Wire Fence Heel. For a home-made wire fence reel limply convert an empty barrel into hand roller. Across the open end, two pieces are nailed at right angles and in the center of this, ti.s well as the bottom, .a hole is bored to admit an Iron rod. The push frame cnn be made of light pieces of hard wood braced across and on the under side a staple or hook is Inserted to carry a can or paint bucket with tools, staples, etc. This may bo suspended from the rod of the Government farms we find 20, 000 district samples of milk tested to establish one fact namely, that when a cow has reached her maximum er centage of solids In the milk she pro duces, an increase of richness in the ra tions she Is fed on does not yield an in crease In the total quantity of milk she produces. Coal Ashes as Manure, Chemical analysis shows that there Is very little of value in coal ashes. Yet the fact that they are porous makes them nn excellent mulch for fruit trees, and If they are spread thickly on the grass, by destroying that they save the soil beneath from loss of moisture and fertility, and have thus practically the same effect as pinnure. Some re markable growths of squashes, pump kins and tomatoes have been made on heaps of coal ashes where the seeds of those plants had been scattered. But in every case there was some wood ashes among the coal ashes, or else the coal ash pile had been for months the convenient receptacle for every kind of refuse from the house, most of which contained considerable of the elements that make fertile soil. WIIIK KKNCU ItKKT,. 'Just inside the open end of the barrel by means of an S-shaped wire, but Is not quite so convenient. , In removing wire, one end is stapled tp the barrel ond then It is a simple matter to push ,the contrivance before you. In this way the wire is not dragged through the dirt ond so does not gather much litter. If it is a temporary fence, It Is frequently necessary to move It but a short distance and then it can be push ed all the way, but it the removal Is to a greater distance, the rod can be taken out and the barrel with its coil of wire lifted Into a wagon. Orange Judd Farmer. Small Farms Pay. ' Small farms can be made to pay if properly utilized. One farmer in New York State -who lias but twenty-flve acres keeps two horses, one cow, and . iraises two pigs each year, growing all 'the food required to support his family and stock, making poultry and eggs his specialties. lie devoted moat of his Itlme to poultry, claiming that it was iless work than hauling milk to the rail road station in the winter, and that leggs bring good prices every year. Tha result was that he made a fair profit, while farmers with large farms claim 'ed to have made nothiug.-When farm ers decide that poult ry can be made a leading object on farms, and not given up to women and children, they will have a source of income better than ;many others and for every mouth In the year. Milking Stool. I have used a milking stool made and illustrated on the plan described below for six years, says Lyman Par ,melee, in Farm and Home. The seat board (a) is of two-inch plank, nine inches wide, 14 Inches long. The stool board (b) is two Inches thick, nine Inches broad and long, out round. A three-eighths Inch Molt (c) is put through the middle, the head sunk, the nut left off, so the seat will revolve, The seat Is 11 Inches high. A hoop (e) Is fastened with staples on the upright board (d) to hold the bucket so it will be 11 Inches from the floor to its upper rim. I use a two-gallon tin pail. -A heavy wire Is used for a hoop. . The i : An Karth Scraper, This is a valuable Implement on the farm. If perfect under-dralnage has not been secured, the surface channels should not be lost sight of. On every farm there are slight depressions or basins, which might be easily emptied by lowering the rim at some point by removal of the dirt to the lowest places. It will be a surprise to those not having tried It to apply a scraper in a judicious manner to such places to see the re sults. Water should not be permitted to stand upon the soil during any portion of the year. It Is very injurious to laud. In fact, an excess of saturation is more damaging than drought. AY.ater estroys fertility as well as crops, hile dryness preserves the richness of the laud, if vegetation does suffer for lack of moisture. James Gordon Bennett, the proprie tor of the New York Herald, is an en thusiastic whip, and when in Taris or In the. south of France a seat in his four-in-hand is free to anybody paying a reg ulation fare. The proceeds of his coach ing tours are devoted to charitable pur poses. The Grand Duke George Mlchnelo witch of Russia Is engaged to Princess Marie, only surviving daughter of the king of the Greeks. A marriage be- tween these two august families is not entirely free of ill omen, as the princess' elder sister married the Grand Duke Paul and died very shortly afterward. Although Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stan ton is in her eighty-second year, her voice rang out strong and clear in the address she recently made in the open air toabouttwo thousand farmers and their wives at the Seneca County an nual "Home and Harvest Festival." Mrs. Stanton spoke on such national questions as the recognition of Cuba, prison reform, silver, and the suffrage. L. J. Itlckard is a gentleman who has been building corduroy roads on the way to Klondike and packing provis ions on his back to the land of cold. He got tired and turned back. He confided to a reporter these striking facts: "As to climate, it is an atrocious place. I said to an Indian: 'Charlie, does It rain here nil the time?' 'No. not rain all time,' said Charlie; 'sometime he Foot Hot in hecp. The natural habitat of the sheep 1s on high and often rocky lauds. By con- ict with rocks and stones the hoofs of sheep are naturally pruned. When they are kept on low, wet ground the hoof rows long, and being very little sensi tive it is easily softened until it begins to rot. There can be no doubt that this caused by some germ, for rubbing the hoof with blue vitriol, which Is one of the best germ killers, will destroy it. But the germ seems to be Indigenous to all wet lands where sheep are kept, and is the worst affliction with which sheep can be afflicted. When It once gets Into a flock It can be carried to land that Is high and dry, and will propagate there. CON VKKIKNT MILKING RTOOI.. piece d is two by four ami six lnche long fastened to the underside of the seoat. Variation iu Knallasfe. It is too commonly supposed that cn- silage made from fodder corn must be uniform in its nutritive value. This is by no means the fact. The ensilage nut up the last few years Is much bet 'ter than that which was made at first, when a large quantity rather than qual ity was what was mainly sought for. All corn ensilage requires that some supplementary food le given with it, for corn Is not a well-balanced ration But some corn ensilage requires more of other food as its supplement. It Is oosslble to ensilage com when It has reached the earing stage, cutting up the ear with the stalk. This is worth twice or thrice as much for the same bulk a corn fodder sown or drilled too thickly tn allow it to form ears, and cut as soon as it got into tassel. Experiment Farms. In each section of Canada Govern ment experiment farms have been es 'tabllshed as centers of education and object lessons to the surrounding fanu ,ers. Here tests are made under the Ibest scientific conditions, and the result applied for the betterment of the meth ods of the average farmer. Thus a one have received It, give thy servant strength to get home in time for din ner." Sir Isaac Ilolden, the Inventor of the lucifer match, died recently in England at the age of 91. Though he did not profit by that luvention, others, espe cially in woolen machinery, gave him a large fortune. He set out comparative ly early in life to live as long as possi ble. In the matter of exercise his rule was to spend at least two hours a day in the open air, and it is told of him that on first going to work in his youth he agreed with his employer that In stead of having a yearly vacation he should have an hour every afternoon in which to take a walk. In the use of al cohol he was abstemious, yet not a total abstainer, and he smoked tobacco moderately. In diet his chief peculiar ity was that he avoided bread. His chief foods In his later years were meats, soups and fruits. Yet ho was not a man who lived by invariable rules, for he was long a member of the house of commons, and when over 80 years old he saw the session out at 2, 3 or 4 o'clock in the morning oud smok ed long cigars in the smoking room. GEE-WHIZ. At every motion of his body or limbs he aid "Gee-whiz." If he raised his armjor crooked his elbow, or when he got up or sat down or bent over; if he bent his knee or turned his head, he said "Gee-whiz." Gee whiz wits his way of expressing vexation and trouble, and he had his peck of it. Thousands do as he had done and have bushels of it. He simply did a very foolish tiling. He took off his coat at the wrong time and in the wrong place. The tune was when tie was overheated ana tne pince just where a cold draft struck him. He woke in the morning with soreness and stiffness from head to foot. If he had be thought him of the right thing to ao, as most' men do, he would have gotten a bot tle of St. Jacobs Oil and rubbed it over his body. Use it on going to bed and you'll wak'e up, open your eyes and say, "Gee whiz!" .ie soreness and stiifness are gone. Representatives of the Methodist church are in session at Washington for the purpose of effecting a union of the M. E. church North and .South. TEN DOLLARS A WEEK. Protection for Horses. It Js undeniable that horses at work on cold, blustering winter days suffer severely from the chilling temperature, especially where they ore com pelled to pause every little while after severe ef fort. Fit a shoul der blanket to the work horse, like that shown lu the cut. Tho forward part of a SnOCLDHK BLANKET. n-nril-OUt stable blanket can often be utilized, or a shoulder blanket can be made from old carpeting. This will protect the vital organs, and will iu no way interfere with the harness. It is in the interest of humanity and may also save a val uable horse from sickness. New Eng land Farmer. Cultivation of Oats. At Cornell University oats were sown broadcast. In the usiHil wanner, the yield per acre being thirty-seven bush els. On another plot the oats were drilled In fifteen inches apart, the hand-wheel hoe being used to work be tween the rows. This may appear to some as giving a large share of labor in that manner, but as the yield on the drilled and worked plot was sixty-one bushels per acre the method Is worthy of attention. A man with a wheel hoe can go over a large piece of ground la a day, and it Is possible that the meth od will pay. i Horse Talk. When loaded let the team stop often to get their breath.- It pays. Better go twice than overload the team. This overloading is a fruitful cause for unsoundness. Be especially careful in loading tho colts a little lack of judgment has ruined many a fine horse. If you find you have too much load for the colt, throw part of It off liefore he Is discouraged. Let his muscles be come used to work by slow degrees. Drive colts only short distances first, not far enough to tire them in tho least. Increase the distance a little every day, . and you will Insure a prompt, free driver. , If you have a man In your employ who is timid and nervous, keep him away from the colts. It requires a level-headed, cool, courageous man to handle colts successfully. Inspire the confidence of colts by kindness and firmness, every time you go near them them, and the education will be easily and successfully accom plished. Horticultural Notes. Make quality rather than quantity the principal aim. Having the orchard properly trimmed keeps the trees bearing well. Annual pruning largely avoids th necessity for removing large limbs. . Fruit trees or plants will not take care of themselves. They must be helped. . In setting out a tree, save some of the top soil, especially to put around the roots. Rural World. Dumas the elder was not in the habit of counting his money, but did. once, leaving it on the mantel while he left the room for a few minutes. When he returned and was giving some Instruc tions to a servant he mechanically jounted tho pieces over again and found a louis missing. "Well," he said, with a sigh, "considering that I never count ed my money before, I can't say It pays." During a recent session of parliament Sir William Ilarcourt found himself un expectedly in view of on important speech and, having no notes, went into the stenographer's room to prepare some. He procured a lady typist and dictated to her for some time. As he wound up a glowing peroration the lady typist suddenly gasped and burst into tears. "Would you mind saying all that again?" she said, plaintively; "I've for gotten to put any paper in the ma chine!" The late Gov. Henry A. Wise of Vir ginia received from admirers more than two dozen dragoon pistols and Colt's revolvers, said to have been taken from John Brown In the engine house, while there are few homes in West Virginia that do not contain a rifle, pistol ana dagger taken from the mnn whose "body lies molderlng in the ground, while his soul goes marching on." There Is n dealer in Washington who has built a block of houses with money made by selling pistols and pikes taken from Brown and his supply Is still ample for the demand. A young doctor had among his first patients an uncommonly dirty Infant brought to his office lu the arms of a mother whose face showed the same abhorrence of soap. Looking down up on the child for a moment, he solemnly said: "It seems to be suffering from 'hydropathic hydrophobia.' " "Oh, doc tor, is It as bad as that?" cried the mother; "that's a big sickness for such a mite. Whatever shall I do for the child?" "Wash its face, madam," re plied the doctor; "the disease will go off with the dirt." "Yash its face wash Its face, Indeed!" exclaimed its mother losing her tomier; "what next, I'd like to know?" "Wash your owui madam- wash your own," was the rejoinder. Many years ago, Mr. Gladstone, speaking of Mr. Parnell, made use of the oft-quoted phrase, "Marching through rapine to the dismemberment of the empire." On the same day there was a horse race, In which the winners were respectively Veracity, Tyrone and Lobster. These facts were cabled to New Zealand together In the usual shorthand style of the cable. The re sult was that next day the New Zea land papers contained the followinv extraordinary paragraph: "Mr. Glad stone denounced Mr. Paruell as march ing through rapine to the dismember ment of the empire, and said that the Irish' leader had the veracity pf a Ty rone lobster." A Swede came Into a lawyer's office one day (says the Cincinnati Enquirer) and nsked: "Is hare ben a lnwyer's place?" "Yes; I'm a lawyer." "Well, Maister Lawyer, I tank I shall have a paper made." "What kind of a paper do you want?" "Well, I tank I shall have a mortgage. You see, I buy mo a piece of land from Nels Petersen, and I want a mortgage on it.". "Oh, no. You don't want a mortgage; what you want is a 'deed." "No, maister; I tank I want mortgage. You see, I buy me two pieces of land before, and I got deed for dem, and 'uother fallor come along with mortgago and take the laud; so I tank I better get mortgage this time." Down in the rural district it happen ed (according to the Atlanta Constitu tion), when the Mean Man invited the preacher to dinner. The Mean Man had plenty of money, but he did not spend it on his table, which on that occasion showed but scant fare. "Par son," said the Mean Man, "times air hard an' groceries high; but, sicb as It Is, you're welcome. Will you ax a lilessin'?" "I will," replied the parson; "fold your hands." And then he uld "Lord, make us thankful for wbt we are about to receive for these greens without bacon, this bread without salt, UIs coffee without sugar, and, aftr we Feeding a Family at a Cost of Kitchteen Cents a Day for Kacli Person. In the Ladles' Home Journal, Mrs, S. T. Korer tells how a family of eight persons can be fed and well-fed at the aggregate cost of $10 a week. She presents a bill of fare for each intvi, with suggestions for changing and varying them, and details how to pre pare the main dishes that enter into her economical plan of supplying the family table. "To carry out the scheme," she says, "articles must be purchased economically, and no waste permitted. A table which is supplied for a family of eight for $10 a week must, of necessity, be plain, but It may, at the same time, uot hick for variety or wholesomeuoss. Sweetmeats and rich desserts must be counted only as occasional luxuries, and 'company' dishes must be omitted altogether. Meat, the most expensive food item, may be purchased in a mucu larger quantity than Is needed for a single meal, and utilized French fashion. The poor and middle classes of this country must learn more about the fowl value of the legumens, more about the proper preparation of fowl, and last, but not east, more about the proper combina tions of food. Avoid the buying of steaks, roasts and chops each week. It is an expensive household indeed which has no repertoire of cheaper dishes. A beef's heart or a braised calf's liver makes an excellent and. economical change. Broiled sheep's kidneys, with a little bacon, give a good breakfast at a cost of ten cents. Smothered beef, which may be made from the tough end of the rump steak, is appetizing, and only costs half tho price of an equal foot! value of tender loin, steak. "The housekeeper should go to nvy ket early and buy oidy the best materi als. They keep longer and go farther thau the Inferior ones. Perishable food should be 'bought In small quantities two or three times a week. Groceries enough to last a mouth should be laid iu. Canned goods and conserved sweets should bo bought sparingly. Meat Is always a most expensive article, and not a particle of It should be allowed to go to waste." HAWAII AND JAPAN. Dispatches from Washington state that there arc about to be important development in the Japanese imbroglio with the government of the Hawaiian Inlands. However this may be, cer- tivin it imlmt. the disturbance of the stomach caused bv simple indigestion will develop into chronic 'dyspepsia unless checkmated at the otnrt The li nest, stomachic, is Hosletter'sbtom- ach Hitters, which promptly rectifies gastric trouble and does away with irregularity of the bowels and liver. Germany's proportion of suicides is larger than that of any other Europeau country. After being swindled by all others, send ns stamp fur particulars of King Solomon's Treasure, the ONLY renewer of manly strength. MASON L'HKJIK'AL CO., P. O. Bon 747, Philadelphia, Pa. itopl Women, And consider that in addressing" Mrs. Pinkham you are confiding- your private Ills to a woman a woman whose ex perience in treating1 woman's diseases ' is greater than that of any living phy sician, malo or female. You can tlk freely to a woman when it is revolting to relate your private troubles to a man; besides, a man does not understand, simply because he is. man. MRS. FINKIIAM'S STANDING ! INVITATION. Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited topromptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. ' All letters are re ceived, opened, read, and answered by women only. A woman can freely talk of her private illness to a woman. Thus has been established the eternal confidence between Mrs. Pinkham and the women of America which lias never been broken. Out of tho vast volume of experiencn which she has to draw from, it is more than possible that she has gained the very knowledge that will help your case. She asks nothing In return except your good will, and her advice has relieved thousands. Surely any woman, rich or poor, Is very f lolish if she does not take advantage of this generous offer of assistance. A captive bee striving to escape has been made to record as many as 15,500 wing strokes per minute. AN OPEN LETTER TO MOTHERS. We are asserting iu the courts our right to the exclusive use ot the word " CAS'1'OK.IA," and "PlXCHEU'SCAsrORlA," asourTiadc Mark, I, Dr. Samuel Pitcher, of Hyannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of " PITCHER'S CASTORIA," the same that lias borne and does now bear the facsimile signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER on every wrapper. This is the original " PITCHER'S CASTORIA " which has been used in the homes of the mothers of America for over thirty years Look Carefully at the wrapper and see that it la the kind you have always bought, and has the signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER on the wrapper. No one has authority from me to use my name except The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is President. March 8, iSgj. SAMUEL PITCHER, MJX HOME PRODUCTS AND PUllK FOOD All Eastern Syrup, so-called, usually very light colored and oi heavy body, is made from frinroKp. "7m (iiinfrn ln-im" is made from Sugar Cane and Is strictly pure. It is tor sale bv first-ciass grocers, in cans only. Manniac tnred bv the Pacific Coast SvnrrUo. All gen uine "'I'm tiartlra Driui" have the manufac turer'! name lithographed on every can. State or Ohio, City of ToVedo,) LVCA8('Ol!NTY. I Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is th Pillar nartnsrof the firmof F. J. CHENEY & Co doing business in the City of Toledo, County niri state alnresiiid. ali i that the said firm will pav the sum of ON 15 11UNDKKD UOLLAK8 for .-ach and ayarv case of Catakuh that cannot be L cured by the use oi hall s uatahkh uum. f FRANK J. CHENEY Rwnrn to hpfore me and subscribed In tn cresence. this btb. day of Decern her, A. D. Ibt46, - A. V. GLEASON, j real I Notary Public Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, an acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Bend for testimonials, iree. F. J. C II EKE Y & CO., Toledo,' Sold bv dniKKlsts, 78c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Plan's Cnrp for flnnsnnintion has been fiiinilv medicine with uu since lSOV). J. Ii. Madison, 1U09 i'ld Ave,, Chicago, OCQXand IDEAL, WITH I HE GKBAT fit&cA.lIRKS S25, $30, $35. $40, $SO, $60. Better and cheaper than ever. Write for circulars, catalogs and list cif si'ciinil-lmnd wheels. Live ujtt'l wantea. kiuj t, jhi'.iuui-.l. vyeie co., runmuu. Has Already Cost Millions. In 1S09 Mr. Trouvelot, who had gone to Massachusetts from Paris, had taken with him some eggs of the gypsy moth. These lay, oue duy, on a tray near an open window and a breeze blew them out of doors, lie recognized the mis chief he had wrought, but his an nouncement of it created little excite ment at the time, as the people of Med ford, where he lived, knew nothing of tills insect. And, Indeed, little more was heard of it for about ten years, while not until 1880, or twenty years after the escape, were the ravages of the moth such as to call for action by the State. At that time the worms hud spread through thirty townships, ruin ing shade trees everywhere, and attack ing also farm and garden crops. Ac cordingly, in 181)0, Gov; llrnekett called on the Legislature for help, and that body authorized a commission for the purpose and appropriated $25,000 for its work, which sum was doubled a few months later. The next Legislature had also to expend $50,000, and others followed with still larger sums annu ally. .''.-. Last year the actual expenditure was about $120,000; and Mr. Femald, the entomologist of the State Hoard of Agriculture, in his last report, estimat ed that to exterminate the moth would require $200,000 a year for the next flye years, or $1,000,000; then $100,000 a year for five years more; finally, $15, 000 n year for a period of five years, making .$1,575,000 in all. Supiwslng that the moth should then disappear, this cost, added to what has already iH'on laid out, would exceed $2,000,000, apart, of course, from all losses of woodlands and crops caused by the in sectSan Francisco Argonaut, Established 1780. Baker's Chocolate, & ft & ft ft ft ft ft ft ijljij' it BICYCLES YP'&'&lKr The best rSIJ!' seeds urown are lK.i?fiJKerrv'8. The beat KHir seeds sown are Kerry's, tiT,The best seeds known are IFerry'!. It pays to plant Y FERRY'S Famons Seeds Ask the dealer for them. Send for jt-V FERRY'S CECD ANNUAL and Ketali that's (rood aud JUsSTt new the latei VM'pJ the beat new the latest and n ins ucDh n r.u -fcKtfni 'n u cfpry rn..Y;i7i' tJSk. Detroit. Klch. A;rv AUlwAlisMI BUY THE GENUINE YUP OF FIGS ... MANUFACTURED BY ... CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP CO. nriWITK THE NAME. mmM- lame j BACK-; celebrated for more than a century as a delicious, nutritious, and flesh-forming beverage, has our 3 well-known 5" "3 Yellow Label , i on the front of every 3 package, and Our trade-mark,"I,aHella k$ Chocolatiere,"ou the y back. NONE OTHER GENUINE. Weak Kidneys, Lumbago, Rheu matism and Sciatica Are Cured by Dr. Sanden's Electric Belt. It conveys a steady, soothing current of elec tricity into the wealii-ued iiium-U-s, kIvIiik them a healthy nerve power wnt!h revives them. It m.'ltea thum strong. It is curing hundreds every month. Hook about It free, by mail, or at the office. Address , SANDEN ELECTRIC BELT CO, 963 VHt WHHlili.tftmi Mt., 1'ortUud, Or. Pleae mention thii Paper. YOUR LIVER MADE ONLY BY Is it Wrong? Get it Right Keep It Night Monro's Kivaled Itemed y will do it. Three doses will make you feci better. Get it from your drrJiajist or shy wholesale droit house, or j fro f&aT4vyrttlfUiMi UrugC Co., Bealtlti. WALTER BAKER L CO. Ltd., ft Dorchester, Mass. KAGSCUIY . EFFECTIVE . TREATMENT -FOR WEAK KEN OF ALIAGES to alls fern i r grown vtjr Nevr With Gloe. Detectives (totalled to look after pro fessional shoplifters always look to see If their stwiHH.'ts nre wenrinf? jfloves. A "iirofeHslonnl," it is declared, never works with glove on.; r a nr a I " e,A HSSS 5'allure Impossible! ago no barrier. ERIE MEDICAL C0..buh'au. n. y. t ILLUSTRATED V 1 CATALOGS FREE hoBucll co Lambersoti , mo FRONT ST , Portland. WHEAT I Wale money by sutxesftil Hernial ion In Clilcaxo. W buv and sell wheal on mar itlns. Fortunes have been mada on a small Leiiininn by trading In lu- tores. Write lor full nann-mars. nest oi rei. cri-iiee iilveu. Heveral years' experiunet-on the Cliicn1-'" Hoard ol Trade, and a UioroiiKh know, ledne of the u"l''s. Kend for our free refr enee book. DOWMNii, Hol'klNH . Co., f'lnrauo Hoard ol Trade Brokers. Offie.es In I'ortlaud, Oregon and Seattle, Wash. 7 " 'CHILDREN 9 WRN WlM.I,W'lh'J(flUINO ft Ufletl fur ebililrcil u-ithllir. ll tool hfH Hi b ritw Hit, irnmi, sMhvh nil ptln. cure. k Ui best remwl. for diarrliu. H 1m tti ti't of nil. TECTHINC." J HYaor iiu,uiu aiwsyp rm 3 lhi-H lit ehliu.ftori-a f wind cfihcaixl Is 4 Twenty five tttUU a Varying Lengths. Tacks are from a quarter to a hnlf inch, though, when accidentally 8tei jm1 on, this length seems to be multi plied by 100. A iound of the smallest sized contains 16,000 tacks. Hob-Tall Cars. The old-time bob-tailed mule cars, now disused in mot cities, were about ten feot in length; the electric ears of the latest build are from forty to forty six feet. American Type r EVERYTHING FOR TUB PRINTER.... Founders Company We lead and originate fashions in.... TYPE Cor. Second and Stark Sts. PORTLAND, OREGON V . .... .TTT'T. ii,, it id i LOritii Arttftt ALL ti'ot TAILS, Best ( ouKh Byrup. TwtM Ux In limn. tnn nw nniftrwi RODS N. P. fir tracing and locating Hold or Rllr Ore. lottt or buried treasures. M. ! jroWLKIt, Uoz a.i",Huuiuliistou,Oouii, N. V. No. 6, 'V8.'