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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1893)
-J1 til 'i L' iSk. J4,aUa 'The New Bread. "D OYAL unfennented bread, made without -east, avoiding the decomposition produced in the flour by yeast cr other baking powder peptic, palatable and most healthful ; may K eaten warm and fresh without discomfort, which is not true of bread made in any other way. Can be made onlv with Royal Baking Powder. Receipt for Making One Loaf. ONE quart flour, I teaspoonf-.sl salt, half a teaspoonful su;ar. 2 heaping toaspixinfuls Royal Baking Powder, half mciliu:n-sized col, I boiled potato, and water. Sift t -gether thoroughly flor.r, salt, sugar, and baking powder ; rub in the potato; add sufficient water to mix smoothly and rapidly .into a stiff batter, about as soft a for pound cake; about a pint of water t a quart of Hour will be required Bra Istreet's Mercanti'e Awrcy reports twen'y-one failures in the Paciiie U ,at-t States and Territories for the past wec, a compared with twelve lor the previous week aud fourteen for the corresponding p ried of 1892. rT. ...... Ct"M ATIfA SPRAINS, BRUISES, INJURIES, CUTS, ALL ACHES, BURNS, " WOUNDS, y SORENEr lifts, 'V fuTfcV LUMBAGO. Sold ly I'faijgiM oh J l).l:rs Everywhere. IHE CHARLES Jk.VOGELER CO.. Baltlmora. M4. Jlfc. 1- Vat. I The Ti.thy Hopkins Collecli.'jn Sweet Peas I'oruainiiiu twenLj ..efditinct varieties a large pa -kct of cacti fl. . or a packet of the same v.-riettes, niixcdr U cents. 12 Carnav ns(ditwatiene) . $1.00 12 Chr' '1b5ums(SEi)$i.oo 12 Pc N ,HLni3ldltlnct varieties) $.00 12 R0SeS V 'UnwrieUttj . . $1.00 AllsLfjng, heatttf, pot-grown plants, fret by molt. Flower Seeds-. SSffifr Veget'yjle' Seeds Z,TTJ?M""' Witheiih Jo: above collection, our handsomely iMu-tr.-ij.ed Vo-pae catalogue it sent free. '1 his i iu e a work of art, and contains a reprod tic ti 'n, in natur ij kr, of thr twenty-one varieties now i 1'verslly rc-oenited as The Timothy Hopkins Collection of Sweet Peas. Sherwo3d Hall Nursery Co. AN FRANCISCO, CAL. yrup Boschee's German Syrup is more successful in the treatment of Con sumption than any other remedy prescribed. It has been tried under every variety of climate. In the bleak, bitter North, in damp New England, in the fickle Middle States, in the hot, moist South every where. It has been in demand by every nationality. It has been em ployed in every stage of Consump tion. In brief it has been used by millions and its the only true and reliable Consumption Remedy. Pimples -AS'D- Blotches AREJZVWESCE That the blood it wrong, and that nature it endtav Tnl! . to throw off the impuritiet. Nothing it to beneficial in assisting nature at Swift t Specific (S. S. S) It it a timple vegetable comfiound. It karmltts to tlie most dilicate child, yet ttforcet the poison to the turf ace and tiiminatet it from the blood. HARK I Awhw4l - . i . i . , f- Eted ""'wbusincM (or (our learv A few bottka oi fewift', Srific (S. S. S ) cured J.CJoNU.CityMir.hal, Fulton. Aruusa. TiwtiM on nw ,nd Pldn Diw milled svirbrBciric Co, AUuiu, da. PUii'a Vrmnf Cuarrb la I ha i 1 11 i m i n I, tovl (it dnii;au or aatit tij aiaU. K. P. S. U. No. 4848. F. N. U. So. Ml, "German 99 in ire or less according to the brand aid quality of the flour used. Do not make a stiff dou-h, like yeast l'veal. Pour the batter into a erea--el pan, 4'jxS inches, and 4 inches deep, filling about half full. The loaf will rise to fid the pan when baked. Pake in very hot oven 45 minutes, placing paper over first 1 5 minutes baking, to pre vent crusting t i soon on top. Bake at once. Don't mix with. milk. Intelliui'iire Nut named. Attorney What is your oi-cupatioul Man surnmonwl as juror I am employed in an intelligence olllce. All the uttorneys at once Your honor, we challenge this juror for cause. Chicago Trib une. Very Venlant. niraui I thought that if I lay dorni In the grass you couldn't find mo. City Cousin (who had been hunting for him)-I did find it bard n distinguish you. The grass is so erccn. Drake's Magazine. New Jersey's Worlil'a Fair HnlMing. The New Jersey Mate building at the World's fair will be of interest to ull visit ing patriots, as it is modeled to a great ex tent on the Washington headquarters building at Morristown, X. .1. It is not in tended for exhibition purposes, but rather for a clubhouse and general meeting place for Jerseymcn. There are therefore large and inviting piazzas in the front and rear, and the main entrance opens iuto a large general assembly hall two stories high, with a circular balcony looking down from the second story. TIIK XKW JKKSKV I'.tll.DlXG. This hall contains the nostonicp lint. anA cloak counters, a very large open fireplace and the main staircase h ading to the upper section. The design of .Mr (iiirnnl tlm architect, was to make the structure typ ical ot the slate, and such it is in its like ness to its i.M colonial model, as well as lu its materials and finish. It is centrullv located, wiili .Massachusetts, Connecticut, Hhode Island an, I New York for its ueiirest neighbors. NATURE'S SI'ltEHT ALLY. If nature did 1 ot struggle ppainst dlflrnftp, even lu wenkly comtitmious, swht in,lced would he the course of a mttliuiy to Its fatal termina tion. White nature tMi sirtiK es lei 119, 1 Ht worse befall us, aid ner ett.trts with judicious medicinal Help. Kxjierienee must be our guide tn ba'l (s Willi irease, ar,d that "lamp to our feel" Indicates Hob etter's stoma 'h Hitters ai a afe, tried aud thorouith ally of nat'ire. if the ol od be intectelwith bile, if the bowels and stomacb are Inactive, if the kidneys fail to ex el lmpurltieii of whlcn they are the natural utlet. a course of the Blttets.ia the surest rell ini e cf the,su(rerer, one. moreover, that Is saue 1'ined by ptofesnioual ludorfceuient aud use for uean. half a century. No Amcrictu or fotelgn eiiuKly has earned greater distinction as a rcm ily for and preventive of ehrnnie liver com plaint, maiurht, constipation, kidney and rheu matic trouble aud ui biilty. " I cannot aing the oM toiiKs' He said, aa the cltor la vlorated; And those who ticard him wondered W hy Ue (liscrlmiuat .'d. BDPTl'RB AND riI.BS VDKKD, We positively eure rupture, pllea and all re; al diseases without palu or deteution from bull uesa. No cure, no pay. Alao all Private dis ease. Address for pamphlet bra. Portordeld 4 Uwey, &i6 Market itieel, Hau Frauciaoo. Mrs. Bleeker BilUet, have you tume the itasoni itoe patlor. as I lo.d you? T e New uome&tic Jewel Yes. mum; can't yez aniell It? Coughs, colds and sore throat quickly re lieved by "Jjtvwn'i Bronchial Trvchet.'' ' cen.s a box. " Money talk," slid Purvey New p potikly. "Very true.' was the reply " but it U-xh j't . i waya tniuk U'fore it apeaka " A WIINDKBri'L MACHINE. There is no doubt that man is a tine mechanism, but like every other machine he wears out by friction. It is said that he in b rn again every twb or three years. His body is virtually remade from food. To retard this making over ia radically wrong, as a man loses so much vitality in the de layed process that it takei a long tune to recuperate. The process of mukiiig anew is so accele atod by purging with Ukan iirktm'b J'ilij" that a new man, as it were, may he made in two or three months, and tli change in the mechiinisin is such thai the worn-out part is replaced by the new without the usual running d iwn of the en tire machine. You don' have to stop for repairs. V rge away witn Ika 5 okkth 1'ii.ls the old. diseased and worn out laxly. They are purely vegetable, absolutely harm less and safe to take at any time. The only electr.c raiiroad in London 1 underground. The use of Kly'i Cream Halm, a Hire cure for catarrh and cold in head, in attended with 110 pain, inconvenience or dread, which can be raid of no other remedy. I feel it my duty to say a few words In regard to Kly'a Cream lialm, ami I do so entirely without solicitation. I have used it half a year, and have found it to heiiiosl adrvirable. 1 have suffered from catarrh of the worst kind ever since I was a little boy. and I never hoped fur cure, but Cream Itaiui seems to do even that. Many of my acquaintances have used It with excellent results. 'scar Ostrum, 45 Warren avenue. Chicairo, III. Apply Halm Into each nostril. It it quickly ansornea. uives renei ai once. Price, 50 cent at druggist' or by mail. Klt IlaoTUKiui, 66 Warren street, New York, THE RUNAWAY SEGRO HIDING OUT ATTAINED WITH HIM TH RANK OF A PROFESSION. A Figure vt the Old South He Wu a Born Woodcruftsman and Cave Dweller, and He Climbed the Trees Monkey Fashion Bow He Managed to Live. Among the many picturesque figures with which the old south teemed a most striking one was the runaway negro. Not the occasional "hider out" the one who sought temporary refuge in the woods to escape punishment for something doue or left undone, or for fear of being sold to the speculators, nor even when the crop was Kiiissy Hau lue wolK lmrUi blt tm, one who clung to a wild life as instinctively as an Indian, and who might almost be lermeu tue professional runaway. lour genuine runaway was a born woodcraftsman. The habits of wild ani mals aud ways of taking them seemed to be his by intuition. He had no difficulty in varying his menu of pig, Iain!) and poul try with all the rabbits, squirrels, opos sums and fish thnt he wanted. Sometimes lie carried Ins dog into the woods with him, although of course it greatly increased his danger of being taken. But this wasmore for companionship than anything else, for, single handed, with his snares, traps and "gums," he was more thau a match for wild game of all kinds. Discomforts, which would have driven the amateur back to the snug chimney corner of tiie plantation quarters and a whipping had no terrors for him. Like the rest of his race, he cared not a fig for wet, while cold, the negro's dread, he knew well how to guard against. The nrt of producing the maximum of fire with the minimum of smoke was his to perfec tion. He knew exactly what kind of wood anil bark to select, and how to combine them to this end. No matter how hard the rain, how sodden the wood, nil that he askeit was 11 "chunk," or, lacking that, n coal of fire, to be s happy as a king the ideal, not the real king, i mean. From a coal which, iu unskilled hands, would scarcely have sufficed to light a pipe, he could, with even the wettest and most im possible kind of fuel, soon call into being the rarest of roaring fires, while iu the preservation and transportation of fire he could have given lessons to Prometheus himself. In the most essential feature of cave architecture secrecy lie easily surpassed all imitators. Between two" suns, aud ofteuer than not Willi only the wornout stump of a hoe the runaway would dig and conceal a tnyu which defied detection from the eyes of a lynx. At the same time several cubic yards of upturned earth had to be whisked away and hid under distant leaves, or, better still, consigned to the safe keeping of 'some running stream. For several reasons the wornout "old fields" of the southern states were the fa vorite site of thecavedigger. Thesedreary wastes, given over to gulleys, broom sedge nnd scrub pines, being deserted by man hood in general, were o( course his safest retreat. The soil having been over ex hausted ami "turned out," and the sappy, twisted pines being held worthless for either rails or fuel, there was no danger of the woodman's ax coining that way agniu for many 11 long year. Nor did the squirrel or fox hunter have often to seek or follow his quarry into this terra incognito where indeed the dense screen of the low, thick pines would have confined their vision to a very limited space. Here this Ksuu of the south, whom In deed every man's hand was against, aud whose hand w as against every man, found an ideal dominion, every feature of the surroundings adding to his sustenance or safety. The weirdness and virtual barren ness drove ofT ot her men. The deep, water worn gulleys, barriers to the ordinary traveler, whether mounted or on foot, of fered him a highway whose firm or grav elly bottom registered no passing foot prints to be read by curious or hostile eyes. Nowhere did lie display more ingenuity than in contriving means to approach aud depart from .,is burrow ami leave no sign. As I have said, the gully was his favorite path, thougl occasionally he had recourse to the Indian's highw ay a stream. Some times he would several the ground a long, stout grapevine, the other end lieing se curely interlaced among the tree limbs laiiy feet above. By grasping this vine he was able to swing clear of the ground many feet, or even cross a considerable ravine and drop just at the mouth of his cave. Again, when the pines were thick, he might climb a tree, and passing from limb to limb, monkey fashion, slide down a tree trunk at the proper spot. Still another, which could sometimes be practiced, was to mount a stray ox, and forcing him to the proper place spring off. One very orig inal old darky, littledreiiming that history was repeating Itself with a variation is said to have fashioned to his shoes an old pair of horseshoes, reversed, knowing that no runaway hunter would ever think to notice a horse track. Amid the swamps the malaria proof negro found little difficulty, if so minded, in passing a lifetime "hid out." Hut un among the hills of the central portion. where there were no retreats impenetrable to all but the initiated, where the farm houses were close together and compara tively little land uncleared, it took no lit tle skill anil cunning to play the runaway successfully for any considerable period. Yet Johnson's surrender brought in more than one ragged, "varmlntlike" creature. who had spent perhaps the better part of a long life in this manner. There were even women runaways, and sometimes very suc cessful ones. A few children were born in the woods. I knew of one instunce in which the close of the war brought up a con siderable family of whose existence the le gal owner knew nothing. David Lodge in Kate Field's Washington. A Tldeleaa rtea. For practical purposes the Mediterra nean may be accepted as lieing what It is popularly supposed to be, a tideless sea, but it is not so in reality. In many places there is a distinct rise and fall, though thii is more frequently due to winds and cuirents than to lunar ai traction. At Venice ihere is a rise of from one to twi feet in spring tides, according to the prevalence of winds up or down the Adri atic In many straits and narrow arms of lha sea there is a periodical flux and re lux, but the only place where the tidal in lueoce, properly so called, is unmistakably bserved is in the Gulf of Cabes, where the tide runs at the rale of two or three knots an hour, and the rise and fall varies from three to eight feet. Philadelphia Ledger. An Irreverent Yankee. A Yankee was being shown a lamp by in eastern priest, which the latter affirmed bail not been extinguished for five cen turies. He Just gave a vigorous puff and remarked, "Well, I guess, it's out now I -toywayB." London Til-Illu. Fraia "Nw Orl.ans, Our Southern Capital." 1 Tne Louisiana lottery being legalized, tickets are openly displayed in the f hop windows, and are soid on tne sidewalks by men, women and cinldien. One store ler the sale ot these tics eta bears soch a legend as this on us sign : This e lucky Nmui er Kieven. More winning tickets sold here than anywhere e.se in town. There was a drawing while I was in : the c ty, and knowing that the lottery i company was not to a-k for a reuewal of 1 its privileges, 1 availed myeed ol the op- 1 portuuity to witness its chief public : operation and the historic characters uo nave oeen imiucea uy lariie salaries 0 figure for it. The draw ing tock place a a theater called "the Aca ieniy ot ilasic." at eleven o'clock in the morn ing. The yellow gas-jets battled feetiv wi h the ilavlglit iu the lobby into which the people were presS'iig witnout et or qui illation. Tne theater was wo-thirds full at last. Ou the stage, set wttlt a par.oriceue, was a knot of men between iwo whee s. The wheel on the right was a baud of silver, with sides of glass aud w:th a door in the metal rim. A. bushel of little black gntta-percha en velopes the eizs of domiuoes had beeu poured iuto this wheel, and a white toy, blindlolded with a handkerchief, stood at the handle 1 f the crank by which the wheel was turned. He had one arm in tfe door of the whee . and with the hand of the other arm was offering a tiny en velope to lien. Beauregard the last s irviving general w ho served on either side in our late war. A tine, most gen-tleinaniy-' coking man he is, with the leatures 'A a French c.iurt.er, with snowy hair, a white mus'aclie, a little goatee, ami the pinkeetfckin a bahy ever knew. He was latntleaaly dressed. Across the stage, betide a very much Imgr w heel. of parti colored hoards, sat Major-tien-eral Ju!al A. Early a periect tvpe of uu wuiruwiiii iiiiiur 01 miner inue: tall, portly, slonp-shottldered. nartlv bald tiid Willi & holt)', Vl,,td buald. He was dressed all in the color of the uniform lie distinguished by his valor as a soldier. By each general stood a blindfolded boy, taking numbers out of the wheels. aud banding them to the generals. from the Dig wheel to Mujor-Ueneral Etrly came the mini hers of tne tickets: irom the little wheel to General Heuu retnrd came the numbers of dollars that formed the prize each ticket luul won. By each general stood a crier. Early read out,, "Twenty-one thousand one hundred and fifty-two ;" and Beauregard, having shelled the gii'ta purcha case 1 ti a billet, read o,it. Two hundred dol- ars." Then the criera took the b. lints and cried the iiuinlie s. " Twenty-one thousand one hundred and Hity-two" from one ; "Two hundred dollars " Irom the otber, who, by the way, called 0111 two hundred dollars at least two hun dred times. But all the prizes were not of that amount, I chanced to hear the capital prize read out. " Twenty-eiglit thousand. Tnr hundred and thirty-nine," said Early. ."Three iiuni red tucusaud dollars," Baul wu regard. 1 lie effect was startling : indeed the etirlled seme relused to grartp the meaning of the words. The criers re peated the figures. Tue people in the theater craned forward, a hundred neu- cils ehot over (ads or bits of paper in men's and women's laps, Tuen a mur mur of voices sen tided all over the house the routine on the stave was baited, foi the criers took 1 lie two bils of papet to some clerks who Bat at tallies in the arther part 01 the siege, to hi ow tl em t verify tin ini orliint figures. 'Ihnit me rout ne began 1 mw. By Jul11.11 Ralph in Harper's Magazine for Feb tuary. First Citizen How is II that ao mai v Kn 1 ah- men light shy of home ruh '.' s, cou,i ('ltlxfii I laucy because U higlua wiih the letter "h." Our readers will servo thenwl vna ltv noticing the rcinurkiible offerings advertised In another column bv the SI Nursery Co. of .Menlo I'ark and San Fran jisco, who are leaders on the coast in fur nishing everything for tho furm and garden. Tramp Pleas .mum. I mat' a sol-mn vow twenty yeasaot at I'd nevi rd'iauotheratr ku 1 wirk till women was 1 aid th same wanes as men. Stat or Ohio. City or Toi.etio, ( i.ri as ('ursTY, " Fkank J. (Iiiksky makes oath that he la the enlor oar'licT of the firm of K. J i'mhskv a Co.. iIoIiik hii.lueHM iu the eitr of l'.,le lo, I'l.uniy and Mate 1 fore sid. and that said firm will pay -he sum of (INK Ht'NIlKKI) ImiI.I.AIIS lor eacn and every case of entarrh thai cauiioi tm cured uy tne use 01 hall s .atakkh i: kk. r HANK J. (,'IIKNKV. Hwom to before mo aul suh.criisd in mv presence thlaCtn day of In-ccinber. A. II. lass. lHAl..J A. . Ul.f.ASON, Knturit I'uhlir. Hall's Catarrh Curn Is tki n Inieruallv. and rfctH directly ou the Idoisl and mueoiiN aiirfwe 1 iu system. Heuo for rcNtlmon als, free, K.J. ill hSKY Ai t;o.. iv.ilkIo. O. Hold by drtiKKUui 7(cenM. Use Kuamoilno Store Polish; no dust, no amell, Tit 0w for breakfast now do YOU DO when you buy shoes or clolli lnr f liou't you eo to the "N place ( If you : can II ml It) where they tell you Unit you nmy wear tlio art idea out, ond then, if you'r. not satisfied, they'll refund the money 7 vwiy not do the tamo when you buy medicine f Dr. Tierce's Golden Medical Discovery I) sold on that plan. It's the only blood purifier so certain ami eflecllve tliut it can be guaranteed to benefit or cure, lu every case, or you have your money DUCK. It's not like the ordinary spring medi cines or sarsapnrlllas. All the year round, It cleanses, builds up, and Invigorates the system. If you're bilioiit, run-down, or dyspeptic, or have any blood-taint, noth ing can equal It as a remedy. From 10to40 Agi-ntH wanted BICYCI In all gradcii minnfiu:ture.l in Amori'-a. N'.w and nceoml-han.1 machined from 20 up, CuhIi or on install inents. A nt for catalogutH and ternm. FRED T MERRILL r .r. i- i 1'.iol,,r1U,'.aler off CoaHt. 32U Washington rttreut, i'ortland, Or. Free 'Cycling Academy in went wing of Expoiiition building. ' Hood's Cures Mrs. C. if. Card Oakland, Cal. Made Over Anew Chronlo Headache Cured-Weak Lungs Mado Strong and Well. " Tor years I had sick headaches every day, and 1 also had very weak lungs. Since I hive been Liking Hood's Sirsaparllla, I have, been rmirely cured of headaches, and my luugj are strong and well. Friends often say How Well You're Looking. I tell them It Is duo to Hood's Sarsaparllla. I am small In stttiiro never weighed over too pounds before taking Hood's Sarsaps- 1 ilia, and at the time I began Liking It 1 had run down to 85 pounds, but now I welsh 1 1 1 'i. Jly friends thought I would be dtl lon ago, but I am perfectly weU. I am unable to express my thanks for tlio good Hood's Sarsaparilla les itono me." Mrs. C. It. IOIK ,!.n,m Strett, Oakland, California. Hood's Pills cure all I.lver Ills, Bilious- ness, Jaundice. InillRCStlon, si -k Headache. 2'icts., Wots., nnd ri.OOpor Hottlo? Ouo oeut a done. inra timtT Cornti ( hub promptly curia has cured thousands, tin, I will ( linn you If taken in time, bold uy J)rnituits on a Bunr nnteo. For n Lama Hack or Ch"t, ti-o BH1LOH S BELLADONNA PLASTUR..2i0. Q HI LP H'SVC ATA R R H O i R EMEDY, li.voyout uiiuih 1 This remedy Is iron ran. tood to cure you. l'rioo,WcU). Injector five. Two Stepping Stones to consiimptioA'reai'fments wc often deem trivial a cold and a miirrh. Cnnsumntinn tliimnr- n--- 1 - - quired is rightly termed " Con- uiinml irtn f-.,,ii m.nrljiff " Scott's Emulsion not only stops a cold but it is re markably successful wher the cough has become deep seated. Sivl's Em it Is ion is the richest of fat-foods yet the easiest fat-food to take. It arrests waste and builds ttp healthy yiesh. ' ' P"na, N. V. All dnnttl.l. THE HARTMAN THE COST IS THE SAME. 1 i m no more than an ordinary clunmy wood picket altalr that nlaitriieta th .i. ...a -hi aiwrt III a .linrl tline. The if.rlin.n " Keiiee In I,, "."in ,,r , tie", Ihr Zm, 0,7. wlo'! h" uD u t iii'hli, ' KK" I ' nieutloii tin. ,,,, In wrlll,,, AKU HAH , MAN FCb CO .. . . .. . B MLL8, PA. David M. Clarkaon. Holly, Mason, Marks It DON'T BORROW TROUBLE." BUY SAPOLIO 'TIS CHEAPER IN THE END. A. RHEUMATISM CURED BY THE USE OF ' IVIoore's Revealed Remedy. MKH. N. V. Ul tKLK. ' mi.ii iv vol it nut noiar. Simonds Crescent Ground Cross Cuts. And All Kinds ot MILL. SAWS. Also 8aw Repairing PER CENT DISCOUNT TO AGENTS. in every town in Ongon and U'mthingion to Bvll tho loading If You Think nrktnd of irmn ,:0. then &tiv kind of will tn: i ui t.x tbe ttt rvsu:i you should plant FERRY'S SEEDS. I Always the bent, thTwtiiutia Frrrj Sct1 Annunl w thp most 1UILHM (Kill VAN.' i Hit KIMtl jut 1. Itsliod. It is tnvalimhlp to tUt piamor. e send il tree. D. M. FERRY & CO. DETROIT, Mien. DONT BE A MARK BV NOT RI0IN8 THE RI6HT B cyci r imo rtm ova (ATAIOOVC leu) youauamut fjORTHPACIFlCp'CLEro. B4CYCLCS Ol" EVERY DESCRIPTION."" MH8'"1 BuilPina, -PoRTtAND OWCQON.I fV.ANN'8 QONE Q UTTER . Dry or ttreeo II il Bones, Meat.Oristleaud all A wen U"t BONKS will M 1 11 doublo the number of ew win mate maul more itir tile will carry the heni safely through the moltlnf period and put them la condition to lay when eiptt ' rominand thehlRhvstprira and will dovelope jour chicka fastur than auj other food. Ke1 flreen Bones and no Craoioidna to kill the lice, and you will mala 11 1 af jr latyixrct-trf mora proiiL J U Send for Catalogua and tmusn mmm komp't, muciA, en. FISHING TACKLE ., 1 i 1 .up- , M -KOH- Roda, Reels, Lines, Hooks, Lenders Etc, of the Finest Quality. 8KNI) TO THE I T. HUDSON ARMS GO., 93 First St., Portland, Or. tW Heud for e tiiloKiio. FRAZER AXLE Best in the World! fl II T A O T i.'r-.TC .-MOlinoW Ynu ihonhl writ" to A, AFTKB T0-Mt)KlT)WforJiud0Jjm5 AKTKH TO-MORROW t&l'JZ&jS. 'fo? n, ;,.. I'de s on siii,tlor 811 ver mid PI to Tableware. Iln will rave yoii money. It costs iioihlug to a-k lor Ida prims. 1 Tho Specific A No. I. Pnrrs, wltliont lull, all rrnm nt Uonnrr- 1 htrit 11'id Utt, mi mailer of li,,w lima 1 sUuidlna-. 1'ieveiits ntrli-tnrn, It b,-li,aaii In" 1 terniil ri-miHly. furea when evarytlillia ala Ioasi.i 1. r""i! iy all llriiKKlsta. Maiiiitiu'liireraiTUoA.HelMieiihal.Medleln. Ir Ire. ..1.1X1. INVALID GOODS. touiua hair. Itm'linlna t'halra Hack Hrota ('ammodra. a 1 r. fu,.i u rV.iSCuOCUIIIeiMon!perSt.S.F SfttL PICKtT FtNCS Jr Co., Spokana Falls, Wash J c. i r I I I Mr t I 1 ; l f J VA A - .-U , I ...,. T -..! 1 , t j w jpr , - - -ir