THE ALASKA RUSH. tVeatern Roads Preparing to Ignore the Canadian Pacific. Chicago, Dec. 13. The Western roads have for some time been figuring earnestly on the business that is ex ; pected to set in in the late winter and ; the early spring toward Alaska. They have been doubtful twhether the pur chasers of transportation would wish Jto buy tickets through to Dawson City, br only to the ports on the coast, and today the roads took their first action bearing on the question of Alaska rates. They have decided to get out their rate ' sheets showing the rates to Alaska and will ignore entirely the claims of the Canadian Pacific for the differential on the business. , The rates of the Cana dian Pacific will not be shown on the ' frheet at all. In the days of the old Transconti nental Association, the Canadian Pa cific was allowed a differential of $5 on its Pacifio coast business, and it claims the same now, but the roads of the old association, and those of the Western Passenger Association, after the pro- - mulgation of the - supreme court deoi Bion regarding the formation of pools und associations, absolved them from . all further obligations to allow the Differentials of the Canadian Pacific. 'i.The latter road has never seen' the mat- " ter in that light and it wiH make a .fight that is very likely to demoralize , the rates to Alaska, and North Pacifio i(coas.t ports. '. ' ' FIGHT , ON "THE BORDER. . Three Mexican Guards and One Des perado Killed. Denver, Dec. 13. News is received of a desperate fight that occurred near the border of Arizona and old Mexioo. Three guards of the- Mexican servi6e and one desperado were killed. The ' latter was Franco Phallard, one of Black Jack's gang, and an outlaw from .Texas, whose two brothers were killed while members of Billy the Kid's gang. A few days ago the border guards learned of a raid that was designed by Black Jack to loot a town across the " river, "A start was made from Leander Springs, and the guards had no diffi culty in finding them. The two forces met face to face at a turn in the road.- There were eight outlaws against three o'ficers, but the latter opened the at ' taok with orders of "hands' up." Two of the outlaws turned their horses for the , hills,,, but Phallard dismounted, fire and; killed the three officers before he fell with a wound in his side which proved fatal. " Phallard is the last of the Sam Bass gang oi trainroDDers, wno cleaned out Custer City many years ago. , . HIS LAST HOPE GONE. The California Supreme Court Decides , f ' Against Durrant. San Francisco, Dec, 13. Lata this afternoon the supreme oourt dispelled the last -hope of W. H. T. Durrant, the murderer-of Blanohe Lamont and Min - fiie Williams,' by disposing in a sum mary manner of his two appeals. In a written opinion, from the pen of ' Chief Justice Beatty,, which is oon "', cur'red in by all but one of his col leagues, the court affirms the judgment of Judge Bahrs, in remanding the pris oner to San Quentin Until the time set for his execution, but reverses that sen- ; , tencirig Durrant to be hanged on Novem- bei 11; i and remands the case to the .superior-court, witn instructions to pro oeed aocording to law. , - in uue renmiur was oruereu issued forthwith and the court holds that ex ecution can only be stayed now by the .'issuance of a . certificate of probable ( cause, At only remarhs to resentence the "condemned murderer, which will prob ably be done tomorrow. Justice Garoutte alone dissented from this opinion, maintaining that Dur rani's appeals should have been dis- ' 'missed,' as the time required by law for their perfection had been allowed to V lapse,-.- - - BRAVE PORTLAND GIRL. ', ; . Rescued a Woman From a Burning , , -( i Victoria Lodging House. - '' Victoria, B. C, Dec. 13. Through the couraee and TjromDtitu.de of Lilv Baldwin, a Portland .girl, a life was saved here under sensational circum stances; yesterday evening. There had VtPAn an Tnlnsinrt nf cnnnlina in flio nil tent factory of Tryon & Co., and the .'entire premises were soon blazing. Oa "iihe upper floor was the American lodging-house, whose proprietress, Mrs. Fox, was ill in bed. In the confusion : 'She was forgotten until the Portland girl, a, lodger, remembered her, She ran upBtairs and carried ' down the landlady, who by that time was uncon scious from suffocation. Both escaped with slight burns, although their dan ger, was imminent. K' ' Rich Strike in Montana. Butte, Mont., Dec. 13. Reports from .the Lowland mining district are that a'rich strike of gold- and silver quartz has been made in the Ruby mine, arid that over a million dollars' worth of ore is in eight. The owners are taking out over $2,000 a day. The property was purchased last summer from Adolph Moudehauer, of San Fran cisoo, for $90,000, the principal . owner being M. E. Graves, a New York man. i ' New York, Deo. 13. The largest life insurance policy ever issued has been written 'in: this city, calling for $1,000, 000 insurance upon the life of George , W. Viariderbilt. The policy is what is . '&ovii as a 20-payment life oontract, 'and provides for a premium of $35,000 jrear. After Mr. Vanderbilt haspaid . that sum yearly for 20 years the" pay ments cease and the principal becomes due at his death.. The next largest ' ' polioy ever written is said to have' been 1 f65f 00,000 ($500,000), WEEKLY MARKET LETTER. Office of Downing, Hopkins & Co., Chicago Board of Trade Brokers, 711-714Chamber of Com merce Building, Portland, Oregon. Light speculation was the dominating factor in the wheat market last week. Its force was felt more keenly than at any time since prices left 64 cents five months ago. The ; bear ' element is working on the idea that all the bullish influences have been discounted by the advance in prices of 86 cents from the low point in the spring. Wheat that cleared last week was all bought a month or more ago, and prices were ad vanced at the time. Now that the stuff is moving out, the bulls think that prices should continue to go tip, because the stuff is being delivered to the buyers. The latter are not taking hold as freely, but export sales during the week were heavy. For three months the market has backed and filled around 90 cents for May, getting 5 cents above it recently, and has been L' 2 cents below it. The bears have been unable to maintain a break for more than a day or two below 90 cents. ' De cember sold 4. cents to 17 cents premium over May. The position of the bulls and their intention are as much of a puzzle as ever. They stand ready to pay 'for 5,000,000 bushels of wheat, and are very liable to get it be fore the first of the year. Elevator people, however, are not disposed to make any deliveries until navigation is closed, as they want to keep the wheat in their houses. TheLeiter party havd from 5,000,000 to 7,000,000 bushels bought. There are also scattered lines that will reaoh above 2,000,000 bushels held by parties outside of the pool. The claim is made that there is no shortage, except on the part of the ele vator people. The ' latter have been bringing wheat down from Duluth. It is a deal that no one except rioh men can afford to be in. The bulls claim that the wheat brought down from the Northwest by the elevator people has not shown any profit. If suoh is the case, it seems rather strange that two such shrewd business men as Armour and Weare should be so actively engaged in it. Government report gives crop of winter and spring wheat at 850,000,000 bushels. Visible supply of wheat de creased 101,000 bushels, and now totals 84,744 bushels. - . . Portland Market. Wheat "Walla Walla, 72 73c; Val ley and Bluestem, 76 76c per bushel. Four Best grades, $4.25; graham, $3.40; superfine, $2.25 per barrel. , Oats Choice white, 84 85c; choice gray, 82 33c per bushel. Barley Feed barley, $1920; brew ing, $20 per ton. Millstiffs Bran, $17 per ton; mid dlings, $21; shorts, $11. ' Hay Timothy, $12.5013; clover, $1011; California wheat, $10; do oat, $11; Oregon wild hay, $910 per ton. Eggs 18J25c per dozen. Butter Fancy creamery, 5055o; fair to good, 4045c; dairy, 8040c per roll. i Cheese Oregon, lljo; Young America, 12c; California, 910o per pound. . Poultry Chickens, mixed, $1.75 2.50 per doe'zn; broilers, $2.002.50; geese, $5. 50 6; ducks, $3. 00 4. 50 per dozen; turkeys, live, 10llc per pound. Potatoes Oregon Burbanks, 8545c per sack) sweets, $1.40 per cental. Onions Oregon, new, red, 90c; yel low, 80o per cental. Hops 814c per pound for new crop;, 1896 crop, 46o. Wool Valley, 14 16c per pound; Eastern Oregon, 712o; mohair, 20 22o per pound. - . Mutton Gross, best hheep, wethers and ewes, $3.00; dressed mutton, 5o; spring lambs, 5c per pounds. Hogs Gross, choice heavy, $4.00; lightand feeders, $3. 004.00; dressed, $4. 50 5. 00 per 100 pounds. , Beef Gross, top steers, $2. 75 3. 00; cows, $2.25; dressed beef, 45c per pound. Veal Large, 4 5o; small, 5 6o per pound. - Seattle Market. Butter Fancy native creamery, brick, 28c; ranch, 1618c. . Cheese Native Washington, 12c; California, 9o. Eggs Fresh ranch, 80 32c. Poultry Chickens, live, per pound, hens, 10c; spring chickens, $2.50 8 00; ducks, $3. 50 3. 75. ... Wheat Feed wheat, $22 per ton. Oats Choice, per ton, $1920. Corn Whole, $22; cracked, per ton, $22; feed meal, $22 per ton. ; Barley Rolled or ground, per ton, $22; whole, $22. -, ' Fresh Meats Choice dressed beef, steers, 6c; cows, 5c; mutton sheep, 7c; pork, 7c; veal, small, 7. ' Fresh Fish Halibut, 4 5c; salmon, 84c; salmon trout, 710o; flounders and sole, 8 4; ling cod, 4 5; rock cod, 5c; smelt, 2)4c. ; Fresh Fruit Apples, 50o$1.25 per box; peaches, 7580c; prunes, 8540c; pears, 75c $1 per box. San Francisco Market.' Wool Nevada 11 13c; Oregon, 12 14c; Northern 78o per pound. Hops 10 14c per pound. Millstnffs Middlings, $2022; Cal ifornia bran, $17.6018.00 per ton., Onions New red. 70 80c; do new silverskin, $1.401.60 per cental. Eggs Store, 28 28c; ranoh, 27 80c; Eastern, 1420; duck, 2025c per dozen. , . ' Cheese Fanoymild, new, 12c; fair to good, 7 8c per pound.. OREGON STATE NEWS. Brief Review of the "Week Throughout ', the State. Thirty-four marriage licenses were issued by the Marion county clerk in Novem ber. Fishermen on the Umpqua are ship ping sturgeon overland via Drain to Portland. Four panthers were killed near Marsh field last week. One measured 1 feet from tip to tip. . 1 Manager Dorwin increased the force at the Jewett mine and will hereafter run night and day shifts. Samuel Henry, a veteran of the oivil war, celebrated his 94th birthday an niversary at Jacksonville last week. It is estimated that over 20,000 boxes of apples have been shipped from the Coquille valley this season, and there are several carloads yet to be forwarded. The owners of the Oregon Bonanza mine contemplate running a blind tun nel, to begin on the Powell creek side of the mountain and extend westward a distance of 800 feet. Another shipment of Wallowa coun ty beef cattle was made from Elgin the latter part of last week by a Chioago dealer. He paid S4 cents for the steers weighed at Joseph. A lot of cattle were recently bought on Smith river, in Lane county, and driven to Harrisburg. ' The average weight of 16 of the band was estimated to be 1,750 pounds each. A three-foot ledge of bituminous coal has been found in the south end of Jackson county, as good as that pro duced in eastern states. Indications are that the vein is very extensive. The judgment in favor of the state of Oregon and against Baker county has been recorded in Baker City, and a tax levy will have to be made to raiso the amount of the judgment, $10,928.60. It was blowing a gale when the Chil kat crossed the Coos bay bar Monday, and two tremendous seas boarded the little steamer.' Her stern was stove in, and she is at North Bend, undergoing repairs. An old store building, a landmark, at Utter City, Coos county, collapsed during the recent storm. As many sur veys started from the old building as a corner, some trouble will be caused in running lines. It is a foregone conclusion that we will be treated to the operations of a first-class English mining company, in the Ashland district very soon, as one of the best and largest quartz mines is now being listed on the London mar ket.' . , - At the Clackamas hatchery about 1, 000,000 young fish have been turned out so far this season. There are now about 5,000,000 eggs in the troughs in all stages of hatching. The eggs were obtained from the Little White Salmon river station, in Washington. There was a heavy run of salmon in the Siuslaw this year, and at the Florence cannery 8,500 cases of canned salmon and 600 barrels of salmon were recently shipped to ; San Francisco. J Mr. Hurd says that 10,000 cases could have been put up had the market price justified. During the last two months one man has shipped from Brownsville, to out side markets, 1,150 turkeys, 650 chickens, 71 geese and 95 ducks, mak ing a total of about 15,000 pounds of poultry shipped by him alone. . There are several other poultry buyers in Brownsville, who have shipped a large amount also. . There have been shipped from Med ford station this season thus far about 40 carloads of apples, and there re mains to be shipped yet 20 carloads more of merchantable apples. This includes fruit hauled from the Apple gate and surrounding oOuntry. Two carloads of dried fruits of different varieties have been shipped eastward from that station, too, and about eight carloads more remain to be shipped. The Alabny Fruit Company has shipped tq Davenport, la., 600 boxes of Oregon winter apples. The company is also arranging to ship a carload of winter apples to Missouri. There is a good demand for Oregon apples in the East, but they must be salable. This oompany has dried 8,000 pounds of apples, which were not good keepers. It is also now arranging to carry out the experiment of drying vegetables for the Alaska trade. While workmen were excavating-, a ditoh in Elgin, at the interesection of Front and C. streets, last week, at&s depth of two feet or a little more they began to uncover human bones, and in a short time almost the entire skeleton was unearthed. : A few feet further oh they unearthed portions of another skeleton. From the shape of the skull found, the remains are undoubtedly those of Indians, buried long before the whites settled there, says the Elgin I Eeoorder. There has been received at Astoria a fish from the life-saving crew at Fort ' Canby that no one seems to recognize. Some pronounced it a devil fish, and ( others are certain it is an octopus. It , is about three feet long and of dark brown oolor. Its girth is probably 10 or 12 inches and from the tail to the , gills varies but little in size. The head is attached to the body withal sort of swivel, and the mouth is hid beneath a clump of tentacles about a , foot long. A Lake county man who left last ' June to assist in driving 8,000 head of sheep to Amadee, Cal., has returned. He says that the sheep were bought be fore shearing or lambing for $1.78 to $2 a head, and that Flanagan & Dunn, the purchasers, have made a little for tune on the speculation, as the culls of the band are worth $3 a head at Ama dee. He thinks their profit will be nearer 200 per cent than 100. They had a successful drive and spent 'the summer in the Sycan country, in Lake county. x Te Sflll the Ocean's Wave. A scheme to increase the efficiency of oil to still the waves of the ocean in a storm has been thought out by Wil Jiam Guthrie, of Chicago. His notion is based on the argument that if oil has a pacifying effect-when distributed on the water in the immediate neighbor hood of the ship in trouble, its effect would be magnified if the oil could be applied at a distance all about the ship, thus creating a calm cirole, in whioh the ship could ride in safety until the storm had spent its fury. His proposi tion is to shoot saturated sponges or cot ton from a pneumaMo gun, that being preferable to a powder gun, as there would be no danger of igniting the oil soaked sponge. Some people interested in shipping have been impressed with the idea and application is to be made to congress for an appropriation to test its efficiency. In the publication of the Berlin Academy of Sciences, Professor Roent gen has an article in which he confirms the observation of Dr. Brandes that it is possible to make the X-rays visible to the eye. ' ' KNOCKED OUT. , t It knocks out all calculations of attend ing to business in the right way for a day when we wake up in the morning sore and stiff. The disappointment lies in going to bed all right and waking up all wrong. I There is a short and sire way out of it. Go I to bed after a good rub with St. Jacobs Oil and you wake up all right; soreness and stiffness all gone. So sure is this, that men I much exposed in changeful weather keep a bottle of it orf the mantel for use at night to iake sure of going to work in good nx. I A floral curiosity is on exhibition in . the Temple Gardens, London. It is a I $5,000 orchid from Venezuela. It has a white flower which in shape resem bles a sea-gull with outspread wings. THE PUBSUIT OF HAPPINESS. When the Declaration of Independence as serted, man's right to this, it enunciated an Immortal truth. The bilious sufferer is on the road to happiness when he begins to take Hos tetter's Bitters, the most efficacious regulator of the liver in existence. -Equally reliable is it In chills and fever, constipation, dyspepsia, rheumatism, kidney trouble and nervousness. Use it regularly, and not at odd intervals. If you look at the map you will find that the mountain chains of the Old World lie east and west, while those of the New World lie north and south. AN OPEN LETTER TO MOTHERS.' We are asserting in the corts our right to the exclusive use of the word " CASTOR1A," and ' PITCHER'S CASTORIA," as our Trade Mark. I, Dr. Samuel Pitcher, of Hyannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of "PITCHER'SCASrORIA,' the same that has borne and does now bear the facsimile signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER on every wrapper. This is the original " PITCHER'S CASTORIA" which has been used in the homes Of the mothers of America for over thirty years. Look Carefully at the wrapper and see that it is the kind you have always bought, and has the signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER on the wrapper. No one has authority from me to use my name except The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is President. . March S, 1S97. SAMUEL PITCHER-, M.D, Benjamin Bissell, who lives near Ballston Spa., N. Y., says he has voted for eighteen presidential candidates, not one of whom waseleoted. HOMK PRODUCTS AND PUBS FOOD. All Eastern Syrup, so-called, usually very light colored and of heavy body, is made from rlucose. "Tea Harden Drins" if made from bugar Cane and is strictly pure. It is for sale by first-class grocers, in cans only. Manufac tured by the Pacific Coast Syrup Co. All gen uine "Tea Gavdfn Vrivs" have the manufac turer's name lithograp'hed on every can. Piso's Cure for Consumption is the only lough medicine used in my house. I). C. Albright, Mirriinburg, Pa., Dec. 11, '95. try Schilling's Best tea and baking powder. Diamonds have been discovered, in rare instances, in the -meteoiic stones which have fallen to the earth. "King Solomon's Treasure," only Aphrodisiacal Tonic known. (See Dictionary.) 15.00 a box, 3 weeks' treatment. Mason Chemical Co., P. O. Box ?47, Philadelphia, Pa. . In every mile of railway there are even feet four inches not covered by the rails, the space left for expansion. The number of stars pictured on the latest English and German photo graphic atlasses is about 68,000,000. There are no rats,' mice or cats in Santa Fe, N. M. The air there is too rarifled for them to exist. YOUNG WOMANHOOD. Sweet young- girls I How often they ievelop into worn, listless, andhopeless women because mother has nob im pressed upon them the Importan ie of attending to physical development. , No woman s exempt from physical weakness and periodical pain, &nd young- girls just , budding m- g to woman hood should be guided physically as well as morally. If you know of any young lady who is sick and needs moth erly advice, ask her to ad dress Mrs, Pink ham at Lynn, Mass. , and tell every detail of r .' her symptoms, surroundings and occu pation. " , She will get advice from a source that has no rival in experience of wo men's ills. Tell her to keep nothing back. Her story will be told to a wo man, not to a man. She need not hesi tate in stating details that she may not wish to mention, but which are essential to a full understanding ofJier case, and if she is frank, help is certain to come I ; ' ' UIIKfS WHI-Uf ill FISF F1IIS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastej Good. Use I m time, fold ov avuKKists. --tii ? rail stsatfM? r.r mi new- '.' -7 The' contest ends Schilling s Best baking powder and tea are What is the missing word? not SAFE, although Schilling's Best baking powder and tea are safe. ' Get Schilling's Best baking powder or tea at your grocers'; take out the ticket (brown ticket in every package of baking powder; yellow ticket in the tea); send a ticket with each word to address below before December 31st. ' Until October 15th two words allowed for every ticket ; after that only one word for every ticket. ' .,3,-': If only one person finds the word, that person gets 2000.00; if several find it, I2000.00 will be equally divided among them. ' Every one sending a brown or yellow ticket will receive a set of cardboard creeping babies at the end of the contest. Those sending three or more in one envelope will receive an 1898 pocket calendar no advertising on .it." These creeping babies and pocket calendars will be dinerent from the ones offered ,inV the last contest. , '.- Better cut these Address: MONEY-BACK, SAN FRANCISCO. GET THE GENUINE ARTICLE! Walter Baker & Co.'s Breakfast COCOA Pure. Delicious Nutritious. Costs Z,esa than ONE CENT a cup. , ', IS Trade-Mark. Be sure Walter (Ertebiishedmo.)' Hercules Special , (2 actual horsepower) Price, only $185. DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CUBED By local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one ! way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remeaies. ueatness is caused by an in flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hear ing, and when 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 of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of deafness, (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for cir culars; free. P. J. CHENEY fc CO., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Persons Who Are Magnetized. Recent French experiments have de veloped the curious and unexpected fact that certain persons possess a magnetic polarity that is, they act as magnets, having north and south poles. Such a person, when completely undressed and placed near a sensitive galvanome ter, will, when turned on a vertical axis, cause a deflection first in one di rection and then in the opposite, just as a magnet would. All persons do not possess this polarity. Professor Mu rani, an Italian, upon whom the experi ment was tried, exhibited this phenom enon, and it is was found that his breast corresponded to a north pole and his back to a south pole. A fat men's club has been instituted in Paris, with the novel aim of In creasing the weight of the members, the rules enjoining all the comrades to sleep, eat and drink as much as pos sible. YOUR LIVER Is it Wrong? Get it Right Keep it Right Moore's Revealed Remedy will do it. Three doses will make you feel better. . Get it from your druggist or any wholesale drug bouse, or from Stewart & Holmes Drug Co., Seattle. WHEAT Make money by succesf ul speculation in Chicago. We buy and sell wheat on mar gins. Fortunes have been made on a small beginning by trading in fu tures. Write for full particulars. Best of ref erence given. Several years' experience on the Chicago Board of Trade, and a thorough know ledge of the business. Send for our free refer ence book. DOWNING, HOPKINS . & Co., Chicago Board pf Trade Brokers. Offices in Portland, Oregon and Seattle, Wash. r "CHILDREN TEETHING w Mm. Winslow's Soothikg Sybup Bhould alwavs be J .ft- ft used for children teethinor. It soothe the child. Boft- b ens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and la a k the best remedy for diarrhoea. Twenty five cent a i r KnltU 1 i Vof nf all Z RODS for tracing and locating Gold or Silver Ore. lost or buried treasures. M. 1. FOWLER, Box 337, SouthiL,tf ton, Coon. It M v y M 1, . December 3 1 st. because they are money-back. rules out. 20H that the package bears our Trade Mark.' Baker & Co. Limited. Dorchester, Mass. DOWER ...FOR.. PROFIT Power that will save you money and make you money. Hercules Engines are the cheapest power known. , ,Buru Gasoline or Distillate Oil; no smoke, fire, or dirt. For pumping, running dairy or farm machinery, they have no equal. Automatic in action, perfectly ' safe and reliable. ' --' Send for illustrated catalog. ' Hercules Gas Engine Works Bay St., San Francisco, Cal. 1 A free Book for jlen For men who have wasted their vigor and youthful energy, who feel slow, suipid and weak. For young men, middle-aged and old men who would like to be stronger, Dr. Sanden offers free a book that is worth $1,000 to any weak man. It tells and proves bv hundreds of grateful letters how DR.SANDEN'S ELECTOIO BE1T restores the old snap, Ihe vim, the vigor. Call or send for it. It is FKEJi. By mail or at the office. , . SANDEN ELECTRIC . BELT CO. 353 West Washington St, I'orl.liiud, Or. Plewse mention thi$ taper, - r , How to Restore Lost Manhood and i-eneci development. This great wort, plainly written by a high medical authority, shows how manly vigor can be regained and obstacles to marriage removed. It is a modern work for men who suffer from nervous debility caused by over work, youthful indulgences or later excesses. It points out how to be cured o nervousness, despondency, impotency, at home, without interfering with business. IT IS ABSOLUTELY FREE. ' :' : . This great book, entitled "COMPLETE MANHOOD AND HOW TO ATTAIN IT " will be mailed free, in plain, sealed wrapper, to the address of any sincere inquirer by the i Brie Medical Company, 65 Niagara Street, Buffalo,N.Y. NoCO.D.schemejnodeception. Kodaks. $4 FROM up.;. WOODARO, Portland. Or. Catalogue Free. Clarke & Co. ILLUSTRATED , FREE Buell Lamberson 180 FTONT ST Portland. Qr, N. P. N. U No. 51 i '97. vyHKN -writing to advertisers, plena 1 1 ml maution this puper.