root a, Hertw, Hud» and
Harks that have been gathered from every quar
ter o f the globe. The eecreta o f these medicine«
ere not known to the outside world, hat have been
handed down from father to son in the physician«*
families 1« Chin«.
CONSULTATION TREE.
I f you live out o f town and cannot cell, write for
eymptoae bleak nnd oirowinr. enclosing « oeate In
«tempe,
THE C. SEE WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO.
162) nrat S t, Car. Me r b iii
». N. U.
N o . M -U S