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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1896)
n'Bl-. uast V- Absolutely Pure YOU. The chief want In life is somebody who shall make us do the beat we can. Emerson, A flash I You came into my life, And, lo, adown the years, . Rainbows of promise Btretohed acrosi The sky grown gray with tears ; By day you wero my sun of gold, V By night, my silver moon, I could not from the Father's hands . Have asked a greater boon. Life's turbid stream grew calm and olear, The cold winds sank to rest. Hand clasped with you, no bitter pain Found dwelling in my breast ; I did not dread life's care and toil. Your love dispelled all gloom. And now on graves of buried hopes The sweetest violets bloom. My every breath and every thought Were pure because of you, I had not dreamed that heaven could be So close to mortal view ; My hands and feet were swift to do The good that near them lay, And in my heart throughout the year The joy bird sang each day. A flash! You passed out of my life ' v No, not Your spirit still Is sun and moon and guiding star Through every cloud and ill ; As down the rainbowed years I go You still are at my side, And some day I shall stand with you Among the glorified. Clarence Urmey in Youth's Companion. ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAW. General Harrison Advocates Town Meet ings Once or Twice a Year. Ex-President Harrison, in a series of articles on "This Country of Ours" in The Ladies' Home Journal, writes vig orously of the great necessity of the peo' pie insisting upon the strict enforcement of the laws. Directly upon this point he says: "We need general assemblies of - the people in the smaller civil subdivi sions, to be held regularly once or twice a year, town meetings in which two questions only shall be considered: First,' are the public officers faithfully and honestly transacting the public bust ness'f Second, are the laws not this law nor that, but all laws enforced and obeyed? All questions of law reform should be exoluded, left to parties or so cieties organized to promote them. The enforcement of the law, whether we op posed or aided the making of it ; the strict accountability of publio officers, whether we opposed or aided their elec tion, should be the objects and the lim , its of these meetings. There should be no distinction of persons. "Our law and order movements are too apt to be confined to what we, not too accurately, call influential people. Every man and woman ought to have a chance to choose his side, without re gard to station or wealth or race or col or. There will be none too many. In some such movements it has seemed to me that many have been assigned to the wrong side who would have chosen the right. " There is danger that such may accept the place they would not have chosen. Can any working plan be de vised to maintain from day to day an effective watchful interest among the. body of our citizens' in the enforcement of the laws, and in a clean, honest, ad ministration of publio Naffairs shiall and great? Or are wo to accept the hu miliating conclusion that bad things cannot . be made good, or evew better, until they come to be persistently and utterly bad; or still worse, that when the river or popular inajgoation lias cleaned the stablest is only to leave us without a supply of water for daily sani tation?" ; He Knows War. There is 'one soldier by profession who wants peace. General Lord Wolseley, commander in chief of the British forces, has exclaimed, "God forbid that there should be war. " Milwaukee Sen tinel. KNOWLEDGE rtrinp-s comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when 1-L'liily used. The many, who live bet i.t limn others and enjoy life more, with 1 -s -expenditure, by more promptly mingling the wo,ld's best products to Uie nneila of physical being, will attest Mn"i value "to health of the pure liquid '.nxative priaciples embraced, in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid neys, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in 50c ana $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will Jiot accept any substitute if offered. - Pitt at Flay, - Mr. Pitt liked practical fun and used to riot in it with Lady Hester, Charles and James Stanhope and myself. Once we were resolved to blacken his face with burned cork, which he most stren uously resisted. At the beginning of the fray a servant announced that Lords Castlereagh and Liverpool desired to see him on business. "Let them wait in the other room," was the answer, and the great minister instantly turned to the battle, catching up a cushion and bela boring us with it in glorious fun. We were, however, too many and strong for him, and after ten minutes' fight cot him down and were daubing bis face when he said : "Stop 1 . This will do. I could easily beat you all, but we must not keep those grandees waiting any longer." His defeat was, however, palpable, ind we were obliged to get a towel and basin of water and wash him clean be fore he could receive the grandees. Being thus put in order, the basin was hidden, and the two lords were ush ered in. Then a new phase of Mr. Pitt's manner appeared. Lord Liverpool's as pect is well known melancholy, bend ing, nervous. Lord Castlereagh was a model of quiet grace and strength. What was my surprise to see them both bend ing like . spaniels on approaching the man we had just been maltreating with such successful insolence of fun I But Mr. Pitt's instant change of manner and look entirely fixed , my attention. His tall, ungainly, bony figure seemed to grow to the ceiling ; his head was thrown back, his eyes as if reading the heavens and totally regardless of the bending fig ures near him. "Memoirs of Lady Hes ter Stanhope." Ore Deposits. Ingenious theories have from time to time been advanced by scientists relat ing to ore deposits the cause, time, manner,' etc. and among the most re cent and able of these Professor Le Conte may well be ranked. His conclu sion is that such deposits, using the term in its widest sense, may take place from many kinds of waters, but espe cially from alkaline solutions, these be ing the natural solvents of metallio sul phides, and the latter are usually the original form of such deposits. They may take place from waters at any tem perature, and pressure, but mainly from those at high temperature and under heavy pressure, because, on account of their great solvent power, such waters are heavily freighted with metals, and the depositing waters may be moving in any direction that is, may be up com ing, horizontally moving, or even some times down 1 going, but mainly up com ing, because, by losing heat and pressure at every step, such waters are sure to deposit abundantly. Furthermore, Pro fessor Le Conte says that deposits may take place in any kind of waterways, suob as open fissures, incipient fissures, joints, cracks and even in porous sand stone, but especially in large open fis sures, the latter being the main high ways ' of ascending waters from the greatest depths. Deposits may also be found in many regions and in many kinds of rocks, but mainly in mountain regions and igneous rocks. Took the Wrong; Antidote. A man was arraigned before Justice Richardson on a charge of disorderly conduct. - He was found intoxicated on Clark street. ' The prisoner told the court he was not in the habit of getting drunk and declared on this occasion he was ex cusable. "Your honor," said the prisoner, "I got home late last night, and before starting to bed I went to my medicine cabinet to get a dose of cough sirup. ' I thought I knew just where the bottle Btood, and that I could get it in the dark. I made a mistake and drank a big swig of some strange mixture. I thought I was poisoned, and rushing down to the drug store with the bottle still, in my hand I asked the clerk for an anti dote. He swelled what was left in the bottle, and then says he: 'My friend, all the antidote you need is to swallow a comb and brush. That stun! is hail vigor. ' "Judge, I just felt so ashamed of my self that I started drinking. " t He was discharged. Chicago Inter Ocean. A Lincoln Letter. George Kluetsoh, editor of the Lin coln .(Neb. )Freie Presse, has in his pos session in the handwriting of Abraham Lincoln, written in 1859, an interesting letter. It was written to T. J. Pickett, at one time editor of the Republican pa per in Rock Island, Ills., who has given it to Mr. Kluetsch. It reads as follows : Springfield, Ills., April 16, 1868. T. J. Pickett, Esq. : MT Dear 8i Yours of the 18th is Just re ceived. My engagements are suoh that I can not, at any very early day, visit Bock Island to deliver a lecture or for any other object. As to the other matter you kindly mention, I must, in candor, say I do not consider myself fit for the presidency. I certainly am flattered and gratified that some partial friends think of me in that connection, but I really think it best for our cause that no concerted effort such as you suggest should be made.' Let this be considered confidential. Yours very truly, A. LINCOLN. Mme. Mara, the noted songstress, had dark, irregular features, but with such a play of expression when she sang that they seemed to glow. ' She did not at Qrst appearance on the stage favorably Impress an audience, on account of her lameness, but when she began to sing everything else was forgotten. A MYSTERY. Borne only know good fortune, some ill luck, Though equal they in tiulent, taot and pluck. Say not that all on the same footing start , And that by voluntary act they part, For I have seen it in a hundred cases, In various stations and with various races. Borne without effort smoothly, grandly rise. As sparks fly upward, mounting to the skies; Prosperity attends whate'er they touch And all with them is Joy, or seemeth such, While others, bright their intellectual eyes. Prudent and careful, energetic, wise, Their heads as clear as yonder water brook, Their sturdy hearts misfortune never shook, Yet a dark shadow hovered ever near, Unseen, unheard, intangible, severe, Frustrating their best plans and well laid schemes, . Tainting their lives and all .life's flowing streams. Though they be honest, truthful and Indeed All we may expect in man, they don't suc ceed. ' Why is It thus? Have some a sable line Which may be felt, but no one can define. Starting from orib of coward and the brave, Beaching through life and ending at the grave, While others have a star whose beaming light Shines on their pathway through the darkest night, Making the crooked straight, the doubtful clear, Leading them forward in their glad Career, With powers celestial but to cheer and bless Till they attain to ultimate success? I will not argue, we may not agree, Let others solve this wondrous mystery. Nebraska State Journal. The Maelstrom. From time out of memory up to with in the last 25 or 50 years, the geogra phers, the hydrographers and the com mon people alike believed in the exist ence of an immense whirlpool in the ocean off the coast of Norway. The English of the sixteenth and sev enteenth centuries thought it to be a subterranean abyss, penetrating the globe in such a manner as to communi cate with the ocean on the opposite side of the earth, and the ancients of most European countries had an idea that it was in some mysterious way connected with the waters of the gulf of Bothnia. According to the popular accounts pub lished and firmly believed down to the middle of the present century, the mael strom was the most startling and giaan tic of nature's curiosities. Its mighty whirling current, it was said, was pow erful enough to draw within its influ ence whatever approached within a dis tance of several miles of its vortex. Im mense trees, lumber rafts, bears, ships, whales, etc. , were drawn in as though they were straws and ground to pieces by the whirling, seething waters miles beneath the surface. What has become of this terror of the ocean? We never hear it mentioned nowadays, and the very existence of even a rough piece of sea in the region in which the maelstrom was formerly located is denied by the very best au thorities on ocean tides, currents, etc. Its existence was first questioned, I be lieve, by Bayard Taylor in a letter to the New York Tribune on Oct. 6, 1857. A few days before the letter was writ ten Taylor sailed over the spot where the whirl was generally located without noticing anything out of the ordinary. During the same year (1857) W. M. Williams, in a lecture on Norway, de livered at Birmingham, England, de clared that no such whirlpool had ever existed. St. Louis Republic She Was Frightened. The first railway ride is naturally a somewhat exciting experience. A corre spondent of the Chicago Times-Herald says that he was taking a trip through the hilly part of Alabama, where the road bed is intersected by trestles from 50 to 175 feet high, and from 50 yards to half a mile in length. At a small station in the pine woods an old gentleman, carry ing a carpet bag . and accompanied by an old lady, evidently his wife, boarded the train. They took the first seat, the old lady sitting next the window. It was appar ent from their expression of curiosity mingled with anxiety that this. was their first railway journey. The train started, and they both looked eagerly from the window, and as the speed increased a look of keenest anxiety gathered on the old lady's face. She grasped her hus band's arm and said in a voice plainly audible to those about her : "Joel, we be goin awful quick. I know 'tain't safe. " A few minutes later the train ran onto one of the long trestles. With a little shriek of terror the old lady sprang to her feet and seized, the back of the seat in front of her. There she stood, trembling from head to foot, staring from the window. Meantime the train sped onward and was soon once more on solid earth. The old lady was quick to note the change. Her features relaxed, and she sank into her seat with the fervent exclamation : "Thank goodness, she's lit again I" ; An Exasperated Lawyer. "I've got a typewriter," began an ex asperated man. "She is very good at copying, spells better than usual and is, in some respects, more satisfactory than any I ever had. She is one of those women's women, however, who always have a string of females running after them at all hours. I spoke to her about it, and she looked at me with a hurt expression and said, 'Oh, Mr. L , how unfair !' So I stood it awhile lon ger and said something else. She gave me a glad-I'm-not-your-wife look and sniff ed a little. Still the troop comes and goes. Why doesn't the new woman learn that business hours mean business hours and do the social act outside? I would gladly give her an hour every now and then rather than to go into my own office and find a set of idle girls. I can face a jury without flinching, but I wilt like a gourd vine before the senseless stares and giggles of a lot of half grown girls. " Philadelphia Times. Another Matter. Clara I hear your father has forbid den Mr. Higgins calling on you. , Cora No ; you are mistaken. "Did he not tell him last night never to darken his parlor again?"' i He did, but that referred to his turning down the lamp. " Yonkers (Statesman. NEVER TOO LATE PREMATURE OLD AGE MADE IMPOSSIBLE. ; ? r . ' - ' . A Life-Time Habit Easily Broken It's Easy if You Only Take the Bight Boad. From The Press, Everett, Pa. A number of our great and most inveterate tobacoo smokers and che were have quit the use of the filthy weed. The re form was started by Aaron Gorber who was a con firmed slave for many years to the use of tobac co.' He tried the use of No-To-Bac and to his great surprise and de light, it oured him. Hon. 0. W. Ashcom, who had been Bmoking for sixty years, tried No-To-Bac and it oured him. Col. r-amuel Stomener, who would eat up tobacco like a cow eats hay. tried this wonderful remedy, and even Samuel, after his years of slavery, lost the desire. ' J. O. Cobler, Leasing Evans, Prank Dell, Geo. B. May, C. O. Skillington, HanBon Kobinett, Frank Hershberger, John Shinn and others have since tried No-To-Bac, and in every case they report, not only a cure of the tobacoo habit, but a wonderful im provement in their general physical an mental condition, all of which goes to show that the use of tobacoo had been injurious to them in more ways than one. All of the above gentlemen are so welJ pleased with the results that we do not hesitate to join them in recommending it to suffering humanity, as- we have thor oughly investigated and are satisfied that No-To-Bac does the work well and ts a. boon to mankind. ' The cost is trifling, and three boxes are guaranteed to cure any case, or money re funded. One box in every instance stated above effected a cure,- with one or two ex ceptions. No-To-Bac has a wonderful sale upon its merits alone, and can be secured at almost any drug in this country or Can ada. It is made by the Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago, Montreal or New York. Our readers are warned against purchasing im itations, as there are several on the mar ket. Be sure you get No-To-Bac. Then you're all right. . "Jones is an awful chump. He reminds me of the wiie men of the Noacnlan era." -What, that idiot? Why, he doeen't know enough to. go In when it rains." "Well, neither did-iney.?'. CONSUMPTION CUMD AN ABSOLUTE REMEDY FOR ALL PULMONARY COMPLAINTS." T. A. Sloeum Offers to Bend Two Bot tles Free of His Remedy to Cure Consumption and All Lung Troubles An Elixir of Life. " ' . . i Nothing could be fairer, more philan thropic or carry more joy in its wake than the offer of T. A. Blocum, M. O., ot 183 Pearl street. New York. Perfectly confi dent that he has an absolute remedy for the cure ot consumption and all pulmon ary complaints, he offers through this pa per to send two bottles free to any reader who is suffering from lung trouble or con sumption, also loss of flesh and all condi tions of wasting. He invites those desir ous of obtaining this remedy to send their express and postofnee address, and to re ceive in return the two bottles free, which will arrest the approach ot death. Already this remedy, by its timely use, has per manently cured thousands of oases which were given up, and death was looked upon as an early visitor. - Knowing his remedy as he does, and be ing so proof-positive of its beneficent re sults, Dr. Slocum considers it his religious -duty, a duty which he owes to humanity, to donate his infallible remedy where it will assault the enemy in its citadel, and, by its inherent potency, stay the current of dissolution, bringing joy to homes over which the shadow ot the grave has been gradually growing more strongly defined, causing fond hearts to grieve. The cheap ness of the remedy offered freely apart from its inherent strength, is enough to -commend it, and more so is the perject -confidence of the great chemist making the offer, who holds out life to those already becoming emaciated, and says: "Be cured." The invitation is certainly worthy of the consideration - oi the afflicted, who, for years, have been taking nauseous nostrums without effect ; who have ostracised them selves from home and friends to lire in more salubrious climes, where the atmos phere is more congenial to weakened lungs, and who have fought against death with all the weapons and strength in their hands. There will be no mistake in send ing for these free bottles the mistake will be in passing the invitation by. ott'ITt'q,.! Agents to handle the latest forbidden Slot Machines and pays better. Every eaioon ana uipar more wants one. exclusive territory. BIG MONEY. Sample game com plete, 76c. Particulars 2c. Forester Novelty Co., 130 Bansome St., Sen Francisco. , FITS. AU fits stopped tree by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Bestorer. No fits aftei the first day's nse. Marvelous cures. Treatise and (2.00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline, 81 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa. Tbt Gkbmxa lor breakfast. - AN ELECTRO MM e SENT POSTPAID For ioo Coupons 1 and $1.00 OR, You will find one coupon inside each 2 ounce bag, and two coupons inside each 4 ounce bag of ; . Blackvell's Genuine Durham Tobacco. - . " :' The watch is Eleotro Gold Plated, a good time keeper, quick tern wind, and stem set. It is offered far below its Talue to induce you to try this Tobaoco. Send coupons with name and address to BLACKWELL'S DURHAM TOBACCO CO., Durham. M. C. Buy a bag of this Celebrated Smoking Tobacco and read the . . Coupon which gives a list of other premiums and how -to get them. 2 CENT STAMPS ACCEPTED. 1 teeseei DON'T BK TOO LATE FOB THE BTKAMER, Ana don't omit when you are packing up your effects preparatory for the voyage, to include amoug them a supply of Bostetter's Stomach Bitters, the great remedy for sea sickness. Travelers for pleasure or business seeking for eign climes, or who locomote by steamboat or train, besides yachtmen and mariners, testify to the remedial and preventive efficacy of the Bit ters, which is incomparable for Hansen, head ache, dyspepsia, biliousness, rheumatism, nerv ous and kidney trouble. ' ,-I must go tell her that her dog is dead." "Don't tell it abruptly." "No; I'll begin by saying it is her husband." ONE THING L.KFT OUT. In acrobatic, gymnastio and athletic training one thing seems to be entirely left out; a thing which, if practiced, might prevent many serious consequences and thereby become the useful part of training. How to fall down easily and gracefully, with the least amount of resistance by the muscles, might be made a tine art. Why not adopt a slide and practice feet-slipping with these objects in view. Everybody knows that at this season the worst injur ies result from not knowing how to fall. ' There seems to be nearly always a compli cation of injury in every fall, such as a sprain, bruise and often broken limbs. It is true that for all these mishaps, either separately or m complicated form, and es pecially for sprains. St Jacobs Oil is the best known ana surest cure. Speaking of sprains, the very worst often result from falls, because tbe muscles sustain such vio lent twists from resistance. But whether there is practice of the art or not, the great remedy for pain is sure to cure. lOu ItUWAKB UOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cur in all its stages and that is Catarrh. Hairs Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly -upon the blood and muoous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hun dred Dollirs for any case that it fails to cure. Send lor list of Testimonials. Address. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. fW8old by Druggists, 75o. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Insist On a good (the best) skirt bind ing as strenuously as on a good cloth for the skirt. , Ask for (and take no other) the ft ; . Bias Velveteen Skirt Binding. If your dealer will not supply you we - . : Will. Send for samples, showing labels and materials, to the S. H. & M. Co., P. O. Boi 699, New York City. If you want a sure relief for limbs, use an Bear in Mind Not one tations is as good as the genuine. it the name of Woman's Friend. It is ful in relieving the backaches, headaches which burden and shorten a woman's women testify for it. It will give health and strength and make life a pleasure. For sale by all druggists. BLUMAUER-FBANK DRUG CO., Portland, Agents. flour' ' .' .'..' BJ ft Q marine . . . WARE-HOUSE THE ORIGINAL AND GENUINE. The Ladles., uk Draultt for CMthtatvr' Bnalith boxes sealed with bine ribbon. Ttz nn AU pllli in paste board boxes, pink wrapper, 4c in iMinpa for particular;, tmintonifJi, 10.000 Testimonials. CHICHUSTKB CHEMICAL CO. .. .. .. ..r- Chichester'8 English, Red Cross Diamond Brand C "IT IS IGNORANCE THAT WASTES EFFORT." TRAINED SERVANTS USE SAPOLIO. (For 2 Coupons ( and $2.00. o IT D ID O Is the season for purifying, cleansing, and'. renewing. The accumulations of waste everywhere are being removed. Winters icy grasp is broken and on all sides are indications of nature's returning . life, 1 renewed force and awakening power. pring Is the time for purifying the blood, cleansing the system and renewing the physical powers.: Owing to close con finement,, diminished perspiration and other causes, in the winter, impurities have not passed out of the system as they should but have accumulated in the blopd. riing Is therefore the best time to take Hood's Sarsaparilla, because the system is now most in need of medicine. That Hood's Sarsaparilla is the best blood purifier and Spring medicine is proved by its wonder ful cuies. A course of Hood's Sarsaparilla now may prevent great suffering later on. '.Inloodl' Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists; L Prepared only by C. L Hood & Co., Loweli.Mass, U-k-,-l'o D:ilo cure Liver Ills: easv to o i nio take.easv toorwrau- ofin. mr. A. H. (Jransby, of No, 168 Kerr St Memphis, Term., writes that his wife had can cer which had eaten two large holes in her breast, and Which the best physicians of the surrounding country treated, and pronounced in curable. Jtier grandmother and aunt had died- of and when told this, the most I eminent specialists of New York, under whose treat 1 ment she was placed, de clared her case was hopeless. All treatment having la'led, ehe was given up to die S. S. 8. was recommended, and astonishing as it may seem, a few potties curea her sound and well. Our treatise on this dis ease will be Bent free to any address. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta. Ca OPIUM Morphine Habit Cured In 10 to 20- days. No nay till cured. DR. J. STEPHENS, Lebanon. Ohio. pains in the back, side, chest, or Porous & Plaster of the host of counterfeits and imi The very remarkable and certain relief given woman by MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY has given uniformly success and weakness life. Thousands of MACHINERY Sr BY CORRE8PNDlNQ WITH THE WILLAMETTE IRON WORKS Portland, or econ only Safe, Sure, and reliable Pill tor sal. Diamond Brand id UaH and Gold mAt&niA nth UmA. RfWj SuhuttHnnM amA iitntnma are danseroaa coDtitorfoltM. At Draggista, or tend ml and "Relief for Ladle," in Utter, by retnra MaLL ru,u "J ii ijoeai uruggm. B1 Madiswa Fill LADKLPHIA PA. ------- r- . 1 for them NstA ? f I get them, plant ltiWthem. They are the J f standard seeds every where; sown by the iareest nlanters in the world. Whether you nlant fiO sauare fent ' Of ground or 60 acres, yon should oave ferry's seea Annual ror 'o. ioa most vaiuaDie dook lor iar- mers and gardeners ever given away, jviaiiea iree. D. M. PERRY & CO., Detroit, OUcb. THE AERMOTOR CO. floes half the wowa's windmill business, because It has reduced the cost of wlud power to 1.'6 what It was. a It has many branch uuuses, ana supplies its gooas ana repairs l yuur uuor. xt can ana aoes iurnisn S better article tor less money than others. It makes Pumping and Seared, Steel, Qalvanlzed-aftar-ComDleUon wlndmMlfi. Tlltlnir r u ?iwu Bietu -juwers, ieei buzz saw Frames. Steel Feed Cutters and Feed Grinders. On application It will name on Hi of these articles that It will furnish unttl January 1st at 13 the usual price. It also makes Tanks and Pumps of all kinds. Send for catalogue. Farter i 12th, KockwtU sss Fillmore Streets, ChKa. SlD Cancer ,- FOR CHILDREN TEETHING , For Kale brslllruenrUU S5 Ceata a bet-tle. .fnavsk N. P. N. U. No. 6418. F. N. U. No. 718-