-. . A YUKON OUTFIT WHAT THE GOLD HUNTER SHOULD TAKE. found Advice for Those TTko Coutern- plate Reeking; Their Fortni In the w Gold Flelde of Alaska and the Northwest Territory. ' ; v Special Correspondence. The most practical and vital question to be decided by the man who intends to go to the Yukon next year is the composition and quantity of his outfit. What should he take and how much ol it. This is far more important a ques tion than that of the route he shall se lect, since by any regular route he would probably reach his destination, while should he not have a proper out. fit, he would be likely to find his labor to have been all in vain, with failure and possible starvation staring him in the face. : : Whatever a man would require to eat, to wear or to work with he should take with him. To go into that coun try depending upon being able to pur chase any of the necessaries of life or successful work is to run the risk of utter failure and calamity. Again and again was this asserted by experienced Yukoners when the excitement broke out in July. Publicly through the press and privately on all occasions they advised gold seekers to take with tbern a complete equipment for IS months, certainly not less than a year, and to place no dependence whatever upon being able to purchase what they might need from trading poets. This advice was bassed upon the well-known conditions of work and transportation in that region. The miner might be located several hundred miles by a trail Impassable in winter from the nearest trading post, while the post itself, even if accessible, might fail to secure a stock of goods. 5 '-. J 5 The soundness of this advice has been amply demonstrated the present season. ' Hundreds who did not give it sufficient -weight, have rushed , into Dawson City with not enough food to last tbem through the winter, only to find that not a pound of food is 'to be purchased there, and that they are but adding to the distress of those already threatened with starvation. They have not done this in ignorance, but in defiance of the advice of men of experi ence. The golden mirage of their im aginations has blinded them to the practical, and they have rushedhead long to needless hardships, if not de struction. Yet the majority of them took this advice seriously at first, and equipped themselves well for the jour ney. Very few, indeed, of those who have reached Dawson with almost noth ing for their support this winter, land ed at Dyea or Skagway with less than a thousand pounds of supplies each. The secret of their present shortness is the difficulties of the trail and their in tense eagerness to reach their destina tion. They have disposed of or aban doned the bulk of their outfits, trusting to luck, or the deity supposed to have fools in his . special charge, to get through the winter somehow. (Tbey would have done better to have camped at the lakes till spring, than to have gone on to Dawson short of supplies. They would have done still better, when tbey found they could not get through this fall in good shape, to have returned to the coast and waited until spring for another attempt fully equipped. Those who followed this course are infinetly better oft than those who sacrificed everything to their issane eagerness to get through, and are now at Dawson with nothing to do and threatened with being overwhelmed by a calamity of their own creation. The value of the advice given to those who started last fall has been demon strated by their experiences. The same advice is as valuable to those who will go in the spring. Take everything ?with you that you anticipate to need for a year for any purpose, and do not depend upon being able to buy anything whatever. It is folly to take for grant ed that there will be eo.many new steamers on the river next year that the country will be amply supplied with food and other necessaries. Assuming that transportation facilities will be in creased ten times, this will be offset by the undoubted fact that more than ten times as many persons will go in as are there now, and that the added trans portation facilities will bensed to carry them and their outfits. To the thou sands who are already there and must depend entirely upon supplies brought in for sale, must be added the other thousands who will not heed the voice of prudence and will rush in lightly equipped, depending upon purchasing what they need for the winter. It is extremely doubtful whether enough goods for sale can betaken in next summer to supply this demand. In deed, in view of the experiences of this year, it is almost certain that they can not .',.,'. Even if it were not for this uncer-t tninty, the conditions of successful work there require that the miner take in a full equipment and have it with bim wherever he goes. The Yukon gold fields cover a great area of country, while the trading posts are few and at present only along the Yukon river. Other posts will doubtless be estab lished next year, near such new dis tricts as may become populous, yet even these will be only at points accessible to steamers. Those going to the gold fields must not expect to find claims near the present centers of population. They will be compelled to prospect dis tant stream and gulches, and if suc cessful, they may locate several hun dred mile from the nearest store. To be compelled to make a journey after supplies might cause the loss of the en tire season's prospecting, even assuming that the things needed could be pur chased at alL Every prospeoting party should bo fully equipeped to subsist itself for a year. Otherwise it can not carry on its work tinder the conditions necessary for success. This is made clear when One understands the method of mining and the difficulties of travel in the winter season, in a mountainous region without trails, the ground cov ered with snow and the thermometer almost continuously below aero. The ground ia frozen from surface to bedrook, a distance varying in mining claims from 20 to 40 . feet. Even in summer it thaws out less than a foot from the surface. The best pay dirt or gravel is just above the bed rock, and to sink a shaft down to this requires a great deal of fuel, and it takes many , weeks of hard work in the open season to gather fuel enough to last through the winter for heating and working purposes. Water for washing out the dirt and extracting the gold can he had only in the summer and early fall. In some districts water flows only a few weeks each year. All the dirt taken out of the shaft is piled up bear it till the following summer,. and until then the miner can not tell what will be the result of his year's labor. This is the ordinary programme of the Yukon miner. lie reaches the gold fields in June or July. He spends the next few weeks in ; prospecting and finally locates a claim. There ia then but a Bhort time left in which to gather fire wood and prepare for work. Dur ing the winter he sinks his shaft and piles up the dirt to be run through sluice boxes the next summer. Wheq be can get water he begins washing, and by the time he has completed it more than a year has passed from the time he first arrived in the gold fields, and it may then be too late for bim to get out ot the country that season. If he went in supplied for 18 months and has kept his supplies he is all right. If not, he may be in the position of those Klondike miners this winter, who have not "applies to carry tbem through till spring and can not buy them at any price, i ' So much for the necessity of an ample equipment Now a few words about the nature of it Some things re absolute necessities, and one of these is quicksilver for saving the gold. Take five pounds. To be without it would be like a soldier without ammu nition.. It should be in a metal ttesk of some kind, something that will not break, and care should be taken not to spill it - A pick and long-handled shovel are necessary tools, also a gold pan.,. You will want a kit of tools for making a boat, as well as for building a cabin, flumes, etc. It should consist of whipsaw, handsaw, jack plane, draw-knife, axe, claw hatchet, ham mer, square, chisel, files, whetstone, chalk line and- wire and galvanized nails, also oakum, pitch, oars, row locks, calking iron, boat cotton, twine, sail needles.jwooden block and manila cotton rope." ; The necessary camping outfit con sists of a tent, a Yukon stove, a nest of three.pamp kettles, fry pan, bake pan, water bucket, plates, sopnd,aucer, coffee pot, knives, forks, soons, two large spoons and a butcher knife. The beat materials for utensils are alumi num, graniteware and steel in the or der named.' No tin, china or glass is desirable. There ia no economy in not g.Hting the best and a full equipment. Food must be good and properly cooked if one would retain health and be in condition to work. Insufficient or poorly cooked food, with little variety, ia the chief cause of scurvy. ; Too much care eannot be exercised in this par ticular. ; -. ; ' , As for food, an adequate supply for IS months weighs about a ton. The chief items are 600 pounds of flour, 300 pounds of bacon, 160 pounds each of beans and sugar, 75 pounds each of piled oats or other mush material and corn meal, 50 pounds of rice, six dozen cans of condensed milk, 85 pounds of butter in sealed cans, 150 pounds of evaporated vegetables, 100 pounds of evaporated fruit, 50 pounds of prunes and raisins, SO pounds of dried fish, 40 pounds of coffee, with baking powder, soda, salt, pepper, ginger, mustard, yeast cakes, tea, soap, matches, lime juice (very important), dried beef, ex tract of beef, soups in tins, sausage, to bacco, etc., as desired, bearing in mind always that variety of food promotes health. There has more or leas been said in the papers about various con centrated foods, but with the exception of evaporated vegetables and fruit, condensed preserves, condensed milk and beef extract there ia nothing yet been brought forward which lias been proved desirable. One can not afford to experiment with his stomach in Alaska. , All supplies should be carefully packed in canvas sacks of a total weight of 60 pounds each as nearly as possible. Canvas of superior quality should be used, the object being to preserve the food from loss by dampness as well as by breaking or tearing of the packages. Fifty pound packages are the most con venient for handling, and this is often as great a weight as one roan can carry. It is better to have these canvas sacks paraffined, to resist dampness. Do not use oiled canvas, as the extreme cold ness causes it to crack, with consequent loss of the contents of the sack. iThis is true also of oiled clothing, sleeping bags, etc. Plain canvas is better than oiled, and paraffined better than plain. A canvas tarpaulin is necessary as an outfit cover, and this may also be fitted up and used for a sail. The canvas sacks should be numbered and a list of the contents of each kept. The owner's name should - be plainly marked on each. '". Such necessaries as matches, candles, etc., should be distributed throughout the Sacks.'so that a loss of a portion of the outfit will not deprive the owner of these tbingrs.1 Put matches in tin boxes. The camper will require a tent, 8x10 or 10x12 being the usual sizes taken. Each man should have a oanvas sleeping bag, preferably paraffined, with a ; hood to draw over his head, lie can have an other heavy woolen sleeping bag to go Inside this, or nts bhnkets, as ha may prefer, though there is more warmth to the same weight is the sleeping bag. As for clothing, the essentials are maoklnaw suits, heavy woolen under wear and overshirts, . heavy woolen socks, woolen mitts and fleece lined leather mitts, heavy bather boots, gum boots, overalls, woolen cap, soft felt hat and a waterproof Nothing sack. To this equipment one may add. whatever he may think desirable, but these at least are necessary. The question of footwear is an important one. Gum boots are worn only while at work in the water, either in a clein or along the trail. Leather boots crack and are easily ruined in the snow and cold, The Iudians make a moccasin boot, called "mwckluck," which is the usual footwear along the Yukon,; but it will of course be impossible, for them to sup ply the demand for them next year. This renders it advisable for the gold seeker to take at least one extra pair of boots with him. The most desirable is the style of boot worn by lumbormon. There are numerous little things that are a necessary part of an equipment. Every man should have a small kit of shoemaker's tools and supplies, also a complete mending outfil for clothing, toilet articles, etc., all in a' case with pockets, one that can be rolled up and tied. A few yards of mosquito -netting are necessary, for mosquitoes are a pest. Goggles to protect the eyes from snow blindness are necessary. Pens, ink, penoils, paper and government stamped envelopes, both Canadian and United States, should be taken. A few books are worth their weight. Fishing tackle and shot guns are likely to prove of service, as the streams teem with fish and water-fowl are extremely abundant in summer. .Traps are use less, as all taking of animals for their fur is done by Indians. . A com pane is desirable, also snow calks ' for the feet For travel on the snow a Yukon sled is needed. No matter by what route one travels or how he expeota to transport his outfit, there will be times either on the journey in or later when he will have to pack supplies on his own bark, and he should be equipped for it. The ordinary packing straps cut and gall the shoulders and let the load lie dike a dead weight on the small of the back and the kinders. There are various devices for overcoming these troubles. The best , of thcra are the Merriam pack, by which the weight is thrown upon the hips, and the Yukon packing frame, which places the weight on the shoulders. Either is worth far more than it costs to the man who has to pack bis outfit In packing it is a great mistake to overdo oneself or to carry a load too far. The best plan is to move the entire outfit along by short stages, and then to stop work before completely exhausted. One should be especially careful not to eit'nrouiid without a coat when heated or to wear wet clothing when not at work. . Every man going to Alatka should take a small supply of medicines and surgical necessaries. Thtse out fits, both regular and bomeopnthwe-tnay be procured in specially ptepa'red cases, and cost about (10. He should also understand the use of the remedies and appliances. 1 Finally, the best advice of all is to take only the best quality of every th ing, whether clothing, proivsimis or ntensits, and to procure them from ex perienced outfitter, who know jot what Is wanted and how- to pack it. It is poor economy to save a rent or two a pound on provisions and then pay a dollar a pound to get this cheap food to its destination. These things can all be bought cheap er and to hotter advantage at the (m fit ting points from which the steamers sail than at any other place. It is both economy and widsom to wait until the final starting point is reached before outfitting, -as a perfect equipment, se lected under the advice of reliable 'out fitters and properly packed, is half the battle for success. ; ; .. . , ; Girl I'shere in C hurch. Because the members of his ohurch were jiegligent in attending 'Sunday services and still more so in contribut ing to the support of himself and the church, Kev. Maurice Penfleld Fikes, pastor of the First Baptist church ut Trenton, N. J., decided to try an inno vation to attract people to hear him preach and their nickles and' dimes from their unwilling pockets. He in troduced pretty girls us ushers, and is more than pleused with the results of the first experiment. Mr. Fikes hud the sagacity to make announcement of the fact that the yonng womon would show folks to their seats and take up the collection, fie was care ful, too, to pick out six of the prettiest girls in his flock, so the church haej more young men fn its pews than had" ever before been seen there. Every seat in the church was filled long be fore services were begun, and it was necessary to get chairs in the oiules. As ushers the girls were a grand suc cess, but their best services were given when the time came to take up the col lection. The innovation doesn't meet with the approval of the other preach ers, who say that when people are drawn to a church simply for the privi lege of looking upon a bevy of pretty girls there is no lasting good to he ex pected from it But Mr. Fikes says that he believes in getting people Into his ohurch and he doesn't care how he docs it so long as the means are legiti mate and honest. It took a long time to take up the collection, but when it was over and the money oounted there was nearly $300 to add to the treasury of the church. i . , :' Miss Maud Parks of Lock Raven, Baltimore county, Md.,wai sitting near a stove when a celluloid comb in her hair caught fire.. Somebody present got a bucket of water and emptied it over her. California claims the largest boy in the world of his age. His name is John Bardin. lie ia 15 years old, six feet five inches tall, and weighs 220 pounds. V KNOCKED OBT. It knocks out all calculations of attend ing to business in the right way for a day when w wake up in the morning sore and Stiff. Th disappointment lies in going to bed all right and waking up all wrong. There is a short and sure wav out of It. (Jo to1 bed after a good nib with fct. Jacobs Oil and you wake up all rlftht; soreness and stiflness all gone. Ho sure U this, that men much exposed in changeful weal iter keep a bottle of it on the mantel for use at night to make sure of going to work ia good lix. Long Distance Signaling. The Greenwich observatory has been pat into telegraph communication with that ot the McGlll college, Montreal, and the signals oan be flashed between the two places, a distance of 8,300 miles, in three-quarters of a socond. THI LAST MAN OK EARTH To recklessly experiment upon himself, with hopeof roltttl 1 tlio dtupepito.jj Yet the no, trumi for this malady are M the tends ot the. tea, and, presumably, ahnul as eilieoloiis. In dllieatlon, that obstinate niRlu.ly, even It ol long iHTpetuliy, Is eventually overcome with Hostvtu-r'a Htotnach Kit torn, an appetising Initio and alterative, which euret constipation, (ever and ague, bilious remittent, rheumatism, kidney eoiuulalnt and tecbleneti. , An even cubio fool of average soil was weighed and analyzed at Cornell University. It was found thut the soil in one. acre one foot deep weighed 1,082 X tons. i AN OPEN LETTER TO MOTHERS. We are asserting in the courts our right to the exclusive use ot the word "CAftTOKlA," anil ' m'CHKK 3 CAS I OK1A," as our 'trade Mark. t, Dr. Samuel Fltcher, of Hyennls, Massachusetts, was the originator of " PITC ItER'SCASrORIA," the same that has borne ami does now bear th isc-simile signature of C HAS. H. KLKTCIll'R oa every wrapper. This U theorigiuaj " 1'lTCHKR'a CASTORIA " which has been used In the hornet Of the mothers of America for over thirty years. Look Carefully at the wrapper and set that It la Ut iind yo Mat always bought, and has the tiirnatur of CMA3. II. FLETCHER on the wrapper. Ho one has authority front me to use my name except The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher ia President. Match 3, iSgj, BA.MUEI. PITClUiR, M.U Lightning rods may be valuable if large enough and insulated sufficiently to carry away a bolt of lightning. The common lightning rod is not of much use. ..- " ' ; HOME PRODUCTS AND FVRB FOOD. All 'Eastern Syrup, so-ealled, tuntlly very lift lit colored aud ol heavy body, Is made Irom Sliicose. "Tea ttanrro Vriu" is made Irura uirar Cane and is Mr lolly pure. It is lor sal by tlrsi-claMirrocers, in cans onlv. Manufac tured bv the Pacific Coist svitir Co. All Ken nine "Tro GanUn m" have the manulao Hirer's name lithographed on every ean. In a recent leyture Professor Berg mann, of Berlin, statod that in 60 cases of perforating the skull for' epi lepsy, he knew of only one permiu.ent cure. . . ' MKln Solomon's Tremor," only Aphrodliiacal Tonic known. (Me Dictionary.) Km a 0i. S weeks' treatment. Mason Chemical Co., P. O. Box 77, 1'hiUUelphla, Pa. Firelighters are taade !n Oermany by twisting wood into a rope, cutting it into short lengths, and dipping the ends of the pieces into melted resin. I believe my prompt use of I'iso's Curs prevented quick noii.itmiptioii.- lira, l.ucy Wallace, Marquette, Kans , Pec. U, lS'.iJ. Try Schilling's Best tea and baking powder. The oyster is one of the strongest creatures on earth. The force required to open an oyster is more than 900 times its weight. Awful Warning. y. A Spanish woman kissed her pug dog and died of hydrophobia lust week. The retributions of Providelice for lack of sense are often mysterious and severe. Pomona Progress. " . MRS. PINKHAM'S VICTORY Ida. Sidnej-temlet,' J Cored by X-ydl X. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, Red Horse, Va. To Mrs, Plnkham: "My heart goeji put in sympathy to all who are suffering with troubles pecul iar to the female sex. "', "I would like to express my gratitude forwhat your Vegetable Compound has done for me. I have been a sufferer since girlhood; did not then know the cause of dreadful sick headaches and other troubles. I could not take lonir walks, lift or carry any thing heavy, and. Was very nervous. ' . "Last summer I was almost an invalid ; could not walk across my room without pain. I sent for our physician, lie pronounced my case ft bad ono of ' Prolapsus Uteri,' conges tion and ulceration of the womb, and said I was to lie abed. I was so dis tressed to find myself so helpless and useless to my family; I saw your Com pound advertiHod and thought I would try it I took several bottles, and used the Sanative Wash and Pills as directed, ' and now I am as strong aa I ever was, and do all my own housework. I can walk more than a mile without any inconvenience. Ohl I am truly grate fid. I cannot write the good you have done me. Words art) inadequate to express It. ' May Ood bless you for the good you are doing." Mns. Sidket Hamlet, Eed House, Va. WHO ARE WEAK BROKEN DOWN DISCOURAGED v Hen who safer from the effects of disease, ovsn work, worry, from 'lie follies of youth or the ex easias of manhood, from annatnral drains, weak ness or lack of development of any organ, fatlureof vital forces, ontttnese for man-lane, all such men Should "corns to the fountain head for a selentlBs method of marvelloni power to vitallie, develop, re store, snd sustain. We will mall without charge la a plain sealed envelope a pamphlet that Telle It All. Notblne sent nnasked. Ho expo sure, do deoeptlon. Address , ERIE MEDICAL, CO. ' es fttsoasia aTstrrr, bu's-alo, m. y. M o (illHtS WHtKl ALL tlbl id nma. rxno ny onureitts. E fUA fTu sPS Last Chance ! The $2000.00 'missing-word contest Poeulf ttrili innniinrr1 nKriit'.Tnrtl1?',f1 1 sth. , ,M ' Schilling's Best baking powder audi 'hfmit What ia the missing word? not SAFE, although Sthillini't powder and tea mrt safe. Get Schilling' t Beti baking powder' or tea at your grocers'; ticket (brown ticket lo every package of baking powder; yellow I tea); send a ticket with ea(!h word to address below before Decem( Until October 13th two words allowed for every ticket; afterf' If only one person finds the word, H, J 1000.00 will be equally divided among them. Every one sending a brown or yellow ticket will receive creeping babies at the end of the contest envelope will receive an 1898 pocket creeping babies and pocket calendars the last contest Better cut these Address: MONEY-BACK, SAN FRANCISC U,V. -.),,. Li; A5 fx) - i- 0 11 I'lii.i 1 iia" make are fire, dairy equal. HercuhB Special " actual horsepower) Price, only S13S. Cooking by Solar Beat. , The various 'experiment! made with solar engines by the Ftenob in Algeria, where the sun i neve overclouded and shines with great power; have been at tended in aoruoanstitncea with marked success. The beet apparatus is stated to b a simple arrangement of boiler and concave mirror, the steam generated being condensed in a coiled tribe sur rounded by water, this hting intended merely for -distilling water. But in India an inventor has contrived ' some machines With which more varied re- suits are accomplished. One of these, says the Philadelphia ltecord, is what is termed a cooking-box, made of wood and lined with reflecting mirrors, at tho bottom of the bog being a small copper boiler covered with glass to re tain the heat of the raysancentrateiiANDN ELECTRIC BELT CO. by the mirror! upon the boiler, in this contiivance anv sort of food may Jie quickly cooked, the result being a stew or boil if the steam is retained, or if allowed toj'scape It is a bake. "The heat with tfrfS' device may be aug mented in'te'fftfitoly by increasing the diameter of the box. DKAFNESS CANNOT HI ttRED Hy local applications ss tbey eannot reaeh the UlMjaNei! portion ol the t ar. There Is only one wsy to pure dealnens, and that Is hy Cotnlitu tlonal remedies, Uesfneia is caua'tfli an In flsmed conditldn ol th inucntis Until ol the Eustachian T Ue. When thls tube Isfnllamed you have a rumbling sound or itrt perfect hear ing, and when It Hthnirely cloeed, deafness Is the result, end unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tuue restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroved forever; nine canes out of Ion are caused bv Catarrh, whirh U nothing but an Inflamed condition ol th mucmis stirisws. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any ease of lcfnea, (caused by catarrh) that can not bv cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure, (end lor cir culars; free. j r.t. CHINIYCO.,Te!edo,0. Sold bf driiffglBrs. 76c. ' Uairspeoifly Bills are th best. uOnlJ one person in 15 hag perfect ayes, tbcjlargcr portion of defsctiyeutss prevailing among fair-haired people. rieriiiiiny and China, The foreign ofliao at Pekin says that when the bandits killed the two mis aonariea it ordered the governor of Shangtung to arrest the culprits, and the capture of four ef them was affect ed, but meanwhile, indeed only one day before, the Germans landed troops and occupied the forts. The Germans still occupy EiaoChau, a place of great stratngio and com mercial importance, and show no dis position to abandon it, but, on the con trary, appear to have seized upon the murder of the missionaries as a pretext for obtaining and permanently occupy ing a very desirable position upon the Chinese coast, and so clear is this de termination that China hui appealed to Russia to interfere in her behalf against Germany. Germany reinforoed her squadron in the Chinese waters on the huels of this seizure of Klao Chan bay, ) and it is reported that as long ago as j. 1895 one of our warships on the Chinese coast was applied to by a German ves sel for charts of these waters, "and car- ticularly requested detailed charts of the harbor of Kiao Chan." The Set mam verified these charts, and made more extended survey! of the place, 1 and when "the German naval offloon at that time discussed the probability ! of their occupying that port, the murder' of German missionaries was not men-1 tioned." . 1 ' :: : '" A they are mone that person gets f joooc Those tending thr calendar no advert!.- will be diiTctent fiou th rules out; i l 4 "DOWER .FOR,.. PRO Power that will tave you money ail you money, ucrculcs Eagis the cheapest power known. Bl Gasoline or Distillate Oil; no mi or dirt For pumping, run or farm machinery, they hav! Automatic la action, perff afe and reliable. Sead for illustrated catalog. Hercules Qak Engine WorL Bay St., San Francisco, Cal. This Is an arnllanee which la know 1 the world lor lta wonderful trnilc Inttut I the wan lua- vitality ol man and wo 1 much H the touch ol life. Warmth i peilo heaitn l(i I In w Us Hiipilrntlnn l dy. A permanent enre nl all we restoration 01 new nt- -u a.Mirm in I est standing canes within 9u darn. , "Thsee. Classes of Men." Dr. Handen will send yon a book npoi subjeVt, with valuable Information, Ire, po-slble, call and see his faniims Belt. To, and regain your ttronsth, I. He has n. rhsrm to those who war It. Call or address SSS West Washington St., 1'orlUad, T ' rirtut mention (An ',j,r. OS. I row pa log crops because they're Cpesb and always the beat. For sale everywhere. Itofuas substitutes. Rtlek to Kerry's Seeds snd prosper, ism Beet Annual free. Write for It ; D. M. FERRY A CO., DtlroR, Mtek. Kodaks- $4 FROM UP... WOODABO, CLARKI ft Co. PORTLANO, OsT. Catalogue Free. YOUR LIVER Moore's Revealed Remedy wllldo It. Three doses will make you feel better. (Jet It front yonr druff 1st or any wholesale drug house, or. Irom Stewart 4'Iiolmes Drag Co., Seattle. llflir HT "k,,mo''rbysucesiu Vif Mln I ,'t,l'on In Chicago. Ws Iff IiLH I "S on msr. HisilS gins. Fortunes have bees made on a small beginning by tra.luii Tin TtZ tures. Write for full VanlouUfs. ' hi, 'ol ret erence given. Severs! years' esnerieneann ihi Chisago Bo-rd of Trade', a,l "Zm , h kni w! ledge of the business. snd tor our f? V.iT ence book. DOWNINtt. HoVkinb A cT Portland, Oregon and Ssattle, Wash. ILLUSTRATED CATALOGS oSuell 0 Umbcrsor. PJ?IkANp,Oi$ m 1 a-NORTHCRN JjL I ! for children tMthlnr. It .o..lum lb. cttll,l, .cX AKm Li ens ths giimi, Hv all puin, cures rind mil. u I ina Best raniMW ler tlliurhiea, TV Sntr Ot. m bottla. H l the bert of all. , RODS! fir trsclng and locating OnM o Mini P.r.,'J.1,L ?r hnrted treasure,. l. li! suT.sonthlngton.Coan, V. P. N. V. No. St, 'ST.. WHKSt writing to advertisers, yloas snentles tfcls pot. 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