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About Mosier bulletin. (Mosier, Or.) 1909-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 10, 1913)
PARCELS POST IS POPULAR u v e STOCK WATER TROUGH QUITE NOVEL Heavy Metal Base Holds Pipe Which la Attached to the Support So That It Can Revolve. r Something new and odd In the way of water troughs has been designed by a California man. Its novelty lies in the fact that it is self-cleaninig. A heavy metal base supports a pipe, which is Journaled on the support so that it can revolve thereon. In that section of the pipe that is normally Novel Water Trough. underneath are a series of perfora tions. Rigidly attached to the pipe and swinging from it like a cradle is the trough. A hose leads from the pipe to_ a hydrant, and when the water is turned on from the hydrant the trough is quickly filled. If the trough is to be cleaned it can be inverted, and as the holes in the pipe follow it around, a stream of water is squirted up up against it and flushes it. This re- oeptacle can also be used as a feed trough and the hose attachment used only to clean it. MANAGING TH E ANGORA GOAT Animals Have Natural Inclination to Browse on Coarse Herbsge, but Must Have Other Feed. (By B. E. LARA.) Goats, like other animals, must be fed or they will die. Some people do not seem to recognize this fact, but It la true. Goats have a natural incli nation to browse on shrubs, weeds or any other coarse-leaved herbage, but they must have nutritious feed in ad dition to thrive. If Angora goats are fed and treated aa one would treat sheep they will gat along very well. In the winter time they need glean clover hay and some grain, and clean, fresh water at all times. The goat is almost as fin icky as the sheep and requires water untainted by any other animal, sweet grain and hay, as they will not touch these feeds If they are musty. Too much has been said about the ability of goats as weed destroyers. It is true they will clean up a pasture of coarse weeds, and so will sheep; we have never been able to discover much difference and, taking every thing into consideration, we believe that the farmer who raises sheep in stead of goats will get better satisfac tion from his flock. Department Stores and Wholesale Houses Largest Patrons. Portland — Millinery in boxes as large as the law allows promises to cap the list of popular eligibles under the new parcel post law, but Milady had better warn Mr. Milliner to be sure that the receptacles for the aigretted headgear are sufficiently strong. Otherwise, with all the care and caution that Uncle Sam’s mail clerks may take the chapeaux are like ly to issue from their parcel post jour neys bedraggled or smashed. This is the warning that postal offi cials in Portland are sending out after the second day’s wrestle with the in novation, when the local office almost became swamped with the rush of bus iness. The fact is that the Portland post- office on the second day o f parcel post traffic found itself extending its quar ters almost into the streets in order to take care o f the business, which, it is conjectured, is only a hint at the busi ness to follow. The dozen sacks o f parcels received from out of town points and the 25 sacks which were mailed in Portland fairly flooded the section set apart in the local office and a big overflow encroached on other de partments. The indication is that an additional near-by building will be needed to handle the business inside of a few weeks when the traffic is reg ular and established. Somewhat to stem the rush the authorities -have asked that special de livery stamps not be placed on the parcels for a time, or until the service is thoroughly organized to deliver hur riedly. All special stamps on parcel mail will be ignored for the present. One thing is plainly certain: The big,department stores, the mail-order houses and the wholesale houses are going to take liberal advantage of the service. Ons department store mailed more than 150 packages. Another sent about 100 and a third mailed more than 50. Most o f them were sent to nearby towns. As the government restricts only such articles as always have been un mailable from passing through the parcel post office, almost every legiti mate article o f commerce already has been sent. The favorite commodity is millinery and the department stores are the senders. The postoffice attaches fear that the millinery vendors use too fragile a ma terial in packing. All packages are placed in pouches and sealed the same as regular mail. They are loaded onto Wagons, sacks upon one another and packages in the sacks underneath, un less they are securely packed, are apt to become broken. Such things as millinery and eggs should be well protected, therefore, advise postal clerks. It is a common thing to mail eggs, now that the parcel post has been established. Eggs are not considered freak shipments. In fact, a regular traffic in eggs is expected. Enter prising farmers near Portland are striving already to build up a regular trade with customers in the city, send ing eggs and other farm products through the mail. A new field has been opened to inventors. They are trying now to devise a light, strong box o f aluminum or other material, especially for mailing eggs. Ordinary perishable goods such as fruit, vegetables, fish and meat can be sent by parcel post within the zone of origin, or a radius o f about 50 miles. A man in Eastern ' Oregon had five pounds of beefsteak sent from the butcher shop in a nearby village to his home by parcel post. Give Assurance of Peace. Washington, D. C.— Senor Pedro Lascurain, Mexican minister o f fore ign affairs and personal representative of President Madero, came to Wash ington Friday to tell again to Presi dent Taft and Secretary Knox the story o f his government’s struggle with rebellions, to reassure them of ability to protect American lives RACK FOR FEEDING FODDER its and property everywhere in that re If Sides and Bottom Ara Made Tight public, and, incidentally, it was whis pered, to find if there were any truth Qraln May Be Fed as Well as in recent reports that intervention by Roughage— May Be Moved. the United States was not merely a A rack for feeding fodder may be threat but an alarming possibility. built on two runners 2x8, ten feet long. Five pieces of 2x4 Btuff are bolt Seven-Story Building Bvrns. ed to these runners. The sides are Cincinnati—The Carlisle building, a made of 2x4’s, five feet long, to which seven-story stone structure at the may be nailed such lumber as may be at hand, leaving a space of sixteen southwest comer of Fourth avenue and Walnut streets, was almost destroyed by fire, entailing a loss estimated at $250,000. The building is the center o f Cincinnati’s commercial district, within several hundred feet o f the Gibson House, which was burned sev eral weeks ago. For a while the Sin ter hotel, on the- west side o f the building, was threatened, but escaped damage when the fire was confined to the Carlisle building. Feed Rack. Inches about eighteen Inches from the bottom of the rack. If the sides and bottom of this rack are made tight grain can be fed In them as well as fodder, says the Iowa Homestead. They will also hold quite a lot of hay and so may be used as a hay rack. This rack may be moved from one lo cation to another as needed. Law for Blind Is Wanted. Vancouver, Wash.— With a desire as to assist the blind, C. W. Master- son, blind representative-elect from Walla Walla county, visited the State school for the deaf here. He was once a teacher in this institution. During his visit here Mr. Masterson conferred with George W. Mullin, superintend ent o f the State school for the blind, and several teachers, getting ideas and needs o f the institution. He said that he is going to introduce bills in the legislature which will materially benefit the blind, if passed. Breaking Colt to Lead. In breaking a colt to lead do not separate from the dam, but place a small halter on the colt and then have some one lead the mare around. The oolt will naturally follow. • By gen tle pressure or tension on the halter Food Stores Discussed. It la surprising how quickly the lit Philadelphia—As a means of reduc- tle fellow will learn to follow you Instead of his mother. Care must I ing the cost o f living, a system o f co- be taken not to throw, frighten or ' operative stores for the sale o f pro- Injure him if he becomes excited, as | visions was discussed by the House- It would have the bad effect of mak I keepers’ League here. Mrs. William ing him nervous when being handled. B. Derr, who conducted the crusade for cheap eggs, presided. She said she had countless offers from produc Weight of the Team. ers in all parts o f the East to supply The small mule and horse are ene mies to good farming. Deep plow provisions at rates that would mean a ing cannot be done with the light considerable lessening o f prices, “ if team, and deep stirring of the soil the business is properly managed.’ ’ is one of the fundamentals. weight In your teams so you plow right. Get can Disease Preventive. The man who keepe everything neat and clean about his bog yards Is not very apt to have any trouble from cholera or any other disease, provided, of course, that he feeds food dean feed Tacoma’s Balance Less. Tacoma, Wash.—The City o f Ta coma has on hand to start 1913 more than $1,000,000 less than it possessed at the opening o f 1912, according to the report o f Controller Meads. The large amounts paid out on the new light and water plants, and the falling off in tax collections o f about 6 per cent are principally responsible. WOULD REVIVE ARMY CANTEEN General Wood Also Recommends New Merit System. Would Weed Out Unfit Officers, Recognizing Fitness and Ability in Promotion. Washington, D. C.— The restoration of the army canteen and enactment of legislation for the elimination from the United States army o f unfit offi cers are among the principal recom mendations o f Major General Leonard Wood, chief of staff, in his annual re port made public Saturday. General Wood recommends the con centration o f the army on strategic lines and in areas where it can be maintained more economically. He would transfer all the personnel o f the staff corps — excepting engineers, medical officers and chaplains— to the line, increasing the number of the general officers and line officers in the different grades. The transfer o f the personnel of staff corps to the line, in General Wood’s opinion, will terminate the constant struggle between line and staff, a struggle which is as old as the army and one which promises to con tinue. There would be no interfer ence with promotion, nor would the members of the present staff corps lose any of their present advantages. Discussing means for the elimina tion of unfit officers the chief of staff says: “ The full efficiency o f an organiza tion o f men cannot be secured without a system by which the merits o f the individuals shall have some effect upon their advancement. “ The army long has suffered from the lack o f such a system. Up to the grade of colonel promotion is by sen iority in each branch, and there is no way under the law by which an officer, no matter what his merit, can be ad vanced a single number except by making him a general officer.” FOR SPECIAL ARBITRATION POULTRY AND GAME Taft Believes Canal Tolls Issue Not a Hague Matter. Washington, D. C.— Although Presi Pearson-Page Co., Poriiand dent Taft is willing to submit to arbi tration the issues between Great Brit ain and the United States over the Panama canal tolls, he does not favor Ship us your VEAL, PORK, POULTRY, HIDES We guarantee top price* and CHECK BN RETURN such procedure by The Hague tribunal. MAIL. Taws, price*, coop«, free, "** will -**>•»! for >ear on request to ail win» make »hip menu* during Although he has not given the subject one January one year’ » aubucription to either Northwest Poultry Journal. Pacific Homestead. Poultry l ife. of a tribunal much thought, the presi Northwest Pacific Farmer. Please tell jo u r neigh Loit* about our liberal offer. Ship to dent probably would prefer a special F. H. SCH M ALZ <£ CO. board of arbitration composed of an Fad * Casual $10.000 Ml 143 Fraai Sh. F0RTUND. ORE equal number of citizens of the United F or Sale—#9 ». In W ashington Co.. Ore., near H ills boro; 22 a. cult.. 6-r. houxe. barn, outbuilding*. 40 States and Great Britain. fruit tree*, stock, machinery, etc. Nachbour. llox S19, Chicago.________________________________________ The president has expressed to For Sale -480 a. in Adam» Co.. Wash : 460 a. cult. 5-r 2 barn», outbuilding*. .'>0 fruit tree*. 240 a. win friends the view that all The Hague house. ter wheat, etc.; bargain. Morgan, Box 319. Chicago. tribunal would be against this nation, For Sale -66 a. within city limit* of Salmon Arm. R and that the moral pressure on the C.. Can.: 65 a. cult. 14-r. hou*c. barn, outbuilding*. 5 a. bearing orchard, stock, machinery, etc. J. 1). Mc court would be enormous, because Guire. Salmon Arm, B. 0. Europe is interested in Panama. In a Second-H and Machin court in which only Great Britain and ery bought, sold and exch an g ed: e n g nea, the United States were represented, it boilers, sawmills, etc. The J. E. M artin Co.. 83 1st is argued, there would be a much St.. Portland. Send for Stock Liat and price». greater chance of a fair decision. Several Democratic senators have voiced the opinion that a special tri RAW FURS bunal should be created to arbitrate this dispute. W A N T E D ^ J P V "1 * ~ Machinery OIL OUTPUT SHOWS BIG LOSS Increased Demand Has Buoyant Effect on Petroleum Prices. Washington, D. C. — With the world’s consumption o f oil aggregating 1,000,000 barrels a day, of which the United States supplied almost two- thirds, production of petroleum in this country in 1912 was 220,200,000 42- gallon barrels, or about 250,000 bar rels less than 1911. While the pro duction was less, the rising price of oil increased the total value o f the product markedly. Last year the out put was valued at $150,000,000, an in crease of about $16,000,000 over 1911. According to David T. Day, of the United States Geological Survey, the Eastern oil fields, as a rule declined production because it was impossible to keep up with the great output of 1911 without large additional discov eries of pools in the older fields. The Eastern decline, however, was offset by the increase in California. CASTRO MAY REMAIN IN U. S. FOUR VESSELS TO OPERATE Legal Steps Taken to Establish Status of Venezuelan. Trade From New York to Pacific Coast to Be By Way of Horn. New York — The Federal courts have been invoked in behalf o f Cip- riano Castro, and a writ o f habeas cor pus was granted to bring him before a judicial tribunal which may determine the cause o f his detention at this port. It was alleged in the application that the ex-president o f Venezuela was il legally held at the immigration sta tion on Ellis island, where he has been detained since his arrival. The court will be asked to sustain the writ and thus set him at liberty. Castro, immediately upon finding his right to land was questioned, had decided to return voluntarily to Eu rope, and had passage on the steamer Amerika for Hamburg. As soon as he learned the writ had been granted he cancelled his passage. BODY OF AMBASSADOR REID REACHES NATIVE SHORES New York— Great Britain delivered Saturday to his countrymen the body o f Whitelaw Reid, editor, statesman and American ambassador, who died in London. The British cruiser Natal brought the body home and placed it under the Stars and Stripes in the Cathedral of St. John the Divine. President Taft, dignitaries from the army and navy and representatives of foreign powers will attend the funeral services. The Natal was met off Nantucket by two United States battleships and four destroyers and the funeral fleet lay off Sandy Hook Friday night. A thick fog blanketed the bay and it was 11 o ’clock before the procession got under way. A gale that swept up the river made landing the coffin a diffi cult task. Girls Eat No Chicken. Colorado Springs, Colo.— By going without chicken at their Sunday din ners, by washing hair at 25 cents a head, cleaning rooms and other menial tasks, the 200 girls o f the four dorm itories o f Colorado college have raised $9300 toward a $50,000 endowment fund to obtain $100,000 offered for a gymnasium by Mrs. A. D. Julliard, of New York City. As E. P. Shove, a retired business man here, has offered to give a dollar for each one they raise, the girls now have secured $18,600 and declare they will raise he rest. Hope for West Not Lost. Washington, D. C.— Senator Cham berlain says he has not given up hope o f securing the appointment o f a Western man as secretary o f the in terior, and in a short time will again take up this question with President- Elect Wilson, probably by correspon dence. Senator Chamberlain is insis tent, as are other Western senators, that the West, in view o f its vote in November, is entitled to at least one member o f the cabinet, and he hopes that the co-operation o f Western sen ators may bring Wilson to this view. Gompers' Appeal Is Filed. Washington, D. C.— Samuel Gom pers, John Mitchell and Frank Mor rison, o f the American Federation of Labor, convicted o f contempt o f court and sentenced to jail in connection with the Buck Stove & Range case, filed their appeal in the District of Columbia Court o f Appeals. It al leges the men were convicted not of contempt o f court, but o f want o f re spect for'judicial authority. Seven-* teen alleged errors are charged. Can j e t you fa n c y prices fo r W ild D ucks and o .h e r grame in season. W rite us for cash o ffer on aP kinds o f poultry, pork. etc. San Francisco— Details of the found ing of the Atlantic & Pacific Steam ship company were made public here Monday. Bonds to the value of $750,- 000 were sold in San Francisco by W. R. Grace & Co., agents for the company here, and the 7500-ton steam er Santa Cruz, one of four vessels to operate between New York and Pacific Coast ports, via Magellan, will begin loading cargo at Philadelphia Febru ary 1. Three other liners will go into com mission immediately afterward. They are the Santa Clara, Santa Catalina and Santa Cecilia. Each is of 10,000 tons, but for the present it is not in tended to fit them for carrying passen gers. The Santa Cruz will carry about 75 passengers. BATH TUB TRIAL Highest Market Price Paid t » * T* H. UEBES& CO. -V ./. /*. Plagemarm, Mgr. MANUFACTURING FURRIERS 298 Mormoa St. CaiWtt Bldg Ref. First Nat’l Bank Portland,Ore. NOTTINGHAM & CO. 102 Front Street. PO RTLA N D . OR. BANDM EN: XtES? HOLTON and BUESCHER band instrum ents. T he most com plete stock o f Musical M erchandise in the N orthw est. W rite fo r Catalogues. 8 El BERLING* LUC AS M l SIC CO. 134 Second Street. Washington, D. C.—The re-trial of the criminal anti-trust suit against the so-called bath tub trust will begin at Detroit on February 3, before United States District Judge Sessions, of Grand Rapids. At the first trial the jury disagreed. The government delayed the re-trial until the Supreme court decided the important issues involved in the civil case against the alleged trust. That decision, recently given, compels the dissolution o f the combination of 16 corporations and 64 individuals, manu facturers of enameled ironware in var ious parts of the country. I. W. W. Clubbed in Riot. Los Angeles— Several hundred I. W. W. and sympathizers, marching be hind a red flag, carried by two Mexi can Amazons, precipitated a riot in which clubs and revolvers figured, at Third and Los Angeles streets Sunday. Several of the rioters were injured by police clubs and four arrests were made. The men, all foreigners, will be arraigned on charges of inciting a riot. The crowd was marching through the downtown streets prepara tory to a demonstration at First and Los Angeles streets. Taft Auto Stuck in Mud. Washington, D. C.—President Taft took his brother, Henry W. Taft, for a ride in one of the White House auto mobiles and the story o f the sightsee ing trip became noised around the city. The president chose a new Virginia road, but before much ground had been covered mud made the way im passable. The president and his brother decided to walk back to the White House, but before they had gone far the machine overtook them, having been pulled out o f the mud by a farmer’s team. Idaho Mines Pay Owners. Spokane—The lead-silver mines of the Coeur d’Alene district during 1912 paid an average o f $8000 a day in div idends. The total for the year passes the $3,000,000 mark by a good margin. The Bunker Hill & Sullivan takes first place by paying dividends during the year of $850,200, which brings its grand total up to $13,977,150. The Federal company, with its three mines. Standard, Morning and Last Chance, passed $800,000 in dividends. Assassin Gets Eight Years. professor said: ” 1 met Mr. Junior the ather day, and he made a very bright remark. He had just fallen down, you know; and, when 1 asked him how it happened, he said, 'Nevertheless.' ”— Budget. ______________ PIL ES CURED tN « TO H DAYS Y ou r drupirist w ill refu n d m oney i f P A Z O O IN T M E N T faila to cu re any case .if Itchmir. m ind. B leeding o r P rotruding Piles in 6 to IS day s. 60c. To Keep Ferns Fresh. Use a soil of about talf leaf mold or smooth earth and half fine sand. (Jive abundant drainage and then plenty of water. About once a month put them in t he washtub or bathtub and give a thorough washing, not sparing soap: rinse well, and slightly loosen the soil before returning them to the stand. A bit of fresh beef burled in the soil ocaslonally helps. Sizing Him Up. When you call the average young man honest he Is likely to feel a mild sort of gratification. When you call him competent his chest begins to bulge. When you call him a heart breaker he slapa you on the shoulder and gives you to understand that he considers you n person of remarkable perception and unerring iudgment. Portland, Oregon Mothers w ill And Mrs. W inslow 's Sontatng HUNTERS! TRAPPERS! Deal direct w ith m anufac turer, W e pay the highest prices fo r Kaw Furs. W rite for free p rice list and shipping tags. N. M. UNGAR CO.. FURRIERS 191 Seventh Street PORTLAND, ORE. One Word She Could Say. An earnest London slum worker re cords her unremitting, patient en deavors to Improve the accent and vowel enunciation of her little protege. Blanche, for the sake of the child’s future destiny “on the styge.’ Once, falling In all else, she tried a mild dose of gentle ridicule. “You can’t say ’food,’ can you, Blanche?’ she smiled, teasingly. “ I can say ‘fule!’ “ was the child’s crushing re Strange Names. Every clergyman can tell tales oi the strange names which ho has been asked to bestow upon children at the baptismal font; but the piace where that sort of thing Is rampant Is British Oulnea. Nannie Bellona, John Pantaloon, and Frank Locust are among Christian names Imposed on the offspring of native converts IS RE-SET Worse still are “Whisky Emmanuel” and “ Serla'tm »a Vnir-rewy’’ Government Guided By New Decis ions in Suit Against Trusts. You could not please us bet ter than to ask your doctor about Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral for coughs, colds, croup, bron ONLY ONE “ BKOMO QUIN IN E” chitis. Thousands of families That ia L A X A T I V E PROM O Q U IN IN E . Lrx.k fo r the aianature o i E. W . G R O V E . Uurea a Coid i always keep it in the house. in O ne Day. Curea G rip in T w o Daya. 25c. The approval o f their physi Professor Recited Badly. One day a college professor, going cian and the experience of to his class, came across one of his many years have given them J students who had just fallen down. ! Asking him how he fell, the student j great con fid en ce in this* replied, "Notwithstanding.’’ Tolling j standard cough meuicine. \ the anecdote a short time later the | Sold for seventy years | LIME FERTILIZER 1 A lso Land Plaster. Lime. Cem ent. W all Plas ter and Shingles. W rite fo r prices. Coughs and Colds Safety In Friendship. An Intimate-friendship Is at once i safeguard In recreation and social enjoyment, for a man thinks twice be- I lore he plunges into surroundings which he knows his best friend would | condemn. It is a stimulus, because I in work or business, or even play, a man does not willingly lag behind while the friend is forging ahead. In common endeavors for good causes, religious or social or political, friend ship )s a powerful inducement to self- forgetting activity. Ryrup t’ e best ret iodr to use foz thail chiidean during .he teething ¡jcrioU, Abraham Lincoln. In the language of the shop, the farm, the boat, the street, or the nursery, ho told the high truths that reason and religion taught, and took possession of his audience by a storm of speech, pouring upon them all tho riches of his brave pit beian soul, bap tizing every head anew; n man who with the people seemed more mob than they, and with kings the most im perial.—Theodore Parker. j Any good doctor will tell you that a medi j cine like Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral cannot [ do its best work if the bowels tre con stipated. Ask your doctor if he know* anything better than Ayer's Pills for cor recting this sluggishness of the liver. M .J e b v th a J O . A Y E S C O .. L o w e l l . M u m Almost Limit of Foolishness. An old woman named Czabo, who was found dead In Budapest, left a will in which she set forth that all | her money, over $5,000, should bo given to her dog. The animal was handed ov»r to the relatives, who, It is said, will contest the will. The old woman had set a room apart for her dog. It was furnished with large mir rors and antique furniture upholstered in silk. Only the dog was allowed to enter this room. Bear Baiting Popular Sport Few sports nave had such a great and extended popularity as bear bait ing. The Komars Imported their bears from Billrin, and the sport can be traced D Englend to the Conquest or beyond. Queen Elizabeth was so fond of the sport that, ly an order in coun cil. she prohibited “ plays to be per formed on Thursdays because bear halting and su-h pastimes had usually been practiced.” Li JUiil blue ta a Wf-.il; solution A roid it. Rod Cross Hull Blue, the blue that's utl blue, your grocer. Bu; Si No Conclusive Evidence of Change. “ Five years ago, sir,” triumphantly declared the landlord of the Atlantic and Pacific hotel at Whoopopolis, Ok., "there was no town here at a ll!” “ H’m !” replied the hypercritical tour ist from the east. “ And what make* you think there is one here now?” Ham and Eggs. Calhoun Clay says: "Par am a non- breakable relationship betwixt de cul Not Knocking. “ Beg pardon." said the agent, as Air. lud race an’ turkey, the reason bein' Grouch opened the door, “ but I would dat de cullud race la descended from like to nsk if Mr. Dodger, your next Ham, while turkey Tomes from eggs." door neighbor. Is good pay.” “ How do I know whether he is good pay or not?” exclaimed Mr. Grouch. “ All I know about him is that ho has four grandchildren and he still owes for his marriage Heen“e " N o th ou gh tfu l person uses liquid blue. I t ’ s a pini-h o f blue in n large ir-ttie o f w ater. A sk for Rod Cross Ball Blue, the blue th a t's alt blue. “Be on the Jump” Don’t allow > ourself to become Scholastic Flippancy. discouraged and “ out of sorts.” "And now,” continued the professot The stomach, liver and bowels have of history, "permit mo to mention a tireless worker in the great cause of betome lazy and inactive, but a Immunity—■” “ Attirelrss worker?" short course of Interrupted one of the seniors, “ par don me, professor, but if you are re Young Man Must Have Friends. ferring to Lady Godiva, she was at For boys and young men friendship tired in her luxuriant hair.’ is a prime necessity of existence. Opulent tiara. When a man has established himself "T can't understand how that poet’i in life and the Interests of home and wife and family have absorbed him. wife is able to dress so well. I thought he may, perhaps, dispense with friend there was no money In poetry.” “ 1 | ship. But as long as he is young, un guess there Isn't; but her hushnnd has will soon make th'ngs rght. It married and unsettled, he is as de the Job of writing all the advertising strengthens the ent re "inner man,” pendent on friendship as on air or rhymes for one of the biggest break prevents Colds and Grippe and fast food concerns in the country. food. __________ ______ Have you seen th"lr new nutomoblle?* males you strong and vigorous. Had Stood Hard Teat. "I understand that you once sang In TO N IC TRY IT. FOR EYES a glee club." "Yes,” replied the great politician. "And I want to tell you W asning m d u m g . when a man with a voice like mine Bran Is much better to use foi can hold a position In a glee club cleaning matting than soap and wa It shows that he Is some officeholder.” ter. Tie the bran in a bag. dip the —Los Angeles Listener. bag Into clean warm water, and mb the matting briskly with this; then Makes All the Difference. wash It ofT with a cloth wrung cut of is what they al say Before marriage the shape, the fig warm salt water. This method trogh- o f our ure and complexion carry all before ens It up wonderfully. them; after marriage, the mind am) Painless Methods of character Unexpectedly claim theli Japanese Plant Camphor Trees. Extracting share—and that the largest—of im In Formosa largo areas are to ba Teeth. portance.—Lord Melbourne. planted with camphor trees during the O u t-of-tow n peo next few years. The trees now util Time to Beware. ple can have their ised ure five hundred to one thousand If ever you meet a woman who sub plate and bridire- w ork finished in one ceeds In convincing you that you are years old, and the Japanese wisely in tend to conserve the source of supply day i f necessary. an exceptionally fine fellow, be very, of one of their Itnnortanl monopolies. A n absolute gu ar very careful. She has far more Intel antee, backed by 26 Igence than you.—Jay Denby, In Let- years in Portland. Not Up to Expectations. ers from China. "George has tokl me ail the secrets Vegetarian Menu. of hts past." "Mercy! What did you The menu of e meal given lately by think of them?” "I was awfully disap orricr nouns: S A . M. to S P. M. Sundays 9 to 1 the Igjndon Vegetarian association In pointed.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Phonos: A 2029; Main 2029. cluded walnut cutlets with brown r .i l l n c Bld g., Third and Washington, Portland sauce, cauliflower and new potatoes Dally Thought. asparagus on toast, spaghetti on toaat, There arc two elements that go to tomato farcle and von -" -irrots. the composition of friendship—truth and tenderness.—Emerson. O U T o r TO W N ^ Bound to Win. PEOPLE Willis—"I see you have all the mod flfifi m oslr* prompt treat- ern conveniences for women In this In m enu o f If on-Pol tenons. H e a lt h -b u ild in g r « m « 4 lM stitution of yours.” Olllls—“ Yes. Two from of the highest paid gossips In the city are always in attendance.“—Life. Hostetler's Stomach Bitters Pettits Eye Salve “DIDN’T HURT A BIT” W ise Dental Co. C. GEE WO the < 'M n d o c t o r . Try one© more If you have l « « n doctor!n« with this on* and that one and have not obtained per manent relief. Let this area* nature hsnlsr diag nose your ram and prescribe aome remedy whoa« action ia quick, mire and aafe. Ilia prescription« are compounded from Room. Ilcri*. Ruds sad Rnrk* t h a t have Ixven gathered from every quar ter of the glolts. The mernts o f these medicines are not known to the outside world, but have been handed down from father to rod in the physicians* fernilies in Chine. HiS rifeaaw, b. A famous king said: "If men only <new bow pleasant to me it Is to for five faults, there is not one of then who would not commit crime.”—From he Orient__________ ______ . Society People Classified. CONSULTATION FRE*. Store lie aper—“They are society people. They belong to our first and last families.” Cuetomer—"You mean ■first families’ T” Storekeeper—"No; first and last. First to ask credit and (art to pay."—Pnck ____ e n-if I __ f , you live out of o f town town and and « cannot call, write for ayri.ptout blank and circular, enclosing 4 cents In u fli h i h i m i u r f h THE C. BEE WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO. 8pread Information cf Death. In Venice, when anyone dies. It I* the custom to fix a placard on the fTont of the deceased person's bouse, ns well as tn the neighboring streets, as a sort of public notice, stating lilz name, age, place of birth, and tho ill ness of which he died 152J first St., Cor. Morrison Portland. O ra ro n . Yekaterinodar, Russia—The work P. N. U. H o 1 -0 * . Bert O i f l t y r v p T w le « O o o d . C m B 3 Laborer Finds Fortune. man, Sedelnikoff, who assassinated H. la t i n « . No 14 fcy D r n r r i * « P Ì Nowata, Ok la.—George Hardsook, a H. Emcrich, the American superin W H E N a r i t i . « ta i advertisers, plan— laborer, unearthed $37,500 in gold tendent of the Kyshtym Copper com TT tion this paper. while digging a trench near the vil-1 pany on October 20, 1911, has been lage o f Oglesby. Hardsook’s posses-1 condemned to eight years’ imprison sion o f the wealth, however, probably ^ ment at hard labor by the Circuit will be o f short duration, a state law | court. Emerich was killed by a shot requiring that such funds be surren- fired through the window of his resi mora goods brighter and faster colors than anv other dye. One 10c package colors silk, wool anA cotton equally dered to the owner o f the land. The . dence at Kyshtym. The assassin was C o l o r in w a l l and is guaranteed to give perfect results. Ask dealer, pr we will sand postpaid .1 10c a package. Write for fra« money bore evidence o f having been arrested last July, and confeaaed the booklet let how to dye, bleach and mix colors. MONROE DRUO COMPANY, Quincy, liunoi a. crime. buried a number o f years. PU TN A M FA D E LE SS D Y E S