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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1894)
HOW VLSSELS ARE NAMED. ARE FAKE LOTTERIES. HOITT'S OAK GJROVE SCHOOL, " Take no Substitute for Royal Baking Powder. It is Absolutely Pure. All others contain alum or ammonia. m -J"rllilMlM1MWtlJ'llLtWlllMltl IT WAS ALL FUN. And the Kind Old Man T Just th. Ol : For Full, You Know. . He was a man about 45 years of age. Ee bud on a blue woolen shirt, his pants weitt tucked into bis bootlegs, and bis gait wus that of a man walking over plowed grounii As be sauntered up Brush street he met a policeman, and as he blocked the officer's way he .whispered: "Hush I Keep quiet I Don't give tneaway!" w ure s tne matterwitb you?" fleer. "Nothin the mat ter with me noth- GIT ONTO THAT FOLD ln 'talll Never felt ,IN BED!" better in my life and am as hnppy as a yearlin turkey. I'm just bavin fun with the boys." , "What boysf ' v; "Down by the depot. ' I just come in on the train. . Hadn'thardly gotoff before one of the boys yelled out, 'Git onto the gov ernorl' Took me fur the governor of Mich igan, you seel Keep quiet! I hain't the governor, but it won't do no hurt to let'em think ro. Would you have taken 'me fur the governor?" broad smile. , . ' "No, perhaps not. I was luggin my satehel over to the hotel when somebody hollered, 'Git onto that foldin bed!' Purty good, wasn't it? Did they mean me or the satchel?" "It's hard to tell." , "I stood on the corner lookin around to see whether I was lost or not when a boy yells, 'Git a lath to measure . his hoofs 1'. Meant my feet, you know but he was way off. You kin measure either of 'em with a two foot rule. Boys around here are chuckful o' fun, eh?" "Yes. I find 'em so." . , "And say," con- "HOORAY run the VAN- tinued the man, "I DEKBILT!" put my bands un der my coattails and sort o' sauntered around, and a boy hollers, 'Git onto his bustle, will yerl' I never wore a bustle. You wouldn't take me fur a bustler, would you?" ..."No." .... - ' ' " , "Went into a place and paid 5 cents fur this cigar, and when I came out with it a kid he shrieks, "Hqoray fur the Vander bilt!' Took me fur a millyonaire, you know. Do you think I resemble Vanderbilt?" "Very slightly." "But don't say anything to the boys. It's all fun, you know, and I'm the durndest band fur fun of any man in our county. Hear that? A boy js yellin, 'Git onto his cbinl' Means my chin, I guess, but he's Just in fun. Don't say a word to hurt their feelin's, but let 'em have a good time. Hip whoop whisb!" And he poked the officer in the short ribs, winked his left eye and. tiptoed his way to ward Jefferson avenue. Detroit Free Press. How It Was Done. Von Blumer Your wife tells me you are doing the marketing this week. ' v Witherby Yes. You see, old man, I've got the most extravagant wife you ever saw. I don't blame her for it. ; She can't help it. Born in her. But it is neverthe less a fact. Why, sir, you haven't any idea bow much that woman squanders in butch ers' bills alone! .' Von Blumer I see. And so you have taken it into your own bands? Witherby Well, not altogether. Webad a dispute about it the other night, in which I criticised ber in a mild sort of way, you understand, and she told me" to do the marketing myself and see how I came out. So this week I am buying all the food. Von Blumer Oh, yes! How are you com ing out? I Witherby Splendidl It was Just as I expected! Why, sir, it is amazing how much a man can squander on his table when be gives bis wife full swing! " Von Blumer And so'your market bills are not so high this week? ' Witherby Not by one-half. Von Blumer (reflectively) This thing may be worth looking into. My wife Witherby (excitedly)-That's it; that's itl They are all the samel Want me to explain it to you? , ; ', Von Blumer Yes. I wish you would. Witherby Well, come to this restaurant while I get a VHe to eat, and I'll tell you all about it. Puck. . "' ' The Children. A clergyman was explaining to a class of boys the passage of Scripture, "It is easier for a camel togo through theeye of aneedle than for a rich man to enter into the king dom of God." He told them that this very strong expression was meant to show the extreme, difficulty, adding, "You know it would be impossible for a camel to go through the eye of a needie." "Of course it would, sir, on account of its bump," responded the naturalist of the class. Youth's Companion. Johnny What made you run away from Bill Slutthers? You was afraid of him; that's what's the matter. Tommy No, I wasn't neither. If we'd fought, I'd licked him, and then my ina'd 'a' licked me. That's what I run away for so. Boston Transcript. Uncle George Are you good at guessing? Little Dick Yes, indeed. I'm head in the spelling class. Good News. .' An Intelligent Animal. The following is the latest dog story: "A man owned a dog which always sat at his feet at dinner and had a bone. One day the diner quite omitted to give the poor dog bis bone, so after waiting a long time and see ing his master taking his usual nap the tyke walked demurely into the garden, plucked a flower and brought and placed it on the ground in front of bis master, then woke up the cruel or forgetful man and pointed to the little flower, It was a fop gtmenot. "Tit-Bits. THE GROWTH OF A FEW YEARS. How tlio Work of the Harvard Annex Hal Increased Since 1879. The report of Arthur Gilman, secre tary of the Society for the Collegiate In struction of "Women by the Professors and Other Instructors of Harvard Col lege, covers the thirteenth year, ending Sept. 1, 1892, and shows remarkable growth and prosperity. The annex was started in a small way. Before it was thought of there had been instruction for women by professors in colleges, but that instruction was not of the character planned to be given in Cambridge. In 1870 the originators of the undertaking, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gilman, thought an arrangement could be made by which women could receive instruction from the professors in Harvard college. The admission of women directly to the college was out of the question. Ac cordingly no advances . were made di reotly to the corporation of the college, but instruction was asked of the profess ors, whose college duties were to be in no wise interfered with.. It was not until 1878 that the plan was perfected and brought to the attention of Professor and Mrs. J. B. Greenough, who heartily approved of it. Most of the other pro fessors gave their immediate assent to the request to teach women, and Presi dent Eliot added important counsel and encouragement. A directing body was then formed, consisting of Mr. and Mrs. Gilman, Professor and Mrs. Greenough, Miss Lilian Horsford, Miss Alice M. Longfellow, Mrs. Josiah Parsons Cooke, Mrs. E. W. Gurney and. Mrs. Louia Agassiz. ' In February, 1879, the first circular was issued, and in the September fol lowing the annex opened., The first year began with twenty-five students, who formed twenty-nine classes of in struction, and called for the sendees of seven professors', four assistant profess ors and twelve instructors. At first the annex occupied two rooms in a house on Appian way, near the college. From year to year additional rooms were re quired, and finally the society moved into its present home in the Fay house. This building was an old brick mansion, formerly the home of Edward Everett Soon after the annex secured the prov erty Fay house had to be much en larged, but the additions were so planned that the dignity and character of thy old structure were retained. . ' When the annex took the Fay house in 1883 the question of finances became a serious one. At the beginning the en terprise had no strong financial backing There was an annual deficit of about $4,000 for the first five years. This sum was cheerfully made up by men and wo men in Boston who were interested in the work. The money for the enlarge ment ofg the new quarters was alsc raised, and an endowment fund started Miss Horsford, the treasurer, gives the receipts last year as $47,988.58, and the expenditures as about $3,000 less. Of the income $84,010 was from tuition fees, $5,000 for a Maria Denny Fay scholar ship and $7,000 from two years' interest on the general fund; $27,680 was expend ed in salaries, $1,048 on the library and $6,885 on the building. . Mr. Gilman calls attention to the fact that the number of students increased during the year from 174 to 241, and this fall there are nearly 300. The teaching force comprises more than seventy of the professors and other instructors of Har vard college, and as usual represents the older professors as, well as the later addi tions to the faculty. The graduate stu dents -numbered twenty-two, coming from such institutions as Boston univer sity, Bfyn Mawr college, Kansas univer sity, Nebraska university, Barnard col lege, Smith college,- Wisconsin univer sity, Oberlin college, Vassar college, Mount Holyoke college and Wellesley. One hundred and thirteen institutions furnished students, against seventy Beven the year before. . In the classes the special increase? were in the departments of Greek, Latin. English, German, French, Italian, phil osophy, political economy, history, the fine arts, mathematics, astronomy, chem istry, botany, physicial geography and geology. . The degree of bachelor of arts, or rather the degree certificate, was conferred upon ten; master of arts upon one; final honors in classics upon one; final honors in history upon one; second year honors in classics upon three, and the Sargent prize for the best translation of an ode of Horace, competed for by the students of the college as well, went to Miss Margaret Foster Herrick, of Boston. Boston Letter. Mrs. Gladstone. Sir Andrew Clark has often been heard to say that Mrs. Gladstone is quite as much entiUed to the name of the Grawl Old Woman as her evergreen husband is to that of the Grand Old Man. On Jan. 12 last Mrs. Gladstone's eightieth birth day came round,- and she passed th morning in writing letters to her friends in England, a task which she accom plished without wearing glasses of any kind as aids to her sight. In fact, she has never yet known what it is to need spectacles, and yet her eyes are as bright as those of a young woman. Every morning passed by Mr. and Mrs. Gladstone at Hawarden sees them both . at church, nearly three-quarters of a mile away from the castle. Mrs. Glad stone goes thither and back in her lit'"e rjonv carriage, which she drives herself. It is said that Mr. Gladstone does not know what it is to have a, headache or I I to suffer from cold feet. London Tele- graph. tome of the Carious Title Selected by , American Craft Owner. People who are called upon to name ves sels sometimes have strange ideas as to the fitness of things, and the list of mer chant vessels sailing or floating or being pushed of dragged along under the Amer ican flag shows how affection, gratitude, political preference, imagination and hu mor are all used to furnish names for sail ing craft. System is adhered to onlj by regularly established lines, and by only few of them, even the big steamers of the American line, the New York and Paris,' having been named before they hoisted the stars and stripes and "City of" being dropped when that interesting ceremony took place. The largest list of strictly American vessels where a system is follow ed is in the case of the Southern Pacific fleet, running between this city and New Orleans, the names of the steamers all be ginning with the Spanish "El," while the Ocean Steamship company, running to Savannah, called upon cities and rivers of Georgia for names for its vessefs. While the comparatively small number of steamers flying the American flag pre cludes any great latitude in nonemclature, the sailing fleet makes up for the deficien cy, with room to spare, and with that part of the nation's commercial marine the name finder had a good time, judging by the results cf bis efforts. A Texas man, apparently doubting whether he was or not, asks the question by naming bis lit tle five ton schooner Am I, while some one in Noank, Conn., drew on the Pequod tongue and named bis little two master Aquopimoquk. A man in Westerly, R. I., bad a pain and recorded it by calling his sloop Backache, while Chief Justice C. P., Daly is the name of a sloop hailing from Sag Harbor. Norfolk county, Va., recalls other days in New York by calling a sloop the Helen Josephine Mansfield, but who Filomina Ciccaluga, who has a schooner named after her, may be is probably known only to the man who wrecked a pretty Italian name when he christened a Cow Bay(N. Y.) schooner the Gully Elma. Chincoteague, Va., has a man who is probably an agnostio, as his lack of knowl edge is blazoned on his schooner's stern, which bears the name and information, I Don't Know. Port Huron, Mich., has a name which it is well to recall when a collar button is lost. It is on an 18 ton schooner called the Go Look. George W. Childs has 50 tons of shipping named fitt er him, George B. McClellan was good enough for four vessels aggregating less than 150 tons, the Little John Trott floats around Crisfield, Md.i the Oval Agitator bails from Chicago, while the Mississippi river at New Orleans floats a lighter call ed the Puddicinedda Citrolu. , , Wellfleet, Mass., rejoices in a sloop which is known as the O They Know ,Me, and the other end of the country has, at Port Townsend, Wash., a man who had a narrow escape and celebrated it by nam ing his sloop He Never Touched Me. How near Deer Isle, Me., and Norfolk joined hands is shown by the Maine boat Nawi gawaw and the Virginian Nassawaddux. Names where Mary, either alone or in combination with other words, appears are borne by more than 500 United States sailing craft. ' . The mutineers of the Bounty are recall ed by the name Pitcairn, borne by a ves sel built, so the record says, at Benicia, Cal., but now hailing from Detroit. What Proof Glass is is probably known to the New Yorkers who own a sloop of that name. One of Cooper's works is recalled by the Baltimore schooner Wishtunwish, and a Michigan roan struck a combination of Petroleum V. Nasby and Josh Billings when be called his two master the X 10 U 8. New York Tribune. Hetty Green and the Forgers. It was once discovered in Chicago that forged deeds to property owned by Mrs. Hetty Green to the amount of $1,000,000 were in circulation. When the attempt of the schemers to raise money on the forged deeds brought the plot to light, Mrs. Green's attorney, Mr. Bisbee, set to work to protect her interests and bag the crooks. A trap wan set for the forgers, and the as sistance of the chief of police and his de tective bureau and of a big trust company was secured. It was necessary to consum mate some transfer or deal on the forger ies or obtain the forged document itself. Secrecy was the only hope of gaining proof of guilt, as the law; does not touch the holders, but only the makers of forged deeds. - " , . Attorney Bisbee was to delay filing a bill in chancery to quiet the title to the property nntil the thieves were caught. But the minute Mrs. Green, who was at Far Eockaway, beard of the arrangement she hurried to Chicago and hired another lawyer to file the necessary bill. She had a stormy interview with Mr. Bisbee, in which she declared that she bad not the slightest interest in bringing the forgers to justice, and that he should have known better than to take any chances. . , "You look after my interests, Bisbee," she said sharply, "and keep the titles to my property clear. That's what I pay you for. Let the police catch their own thieves." New York World. ( Railroad Crockery. .. ' " There is a tradition among the Hudson River railroad folk that the dwellers along the tracks north and south of Poughkeep sie keep themselves in crockery from the cups, saucers, plates and tumblers fired from the car windows. ' Travelers snatch ing a hasty luncheon at the restaurant in the station levy on such utensils to carry food to companions unable to get out, and the trains move off often before the cup or plate is released from duty. , As a deposit has been paid largely in excess of the value of the article, and as most passengers have no desire to preserve this crockery merely as bric-a-brac, it having no other civi lized use outside the railroad restaurant, the car window usually offers a prompt and easy solution of its disposition. And these literal wrecks of time, built to stand more than mere pitching from a flying express, rest by the roadside to be garnered by the track gleaners of the neigh borhood. New York Times. ,"Buck Fever." Adirondack - Guide Hear them dogs? Jest you rest your barrel on that log. In a minute you'll see 'em break into the clearin. . ... .....--. Young City Sport (40 seconds later, as buck springs into sights-There hecomesl There he comes! Oh, there he goes! There bo goesl Guide Did yer think be was goin to camp here over night? Piok up your gun! Boston Traveller. Explanatory. "Jim, wot is steam anyhow?" x "It's sort o' waporous sweat wot the millions of hanimalcula wot's in the wa ter throws off In their hanguish at beln scalded to death!" "Wot a gilly lam! I might ha' knowed as much." Life. List of Fraudulent Concerns Whpie Drawings Never Take Place. A Chicago daily publishes the follow ing list of swindling lottery concerns who are general advertisers.' It will be noted that these bogus lotteries use names similar to those of legitimate concerns: . The Kansas State and the Little Lou isiana run by J. F. Brady, alias M. Ot tens & Co. A fraudulent drawing is employed in the Kansas State, and if a ticket drawing a prize is sold in the Lit tle Louisiana, payment is refused. The Santo Domingo Loan and Trust Company. The Louisiana Loan and Trust Co. The Brazilian lottery. The Royal Havana. The Louisiana of Kansas City. The Louisiana Grand of New Orleans. The Matanzas lottery. The Original Loan Association of Illi nois. ; The Eoyal Havana Guarantee Loan Company of Havana, Cuba. The Original Louisiana Lottery Com pany of Kansas City (Gale & Co.) The Empire State Lottery Co. .. ' The Cuban Lottery Company of Ma tanzas, Cuba. The Mexican Lottery Co. (Garcio & Co.) : The Original Lottery of Vera Cruz. The Pan-American Lottery Co. The Little Lottery de la Beueficencia Publica of Guaymas, Mexico. Publish er' Commercial Union. Panama hats are practically the only ones used in the tropics by white men. They are made by hand from the fiber of the leaf of the screw pine, which grows in Ecuador and the neighboring states. Two million four thousand of these bats are sent out annually from Panama, valued at from 1 to 20 each. When Colonel Shepard, proprietor of the New York Mail and Express, died, he left a condition in his will that the paper should not be sold except under the agree ment that there be no Sunday edition, and William Walter Phelps bought it with that understanding. A Possible Solution. , Robbie (at the museum) Mamma, that littledwarf was never washed right, was he? Mamma Why, dear? ; Robbie Well, isn't that what made him shrink so awfnljy r Chicago Inter Ocean. CROSSING THE ATLANTIC Usually Involve seasickness. When the waves play pitch and toss with you, strong indeed must be the stomach that can stand it without revolting. Tourists, commercial travelers, yachtsmen, mariners, all testify that Hostetter's Stomach Bitters is the best remedy lor the nau sea experienced in rough weather on the water. Nervous and weakly travelers by land of'en suf fer from so nettling akin to this, and find in the Bitters Us surest remedy. No disorder of the stomach, liver or bowels is so obstinate that it may not be overcome by the prompt and thor ough remedy. Equally eflicacious is it forcnills and fever, kidney and rheumatic trouble and nervousness. Emigrants to the frontier should provide themselves with this fine medicinal safeguard against the effects of vifissitudes of climate, hardship, ex) osure and fatigue. Bacon They say Mrs. Shrew's mind la all gone.- Egbert I'm not surprised. . She used to give her husband a piece of it every day. A cough,- cold or sore throat requires immediate attention, as neglect results in some incurable lung disease or chronic throat trouble. "Brown't Bronchial Tro che " will invariably give relief. Guard yourself lor summer malaria, tired feeling, by using now Oregon Blood Purifier. , Use Knameline Stove Polish ; no dust no smell. Tbt Gebmba for breakfast. CONSUMPTION is not inherited. It develops only when lungs are weak and the system run down. Scott's Emulsion the cream of Cod-liver Oil, often cures Consumption in . its early stages and always prevents it. Coughing is stopped, Lungs are strength ened and the system built .up. . Physicians, the world over, endorse it. . Don't be deceived by Substitutes! Prepared by Soott & Bowne, N. Y. All Druggists. It is sold on a sruarantee by ail drug gists. It oures Incipient Consumption an1 ia the best Comth and Croup Cure. Burst!! ' That frequently occurs with poor , fes Belting and Hose, but NOT with MONARCH or RED fcTKIP Belt tag, or Maltese Cross, Ridgewood or Wallabont Steam and Water Hose, livery length guaranteed. Ask your dealer for these supe- , rior brands. ,- 11 ' ' ' Gutta Percha and Rubber Mfg. Co., Established 1855. Portland, Or. "WHERE DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES." . GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OF Oil Dm ASTnRI. OR. -I can state with pleasure that bv the use of MOORE'S RBVEALED llll llr II REMEDY myhu hand was relieved from an old case of RHEUMATISM and mv IU u LU youneent bov cured antlrelvwof INFLAMMATORY Rhxiimitiw rhAn ih. wi doctor I could get did him no good. . Yours in ulillbf ae, San Mateo Co., Cal., Is a nrst-olass home school for boys, with beautiful sur roundings. The best of care, superior In struction. Prepares boys for any university or for business. Fall term commences Aug. 8. Catalogue and all particulars can be had by addressing Ira G. Uoitt, Ph. D., Master (Ex-State Supt. Public Instruction). . James Wormley, son of the Washington hotel keeper, recently found stowed away In a closet a coffee wood cane, highly pol ished, engraved upon the head of which was this inscription, "Hon. Charles Sum ner, from a citizen of Liberia." The stick had in turn been presented to Mr. Wormley. DO NOT BE DECEIVED. Persons with weak lungs those who are constantly catching cold should wear an Allcock's Pobous Plasteb over the chest and another between the shoulder-blades during cold weather. Eemember they al ways strengthen and never weaken the Sart to which they are applied. Do not be eceived by imagining any other plaster like them. Insist always on having All cock's, the only reliable plaster ever pro duced. Brandekth's Pills will purify the blood. She Why don't you propose to some nice girl? He I've done that twelve times already. DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED By local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portiou of tiie ear. There Is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness Is caused by an in flamed condition of the mucous lining of the eii.txchian tube. When this tube gets Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hear ing, and wheu It is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out ol ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. ' We will give One Hundred Dollars for any rasa of deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hairs Catarrh Cure. Send for cir culars, tree. . J. tJJHJlUJil at Toledo, O. Sold by druggists; 75 cents. SLEEPLESSNESS, Nervous De bility, Nerv ous Exhaust tion, Neural gia, Paraly sis, Locomo tor Ataxia, Mnlnnnhnlift- and kindred ailments, whether resulting from over anxiety, overwork or study, or from unnatural habits or excesses, are treated as a specialty, with great success, by the Staff of Specialists attached to the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute at Buffalo, N. Y. Personal examinations not always necessary. Many cases are success fully treated at a distance. A OrPTTlf A ' A new and wonderfully ilD 1 HiViii. successful treatment has been discovered for Asthma and Hay Fever, which can be sent by Mail or Express. It is not simply a palliative but a radical cure. For pamphlets, question blanks, refer ences and particulars, in relation to any of the above mentioned diseases, address, with ten cents in stamps, World's Dispens ary Medical Association, 603 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. . - " ELY'S CREAM BALM Ia quickly absorbed. Cleanses the -Nasal Passages. Allays Pain and Inflammation. Heals tbe Sores. Protects the Membrane from Additional Oold. Kestores the Senses of Taste and Smell. CATARRH HAY-FEVEij HI A IT WILL CURE. COLD (N HEAD A particle is applied into each nostril, and is agreeable. ; Price 60 cents at Druggists or by mail. r.u utvuinciu, 66 Warren street, New York YOUNG YOU CAN MAKE MORE MONEY baling hay with a Challenge MAN Hay Press Than any other Kind of machinery. We sell the challenge ana an otner nrst-ciiNB nay presses. send tor catalogue. .J TKUMAH ftUU., ban lTranoigeo, Cal. a a f? EVERY OCCASION, Jj bread made with LfeCP ' . WEST Manufaetured by CLOSSET & DBVEKS, Port land, Oregon. FALCON Bee Supplies, The best on the market. We are Northwestern l . Agents. PORTLAND SEED CO., 171 Second Street, ' - Portland, Or. THE ERICKSON PATENT SQUIRREL Is sure death to Ground Squirrels, Pocket Gophers, Rabbits and all ani mals that burrow in tbecrround. Sim ple, safe aud certain. Price $3 per 100 bombs: boxed f or shinment. Samole cartridges, with directions for using, sentree on application r or saie Dy bihuilis HAi-cmm NATOR CO., Moscow, Idaho. . IS g the iti Dr. Williams' Indian Pile Ointment will cure Blind, Bleedin and Itch in PUbs. It absorbs the tumors, nllavn the itching at once, acts as a poul tice, srives InKtantTfilief. Ttr will- lams' Indian Pile Ointment is prepared lor Piles and Itchine of the nrtvato parts. Every bo is warranted. By drug Grists, bv mail on renplnt of nrinp. so nTa and $1.00 WILLIAMS MANUFACTURING CO., Proprietors, Cleveland, Ohio. gratitude, Mas. N. V. Steele. Sold ) tar Hmgjiit . Blood Poison Sy Ivy or live oak, caused infiBmmatioD, orun tioua and intense itching and bu.nlng on my Sarsa-' pariila leg. I decided to try Hood'a i Sarsaparilla. I have taken TT O . sii. "and" doisa ;wwvw have any poison symptoms. I have gained 12 pounds since taking Hood's' C. E. BoiIall. West Union, Minnesota. Get HOOD'3 Hood's Pills cure all .Liver Ills. Biliojsnefs. FRUIT PRESERVED! ; LABOR SAVED ! ; PRESERVES FRUIT , WITHOUT HEAT. , : Antifermentine PRESERVES ' Cider, Milk, Butter, Catsup, . Pickles, Etc , . And docs it SUCCESSFULLY by preventing fer mentation. The ue of ti U wonde f ul p est-rv-alive assures snccess in canning and preserving fruits and vegetables of all k uds. No MnULD on top of fruit. Saves time and labor, and Ui n every way a decided eucces?. ANTIFERMENTINE Is sold by all druggists and groc.rs, and Is guar-' anteed to.do what we say it will. : . SNKLli, HEITSHU & WOODABD, '."."' Portland, Or. HERCULES $ Engines CAS and GASOLINE NOTED FOR SIMPLICITY, STRENGTH, . ECONOMY -AND- SUPERIOR WORKMANSHIP In Every Detail. These engines are acknowledged by expert en gineers to be worthy of hiehest commendation ior simplicity, nign-grafle mnterinl and superior workmanship. They develop the full iictunl horse power, and run without an Electric -park Battery j the system of ignition is simple, inex pensive and reliable. . ( For pumping outfits for irrigating pu'powa no better engine can be found on the Pacfllo Coast. For hoisting outfits for mines they have met wiih highest approval. , For intermittent power" their ceonomv is un. questioned. . t "D3TI0PMY am ' MANUFACTURED BT PALMER & KEY TYPE FOUNDRY, 405-407 Sansome Street, San Francisco, AND ,- Cor. Front and Alder Sts., Portland, Or.. Send for catalogue. ' N. P. N. U. No. 6518. F. N. TT. No. 62&. Consumptive and people who hare weak lungs or Asth ma, ebon kl use Piso'sCure for Consumption. It has enred then Bands. It has not injur ed one. It ts not baa to take It ts the best cough syrup. eoia everywnere. KoCt rib Antifermentme EPQfflES'". sjp?