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About The Oregon scout. (Union, Union County, Or.) 188?-1918 | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1891)
FARM AND GARDEN Scientific and Practical Knowledge. MEADOWS AND PASTURES. Orango Judd Says Good Strawberries Can Be Raised Cheaper by the Bushel Than Wheat. Scientific ami I'riictlcliil Knowledge, The production of food agriculture is one of the exact sciences. ItH laws are settled, determined, positive and re liable. If all the Iuwh which our inves tigations have found out are obeyed strictly, agriculture never fails us; it is as sure in its results as that fire will burn. The laws are few ami simple. I'lnce : irood seed in good soil, prevent any other plant from interfering with it," select time proper to its growth, gather the produce when ripe, and we have obeyed all the laws ; we have conducted " its progress scientifically, and have reaped a harvest the result of applied science; that is, we have gained knowledge, have set it to work, have raised an ear of corn and have grown a dinner. Meltdown ami Pastures. Grass lands pay well for good enre and management. Growing timothy hay for market pays good dividends in many lo calities. Timothy is not regarded as the best grass, but as the most salable. Its clear, healthy-looking stems and leaves commend it to buyers, and it is always in demand. A good, well-managed grass farm ought to pay largely in almost any section. Both meadows and pastures must be well cared for at this season protected from the stamping of stock while the ground is soft and receive needed atten tion in the way of fertilizing, draining and clearing of stones and other obstruc tions. The yield of many an old pasture might be largely increased, if not doub led, by the application of some fertilizer. Whenever practicable, provision should be made for watering and shading pas tured stock, and thus prevent them from suUering during hot weather. Inking; Good Itutter. Skill in the management of the cows, the inilk and the cream will be rewarded -with good butter, no matter what kind of a churn bo used, but it is generally con ce d in these latterdaysof advancement that one without a dash is best. The ooncui-sion caused by the peculiar motion of the swing and the Ixjx churn is sup posed to be more conducive to the perfect functions of butter globules, and the buttermilk is more thoroughly washed out than when the old style paddles are used. Good butter, howpver, is not dependent upon the kind of churn ; its qualities are regulated vastly more by the handling and manip ulation than by any implement employed in its production. Proper food for the cows, constant observance of cleanliness, correct ripening of the cream, observance of temperatures, pure air in the dairy room and common-sense methods ap plied in all the details of butter making will result in uniformity and satisfaction both to the maker and 'consumer. An Imtni'nsn Strawberry Croi. A pr.nninent fruit-grower of Western New York from a single iatch of sixteen acres sent to market in one year 1 ,300 bushels of strawberries. Tlie entire crop was sold at an average price of cents per quart, realizing the snug sum of $5,--0i). This may be taken as an instance of the prolitableness of thoroughly sci entific fruit-growing. Good strawberries can be raised by the bushel, says Orango Judd, cheaper than wheat The space, necessary to supply a family need not be large. o have aver aged one quart to 2.1ti square feet, or at the rate of C.'iO bushels per acre. The Ohio Fanner says that, if strawlerries are well set in the fall, th'ey will fruit the next seapon, as it is the fall growth of roots which supports the plant for the jiext year's fruiting. J. J. Thomas rec ommends in p anting to make a little mound under the roots and spread them evenly upon it and then carefully cover them! Thus treated, they grow twice as well as when planted as tfiey usually are. A writer says : The secret of success in raising the strawberry is watering it freely daily. .Mr. Fuller says: Early scarlet should be grown in beds, Tn omphc de Gaud always in hills and the rnnnere kept trimmed oil'. Mr. Knox say?: Strawberries do not injure grape vines when grown among them. Timely Cure, of Live Stuck. "Work horses need plenty of strength ening food, regularity in feeding and watering and good grooming. Guard airainst galls bj.' keeping the harnese clean and soft. Many horses work best when they are barefoot. Protect teame from drafts when they are heated. Give brood mares roomy quarters, watchful care and treat them gently and kindly. Cowb require extra care at this season. Give those alxmt to come in good roomy quarters, and treat them kindly. Guard against ulvortion and accidents. To pre vent garget and other troubles reduce their tood, though plenty of good sound hay may be given safely. Keep nil the good heifer calves, unci remember that teaching them to feed from the pail saveH trouble. Sheep should be kept in dry yards to protect their feet, and also guarded against storms. Ewea and lambs need good shelter and liberal rations to pre vent sutlering and keep them thrifty. Spring lambs, well cared for and fed lib erally, will soon sell at u profit. Pigs and poultry both pay for good care and keep. The pigs need exercise, and will do good by destroying many in sect enemies if allowed to take it in the orchard. Give breeding bowb bran and other cooling food, but no corn or meal. Poultry "ehell out" the proflta now, if ever; bo caro well for the birds if you want fresh eggs and chickens galore. Protect them from vermin by using ker oeeno upon the roofs and walls of the poultry houso; and do whatever elso that will tend to promote their comfort, health and consequent productiveness. Walt Whitman like to talk to editor, reporters and theatrical folk. Tbn IiiiIimii I'liiiili'in "l Vet Molvrtl. While we eonsinitulate the people of the whole northwe.-t. and especially the citizens ol li.ikola.ou the roiiMiinmatiuii of their long tie-in, the opening of the reservation liy no mean puts an end to the Indian prolilem n-far as the Sioux are concerned On the contrary, it is scarcely more than the beginning. Only a part of the reserve is acquired by the government; and the xiiiiic questions will doubtless arise in future, as to that part, which have proved to vexatious in rela tion to the whole No settlement can ever bo regarded as linal which stops short of the abMilute allotment of lauds in severalty and the adding of all that remains to the public domain Again it seems as if the government were mere ly abandoning one po-ture of the "guar dian and ward" attitude in order to as sume another The reservation system, with its issue of rations and consequent tendencies toward idleness and vice, has scarcely a friend remaining. Vet we have only the same thing in another form in the practiceof accumulating im mense cash funds for the benefit of the Indian, to he. held in trust by the nation, while interest is paid regularly to the beneficiary The purchase of these lands by the tuition means a permanent invtM ment in trust for the Indian. And it is not according to nature that a quarterly payment to him of so many dollar.1 in cash as interest will bo any less demoral izing' than the issue of so many blankets and so many pounds of Hour, beef and pork. St. Paul Pioneer-Press. Iliully lined Up by Keen. Mr. George Murray . a teacher at the Colliery board schools, Dipton, with tho assistance of one or two other gentle men, was preparing to carry some half dozen hives of bees from tho Colliery farm to the fells at Waskeriey. During the process of packing them in a cart the bottom fell off one of the hives, and. as a natural consequence, the bees came buzzing out and stung Mr. Murray and his companions, as well as stinging the horse attached to the cart. The animal bolted away in fright. Hundreds of bees found their way out of the remain der of the hives, and not only stung the occupants of the cart and the horso in a dreadful manner, but the insects also fastened themselves upon a number of school children who were having a ride through the village on a hay cart. Mr. Murray and his companion (Mr. Elliott) were left lying on the ground in an ex hausted and almost unconscious state, and the horse was so badly injured by the insects' stings that it fell down upon the road and succumbed the 6amo night. Mr. Murray was also confined to his bed for foino time, but on Saturday ho was reported to bo much better. Tho rest appear to 1h vciy little worse. Pall Mall Gazette. Tlie Cotton Wornii. That one drug houso in Vicksburg should receive orders for fifteen tons, or 80,000 pounds, of paris green in one day demonstrates the extent of tho appre hension felt by cotton planters concern ing tho cotton worms in the largo area of country tributary to or trading with that city. With the cotton worms ap parently so formidable in their second generation, tho third generation, which forms a vast increase over its progeni tors, may do very serious damage. It is extremely unfortunate, if it bi true, that tho available supply of paris green has been already exhausted. It is likely that far more than the amount already used will be needed. Where these pests are unchecked by poison, in their third gen eration, they have been known to rav ago cotton fields and leave tho stalks as baro of foliage in the latter part of Au gust and September as they aro in early February before being pulled up and burned, preparatory to the planting of a now crop. New Orleans Times-Democrat. Military IsIiiiiiImii. There is about modern Mohammedan ism, at least of the military type, noth ing of the uncertainty and shillyshally with which modern Christianity is some times reproached. Tho prophet under stood tho natural man of Asiatic nnd African races perfectly well, nnd his mode of procedure is still fully justified with them. lie did pot, like some un wise fanatics, promise universal victory, invulnerableness. or anything of the kind. The followers of tho Khalifa are quite aware that they may bo collective ly defeated and individually killed. Put that does not interfere either with their certainty of the ultimate success of their cause, with tlwir sense of the duty of offering conversion, tribute or tho sword, or with their enjoyment of tho comfort able prospects of the martyred believer. Saturday Review. Jersey Mosquitoes Aotrny In Japan. An extraordinary statement was made the other day by a man from Miyagai ken. He btatcd that in Sendai, since tho lllh nnd 12th ult., tho peoplo have been much troubled with a kind of joi 60HOU8 butterfly. To touch one of them causes the flesh to itch, and if scratched to swell nnd remain swollen for a very long time. In daylight, ho says, they do not make their appearance, but at twi light they swarm into the hou.c3. With tho approval of the authorities fires are now burned at the entrances of houses and yards to attract tho insects and de stroy them. Mulnichl Shimbun. Tho American rage for baseball Is af ter all weak compared to tho British croze for cricket. At tho last match be tween the two greatest of the county elevens, Surrey and Nottingham, which took three days to play, nearly CO.OOO peoplo went to see it nud Surrey's vic tory. Tho batting of Lockwood nnd Abel, who together mado 159 In Surrey's Aocond inning, was so important toward winning the match that tho collection taken up for their benefit amounted tc 42, 5 of which was in penny pieces. Of tho 35.000 tons of wiro fencing an. nually imported into the Argentine Re public it U said that Belgium furnishes half, Great Britain about a quarter and France somewhat lees. I THE MYSTERY OF THE 6UN. Wlmt In Sought to lie llli in-eretl nt ttie i:llie In Iterember. The mimlx't ot astronomical parties that are preparing to go to convenient oilits in the track of the total solar eclipe in December, and the cotnplete-nes-s of the equipments they proKs to. take with them fur ob-ervation. make the prospects for good results unusually hopeful The comparatively infrequent opimrtunities for studying this species of solar phenomena, ami the brief time thru is available under the most favor able circumstances for observation, make each event of great importance to as tronomical science, particularly as at no other time can so much evidence be ol tnined for determining the real character of the sun and its appendages lxiiig as tlu science of astronomy has flourished and great as has been its ad vance, it is only within a few years that, by the aid of the speotroi-cope and pho tography, the nature of the sun and its surroundings has been established with anything like certainty, and even now the most widely different theories aro held as to the character of the sun's ac tivity. It lias long heen known that around the black disk ot the moon in to tal solar eclipses a halo of light is seen, bright next to the sun, but fading away more or less gradually into the black ness around it This was supposed by the generality ot astronomers as late as 1870 to he due either to the effects pro duced by our own atmosphere or by the moon's atmosphere. It was not till later that astronomers were convinced that this halo or corona was a part of the sun itself, and that from it must bo derived the most important clews for settling the mysteries of tho sun's heat, and light. From the observations of eclipses made recently it is now well known that tho sun as ordinarily visible to us. bounded by the photosphere, is only a part of tho sun. Just outside the photosphere is :i comparatively thin layer of gas, mainly hydrogen, called the chromosphere; around this is the corona, thousands ot miles thick, and around tho corona, es pecially along the equator, there is a con siderable extension of matter about which little is known. The general theory which has Ireen built up from a knowledge ot these facts and from tho observations of such phenomena as sun spots and prominences is that thechemi cal elements are being continually tossed about in the enormous atmosphere of tho 6iin and never getting out of it. The out er layers ot the atmosphere nro recog nized ;is much cooler than tho inner. Cool or comparatively cool masses of matter are produced by condensation in the upper regions from tho hot ascend ing vapors of the lower atmosphere. These masses of matter, having gathered weight, come under the influence, of gravitation over twenty-five times as great as ours, and fall with almost in credible rapidity toward the center. It is 8tiposed that these terrific rains of cooled matter upon the sun produce what are known as sun spots. Wo know how small meteorites in our own cold atmosphere are heated to in candescence by friction. Their kinetic energy is transformed into heat. It is not difficult to imagine, therefore, that these masses of matter darting down from a great height above the photo sphere of the sun. creates great disturb ances near the photosphere, such as sun spots milk-ale, and that masses falling into the inner and greatly heated atmos phere should he broken up in the heat generated by then own kinetic energy into hot vapors, producing such expan sion that the down rush is transformed into tin up rush, which would carry the chemical elements back to the cooler air, where they would gradually condense again ami repeat the operation of falling into the chromosphere The effect of such an up rush is supposed to bo indi cated by tin; prominence observed. The matter is supposed to be thrown up like the waterof a fountain and liko it thrown back, only to he to.-ed tip again, but on so great, so terrific a scale that the imagi nation is unable to form a picturo of it.. If this is the correct theory of tho sun's existence, it is impossible to conceive of any limit to it. Hlemeuls which wo can only heat into a glowing mass aro there reduced to a vapor, and by expansion thrown 100,000 milesor more away, only to cool and pelt back again toward tho center of attraction, there to bo thrown oil again. Hut effective as tho theory is in explaining solar phenomena, it is by no means generally held, and among thoso holding it there aro great differ ences of opinion. The evidence is little better than circumstantial, and it is only by the industrious work of astronomers, with improved appliances, that tho mys tery can approach solution. The study of the sun is to us tho most important study in astronomy. It affects us di rectly To butter .understand this center of life and heat is to better understand our own surroundings, arid it is from tho observations of those sent out to view tho occasional total eclipses of the sun that light must como. Providence Journal. He Kimw No KnglUh. About ono month hk a young man named Joo Harpstcr was utruck on the back of tho head with a pair of brass knuckles by a footpad, knocking him senseless, and for more than a month he Jay unconscious. A few days ago ho suddenly recovered his senses, but when he did he was ublu to con verso intelli gently only in the German language. Ho was lorn of American parents, who spoke (Jcrman, and that was tho lan guage ho first learned. Ho gave that up. however, and learned English, using it at ull times, entirely forgetting his (icrinun. Now he can remember noth ing of English. Scientists nro wrestling witii tho problem. St. Louis Republic. A New York physician tried an experi ment with Ur. IJrown-Sequard'a elixir uiton a cat with ix'rfect success. The ! doctor ntUH.'lled the cat with half pound of ether and then applied tho elixir hypo dertnicnlly, and in a moment the cat was dancing around tho room'tho stupor of the ether having entirely disappeared. " FtlK I.IKK IS NOT TO I.I VK, HUT TO IIK WEbl.." VitTcot, Wash., March .. tS!l. r. .Ionian, Scuttle, HVmA.-- Dkak Siu: My father-in-law was able to go out on the street four days after lieconinicnced taking your medicine; six days after he went ten blocks and surprised some of the people that thought he would not Ik- able to no out of doors again. Four doctors in this town thought lie never would be able to go out again. The swelling was nearly all gone in four days. He has .-lent well the Inst two or three nights, which is something he has not done befon- for several month-. If he gets cured, I shall do all lean to advertise your nuiticine. i ours respectfully. Kit.vxK K". Fiit. KvsTSot Nit, Wash., April 10. ISM. r. .Ionian--1 H k Silt: I have been tak ing your medicine two weeks la-t Saturday, aiiifthcre is a grand improvement in me in every way. My stomach i- -o much better, and"l have a 'better appetite than I have had before for three months. The la grippe cough is almost entirely gone; bowels much more regular than they were, and 1 am gaining strength faster every day than I thought it posible lor me to. 'Respect fully, I'. AtlMsTKOMI. llrrKt.r.v, Wash.. April ..'). tSH. Dr. .Ionian l)Kwt Sik: 1 received your medicine, and have taken it eer since. 1 urn feeling ever so much better. The pain through my kidnevs has all left, and the dizziness 1ms nearly all gone. Please send me what medicine I need and oblige. J. W. Davis. Dr. Jordan's otHce is at the residence of e.- Mayor Yesler, Third and James. Consultations and prescriptions absolute ly free. Semi for free book explaining the Hi-to-genetic system. Cu'Tiox. The llistogenetic Medicine are sold in but one agency in each tow n. The label around the bottle bears the fol lowing inscription: " Dr. J. Kugene Jor dan, llistogenetic Medicine." Kvery other device is a fraud. The people of et?ry state have their fad. The fait of MHSMichusuits seems to bo to collect old inn UK DKSIJCKS TO It Ki It TESTIMONY. Henry Thome, Traveling Secretary of the Y. M. 0. A., writes from Kxeter ilall, Strand, London, February 2, 1SHS: "I desire to bear my testimony to the value of Ai.i.cock's I'ouocs Plastkiis. 1 have used them for pains in the back anil side arising from rheumatic and other causes never without deriving benefit from their application. Tliev are easily applied and very comforting. Those engaged as 1 am in public work, which involves expos ure to sudden changes of temperature, will do well to keep a supply of Ai.i.cock's I'd itors Pt.AsTKit- in their portmanteaus." Students of Political Hconomy. Kthel What Is tho object of the single tax? Maud To drive people Into matrimony to escape It, I fancy. "Penny wi-e and pound foolish" are. those who think it roiwm to use cheap soda and rosin soaps instead of the good old Dobbins' Klectric Soap; for sale by all gro cers since Ibtil, Try it once, be sure, buy genuine. Don't lose sight n an honorable enemy: ho'U make n sood friend. KUPTUItK A Nil 1'II.KS OUItKI). Wo positively euro ruptnro and all rectal dis eases without pniu or detention from biihlness. No cure, no pay; and no pay until cured. Ad dress for pamphlet Drs. l'ortorlleld & Lokoy, 838 Market street, San Francisco No man over yet minded his own business who didn't set Into trouble. VAliUAIIIiK IIISOOVKKV m, ini). KOlt THIC Dr. I.a Orange wishes to mako known his t'ew Trmtment for the cure of all diseases of tho Hj'u CYiaro:(, Deftctive Virion, Inflammation, etc., without Operation or l'aln. Tho remedy can to apirtlod by tho patient, and Is simple, sido and sure In its ell'ects, strengthening the muscles mid nerves of tho eye, removing palu almost In stantaneously It Is n marvelous discovery and a blessing to the sull'erer. For lurther particulars address with stamped euvdopo K. J. I.a Okanuk, M. D., '216 I'owell St., fourth door from (ieary, San Francisco, CaL, Olllco hours-11 till 3. CONSUMPTION SIJKKI.V CUItlSI). To thk EniToit: Please Inform your readers that I have a posltlvu remedy for tho above named disease. It y its timely uso thousands of hoioless ciucs have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy freo to any of your readers who have consump tion if they will send me their express and pout ottico address. Hespectfully. T. A. BLOCt'M, M. C, 181 Pearl street, New York. Tho Occidental Hotel, Han Francisco, Is uni versally pronounced by the public tho model hotel of the Pacific Coast Everything Is perfec tion to the minutest detail, owl guests aro made to feci entirely at home. J, A, Hooper, Manager. Thy Qkjimka for breakfast. Use Enamcllue Stove Polish; no dust, no smell. A Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. Superior to every other known. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard. Delicious Cake and Pastry, Li(,'ht Flaky Uiscuit, Griddle Cake, Palatable and Wholesome. No other baking powder do uoh work. Baking Powder leffIl WATER WHEELS 2 JAMES LEFFEL & CO.XSi SPRINGFIELD, OHIO, or Liberty St, NEW YORK CUT. Thkrf. Is more Catarrh in this section of tho country than all other diseases put together, and until the lat few jcars was supposed to Ikj in curable. For a great many years doctors pro nounced It a torai disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with local ttvttim-ut, pronounced u incurable. Sci ence has proM-ti catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment Hail's t'atarrh t'ure, manufactured by F. J t'hetioy A Co., Toledo, O., Is the onlv con stitutional cure on the market. It Is taken 'Inter nally In doses from ten drops to a teasiMoufuL It acts directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of tlu system. They otl'er 1100 for any ca-e It falls to cure. Send lor circulars and tes timonials. Address F. J. CHF.NKY A CO., Toledo, O. W Sold by Druggists, 7.V. "There Is music In tho heir," snld the young husband, roichliu for the paregoric bottle. Dr. Wallace Kly has removed his olllcos to 215 Powell sireet, San Francisco. Cat, where he con tinues to give special attention to Kidneys, Iliad der, Prostate (daud and all diseases arising there from. Diabetes and llrlght's Disease treated according to tho latest approved method Most cases can be trtated sucifssfully by correspond ence. Consultations datlv from 10 a.m. to I r. m. W'almci' Kly, M. I)., 215 Powell street, four doors from Weary street. San Francisco, Cal. l'f miller's Orriron lllooil Purifier Is tho bet remedy for that dread disease, dyspep sia, for It regulates Ue 1 mphatlc system and bad secretloui. THE BEST STANDARD REMEDIES Xfl TRADE MARK E M etd y""pAI N I)U. AUGUST UCKNIG'S Hamburg Breast Tea w (ijamburatr Orupu)0 ron COUGHS and COLDS. .r-' VV At uruggisiJj 111111 icnii-ra, or l"v ' sent bv mall on receipt of 25 eta. 1 . , . 1 . . 1 r (5 packages Sl.Ou) In stamps. THE CHARLES aTvOGELER CO., iltlswrt, M. DIAMOND VERA-CURA FOR DYSPEPSIA AND ALL STOMACH THOUBLES. At Druggists nnd Dcnirrt, or sent by niallonrecclptof2ficts. 15 boxes 81.00) ln'sbimri. Sam ple sent free on receipt of 2-ccnt stamp. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Ualtlmor. MtL A cough or cold is a spy which has stealthily come inside the lines of health and is there to dis cover some vulner able point in the fortification of the constitution which is guarding your well-being. That point discovered the spy reports it to the enemy on the outside. The enemy is the changeable winter climate. If the cold gets in, look out for an attack at the weak point. To avoid this, shoot the spy, kill the cold, using SCOTT'S EMULSION of pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda as the weapon. It is an expert cold slayer, and fortifies the system against Consumption, Scrofula, General Debility, and all Anaemic and Vasting Diseases specially in Children). Especially helpful for children to prevent their taking cold. Palatable as Milk. SPECIAL. Scott's Hmnlnlon U non-accret, nnd Is prescribed by tho Modlcnl Pro fcHsIou nil over tho world, becnuno Its Ingredients are scientifically combined in such a manner as to greatly lncrcaso their remedial value. CAUTION. Scott's Rmulslon Is put up In salmon-colored wrappers. Bo sure and get tho genuine. Prepured only by Scott & Ilowno. Manufacturing Chemists, New York. Sold by all Druggists. MIS Tula Picture, Panel sizs, mnllod for 4 cents. J. F. SMITH & CO., Makers of "Bile Be&na," 255 L 257 Greenwich St, N. Y. City. UNCH'says .uenr-m COudhr The ho y. . .:t-1 ty f.1 -vi- i-l t.y '.-t wirn zdoooiic). naca.Kp.invmir' nexh house-cleaning &nd be convinced V "ItSrJORANCE of the ,aw reuses no man," and ignorance t no excuse for a dirty house or greasy kitchen. Better clean them in tho old way than not at all ; but the modern and sensible way is to use SAPOLIO on paint, on floors, on windows, on pots and pans, and even on statuary. To b ignorant of the uses of SAPOLIO is to be behind the age. HljMOgs. I 'J IK Ht'.M O Its OF Tl I K II I.OOD. 8 KIN A N D 80A LP whether Itching, burning, bleeding, scaly crusted, pimply, blotchy or copter-colored, with loss of hair, either simple, scrofulous, hereditary or (Hiutaglous, are speedily, permanently, eo nouueally and InfalllMy cured by the Cuticuba ItKMKlUKS, consisting of Cctktk, the great kin cure, Cct'ccka soap, an exquisite skin pu rlller and U-autltler. and itmccka I!oi.vkht, the new bUxvd and skin purifier and greatest ot humor remedies when the best ptiy-lcUiis and all other romodlesfaU. CfTltcnA Kkmk meson the only Infallible blood and skin purifiers, and dally eil'eet more great cures of blood and skin dlseaes than all other remedies combined. Sold everywhere. Price, Ccticcra, SOo; Sop, 2'; Ur.soLVKNT, tl. Prepared hv Potter D-ur and Chemical Corporation, Uoton, Mass. Send fur " How to Cure llluod and Skin Dis eases," tiv Pimples, tilaeklieiul", chapped and nllylta f-jf skin ptcveiited bvl'CTlccm Soap. 1s Xn Haekiieho, kidney pains, weakness and JB rheumatism relieved In one minute bv the I J3eelehrateilCi'Tici KA Anti pain PlastkiuVSc Season Opens for Trout April 1st. TACKLE: 33 , . O g sJ H. T. HUDSON, 03 First Street, Portland, Or., DEALER IK ARMS, REVOLVERS & SPORTSMEN'S GOODS. Send for now Illustrated catalogue. BIKIOHIA'N IIOTi:i Hush Ht,, tot. Muofc-Kcnm-ry A Hausomo, H. K ; comluctiil on loth th Kuron ml American plan. Tills Hotel Is undor tliu tiiaiiacrinint of Charles Montgomery, ml I Uat Ust Family and HukIiuiw Men's HoUil in Bad Vnu clson Homo comforts, cutnlno unrxtt'llod, firstcUia nerrlcr, highest standard of rKwUtiUlty KuarwiUwt. Hoard anil room per dajr, 1.25 to f J 00; single room, Bt (viiIk to $1.00 ixT ult;tit. Km coach to and from um noui. J. McCRAKEN & CO., DKALKKS rN Roche Harbor Lime, Portland Cement, Gol den Gate and Utah Platter, Hair, Fire Brick and Fire Clay. LAND PLASTER. OO North Front Street, Cor. I), TOUT-LAND, OK. CURE Biliousness, Sick Headache, Malaria. BILE BEANS. fte anno. 9. stanrJet frirnnHnind i.Ti... . . . Si. mem