Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report ABSOLUTELY PUCE SfcLF DfcKENSfc. Tlie Law Kelutlnir Thereto Laid Down bj the Supreme Court. A United State diHtrict judge in Arkiiiimm iiiNtructi'd a jury that every whi'i'M except within his own Iioiiho the law iwiuirt'n a nian to ruu away aud do liin bet to escape from mi assailant be fore killing him. The judgo further mid that win assaulted on his own prcmisci, but outHiilo of bin house, a man mut show bin tienso of danger by 1'ffurtn to escape before hiH plea that he killed 1i:h assailant to save himself from (jreat bodily harm ran bo ara'pted. Thin instruction wan handed down from aiicicut time when weapon of assault consisted of knives, bludgeons, swords, etc., which an active man had Home chance of escaping. But it i not applicalilo to these day of revolvers and Winchesters, whose bullet no man can dodge or outrun, aud the United States supremo court ha gent it to the black letter lumber garret. . The man sentenced to eight years' imprisonment by the Arkansas judge obtained from the supreme court an or der for a new trial unde r a new instruc tion. This new instruction declares that wherever u man may bo, if he lias a right to he there and if ho has not him self provoked tho assault, the law justi fies him in standing his ground and killing hi assailant provided tho prov uble oircumstanecs aro such as to satis fy a jury that he had reasonable grounds for believing and "acted on the belief that tho killing was necessary to protect himself from great hodily harm. Putting any further limitation on the right to kill in self defense would abol ish it altogether. Arkansas is only one of tho many states in which a man may have to decide very hastily whether he shall be tried for killing a follow citi zen or let the fellow citizen bo tried for killing him. In these cases, with his atteution excitedly fixed on his ussail aut, he has no time to get legal advice or to study the necessities of the situa tion through tho eyes of bystanders. Court and jury will do that afterward, and he is under restraint enough when he knows that in saving himself from the peril of the moment he incurs the further peril of having to satisfy n jury that hi act as justified by the circum stances. Now York World. Treacle, The word treacle has undergone an odd, modification. At first it was applied to such decoctions of roots or other sub stances us worn deemed beneficial iu medical practice. Then, as theso were frequently sweetened, it camo to niouu any sweet concoction or confection, and lastly,, as molasses was the sweetest of all, this niuuo was exclusively applied to sirup. The rimall llrother Agnlu. Mr. Courtney (flatteringly) I had Hie blues when I camo here tonight, Mis Fisher, but they are ull gouo now. You aro as good ns medicine.' Miss Fisher's Littln Brother Yes ; father himself says she'll be a drug in the market if sho doesn't catch on to Borne fellow soon. Philadelphia Times. NKW WAY EAST NO UU8T. Of) East from Portland, Pendleton, Walla Wallu via O. K. N. to Spokane and Great Northern Kuilwav to Montana, Diikotas, 8t. Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago, Omaha. Bt Louis, Kant and 8011th. Rook-hnllusl track; tine scenery; new equipment; Oreat North ern PalaiM deeper and Diners; Family Tourist Cars; Nutlet-Library Cars. Write !. 0. Donovan, General Agent, Portland, Oregon, or F. I. Whitney. CJ. P. & T. A., St. Paul, Minn., for printed matter and in formation about rates, routes, etc Tar Gra for breakfast. Waller Baker & Co. Limited. Tht tuitt Minufhcturtn of PURE, HIGH CRADE Cocoas and Chocolates On thli Continent, hM rtcttnyd HIGHEST AWARDS from tht ffrtftt Industrial and Food EXPOSITIONS IN EUROPE ANO AMERICA. Caution: Jj'TmHitiin .1 fifth Urwllfttiri W"'Prt in uur Hiil, C(Otumrt noum nmf 'ur 1 niif tiUe of nitRii'iftUr, ntin'W, Dorrhfitrr, UU. la printed un 4ch ihigt. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER 1 CO. LTD. DORCHESTER, MASS. I'nlnnh riM.W Aiir wax antl tlih-tittf inxpftil imj. 1 tilsti i t n ijt'fiit ?i Unl .( hrnrinn. th of (Tram tttitn r;i'ti f Hiuni hn. yii.vi, Hurt ami ltriirina hnvf iirf'ith ouiriuri. J H". )'r'i'imi, Att irnry-Ht J.itir, K'Hiimttitfi, II. CATARRH KI.VS CIIK AM II I.M Opn ami clcanaea I the NnhhI l'.i"mr. A linn r'am and lurlamma- i mm, Huali the riorea, 1'roieota the Membrane! from iiihln, K.ttorei the (wim-a ol Tante and ; Smell. The Balm In quickly auaortx-d and give relief at one. : A particle It applied Into rat-h nnMrll, and i , agreeable. filiK, 60 oenU at DrmKlna' or by 1 jail. ELY BKOTHKR.S, U Warren street, New York. EE2ZS rt-tawu m in r i til r.iii a h ; m : wrtvtii t J 1 ry3 S f"Tontrs I iBeatimwh I I la tin. c wMttt Alt EU fall. tint l"MW(tnvlr. 23 THINNING FRUIT. It Makea a Store Profitable Crop and Buret the Tree. Tlio next essential thing after you have got your fruit started, says Mr. J. II. Halo, tho Connecticut fruit growor, is a judicious thinning of it. I believe tho thinning of applos should M-gin when they first begin to bear. A well planted and well fed tree will begin to bear early. Only let it bear a little. Al low some of the strength to go into the development of tho fruit buds for next year. Kext year thin pretty closely ; then by and by you will build up an orchard that will have no oft years in it. There isn't nn off year. . It is because the ap ples are iu tho hands of an off man. Thinning constantly would bring it into constant bearing. It is seed growing that exhausts the vitality. There are no more seeds iu a large fruit than in a small one, and a largo one doesn't take nny more vitality out of a tree. If a Keiffer pear tree has on it a thousand pears, and you take off 600 of them, tho balance will weigh as much as the whole of them and bring more monev, weakening the tree only half as much. Our rule fur thin ning peaches is not to leave one within four inches of another. This covers the ground with green fruit and looks like destruction, but at the end of the season there are more bushels thuu thore would have been. Thin by hand. Put stepladders under the trees uud put boys on thorn whose, bump of destructiveness is large, aud toll them to go ahead. . We begju when the peaches are three-quarters of an inch iu diamoter, and take everything that is enrculio stung and diseased. These we cart away and burn. The rest that ore taken off are dropped on tho ground and left there. In future our three or four year old peach trees shall not bear over 250 peaches ; our four or five year old trees not over BOO, mid full grown trees not over 500. That means six inches apart; 000 peaches on a tree will make six to eight baskets of fancy fruit. Three thousand peaches to a tree won't make more, uor sell for more money, and the trees ure ruined. Hartford Times. AN EXPRESSMAN'S HARVEST. Queer Tiling the Northern Soldier Sent Home From the War. The greatest harvest reaped by the principal express companies was during the luto war of tho rebellion, when ev erything was scut and received by ex press, 110 matter what the cost. The writer of this sketch had a varied and somewhat tedious experience in tho busi ness during that protracted disturbance, and was witness to many scenes of som ber nnd many of a humorous character. Theso were mostly seen in the returns from tho seat of war just after a battle. Sometimes after a victorious Federal notion, or the capture of a rebel towu, tho officers, ns well as tho men, made a practice of i-euding home trophies they had captured. Theso often were house hold effects of comparatively littlo val ue, and cost tho recipients at home a largo tax for express transportation. Sometimes livo stock was sent, consist ing largely of dogs and donkeys, some times a singing bird, or fowls of pecul iar breed. On one occasion a stalwart negro fellow was received at the Boston ofllee, sent by an officer who found he could do nothing elso with him and thought ho might be of uso on his farm nt home. The grinning darky had a card firmly fastened about his neck, giving tho address where to land him, with this direction: "Feed and grub this nigger all that ho needs." It was sad, however, to Ree the rough boxes often piled up outsido the ofllco containing the remains of the boys in bluo sent homo for burial among tho scenes which they had left a short tinio before for thosouthern battlefields. Theso relics often proved a burdensome cost to their bereaved families at homo. Wo wero always glad to forward remit tances of money to tho oftentimes dis tressed ones at home. The business transacted by some of tho big expresses, Adams & Co., for instance, was of enor mous proportions, and added largely to tho wealth of many proprietors, the ter rible war proving a godsend to them at least. Boston Transcript. Tho Obedient rxiff. . Here is u dog story by a Putnam chronicler: "One of tho most interest ing ami at the samo tinio truthful dog stories wo have heard for some time is that told by Victor Peloqniu, who keeps a confectionery store on Bridge street. Last winter ho went to Canada and brought back with him a littlo black and tan dog, tho gift of his father. All went well for about a month, when he had occasion to reprove him for some trivial offense, telling him iu French to 'go home. He saw no more of his dog nnd was greatly surprised recently to receive a letter from his father iu Can ada, informing him that the dog had returned. He was three months iu mak ing the journey. "Hartford Couraut Chancellor Ale. At Oxford there is what is called "chancellor ale," brewed out of 16 bushels of malt to the barrel, aud so Wrong that two wiueglassfuls will in toxicate most peopla It is kept iu oak. 111 shaped casks, and is never tapped until it is two years old. Some of the casks have been in use for half cen tury, but "chancellor ale" is only used at high table, when man take very high honors. AT THE AIIMY'S HEAD GENERAL NELSON A. MILES WILL SOON ASSUME THAT PLACE. II V.'sa Nut Urailnateil From Wfit I'olnt, anil Un H the Youngi-at Han but fine to Itetomo Cniuumnilrr In Chief III Ca reer In Ilrlef, General fi'elson A. lilcii, now in command of the military department of tho cast, with hoadcpinrters on Uoviru ors island, iu New York harbor, who is to assume command of the entire nrmy upon the impending retirement nf Goneral Schofleld, will be the first officer not a graduate of West Point to reach that high plncp. He will also be the youngest general, excepting General Phil Sheridan, who has ever been at the head of Uncle Sam's military forces. General Sheridan was but 02 years old when he died. General Miles is G7, and ns 04 is the retirement age has seven years of active service before him. Kelson A. Miles was 23 when the war broke out, having been born iu 18:! 9 at Westminster, Mass. The littlo red schoolhonse was tho sonrco of his earliest education, and the 'course lie received there was supplemented by tho training of the village academy.- At 10 he left the acadomy and went to Boston, where he got a place as clerk or salesmun iu a dry goods store. Among his ancestors were numbered some of the old time fighters of tho republic, and a love for military affairs was one of his churau- GENKIIAL NELSON A. MILES. teristics even when a boy. Iu 1800, when there seemed to be some prospect of civil war, he joined iu with a num ber of other young meu and formed an organization which took military in structions from an old French officer. He was therefore fairly well trained in military matters when hostilities broke out, and npou enlisting was made n onp tain in the Twenty-second Massachu setts infantry. With this regiment he joined tho Army of the Potomac uud served throughout the peninsula campaign. He attained the rank of colonel in the short space of two months, when he was but 22 years old. At Fredericksburg he was wounded in the neck, aud at Chaneellorsville receiv ed a severe wound in the groin and leg, being so badly hurt that he had to be carried from the field. This injury kept Miles from active service for somo time, und it was due to it that ho was not present ut the battle of Gettysburg, the only important engagement iu which tho Army of the Potomac took part at which lie was not present. At Spottsyl vauia he was in the thick of the fight, and in the closing operations of tho war, including the action at White Oak Eidgo and the pursuit of Lee, Miles still further distinguished himself. When the war closed, he was brevetted n,hrigad:er gen eral of tho regular army in special rec ognition of his services at Chaneellors ville. Later he received a full commis sion us brigadier general of volunteers for his services at the Wilderness and Spottsylvania. When there was no more fighting to be done in the south, Miles having sig nified a desire to continue his military career, he was made a colonel in the regular army and assigned to command tho Fortieth infantry. In 1SI!) he was transferred from that command to the Fifth infantry. , Application was made by tho interior department in 1874 to tho war department for punishment of hos tile Ii, mis wherever found, and it was then that Miles' career as an Indian fighter began. Befoio the year was over he had inflicted exemplary punishment upon tho Kiowus, Comanches and C'liey ennes in southern Kansas. In 18TC, nnd shortly after the Custer massacre, Miles and his regiment were ordered to the Yellowstone valley, in eastern Montana. Generals Terry anrt Crook were in the field, but had not succeeded in doing much, although they had 4,000 soldiers. Soon after Miles arrival they withdrew, and then, late in the fall, Miles liegan his campaigns against Sitting Bull and Cray Horse. In 1S7T Miles did excel lent work along the Red water, among the Wolf mountains ami in the Roselmd valley, and in the same year practically i wiped out the Nez Perecs. under Chief Joseph. In he castigated the Ban nocks. The next winter he passed in the east as n member of the army equipment board, but in 1S7S he did more and ef fective Indian fighting. Shortly after bis victories iu 1S7!) he was made a brigadier general in the regnlar army, and was in command at first of the department of the Columbia and then the depaitmeut of the Mis souri. In lO mid 1S7 be captur-d Geronimo after Cnx;k had failed, ami was then assigned to the division of the Pacific, and in JS!H, 011 the death of ieuer.il Crook, was made major general, with headquarters at Chicago. That winter ho broke up the ghost dances in Dakota, and since then there have been no Indian disturbances worth mmtii n ing. , He was placed iu romm:iud of the department of the past la.-t year. In lSi'.S (teneral Miles w:is married to Miss Mary Sliernmu, a niece of Senator John Sherman. Tbeir daughter. M s Cecilia Mile.', is a charruiug woman, aud the son. S::ennan Miles, ir a sturdy lad in !,;: iv-ir r,-o?i. I A VETERAN EDITOR. R. B. AVERY WAS A NEWSPAPER MAN BEFORE THE WAR. Health Hlmttereil by HariUlilp-Hiiftered all Tlmt Mail toulil Htnnil, ami Finally M'ou the Fight. From the Examiner, fan Praiiclioo, Cl. At the opening of the civil war Rich ard B. Avery, now residing ut 343 Thirteenth street, Ban Francisco, was 1111 associate editor on tho Chicago Times. Chicago was not then the grout commercial aud industrial ceuter that she is today, 110 had the Times even begun to be the great representa tive journal of the inland metropolis, ns it has become in lute years under the control aud direction of the late Carter Harrison. At that time Mr. Avery was a man ISO years oi ago, uud hud come to his position us au editorial writer ufter twenty yeurs of service in various brunches of the newspaper bus iness, having begun his apprenticeship ua a compositor ut 10 years of age. When President Lincoln issued the first call for volunteers, Mr. Avery threw aside ull the bright prospects which lay before him in the journalistic field uud joined his fortunes with those of the North. Ho enlisted as u volunteer and fought with the Union army until the close of the war. Ho took part iu some of the fiercest battles of the war, aud when he received his discharge was cousiderubly broken down iu health. By continued exposure to the severe weather that prevailed duriug many of the campaigns, Mr. Avery contracted an acute form of neuralgia in the head. He suffered excruciating pain, und passed many sleepless nights on account of the disease. He came to California several years ago, but the change of climate did not afford him much relief, for the neuralgic attacks recurred ut stated periods, and the puin was so intense at times that he was driven ulmo.it to desperation. "It was while I wus suffering from oiie of the most violent of these at tacks," said Mr. Avery, "that I wus persuaded to try Williams' Pink Pills for Pule People, after having used sev eral other remedies without relief. I was glad to accept anything that would even temporarily ease my suffer ing. Why, for three mouths during one winter I did not pass one restful night. Thore wus not a moment dur ing all that time in which I was free from the awful neuralgio pains. When you consider that I urn 64 years old, you must know how rapidly my system was beiug undermined through the mental distress that I endured. T had not taken more than half a box of Williams Pills before I felt a decided relief. The neuralgia was not so pain ful, and I was enabled to sleep during the night in comparative comfort. Having felt the iuitiul results of tho pills, 1 coutinued to take, and just as steadily did I continue experiencing a relief from the neuralgia. I did not stop until I had taken seven boxes of the pills, although the neuralgia had entirely left me loug before that time. The pills certainly p issess wonderful curative properties, and I feel perfectly free in recommending them to auyoue who is uttiicted with, neuralgia... My faith in the pills is increased by the fact that my relief has been permanent. I have never felt the least iudication of a return of the neuralgia to my head, so I kuow that the relief I have received through using the pills has lieeu effective. I have already advised several of my friends to use the pills, and I think that a number of them have done so, with good results." Dr. Williams' Piuk Pills coutaiu, in condeused form, all the elements necessary to give new life and rich ness to tho blood und restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases ns locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus' dunce, sci atica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache the after-effect of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale aud sal low complexions, nil forms of weak ness either iu male or female. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be seut postpaid 011 receipt of price (50 ceuts a box, or six boxes for $2.50 they are never sold in bulk or by the 100) by addressing Dr. Williams' Med icine Company, Schenectady, N. Y. At Last A PRACTICAL TypeAVriting Machine... ATA LOW PRICE The Blickensderfer k 5 PRICE...S35.00 M letters and rhnmcters. Wentht on y d In . Kqiials any hisrh iric il nurdine In cupar ty and quality ol work and excel them ail iu convenience. We Guarantee Every Machine. Twelve Hnliita Lw ptce. Full kv.bori, Wriiina aiwavn iu siht, Porui.jHiy, txivlleut maml uliler. Trr.lieei. Diiect nntim a d tnalmc. Interchangeable type, Vn-t du b,e ma htne made, ls uumbei ol pnris. Weight t lbs.. No rihtwu used. Aaenia wauled Iu ery county In Oregon, Waahinatou aud Idaho. THE BL1CKEXSDERFER MFG. CO. S.JACKSON & CO, NrtharM Aimtt Ft.MiltTuM. OK. 1'OTW AMI HTOVKH. The fires of energy ara lighted very toon In life and the utrugifle beglm, at the say ing "t i keep the pot boiling." But speak ing literally, fire are still kindled with keroaene, and many a pot bulls over or is overturned. Frightful tiu'iis and scalds result In spile of warning and suffering. The thing la then not to preach but to practice, and the practice ii for a'suracure, to use St. Jae Oil according to directions. In re of iloiibi In a Keiilui'ky poker game alMayailraw Willi gnn. ON K MILLION DOLL I ICS I I Think of It ! Yet this sum has been ex penilett this year in pnrolitinmg a late, up-to-ilale typewriting niHtiliine, tliut only weighs ttix pounds. No nobun, type changeable iasiamlv, perfeut alignment, dues orautilul manifold work, is equal to tue bigheMt pried mu'inine iu quality of work anil excels them 111 ciiiveineiioe. These are only a lew of the reasons why tne public nave stieiic a million dollars lor them. The Western 1'uiun Telegraph Company have oonuacieil Iur4,0uu ol tbein lor Use in llieir olllces. This typewriter in known aathe"!)iiokuiderfcr,''tbe'.'Ulick'' titration. It is lue only thoroughly pruo lieal and reliauie meu um-iiriced machine iu the market. Price f5 net. Live agents with exuerienue wanted fur every to n and county 111 Oregon, WaMiingtuu and Idaho. Addiesa, C. ci. JaokhoN $ Co., Pendleton, Or., Northwest agents. IOO ItEWAKI), DIOO. The readers ol this .paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one areuded disease that science bui been uble to cure In all its etaiies and that u Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Caturrn being a constitutional diaeuse, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting direotly upon the blood and mucous sari aces of the system, thereby destroying the loundation 01 the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature 111 doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they oiler One Hun dred Dollars lor any case that it lails to oure. Send for list of Testimonials. Address, K. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, Sc. FIT. All Fits "tupped fice by ir Klln' Or-xt Nerve Kruturnr. No KU alter I lie Unit ilny'H ue. Marvelous cures. Treue and 20U ir'al bottle free to Fit raxes. 8eud to Dr. Kane, Ml Area St., fuiladelplila. Pa. I believe Fist's Cure fir Consumption lived my boy's life last "iiniiuer. Ma. Aia ik IJoi'olass, Le Roy, Mich., Oct. 20, 1I4. It Will Pay To make some provision for your physi nl health at this season, because a cold or cough, an attack of pneumonia or ty phoid fever now may make you an invaim all winter. First of all be sure that your blood is pure, for health depends upon pure blood. A few bottles of Hood's 8ar saparilla will be a plying investment now. It will give you pure, rich blood and in vigorate your whole system. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. LI., ji. Dllle re tasteless, rrilrt, efteo MOOQ SrlllStivo. All drngfflits. 2.O. GillOKEH RAISING PAYS Ifyou use the Petalom Inculmurs a nrootiera. Wake money while others are wnsting time by old processes. Cataluftelisull about lt.and describes every article ueeaeu iwr mt poultry business. The"ERIE" mechanically the Lest wneei. rreiucsiniuuci. We are Pacific Const Auents. Bicvcle cntn- logue.mailed'free.gives fnlldewintlon fit-'ees. ec. aofnts wantko PETA1UMA IHCUBATOR C0.,Petalnma,CaI. Branch Horss, 231 S Main St., Los Angeles DR. GUNN'S IMPROVED UVER PILLS A MILD PHYSIO. twn vit.t. vat? a no P. A movnnirat of tha bowoia each day is necessary for hoalth. Tbem pills supply what tba irnera lacks to make it regular. They 'jura Headache, brig-liteo tba J rea, and clear the Compleiiou better than ouaraetlca, They neither gripe nor aicken. To conince ion, wa will malt Mmple free, or a I 'nil hen for S60. So.d erery alwra, iiO&ANKU MED. CO Philaualrhia. Pa FRAZER BEST IN THE WORLD. AXLE CREASE Il weitrlim qualities are unsurpassed, actuall ourlaanng two boxen of anv other brand. Frt liom Alllmul "Un. GKT THK OKSIUN t. F" if. e-AEE BY OKKUON AND WASHINUTUN Mriil'IIANTM-m and lhjtlera Keneratly. N. P. N. U. No. filS-S. F. N. TT. No. 15 NHARD'S i0 ! MALARIA ! J Thre- n e only. T-t h 4?"pf;e .11 Illustrated I 1 Cntnlogue UJ1 1 FREE. r .9 irxif v.x tFRTIL ZER IT! Oil I"" 4 JUST OUT SEND KOR ONE f DON'T BORROW TROUBLE." BUY SAPOLIO 'TIS CHEAPER IN THE END. ? ONU upjoys Botli the method and resulta when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant end refreshing to the taste, and acts ccnly yet promptly on the Kidneys, Stiver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colJs, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to tho lasto and ac ceptable to the 'stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have mode it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50o and il bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. I)o not accept any edistitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FHANCISC0, CAL. tOWSVILU. Ut HEW YORK, H.t. A SURE CURE FOR PILES Itohinff Pilea known by moiatnea like panplration. oaoaa InUmae itching whan warm. Thia lorm and Blind, Blaad tug or Protruding Pilea yield pt ouce to DR. BO-SAN-KO'S PILE REMEDY, whtoh acta directly on parta affected, abnorbatnmora, al- feya Itching, effecting a permanent onre, Pnca iiia, rogk-iau or mad. l)r. lloaiuika, I'Ullada,.. Pa. MDC WINCI niM'C soothing llllltli IIII1ULUII U oYRUr - FOR CHILDREN TEETHING For aale by all llrugglnth. ti:, Ccnta a battle. ::. Engines GAS CASOLI NOTED FOK-, SIMPLICITY, " STRENGTH, ECONOMY -AND SUPERIOR ' WORKMANSHIP In Every Detail. These engine are HCltuiiwrMfred hV expert en- f;iucer to be worthy nt hiirhen commendation or simplieiiy, hiiih-grade material ami superior workmannhip. They develop the full actual home power, and run without an Electric Hpark Battery: the rTRlem of imitlou is simple, luei ueusive and reliable. ' Kor pumping ou flla for Irrigating purpoaea no belter engine can be .fouud on the Pact Ho Count. for hoisting outfit for mined they have met with highest approval. . For intermittent power their ecouomy la un questioned. STafnOWIRY Am MANUFACTURED BY PALMER I FEY TYPE FOUNDRY, PORTLAND. OREGON t Buell Lamberson ccrncu a i 205 Third SL...PORTLAND WELL-KNOWN BEER (IN KEGS OU BOTTLES) pecond to none No ma.ierwnere from. TKT IT... 1 OKTLAND. OK. HERCULES g IMJ YOU EEL BAD? DOES YoUK BACK ache? Do r-verv efep aeetn tmrden? Yon net-d MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY.