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About Mosier bulletin. (Mosier, Or.) 1909-19?? | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1912)
F a rm e rs iind M erchants SION WAS TRIFLE AMBIGUOUS Write us lor our cash oiler on your Farm and Dairy Produce. If we don’t handle it will refer you to re liable buyer. f'EARSON-PAGE CO. Placard Bearing Inscription “Famlllej Supplied” Taken at Its Literal Meaning by Customer? "The merchant can’t be too careful I (a having his announcements perfect- I ty plain,” remarked Sir James Butler | to some friends the other day. “For ID EA L F R U IT P IC K E R S - BAG. Send us one d o llar and w e w ill m ail you sam ple Instance, a man went Into a butcher of Ideal A p p le P ic k e rs ’ Bayr. P ositively th e best p ic k in g b ag on th e m a rk et, allo w in g m an to use . shop recently and B a ld to the man be both hands. Barker M anufacturing Co., 35 Am hind the counter: brose S t., Rochester, N. Y. " ’I want two boys and a girl. Second-H and Machin ; please.’ ery bought, sold and " ‘Beg pardon, sir,' replied the man. exchanged: « n g in e s. " ‘I want two boys and a girl.' boiler«, sawm ills, etc. The J . E. M artin Co.. 76 1st St.. Portland. Send for Stock L ist and prices. " ‘Beg pardon, sir.’ “The manager of the shop, seeing a :lttle misunderstanding between the two, went to the gentleman and said: “ ‘Please excuse my assistant, but rolls developed. 10c, any size. L a rg e s t and best le is a new hand and perhaps does shop in N o rth w e s t. Com What Is your p le te p ric e list on request. aot understand you. -n * B e st re s u lts g u a ra n te e d . wish?* “ ’Two boys and a girl, f S you — SU A C O B S CLL—Z P.-I. Uuild’g, Seattle please.’ “ 'I beg your pardon, sir, but I'm Afraid I don’t quite understand you Hand Wcrei, Uublocked myBelf,’ replied the manager. ‘I want—two—boys—and—a—girl. Basil PANAMAS Is " that plain enough?” answered the ffipPi SOM WIAVIR TO WEARER gentleman. 1,0 wopn nnh lo ek ed w om en. B locked in "The manager then said, ‘I’m sorry, .* o r sty l» • inen. B rim s 8 a n d 6 but I don’t keep them.’ in c h e s . L i e h t w e ic h t J S e n t p o s tp a id o n r e c e i p t "The gentleman then replied: o f p ric e . M o n ey r e f u n d e d if n o t s a t i s f a c t o r y , (le t a d u r a b le , s t y li s h h u t f o r t h e h a l f o f w h a t i t w o u ld c o s t " ‘But you have a sign outside, ‘Tam y o u e ls e w h e r e . A d d r e s s N E W M O D E H A T OO. llles Supplied.” ’ ’’—Exchange. C . H . M e u s s d o rfF e r. P r o p . ‘J27 1-2 W a s h in g t o n S t REBELS PREVENT SENDING ARMS Portland. Oregon. Machinery K O D A K T w e n ty y e a r s i n P o r t l a n d . P o r t la n d . O r. •1 F I T S Y O U R EYES- P E H I T ' S E Y E S A L V E ia w h a t y o u n . . d O LM ES IBUS1NE55 C0LLE0EI W A S H IN G T O N AN D T E N T H S T S PORTLA N D . OREG O N ___ _____ . W R I T E FOR C A T A L O G Ths 8chovl th a t P la e tj l'o u in a Uood Position Mount Sinai Located. The discovery of what Is believed U be the real Mt. Sinai of Holy Scrip-’ Is reported to the Academy of Selene« at Berlin by Prof. Dr. A1 Musil from Damascus. Prof. Musil believes that the extinct volcano, Hala-l-Bedr, In the Hedja region of northern Arabia Is the biblical mountain where th» Ten Commandments were given U Moses. _______________ Red Cross Ball B il e Rives double valu e for your money, r o c s tw ice a x far as any other. A sk your grocer. Revised Version. “I suppose that when you left the convention you exclaimed: 'I came, I saw, I conquered?'” "Not exactly," re plied the delegate who changed his mind. "That is what I was going to say, but I modified it to ‘I came, I w a seen, I concurred.’ ” Misunderstanding. First Boarder—Will you pass th« cheese? Second Boarder—How fasl Is It traveling?—Judgn. MEXICAN MUSTANG L IN IM E N T CURED A CUT HORSE. : F rsd D e N e ffe , Marshall, W a sh ., w rites “I h ave used M exican M u sta n g Linim ent I for som e tim e and am w ell ple ased . One I o f ou r horses had a deep c u t in h e r b reast I and w e used all k in d s o f m edicines w ith o u t I effect u n til w e tried M u stan g Linim ent and { it h ealed it up in less than 10 d a y s.” I 2 5 c . 5 0 c . $ 1 a b o ttle a t D ru g & G en ’l S tores | Painless Dentistry Is our pride—our h o b b y —o n r s t u d y f o r y e a r s and b o w our suooess, a n d o u r s is t h e b e l t painless w o r k to bo f o u n d a n y w h e r e , n o m a t t e r h o w m u c h you C om pare o u r P r i c e s . We finish plate and bridge wort fo» out of to-rn patrons in one day if desired. Painless extraction free when plates or bridge work is order ed. Consultation frss. Molar Crowns $5.00 22k Bridge T..th 4. CO S 1 .0 0 9 Gold r’illingt I Enamel Fillings ■ Silver Fillings 1.00 .50 5.00 ■ Best Red Rubbsr — _ A I Platss 7.50 ■ Good Rubbsr 1 Plates M . WISE, Prnunrise Masts» Painless Extr'tion . 5 0 n m s s imilUNIO IN rsaiUNS B EST M ETHOD* A ll w o rk fu lly g u a r a n te e d fo r f ifte e n years. W i s e D e n t a l C o .,i» c . Painless Dentists M i n t B u lldlni. T h lrt snd Wishington^PORTLANO^O Rk You w ill g e t a thorough exam ination World’s Cables Mads In America. Practically all the world's cables are made In this country, the first having been made In 1857, the total length of '.he wire In the sheathing and core being sufficient to reach from the earth to the moon. When the sea Is about three miles deep, and the ship Is steaming at Its usual rate,-paying opt a new line, over two and a half hours will pass before the cable reaches the bed of the sea. By the time the cable has settled to rest the ship Is 25 miles away. R C ures W hile Y ou W alk A llen's Foot-Ease is a certain cure for hot, nveating, callus, and sw ollen, aching feet. Sold t>y a ll Druggists. Price 25c. D on’t accept any m batitute. Trial package FREE. A d d r e i Allen S. Olmsted, Le Koy, S . Y. / United o n Deathbed. A pathetic marriage ceremony took place the other day. In a Budapest hos pital. A German singer named Erdos, who was appearing professionally In the Hungarian capital, was suddenly taken 111 with heart weakness a few days ago. He telegraphed to his sweetheart In Frankfort, Germany, to come to him. The girl started at once, and arrived In Budapest promptly. They were married immediately In the hospital ward, and Erdos died an hour After the ceromonv Grecian Head-Covering. The Greeks wore a hat called a petasos, which was soft and light, be ing made of felt; it was strapped un der the chin to fasten It firmly to the head. But only the lower classes among the Greeks, such as herds and travelers, wore hats, and both sexes wore hats of the same shape. The Greek nobility and gentry wore no covering for the head out of doors, and women only adorned their hair with a wreath of flowers. Insuring Private Cup. To Insure the owner of a private shaving cup kept In a barber shot that he Is its only user there has beer Invented a paper cap to cover It which cannot be removed without breaking a seal. Be Well! The First Step Towards G ood H e a lth is a Strong Stomach Is Your Appetite Poor Is Your Digestion Weak Is Your Liver Sluggish These are N a tu r e ’s warning* of stomach weakness and im pending sickness. You should try HOSTETTER’ S STOMACH BITTERS AT ONCC. IT WILL HELP YOU Warning to tha Doctor. Never, in a moment of forgetfulness, advise the parents of a child whom you operated upon a year before for the removal of adenoids that the child Is suffering from Impeded nasal res piration and should have Its adenoids removed.—Medical Review of Re views. . »• THE CHINESE HERBALIST. The C hinese system o f m edicine differs from all athers. It em ploys only purely herbal remedies and adheres to principles th at have been thor oughly tested fo r thousands o f years. When a patient com es to C. Gee Wo for treatm ent he is given a careful exam ination and h e is told w hat ails him . Then he is given sufficient herb reme dies for a course o f tim e and told to report again to have his condition noted. In m ost ca**»s pa tients notice a decided im provem ent in . their health in a w eek ’s tim e. This is particularly so in nervous diseases and w here th e system is run down. T he system its e lf w hen toned up to nor mal is often able to throw off sick n ess. I f you are ailing don’t continue to suffer wher, the help of harmless remedies is so near at hand. CONSULTATION FREE. O ut-of-tow n people can b e g n treatm ent* by sending 4c in stam ps for sym ptom biank. which is to be filled out and returned. C. Gee Wo Chinese Medicine Co. 1621 First St car. Morrison. Portland, Or. No. 87—’is Why cough? Stop it! Stop coughing! Coughing rasps and tears. Stop itl Coughing prepare« the throat and lungs for more trouble. Stop it I There is nothing so bad for a cough a t coughing. Stop i t ! Ayer’s Cherry Pec toral is a medicine for coughs and colds, a regular doctor's medicine. Sold for seventy years. Use it! Ask your doc tor if this is not good advice. Unless there is daily action of tha bow- ela, poisonous products are absorbed, causing headache, biliousness, nausea, dyspepsia. T t wish you would ask your doctor about correcting your constipation by taking iasttive doses of Ayer’a Pills. M s** * r <M /• 0 . A T » CO.. L avaU . «aaa. Americans in Mexico Cut Off by Insurrecto Band. Trains Derailed, Bridget Burned, Pxteengere Sent Back—Cana nea Believed in Peril. Cheyenne, Wyo.—One detachment of the Ninth cavalry, under orders for the Mexican border, left here at 6 :30 Sunday night. Other detachments will leave shortly. Junction City, Kan.—Final orders directing the Thirteenth cavalry to proceed to the Mexican border were received Sunday by Colonel Charles Hatfield, commander of the regiment. The regiment, nearly 1000 men, and a machine gun platoon, will leave Fort Riley in a few days for K1 Paso. Naco, Ariz.—Mexican rebels have cut all traffic and communication be tween here and Cananea, Sonora, Mexico, where about 500 Americans reside. Shortly afterward a passen ger train arrived here carrying 500 rifles and 150,000 rounds of ammuni tion, sent by the United States gov ernment from the arsenal at Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, Tex., to arm the American residents in Cananea. The rebels cut the railway in an at tempt to prevent the shipment of arms from reaching the Americans at Ca nanea. The passenger train for Ca nanea was captured by rebels a few miles south of the international line, the engine was derailed and the pas sengers allowed to coast back into the United States on a passenger coach down the grade. Six bridges were burned. Care had been taken to conceal the identity of the shipment |of arms, but news that the Americans of Cananea had requested Washington authorities to send them arms for self-protection, and that the request had been granted is believed to have become known among the rebel chiefs operating in this vicinity. Not only are American lives be lieved to be in danger as a result of recent operations by the rebels, but tbe mines must close for lack of fuel within a few days, mining engineers state. Cananea is one of the most exten sive copper mining centers in the world, and the Cananea Copper com pany is the richest corporation of its kind in Mexico. The railway destroy ed by rebels runs from a point on the American border to Cananea, and is a part of the Southern Pacific of Mexico system. In Cananea are about 500 American men and about 50 American women. About 100 of these are American cow boys from surrounding ranches. Re cent threats of rebel leaders to attack Cananea now are now taken seriously here, in view of the late develop ments. PLAGUE STOPS FARM WORK. Kansas Farmers Without Horses Can not Get Fall Plowing Done. Topeka, Kan.—Farm work is going undone in Western Kansas for lack of horses killed by the plague. Crops remain ungathered and fall plowing is weeks behind. On many farms all the horses have died. Until experts ascertain a remedy for the disease, farmers are unwilling to purchase more horses. The disease is rapidly spreading eastward, according to reports receiv ed by J. II. Mercer, state livestock commissioner. Mercer sent out a warning that horses all over the state should be kept off pastures and given no water except from wells. The streams and ponds are said by the experts to swarm with diplococci, a variety of which causes meningitis. Nitrate Supply Limited, New York—There will be no ammu nition for British guns in time of war should Great Britain’s enemy cut off her supply of nitrates from Chile, ac cording to a declaration made by Colo nel Samuel Eyde, of Christiana. Nor way, before the eighth inteinational chemical congress at Columbia Uni versity “ Nitrate of ammonia pro duced from atmospherice nitrogen is pure, and according to the experience of the British navy has a great bear ing upon the life of the guns, the pur ity of the product reducing the heat.” Convicts Honor Booth. San Quentin, Cal.—Nearly 1000 men in stripes paid tribute to the memory of the late General William Booth, founder of the Salvation Army, at me morial services held at San Quentin prison. Abraham Ruef, the convicted briber,“delivered the main address. He eulogized the great Salvationist and dwelt at length on his work for “ the poor Jand the man behind the bars.’’ Prison inmates and members of the army corps in San Francisco had arranged a program consisting of sacred music and addresses. TAFT LEADS IN CALIFORNIA. Easy Victory Expected By Progres sives Does Not Materialize. San Francisco—Roosevelt Progress ives suffered unexpected reverses in many instances in the California pri maries, and in some congressional dis tricts where the Bull Moose forces were absolutey : confident of victory, especially so through the redistricting of the state, they have found them selves defeated. In districts where easy victory for the Roosevelt candi dates had been predicted, notably in the third, the Taft vote ia running far ahead of the Roosevelt Progressive count. The Roosevelt forces, however, claim that the election has given them control of the state machinery, and if this claim is borne out, as incomplete returns indicate, it assures the selec tion of Roosevelt-Johnson electors at the state convention at Sacramento, September 24. This result has been, however, more or less counted upon by the Taft leaders on account of the large personal popularity of Governor Johnson, the vice presidential candi date on the Roosevelt Progressive ticket. Secondary in interest only to the sharply-drawn contest between the Taft and Roosevelt faction of the Re- pubican party was the nomination of 11 representatives, the primary being the first congressional contest since the addition of three new congression al districts by the reapportionment at the last special session of the state legislature, based upon the 1910 cen sus. Scant returns in several districts in which the Progressives had predicted easy victory for their candidates indi cate unexpected reverses for the Roosevelt men, notably in the third, which Taft leaders declared was “ carved out” by the legislature ex pressly to insure the certainty of the election of Frank R. Devlin, a Roose velt stalwart. MILWAUKIE FIRE $50.000. Portland Suburb Hard Hit—Califor nia Resort Also Burns. Portland — Fire believed to have started in the rear of the Milwaukie Appeal print shop at 1 o’clock Wed nesday morning swept one entire block on Main street between Wash ington and Jefferson streets at Mil waukee, Or., a suburb of Portland, doing damage estimated at $50,000. The fire razed the entire block, in cluding the postoffice. Only the Sell- wood fire appartatus from Portland was able to reach the scene. Water was pumped from the river to quench the flames. Wires from all parts of the town except a tavern and the O. W. P. re pair shops were down, and aid was summoned with difficulty. Los Angeles—Fire originating from a defective flue at the Casino Cafe on the pleasure pier at Ocenn Park caused a loss of at least one life and a property damage estimated at $2,250,- 000. For a time it threatened to dev astate the twin beach resorts of Ocean Park and Venice, 18 miles from Los Angeles. A high wind caused the flames to spread so rapidly that seven men were caught at the end of the Frazer pier, on which the Casino wa9 located, and were forced to jump into the breakers. Six of them were rescued by life guards, who put out in boats. They were not in time, however, to save the life of E. W. Leach, chef of the Casino cafe. Rebel Looters Are Active. Washington, D. C.—Confirmation of press reports of the great activity of rebel looting parties in Northern Mex ico continues to reach the State de partment. Naturally these raiders, constantly kept on the jump by the pursuing government columns, are looking for horses and ranches are suffering loss of their livestock where- ever they appear. At one point the rebels captured 5000 rounds of ammu nition destined for government forces. At the Verde ranch, 15 miles south of Naco, they took 70 horses. Spokane Rates In Effect. Spokane—Spokane shippers receiv ed advices from representatives of Western railroads in St. Paul that looker freight rates on the commodities which were held up when the com promise traiff of June 15 was agreed upon would be placed in effect at once. There are about a dozen commodities affected and it is estimated the reduc tion in the rates will be 3 or 4 per cent. The new rates will remain in effect until December 31, when they will be subject to a hearing before the Inter state commerce commission. Mount McKinley it Goal. Seattle — An expedition to climb Mount McKinley next spring has been organized by C. E. Rusk, editor of the ProsBer, Wash., Independent, reputed to be the moat skillful mountain climber in the Pacific Northwest, and Merl I.avoy, who was a member of the unsuccessful Henchel Parker ex peditions of 1910 and 1912. Rusk, who is a member of the Portland Ma- zamas, made an unsuccessful expedi tion to the mountain in 1910. •2 6 ,0 0 0 Bonds for Trainrobber. Topeka—Wells Lounsberry, the rob ber who held up six mail clerks on a Union Pacific train between Kansas City and Topeka the morning of Au gust 22, ia in jail here under $26,000 bonds, awaiting action by the federal grand jury at Leavenworth October 14, and his wife and two children, Philip and George, are on their way hack to Medford, Or. Bomba Set'By Black Hand New York—“ Black Hand” agents made three attempts to blow up as many buildings in the city Sunday, the tenements in which the bombs were placed bousing more than 76 families. Two of the infernal ma chines were discovered in time to pre vent them from exploding, while the third shattered windows and doors on Japs Not to Hira Whites. two floors of a building in West I»a of Police Se Thirty-fifth street in which it had bastian Angelea—Chief has issued an imperative or been placed. No one waa injured. der that proprietors of Chinese and Japanese cafea and soda water stands Chinos* Troops Revolt. must discharge immediately the 50 Tientsin—A serious military upris white girl* and women employed by ing has taken place at Yunnan. The them as waitressea and cashiers. governor general has left the town, White women and girls are out of but his designation ia not known to place in resort* conducted by Orien the public. Yunnan is the capital of tals. the chief said. the province of the same name and is Federal* to Fortify Juarez. in Southwest China. The province haa 122,000 square mile« and 12,800,- Juarez, Mexico — The federal gov 000 inhabitants. Yunnan, the city, ernment, it i* announced, will fortify has a population of 100,000. It ia a Juarez with extensive earthworks and wailed city. light and heavy artillery. MAY ABIDE BY CANAL RULINGS Britain Expected to Abandon Arbitration Demand. English Study Question—Washington Believes Objections Will Stop When Fully Understood. Washington, D. C.—In diplsmatic circles here it is believed that the de lay by Great Britain in asking for ar bitration of the free tolls section of the Panama Canal act is an indication that the London foreign office event ually will abandon that plan. It has been said that the foreign office was withholding formal action pending a careful study of the act. It is believed that when the British gov ernment comes to understand that the free toll provision of the act applies AUNT JENNY’S JOHNNY CAKE only to American coastwise trade, in which British shipping cannot partici How This Most Popular of Tabl* Dainties Is Put Together by pate in any event, the reason for an Southern Cooks. appeal for arbitration will disappear. “ Diplomacy Likely to Fail, London — Regret at the spirit in which the Panama question is being discussed on this side of the Atlantic ia expressed by the Westminster Ga zette, the government organ, whose editor, J. Alfred Spencer, is consider ed as possibfy the next British ambas sador at Washington. The charges of “ Yankee perfidy,” it says in an editorial, have had the effect that might have been expected in the American retort that Europe is strewn with examples of this perfidy. This only serves to “ generate heat where light is wanted.’’ It is likely, continues the Gazette, that diplomacy will fail to arrive at a settlement, in which case the govern ment's course clearly is to ask for ar bitration. In conclusion, it says, President Taft is so deeply committed to the principle of arbitration that his refusal to submit the question cannot be conceived. ARMY POLICE FOR ALASKA. System Like That of Canada Being Considered by War Department. San Francisco—The problem of giv ing Alaska a thorough military police system may be solved in the near fu ture, not by the stationing of a regi ment or more of soldiers there, scat tering the troops through the territor ies by companies, but by establishing a constabulary system modeled some what along the lines of the Northwest mounted police, which has accom plished wonderful results in Canada. Officers at the Presidio Bay that Buch a system of mounted police is being considered and may go through. If so, it would be under the jurisdic tion of the War department, the mounted officers being recruited from the ranks of the army. Major George H. McManus, of the inspector general’s department, who has just returned from an inspection tour of Alaska army posts, acknowl edged that such a constabulary was being contemplated. “ Personally,“ he said, “ I believe that a system of this kind would work out well. Cer tainly if a corps as efficient as that of the Northwest mounted police could be developed, it would do much to pre serve law and order in Alaska, possi bly far more than a large number of soldiers.” A cupful of sweet milk, a cupful anA i half of buttermilk; a teaspoonful each of salt and of soda—the latter sifted three times In a cupful of meal; one tablespoonful of melted butter. Enough meal to enable you to roll the dough Into a sheet half an Inch thick. Begin with two cupfuls and add at discretion. Knead the dough briskly before rolling It out Have ready a clean, sweet board of oak, hickory, or hem lock (never of resinous wood), butter ed and heated. Set before the red coal* under the grate at an angle that will not let the cake slip down, and prop It In place. Spread the dough upon It, patting it gently to make the surface even, and bake. As soon as It Is hard enough to keep Its place, set the hoard upright. Begin then to baste It with butter, lightly going all over the sheet. Do this three times. The cak* should be nicely browned and crisped. Cut with a sharp knife, held per pendicularly, into squares. Virginia water ground meal should be used for this delicious cake. The northern cornmeal will not do. Nor does the southern cook put sugar Into oorn bread. She holds that the meal should be sweet enough without it.— Chicago Tribune. Trounie V v u u in « Sometimes tiny hairs become loos ened and get beneath the eyelids. B e fore going to all the trouble of exam ining the upper and lower lids, till the wash bowl with cojd water and open the eyes under water. Open and shut them several times, and lu near ly every Instance this will wash out tho bothersome hair. It will at least loosen such a hair so that It may be easily removed by the cotton-tipped toothpick._______________ Mother* w ill find Mrs. W inslow 's S oothln* Byrup the b est remedy to use (or their uhUdrea Curing th e teeth iu g period. English "Hunting Parson." The Rev. Lawrence Capel Cure, reo tor of Abbess Rodlng, whose death It announced, was known throughout West Essex as the "hunting parson.’ B e th rifty on little th in g s like bluing. D on't a o Wpt w a ter fordduing. Ark for Keu Cruaa Bull lie Invariably wore the old-faahloneA Blue, th e ex tra good value blue. smock and tall hat and was a famll lar figure at the meets of the Essei The Reason Why. “Madam, I am just out of the hos hounds, which he attended regularl] pital, and—” “Don’t tell me any such though In his seventy-eighth year.— story as that! You are the sRtne London Evening Standard. man I gave a piece of pie to not two Most. Costly Wood. weeks ago.” “Yes'm, dat was Just a beautiful tree that growt fore I went to de hospital.”—Houston on C&bole, the west coast of Africa, and Is als< Post found on the Island of St. Thomas, ti Bald to furnish the most costly woo« Putting the Garters On. Mrs. Brown was preserving peaches In the world. It somewhat resemble, In the kitchen amid an array of glass teak, and takes on a very high polish Jars, covers, rubber bands, etc. Mar Its price Is quoted as about $3,500 I garet, aged four, watched the process cublo meter. quietly until the fruit was In the jars Advantage or electricity. and the covers ready, then she ex Electricity can not be frozen, neith claimed, "Oh, mother, p lea» let m* er can It be adulterated. It works put th* garters on!" >qually well on hnt nr cold days. “ AMERICAN” CANAL LOOMS Spokane Chamber of Commerce Would Drop Panama Appellation. Spokane—Instead of the Panama canal, why not the American canal? Make Uncle Sam’s big ditch joining the Atlantic and the Pacific distinctly American. This is a suggestion which the chamber of commerce will make to the members of the American Geo graphical society, who will be in Spo kane on a special train early in Sep tember. This action was decided up on at an executive meeting of the trustees of the chamber of commerce. The Geographical society party will be the guests of the chamber. Wheat Movement Heavy. Spokane—The Spokane & Inland is moving 100 carloads of wheat a day from.the Palouse to Seattle, Tacoma and Portland, according to a state ment made by E. R. Lillie, superinten dent for the Hill electric interarban system. The Palouse wheat handled by the Spokane & Inland is distribut ed among the three Hill steam roads between Spokane and the Coast cities, the Northern Pacific and Great North ern getting the haul to Seattle, and the Spokane, Portland A Seattle the Portland freight. Goods Come Via Suez. Seattle—Part of the cargo of the Blue Funnel liner Titan, which ar rived here from Liverpool via the Suez canal and the Pacific, is a con signment of household furniture ship ped by a group of 100 emigrants, who are now on their way to the Pacific Northwest from England. They found that they could save money by shipping these goods three-quarters of the way around the globe, as against paying the high rates across the At lantic and the railroad freight from the Atlantic Coast to the Northwest. Forty Coal Miners Dead. Lens, France — At least 40 coal miners are dead as the result of the explosion of firedamp in the Clarence pit, near Bruay. Three of the rescu ing party were among the killed and others were injured trying to aid their entombed co«tirades. Further explo sions occurred and the entire pit ia on fire. Mining engineers have decided that it must be sealed. Twenty-one bodies had been brought to the sur face at last accounts. Bk A Picture of Contentment All men look pleased when they smoke this choice tobacco— for all men like the rich quality and true, natural flavor of Smoked in pipes by thousands of men—everywhere known to cigarette smokers as “ the makings.’’ We take unusual pride In Uggrtt & M yert Duke’s Mixture It is our leading brand of granulated tobacco— and every *ack we make it a challenge to all other tobacco mnnulacturers. Every 5c sack of this famous tobacco contains one and a half ounces of choice granulated tobacco, in every way equal to the best you can buy at any price, and with each sack you get a book of cigarette paper* FREE. If you have not smokrd the Duke's Mixture made by the Liggstt j Mysrt Tubecco Co. *t Durban), N. C., try it now. Gel a C am era w ith th e Coupons Save the coupons. With them you can get all sorts of ralu- able present*—articles suitable fur young and old: men, women, boya and girls. You’ll bo delighted to see what you can get free with out one cent of cost to you. Get our new Illustrated catalog. A s a s p e c ia l o f f e r , w e s § g 1 will sen«/ H from staring S e p te m b e r a n d Your name and addresa on a poatal will bring It to you. October only. Coupons from Duke's M ix tu re may ho as- to* ted w itk lm ‘ ----------------------------- * T f f t t U L T V m _________________„ G EH __TW I T . coupons fro m F O U R k C U X CIGARETTES, ami other tags or coupons issued by w . g !Í i S