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About Mosier bulletin. (Mosier, Or.) 1909-19?? | View Entire Issue (May 30, 1913)
GAME POULTRY AND GAME FOR RECESS A T SCHOOL Twenty or Twenty-Five Beys and Girls May Participate in Pastime While Clasping Hands. This game may be played at recess P earson-Page Co., Portland i with as many as twenty or twenty-five girls and boys taking part in it. All ; of the players except three clasp hands j and form a circle. Inside the ring is the orchard where the fox. one of M O N E Y TO LO AN the players, takes his place. The L ow est rates. W rite fo r application blank. W est farmer, another one of the extra play ern Bond & M ortgage Co.. C mubetcu I Club Bldg.. Portland ers, Btands on the outside of the ring and calls to another player, who is Second-H and Machin outside the ring, saying: “ Bruno, a ery bought, sold and fox is in the orchard.” Then the fox ^ e xch an g ed : r n g in e s. boilers, sawmills, etc. The J. E. M artin Co.. 83 1st runs from the circle beneath the play 6L . Portland. Send fo r Stock Umt and prices. ers’ uplifted hands. Bruno chases him, first entering the circle and then fol lowing just where the fox runs. WRITE FOR FREE ADVICE All through the game the dog, inform ation and booklets o f value to you. Bruno, must imitate everything that PACIFIC GUANO & FERTILIZER CO. the fox does just as players in “ follow 182 M adison St.. Portland. Or. their leader” imitate their leader. If the fox jumps up to touch the branch of a tree Bruno must imitate. Some- I times the fox does many stunts which Learn to b e a DETECTIVE | amuse the ring players very much and Earn fr o m $ 1 5 0 to $ 3 0 0 p e r m onth I ' which make it hard for the dog. If the Full course in ten w eeks; actual e x p e r ri- t dog does not follow he cannot go on ence m ethods used. Easy p a y m e n t plan. F or full particu lars w rite with his part of the game, but must latenuboul Detective Training Correspondence Scfcool join the ring. Then the fox becomes 510-12 Dekun Bldg., Portland. Oregon. dog and a new fox is chosen. When the dog captures the fox he becomes the fox for the new game and the fox goes into the ring. Then a new dog DAISY FLY KILLER tSSÎYSTÎSi'tt is chosen. When the ring is vary flies. Neat, dean, or namental, convenient, I large there may be two foxes within cheap. L a s t s a l l the circle and two dogs to chase them. r e a s o n . Made oI Can g e t you fa n cy prices fo r W ild D ucks and oth er gam e in season. W rite us fo r cash offer on all kinds o f pou ltry, pork. etc. Machinery n i metal, can'tspill or tip over ; will not soil or Inj u r e a n y t h in g . Guaranteed effective. Ecld t y dealers, or 6 sent by express pre paid for Si- KAJtOLD SOMERA. 100 De Kalb Are., Brooklyn. M. X. BANDMEN: a s Sole for HOLTON and BUESCHER band instru m en ts. The m ost com plete stock o f Musical M erchandise in the N urthweeL W rite for Catalogues. SE IBER LIN G -LU CA S M USIC CO. 134 Second Street. Portland. Oregon Live Stock Notes. Inferior sows constantly pull down the average of the herd. Muddy pens in winter are discour aging places to keep a hog. Sheep will do better on rough land than will any other kind of stock save goats. Good feeding is an integral part of success in breeding pure-bred swine. A rigid system of selection of brood sows should be practiced by all swine breeders. Kaffir fodder should never be fed ex clusively to cattle because it will scour them. The profits of a successful hog man rest largely upon his success in rais ing pigs. Few branches of stock feeding offer better inducements than feeding range lambs. Cattle feeding is not a hazardous business, provided it is done intelli gently and conservatively. Soft coal or coal cinders are relish ed by pigs and hogs because of the mineral matter they contain. Hogs that have a natural shelter and a good dry ground under them will al ways do well in winter. Lambs to be finished for market should go into winter feeding quarters before the weather becomes cold and unsettled. Highest Form of Animal. A Boston teacher had been giving a familiar talk on zoology to a class of ten-year-olds, in a grammar school. To test their intelligence, he said, in the course of his remarks: “Who can tell me the highest form of animal life?” A little girl held up her hand. “ Well, Mary?” “ The hy-ena,” shouted Mary, seriously, but triumphantly. Repressing a smile, the teacher said: "Is it, Mary? Think again. Is a hyena the very highest?” “ Oh, now I know,” cried Mary; "it’s the giraffe.” Economy, Frugality, Industry. The original tightwad lives in Mis souri. According to those who know him, he is so tight that he saves the tips of his shoe laces and sells them for old iron, and in the last 22 years he has realized 11 cents from their sale.—PopulaT Magazine. It’S “Good night” to all such ailments as POOR APPETITE SOUR STOMACH SICK HEADACHE INDIGESTION CONSTIPATION if you will only begin your meals with HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS It tones the stomach and assists digestion in everyway. Try it today O N L Y O N E "B R O M O Q U IN IN E " •■hat is L A X A T I V E BBOM O Q U IN IN E . L ook lo i th e Hianature o f E. W . G R O V E . C u res a Cold in O ne D ay, Cure s G rip in T w o D ays. 25c. The Word “Yankee.” The origin of the word “ Yankee" has been variously explained. Some authorities think it is a corruption ot the word English, as it was pro nounced by the American Indians who called the white people “ Yenghies." It seems first to have been applied to the British soldiers about 1775, as a term of reproach to the New England ers who afterwards adopted it them selves. Others hold that Yankee is a cor ruption of Jankin, or John, a nick name given to the English colonists of Connecticut by the Dutch settlers of New York. The song "Yankee Doodle,” was originally “ Nankee Doodle,” and was applied to Oliver Cromwell. L iqu id blue is a w eak solution. A void it. R ed Cross Ball Blue, the blue that’s ail blue. y o u : g rocer. Buy A sk A Bed of Roses. You hear people quote an old say ing sometimes about such and such a place being no bed of roses. That does not mean garden beds, but real beds on which people slept. There used to be mattresses, cushions and couches stuffed with dried rose leaves both in Greece and Rome, and An- tiochus, when he meant to enjoy him self very much, slept in a tent of gold and silver in a bed stuffed with roses. Those times are past and gone, but you still see in many houses baskets and bowls of dried rose leaves stand ing about. 37 DIE WHEN BIG PIER FALLS Queen’s Birthday Celebrants at Long Beach Victims. Fifty Others Badly Injured-Part of Auditorium Crashes Down and Adds to Horror. Long Beach, Cal.—Too frail to up hold the burden o f nearly 10,000 hu man beings assembled for the festivi ties of the British Empire day celebra tion, the land end of the big double decked pier in front of the city audi torium collapsed Saturday. Hundreds of persons on the top deck were dropped down on the heads of other hundreds crowded on the deck below. The lower deck then gave way and all were dropped down a chute of shat tered woodwork to the tidewashed sands 25 feet below. Thirty-three persons—mostly women —were killed by the shivered timbers or crushed to death by the falling bod ies. Fifty more were seriously in jured, while hysteria and paralyzing fright disabled scores. A section of the auditorium also went down in the crash and the debris from it was added to the wreckage that fell on top o f the dead and in jured. The victims were mostly subjects and former subjects of Great Britain resident in Southern California. The dead were taken to the National Guard armory, while the injured were hur ried to various hospitals in this city and Los Angeles. All the doctors in the city, rein forced by surgeons and nurses from Los Angeles, were called to care for the injured. The Empire day parade, Jthe princi pal feature of the celebration in honor of the late Queen Victoria’s birth an niversary, had just ended and the par ticipants, with thousands o f visitors, were crowding up the steps of the pier and surging toward the auditorium when the pier floor sagged. An instant later the supports gave way and the sound o f breaking tim bers mingled with the shrieks and cries o f the victims as all went down into a mass of brrfken wood and writh ing human forms on the sand. Long Beach, Cal.— Later. Prospec tive damage suits {aggregating proba bly $1,000,000 or more, and a grand jury investigation are engaging the attention of the city officials as a probable outcome of the disaster Sat urday in which 37 persons lost their When Your Eyes Need Care T r y M u rin e E y e R e m e d y . N o S m a r t in g — F e e ls lives in a collapse o f the municipal F i n e — A c t s Q u ic k ly . T r y i t i o r R e d , W e a k , pier, just after the close o f the British W a t e r y E y e s a u d G r a n u la t e d E y e lid s . I ll u s t r a t e d B o o k in e a c h P a c k a g e . M u r in e is Empire Day pageant. com pou n ded by o u r O culists—not a “ P aten t Med The weakness of the pier, which ic in e ” — but used in s u cce s s fu l P h ysicia n s’ P rac tic e f o r m any years. Now dedicated to th e P u b was built eight years ago and never lic and so ld by Druggist s a t 25o and 60o p e r Bottle. M urine E ye S alve in A sep tio T u bes, 25c and 50c. repaired in that particular portion, is M urine Eye Rem edy C o.t C h ica go believed to have been due to decay caused by the action o f salt air on Bullock Ran Amuck. wood and its iron fasteners and sup Some excitement was caused in Wexford (Ireland) the other day, by ports. However, it was declared that the vagaries of a bullock, which ran a much stronger structure might have amuck. The animal took refuge in the been wrecked under the same circum house of a.man named Murphy and stances, as the participants of the big climbed the stairs and entered a bed parade marched on the pier in step. room. It demolished a large bed and Military men pointed out that the other articles, and then took a "head rythmic vibration created by the er” into the street twelve or fourteen measured tread o f thousands of feet feet below, bringing with it the win i caused a tremendous strain on the dow frame and sashes. It escaped in to the harbor and swam about for a supports, which already had been considerable time before it was cap heavily burdened by the crowd which thronged In front o f the doors await tured by means of boat3, ing admittance, and they recalled that military columns comprising large “ Fashion” or “Cookery?” “ Daring color schemes are likely to numbers o f men always break step dazzle visitors to Paris. . . . Cream when crossing even iron bridges, in skirts are to be worn with mustard order to avoid causing collapse or seri coats,” says a morning paper. We ous damage. hardly know whether this comes un der the heading of “ Fashion” or Chinese General Killed. “ Cookery.’ ’—London Globe. Shanghai—General Hsu Pao San PIL E S CU R ED IN « TO 14 D A Y S was killed by a bomb while opening a Y o u r drugsrist w ill refu n d m oney if P A Z O OINT* M E N T fails to cu r e an y ease o f Itch in g , Blind, box which was supposed to contain B leed in g o r P ro tru d in g P iles in 6 to 14 days. 60c. porcelain. He had set for a piece o f For Burnt Matches. porcelain, and when the box arrived Burnt matches are dirty and danger he attempted to pry off the cover. A ous to throw about, the charred wood terrific exposion resulted, and he was leaving dirt and the glowing end some hurled with great force to the opposite times burning a fine bureau scarf or end of the room. A servant also was polished wood. Have a little glass of instantly killed. The general, who sand and thrust the burnt end of the was known as "T iger Hsu,” was a matches in this, thus preventing dirt strong supporter of President Yuan and danger. Shi Kai, and the objected of bitter Pompous Coal Horse. hatred to the Southern extremists. "A coal horse,’ said the magistrate, “ has a pompous stride. There is more Tapestries Line Trousers. dignity about a coal horse than there Paris—The loss o f some precious is about a provincial mayor.” Gobelin tapestries, which were pres ented to the museum at Pau 50 years Where the Rhine is Busy. The traffic on the Rhine between ago and which were valued at several Strasburg and the Holland frontier thousand dollars, has at last been ex amounts to the enormous total of for plained by the confession of the care ty million tons annually. taker that he and his little boy have been wearing some o f the tapestries Everlasting. as lining for their trousers. The care Tings gained are gone, but great things done endure.—Algernon Swin taker declared he believed the tapes tries were worthless, so he took them burne. home to his wife. She selected a Irrigation in Australia. woodland scene to turn into nether Australia is irrigating more than garments for him and their son. two million acres of grazing lands with artesian wells. Allies Approach Peace. Send for Our Big Book of Floor Plans _ And Catalogue of Mill Material at Factory Prices. We manufacture Mill Material o f Every Description and sell direct to the consumer at prices saving from forty to fifty per cen t A $1000 house all ready to set up for only * 400 . Anyone can set it up; blue prints accompany the ma- i terial. We will gladly quote you factory prices on any | article o f mill material you need. Write us; no order too small and none too large. NORTHWEST DOOR COMPANY PORTLAND, OREGON. FAVORS FEDERAL RAILROAD Wilson Makes Known His Attitude on Alaskan Question. Washington, D. C. President Wil son told Senators Chamberlain and Jones Wednesday that he felt kindly toward the proposal for government construction o f railroads in Alaska. The two senators sought the Presi dent’s views on securing Alaskan leg islation during the present session. Wilson expressed his hope that a bill might be passed, but made it clear that, in view o f the urgency for tariff reform, he would be unable as yet to recommend action, intimating that if the Alaskan question could be dis posed o f without interfering with those subjects, he would lend his sup port to a bill within the near future. Senator Jones said, on leaving the executive offices, that he was confi dent a bill would be reported to the territories committee and probably acted on before the tariff was taken up. Governor Ammons, of Colorado, and Senators Thomas and Shafroth called on the President to urge that the gov ernment pursue a more liberal policy toward opening agricultural lands in ; the West. They told the President that the withdrawal of lands from public entry had discouraged settlers, and that every effort of the govern ment should be toward development of these regions. GRASSHOPPER PEST APPEARS Ninety Square Miles of Insects Devastate New Mexico. Amarillo, Tex. — Traveling north eastward a column of grasshoppers five miles wide and 18 miles long is reported in Northeastern New Mexico. Reports that the millions of grasshop pers seem to spread as they travel and also the appearance of small bodies of grasshoppers in sections o f West Texas have caused fear of a general grasshopper pest in the Southwest, es pecially in Texas, Western Oklahoma and New Mexico. The New Mexico column is reported between Elida and Texline. It is reported they are entirely de nuding the land o f grass, as well as destroying all kinds o f foliage. Stock, especially sheep, have been left in starving condition by lack o f pastur age after the grasshoppers passed. Government, state and railroad ex perts have combined to fight the grass hoppers. Health Board Has Puzzle. ALIEN ISSUE IS WOMAN GOULD NOT SO URGENT NOT WALK Both Sides Willing to Submit Question to Court. Illness of Japanese Emperor Quiet Pentwater, M ich. — “ A y ear ago I was Feeling—Representative Sis Very weak and the doctor said I had a s e r i o u s displace son States Plain Facts. Washington, D. C.— Probably as a result of the anxiety in official circles in Japan over the condition of the em peror no instructions have been re ceived at the Japanese embassy to make the expected further representa tions to the United States goverrment regarding the California alien land act. The embassy is engaged in collect ing material for the continuance of the negotiations on the lines indicated in the original Japanese note of pro test May 9. This relates principally to the phase o f the negotiations touching the possible conflict between the Cali fornia state law and the treaty, leav ing to the foreign office the broader questions o f policy. Legal proceedings of some sort seem to be indicated, both parties desiring to use that means of settlement o f the issue, and the question apparently hinges on which side falls the respon sibility for making this test. The new law will not go into effect until August 10, before which date it would not be possible to bring suit and for that reason the negotiations appear to he losing some o f the fea tures of urgency that characterized the early stages. Representative Sisson’s speech on the Japanese question, in anticipation of which he had been enjoined to mod eration by the President, was an at tack on the principle that the treaty making power of the government su perseded the la- '-making power o f the state. " I f any nation,” said Sisson, "should decide that it will dictate to us our land laws then we would be un worthy of national existence if we sub mitted to such dictation. Does any one claim that this is a declaration of war because I announce this truth? “ It is no declaration o f war for the United States government to decline to override the rights o f the sovereign state at the dictation of a foreign power. If the United States govern ment should deliver a state over to the mercies of a flood o f aliens from any nation, then I maintain that the Fed eral government would have prostitut ed its authority. Is the zr.ore an nouncement o f this principle a declar ation o f war?” Sisson made a long argument pur porting to show the possibility of cor poration control of land, which would he made possible by allowing the im portation of "cheap alien labor.” "Many of these large employers of labor,” he said, "would be delighted to have the Federal government, through its treaty-making power, let down the bars and let the alien come in. What would become o f the Amer ican farmer if the great corporations o f the country should buy all the best lands and cultivate them with Mongol ian, Chinese, Hindu, Japanese and other cheap alien labor?” Sacramento — The State board of health is confronted by one o f its most difficult problems in recent years in having placed before it for decision the question o f when do human bones cease to become a part of the human body. This question must be decided before the board can give its permis sion to Chinese at Auburn for a ship ment o f the bones o f dead Orientals by freight and parcel post to San Francisco for exportation to China. Arrangements are being made by Chinese throughout the different sec tions of California to send to China a large consignment o f skeletons of Chinese who have died in this state. The law prohibits shipment o f human bodies unless hermetically sealed in a metal casket. In order to grant the request of the Placer County Chinese the board of health must rule that a skeleton in the form o f dried bones is not a human body, or a part o f a hmuan body. The object o f the law is to safe guard health. TRACE CHECKS TO OPERATOR Settlers Forced to Pay. Washington, D. C.— More than 10,- 000 farmers on reclamation projects of the West will be affected by the Supreme court’s decision that they must pay to the govenment the cost o f maintaining and operating the various reclamation projects, pending their completion. The decision was in the suit by D. P. Baker and other farmers on the Sunnyside unit o f the Yakima, Wash., project to have the reclamation serv ice enjoined from cutting off the wa ter supply to enforce collection of such charges. She W a s S o 111— R estored to H ealth b y L ydia E. Pink* ham ’s V eg eta b le C om pound. Paid to Have Dynamite “ Planted” During Textile Strike. ment. 1 had back ache aud b e a r in g down pains so bad that I could not sit in a chair or walk across the floor and I was in severe pain all the time. I felt discouraged as I had taken everything I could think of and 1 was no better. I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg etable Compound and now I am strong and healthy.” — Mrs. A lice D arling , R.F.D. No. 2, Box 77, Pentwater, Mich. ReadW hatAnothcrW om an says? UNUSUAL RESOURCE OP BOV Lad With One Roller Skate Attaches It to Box and Secures Bigger Load of Wood Than Othera. Small boys were collecting firewood, where it had been thrown out for them, at the side door of a large gro cery establishment on upper Broad way. There was something of a rush to see who would get the most, and the proud possessor of one roller skate came out ahead in the scramble, says the New York Sun. Seizing an orange crate, he strapped hts skate to one of the bottom slats and, filling the crate with wood, rolled it away on the four wheels of the skate, while others were left to drag or carry their smaller loads. Also Had Something to Praise. The other morning my four-year-old cousin and her five-year-old friend were talking of all the hand-painted china their mothers had. The five- year-old one said: “ My mother has a hand-painted sugar bowl and milk pitcher and some plates,” and she mentioned several other things. Then my cousin spoke up and said: “ Huh! That ain’t anything; we got a hand- painted fence back in our yard.”—Ex change. No Chance for Him. A certain minister having noticed a new attendant for several consecu tive Sunduys, engaged her in conver sation after service. Cordially sha king the young blond by the hand, the reverend gentleman asked her name, address, etc., aud concluded by ask ing if he might call upon her. In a rather broken English and very Swed ish intonation came this response: “No, t’ank you, I have a reg-lar fel ler.” Peoria, 111.—“ I had such backaches that I could hardly stand on my feet. I would feel like crying out lots of times, and had such a heavy feeling in my right side. I had such terrible dull headaches every day and they would make me feel so drowsy and sleepy all the time, yet I could not sleep at night. “After I had taken Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a week I began to For a Heavy Heart. improve. My backache was less and Set about doing good to somebody; that heavy feeling in my side went put on your hat, and go visit the sick away. I continued to take the Com and poor; inquire into their wants pound and am cured. and minister to them. Seek out the ** You may publish this if you wish.” desolate and oppressed. I have often —Miss C lara L. C a u w i t z , R.R. No. 4 , tried this medicine and always find it the best antidote for a heavy heart Box 62, Peoria, I1L —John Howard. Such letters prove the value o f Lydia Willing to Become an Enemy. EL Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for "The quickest way to make an en woman’s ills. Why don’twou try ItT emy ot a man Is to lend him five dol lars,” said a philosopher, sententlous- ly; and then, with a haif-concealed show of eagerness, he inquired: “ Isn’t SOUR STOMACH, SLUGGISH LIVER there somebody around here who AND ALL BILIOUS COMPLAINTS would like to make an enemy of me?” INDIGESTION INDIAN VEGETABLE V egetable pufl^Vin! l'l|11 Contradictory. Queer things, these alleged wtso saws. “ Know thyself,” for instance. On the other hand, "familiarity breeds contempt.” How do you dope that out? Electric Current and Nerves. Along human nerves the electric current travels at from 33 to 60 yards N ATU R AL FU N C TIO N S Or a second. N o e D FROM F O R M U l » “ ite OB.WM.WRI 'll) K EEP T H E TH E LIV ER , STOMACH AND BOW ELS H E A L TH IL TA N O R EGULARLY EXERCISED Never Satisfied. When a man gets something for The Eternal Why. nothing he is pretty sure to think it “ Papa,” said an inquisitive boy. might have been something better. “ don’t fishes have legs?” "They do not,” answered papa. “ Why don’t they, papa?” “ Because fishes Bwlm and don’t require legs.” Then he asked, "Papa, ducks have legs, don't they?” “ Why, yes, ducks have legs.” "Well, ducks swim, don’t they?” “ Yes," “ Then why don’t fishes have legs, if ducks do? Or why don’t (lucks not have any legs if fishes don’t?” Papa gave up. Good Reason, Too. “Miss Mary,” Inquired the clergy man, “have you seriously considered the great question of life?” “ Well, you see, sir,” Mary replied, blushing, "none of the young men has asked me y e t” V o t h e r « w ill A n d M rs. W in s lo w 's S o o t h in g S y ru p th e b e s t r e m e d y t o u se lo r t h e ir c h ild r e n d u r in g th e t e e t h lu g p e r io d . Gave Him Away. Master (who is trying to make a good impression on his strait-faced aunt from whom he has expectations) —"Mary, have you seen a letter any where about marked ‘Private’ ?” Mary •—‘You mean the one from the man what can’t get ’Is money out of you, sir? I put it be’lnd the mirror, sir’”— Punch. “ DIDN’T HURT A BIT” ia what they all aay o f our rainless Boston—Two checks, one o f which Methods o f was in payment o f "expenses incurred Extracting Teeth. during strike at Lawrence,” were traced to the offices of the American O u t-of-tow n peo Woolen company at the dynamite con ple can haw* their spiracy trial here. The checks were plate and bridgo- Lessens Danger From Fire. w ork finished in one issued on the authority o f William M. day if necessary. Transmission line poles and cross- Wood, president o f the company, and A n absolute guar were payable to Frederick E. At- arms treated with creosote oil aro antee. backed by 26 teaux, a dye manufacturer, who, with less liable to destruction by fire than years in Portland. Wood and Dennis Collins, are charged untreated timber of the same kind. with conspiracy to "p la n t" dynamite N o th ou gh tfu l perann u w i liquid blue. I t 's s o f blue in it large bottle o f w ater. Aak fo r at Lawrence, to discredit textile oper R pinch ed Cross B ell Blue, the blue th at’ s all blue. orricr h o u r s : ators during the industrial troubles of S A. M. t o 8 P. M. S u n d a y. 9 I s t Had to Have Round Figures. Election Change Mooted. 1912. P h o n .» : A 2 0 2 9 : Main 2 0 2 9 . Where Catherine, age five, buys her Washington, D. C.— The new plan candy, they will not sell less than n f s il ln s B id * .. Third and W ash in gton , P ortlan d Miami Honors Flagler. for national election and the assem nickel's worth. Catherine asked for St. Augustine, Fla.—The funeral of bling o f congress was proposed by money to buy Borne, but her papa Senator Works in two bills. He Henry M. Flagler was held Sunday said: "You have pennies of your OUT O f TOW N would change election day from No from the Flagler Memorial Presbyter own.” She answered, “Oh, but pen vember to August and provide for an ian church here. PEOPLE Three leading pas nies ain't any kin to one another un nual sessions o f congress from the tors o f the city conducted the services. less you’ve got five.” <**n reoflIveprompt treat* ments o f non-folsonoas. first Monday o f October to the first The body will be interred in the mau H e a lt h -b s lld lu g re m e d ie s HIs Patience Exhausted. fiour.- Monday in June. Congressmen would soleum o f the Flagler Memorial church A yeomanry squad was drilling, and assume office in October, immediately in the city. All busisness houses in being out of practice, most of them after the election, and the President Miami, including the postoffice, were were Buffering from bruises caused by the Chinese doctor. and Vice President would take office 1 closed, all flags were at half mast and j the unsteadiness of one another's Try once more If you hare 1-oen doctoring with in November. The plan is not looked public buildings draped in mourning, | movements. “ I believe you have cut thin one and that one and have not obtained ner* upon with favor to any extent. manent relief. Let thin «treat nature hosier diag out o f respect to the memory o f Mr. my head open,” shouted n recruit to nose» your rasa and prescribe Rome remedy whoa* Flagler, who founded the city o f Mi j a nervous comrade, who had given action 1 r quick. Rure and safe. Hi* prescriptions are compounded from Roo*s. Herb«. Hilda and him a serious knock. “ Well," said tho ami. $6,000,000 Fund Approved. Bark« that have been gat he red from every quar distracted sergeant-ln-charge, “ now Is t e r o f the iflol*». T he secrets o f three medicines sre not known to the outside world, but have been Detroit—The annual report o f the t a good time to put something In it !” handed down from father to son in the physicians' Bridge Pier Washed Out. general apportionment committee, i fam ilies In China. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regu which included a recommendation that Lewiston, Idaho — Owing to the CONSULTATION FREE. If you live out of town and cannot call, writs for the convention make the raising o f warm weather the last few days, both late and invigorate stomach, fiver and symptom blank and circular. enclosing 4 cents ia $6,000,000 annually for missions the the Snake and Clearwater rivers are bowels. Sugar coated, tiny granules, ultimate object, was presented Wed rising rapidly, the Clearwater being easy to take as candy. THE G. 6EEW0 CHINESE MEDICINE CO. nesday to the Northern Baptist con higher than at any time this season. Laying Matting. vention in session here. The recom Pier No. 3 o f the new Clearwater 1621 r«9t St.. Cor. Morrison When laying matting, It is not al- London—The allies informed Osman mendation was approved. One recom bridge, which was forced out o f line | ways necessary to cut It in order to Portland, Orasse. Pazim Pasha at a joint meeting of the mendation for a United Missionary by the high water recently, is now j fit corners and alcoves. It may be Balkan and Ottoman peace delegate* convention by the convention, with gone entirely. Whether it slipped off better to do so In very small spaces, N o . 2 2 - '! * . that they had no intention of asking Dr. John M. Moore, o f Boston, as the the base or broke off will not be but often moistening the matting Is F. N . U. No sign of found to be better than cutting. Soft for further modification o f the peace educational director, was acted upon known until low water. the pier can be seen at present. Those ened thus. It can then he bent with terms already put forward. This an favorably. W H K N writing to advertisers, familiar with conditions in *he moun out breaking, and makes a neat, sub nouncement is regarded as an import TT tion this paper. stantial edge. tains look for a repetition o f 1894. Teacher- Murderer Con victed. ant step in the direction o f peace, as the Turks announced that if any modi Salt Lake City — Caleb A. Inlow, Law Bars Policewomen. fications were suggested it would former school principal and juvenile FOR WOMEN ONLÌ leave the door open for further de probation officer at Bingham, Utah, San Francisco—Two provisions of mands on the allies. waa found guilty in the Utah District the city charter make it impossible Backache or Headache court here o f second degree murder. for San Francisco to add to its force Dragging Down Sensations Morgan Gift to Be Tax-Free. Inlow and his wife were charged with three policewomen, for whom the board Nervous— Drain*— Albany, N. Y .—The valuable collec having killed Thomas E. White, a o f supervisors recently voted an appro Tenderne** Low D ow n tion o f works o f art, pictures, books taxicab chauffeur, last Octo'ier, to pre priation. The city attorney brought and antiques o f the late J. Pierpont vent the latter telling o f alleged ore out these facts when requested to give It ia e x - 1 an official opinion on the question. Morgan will be exempt from the state thefts committed by Inlow. It is because o f some derangement or disease inheritance tax, provided the collec pected Mrs. Inlow will be released Candidates for the force must possess distinctly feminine. Write Dr. R. V. Pierce’s the same physical requirements de tion is turned over “ to a municipal without trial. Faculty at Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N .Y. manded of volunteers for the United corporation o f the state for educa Consultation is free and advice is strictly in Bulgaria Fully Expects War. tional purposes by the heirs within two States army. confidence. years.” The Omrod bill, which so Vienna— Bulgaria regards war as' Nation Aaks for lalet. provides, was signed by Governor Sul- inevitable, according to dispatches zer Saturday. from Sofia. Servia’s demand for a Boston—The deeding to the United revision o f the alliance treaty is re States o f Outer Brewster, an island at Mines Tie Up Shipping. restores the health and spirits and removes those garded as an ultimatum, and it is ex- ' the entrance to Boston harbor, for pnr- Smyrna — Shipping ia completely pected that the Bulgarian cabinet will poar's o f national defense, is requested painful symptoms mentioned above. It has been paralyzed in these water on account of flatly refuse the demand and insist up- ' by the Federsl government, in a letter sold by druggists for over 40 years, in fluid form, treaty. | received by Governor Foas and imme- recent accidents due to mines. The on compliance with the Ot $1.00 per pottle, giving general «atisfaction. It can now he had in tablet form, aa modified by R. V. Pierce, M.Dl. companies have warned incoming Eighty thousand troops are massed . (lately transmitted by him to the legis steamer* to remain away and outward- near Sofia, and other troops are being * lature. Outer Brewster is a mass o f o fif b y M oiMoImm Ommlmnm o f rW -i/ftoxI, rocks about four acres in extent. bound vessels are afraid to leave port. 1 hurried forward in Macedonia. y stuui om i l * l p f S f W o tm s t a n * « * Wise Dental Co. C . GEE W O PoYon Feel This W a D r . P ie r c e ’ s K ] F avorite P rescription