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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 26, 1898)
; 5ood jiver Slacier. Published every Friday by : S. F. liLYTHE. Term of Subscription S1.H0 a year when paid lu advance; tl if not paid In advance. FRIDAY, AUGUST art, IS98. The Davlilaon Fruit Co. iiwde a good move for Hoo.l River when they estalv llheii their cutuiery. It Iw hoped t hey Will meet with a demand for their fcoodft cufflcieiit t enable them to in crease the capacity of their plant witli iaeh succeeding year. There annually goea to wHute lu our valley tons of fruit that could be utilized with proper can ning facilities. This fruit can he de livered to a cannery at a nominal coat, thus enabling the farmers to sell the name cheap, ad at the same time real ize u profit instead of a loss. Now that the valley Is well supplied witli water for irrigation, farmer can grow all kinds of vegetables that ought to bring a good profit when sold to a can nery even at the low prices canneries can aft'oid to pay. Since farmers are left to diversified farming they must sooner or -later learn that they will have to figure on marginal profits, "as do the merchants, instead of expecting big prices all the time. The Note and Comment editor of the Oregoniaii very kindly goes out of Ills way to tell how Hood River has the best of everything. Yes, we have the best of everything, and even the best people of Portland come here every summer to enjoy life where they can get everything the best. The Spokane fiuit fair opens October 4th and closes October loth. This tair attracts dealers and commission men from all parts of the Northwest and is a good place to exhibit fruit. ' Imperialists should make a note of the fact Unit wuen the planet Mars is nearest the earth it is only 10,000,000 miles away. From Our Boys at the Front. .The following is part of a letter writ ten by Clarence English, dated Caviie, July 10, 1898, and addressed to his mother, Mrs. Geo. P. Crowell. The old fort here is a sight worth feting. We are just across the bay from Manila, which we can see from here; You ought to see t he Spanish cruisers sunk around here, their tops sticking out of I lie water with a re member ttie Maine appearance about them. We chu hear.lhe iiisui'Kenls and Spanish fighting every night and uay. iney whbib a lot. or amuniuon. The insurgents are great people to btag. They ure a small race of people, not as large on an average as the China men, ami are brown. ISut they seem to be more intelligent than most of the Chinamen, and are all great trailers. I Tliev live in nouses inane oi oamooo, thatched with paliu leaves, and eal rice, fish, chickens, fruit, corn and sugar cane. They have buffaloes and goats, as well as cows, to milk ami .raise pork. .The native horses, like the people are very small. They are about the height of Shetland ponies, but built like little horses not so clumsy its the Shetland ponies. They say there are lots of big horses in Manila. The carringes used here are two-wheel i aflaiis. Some of them even have two seats and are drawu by these lit tle horses. The rigs are all covered. I haven't seen a bicycle since I came heie, but guess they have them in Ma nila, thouuh. 1 have been all over this town. They say ii has over 100,000 population 1 lie native nouses are all built up 4 or 5 feet fioiu the ground on posts. The windows all have awnings, ... I. II. . .K.. .... .i. ....... r nunc luc uiiirn ua w cu no iwc luuia uic thatched. The streets are about 25 feet w;do, with no sidewalks in the na tive quarters at all, and the walks in the Spanish part of the town, which is right lieie next to the tort, are only about I wo or three feet wide. The only Spanish left heie ure prisoners. Jt looks tunny enough to see one of the little insurgent soldiers slouching along with a gun over his shoulder in any old way, with a gang of Spanish pris oners going to work, or going after water. The natives here all say they want the United States to take the islands, as they would not be able to hold them themselves. I have talked to some of the Spanish prisoners and they don't eem to care much about their govern ment. , Lieutenant Bryan and Ray Greeu visited the insurgents at Ma nila. They were both in the trenches of the insurgents, where they each look a shot at the Spaniards, but did 'not think they hit any one. Tueyv were the first of our men to fire on the Spanish in tbe Philippines I mean of course of the volunteers. There is very ' little serious sickness here among our men and no contagious diseases at all. We are all getting acclimated now. The climate is not so bad as most peo ple think. There Is three seasons wet, hot and cold. We are just at the beginning of the wet season. It rains every day, but not steadily like in Ore gon; it Comes in showers, with thunder and lightning. We catch the rain for drinking water. I am learning some Spanish words so I can get along with . . V ...... . VQI . . V AAUW WV1 i. Ml V all well. I have seen mosquitoes and then other mosquitoes, but none of them were in it for a minute with the ones we have here. In a letter to Mr. Crowell, dated July l!0tb, he wrltes- 1 was detailed yesterday to head quarters to do map drawing for the general under Lieut. Bryan. Bryan told me he was going to lake me with htm i scouting trips to make maps . and sketches of the country. So I will doubtless see a good deal of the island. These islands do not seem, to be very unhealthy, as the climate is not as hot as people at home seem to think. We can get J2.25 in Spanish sliver for every one dollar of Uncle Sura's money. I am writing on a leaf of an old Spanish army book of some kind. I have learn ed to speak a little Spanish. 'Main Iuke, Dave Gibbons, How- ard lienberg and Mark Robinson are all in this regiment aud I e them every day. They are all v e I and happy. 1 am not ashamed I li.e uoys that are here from Hood River; they compare with the best of them. Breasted the Columbia Wares. . Hood River, Or., .Aug. 24, 1898. Editor Glacier: Pursuant to your re quest I give you a dei-ciipliori of the remarkable exhibition of grit and en durance of Seigeatit John Lelaud Hen derson, Company G, O. N. G., and a well-known aitorueyutlaw and notary pub ic of our town. As you well know, both Mr. Henderson and myself are sergeants in the said Company G, and at the call to arms in the late war we both volunteered aud were two weeks drilling in Camp MeKinley, near Port laud. That we failed to go to the front with our company was caused by rea sons over which we had no control. I mention these la -ts to show you that out of such siufl does Uncle Sam get Ids volunteer lo.s and to emphasize what is to follow. We all know hereabouts that Mr. Henderson is a good, strong swimmer. His feats this mouth, of swimming on two several occasions the first across the Columbia from the mouth of Hood river, aud the second across and back without touching are remarkable; but Mr. Henderson, not satisfied with these exhibitions, has for some time asserted that he believed he could swim from this point down the Columbia to the Cascades, a distance of 22 miles by river, and that nothing could deter him from making a successful attempt except the coldness of the water. The public Knew Air. Henderson was a gi.od swimmer, but it good-mil ti redly listened to what it thought was a rath er wild statement arid utterly impossi ble ot accomplishment, it persistently , usserted through its many old-timers who were acquainted with the river that the water wus so cold no person could sWim in it un hour, much less the six or eight hours nectssary, us was thought, to make the trip mentioned. Then it asserted through its old river men that the Columbia was a treach erous river, and that no swimmer could overcome its under currents and ''bad water." However that may be, yester day Mr. Henderson, accompanied by myself in a small row bout, made the attempt, and how well he succeeded I have shown below. t At 7 o'clock yesterday Mr.Henderson and I rowed out to the island at t lie mouth of Hood river, 'there he un dressed, and after he bud been thor oughly rubbed down about the head and ueck with vasaline and charcoal dust, and the rest of his body with sweet-oil, we continued to the middle of the river, aud al 7:55 a. m. he took his plunge into old Father Columbia and turned ids head for Cascade Locks, keeping the general current in the river and crossing the stream four times before he left the water at or near the creek that runs into the Columbia at a point on the Oregon side jrfct two miles uhove the Locks, at 1 o'cl ck p m., just 5 hours, arid 5 minutes afler he took his plunge. The most remarkable part, of the performance is that he swam the 20 miles without losing a single stroke, and the ti st 17 miles of it withovt a chuuge of stroke. He used during the first, four hours the. "sailor-stroke," which he says is the only one wortli anything in rough water or on long swims generally. At other times' he used the "Suudstmnj stroke," and only tw ice did he turn on his back aud swim for a few strokes. He could easily have made the Locks In 25 minutes more, but he was so cold that he feared heart complications. His body telt to (lie touch like a' dead person's, it was so cold, aud for a few minutes he could seaicely stand. He dressed h mself, however, aud then walketl through the hot sun to the locks, while I took the boat down. The sun and heat made him some sick, hut otherwise he complained of no stitf itess or soreness aud seemed to le very fresh. On his return he weighed himself aud found that he had lost just five pounds. He weighed, so Ue told me, 181 pounds at starting und 17b' pounds on return, weighed on the same scales. During the whole trip he conversed with me, at times, and hurrahed to every person he saw on the shore, and his wind and strength seemed undiminished. Noth ing but the terrible cold ot I lie water prevented his accomplishing his tusk which he had imposed on himself, aud which wus undertaken simply for his love of sport, as he is a good all round athlete. He is willing, so he tells me, to meet any man on the coast in a 20 mile swim in the Colombia river or a 10 mile swim in the Pacific ocean for any sized purse.x suy $1,000 a side, pro vided the race is made after his style- straight away, without change of stroke, irle assures me that tor seven years at his former home at Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, he has held' both (be long distance professional and am ateur championships, and that he has never been deleated. Judging from what I saw with my own eyes,' he is telling the truth. I believe t heie is not another man in the state thatcaii'dup .icute Ills last effort. E. T. Winans. State of Oregon, county of Wasco s.s. I, Ephrulm T. Wiuans, bolne duly sworn, de pose and say on oath, that all tbe facta set forth In the foregoing letter that are of my own knowledge are true, and I do especially swear mat jonn jeiana iienuerson, attorney at law of Hood Hlver. Oregon, did. on t he 23d day of August, A. D. 18X, between the hours of V :65 a. ni. and 1 p. in. of the same day.swim without any helps of any kind, and without any suit except snort Datiiiug trunas, ana without a stop or loss of a single stroke, from a point in the Columbia river opposite the mouth of Hood river to a point in said river opposite and a little above the town of Ste venson, Washington, and that during the whole of said time I accompanied him In a skiff; and that for the last U miles or the Bald swim there was quite a strong down-stream wind, which rendered tbe water very choppy, and that the temperature of tbe water was cold enouKh lor good drinking water: and that the distance covered in said swim was at leastaomllcs. E. T. WINAN.H. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 21th day of August. A. D. 1SH8. Geo.P Crowell. Notary public for Oregon at Hood Klver, Don't Tobacco Spit nd Smoke Your J.ifo Ausr. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-Bao, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 60o or II. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or Mew Tork. WANTED TRUSTWORTHY AND ACT lve gentlemen or ladies to travel for re BpnriKiblc.establlihed house in Oregon. Month ly $05 and expenses. Position steady. Refer ence. Inclose self-addressed stamped envelope. The Dominion Company, Dept. V, Chicago. Shoemaker's Supplies. All kinds of shoe store supplies for sale at my shop. Bole leather by the jHjund or side; nails of all sizes, cheap for cash. Call and see. 0. WKX.DP. "Discipline" of the Boys at Cavite. The Manila correspondent of the New York Sun tells how the Oregon volunteers run things and of the free aud easy style of their officers. Old vets of the civil war will recognize the picture and learn that war is still about the same thing as it used to be. After describing how Aguiualdo's insurgents looted the quarters of the Spanish of ficers and carried otf fine old mahog any furniture and everything they could lay haudt on, he says: Jt is only truth to add (hat Ihe in surgents were not the only ones who helped tiiemselvts There are men ill i he Firs! California aim Second Oregon who seemed to think they Were entt- ti'led to what they could get, and s e, of i htir officers were not much better. 1 saw the captain of an Oregon com pany take a tine big worbek from a na tive in Uaum and tell the poor devil to charge it to the government of the United States. eS"ine of the'allfornia officers belped'such things along rather than hindered them. Here i he Oregon, men were first ashore. They had been amusing themselves by raiding the commissary stores on the ship, ami so ere in good form when they got into this navy yard. - They did their best to carry otr" everything they eouid net their hands on here lor the first day or two, but a few things' were too laige tor tin m to handle, and it happened that there w ere no sales. Finally, Gen. Anderson got ashore, and he put us op to the practice mighty quick.. He set a guard of regulars iioui the Fourteenth uis old regiment and sentries armed with Krug-Jorgeiiseu rifles aie not to be fooled with. I have referred before this to the dis cipline in the voluulter regiments, or rather to the fact that it is almost en tirely lacking. There is the material in the two regiments to make the riiiest soldiers in the world, but it takes of ficers who know something of military matters aud methods to bundle the material and form. it, aud .hammer it into shape. There are some officers who know their business and are ener getic and ambitious, but I here is prob ably the finest lot of county pnl.tichins in the Second Oregon which has ever been gathered together in that state, or perhaps a'ny other. On the deck of the Australia one afternoon 1 found the colonel in a lively discussion with one of the majors about a county conven tion tiiat was to be held somewhere. The major was about to go down to conduct Ihe afternoon non-com. school, and just (lie day before lie had been put in the "sweat-box" on one of tbe simplest questions of guard duty. In Honolulu a private came buck from shore leave drunk and ugly. 'Ihe next morning he refused to work and threat ened to strike the officer of the day. The army segtilutions, in their won derful wisdom, provide that volunteers shall not tie tried by regulars. The Oregon officers tried this man. The law provides the extreme penalty death for such an o dense in time of war. The Oregon men buckled on their swords and talked about ho ihey would "cinch'' this fellow. It was "time to make an example;" "disci pline must be maintained." You won't believe the sentenc e. It wus 2 months' police duty and $10 fine. 1 he prisoner has a vote in an Oregon county. The Oregon men came ashore and didn't like the quarters assigned to tlteui. They hud been ordeted not to take the quarters they did lake, but the colonel said that those selected for them were unsanitary, so he turned the gen eral's onler to the wall. There came near being no colonel of the Second Oregon for that, but the battalion got back to its quarters in time to prevent a disaster lor the colonel. Officers ami men both have been cautioned by headquarters aud by their siliceous about eating fruit here ami drinking wa er. .The officers have been instruct ed to see tiiat the men are careful. But that doesn't count. The men fill up on fruit in ail stages of ripenes, and drink anv kind of water they can tret and any kind of liquor. The tesult is that they tall down at drill and guard mount, aud average a dozen a com pauy on morning sick reports. Insecticide for Plants. t Cosmos, a Freneli scientific review, says a South American farmer recently made an accidental discovery of great value to gardeners and florists. It wa to the efieet that leaves of the tomato plant will drive insects away from oth er plants. He covered the tomato leaves over some sin ubs he wished to protect from tue sun ami from small insects, and was delighted to Und that the latter cleared out as sooii as they got the odor of the tomato leaves. He then extended the same treatment to an entire row of young peach treesamt Ids success was complete. To render the process more simple he tried a de coction of the fresh tomato leaves as a spray on other trees and shruhs, and found that he had a perfectly effective weapon which cot practically nothing. He also found that a spray of the same kind would keep the flies off bis borsts. The Best Remedy for lliix. Mr. John Mathias, a well known stock dealer of Pulaski, Ky., says: "Af ter suffering for over a week wiili flux, and my physician having failed to re lieve me, I was advised to try Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrnoea Remedy, and have t lie pleasure of staling that the half of one bottle cured me." For sale by Williams & Brosius. No-To-Mao for Fifty Cent. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60o, $1. All druggists. Harrison Dufur, lately appointed forest supervisor for the northorn dis trict of the Cascade reserve, offers to pay $50 out of his own private means for the arrest and conviction of any person violating the forestry law with regard to starting fire9 on the reserve. . . , ( Prof. Frazier of Dufur has been offer ed a school in Grant county at a salary of $125 a mouth. - - School Funds. The apportionment of school funds, recently made by Supt. Gilbert, is on a basis of 65 cents per capita county fund and $1.20 state fund. Theamounts received by districts iu this neighbor hood are as follows: No. 2 $181 80 8 m 35 4 188 70 5 151 70 .., 1 05 No. 7.... 129 50 70 80 49 95 87 70 ..... 101. 75 41..." 62.... 61... All Teams Stop at ?i i ' ' v ' . . ' -" ' I i i V t T f 4 CLYDE T. BONNE Y i- Is Etill alive and doing business at RECIPROCITY CORNER. Now I have an order for One Car Load of Apples and Pears, And I will pay cash for the same delivered an1 rncelved at the depot of the O. R. & N. Co. Apples must be tree from worms and packed In tiers, and the Pears must be wrapped In pa per and nicely packed and of uniform size. I will pay fir said fruit, so delivered, at the rate of 45 cents per box. Now, Is this not reciprocity? We have a full line of staple groceries, flour and feed, hay and (train, line hams, bacon, purest of kettle rendered lard, and all kinds of fresh meats, which we sell for cash or trade lor produce. We want all to know that those of whom we buy are expected to fade with us, if we have what they want, and we think we can suit the most, fastidious. Business is done on a cash basis. Weask no creditand weiflve none. Whether we buy or exehunge we waif, only No. 1 goods, and we furnish only the same kind. , ' la . s. S T pi US ZELj lJ 3 Of Hood River can furnish comfortable conveyances to all parts of the valley and vicin ity. Heavy draying and transferring done with care and promptness. T7TC!Tn?T JPV TT A "VrXT A Chenoweth, Wash., manufacturers and dealers in XOXlSUJLii OC XJ.Xi.XM IM XI, Red Cedar H1IINGLES. Correspondence solicited. G. D. WOODWORTE, (Successor to A. 8. Blowers & Son) DEALER" IN GENERAL -STOVES AND TINWARE, Also, Agent for OLIVER CHILLED PLOWS. Second door Eapt Hereafter I will soli for CASH only or Its defy competition. I am not afraid to meet competitive prices at any time. Meet me on Port land lines and I will meet you with Portland prices. Call and see - h ' CANDY - ' XCURE CONSTIPATION' The Rev. W. B. 'Cos ley of Stock bridge, Ga,, while attending to his pas toral duties at Kilenwood, that state, was attacked by cholera morbus. He says: "By chance' I happened to get hold of a bottle nf Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera a,nd Diarrhoea Remedy, and I think it was the means of living my life. It relieved me at once." For sale by Williams & Brosius. 35 Acres. Unimproved land for sale, with running creek, i miles south of town, Bast Side. In quire on premises to John Sweeney, or Ch'irles H. Jenkins. 233 Stark st, Portland. 13-J5 190 Acres. A well improved farm of meadow and fruit land. Stock and complete outfit for farming. Call and see what I have for sa e. 13-21 D. A. TURNER. Wagon Repairing. All kinds of wneon repairing done on short notice and at reasonable prices, at the old Rogers mill in Frankton. C. H. KOGERS, BOTH For little more than the price of one. This Is the best otter ever made by any newspaper. We will give to the subscribers of the Twlce-a-Week Republic as a special inducement, the new and superb El May Magazine. - 62 complete numbers, 18 pagfes of the choicest illustrations and miscellaneous reading that money can buy. The regular price of tilts paper Is $1.25 a year. We offer both publica tions, the'fwlce-a-Week Republlc,which alone is $1 a year, and tbe Sunday Magazine for Only $1.50 a Year - for both. When you renew your subscription do not lose sight of this splendid offer. Address all orders to THE REPUBLIC, St. Louis, Mo. Reciprocity Corner. 2- "'C ' I wwnst Hf-Wfre raw w L. CO.'S of Glacier office. equivalent. Reuardlnsr prices, will say that I S.-E. BARTMESS. ALL DRUGGISTS Bees for Sale. Ten or twelve stands of Hybrid Italian Bees In dovetailed hives for sale at 2 60 each', cash. 05 P. G. BARRETT. Stock Ranch for Sale. One of the best stock ranches in Klickitat county. Wash., at a bargain. Facilities for handling a thousand head of sheep or other stock. E. D. CALKINS, Hood River. NOTICE FOK PUBLICATION. Land Office at The Dalles, Oregon, August 2, 1898. Notice is hereby given that the following-named settler has Hied notice of his inten tion to make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be made be fore Register and Receiver at The Dalles, Oregon, on Friday, September , leS, viz: SAMUEL MCCARTNEY, of Hood River, Homestead Application No. 5825, for the southeast northeast J', north east yt southeast section 12, township 2 north, range 9 east, and southwest north west and northwest southwest (lots 2 and 8), section 7, township 2 north, range 10 east. . He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultiva tion of said land, viz: I. C. Feileigh, Frank Davenport, J. Dunn and H. A. Uackett. all of Hood River, Oregon. a5s9 JAY P. LUCAS, Register. Klondike Bakery. 'I can supply people of Hood River with f'esh bread, pies and cake after this date, and will have on hand everything connected with a bakery. M. H. NICKELSEN, Marca 4, 1898. 4 Acres, Well Improved For sale. 8 miles west from town: 80 bearing fruit trees: balance In garden and strawber ries; fine spring of water for house use; plenty of water for irrigating. This is one of the earliest strawberry places in the valley, well protected from late frosts. It is nil le from graded school. Will sell cheap for cash only. Apply to P. F. CORDES, f25 Hood River. Prune Crop In the orchard for sale. Apply at tve Glacier office. jyifi 1 Mifl 0 Mt.Hood Saw Mitts, TOMLINSON BROS., Prop'rs. ' FIR AND PINE LUMBER Of the best quality always on hand ot prices to suit the tunes. jyM Fresh Milk, Areated and deodorized, 5 cents n quart. F. H. BUTTON. The Glacier BARBER SHOP, GRANT EVANS. Prop'r, Hood River, Cur. Fruit Ranch for Sale. 40 acres, 2 miles from town. All kinds of frnlt; 2 acres in strawberries; natural water privileges; bearing orchard. Terms reason able. W. J. CAMPBELL. DR. M. A. JONES. Cs best ' r"' reason Pa "jujS0 - 'Seated Ree; Dr. Jones for best work at most reasonable prices. He permanently 10- corner r ourin and Washington sts.. Portland, wmibe at Hood Kiver loth of each mohth. V n .. I 160 Acres of Land miles from town of Hood Klver. Will sell al I or part, or trade for city property.' Term part cash, part on time. ''' 1 J. H. FERGUSONv 5 Acre Tracts. Some of the most desirable places in Hood River havetieen placed In my hands for sale. Sixty acres for sale in five-acre tracts. If you wish to buy or sell lands in Hood River valley, call on or address : M. H. NICKELSKN, , Real Estate Agent, Hood River. Or. Wanted. I want to rent a small farm up near Mount Hood, to take possession by Oct. 1st. Address a!2 . THUS. BHERE, Hood Klver, Or. FOR SALE. Lumber Wagon, 2 inch , ....50 00 Milch cow 26,00 Will sell part or all of my ranch. - - E. E. SAVAGE. KOT1CE FOK PUBLICATION. Land Office at The Dalles, Oregon, August 2, IStiS. Notice is hereby given that tbe follow ing named settler has tiled notice of his In tention to make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be made before Register and Receiver at The Dalles. Oregon. on Saturday, September 10, 1808. viz: NANNIE V. MACGREGOB, Formerly Nannie V. Bowman of Mosier, Homestead Application No. 5 5ti2, for the south northwest section 34, and south north east ii section 33, township 2 north, range H east v . Al. . lie names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultiva tion f, said land, viz: George Ireland, John Davis, Nathan SturgU and Amos Root, all of Mosier, Oregon. a5s9 JAY P. LUCAS, lfcgister. NOTICE FOK PUBLICATION. Land Office at The Dalles, Oregon, August 16, 188. Notice is hereby given that the fol lowing named settler has filed notice of his intention to make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will he made before the Register and Receiver at The Dalles, Ore gon, on Saturday, September 24, 1898, viz: ALBERT G. McKAMEY, Of Mt. Hood, Homestead Application No. 4087, for the southwest hi section 38, township 1 north, range 10 east, W. M. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence Upon and cultiva tion of said land, viz: , Andrew li.Tienian. Robert Leasure, David R. Cooper and P. F. Fonts, all of Mt. Hood.Or. alfls23 JAY P. LUCAS, Register. . Future comfort for present seemingf economy, but buy the sewing; machine "with an estab lished reputation, that guar antees you long and satisfac tory service. t f 11 ST ITS PINCH TENSION ... 1 . . AND .... TENSION INDICATOR, (devices for regulating- and showing the exact tension) are a few of the features that emphasize the ; high grade character of the White. t Send for our elegant H.T. catalog. ' . White Sewing Machine: Co., CLEVELAND, 0. This Great Cough Cubs promptly eurci where all others fail. Coughs, Croup, Sera Throat, Hoarseness, whooping Couf h and Asthma. For Consumption It has no rival: has cured thousands, and will CURB Ton if taken in time. Sold by Druggists on a guar antee. For a Lame Back or Chest, two BHILOH'S BELLADONNA PLASTERJ&O. CATARRH REMEDY. H iva vou oatarrh ? This remed v is mnu teed to cure you. Price, 60 eta. Injector free For sale Ity H. A. YOHK. h 1 iMifrr--7iiJi