The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913, July 12, 1907, Image 2

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OREGON MIST
Entered at the rostoffice at St. Helen,
Oregon, at second-class mail matter.
ISSURD EVKRY FRtlUY BV
E. It. FLAGG.
EDITOR, AND PROrRIBTOR.
SUBSCRIPTION RATKS
One year.,,..
Six month
,.,.tl.M
Ma Wtf
Advertising rate made known ou a
cation. notice 23 cents per
JULY 12.
1 CIRCUIT COURT OFFICERS :
Thomas A. McBftiD&....I)istrict Judge
G. h. HKDC.KS ..District Attorney
COUNTY OFFICERS:
K, S. HaTTAN, Judge,..-. ....St. Helens
W. A. Harris, Clerk St. Helens
Martin WmTB, Sheritt ..St. Helens
Casper Lihkl, Commissioner Mist
H. Wkst, Corani'r ......Scappoose
Edwin Ross, Treasurer.......... St. Helens
A. T. Laws, Assessor.... St. Helens
I. H. Copklani. School Supt....Houlton
Frank B. Prkscott, Sure Rainier
H. R. Cuff, Coroner St. Helens
THE COUHT HOUSE PLAZA
The City of St. Helens has paid in the
neighborhood of UKX) for property But
Sclent for a park in front cf the tew
courthouse, and the county court ha
agreed to grade and fill, build cement
sidewalks, install a fountain and do all
other thing necessary to the creation
of a beauty spot in front of our public
building. Sixteen hundred dollars i
great deal of money to be raised by tax
ation lor such a purpose in a small com
munity like St. Helens, where there is
but "a small payroll aud very few prop
erty owners to bear the burdens. The
benefits arising from this taxation
should not be monopolized. If the city
and county spend their money to secure
a park, private owners should not be
permitted to front it with discreditable
buildings, and enjoy the benefits of free
sidewalks, fountain and Macadamized
streets. We nnderstand the deeds to
the property in question have not yet
been turned over to the county, and
this is to be the result we hope they
never will be. It would be fat better to
have no improvement than to bare
turned into a means of boosting private
rental. The county could better afford
to buy the old court house and throw
it into the river than have it turned into
three discreditable tenement houses and
faced upon the plaza.
It is time a check was called upon the
city's liberality. Heretofore it has
given away whatever it was asked to,
and it must bs admitted it has been
poorly recompensed for its liberality.
It gave the atrtets away and at cured a
right of way to the Northern Pacific be
cause it was promised a mill, and it has
Icoked and looked for that mill nntil
its eyes are strained and it has practi
cally given up hope of relief from that
source.
There are matters connected with the
transfer of the plaza property that are
not at all creditable to the manipulators.
The city was not worked quite as hard
as was intended, but it was hard enough,
and it is high time there as a change,
THE DEAR LITTLE JAPS
The Administration is (ending nine
teen war vesslcs to the Pacific Coast,
and, despite protestations to the con
trary, this is well understood to be a
etep in advance of a possible, and even
probable war with Japan. The dear
little Jape have had a chip on fheirchoul
der ever since they whipped the Rus
sians, or, rather, ever since Cassia's
internal disorders compelled that coun
try to admit defeat.
The United States sympathized with
Japan during that war and scouted the
idea of a yellow peril. We did our best
to antagonize our ancient ally in favor
of the Yankees of the Orient, even laud
ing the treacherous liijdit attack upon
the Russian ships at Fort Arthur with
out a declaration of war.
Since achieving victory the Japanese
have proved to even our ?atifacli in that
they are cruel, tapachiis as well as
treacherous. Their administration of
the affairs of Corea has been a disgrace
to even the thin veneerof civilization with
which they have been credited and ha
in no way been an improvement over
what might have been expected under
Russian rule.
Prior to the Russian war we heatd
nothing of demands against this conn
try, but since that time every Jnp coolie
Irom Mexico to British Columbia, seem
to have acquired the idea that l.e is at
It not the equal of the average American
citizen, and now the Government of
Japan has announced that it will not
consider a treaty containing a clause
limiting the importation of Japanese
coolies into this country.
Jupan has nb'utt us compI'menUr an
opinion of us as the hud of Htm-i.i, and
her h.iliUry atr botflies bm qu ted its
saying our ial officers a o ahigbt t
I alls or on dr. s piiM-le, hut r;o good for
actual rem e, mi l that oursailor would
desert their h! i f..ie the first gun
was nrei. w mi-lit awell find out
the truth of these a-serii ms 11 ,v ei .-ini-
oilier lime. ' If our imvy has become
- Kusiani7.ed we want to know it. Fx
pcrts say we are boon t to Imve w.ir
with Japan fjr t!u Miprniai-y of the
Pacific and pio'tthly this as y,io 1 a
lime as any to B-m!e thenmtnr. If
Japan is to hp our muster we ud. hi b
well start low to learn the Icsom . f il
inUcion. H uity 1, howi-ver, that tin-Urowuii-s
are inl-takeri, and th it Amen
cm wnnii r can hoot as strnl Ir p in
lKI2,iind that American iiieihiuilis have
lot mine of their inve itiv .lm.
RESULT OP DIVERSIFIED FAR 11 1 MO
The department ot agriculture lias
published a little bulletin on diveralSed
larminf, which contains much valuable
In for inatioii for those Illlera of the soil
who are tied to the single crop Idea. It
was prepared bv Iwj experts In the
bureau of farm investigations, and may
bo taken as authority on the result in
mixed rRlic ilture. The experiment
given iu detail, were Conducted on one
of the phintatioi s of Louishiia where
cotton hat been the only crop plauMl
I V leuauu. Tlie object of the woi k was
to convince th f timers that au income
every month was better than oiicj
year, atd that there was mora indepen
d nc in producing that which the fain
i y consumed than iu purchasing ou the
credit plan. Last year a plantation
owner set aside two acies each for his
tenants, and advised them to plant pot
toes, watermelons, Sweet corn and cab
bage for tl.e mcrket. Eighteen farmer
entered into the work of experimenting
Ti at was merely to carry out the idea
and study results, and did not intefere
in the plans for growing the usual acre
age of cotton. Due tenant planted sweet
potatoes and bad a yield of 271 busbels
per acre. The potatoes were sold for GO
CciiU a bushel One-halt of the crop
was stored away for family use. Others
planted Irish potatoes, and harvested
from 8 to 107 bushels per acre. Tlie
average iucciue over expenses amount
ed to (35.20 an acre.
The success in watermelon culture
was about tlie same as In potatoes. None
of the farmers had ever given any atten
(ion to those crops, and all worked at
disadvantage. The average cash results
from melons, after paying all expense
was 25.41 per acre. The experience
was so satisfactory that in every detail
that thirty seven farmers have planted
suull platiof various crops for results
iu 1007. These men are all renters, and
have always engaged in cotton growing.
This year their crops are planted as fol
lows: Cottou, 777 acres; cane, 67 acres
potatoes, 129 acres ; corn and peas, 417
acres: melons, 33 acres; sorghum, 11
acres ; cabbage, 20 acres; sweet potatoes,
23 acres, and general vegetables gardens
1!) acres.
One year of diversified agriculture
has made changes in thirty seven homes,
If the crops for this reason prove to be
successful, then the work will be con
tinned throughout the entire southern
tenant farming localities. It is argued
that a man with a family, who can be
made content, is worth a half a dozeu of
the roaming, dissatisfied ones. To bring
about that much desired condition the
land owners are cooperating with the
government in trying to get the farmers
to arrange to have something to sell at
all times in the year. That will assist
materially in breaking down the preseut
credit system and making the special
crop of cotton, tobacco and wheat far
mers financially independent. It is an
educational movement in the right di
rection, and should extend to every spec-
is! farming district of the United
States. Seattle P. I.
FRUIT PESTS ARE BAO
Is natorv !,. lio'iig? As Si-mtor
. Ft. raker is talliin r i l.bt along ill Ohio,
the opiuijii of mis experienced dic'sim
ti may bs assumed to he s negative.
I spent three days last week in the
southeastern part of the conuty looking
over orchards. Found some In fair con
dition, but most of them in bad shape.
Some of them have not been sprayed or
pruned for years and are infested with
all kinds of pests. The apple tingies.
the green, black and woolly aphis, San
Jose scale, tent caterpillar, cod 1 in moth
and xylobros, besides fungi. With help
scarce and hard to get at any price,
am convinced that fruit spraying should
become a specialty. To neglect the
orchard means ruin to the fruit as well
as lue trees, i lie pests have been ex
tremely active this year and nuicss every
one prune and sprays their tree they
had better cut them down ; yet I am
sure tbst if we will give our orchards
he proper ctre we can raisa first class
fruit. The San Jose scale is the most
dangerous pest we have, for unless we
subdue it it w,U kill the treo iu a few
ytais. It is spreading very rapidly and
we should do all in our poaer to keep it
iu check.
While out I examined a fruit drying
ouse ami in tin cracks in the walls
ud tl or ol th-' ud douse there were
hundreds of cocoons of (he codlin
moth which had lelt for tlie near by
orchards to deposit their eggs on the
young apples uud I dare say that every
apple in those orahurda will hate worms
iu them. A liul.- forethought and tiiev
could all have been destroyed by dip-
piiii the I,ox-s in hot water when
through wi htiieui.
me appe iingtes aw very numerous
in some orchuid and unless sprayed
with keroiene emulsion and destroyed
the second brood coming out will not
leave a green leaf on the trees. I also
find that g mj of the spraying done for
the Ban Jo;e scale ha failed to killlhem
and that tiieiu are enough live scale to
cover thu treet by fall. I am aware
that one spM.vi.ig will ua kill th) scale
on old mossy treva. Such tieei should
be cut bick and n o moss mid I ne bu k
scaled off ru tiiut every pa; t ol tlu tie
can be reached bv iho suiav. V
should becaieful ts.o t at tha spray
mutu.iul is properly pivpareJ uud ap ,
piled oi it i:l t,e n f iil.ire.
He no hi:ve aeces t. the bulletins
pubii hed by the xeriiiieiit station at
Uorvalhs and can get them b asking
for ihfin, so we can inform ouiselves.
Tbcie hut K-w orchards iu W.fhingtuii
cou ty where marketable fru.t can be
t:rou n without spraying.
I am satisfied that the beM lime t i
p ay fur 8411 Jose s uU is as hwii as
the fruit is gathered in the fall r.s the
scale in i.oi, tit ivine to nuiiunty n,d in
a-'ily dotrojed. lly r-pring Hie bct'e
is thici mid the mots has grown over it,
making it hard 10 reach Ex.
tOUSTY COURT
Small tirlst of Business at Ike Uweut
Term
" County Court for Columbia County
was in S'ssioif July 31, 6th, and tl Ii
But little b'-lnrs was trarwacted, the
greater poitiuti of the time being taken
up in discussion of various topics.
The b d of Cac and Mow, for building
a b, id go 1 crOMt the Kehaleiu river at
the Shotdey place altove YeruonU am
ouniiiig to fllViO, waa accent d anil tho
contract will be lot them.
Tho Umd of (i. M. Neae, the timber
cruiser, hi the sum of J8.000 was accept
ed. It is an American Surety Company
bond and coot Mr. Nease (tKX), and was
secured only after nn appeal to the
head of the company.
The bondsman for James Yan, who
was road sui ervisor ( district No. 10
were noli tied that unless he files his K
port and make final settlement prior to
the 27th of this month the bond will be
declared forfeited and proceedings in
stituted to recover the amount thereof.
Court meets again the 27th to receive
bids for the improvement of Clatskanie
roads.
The following bills were allowed :
J II Collins, helping assessor. SI 00
J FCheldelio cruising timber... Ill "0
C C MuCormack medical attend
ance on prisoners 15 00
M 0 Qray telephone and supplies 13 85
Glass A Prudhomme steel fixture 44 23
St. Mary's Hospital care Batson
May aud June , 42 70
C B Sutton taking Taylor to hos
pital 9 60
J M Blackford rent for Mrs. Hop
kins 10 00
H H Evnian coffin for Ryan. ... 12 60
J L Campbell constable for Berg-'
man 17 90
CJLaison sup rd2.. 1000
MFreshsuprd4 10 00
C Kratxke sup r d 6 32 60
HB Phillips suprdtt 55 00
John Boxler sup r d 12 67 60
P Berger.-oo sup r d 15. 2125
The Columbian advertising for
fill at Beaver bridge 3 00
The Columbian advertising for
Kehalem bridges 12 00
F BPrescott surveying Tucker
hiliroad IS 10
John Winters cleaning windows
and sawing wood 43
Gustave Hendrickson care of Su-
mela . 20 00
E MoVey supplies to McDonild 6 40
Edwin Koks premium on bond.. 52 60
E Ross postage '. . 15 00
E Ross safe 4 00
W A Harris premium on bond. . . 35 00
Columbia Telephone Co atsesamt 2 00
Ida M Harris work in clerkecfflce 29 25
Martin White premium o a bond 40 00
I H Copeland 48 90
Graca MeUgar 18 00
Ray Hoven 9 00
Lois Perry 3 00
George Lester. 12 00
W A Harris 12 04
Harry West 18 20
Casper Libel 16 40
Special road warrant were ordered as
follows:
ROAD district no 3
E Ida Pont de Ne moors 1'wd Co 13 25
E 8 Faxon 399 00
boad district no. 4
Win Bach roan ... : 22 25
Seffert 46 00
C C Warren 30 75
J F Loyd 18 02
Chas Merrill 8 25
F II Adams 40 00
C H English 10 75
ROAD DISTRICT 10
F B Prescott 37 20
Jas Bennett...... 15 00
John Laulenback 6 00
WF Tillman 7 60
BOAD DISTRICT 12
E E Hoberg H4 00
Walter Shearer 80 00
rank Lonkey 149 60
LaueA Birkeufeld 120 40
Morton Crittenden 44 GO
F Crittenden 45 50
BO AD district 13
N D Peterson 21 25
BOAD DISTRICT 14
Frank Tracy 8350
Wm Pringte t .... 39 75
Willie I'ringle 24 00
V Powell , ; .' 28 2.3
Ed Webster. . . , ; 05 00
Aaron Uesolhttrg , .
Frank CillU'tdeti,
John Sidiedvin ....
Arnold lloxl r ....
John Iloxlcr.
K Webster
It Smith . ..
CKichiinn
durance Keed . . .
J Reed
F IVttijoIm
l Ongall..
II S Met linger
Cleve MoTnigi'r . . .
A Wood
Frahk Tracey
Bart Wool ..
J I) Hail
Aitliur Kerns
WUbtim lti.lt
C 8 Mellinger
(to 00
42 .W
13 10
ill 00
32 00
S7 60
Itl K0
12 AO
12 60
10 00
8 75
2 60
15 CO
(I 60
4 00
1 no
4 00
22'40
SO 00
SO 25
18 IK)
Wm Prit.gle... 4 2-
V lw. II 25
A L Parker 3 25
Uustllult 4 50
J Hess 8 33
J P Sheeley 8 11
Mart Christetisen 4 06
J R Dallas 8 11
P Bergerson 11 92
California Pwd Wks 12 10
J Hull 11 87
J F Peterson 11 8"
fc Mcuuitey ta o
J A Kay,..'. 40 00
II Kratx 6 25
Chester Paikcr 40 00
D B Steliuiaii 00 09
R F Hill '.'2 50
CROWXEli (Jl'EEX OF OKKUOJi
The Oldest Honian Iu America Be
sides Iu VTkshlugtea t'oaatr.
Oregon clnitni the honor of counting
among its residents the oldest white
woman in America. Mrs. Mary Ramsey
Lemons Wood, and in the celebration of
the Fourth of state-wide importance,
Mrs. Wood, aged 120 years, one mouth
and 15 days, was crowned Queen of Ore
gon. Tl.e c oronation was performed by
General Geoige H. Williams, attorney
general under President Grant, ami the
only living reoreaentiitive of that ohi
net. General Williams is iu his 8HI1
year. He was assisted by Hon. J. I.
Lee, president of tho Oregon 1'ioueer
association.
Mr. Wood was born at Knoxville,
Tenn., Msy 20th, 1787. She was talce
married, her first husband, Mr. Lemons,
dying in 1839. Iu 1852 tha moved from
Missouri to Oregon, settling in Wash
ington county, where she still makes her
home, riding on horseback the entire
way. Mis. Wood married her second
husband, John Wood, May 28th. 1851.
Uf her (our children, all ol whom live,!
to ripe old sge, only one Is today living
and that the youngest child. Mis. C'atli
erlne B. Soothwotrh Reynolds, who was
born in 1830.
Mrs. Wood is of EnglisU ancestry.
Her parents first settled In the Carolina
and afterwards removed to Tennessee,
Iter mother died at the remarkable
age of (10. This remarkable antiquarian
now weighs 130 pounds, is a good con.
veisatlonalist, ami speaks about the
career of Napoleon Bonapaite, who was
lad of 18 when she was born, as
though those things happened yester
day. She was a mature woman of 34
when Napoleon died, and her youngest
child was born only nine years after his
death. At the time of the death of
George Washington she was 12 .ears
old, and Daniel Webster, if he were
living would be only five years older
than Mrs. Wood. Frederick Ilia Great,
of Prussia, as well as Benjamin Frank
lin, were still iivin when she was born.
She was a mother before the birth of
Abraham Lihcoln aind W. K. Gladstone
and she was twice a m ither before Hor
ace ureeley, Charles Sumner or I leiirv
Ward Beecher came into tho world. As
we have instances of grandmothers at
the ng4 of 31 , Mrs. Wo id w as old enough
to have bten the grandmother of (jut-en
Victoria or Julia Ward Howe, and as
she is 37 years older than General Gorge
niiaiiis, who crownca tier Uticen
SO 75
Emmons
U Member...... ,. . 7 50
U G Melliuger 30 00
A L Parker 2 25
01 uregoii. Hie could easily liavebejii his
grandmother. The tame is true as lu
Edward Everett Halo or Senator lV-ttuc,
of Alabama.
General Williams' coronation
follows :
"On behalf of the citizens of Po. tl !
and as a part of the celebration of tlie
nddn H
1 6J0
Cents a Week Buys It
This hitfiVchiss machine is iikuIc fur us
In ,,..1 .
liti tiv ft iiinntifurturcr 'not 5n ).. c "3
...... -. nix, HWlNfc V
chink Thrt. This is the Aml-Trust Se '
Machine. We employ no ttj;cnts; wc j;oto tlie'"5
pie direct, thcrcfure. have no big cotumii,,..
mill In itl tvijil In tin? C-;!K'1illfr
$60 nachine for $25
We semi this machine to your nearest Rtati0ufi-k
ftcilu pieptic fur i?3oo eash mid a iu moutlit
iti.stultnciitH until ti$ OQ h paid us, Wt iie fur r,'
ItlA'STRATKD I-'fRNITURU CATAt.Otif)-, 2
tdl you all rtkmt our great offer. McnUon th'
Mist when you write, .
ENTIHE HALF DLOCK j
173-163 FIRST STREET, PORTLAND, QRPflrJ
The I'ndi'd Slates Gou'rniuet t la so
pnKrtslv thu l throw,! in an Inlgat
ing ditch whn a silo of pullc lnd Is
tirnd-'.
Mr.T-ft Is quo'vd as saying : "If the
duty routes, I ,hll I tl it dei lilll it."
American foititude has nevir Jet (cell
weighed and found wanting.
Hichstd Croker'a lioisa has won both
the Kuglish and the Irinh IH-ihy, If
the Japs have a derby the power ought
to borrow the Cruker steed.
Hearst's iM.lu v toward the llcimvmtlc lis
tatty is oneofconfiislon until enrlretluti 'Q
draws nenr. and then he turns It Into aj
case of simple fusion. i
; is
SETS FOOTWEAR
FASHIONS
3
CANVAS SHOtS IN ALL COLORS THAT WILL MATCH 5
3
THE SUMMCH QOWNS
PRICES S2.60 AND 3.50
SOROSIS CATALOGOC CNT fnCC ON nCQOCtT
Mayor Mituitx pleads that his health
will be Injur, d by iiiirbonuelit. II.'
should think of what 1'iimo Ii.S ur- p
rived, and take a more h i-elul view,
Knusiis. Mi'Wiuri and Nehcinka will B
SOROSIS HOSIERY
TO MATCH THE SHOES. BCST THAT CAN SC O0TAINC0
pntcc 20C TO tl.CO.
KNIGHT SHOE CO.,,,
THIRD ANO WASHINGTON, PORTlANO, OWC.
t
unite iu an Interstate show of dm 7 pro. U
.l,.l. ,1.1. I.ll ti i. ... ..I.I M
that Uie show wilt ba a urld cmdler. i Ot JJl.t.ftAJUiftjmU.AJUJtJ
lawyer Harrow Inn iioiuinatiHl Harry ;
Orchard for piexideut of the Anaium
Club. ; J
iwwmwnfwwwwwwitfw wmitfmtffnfttfttfttftfm
Poi'tntfal thtiali'iH to oveiturii the
machine at Lisbon and estahlh a
twentieth century republic.
A M'oiidrrful llaipeiilitj(.
Port llyrmi, N. V. lm witiusmd
of the most icmarkahle cira
ever recoidjij. Amos P. Ki
place soys; "lliitkllu's Arn
cure.1 a sore oil my leg ail'i which I
had suffered over HO yeary. I am now
elijhty.flve." Uiinrantcrd to euro all
sores, by all dniKK'sts. ;'.,
I A ft a A JUfJLXJ Kjf JL VsK AViU
DOW DY THE DIC 8AWMILL
deceiving New Goods Every Day
In the Week.
Columbia County Bank!
Docs General Hanking
Money Orders Cheap
Wm. M. Ross, Proprietor,
ST. HKLKS3, OllK.
r 1 1 .
H is a Iteputation of Int Htandint for flnly the iVst lit i
n 1
Mercliandise
1 Dart & Mucklel
OREGON
SiioicrLiNS
and Union Pacific
IMIII A'llf--lll!,AM (I 1-. A if
SI'K' Ul, lor m tan
i't iiii)iiin;ift
Arrlv,,
V- f. M
i'ail j-.
E K Throop.
JH Rench
BOAD DISTRICT 15
John E Iho! 111...
(JuHtHuH ...
P I'ergerson . .
Same
Kdain Smith
J P Blu-eley . . ,
T IIDenslotr.
"M"
10 75
0 33
21 25
21 82
10 25
11 47
1 87
4 27
30 15
W K Peusloir H 40
W A Wilson ,, 30 2(1
Oliver Ieut
C B Aiiii4ionir fl 07
M O Sha iiiiili.-tti. 10 67
i l-t Gii-.tnfs in 4 06
KJ he siiiun ,, 2 02
Arthur John. on. . OS 75
Same....; . 22 0j
OK.NKIIM. U )M) KI ND '
C J Ijirsoii...,,,, 25 00
Jolw Mynn tii
W Mllri.1. .
John Kj.lliing
Ole lr..elsii.
-list anniversary of the dtclaratiuli of
Independence, I liave the honor to crown
you ns Queen of Orrg-.ti so fur as ad
vanced years and the respect and vene
ration of the people can make you such
a queen. As a young man of 81 1 am
proud of the opportunity to confer this
uistinctloa upon a lady old enough to
ue n.y grai dmo'her.
"I do not believe there Is a pa'smt
now living in this country who was
living as you were when Oeorsa Wiw'i.
inftfon was Inaugurated president of ibe
United (Hates.
"I coriK.atulalo you upon tho utensiix;
you must feel in uieetlnir your fi ieinli
. - i n t ... . ' '
ij n. uiiu neiiii;oi8 wlio tiavo nwiiil.,d to
do you bono-, and I hope you m iy ,sr()
that p aci which the world cannot 'give
in the closing bc -lies of your lo iir evvnt
ful life."
rftolU.VK K I, V K li, e IS ..n ,. ,.
W allii H'llt. I .. -
'item Mitrtherir ' I
f-'Miiln. j
f l't.ANTIr KXHUKHs' M . "
'" VU "'""" '"! ',
Iisilr.
n A. M
tisiir,
7 60
18 75
11 25
11 0-'
When oii do a thing, do It well-no
manor what It Is. If you d.. t bilter
man anyone cl-e could
thliiff, th- re'a a welcome
In this big woil l ofr.um
w a man enn write a bi-tter hock
prem-li it1tti r seriuor. or make n hotter
Lower Columbia R
ivkr.
Mi-imsr ll..nli ,,v ,irttt,
'..,, ni r,,fj p. Mt
lor Aitorln ii.i.l way
lilliv. ..
iii.iiiii iii,ltl,
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALI.
"iiiiiiia a. ciuIiiihi, rtuiiiiitt
?:"n ?, III. all..
Soli, , i. , ' ,' ",rn- "' I' ll' mm. .a
"'"I'l'.Kln-n Hint. ki,i...f ... f
l SIKl ,l,, ,(ie ,M 'II'MM-
M oimii. ui.,i ..i, r - n , . s t i n w r,
d the .,i., '"" 'or.H,. h;-; Slir!'1- IH I IIP 1 1
aaaitin, v a a' & ."L'te". 'Z t, IblllUCl
Kiir., said !!:,!::::!:::: "v:!. s'tsvUe
JOB Pi?IiSTSSG
IS OUR BUSINESS
t 1 F M t
i IV llitV(
' l'llllVfluiniiPilJol lrinf.
I lit In'Hf ami iiKHt
iiolllceiiiColumtiiii Count v
. ludice arc prepared to
(to all kinds of Printing
on, .short notice and at
most reasonable prices
A TRIAL WILL CONVINCE
fohuU.MH 2 23!n,'""e'",'H,WM',l1,1''r,llioin.h,9
uuini i.ih noaefi in lt, woods, the world
will U'ifctt n tieaten path to his door."
l'ry to excel It's a laudable ambition.
Thoiuanus fljclt lo the opening cf
government I lifted lands. There's
millions lu 1;, nod the people kno It.
INene.'l wsra ., 1 7,"
Kruile W.s er 27 60
Julian War r. ...... i . , , . 25 no
U.lleirtll, , 35 00 - ? - . .
8 Malcolm , ,N 3250! c"1"ra'1 ' ""ufly bmki d into the
Saae , .. .. . , , 0 00 " -'H1t whit somo new nt-oc-
O Kr.ii7.ki... ............. ioo! "'" lil"Jr",1'K'"ul mine promot
K U. Jones .... . so ut
--rr,.,,,,,, 11 HIJ
11 u nniiips .... 35 (X)
mi' lo h.i.k.. i,i ,
,fllli..l. I. ,
imiii-riv lo iv l.-AII l,f, Ni.Vi I. .
ofllii- ,N.,ril. ,,,,V(V.' ,'r rtVi. . .,7' ''",rr
1.;ivi..hi, , .vrl) " , , ' ' thin, .r -,
" Kl, .Xt.,,t
"tp.l in ,,
"'iililwill, 1
J"tv, iMi t J
Iralda
Inli.. X l W.r -aid esse,,..,
I'hsiie wit h ti,,- r ,.,,; ,, I: " !!":! '". '
Frank Tu-ncr , . .
J110 fi Unilburg .
Libel, .VcCutiley & Co
John Hedland....,,...
6 10 'he Funton-triiK!o-P,iurtli.of-Jiiy in.
17 25 , '"J'" "iht to U clos'd without fur-
10 60 "' les'Jiiiious or additional flapdoodle
11 00 correspondence.
nillrol l l Ho. i ,,, ', ,Y,r.l',:':lo ill Mm
."nun- .-oiih i, r i , " t "mi iil r .'. 1 , r "' n
f.-HI.l , ' " , ' ,.' '' -H to r
leri-m w,,., ,, '' 8"K,,,'"l mi, In.
lrorir , ...""":"'""', Ii,.,, n-,1
,ilo,l, J-Mtlfliu.'rtl ' ,,,' Mi l
"ty.
.... MAIlTINwi V'
C, I. Hooghkirk, Mll,lcri
UAU.KO.H) TIME -
miiirtfiiij'oii-
I,1(',M h( n
lilllll HI it ,W
M..("iv(,, a 1 "IV"
Passenacw aiil Fast FrcM!.
FOR POHTIAUD DAILY
PtlllTI U n .......
Sallow iesi Trflnsfornwd
tn...l. It,.nlltf
A dark I ciu bucoiitt" (""''""H
when del- raudy soft, iu"!'rL,r!'7
with the taiUsnt ",l"'uh J"!
caieiahi j,hy, acm e win, n--I'tskeei
,,eklH refined i I1''!!
keepsiH iisfreBfmin.'lot!S'l;ll,
and nth 4Bjici the tinv riun ww
contril shc ihl.'r wh!c lurharinsj"
blonde an) lnmclto alike. K"1"
lue l sm.iiii proic-tioii ti(.'inn ?
uiihi m ami fiei likn if api'linl,"
I,,, ... fun or WW0,
lr Ada like nn linj.erreptible '"
" U.UW over s k in u t bice, fo"". !
ft JLfi' l niulal i"K aim l""V " -
.Tt - m . i . t. ni
i.V """" Juni us ii,
l-ti"ilM.tiou July m imn.
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