Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 4, 1898)
4 ' 1 Can Be Made to Go. "The melancholy days hav come;" beta rheumatism come with them? It can be made to go. right off by the use of St. Jaoobs Oil, which cures and leave no trace behind. Macaroni With Mayonnaise. A delicious way to serve macaroni is to place it on the same plate -with lettuoe, the mayonnaise doing sauce service for both. The macaroni is cut into thin shoes from macaroni and cheese baked the day before. . It is served cold. Every Action And every thought requires an expendi ture of vitality which must be restored by means of the blood flowing to the brain and other, organs. The blood must be pure, rich and nourishing. It Is made so by Hood's Sarsaparilla which Is thus the great strength-giving medicine, the cure for weak nerves, scrofula, catarrh, and all diseases caused by poor, impure blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. $1: six (or ts. Hood's Pills cure indigestion. 25 cents. With Caucasian Honors. Tin Loy, a prominent Chinese mer chant of Grass Valley, died the other day, and at his funeral was honored as are few Chinese in this country. ,. A brass band headed the prooession, and the pallbearers were white men who knew the Chinese in his lifetime and had business relations with him. He left a family, the daughters of which had been highly educated in American schools. , No household is complete without a bot tle of the famous Jesse Moore Whiskey. It Is a pure and wholesome stimulant rec ommended by all physicians. Don't ne glect this necessity. Maori girls in the North Island of New Zealand are being tattooed by a . Urewera tohunga for $15 apiece. FITS Permanently Cured. So fltsor nervousnes II after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Send for FKKK Ss.oo trial bottle and treatise. SR. B. H, KIAMiL Ltd., 830 Arch street, Philadelphia, Pa. . An English physioian has discov ered a way of producing looal anaes thesia without the loss of consciousness or the use of ether or choir of orm. fie uses moderate currents of electricity frequently interrupted. To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. , The rate at which Zulus can travel in an emergency is astonishing. Some will cover as much as 60 miles in six hours. ' ' Eight miles an hour is an or dinary pace. If vou want the best wind mill. tumrs. tanks, plows, wagons,, bells of all sizes. I Vu-tilovo on nltina sT rrannml tvtannfnavM laa ; or write JOHN POOLE, foot of Morrison street, i'ortiana, uregon. The polar currents are said to contain less salt than those from the equator. In the fall cleanse your system by using . Dr. Pfunder's Oregon Blood Purifier. The horse, when grazing, is guided entirely by the nostrils in the choice oi proper food, and blind horses are never known to make mistakes in their diet. 100 REWARD 8100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to Jearn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all Its stages, and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cuie known to the medical : fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional dis : ease, requires a constitutional treatment. Ball's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the founda tion of the disease, and giving the patient Strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The pro prietors have so much faith In its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollar for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY b CO., Toledo, O. Bold bv druggists, 76c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Zoologists say that all known species, of wild animals are gradually dimin ishing in size. THE DUTY OF MOTHERS. Daughters Should be Carefully Guided In Early Womanhood. What suffering' frequently results from a mother's ignorance) or more) frequently from a mother's neglect to properly instruct her daughter! ' . . Traditionsays "woman mustsuffer," and young women are so taught. There is a little truth and a great deal of exaggeration in this. If a young woman suffers severely : she needs treatment and her mother should sea that She gets it. .. ... Many mothers hesitate to take their . daughters to a physician for examina tion; but no mother need hesitate to write freely about her daughter or herself to Mrs. Plnkham and secure the most efficient advice without charge. Mrs. Pinkham's address is Lynn, Mass. The following letter from Miss Martb V. Johnson, Centralia, Pa , shows what neglect will do, and tells how Mrs. Finkham helped her i ' "My health became so poor that I bad to leave school. I was tired all the , time, and had dreadful pains in my side and back. I was also troubled with irregularity of menses. I was very weak, and lost so much flesh that my friends became alarmed. My mother, who is a firm believer in your remedies from experience, thought per haps they might benefit me, and wrote you for advice. I followed the advice you gave, and used Lydia E. Pinkham's ..Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills as you directed, and am now as well as I ever was. 1 have gained flesh and have a good color. I am completely cured of Irregularity." mints WHiut in nsf mis. Best Cough Bjrup. Tastes Good. Use I in time. tol(r dt oniKjrtM.s. CULTURE OF As Sugar Is Made in Field's, and Important Requirement Henry W. Diederich, United ' States consul at Magdeburg, Germany, sends the following repoit to the state depart ment. The report will prove of inter est and value to the farmers of the Northwest, who are just taking up the industry. Mr. Diedrich says: The results of the war with Spain are bound to effect changes in various direc tions that no one could have foreseen at the beginning of this year. Not the least important is the bearing they will undoubtedly have on the sugar industry in Germany and in the United States. An enoromus increase in the production of sugar in the islands of Cuba, Puerto Eioo, the Philippines and Hawaii is probable in tne near future. With coolie and Chinese labor in the Orient and in the Paoific, with the stimulus of American energy and capital in the West Indies, and with the more or less intrioate bounties of Europe, the sugar question has become a very complicated one. Though the outlook of the young beet-sugar industry in the United States is not so promising as it was a year ago, it is much too early to be come discouraged. While it may be advisable for those planning to start new plants to make haste slowly, yet the good work already begun should continue. . Especially should the work of locating the areas In the . United States suitable for the oulture of the sugar-beet be continued, as this can be done without risk or loss of money, the sugar beets being capable of utilization as feed. In leading the reports of our experiment stations in various states, both as to yield of sugar-beets and also as to their sacoharine qualities, one cannot but admire the wonderful prog ress made in this new industry within a few years, and to congratulate our people engaged in it upon their suocess. Sugar is made, not in the sugar fac tories, but out in the fields. Therefore it is impossible to pay too much atten tion to the cultivation of beets con taining the highest proportions of sugar, and, at the same time, with the largest tonnage per acre. In order to produce such, the selection of suitable soil, the climate, the rainfall, and length of season, the fertilizing, plant ing, cultivating and harvesting all these are very important factors. But the most important of all is to start out with the best seed obtainable; for good seed, after all, is the foundation of successful sugar industry. If I may express an opinion, based on my per sonal observation, it is that some of our beet growers should insist more than they have upon getting none but the best of seed, no matter what the price may be. ' I will not enter upon the history of the origin and development of the beet seed. Nor will I dwell upon the dif ferent varieties and their merits. I have had occasion to visit several of the oelebrated German stock farms, where they produoe seed that is sold to all sugar-produoing countries of the world. With the accumulated knowl edge and experience of a century of in vestigation, with an investment of enormous capital, and with a vast amount of science and skill, energy, and labor, their methods of producing a pure and high-grade seed are as per fect and successful as are those em ployed in the raising of fine breeds of horses and cattle. The high-grade seed grown in this country Is now in the lead everywhere. Even France is beginning to import German beet seed, thereby conceding its superiority. I know that one Ger man firm alone shipped 80,000 sacks of seed to France. I feel safe in saying that altogether not less than 100,000 sacks of German beet seed were bought by Frenchmen last season, in spite of the 80-francs (f 5. 97) customs duty which they had to pay on every 100 kilograms (330 pounds). 1 am in formed that moBt of these orders have been duplicated for next season, and the amounts in many cases doubled and NEWS OF THE The state of Oregon has attaohed the Loe wen berg stove foundry at Salem to secure a claim of $36,267.12. One of the apple orchards of Southern Oregon has this , season paid $100 an acre clear, and this is only the second year of bearing of the trees. The Commercial Club, of La Grande, Or., is Bending out a little booklet, de scriptive of the new beet-sugar factory it that place... Good prioes for saw logs have had the effect of stimulating activity in this industry 'along the Lower Columbia, and a recurrence of last year's scarcity is improbable. The governor has ordered a special election icMultnomah county, Oregon, November 15, for the purpose of elect ing a state senator to fill the vacanoy oaused by the resignation of Joseph Si mon. ' . . T. W. Lee arrived in San Franoisco last week from the Hawaiian islands, whither he went reoently to judge buei ness prospects. He declares that the field in Honolulu is already too fully occupied. The Fulton Engineering & Ship building. Company, of San Francisco, has brought suit against the Alaska Yukon Transportation Company to es tablish two liens, one for $12,223. 13 on the steamer J. W. Soammell, and the other for $8,598.83 on the steamer H. J. Barling. SUGAR - BEETS Not in Factories, Good Seed Is an German Consul's Report. trebled; all of which shows dearly that even France now prefers German beet seed, and I am not at all surprised to learn that there is a movement on foot in that country to increase the tariff on imported seed. The firBt-olass sugar faotories of Eu rope buy none but the very best seed, grown from high-grade individual "mother" beets, to distribute among the best growers; thus not only main taining'' the standard of their sugar beets as to quality and quantity, but also putting themselves in a position to compete in all the markets of the world. This first-class seed is sold and delivered by the growers on board cars in the Prussian provinoe of Saxony, at from 8 to 10 cents per pound, which is a moderate price, considering the fact that it takes at least four years to get it into the market. There is also a second-class seed offered for sale in this country, at from 5 to 6 cents per pound. This is com monly called the "Naohzachtsamen," being a seed produced not ftom the mother beets, but from the first first class seed mentioned above, This in ferior grade, ' however, is not used by first-class sugar men in Germany, France, Holland and Belgium, but most of it goes to Austria, Russia and the United States. And this is the reason why I deem it my duty to call attention to the importance of getting only the very best of seed obtainable. In my opinion, those American growers of sugar-beets who buy cheap grades of seed, make a great mistake. All kinds of seed have a natural tendenoy to degenerate. Even the fiist-class beet seed mentioned above will not bring forth beets that oome up to the stand ard of the original or mother beet, but will show a loss of to 1 per cent of sugar , content. Now, the second genera ti ion of seed will degenerate more than as much again, and lose from 1 per cent to 2 per cent. This is a small amount when considered by it self, yet it is sufficient not only to turn the profits of a sugar factory into a loss, but even to drive the conoern to the wall. To illustrate this:. Factory A slices 50,000 tons (short) of beets, which would yield about an average of 16.5 per cent sugar in the extraction. After deducting the sugar left in the molasses and in other waste, this would leave about 18 per cent 6,500 tons of pure granulated, marketable sugar, whioh at $50 a ton would net $325,000. Faotory R slices the same amount of beets, grown from second-class seed, which, at a fair average, have about 1.8 per cent less of sugar in the extraction. After this material has also gone through the prooess of refining, there will be 11.7 per cent 5,850 tons of marketable sugar, whioh at $50 a ton would net $292,500. It will be seen at a glanoe that while both factories use the same amount of material, and have the same expenses for labor, fuel, etc, there is a differ ence in the gross receipts for manufac tured sugar amounting to $32,500. Factory A bought 55 tons of first class seed, at $180 per ton, $9,900; factory B bought 65 tons of second- class seed, at $120 per ton, $6,600. It will be seen that factory B wanted to buy "oheap" and to make money fast. It did, indeed, save $8,800 at the start; but faotory A began by planting the very best seed obtainable, and came out at the end of the season with $29,200 cash ahead of its competitor, and was in the position of declaring a handsome dividend. Like so many other things in life, the cheapest beet seed are the dearest. It pays to get the very best, and only the very best is good enough. Let the good work of experimenting in the field of sugar-beet culture oontinue, in order to learn exactly what we oan do in the face of -fierce and growing competition, but let American growers determine not only to try different varieties of seed, but also to plant none but seed of high grade and pure pedigree. PACIFIC COAST The Chilkat river, in Alaska, is full of salmon; they are so thick they can not all keep under the water. They are there by the tens of millions, and they make such a noise splashing that they sound like a storm. The river is full of the big fish from the mouth to the source- and the silver-tip bears are having a rich feast while the run con; tinues. A new gold strike has been reported on the Dalton .trail, less than 100 miles from Skagway. ''and the story that comes baok is that five men who were wintering on the trail washed out in five days over $400 in ooarse gold from a bench claim, utilizing only, pick, shovel and pan. ; The dirt from which this gold was washed had to be carried from the bench , to the creek bottom, where there was water. The new gold find is in American territory, about 75 miles from Pyramid harbor. The halibut season of 1898 on the Flattery banks is nearly ended, and most of the fishing sohooners are on their way to Ketchikan and other Southeastern Alaska points to remain during the winter. - Probably the last boat to leave for the north will be the schooner Alcedo; whioh will ' make one more haul off Flattery and then pro oeed up the coast. The Alcedo brought in 18,000 pounds of halibut on her last trip and the Pilot 15.000 pounds. This has been an off year in fishing, and the catch has not amounted to two-thirds. THANKSGIVING DAY. the President Names Thursday, Movent ber 24, in His Proclamation. Washington, Oct. 81. The president today issued the following Thanksgiv ing proclamation: "By the President of the United States A Proclamation: The ap proaching November brings to mind the ouBtoms of our ancestors, hallowed by time and rooted in our most sacred traditions, of giving thanks to Al mighty God for all the blessings he has vouchsafed to us during the past year. "Few years in our history have afforded such oause for thanksgiving. We have been blessed by abundant har vests, our trade and commerce have been wonderfully increased, our publio credits have been improved and strengthened, all seotionsof our country have been brought together and knitted into closer bond of national purpose and unity. "The skies have been for a time darkened by the cloud of war, but as we were compelled to take up the swoid in the cause of humanity, we are per mitted to rejoice that the conflict has been of brief duration, and the losses we have had to mourn, though grievous and important, have been so few, con sidering the great,results accomplished, as to Inspire us with gratitude and praise to the Lord of Hosts. We may laud and magnify His Holy Name that the cessation of hostilities came so soon as to spare both sides the countless sor rows and disasters that attend pro tracted war. "1 do, therefore, invite all my fellow-citizens, those at home as well as those who may be at sea or sojourning in foreign lands, to set apart and ob serve Thursday, the 24 th day .of No vember, as a day of national thanks giving, to come together in their sev eral places of worship for a service of praise and thanks to Almighty God for nil the blossing of the year, the mild ness of the seasons and the fruitfulness of the soil; for the continued prosperity of the people; for the devotion and valor of our countrymen; for the glory of our victory and the hope of a righte ous peace, and to pray that the divine guidance which has brought us hereto fore to safety and honor may be giaci Dusly continued in the years to come. In witness whereof, etc. 1 "WILLIAM M'KINLEY. !'By the President: John Hay, Sec retary of State." i WOOD AT MANZANILLO. Setting- the Mew Civil Government in Motion. Manzanillo, Oct. 81. The United States gunboat Hist arrived here to night with General Leonard Wood, commander of the military department of Santiago, accompanied by Lieutenant Matthew Hanna. On landing, Gen eral Wood was closeted with Colonel Pettit and his adjutant, and he was subsequently received by Colonel Pet tit's entire regiment. General Wood then visited the barraoks, hospitals, palace, custom-bouse and postoffice. Colonel Pettit reports that the Cuban General Bios is apparently making every effort to prevent the disbanding of his troops. The Cuban commander wishes all the sugar estates in the neighborhood to tell him how many men they can employ, and he will guar antee to supply all required on condi tion that only soldiers are employed. The planters unanimously refuse to fall in with such an arrangement, consider ing that it would be a trades union of the strongest possible kind and would also tend to keep up the Cuban mili tary organization, which, in the inter ests of the island, the planters are very anxious to break up. In their opinion it would be better to have no commerce than to attempt it on such conditions. Lieutenant Lucien Young, the com mander of the Hist, created more ex citement on landing than even General Wood himself. Crowds gathered at the wharf to see the young commander, who, with Lieutenants Holm and Jun gen, of the Hornet and Warn pa tuck, de feated a whole flotilla of Spanish gun boats at Manzanillo on July 1 last. Acoording to the reports from the Cuban assembly at Santa Cruz del Sur, General Calixto Garcia has been chosen permanent chairman of the organiza tion. DUG THEIR WAY OUT. Boulder Prisoners Escape by Means a a runnel. - - Denver, Colo., Oct. 81. A special to the News from Boulder, Cola, says: About 6:80 o'clock this evening it was discovered that five inmates of the county jail had made their escape by tunneling under-the wall. They ar John C. Cassidy, who was today sen tenced to life imprisonment for the murder of William Bowe, at Sugarlpaf; George and Edward Bowe, sentenced to four and a half and six years respec tively foroattlestealing; Nick Boucher, awaiting trial for assault with intent to murder; and John Baptiste, serving a three months' sentence for larceny. With caseknives and pieces of wood they had dug down six feet and tunnel ed eight feet to the outside of the wall, hiding the dirt taken out under one of the cages. They had been at work several days. No traoe of the escapes has been found. f St. Louis, Oct 81. A special to th Post-Dispatch from Sherman, Tex., says a disastrous fire occurred at Corsi cana today. ' William Johnson and two children were burned to death. San Francisco, Oct. 81. The vault in the First National bank, used by Judge Wolf, of the Wolf, Worden Company, who mysteriously disap peared two months ago, was opened to day. It was found to be empty, and monev and securities amounting to $10,000 belonging to the Sarah M. Pearson estate, of which Wolf was ex eoutor, are now missing. Wolf wai supposed to have met with foul (play in Oregon, but later on was seen i Chicago. R Beautiful Giri's Affliction. From the Republican, Verttttlet, Ind. The Tuckers of Yersailes, Ind., like all fond parents, are completely wrap ped up in their children. Their daughter Lucy, in particular, has given them much concern. - She is fifteen, and from a strong, healthy girl, three years ago, had become weak and kept falling off in flesh, until she became a mere skeleton. . She seemed to have no lite at all. Her blood became impure and finally she became the victim of nervous prostration. Doctors did not help her. Most of the time she was confined to bed, was very nervous and irritable, and seemed on the verge of St. Vitus dance. "One morning," said Mrs. Tucker, "the doctor told us to give her Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills for Pale People, which he brought with him. . He said he was treating a similar case with these pills and they were ouring the Discussed Their Daughter' t Oat for Bonn. patient. We began giving the pills and the next day could see a change for the better. The doctor came and was surprised to see such an improvement. He told us to keep giving her the medi cine. We gave her one pill after each meal until eight boxes had been used when she was well. She has not been sick sinoe, and we have no fear of the old trouble returning. We think the cure almost miraculous." " ; FRANK TUCKER. MRS. FRANK TUCKER. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 28th day of April, 1897. HUGH JOHNSON, ) Justice of the Peace. These pills are wondei fully effective in the treatment of all diseases arising from impure blood, or shattered nerve force. They are adapted to young or old, and may be had at any drug store. Texas I a Great State. A great many people want to know how large Texas is in area. They look in quite a number of alleged statistical abstracts and never find the same fig ures in two of them. The offioial fig ures of Texa's area are 252,696 square miles equal to about 8. 9 per oent of the entire area of the United States and territories. Texas is six times larger than New York, seven times as large as Ohio, and 100,000 square miles larger than the eastern and middle states, in cluding Delaware and Maryland. Com pared with the countries of Europe, she has 84,000 square miles more than the Austrian empire, 62,0000 more than the .German empire, and nearly 70,000 square miles more than France. The only two animals whose brains are heavier than that of a man are the whale and the elephant. While Ion Sleep. - Do not have too much air blowing through your room at night, or neural gia may oreep upon you while you sleep. But if it comes, use St. JacobB Oil; it warms, soothes and cures promptly. Imitation ivory is now being exten sively manufactured from the fruit of a palm-like shrub called Pbytelephas macrocarpa, which is about the size of an apple and possesses a hard interior kernel. " . When coming to San Francisco go to Brooklyn Hotel, 208-212 Bush street. American or European plan. Boom and board $1.00 to $1.60 per day ; rooms 50 cents to $1.00 per day; single meals 25 cents. Free coach. Clias. Montgomery. Some insects are in a state of matur ity 80 minutes after birth. . Established 1780. Baker's Chocolate, celebrated for more than a century as a delicious, nutritious, and flesh-forming beverage, has our well-known Yellow Label on the front of every package, and our trade-mark,"La Bell e Chocolatiere'on the back. NONB OTHER GENUINE. ,. tff MADK ONLY BY gi g WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., S; . Dorchester, Mass. J? ..STEEL SPIRAL We carry in stock a large supply of the above conveyers, both right and left, which we will ell at greatly reduced prices. Also all sizes of elevator buckets and bolts. Write for price-list and discounts. Willamet Iron Works Front and Everett Sts. PORTLAND, OR. PHILOSOPHY AND OTHERWISE Jean Paul Ricbter: Men, like bul lets, go farthest when they fare smooth est. . : . , Washington Irving: Men are always wooing goddesses and marrying mere mortals. When Roosevelt runs for governor his ranch experience will prove invalu able in rounding up voters, Henry Ward Beecher: The real man is one who always finds excuses for oth ers, but never excuses himself. Frederich Nietzsche: , All conceited men I have found good actors. . They play and wish that folk may like to , look at their playing. , The khalifa traveled so fast on his camel that the English could not ovei take bim. Evidently his camel must have got a hump on itself. Bradford: It is a characteristic of many men and a few women not to come to themselves till they have gone to everybody else and worn out their welcome, v . " Honore de Balzac: It is absurd to . pretend that one cannot love tiie same woman always as to pretend that a good artist needs several violins to execute a piece of music Marcus Aurelius: I have : often wondered how every man loves himself more than all the rest of men, yet sets less value on his own opinion of him self than on the opinion of others. The largest room in the world is at St. Petersburg. It is 600 feet long by ' 150 feet in breadth. It has been used for military displays, and a whole bat talion can completely maneuver in it. - Bichard Croker, the master meohanlo of American politics, is leurning to swim. It has been generally under stood, however, that among the floating voters Bichard Welslead Croker has always been in the swim. Captain D. C. Woodrow, of the Unit ed States navy, has in his posses sion the flag floated by the Virginias on its ill-fated filibustering trip to San tiago in 1878. It was taken from the vessel by the captain himself, Decem ber 26, 1878, just before the ship sank while being brought back to America. "Thirty dollars or sixty days; have you anthing to say?" "No, your horj or," said 'Boston Pete,' "unless it be to synthetically remark upon the dual ity of the oause and effeot in your op tional commitment. Like your honor, I shall take judioial notice that time is money. . I have spoken." What Cuba's Loss Means to Spain. . The loss of Cuba means to Spain the loss of the very sustenance of the nation. In the same way the loss of your appetite means starvation to your body. If any reader of this notice wants to fully enjoy hearty meals, we can recommend liostef. ter's Stomach Bitters. It cures indiges tion, dyspepsia and constipation. The female brain commences to de oline in weight after the age of 80; the male not until 10 years later. Just the Time., This is just the time of the year we feel the muscles all sore and stiff, and then is just the time to use St. Jaoobs Oil to relax them and to cure at once. Plso's Cure for Consumption is the only cough medicine used in my house. D. O. Albright, Mifflinburg, Pa., Dec. 11, 1895. 9 The field at Waterloo is covered with a orop of crimson popples every year. TEETH WITHOUT PLATES Koota Crowned Bridges Made. Vainless filling and extraction . Dr. T. H. White, BiSS.' BASEBALLFOOTBALL ATHLETIC AND GYMNASIUM SUPPLIES. ' Bend for Catalogue. WILL X FINCK CO. San Francisco 'Jjnfc HEALTH RESTORER. U5EITI Buy Direct - FROM THE WOOLEN MILLSa-mS And save middleman's profits. Men's fine tailor-made suits, $3.95 to $14. Fit guaranteed. Cata logue, Bamples, self-measurement blanks, etc, mailed free. Address J. LANDIGAN, McKay building, Portland, Or. Mention this paper YOUR LIVER Is it Wrong? Get it Right' Keep it Right Moore's Revealed Remedy willdoit. Three doses will Make you feel better. Get it from your druggist or any wholesale drug house, or bom Stewart 4 Holmes Drug Co., Seattle. BUY THE GENUINE SYRUP OF FIGS ... MANTTFAOTURED BY ... CALIFORNIA Fid SYRUP CO. rF-NOTB THE IV A ME. CURE YOURSELF! 11 sm ntsr U 1 di charges, inflarumRtlonlu Ouftrtnte of raucous mem bruit no. irniauoni or uicrationi IPravsmtt eoatafion. Pain less, and not astrin tmEvANS CrIEMtOALOo. ent or Poisonous. t Bat ia Htrlami or sent In plain wrapped. by express, prepaid, for l.OO. or Jt linrilna A. Circular sent ou request. N. P. N. U. NO. 45 '98. w HEN writing to advertisers pleas mention tnis paper . CONVEYERS.,., I