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About Mosier bulletin. (Mosier, Or.) 1909-19?? | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1913)
NURSERYMEN* WILL ATTEND “NOT A TRIUMPH, BUT DEDICATION” PO U LTRY A N D GAM E c* Annual Rose Show in Portland to O u gst jom fancy prices for Wild Ducks sad other r a n « in season. W rits os far «ask offer an all kinds of poultry, pork. ate. Pearaon-Page Co., Portland For Bala er Trade—For Ora. or Wash. Land. 40 a. all suit., near Ced&redge. Delta Co.. Colo.; house, bsrn, outdid»«.. 7-a. orchard, etc. ____________E. W. Stolte.Cedared»«, Colo. For 0a)«—-820 a. near Colville. Stevens Co.. Wash.; 10 a. colt., bal. timber; 4-r. house, barn, outbid»«.. 2-a. orchard. •toe*. machinery, etc. __________ L. E. Hedrick. Colville. Wash. For Sale or Tr ad« for Western Property— *20 a. in Lee Co.. Di.; 125 a. cult.; 12-r. dwellin», modern barn. oatb!d»t, aheds. etc. L P. Clarke. Franklin Grove. ID. Second-Hand Machin ery bought, sold and sxrh?nged: tngines, fcoflers, sawmills, etc. The J. E. Martin Co.. 83 1st St* Portland. Send for Stock List and prices. Machinery Be Great Event. Portland, Or.— The National Nur serymen’s association o f America will hold its annual convention in Portland next June and a large major ity o f the 3000 delegates will come to Portland in time to take in the Rose show and Rose festival. The Rose festival week comes June 9 to 14, and the floral exhibit will be one of the greatest drawing cards for the first three days o f the celebration. The National Nurserymen’s association is the most important floral organization in the United States and in the mem bership and among the delegates who will be here will be the foremost pro fessional rosarians in the country. Special attention will be given to their entertainment while here and the judging in the Rose show compe titions will probably be done by some of these experts. President Wilson So Declares Inauguration Ceremony. W O M E N Were not made to do Machine Work, but there is a machine made to do Women’s Work, and it does it quicker and better than it’s ever been done before. Washington, D. C. — President Wil son’s inaugural address follows: There has been a change o f govern ment. It began two yeais ago, when the house o f representatives became Democratic by a decisive majority. TAKES THE WOIiK OUT It has now been completed. The sen HOLTON and BUESCHER OF WASH DAY. ate about to assemble will also be band instruments. The most complete stock Free illustrated catalo» sent upon receipt o f Musical Merchandise in the Northwest. Democratic. The offices o f President o f the coupon below or postal mentionin» Write for Cata!- *ues. BEST PLACE TO KEEP FRUIT this paper. and Vice President have been put into SEIBERLINC-LUCAfl MUSIC CO. the hands of Democrats. What does PORTLAND, OR. 134 Second Street Portland. Ore»on Space Between Beam* Provides Dry the change mean? That is the ques Spot the Most Fitted for Ita Send me your tion that is uppermost in our minds Proper Preservation, free Meadows today. That is the question I am go Washing Ma ing to try to answer, in order, if I Deal direct with manufac Where persons have a house with chine catalog. may, to interpret the occasion. turer. We pay the highest eight or ten-inch beams on which the prices for Raw Furs. Write It means much more than the mere for free price list and shipping floor Is laid In the first story, the success o f a party. The success of a tags. spaces between the beams make an ex party means little except when the N. M. UNCAR CO.. FURRIERS cellent place to keep canned fruit In nation is using that party for a large <81 Scrndi Street PORTUIW. ORE. the cellar. and definite purpose. No one can mis Boards can he nailed firmly to the take the purpose for which the nation underside of the beams, forming shelves on which the fruit can be set MUST HAVE TIME TO RIPEÍ now seeks to use the Democratic party. It seeks to use it to interpret A Toy for Cats Wide boards are best. THE CATNIP BALL The air Is dryer In this point In Mincemeat Should Be Made In Largs a change in its own plans and point of view. Some old things with which the cellar than at any other place, and For fun and health. A t Quantities. If One Would Have we had grown familiar, and which had drug, toy and department there la a freer circulation, too, keep It at Its Best _ . stores. Write DR. A C. DAN- begun to creep into the very habit of ing the fruit In a more even tempera P ric.lO c. IELS. I«e„ 182 Milk SI.. lUrt«. S m . out thought and o f our lives, have al THE EXERCISER for book on Cats. ture and better atmosphere than la Mincemeat is best when made is possible In a fruit cupboard or on large quantities and left to stand foi tered their aspect as we have latterly looked critically upon them, with shelves built along the side walls. some time to ripen. To make, selecl In erecting such shelves care should about five pounds of lean beef front fresh, awakened eyes; have dropped their disguises and shown themselves be taken to secure the boards well neck, rump or round. Cover wttt RAW FU RS with nails. A good plan Is to saw the boiling water, add one teaspoonful ol alien and sinister. Some new things, boards to fit a certain place, allow salt, and simmer gently until very as we look frankly upon them, willing W ANTED ^ ing the ends to be just even with the tender. Free from fat and bone, pul to comprehend their real character, RICHEST PRICES. QUICK RETIRAS V Bides of the beams. Then a small through the food chopper, then weigh have come to assume the aspect of a * 1* H. LIEBES & » 1 board can be nailed firmly on the end For three full pounds add two pound! things long believed in and familiar, J. P. Plagemann, Mgr, vj of the shelf and. when in place, nail of salt suet, six pounds of tart apples stuff of our own convictions. We MANUFACTURING FURRIERS have been refreshed by a new insight ed to the outside of the beams. 298 Morrison St. Corbett BW« pared and chopped fine, one quart ol into our own life. Rei. Fire. Net’l Bank. Portland,Ore. cold beef liquor, six pounds of granu M other« w ill find Mrs. W inslow“« S oothing We see that in many things that lated sugar, three pints of boiled cV life is very great. It is incomparably Syrup t.* e b est rem edy to use fox their ohUdm n “ u rin g .h e teeth in g period . der, four pounds of seeded raisins great in its material aspects, in its three pounds of cleaned currants, an4 body of wealth, in the diversity and His Intentions. Meddling Stage Directors. half pound of chopped citron, tws sweep of its energy, in the industries "Young man,” said Major Black- In a recent lawsuit regarding ths brow, with a lowering glance at Chol- ownership of a play a stage director ounces of chopped candled lemon peel which have been conceived and built lle. “ I happened to see you laBt night testified that In thirty-two years' two ounces of candled orange peel up by the genius of individual men with your arm about my daughter’* theatrical experience he had never two teaspoonfuls of salt, one cupfu’ and the limitless enterprise o f groups grount waist. May I Inquire your Intentions, heard of a pla 7 being produced as cinnamon, two-thirds cup o f men. It is great also, very great, slrT” “Why, sure, major,” replied the originally written. “ The chief duty cloves, one teaspoonful black pep in its moral force. Nowhere else in per, and three pints ol currant blooming Cliollie. “ I intend to put of a stage director,” he said, "Is med the world have noble men and women It there every chance I get.”,—Har dling with manuscripts. I have even Jelly. exhibited in more striking forms the Heat over the fire. If yon cannot per’s Weekly. heard of stage directors who tried to procure cider, or do not care to us« beauty and the energy o f sympathy Improve on Shakespeare by revamp it In making your mincemeat, there and helpfulness and counsel in their Putting It Delicately. is an excellent substitute. To eack efforts to rectify wrong, alleviate Buf He was a stage aspirant, and had ing hla works.” fering, and set the weak in the way contrived somehow to gain an Intro N o thoughtful person uses liquid blue. It’ s a gallon of mincemeat allow one pin! of strength and hope. We have built duction to a well known manager, pinch o f blue in a large bottle o f water. Aak for of clear, strong coffee. up, moreover, a great system o f gov who agreed to fix a date for a trial. lied Cruaa Ball Blue, the blue that’ s all blue. Liquid blue is a weak solutior. A .-old it. Buy ernment, which has stood through a This duly came off, and expectantly My 8ymphony. Red Cross Bali Blue, the blue that’s all blua. Aak long age as in many respects a model the aspirant awaited the verdict. T o U t » content with small means, your grocer. for those who seek to set liberty upon "What do you think of It?” he asked, o seek elegance rather than luxury, foundations that will endure against Awake. after a deep silence. “ Well,” the man tnd refinement rather than fashion; "That man talks a great deal, but fortuitous change, against storm and ager replied slowly, “all I can say is jo be worthy, not respectable, and accident. Our life contains every that If ever you are put in prison for veal thy, not rich; to study hard, think you must admit that he’s wide awake." great thing, and contains it in rich acting it will be a grave miscarriage juickly, talk gently, act frankly; to “Well,” replied Farmer Corntossel, re abundance. of Justice.”________________ lsten to stars and birds, to babes and flectively, “you couldn’t expect a man But the evil has come with the to fall asleep during one of his own tongs, with open heart; to bear all good, and much fine gold has been cor Hard to Please, speeches.”_________________ roded. With riches has come inex Humanity’s appetite for applause la ¡heerfully, do all bravely, await oc Not Many, cusable waste. We have squandered so strong that no man can really casions, hurry never—In a word, to "Women are living longer than they a great part o f what we might have please himself without pleasing a et the spiritual, unbidden amf uncon- iclous grow up through the common— did a generation ago,” sa/s a statis used, and have not stopped to conserve number of people. hla is to be my symphony.—Chan tical authority. Yes, but will they the exceeding bounty o f nature, with Leisurely. ting. _________________ own up to being any older?—E » out which our genius for enterprise "The hired man fell off the fenc< would have been worthless and impo change. ONLY ONE “ BROMO QUININE” down In the meadow lot just now!’ That la L A X A T IV E BROMO QUININE. Look tent, scorning to be careful, shameful the signature o f E. W . GROVE. Cures a Cold "Had he hit the ground when you for ly prodigal as well as admirably effi in One Day, Cures Grip in Two Days. 25c. left?”—Louisville Courier-Journal. cient. We have been proud o f our Direct Hint. industrial achievements, but we have Good Word for Cheese, not hitherto stopped thoughtfully They had been talking as they walk The popular Idea that cheese Is not ed. She had remarked pathetically: enough to count the human cost, the easily digestible Is a delusion. We "Oh, It must be terrible to a man to cost o f lives snuffed out, o f energies may, therefore, pass the cheese with- be rejected by a woman!” “ Indeed It overtaxed and broken, the fearful It’ s r e a l l y only lout passing it up. physical and spiritual cost to the men must,” was his response. Then, after another word for per and women and children upon whom a while, with sympathetic Ingenuous Boy’s Idea of the Veil. fect digestion — active liver the dead weight and burden of it all Little Burney attended a wedding ness, she exclaimed: "It doesn’t seem — bowel regularity. Sick has fallen pitilessly the years through. where the bride wore a veil. While that I could ever have the heart to do ness always brings The groans and agony o f it all had not going home he said: “ Mamma, when It.” And there came a silence be discontent and “ the yet reached our ears, the solemn, mov you married did you wear curtains?' tween them as he thought It over. blues,” but why re ing undertone o f our life, coming up Oldest Known Prescription. main so? Get a bot out o f the mines and factories and out The Wrong Bums. o f every home where the struggle had The oldest prescription In the world tle o f At the town of Ayr, two miles out its intimate and familiar seat. With of Glasgow, stands the cottage built Is In the Metropolitan Museum of A rt the great government went many deep by William Burns, In which his son It Is on a piece of stone 3x4 Inches In secret things which we too long de Robert was born. A Californian, who size and was probably written 3,500 layed to look into and senitinize with was In Scotland recently, was asked years ago In Egypt. The prescription candid, fearless eyes. The great If he would like to see the cottage ol takes up both faces of the stone and government we loved has too often William Burns. "Sure, I’ll go,” re Is written in the old cursive charac been made use o f for private and self «ponded the American, "but I’m ters, the compound being a remedy today. It will make ish purposes, and those who used it blessed if I see how he finds time to that was used for a fumigation. the “ i n n e r m a n ” had forgotten the people. live there very much.” strong and healthy PILES CURED IN « TO 1« DAYS At last a vision has been vouchsafed Your druggist will refund money i f PAZO OINT and preventStomach us of our life as a whole. We see MENT fails to cure any case o f Itching, Blind. Ills, Colds, Grippe Bleeding or Protruding P ile, in 6 to 14 days. Sue. the bad with the good, the debased and and Malarial Disor decadent with the sound and vital. Was Even More. Upset. With this vision we approach new ders. "I can’t understand how you have affairs. Our duty is to cleanse, to the presumption to think I would REFUSE SUBSTITUTES reconsider, to restore, to correct the permit my daughter to become your evil without impairing the good, to wife.” "It does seem rather surpris purify and humanize every process of ing. I suppose; but cheer up, our common life without weakening „ ...... ... Poetry and Music. You’re not half so badly upset as I or sentimentalizing it. There has IND,AN V tG E ïA B L E ^ If I had to live my life again I would been something crude and heartless was when she suggested It to me.” IcJlflVEGEtABLE PURGA” Sili lave made a rule to read some poetry and unfeeling in our haste to succeed Erratic Traveler. ind listen to some music at least once and be great. Our thought has been, Opportunity is the slowest thing In svery week; for perhaps the parts of “ Let every man look out for himself, FOR C O N S T IP A T IO N the world when It is approaching you; ny brain now atrophied would thua let every generation look out for it a n d a ll F o rm s oF but when It Is going in the other di lave been kept active through naa. self,” while we reared giant ma D IG E S T IV E D IS O R D E R S rection It travels faster than light. The loss of these tastes Is a loss of chinery which made it impossible that lapplness, and may possibly be Inju any but those who stood at the levers rious to the Intellect, and more prob- o f control should have a chance to look DISTEMPER FOR lbly to the moral character, by en CATARRHAL FEVER feebling the emotional part of our na AND ALL NOSE Castro Refuses Honors. AND THROAT DISEASES ture.—Charles Darwin. Washington, D. C.—General Cipri Cures the sick and acts as a preventive for others, Liquid ano Castro, exiled ex-president o f Ven Sand Curs for Fatigue. est g t'ven ven on the tongue. Safe for irood brood mares and all others. Best One of the most efficacious cures ezuela, joined the crowds on the Kidney remedy; 60 cents land $1 a bottle; $5 and $10 the dozen, Sold by all dru/gists and horse good« houses, or sent, express for fatigue from overwork consists in streets and from the pavement viewed paid, by tbe manufacturers. walking barefoot in sand. The nerves the inauguration ceremonies. Two SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists, Goshen, Ind. of the sole sr d heel are slightly irri reviewing stand seats had been offered tated by coming in contact with ths him by friends, but were declined, the grains and accelerate tbs circulation exiled president preferring to mingle of the blood in all parta of ths body. with the crowds. General Castro said The effect produced Is highly Invig he was much impressed with the cere orating. Besides this, the monotony monies as giving a phase o f American The North Pacific College was estab of an ample extent of yellow sand ex public life with which he was not lished in 1898. It has departments of | familiar. The general left for New Dentistry and Pharmacy. No school in | ercises a soporific effect on the brain America has better facilities for the train which induces sleep—Harper's Wssfc- York after the inauguration. ing of young men and women for success Lovs as Form of Religion. ful professional careers. The annual ses Suffragettes Plan Raids. Love st Its highest point—love sub sion begins October First. An illustrated London — The announcement that catalog of information will be forwarded lime, unique, Invincible—leads us Mrs. Emmaline Pankhurst would ad upon application to straight to the brink o f ths great dress a suffragist " a t home” at Cam abyss, for It speaks to us directly ol bridge led the police to expect trouble the lnflnlts and of eternity. It la sml from undergraduates o f the university, sently religions; it may even bscoms but because o f the restraining influence religion.— Amlel Eu! Sixth >sd Oregon Six, Fortland, Ort. exercised by the proctors and police the meeting was not disturbed. At Wolverhampton, however, where Miss Annie Kenny attempted to hold a meeting, there was a great disturb ance. The meeting was finally broken up by the terrific din and the libera tion of sulphuretted hydrogen. BAN D M EN : M S ? THE MEADOWS POWER WASHER :lh H U N T E R S ! T R A P P ER S! Happy? HOSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters 75 YEARS OF PUBLIC APPROVAL ♦w Believes Country Ready fo r Change o f P olicy—Justice and Equal Opportunity for W orkers. PINK EYE North Pacific College of Dentistry and Pharmacy Registrar, North Pacific College PUTNAM FADELESS m a s?a DYES o’lt for themselves. We had not for gotten our morals. We remembered well enough that we had set up a pol icy which was meant to serve the humblest as well as the most power ful, with an eye single to the stand ards o f justice and fair play, and re membered it with pride. But we were very heedless and in a hurry to be great. We have come now to tbe sober sec ond thought. The scales of heedless ness have fallen from our eyes. We have made up our minds to square ev ery process o f our national life again with the standards we so proudly set up at the beginning, [and have always carried at out hearts. Our work is a work o f restoration. We have itemized with some degree o f particularity the things that ought to be altered and here are some of the chief items: A tariff which cuts us off from our proper part in the commerce o f the world, violates the just principles of taxation and makes the government a facile instrument in the hands o f pri vate interests; a banking and cur rency system based upon the necessity o f the government to »ell its bonds 5C years ago and perfectly adapted to concentrating cash and restricting credits; an industrial system which, take it on all its sides, financial as well as administrative, holds capital in leading strings, restricts the liber ties and limits the opportunities of labor, and exploits without renewing or conserving the natural resources of the country; a body o f agricultural ac tivities never yet given the efficiency of great business undertakings or served as it should be through the in strumentality o f science taken directly to the farm, or afforded the facilities of credit best suited to its practical needs; watercourses undeveloped, waste places unreclaimed, forests un tended, fast disappearing without plan or prospect o f renewal, unregarded waste heaps at every mine. We have studied as perhaps no other nation has the most effective means o f produc tion, but we have not studied cost or economy as we should, either as or ganizers of industry, as statesmen, or as individuals. Nor have we studied and perfected the means by which government may be put at the service of humanity, in safeguarding the wealth of the nation, the health of its men and its women and its children, as well as their rights in the struggle for existence. This is no sentimental duty. The firm basis o f government is justice, not pity. These are matters o f justice. There can be no equality of opportun ity, the first essential o f justice in the body politic, if men and women and children are not shielded in their lives, their very vitality, from the conse quences of great industrial and social processes which they cannot alter, control, or singly cope with. Society must see to it that it does not itself crush or weaken or damage its own constituent parts. These are some o f the things we ought to do, and not leave the others undone, the old-fashioneij, never-to-be- neglected, fundamental safeguarding of property and o f individual right. This is the high enterprise o f the new day: To lift everything that concerns our life as a nation to the light that shines from the hearthfire o f every man’s conscience and vision o f the right. It is inconceivable that we should do this as partisans; it is incon ceivable we should do it in ignorance of the facts as they are or in blind haste. We shall restore, not destroy. We shall deal with our economic sys tem as it is and as it may be modified, not as it might be if we had a clean sheet of paper to write upon; and step by step we shall make it what it should be, in the spirit of those who question their own wisdom and seek counsel and knowledge, not shallow, self-satisfaction or the excitement of excursions whither they cannot tell. Justice, and only justice, shall always be our motto. And yet it will be no cool process of mere science. The nation has been deeply stirred by a solemn passion, stirred by the knowledge o f wrong, o f ideals lost, of government too often debauched and made an instrument of evil. The feelings with which we face this new age o f right and oppor tunity Bweep across our heart-strings like some air out o f Cod’s own pres ence, where justice and mercy are rec onciled and the judge and the brother are one. We know our task to be no mere task o f politics, but a task which shall search us through and through, whether we be able to under stand our time and the need o f our people, whether we be indeed their spokesman and interpreters, whether we have the pure heart to comprehend and the rectified will to choose our high course of action. This is not a day o f triumph; it is a day o f dedication. Here muster not the forces o f party, but the forces of humanity. Men’s hearts wait upon us; men’s lives hang in the balance; men’s hopes call upon us to say what we will do. Who shall live up to the great trust? Who dares fail to try? I summon all honest men, all patrio tic, all forward-looking men, to my side. God helping me, I will not fail them, if they will but counsel and sus tain me! Nebraskans Exultant. Lincoln, Neb. — Democratic mem bers o f the Nebraska legislature held an “ inaugural dinner” at which there were felicitations on the inauguration o f a Democratic president and vice president. The dinner was informal. The dinner is regarded as preliminary to the annual banquet to be held here on the 63d birthday anniversary of William J. Bryan. Definite announce ment was made that Mr. Bryan will come from Washington to attend the banquet and that other party leaders o f the nation would attend. Coal Tar Trust Gives Up. New York—The defendants in the government suit filed against the so- called coal tar trust consented to a decree o f dissolution. The decree en joins the operations of the American Coal Products company and the Bar rett Manufacturing company, the prin cipal defendants, and dissolves certain o f the subsidiaries o f the combina tion. The decree explains that the defendants have denied the violation o f law, but have decided not to oppose the decree requiring them to reform their business methods. MEXICANS FIRE ON U. S. TROOPS Assailant Quickly Driven Off and Four Killed. Negro Soldiers Rush Into Battle, Backed by Citizens and Cow boys—Boundary Crossed. Douglas, Ariz.— For nearly half an hour Sunday morning a force o f 60 Mexican soldiers engaged 16 United States troopers of the Ninth cavalry, under Lieutenant Michaelson, on the international boundary line here until probably six of the Mexicans had been killed, several wounded and troops E and F, o f the Ninth cavalry, arrived to reinforce the handful o f Americans. Reports o f the casualties differ, some running as high as six Mexicans killed and others giving only four as the definite number o f dead. Four American army officers, walk ing on the American line three miles from Douglas, were fired on by 60 reg ular Mexican soldiers patrolling the border out o f Agua Prieta, opposite Douglas. Sixteen of the negro troop ers o f the Ninth rushed to the place of the firing, and a spirited skirmish en sued. The American soldiers are holding their position at the international line, reinforced by two troops o f the Ninth. The Mexicans were routed, leaving four killed on the field and others straggling through the brush nursing their wounds. It is said that the American troops became so excited that they overstepped the boundary and pursued the Mexicans for some distance. The fight caused great excitement at Douglas. The townspeople armed themselves and rushed to the bound ary, believing that the Mexican sol diers were intending to invade the United States. Within a few mo ments hundreds o f citizens were at the place, armed and ready. Cowboys rushed in from nearby ranches. City officials of Douglas in commu nication with state officials in Phoen ix, immediately after the fight, de clared the negro troops had killed aix of their opponents and urged the State department to use every effort to pro tect the lives o f Americans on this side o f the border. LENIENCY SHOWN TO HEIKE Sugar Trust Official Is Relieved of Prison Sentence. Washington, D. C.— President Taft has commuted the fine and costs, the sentence o f Charles R. Heike, secre tary and treasurer o f the American Sugar Refining company, of eight months in the New York county peni tentiary and a fine of $5000. Heike was convicted of conspiracy to defraud the United States in effect ing entry o f dutiable sugar at less than its true cost. The president acted upon the recom mendation o f Attorney General Wick- ersham. Papers in the case were filed with the department showing that Heike, who had not begun to serve his sentence, was suffering from a complication o f diseases of the heart, kidney and lungs. To remove him from his home, it was urged, would endanger his life. British Suffragettes Mobbed. London—The public temper is rising against the surffagettes. Wild scenes were witnessed Sunday afternoon in Hyde Park when a mob o f several thousand broke up a suffragette meet ing held under the leadership o f “ Gen eral” Mrs. Flora Drummond. Several free fights occurred and masses o f turf tom from the ground were hurled at the speakers. It required a strong body o f police to protect the suffra gettes and escort them to a place of safety. Similar scenes marked a meeting at Wimbledon common. In both cases women were knocked down and bruised. Beads Like Amber. Beads which look rather ilka cloud ed amber, but which have the quality of wood, are picked from the Chinese llnko tern; they are pierced and strung for necklaces or long chains; they are said to obtain a natural pol ish like ivory with a little wear, says a New York Times writer. They are fairly light In weight and cost so much per bead, so that the string is orlced acordlng to length. 8avlng of Men. Men are led away from threatening destruction; a hand is put into thelra which leads them forth gently toward! a calm and bright land, so that they look no more backward, and the hand may be a little child’s.—George Eliot Reformation. Let him go abroad to a distant cou » try; let him go to some place where he Is not known. Don’t let him go to the devil, where he is known.— Dr. Samuel Johnson. HUSBAND TIRED OF SEEING HER SUFFER Procured Lydia EL Pinkham’s V egetable Com pound, which made His W ife a Well Woman. Middletown, Pa. —“ I had headache, backache and Buch awful bearing down painB that I could not be on my feet at times and I had organic inflammation so badly that I was not able to do my work. I could not get a good meal for my hus band and one child. My neighbors laid they thought my suffering was terrible. “ My husband got tired of seeing ma suffer and one night went to the drug store and got me a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and told m* I must take it. I can’t tell you all I suffered and I can’t tell you all that your medicine has done for me. I was greatly benefited from the first and it has mads me a well woman. I can do all my housework and even helped some of my friends as well. I think it is a wonderful help to all suffering women. I have got several to take it after see ing what It has done for me.” —Mrs. E u m a E s p e n h i i a d e , 219 East Main SL, Middletown, Pa. The Pinkham record is a proud and hon orable one. It is a record o f constant victory over the obstinate ills o f woman —Ills that deal out despair. It is an es tablished fact that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has r e s t o r e d health to thousands o f such suffering women. Why don't you try it If you need such a medicine T l If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi dential) l.ynn, Mass. Yonr letter will be opened, road and answered by A women and held In strict confidence* “DIDN’T HURT A BIT” is what they all say o f our P alnlm Methods of Extracting Teeth. Out-of-town peo ple can havo their pint« and brid*w- work finished in on« day if necewiary. An absolute guar- mntee. backed by 26 year« in Portland. Drinkers YiebTSurplus. Washington, D. C.— The booming of customs receipts and the record drink ing and smoking o f Americans, yield ing enormous internal revenue, have given the Federal government a sur plus o f $7,379,000 for the current fis cal year as compared with a deficit of $20,570,000 a year ago. Total re ceipts for February reached $54,803,- 000, from which was expended $52,- 839,000. The working balance which the Democratic administration finds in the treasury, is indicated by the state ment, will be about $78,000,000. Porto Rico Wants Tariff. New York— Free sugar, or even the reduction o f the tariff to 1 cent a pound, will be opposed by the Demo cratic delegation from Porto Rico to the inauguration o f President Wilson. Francis H. Dexter, chairman of the delegation, said the sugar tariff was the most important question confront ing the island and that the delegation would seek a conference with the house leaders to demand that the sta tus o f the Porto Rican product be def initely defined in the sugar schedule o f the tariff bill. FOR EYE D IS E A S E S Pettits Eye Salve Wise Dental Co. o rn ce HOURS: 9 A. M. to 8 P. M. Sunday« 9 to 1 Phones: A 2029; Main 2029. railing Bid»., Third «nd Washington, Portland f A O U T o r TOW N PEOPLE ca n rooelv « p rom pt trsat- tm*nt* o f IfoB-Polaonoa«, Heal t b -b i ll ding remedí«« fr o m * ' m «H L k . c ' C. GEE W O t h . C h i » « , d o c to r. T ry o n e « m ore i f yon h e r e b een d o c t o r in g w ith t h is o n e en d th a t o n e and have n o t o b ta in e d per m a nent r e lie f. L et thin greet n a tu re h e a le r dtag- none your raae and p row r ib « aonie rem ed y w hoa« a ctio n la q u ick , enre and anfe. H i« proscrip tion s •re ^com pounded fr o m R oot a., l i e rim. Ruda end rka th a t have been g ath ered fr o m ev ery quar- o f th e slot*». “ T * he aecrete o f th '* e*« m ed icin * es ___ •re not n ot know kn< n to th e o outaide u tsid e w orld, but bu t have been b h anded d ot________ ided dow n fr o m fa th e r t o son in th e p h ytioln n r fa m ilie s I s C h in s. CONSULTATION FREE. I f yon liv e o u t o f tow n and e s n n o t c a ll, w rite fo r ■ym ptom b lank a n d circ u la r, e n clo sin g 4 oenta i s THE C. SEE WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO. 1U | Drat SL, Car. Morrison Portland. Or, » — . Ernesto Madero^Worried. Ithaca, N. Y .— Some concern is felt over the condition of mind o f Ernesto Madero, the Cornell student and broth er o f the late President of Mexico. A fter engaging railroad transportation to New York last week with the inten tion o f going to meet his family in Havana, it is learned he remained here In the care o f friends. He was deeply affected by the tragic deaths of his brothers. It is now thought young Madero will go to Havana. Italians Repulse Arsbs. Tripoli— Several hundred Arabs at tacked an Italian post, but were re pulsed with heavy losses. They left 36 dead and carried off others in addi tion to the wounded. On the Italian side two native soldiers were killed and an officer was wounded. P. N. U. no W H E N w r l t l . , to i ■drirU am , " U m tUia p a p er. . l o - 'i a . pi—— Man’s Debt to the Beasts. Men have received valuable hints and learned many things of Impor lance from beasts; such as gratitude from dogs, vigilance from the crane foresight and Frugality from the ant, honesty from the elephant and loyalty from the horse.—Don Quixote. CQZEEQ I Bit* Crugk Syrup. Tests* Good, is tim «. Sold by Druggist«. mjsmamm