Orofino_Tribune-01Apr1910_Cmplt

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THE OROFINO TRIBUNEOFFICIAL PAPER OF NEZ
PERCE COOjfTY.
Volnme
5.OROFINO, IDAHO, FRIDAY, April i, 1910NUMBER 40..
r SPRING IS HERE«nd With It the 0. T. Co. can show yon the most attractive line of
Spring and Summer GoodsETerShowDllMtho
A few of the Many things:
the Celebrated I. & S. Bing Clothing, in the latest styler and Pattenii A complete line of Udies’, Gent's and ChUdren's Shoes and Oxfords Spring Dress Goods of aU Shades and Colors # Something new in Neckwear and Belto
'■ 4'..
XumMrmt
Hair Ornaments of att idnds.
The latest in Spring and Summer Head Scarfs Lace Curtains and Bed Spreads. t>’; ^ Straw Hats for allSununer Underwear and Hosiery A carload of furniture just arrived LinoUum in five different shadesSpray Pumps and Pruning Shears f ^
> Bring Your Friends with yon we are always pleased to show Goods
Orofino Trading Company
Bank: of OrofinoCapital, $IS,OOOwOOOfflc«r«*A. MUMBIRD, f>r©«icl©nt aJEROME aJ. D A V, V^lc© Pr©«. VV. al. WMITEp Ca«Hier
DirectorsA. numbircj e. IS. Of-own THeo- F?ohl al»r*oma; J. Omy W. aJ. wmt®
pedeatrUns in Orofino were startled Tueaday erening at about $145 by the appearance of an immense meteor mov» tug throvigh tbie eastern heavens in a northerly direction, and leaving behind It a vast train of fire, visible long after the celestial visitor had passed from ; view. Those who were fortunate enough this splendid body passing through were firtit made aware of its pres- j ence by a bright light more brilliant than day, breaking from the eastern heavens and followed by an immense ball of fire, emitting lighu of green, red and blue, like some gigantic rocket fired into the evening sky. The sight wt* beautiful and inspiring and one long to be remembered by those who saw it. Scientists tell us >hat twice a year the earth passes through the track of count- ; less meteors, of such slight resistance tliatthey are dissolved in the earth’s atmosphere without any damage What­ever, and that they move through space withont emitting light, eicept as they Vome in contact with the earth’s atmos- I phere, when there substance is heated I by.coming in contact with the, oxygen of i the air, and after emitting a beautiful I light they arc dissolved and pass from I view. We arc no doubt to sec many of j these celestial visitors daring the sum- I mer months.
The
board of county commi^oners,. accompanied by E. N. Brown, arrived j in Orofino on last Tuesday night. In company with Mr. Bro^, the Board in- j spected the North Fork wagon road,! where something like $$,500 was I pended last year in building out of lAhsahka. This year approximauly i 55000 is available for use on this road.I With this amount it is thought the road ;can be completed to Steiner’s place, about nine miles from Ahsahka. The j lx>ard estimates that one-half the heavy I and expensive work is completed and ‘ that with a suifident ertw of men, g<*od progrcaa cari be made toward opening up this most important thoroughfare. The Board also inspected the sift of the new bridge to be built across Orofino I creek, on Johnson avenue, and it is pos­sible some change wUl be made in the I plans of the structure before the con- j tract is finally let. PatitiM to Havs Mail Rooto RwsMwod.A petition was circulated in the Blake neighborhood and ninety signatures se- cuf^ asking that the mail route, to Slake« which was discontmuc . ; He owns a biink at Lapwai and is' inter- : estetl in realestatc throughout this sec- ' lion.The Needlework Club held its meeting f; on Friday. March 25th, at the home of • , Mrs. Whitt. After the usual order of^ , : business wma concluded the lessons in ; 4 Parliamentary law and English history v were discussetl. The club adjourned to meet April 8th, with Mra Wellman when the lessonMn history will be. The i.i King Rules without Parliament, Chapter Sixth ard Sevefith.and in ParliamcnUry law. Other Motions in Order, P. 66to 72.The family of J. M. Bartlett left yes­terday morning for Portland, Oregon, for a T«it #Uh relatives.
^—V—
%LdW#RS
of Paradise arc as'numerous in our Millinery department as fruit upon the trees. In fact, we thing Pattern Hats shape and trimminp generally, come from the same locanty. It was cer- tainly a divine talent that conceived the Aousand and one beautiful styles and combinations and blended the lovely colors that go to make up wfimen^shats.
Very
Respectfully
MARY L BUE5CHER
at
Orofino
Mercardile Co Ltd
Orofino's Cash Store
Robert B. SwadenerEngineer and Surveyorno. UioensMMi
Offl^owi Motwlldaho
■ . …. '' – 'VThe
Clearwater
Timber
■ :*Co.
<■General Office, Orofino, Idaho. Buys White and Yellow Pine E. N. Brow Agent- m ;.:-Slf:T^-“; -'^gi'jic What Gold Cannot Buy 9y MUS-. j^CJCJrA.JMim -A C».h.4 ftdh," "Wald. W«* « Wl*«r.- «•» w*~«’» Wit.- -BmMm's Bartfata.*- ~A Llf. IntMMk”
Aj SA
:i
CHAPTKH n-(0«tli«i.t)MI« Dwntead had bcea lluu more than a vaalc at InUaSaM. whan, ra taralnf hooM from Uia natsh1wriii« »*« *><*“ «»•“ -----Wwhha inaa.a.a ra.ji.cUn*> o( Uia local eharltlM to whlcb Hr*. SoTllI* contrlbuK .h. uttered the drawln* room throath on* ol the French wladowa which opaaad on a Teraada and thwea oa to the crooMa.
The ladjr of the houa. waa not tbera bat loasgtas comfortably ht bar eajta elal ehatr Mt a geoUeman. who. dl raetty Ulaa Oeamond enteredo roaa and made her a bow-a bow which proeod that bowing waa not yet onlta a loat art. He waa a tall, elderly man of on oartalB age. alight and ategant. with
an* aqoUiBa ‘featBrea and light-blue Uaghlag eye* that loohad aa If boy bdod aUH lingered Uiar* In aplte of the Wfaey hair that curled round a rather low but wellahaped forehead. He waa oarefnlly. admirably dreaaed. and tod*' anrlbably freah and cool, though It waa • burning Angurt day.
"Allow me to explain my appaanmee here." he aald. In a plaaaant youthful
Ing round over the front of Uia beuaa. bla oulck eye caught eight of Mine Dew- mond. To her annoyance, he lifted hia hat and gave a alight expreaalv* ahrug before atepplng into hla cab. which drove off ImmedUtely."1 wlah 1 had not looked out." ah. thought; Uten. amlllng at the Idea. It
.truck her very like aa "expulaton." "No doubt Mra Savllle could ba very —————cniel; but ah* to good to
in > pi——m, youuiinivoice. “I have token the exceedingly unlntereatlng Journey from London to thla place, and I now await It* arala bl* mtotreaa'a pleaaure aa to whaUter ,, ,, , ah* will aa* m* or not"‘oM y»u or* harer* :|< V: - **k«d Mtoa Deamond. taking off a Urge' nr ^ gardoi-hat which ahe continued to boM In her hand, wondering who thla uonld be. Mra. Sarllle-a vlaltor. had ' hitherto been few and far between, her . ■ " ■ •oqualntancea at that aeaami beingaaatured In remot* region*."Tea. I believe her major-domo haa oonvwyad my paateboard to Uie auguat pneanoA" And Ur* atranger. with Ure air of being very much at homA drew forward a chair, which Mlaa Deamond did not accept"Pray, has Mra. Sevilla bean long harer- . ^ “About a fortnight" mla "Ah! what wondarfnl reahtlng powor! I should have Imagined you would both hy this time bo extinct from men­tal Inanition." Mlaa Desmond laoghod —a aweat w.n-amusod laugh."And you can laugh like thatl" he continued. "Then your vltollty haa of eoorae kept my revered etoter-in-law alive. It mnit however, exhaust your own vital powers to give out oaono— BO. what do thay call «?—alectiiclty- to gnch a degree. There la nothing ‘BO ao aoul-deatroylng, ao deadening, •uburban rusticity. Won’t yon si down? I can’t atand any longer my •elf.”"Then pray do not I do not alt down boeanse I am not going to atoy.I thought Mrs. Savlllo would come In Immediately." wild Mtoa Deamond. who began to perceive In lomo way that this pleasant talkative personage waa a good deal older than he seemed.“Since you permit It then." And he •ank Into hla ohalr with a sigh of re- lleL 'Ton see,” be went on, ”thto sort eovere—even cruel; but the to good to me. r had better give her the ■rtcar’e nwBago; yet 1 feel haU afraid. Thlato*fe^W.eJr' ***“’ **'""'*She paused a moment then locked away her writing again, and proceeded down a long paaaago and n short stolr to the wing In which wna Urn. 8a- vllle’a bondolr.She kaockad at the door, and waa Imperatively told to come In. Mr*. farm, was walking up and down, evl- donUy much disturbed."Il»g your pardon.” healtottogly.,. Oh. come In. come Ini I have been worried by an Importunate fool; but I M not M overset that I cannot attendilcnT?^^’’ “* *'**■ “*•“I did; and he 1* very sorry, but ha ^ already returned the plan* of the cottages to the buUdor."‘rThen he must get them back." very .harp y. "I will wal^ ovar myartf to the vicarage. I want movement Did ‘0 see Lord Evertonr -Tha genUemaa who ba. Just left? mtm to England." oonUnued Mra. Sa- TllU^“s mere butterfly at alxty-three. Hto aeoM of enjoyment has hi* ruto. A trlfler of tho moat timing description, without an ambl tion or m, aim; worat of all. roc“i2; Of how he may throw other* Into temp^mr«.t‘’r^®‘"'‘^- dmeanderte* here to try and talk mo over to Indnee me to pardon tho cruel- leei Injury that could be Inflicted. I W him my opinion fully; but to be serloMly angry with euch a creature la like taking a bowltoer to shoot a humiptog-blrd. Como. Hto. Demnond let u. go out Into tho open air. What 0 clock to It? Nearly flve? I .hall walk round tho grounds until It to wte th* aaniitfht fan «9«a It, m* dMfWB mwB* UMaan ehtmnay.“H0B*«h*." rapaatod Mra. SarOlA “Thar* to an tmmeaae amount of nen- aena* talked about homa I with you could tee Klngswood. Lord Bvarton’t place; It to one of tho flnaat aaato to England-full of family tieaanra* and htatortc relics—and be would not mak* the fatotaat effort to retain IL H* might have anterad diplomacy—or tokM a foreign appointment and eared money. But he la quite content to d* rive h!e Income from the rent * Matt’ cljfeter millionaire pays him for h)s ancestral ball., when he might have married the mllllonalre’t daughter and kept It for himself. ”TTell If the daughter waa not th* of woman he could Iova he was right." aald Mlaa Deamond. thought­fully. “Suppose aha was not cpmpan- lonable. that be could not love her: the flneat place to the world could not "»»A* up for that."'Tou are a foollah child! The thing called love eopn evaporatea. Rank. Im­portance. higrh position, laet;* and* du- tlee due to one’s staUon fill up life •atlafactorlly. It la a low, mean con­ception of existence to spend U In per- -onnl pleasure ”•Tea. certainly. Tou are right." ea­gerly. "To lire for one’, aolf alone. In any way, 1a miserable. But one haa a right to, try and be happy It It does not Interfere with the happiness of others.”"You have been tolerably poor, from wltot you aay." «Ud Mrs, Bavllle, not unkindly. "Have you boon happyr Her Interlocutor paused befotw she THE HPOKAITB HXEKET B8F08T.Frteo* to Frodtoean.The following liit may Bo tokanro 6EF ;;r, IR BENEFICIAL EEEECTS ^3HSwZr:iAU««lVSB()VniE6ENUIIIE Ic; live! Pouttry—Uvi heni. Kej dieaaed, 17e lb; live epylng, Uc; dreawd, 15(* old roqetot*. lOcj dreaaed, lie; geeee, U« lb; dreeeed, ITej live duck., turkey., 23e;Egga—Freah ranch, tlO.Mutton — Dressed Wethers, we», 1IH«: lambs, Ue. ' *Live etoek—Veal, fancy, small, 14c j Ib; large, 8@nc lb; steers, live, *5@l 5.50 ewt up; dreeeed, 8<4@»e; boge,! live, 9 I-4C lb; dreaaed, lie lb. 'Fruits and vegetables—Potatoes 50c ^ cwt; apples, *1 to *1.60 per box; car-i rota, 50e ewt; beet., Ic lb; dry onion.,1 l-4c lb; horMradish, l*Vie lb; cab-: bage, 2e Ib.Butter—ranch, 39e lb.Chee.e-WiMon.in and Haielwood,~ .b, 5Q^, gy LEdOINOoat hsy, $18 ton; wheat rton-np; alfalfa, «1B; timothy, OflE SCZE ONLV. SO^A BOTTIE f- Svitop^FiesamdI Eiixinte^MANUFACTURED 8/THE ^lIPWlNIApfiSfllOPip - your reach, yet toacceaalbVe! The worat 1* to want nice dellcato thing* for aomo one you love and not to be able to get them; that to bitter, 8H1I, nothing can bo so poverty-stricken a. to have BO one to trouble about, no -no to loro or llvo for, no one to love"It to. then, very unfortunate for a peraon of your dlepoeltlon to have Joattoldto*'"”*’”"It to sad enough: but I have been fortunate In flndlng friends like Mr Raweon and hto daughter. It to bet- ter. too. to believe that there to some Plemmnt sheltered nook round the next turn of the road than alwaTS to look for sandy deMrts. Loneliness is the worst erll of all: it Is what I fear cre^m, 18c,Itay-hay, $1----------$21 beet grade. !&rain--Oata, $1.55 per ewt; barley, $1.55 per ewt; wheat, $1.70 ewt.Butter, Eggs and Cheese. E^Stamped eggs, 45c dor; local ranch, 40c do*.Butter-Hazelwood, 45c lb; Yakima, 45c lb; Edgwood, 40c; Mapleleaf, 40c lb; Richelieq, 45c lb; Rosalia, 40c lb; Hyee, 40c Ib; Home Brand, 45c Ib; Jer­sey Bell, 40c lb; Premium, 45c; Meadow Harvest, 40c lb; aoverbloow, 40e lb. Puel Prices.Pnel—Sawed, tamarack and fir, $8.25; me, $7.50. FuU length, tamarack and X' laienocuior paused before she ^led. -Yea, on the whole X bars been happy. Bometime* It has been tryingto feel shabby and to be unable to get xnej-Hoawed, tamara a new dress, to know tbit lovely pic- Pin«» <7.50. FuU length, turss and delightful music were with- <7 and $7,50; pine, $6.25 and $6.50.1 inaccessible. The Coal~^rney, Sheridan, Tabor, $9 ton; I ................................................... Springs, ^9 and $9.50; Monarch,' Bock Springs, ^9 and $9.50; Monarch, ^r OTHER MARKEV&concerning market quota­tions and phases are as fobDispatches tions, conditi lows;FlouxwSteady^^^^’ i ■»- .vu —e, ue went on,’’thto aort of plM to Just far enough from Lon «on to cut you off from all tha con­venience. of town life, mid too near for any of the legitimate amneemento and occupation, of the country." Itore the butler appeared, and «Hd. Mrs. tovllle will sea yon. my lord. If yon will come this way." ”016 gentle- M*n rose, and made another elegant l»w as he passed Miae Dasmond.I won«r Who he la. Some relation. 1 tup- go to Mr*. Savllle at present.” She too left the room by a different ekit and ascended to her own pleaaant apartment, which looked out to th* a dresiing-cloaet opened frothntoh^ like a altting-room. After lean­ing from the window for some min ntaa. apparently In deep thought, she went to her writing table, and. un locking a desk with a key wWeh bung to her chain, ah* began to add some line* {o a closely-written letter which toy therein. -She had written tor n consSdetnb!* ttaaa when the sound of wheel* and . horses’ feet drew her to the window, r-Trtm whence she saw the gantleman J whom she had spoken In thedrawing-room descend the ball door steps to enter a very rusty fly or sta­tion cab. He had a comically rueful •xpreaalon Of eoBntenanci, and. look compllshod tho ascent Mrs. Savllle sat down, as If tlrod, on a seat placed at the best point of outlook. Her panlon bad observed that th* keen, active woman was stronger In spiritfor this rich. proeperouA resolute tody. . *»«*utlful place thto to!" eh* oxcIalmAl, after gaxlng at the «ene before her for a few mtn utes. ~i think It 1. the moat charming I have over seen." - , "Then you have not seen much " ro- tamed Mr*. Savllle, tesUly."That is true. I have not seen any fine piacea In England, and the palaces and chateaux abroad are so melan­choly; but who could desire anything iMyoad the exquisite, graceful, home- Uae beauty of InglefleldT"It waa. In truth, a delightful abode, aheltered on the east by the upland from which they now looked down; the ground sloped steeply from the "PP®**** »'<>«. A wide view over
richly-wooded country; while the house, gardens and grounds occupied the level space between. Fine trees stood about, for Inglefleld was an old tountry-house dating tolerably far built in the half-Umbered style.
chimneys and many-gabled roofa The large additions made by Mra. Savllle’* father had hem. carried out la ^rdanco with the original plan, ud tha garden designed to mt It also. A circular town, surronadod with Sowar- Ing shrubs and dottod with sararai' torg* spreading trees, separated th* hones from a wide avenno which open-
toleJL from a wooded hollow, through whicb a trout-stream had bera widen* ed and dsmmed Into a miniaturs Inks. gUmpee. of which could
Savllle did not answer Imme- dtately; then she said, abruptly, n^e*?"** Chrtottaa"My name? Hope .Desmond.""I thought w). It 1* very appro- priato. Tou have given me a curious mental picture. 1 suppose It Is true, though It to Incomprehensible to me, but you give me the Idea of being sen­
sible and aecuratA Do you not feel that your life has been lost. frulOess. passed as It has bMn In thto constant stmggler !"No," cried Hope, her dark eyes llghUng. and IlfUng her head with an unconscious but dignified movement. “It ba. had much mreetness. and 1 have been of some use. Though I am not clever. I have done what I could; and that will always comfort me. I do not fear the future Work will come to me. 1 would not change with any one. 1 prefer to remain the 'me' that• You are an unusual tpecimen. Hiss Desmond, and really a profound phi­losopher; yet you have refinement and toate aye and cultnre enough, to ena­
ble yon to enjoy beauty and elegance,
literature and art. I congratulate you; only. If every one was as easily pleas­ed the world would sUnd still.” "Perhap. so." said Hope Desmond. With a sigh. ”I can only see life ac­cording to my lights.”Then, after some minutes' sUence. the observed how pretUly the smoke curled up from amon^ the trees down In the hollow.-Tes.” said Mrs. Savllle, «I suppose I^rd Csstleto I has arrived. Inglefleld Court belongs to him. It is on older j and much damper place than this. I must call to-morrow.” She heaved a deep sigh as she spoke. ”Mlss Dacre Is one of the fortunate ones according to iny estimate. She Is her father’s
Hye—No. 2, 78@79e.Barley—Pe^ or mixing, 58@61c; fair o choice malting. 64(g70c.
Haxseed-—No. 1 southwestern, ti.li; No. 1 northwestern, 82.34.Clover—811.75.Mess Pork—Per bbl., 825.75.._26. Lard—Per 100 lbs., 814.371-2.
mark, cases included, X9 ^-2c; firsts, 21c; prime firsts, 22c. Cheese^EasM)aiaies, 16 1-4(216 l-2c; twins, 15l-4c; young; leTlc^*' 161-2c; long horns, 16©Cattie—Market strong, lOc higher, ^ves, 85.60@8.65; Texas steers, 84.90
$10.45@!10.85; rough, $10,40(210.60; good to c^ice heavy, $10.60(210.85; pigs, $9.60©10.40; bulk of sales, $10.65
western, $8.75(210.35.
an embroidercilA striking model for a l^dkerchiJ linen, has a pointed 'c •kirt effect, cap sleeves and a mditt st-
pleats
New Yorkswith a moderate localNov 2 red b afloat. No. 1
Flour—Steady,
$1,26 1-2 nominal f w northern Duluth, $1.27 1-2 opening navi- gation. No. 2 hard winter, nomma!Butter—Top grades firm, others m prices unchanged.(Jheese—Firm and unchanged.. Mexican dollars.]
Alcohol
not neededAyer’s Sarsaparilla Is not a strong drink. As now made, there is not a drop of alcoholIQ It. It is a non-alcoholic tonicand alterative. Ask your own doctor about your taking this for thin, impure blood. Follow his advice every time. He knows.W8 pubU8hj)ur"to^!^!r!n^
, —–Mx»8byth8j.O.k, with spot quoted st | jimifTTF
cxAic IB ««r laxner s sole heiress, and takes the title, too. when she succeeds him. She to pretty, rather accomplished, and decidedly popular. 1 used to see a good deal of her at one time; now—–’’ she paus­ed and frowned, then, rising, she said peremptorily. "Come, I feel rheumah Ic; I havq aat here too long.”Few words passed between tho com­panions till almost at the gate which opened from Mrs. Savllle’s grounds on a foot-path which crossed the vicarage Holds, when that lady said, suddenly expect my son to-morrow,”^Tour eldest son r
(To he contBueAT-^-
83lV5@3“l75*“^' jlead was $4.45©4.55.
Iron was quiet, with No. 1 foundry* northern quoted at 818@18.50; No. 2 northern and No. 1 sonthern and No. 1 soft at 817.75@18.25.
AVheat—Shippi^, 81.82 l-2@1.87»I-2.
fi
$33(^30.Hay—Wheat,am$14(g)19; wheat and Iiiay—wncat, •14©19; wL_______ _ ____ata, $13(^17; alfalfa, $9(2)13; stock, $6 (i9; .traw, j FOR GRAIN GROWERs ' "aose: Wheat-March, 8s 31-4d: ‘hemeetMay 8a; July 7s, U l-2d. Weather dtotnictive .gent yet devisedcloudy. . ^"“*®«t*™>>«tion of Gophers. Squir-Avaltohle Orrin SuppUes. Prairie Dog,, it toiial telegraphic and cable commu- ______: UMurance against their—————— BAkAi^yAAwo. A..*nc lAogs. It la
Special telegraphic and cable commu- ravB«se. w ““urance against their
wuQue—unitea otatea eae*Rockies, increased 366,000
nicationsthe follO’.vassj, vassx..plies as compared'“!;?JUt-pnlted States east ^ «bnsheto: . good. Dealers will retond the piriL^F not n. M.i___t
iX’;.';
aerk at Marriage «« —What’s the tody’s flrat ProspecUve Bridegroom————~….K.vuiu —neavaniI itover tlMMgbt to aak ban.
«>uo,vuv nnsnem; i x^aiers will refund fltaaCanada increased 365,000 bbahels: price if pot as Total, United States and Canada> in-! Howp Ch«xucal Co ^ *creased, 731,000 Imshels. Afloat Wand i Co.. Portland. Ortsgoav..wope, increased 3 ^ . i ——- – ,and Europea 1,000 bosheliin Viiope. incr^a 3,Swr60r,, firtr*Til# nrt,my yo«^ WAih h t dimli it ymmhhf Wiimi U m«rnm
umiA*mi would you adrimfidletad ratiiw, af M» bum-
WkUitf
yvtt*g«r lmid%:Wfwi».UthMik Not iol DoeldwUy mrt to; Imt it it yrwftttfitly w«n to afflict mott everj
Uott ttwat «f tlow growth.
V«l H it not aoQtagiousfia afflicted withdiaoaao hit beat
■:;-rHood’s
Sarsaparilla

Will purify your blood, clear your complexion, restore your appetite, relieve your tired feeling, build you up. take it this spring. Be sure to
0*t H tod»y In «Mnul IhittM fom or tablet* eaUed Saraataba MO Do*« *1.
PSA'Sis the yvonl to I ^vhctt you need amDcdy
':r
m
TryaPackaicof-
Inland
Crackers
TW ate cifap aad wImI««o«c. All CmSeETkeM. Mff.br hU«i Eaiwe B««iit ^ Concur. Sr«ba»e.
SEEDS teenrlSEEDS
a^Ob'^^’bir,"’md for prVtllii.CECIL YINCENT SEED COMPANT. TKKOA, WArtH.
International HotelfiPOXAlCa WASH.»4 Kaia At*,, Mtr
B*nuir4 St A B«W. atrietly aod«r» h*t*l, 105 Po*at,
hot *od eold water aad telapbon* in rooBB. Ratea. 50 centa and i
mnriea. Talaphon*. Main 41!
Claimants’ Claim Departmentme, hire ami !nau*>aac« claims Inveatl- ami adjnatwi. aoi-802 Untl*U* block, , f»P«»KANK. WAHH. cMbi
hMOJM Lamuxua from it, asd ia
timi tha alflkitod b«eom«a re.milalT# to thM boat alarha and ihay break awty from him and atart iat0 btwinest for themtalYM, takiag with them a goodJy portioiT of the afflktetl Ode r biwiaese. | to stay around myThan you would aay that the die-1 trouble for my children, •aaeAn oiMB iaeitatioii to aompailtiom What ia tba aiaei iijpoa thKi afflioted one when ikia aosy^tUion anUref First he i$ a IittU-a|tt»»ed, then he laughs and says: *‘I’A>ibeen in busi-
nem thirty yeara I know* all ?^y cus­tomers by their first nardea. Vfhey wouMnH buy anywhere eiee." Then a little later U begins to talk of hard
I I ■»»» ibwb.
Uttl* sister OWys be sn ■ ——ehildtea when 1 nm n meat “Ym, son,” answered bis
married and hare a home of her own, for I don't intend to ^ow any annte
ai sunt to my nhipmonte of copper ore soonaaaf " «ifl wiU be la the ranks of the steady
hone# making
Why is theI inearablitse the Tietim never known that he has it. in faet,^he always knowssympioms of the dU-that he has not got What are the syi eaee, Dr.fWhen a man ceases to study other men's ideas, and thinks that he knows how to ran hU bimiiiew–he has been in it long enough to know.*' ^What would yon advise to prerent this discasetThat you keep awake to the fact that lots of other men in your business know more than you do, and that their ideas are worth studying, and that you get as many of these ideas as possible.A well-known physician was examin­ing a class of nurses who had served their appointed time in the hospital. The candidates tlied past him, and to each he addressed a question calculated to show the nurse's efficiency. In one of the questions be described the eondi-how________^___, _ _should be administered to tl “Eight grains," promptly nurse.The doctor made no comment, the girl passed on. When her turn again she appeared greatly confused, and said to the examiner: “Doctor, Iwish to eeirect the answer I time. IT, j,nswer I made last that one-eighth of^ain should be giv^ the patientToo late," remark without looking up paper, “the man’s Tommy’s maiden aunt had called at-
hth . nt."ked the physician, from his question
occ m COST or uvmi^
usiCRESCENTBAKING POWDER 25tnilL POUND
wmArmstronn: Macbinery Co.,Founder* MechinUt*32UMS E. Riversid*. < Phou* main 17spokanp:* wash.ICEMACHINES COMO HOTEL .V.«cold water *nd t«!ephoo«utoh*d.not*x»d »In every roomAND UF*Prop. «7 Front At*.K. - - Prop. •I. «7 Front At*. | Ladies Earn $1 Feei^lee if yon want to e*m It fee, send n*m*s meat. ple**nre and happin*** throogh our *s •orlsTion Information confidently. >^re ury. Pacific tAorwi'-onalof Club, Spokane, Wn
Cot-oT«rlands for sale very cheap. .nMeui LnJ»w CM»ujr. Sftlum
FARM LOANSReaMMiabU Rate*.HETHERINGTON AND RIECHERS,H20 Paalaca Kid a.. Rpokaa*. Waah.
With Over 56 YearsOf successful experience back of Hostetteris Stom> ach Bitters, don't you think it is the medicine you heed to set sour storn* ach right again? dtis only natural for you to want the best, and the Bitters will Try a today for Heart* bum. Flatulency, Sour Stomach, Indigestion, Costiveness, Grippe and Malarial Fever. Get
prove
to be "it” bottle today for
I IOSTETTER’O
TIbTtTrO
Customer—I want some kind of door spring; one that won’t get out of cwder.Hardware Dealer—A door springfClistomer—Yes, and one that won’t
require the strength of an efephant to open it.Hardware Dealer—Hem. *Customer—And yet it must be strong enough to bring the door all the way to. and not leave it swinging open a couple of inches.Dealer—I see.Customer—And when the door closes I don’t want it to bang to like a cata- pault with a crash that shakes t|ie kouae from its foundations.
Dealer—Yes; you want one that will bring the door all the way to, and yet do it gently.Customer—That's the idea. But
don't want any complicated arrange­ment that requires a skilled mechanic to attend to It.Dealer—No, of course not. You want something simple, yet strong and ef­fective.Customer—That’s the thing; some­thing that will do its work quietly yet thoroughly, and won’t be eternally get­
ting out of order..Dealer—I see. I know exactly what you want, sir, just exactly.Customer—Well, show me one.Dealer—We don’t keep door springs.
The jeweler left his new boy ia charge the store while he went home to din-of the store whi ner, but not until he cautioned the youth that all the goods were marked, and that ho must not let anyone take goods with him unless thev were paid for.“Well. Sam." he asked, upon his re­turn, “did you have any customerst" “Y"ou bett"“And I manked 18c on the inside, and here's the money—a dollar."
any customerst i Sam, gleeful] id I got his money, tool I sold o all those brass rings you had th
PILES•Thayw sufleredwith pik» for thiityw
six yeara One year ago last April I be­gan Uking Caacarets for oonstipation. la the course ci a week I noticed the pika began to disappear and at the end of aU weeks they cUd not troubk me at aU. Caacarets have done wonders for me, I am entirely cured and feel like a new man,” George Kryder, Napoleon, O.
To Braak in Naw ShooL Always shake In Allen’s Fpot-Ease, a aching,powder. It cures hot, ■woUea feet. Cures eor nails and buniona. At aUstitute. Simple dress ADen O. C
s3Sshoe stores^ 25«. Doa’t^ae<»pt any sub-Olmsted, La Boy,“It’s no trouble now, you know, to “You mix a pint of salt with ten pints of water and stir it tifi all the salt is dissolved. Then you drop an egg into the mixture, and if it sinks to the bottom—no, if it floats, it’s— well, I’ve forgotten which it is, but that's the test, anyway."To Omn a Cold In Ono Day Take LAXATIVE BBOMO Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. GROVE’S tigna ture ia on each box. 2Sc. of the viceroy, Earl Minto, whom 1m eharseterixes as “tpiaeleaa,” and whom he says U afraid to move for fe« of being shot.WiU be la the ranks of the steady producer* by summer.The Lucky Calumet, a copper prop­erty near Muliaa, has reMimod work after being closed down several weeks on account of snowslides. Michael J. OT’Mara, 51 years old, president of the O’Mara-Lynch Mining |- company, a prominent mining man of f Salt Lake section, died of heart dis­ease recently. With a shipment rate of 1,000 tons per month to its credit, the Success mine, located about five miles from VYiJlace, is fast becoming one of the large producers of the Coeur d’Alenes,Preliminary returns on the vote be­ing taken by the unions of the Western Federation of Miners on the proposi- tion to afiUiate with the American Fed­eration of Labor indicate that the issue wiR carry by a substantiai majority, IThe Brown Palace, one of Denver’s; best known hotels, has become a parti of the endowment of the Myron Strat- i ton Home for Aged Miners, which is! to be built in El Paso county. This! is in compliance with the wUl of the* late W. 8. Stratton. The trustees of! the home, instead of selHng the hotel, which IS valued at 11,500,000, win op­erate the property.Bepublic, Wash.—Ore shipments from the Eureka gulch mines were tempo­rarily tied up as a result of the derail­ment of all of the ore cajrs on the O. N. and the 8. A B. C. roads, caused by damage done by the rapidly melting snow. Mine owners here are jubUant over the prospects of having their ore home milled. High-grade ore has been struck in the bottom of th© main cut on the Lone Pine-Surprise property at Republic.Earl Minto Blamed.Victoria, B. C,—W. E. Lyall, a tea planter of Assam, who arrivfed on the steamship Empress of India from the orient, believes that the blame for the disaffection in India lies at the door Bell—I wrote Jack to return tho ioek hair that I gave him; .Nell-Wellf*BeU—He sent me a package today containing three dozen locks of hair and told me to select my own prop­erty and return the balance to him. /’V; BSt all the nourishment 5om kput Into It These pUls conUln no cri " Send lOc for Trial Package. “So when Bella rejected Jack, he went immediately and proposed toMaud!“Y'es; but that wasn What do ypu think! order on Bella for the” ring, m’t the best of it. He gave Maud an Triml Bottlm Fretei By MmU DB. MABTEL’S FEMALB PILLS Seventeen Yeara the Standard.Preecribed and recommended for women’s ailmenta—a ecientiflcally pre­pared remedy of proven worth. The re­sult from their use ia quick and pe . For sale at all drug storee. A clergyman of the old school, who beUeved in a little good wiae “for his stomach’s sake," hired an Irishman to clean out the rectory cellar.Terence carried out two bushel baskets o- empty wine bottles.“They’re dead ones, Terrence," said the rector.*' They are that, your reverence. But, faith, they all had a clergyman wid ’em whin passing away." ill;. ’if”'m■1 m Sllrfef. L**d, 11.00; Gold, Silvsr, 50c; Zinc or Copper. fl velope* and fun pi Control sttd UmpZsrm Carbonat* Kf>ll«t>«IOl oa. as wdl aa any
It has been the poHer of th* Empire ^pany to make th*L»t machine poasiNe.taatify how wo.l
ii
■flvf;f ■ '.n;
hav* a few catondars left 1 ^N*wY^y,
Empire Cream
Separator Co., ttl99H«USiaSlnil
SEND TIBS AD. FOB ME PBEmDM LIST
Padfic Coast Kscoit Compaa,Portland Seattle Spoksn*Aak for Their Goods and
SAVE THESE SWASTKAENDSEAI5 MYAREVEUAHJEThey WiU ^ure Yoa Many Useful Artictes Whhout Cert
m
»'-00 P»am
PUTNAM FADELE SS DYESmor* goods brighter snd tester eolers tkan sny other dys. Om lOo iMrtsflO eoleiartlk, wgol and MtttaColorequalWrit*

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THE OmmHO TEreUKE!W!. e PcMMiaAli, Milor «m! r«llt)i^.
OrnciUi. i*Ai^ Nt* COUNTYM.E Church.IS?. TWmAS tAWSOM. riMt«rSuiKl«y School…:…,
»««wr. 3«i».of ForeclonuroSalo hrlo; A. M.It; A, M.s ivw;hsi«s 7:310j Xh« fiUt bi» pnlpit only everyI other Sondey. AnacHmceinents of this | |I will be made in thia paper from time to the
a; 5: Waiter (i. Dytfert aid TtnUi^ F M.' f hlM wife DofendautJf,k M. ( Voder and by virtue of an■r and by virtue of aaie and deeree t>t fofeelo«ure and ^ »alt% Ueued out of the DietriotCo the Second j«dtela> m^trState of Tdaho. In and for the I County of Ne* Perce, on the .Hrd day» k*;of March, A. I)., mH in the above Iber theapectal Raater aervic* j or Marcti, A. !>., m«), in the billieX. E. Church Sunday. AU in-faction, wherein A. 8. Butterfield
NMIm fwOtp.ita.iit tf tht lattrtor,[TaUal Ijmd one*. ! hi’."!5S«UV7«..h..muMKa tno>aTKOM
in-faction, wherein A.j the above named plaintffT obtalnM 1..^———-. decree of
Realestate
j : : DcCotirccy. dealer in Krt .
': LOANS, TIMBER LANDSemr LOTS and INSURANCE
on Improved Farms.{a judgemenl and decree of fora- I closure and sale apainat Walter O. ‘Bypert and Tennessee A. I)yp<*rt, wife defendants on the Hth dayUet W» Fwei»t Iare prone to never be «t-1hi thii life. It U alw«y» the j , ,„rt coiit. which ..id .Wr,that we sert. and lying and being in the County of| ,iNes Perce. 8tate of Idaho, and!
Money to L<^ < OF^PIINO, IDAHO Whmi in Oroflno. Mate. OTEL IDAHOIV. O. Hail|I««on, Prop, tator.(Formerly Hotel Carson)Bnthely new nwns{!«m*nt. BTcrything new and np to date. Accot dationa fdr all. Dining Room Service ample for all comera. Give os i ready to fall down and worship any Itwomoter who couM successfnly es- j n««„ ^ sk«tf^. Sale U. uMish this enterprise. In the i . r~r-^ jcourse of time we got our lights,*K-ssr fwstess.- rM- Uudw W fey Yiftoe of wi cxecutioD »and they wrere no better or no;^District Court of the! then those supplied by sny ’ Second judicial District in and for the j ^ County of Net Perce, State of Idaho,I and to me directed and delivered, for a { rendered in the District .... ...e Second Judicial D9000 the obatacles attendant to any ; Ke* Perce Count>, Idal enterprise began to arise and snd- day of October i90®, in favor denly the lights vanished and thejWm
le n) of Durham’s the City of Lewls- ngto the official plat Ic in the oftlct ecorder of t«ai And the
North Idaho Title Gwnpanyton. according to ! thereof on file in the office of the County Kecorder of t«aidlI pla oUhiPerce County. And the North haIf(N. l-2i of the Northeast quarter (N. K. 1-4) of Seclike aystem. Everyone was
I District, of the 8th of Bert
power was Everybody, im- imediately foigetting the teinpordry gether with costs of suit and interest, i natuie of the obstacle to be over-! have levied on the following described
ment for the nnforsten accident.Right, defendant, to wit:rof J. ot twoThis is but an example of the in-t southwest QuartW (SV 1-4) of the consistency of human nature. Wc| Northeast Quarter (NB 1-4) and North have now under construction, a : Dalf (N l*^) of J^uthewt Quarter (SET Tforty Six'^»“)building high hopes. It is the one | Boise Meridian, situate and Tying in the thing needful to our existence, | County of Nez Perce, State of Idaho, without it we are pnmitive. with it! NOTICE is l^reby givenwe are modern. This plant will no |doubt meet obstacles to its succes-j of and at the front door of' fnl operation, which will be costly 1 Court House in the City of Lewiston to the management and inconven-1 ^« Pcrcc County, i^io. i will ient toits^trons. -»•incidents in everyday life and ; bert bidder, for the lawful mo^ey orf , the should be borne patiently by the i United States, all of the above described public. The dty and school gov­ernments are others. In an embryo state tbcT have been forced to plan and build beyond their ability to pay. trusting in the future for in­creased revenues sufficient to wipe out present expenditures. Life as it affects the individual, is analo­gous to the community. Every city in its upbuilding experiences idrawbacks, which must be aver-j jBssB^rGPsrw noausa ,come by patience, pluck and horse • of oroaiio. Idaho,
quarter (N. E. 1-4) of Section j Twentj-one (21) In Township ’ Thirty-eight (88) North, nsnge ]' Two (2) Ki^st of Boi^c Meridian, together with all and .singular The tenements, hereditaments 1 and appurtenances thereunto t>e- longing or in any wise appertaining. I Public notice is hereby given that ' on .Saturday, the 2nd da-v of April, i A. D. 1910, at 3 o>lock P. M. of that; day In front of and at the front i door of the Conn House of the • County of Ne* Perce, in Lewiston, * Idaho, I will in obedience of said i order of sale and decree of foreclos-' ure and sale, sell the above described j property or so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy said judge-j ment wdth interest and cost, etc., toi the highest and best bidder, for thei lawful money of the United States, i GEO. W. WELKER,Sheriff. 1By LOUIS D. SCHATTNER, Deputy,
ABSTRACTS OF TITLE
SURETY BONDS ^ TRUST COMPANY BUSINESSAddress: Lewiston National Bank Building. Lewiston, Idaho
BIRB mStJRASfJp:
For the Choicest ol Fre<* and Cured Meats go to the Palace Meat MarketWells He. Palmer, Proprietors Beef, Pork. Poultry. Fish, Mut­ton and Veal always on hand The Palace Meat Marke^ ‘he I Dated March 9th, 1 Notiea for Pubfleatlan.D?twrtinenCofthe Ettterlor - J ^ U. 9. LaoU Oake at LewMloa. Idahs. Mamh^’mlucc I* h^by firra tteUXARKJN J. FLORA ’ Oro Peeno Lumber Co. ^ Idaho... Man uf act -^-^LfwrnwmmBy. LOUIS D. SCHATTNER.Deputy Sheriff.Nottos #or Publication. such a state are we now jtatering and these few Itnesare peused.Mr. Borah oa locomc tax. ‘ oiaLc ate wc uu^K j 0,3,3, for S. H SR. H." and E. >4 8'
7u.«?eApril *«io.Excerpts from speech delivered oiVSErt5i!^rVurtSSdr jama Tyra and by Hon. Wm. E. Borah, last j^e^^lntiot^n.^noror^fino, Idaho, before the Club of Economics, ml * «’ bartlett. Reatour.New York City.' f“A few weeks ago the uate, a m
act of Jttnc 3. iS7«. and act* amendatory, known aa the ‘nPimber aad Stone law,” at *uch value aa"SSfsSrHSr'isflS House
defeat the entry. •
RouigH and O L4umbar* LatH, ^blnslMs Etcm
Billfi a Specialty
Dr. J. M. Fairly ‘
Physiciam and Surgeon
Shmiff. S.I.
tcndetl and accurate information, not given to the use of inconsiderate Ian- fault-fiading. declared noon f the senate that ing 1300.900,000 a year more ahould under strict business If that be true it rcvala not si or loose business methods, hot an indefensible crime, a crime -H»th republicans and democrats
Notice of
alter
^ gert. his
Foreclosure Sale by QROFINO Brooks, Plaintiff Vs.
Dygert and Tennessee A.
aolv bad «8le, issued out of the District Court a crime Second Judicial District of
which hM d«t,o,cd Iter, anddisease which has destroyed every pubhe on earth lias fastened itself iTennessee A.thei his wife defendantsFebruary A. D. 1910. for
Ocarwater Telephone LineConnects with Pacific Telephone
outside as wen aa all local points. Quick, prompt service a specialty. I respectfully solicit your business.Samson Snyder, Proprietor
draws |i 2,000,000 a year hoods. So long as that is true and method of taxation continues there l*e no exertiofi upon the part of me wealth and influence to slop such vi extravagance. Bat if we ahould < i pieces or parcel that ithe County of rce, .State of Idaho, and ‘ and described as foUuw.sto-witLots One (1) and Two (2)InSec- Dr. Bri^nDENTIST In Orofine U to 31 ef each mentk In Kaminh 1 to 10 of each month IOffice in Residence Orofino Feed StoreFred L. Frazier, Proprietor Carrico n general stock of Feed, Grain, Hay, Ac. Chop Hailes the Celehmted “Gold Medal” and “Queen of the West” brands of flour, made by Nezperce Roller Mills. Just a Word About the Shnon Piano Company Special Pianos i J. E. PSekerdjUndertaking & Embalming |Jf/tte { Picture Moulding, Matting, and | /ftel I Frameing, Sewing Machines and 't of I Repairs, ^Needles and Supplies, jon First Street, next ( Bell Telephone Office. I and the Southea.^t QuaifU> of
__________________
S^?Si{'£iS'L:ClearwaterFoundryle course of this man.; appurUmanceff thereunto be t Uint of the demagogue, mg or In anywise appertaining in the citadel of corrupt Public noUoe ia hereby given
As long ms Mr to take this standfears from the people. Republi-eaos. democrats, socialists,-all are* , ,K i and•who withoot Uiot of the demagogue, log or fn anywiae appertaining.: dares stand in the citadel of corrupt Public noUce la hereby given that i .wealth organized to debauch the on Saturday, the 2nd day of April. ; and Tmnmers.
of the Court House of the County of £ast Wain $t.Nez Perce, in Lewiston. Idaho. l!
I Manufacturer of gang edgers
for the common people, ah's speeches on the iamendment have created a profound : will in ohedl acniiation throughout the country ;snd sump him as one of the strong *'‘men of the senate._________With the celestial world agiwted bv comets andle restial agitated , _____ .«.e«ti( ni. the year 1910 is not likely j soon to be forgotten. ' ' Dated March 9th, 1910.
iwi^iAiu. Aunuty. *!• , ..”',.Sl:tS“„':iiLewistonabove descrlbctl pIdaho.«ale, .sell the above describetl jprop-) ———————————————naU«;“tiafr:a"dTud^teStI' Ogden, Morgan & Morganwith interest and cost, etc., totiiejhighest and beet bidder, ' – * ————————-_ foribelavrmeteors and affairs money of the United States.
Deputy.
LAWYERS.Dbtrkt, State aiid Federal Fnctiee
hroughout, according to our own gn. -THEY BEAR ODR NAME AN^D A TEN YEAR.S' GUARANTEE.” Do you realize what this means? It means that yon take no chances in baying the Simoti Piano. Sold forJu^blirat'plito*''* *''*“*“‘ to ^
We are the Wholesale and RetaU Dutrib- utora for the Inland Empire of the
MASON & HAMLIN, MELVILLE CLARK, VOSE & SONS, J. & C FISCHER, SCHILLER, CROWN, CABLE-NELSON, KNIGHT.BRINKERHOFF, CONCORD, and other piano*.
MelviDe Clark Solo Appoflo, Combinola, pMcher- ola, and other Player Piano., MASON & HAM- UN and other organ*.Write |or .Cataloguea, or call at the warerooma of
The Simon Piano Or
618 LEWISTON, IDAHOWASHINGTON, or leave yonr order with the
OROFINO •- . IDiVHO'
Comer of First and Post, SPOKANE. )r leave yonr order with tlWHITE PINE TRADING CO.OROFINO, IDAHO
'■Im.

AN^R
CAearwctter Lime- Co. Lf d.
Dtaters In
Portland Cement, Hard Wall Pfas>
ter, Lime and Hair
lOAdmro • ' .' * IDAHO
IR. H. LEEPER
PractUilHorseskocrGENERAL BUCRSMITHINGYo«r» for Firtt Cl«« Work
SHOP
ON FIRST AVENUR
Por e F»l*a»wnt Half Hour Call at
The Idle Hourcisara, Tot>«oco, Confectlonary~PrultaIn Saaaon.Pool and BilliardsJt. D. K»*tn,dy. Propri0tor Oroflno. Idaho
Berry Plants for Sale.Strawberriea, Clark’s Seed­ling or (Hood Rirer) Black and Red Raspberries Dew­berries, (Lucretia) Logan berries, Blackberries, good strong plantsBOR PRICES WRITEA. WHITE,^b^ Idah^
M. Chandler hmm estateLoans and Abstracts imimANCE NOTARY PUBLICOfflcmeoOld. Jah—t BmilsHms,OROFiMO iD^HO
1 desire to notify the resideoUof Oro- fino that I am in the field for all claMes of draying and will haul anything from I valiac to a ton loud.Yours for business,P. J. Nobia
Charley Noble left this morning for Moscow.John Mix returned Tuesday from s businem trip to Moscow.O. C. Rutter, of Ahsahka, has moeed into the Dow Snyder place, on the hilt
> in Lewiston, letter receivedHomer Ri^Hardson. who resides at Hsi^ Hills, Alberts, sUte* that the winter lit bM i«tion WM over and that flock wiotared Ss« ai»d plowing waa tfcen in Mr. ^ichardfon ia wellpleaaed with (Men Cirockett on Tneaday pnrehajad
Ming io
itoek in all Hnea carried by him.
aid
i» tbe proprieior of the Hotel New- ball. and eaya arrangenienU have been oardina Sfteen men at bifmade (or bbarding Sfteen men at place tbia aummer. Them men will to work next week wagon road for as possible Into the interior the pres-
sions of the Local Option Law Leagoeas a delegate from Nez Perse <»unty.ss5sarxS5:’'Ji.i;'t 5:ieet in view of asaUting the authoriti^ to enforce the Local Option Uw in the n the North Fork which will be pushetl as In South Idaho.C. W. Cochran, of Juliaetta. apent a (aw days here tbia week directing the work of putting in the new water aya- tem. Mr. Cochran expeets the piping for the water aystem to arrive about the firat of May. In the meantime theremrvoir wifl*bi completed and ^every­thing put in readineoa for piplipe lay _ Hr. Cochran hopes that the piping will arrive in time to be placed across the creek before the June frehet. If this la not aceomplUhed some trouble miy- ariaeoD this score. County Asaesror J. S. lacks baa ap­pointed tbe following held depuUea and the work of luting the property in the county began Monday: Cbarlet Lance.Forr^t; R. H. Thompson. Mohler; Prank Harmon, Weippe; J. R. SUndl^. Vollmer; E. A. Patterson. Lenore; D.M. E. A-^pnes. Peck; W. E. Baird. Nez Benton;.. S. Long.Rimrock-. M. Mc.Aaley, : snd John LewU, Orofino.Ntlee to Hocsemen. The French Coach Stallion, Deci No. 4159, will make the season of Hows: At Orofino Mondaysdays; at the S. E. Gainer farm . morning.ighbred Jersey calv ney. Orofino.Vm. Cliandler received his comraia- this weak as census enumerator for this district. This work begins Amil 15th and it supposed to be completed in thirty days.The Bolliuger Annex, with iU forty naw rooms makaa this famous boatlcry one of the beat equipped in Lewiston, Mr. McOrune. the landlord, thinks the beat U nmm to good for hU friends.FOR LEASE—200.000 acres sute and school land in Nez Perce county. Will be at Lewiston troni March 2I to April 2, Call or write Chan. Wallace, SUte Land Agent, care of County Treasurer. B. N. Brown spent a few days in this lion this week- He accomi^ed commissioners to Ahsahka to look over the North Fork road, and will superinted a force of men soon to lie put to work bnilding this much needetl thoroughfare.B. W. W^ing, county commiaaioner from the Third d here this week _ t#. ■ "y S; Cavendish. IdiwsCanvaaaa Vola.canvassM tne reiurna u, in. optihn election and found a dry majori^ of 83a; 6036 votea in all were caat, 344* were ilastln favor of closing toe sa oona, and j6i» against closing the saloons. The case will now be Uken to the courts. All saloons in the ewnty but three doted Thursday. March 31st.Dr. Cmmlngbam Her*.Dr. Cunningham, the Veterinary Surgeon and Auctions will be at the Clearwater barn in Orofino on Saturday and Sunday. Apnl 2nd and 3rd. Will cure ringbone, side bone, spavin or any old thing. Bring in your hoi^ and have their teeth examined. No charge for examinaUon. If you c^n’t fa. ^ 22'.'^^'. ■' is '.-'■■y t ----- mASem X{ # E4ii« S^^etm wttt tkvts* ^ ui Ui^Hf, atvttna fe*»4* I^i4isit Ui jN«i*rt »*.*,»«. S. FA UK LOAKSr-M«Mi* &«fl«! u«^ i-mi^ W<». 3, Alb«tUBCdon, U»^; U«i.toii Pr«ii.«4 j vp« «« pr«f>»>«d » hiraiA *nything ? 4, IMi Mbott* 0«>t*io, 11» #i4twaiV laiiftber or improved fiuine.
OROFINOBmUm Oppmt .IDAHO
neyrk.forilur c«*»ty of Kmi«osPf«nkMooK««Vi«»tty, Vw^„ ^i«t e»4 H€M« Beer4 w«r« rWitor« at ’ Kotkt U kereby glTeo tWocelfd b^a JMr, w*.- s«M.y. |.S‘^XSfe» iMr. Jokii Wells M busy prei^ing |o ro«| diatrkt No. 15 nod 50 op to the !,tl»oak«^tJMrClerk of Ufence U»4 fmtttf fnxdtMmA by fr«tt Clteflie A4Nhmi.
4 oetiuitl «tmy lb Ow Famotui CJeenrektr■csr&“”«"“S'S£f
Qearwater Livery and Feed Stable.WHEELOCK a OPPUGER. PROPRIETORS DriiHng Teams, Saddle and Pack Horses Furnifhed on Short Notice. OROFINO – – – IDAHO."Wi
f
Anoka Newaand contract awarded to the Uirf work to;^ be done according to plana and »peei«~ ! Tki»IHfttict.
Stan: of tdaSo.
the CcMty^g>rWe« ^sir;…………… * J ve vkvuT enxxJTKimx wWe & fCinnc W knUlted kishay bam. I on file tn this office.I S, m«Mi iMa gone toI>alkena, Wash- , P«»al must be accompanied by a certified ;Udbeck for five per cent of its amonut., i pavaUe to Chairaum Board County Com- ^the trail fairly again now.
Out »na«b Club met w^ Mr. And i„to
ra «a.pavaUe to Chairman Board County Com- ^ erai terms ouu the pUiutir is now smTfor | Our “writ- are getting able to lollww M ffer Perce county, Idaho. iwhich shall be forfeited to the county 1if the bidder refuses or neglects to enter Idaho; that piainiiiUv^ defeodant iatrrmarrted I
.~u. ..d ..d a………, r?..sr‘J^ijgTwenty present { in 5o per cent of contract price ;
I^^^SSjNebaho ■ Co;Stsi
tt Uaii, Fn»friM*n SMCMMnt*F. Z. Lviaber Company
• I for completion of contract acecording to abaa.ppear aod.i ; Wa* is reserved by the Board o< County Umber. Uth. HoalAntfs Shiniaes. Doors, Windows MiUworll and Paper •‘‘"SiOrofIno ^Idaho SdM«l EIkS« April IMS.relief d«-The^ I is reserv-cu uj u»s: x>a3«i« in ih7c*t.ripUiui iAn election will be held in SchcoK |Wst^ NO 95;^ Saturday^ the i^h ; misakmem. Nerday of April, The purpose of the eleo ' W. L. OIFFORD.^^ ; ^^al]By W. E. DAGGETT^ ' ’ ' ^ h-GiFFOUD.two ts to elect one trustee for a period j of three years from date of election. A 1 vote will also be taken on a special ta* |1Umqsm Hardware IXaplay.* Wm. Bennell has on display this week
sand
D«kd W L^riaton. Mri«,..kUr^?SS: jBy C. B. MONTKITH, IAMor,«.M»|
: unique h^the hardware line. Dishpana, bnckets and tinware have beentaken bv'Mr. Bennell ami trimmed in to i8th day of April, 1910, at 2 o’clock i The sr-tc of idaii.> sends Greeting .very imaginable shape with the ns. of f- Ti" ' i. o.iHtapebunting, rope, twine, etc. spring mitlinery.^Mr. Bennell has „ ___________>hich only reqnires opportunity to bring Jout Kvery^e should eaamine ihi. ex- j for• ^ImarydiapUy. | amount, payable *-:I m» A«lva.l>i.,d.p. •,; J The first tbroogh train since the dis-1 «> 'h' County if the bkld^ I si.de. of last week .rrived in ; ^^^IS^rrk'rI Orofioo Monday, three hours late. This | Succesafnl bidd
Merrill House iOroflno, Idaho .;;;
Good AccommodationsConvenient Sample Rcfcms
Home Cooking Only
Wmi
1Si
»
. wresemme • t" ‘^e !J rcscmo.c resconaible bidder. Att work to coartif.he a«o»l Jadiciai tt«rtct. state .f'We underatTOd that ^ be done according to plans and sbecifi , |talent in thi. line, j cations on file in this o«ce and at the ; pUitnATi^d EeSo ' *^ H. Nave. Lewiston, Idaho. . mW «ct ion t» brought to dlwo We the bon4* ofaccompaniri |>y !^ j relief •» to the Court n»*y »©em proper.issioners, of Net Idaho, which shall ^c forfeited ]Perce i « I
The Orofino Feed ^ Sale Stable.I. W. Scott, Proprietor,
. GOOD SADDLE HORSES ON h'aNDo^thc*siatc ^ l3«bo?”hat^Iaintilr Tad t r into a written contract < defriHiant iaterman^ed .t Kendrick. Lauh i of hia bid, or | ShISd^ed^iSa«frxS^ ' IDAHO.press and it took one car alone to bring f *" »tm]S^tinuerto ‘o wtnfuUy I . - ------- : .......-....- ............ .....................through the week's accnmUlation. Not-! tfpC'^ind ap^fi^t ^ | S5withrtanding the lateness of the hour. Each proposal must «ate UmcPostmaster Pwker. assisted by Miss I which the work will be compicttd.^ anb- j SfpYm^gayp|y s^mao «.. ::ii Hay and Grain for Sale.»" train carried the delayed mail and ex-1 in full amount of his bid. certified check in 50 per d m0 d to distnbnte the twenty-seven remains uneimpjeted. The right I.............................................. r or all bids ____ dartng the msrrird jdefendent provided Mid | of papers as -well as the letter;reject any or all bids is resered ^ Board of County Commissioners, m: Brady Visits Lawintoo NonmJ.Governor Brady vUiteil the Lewiston | ^State Normal Scoool last Thursday and j By W. E. DAGGETT. ‘expressed himself as extremely well i ^ . Deputy,pleased with the manner in which' the [ Lewiston. Idgho. March 15th. 1910. approprktkio for the new Normal build- i Aliaa SummoM. *inp had been expended. He declared | tn theWiUrict that, without flattery. he could say that | i^kt. state of Idaho, had never seen such a splendid milding as the new Normal gymnasium irected .or such a small- appropriation, the Board of County Commissioners. jBy order Of the Board of County Com- | AncfU my hanlacd the seal of themissioners, Nez Perce Couifty Idaho. j putrict Court of the secstid ju.L GI^W'^»*^ diclal Uiatrict - ................ of the tecood jTMtirial iuaodforthe Coaaty ofinaiadiTVs. Hetea Knatsott______________,„dth«it w.sthe i«.i pi.ee of work ‘Sr?.*? Twer'iSj:hat he had y.t s«D done in any «du-j t5T«S2 ■ ld.llo. In ity.tBwsIbSri.'l Owtri______ .and for Ncx Perce Count dayofMarvh.^iMa^^^^^^^^^By C E. MOgTKTTIL‘ gas A Morgan A^oim^^orPoato«ieea»d reaideoce addre Orofino Meat & Cold Storage Co, Dwalwrasln=?• ' CurmiartU Roultry Nolicn to CrmHto...In the Probate Coart of Mea Perce In the matter of Ue eaUle of Chriaten aon. Ueceaaed. S aOMSttt SlfUi Sold■iifi f said deceaaed.ndcnoti Peceaaed, rrsooa haring clalawith the aecrasary eouchera. 1 ha after the ftral puhlkalloa of j e a«id Sfet i Audemon iu rare of 1 hat be had yri .seen done ational institution in Idaho.alimented President Blm* on his M-1 Ti.w .ctWi.t^^hi u,ouw..Uy th. of; rhuTmkiS.To’uw-id M«i nini.tr.tion ot the school, wiying that; |^«^iruV‘.o'S'SjS5r?.”fj; "'“«r*„*“orth? i T« of Awle had done much tor the intellectual , Court, rfecreeiag the following deaenbed real | Mtate, i« the county of Nea Perce, State of Idaho, uniirs extending not merely throughout•»*»d aeparate property of the plaintiff herein; t V . V . u 1 J •ttd for »uch other and further relief aa to the }W.ho but beyoud. ! ' ^riU* KDteRSEN. ! Executrix, i »for N«z Porcothan 6 tbc«w'de«««irto «Soppervisor of Census Pcrrault made his apjx^ntmenu Monday for the differ- ^ &^4an^U^^"fuTiy"«dent districts of the sute. This list ................prises approximately 300 enumeratorss.£,rs4thU work at this imint. B. F. of peck, has the BedrockFenton. Gilbert aud Greer goes to Obie I i&ko: that the *ame u the separate property of Bounds, of L.p*.i. Fords Cr«k. Fm. , gi:'n"r;=i.;-p?SeAr’ icr and Weippe. to Prank Harrison. Peek RnsacH. Mrs. Myrtle Waritbum.' O. K. CONFECTIONERY O. K. Parlors for Candles, Nuts, Fruits, Tobaccos, Ci­gars. Post Cards, Etc.-Lunch Goods In Connection. Agency for The Lewiston Laundry Company ORIN CROCKETT, Proprietor. - ^ o. the same being la of the bu«i.icss ity of Nes Perce. >
:s to Obie j I&ho: that the same U the separate property of | .
lor-sSS I ——T—————————–——————-
“ ~ Company Limited. this tha. W. MOODY,
Administrator.
Yon are hereby dirccte«tpoB«mliof oa Korrir soifiidmont aatil 13;05 p, «u Saturday aad ad^|«r mUd Kor
Tk# MmliMt on mlM, peraoaiM
by apwOtfa* Oama. »ad Jfor BMay y«an •u|vrom« ia iU control over lefUlatioa^WM tom from the otganiMUon of the bMM. laetead of one mati ^power to
My whet biifc ehoiad pMe and whet •bMld feii, eed wM eed how, eoatrol wOl be veM ie e eoauaittM ehMee hf the MKbttn end reepoeeive t# thele pieee ef e enell eem»itteepetBied by the epeeher# depeedeet npoe hue for every legieletive fever, end j
mheervieet to hie wiU, there will be e ^ MMMittee of tea repreeeatativea of wMh the epeaher will not be a member.TheNewBaMThis committee, created through the adroit iaitiative and ekillful general' etive Geo. W. Norris, omee to lifela pawaaaee of the foUewiag.iMola- im, adM«» the heueer*^That there shaU be a committee on
8atarday-~Neoa-^ tU aiaeateent «tt ofMrih amMed ehair.0al»a*e motion to table (etep eon* rdderatioa of KorrU* amendment) ap­peal defeated, 1S4 to l«l.Korria’ motion for the previmm quea- tiea (eat off debate) adopted, m to l«aSpeaher’a deeMa on Norria’ moat everniled, m te leaKorrie oMed aahrtitate, making ruka eonuaiUee tea membera instead of tfteen.Norris* metioa for previmia queation on aubatUnta eanried, 17$ to 159.Subatitute carried, 193 to 153.Norrie' aaeadmebt aa atteied by Mb* atitnte, carried, Itl to IW.
Motion to declare apMefahip meant defeated, 191 to 155.Honae then adiottraed.
ruled elecMby the honee, eoaaietiag of
tea membera, sir of whom shall bo mem bera of the majority party, and four
APEBBMAra or BTEtri All Vmm Mbw AocMMI MOther of
Washington, March 21.—The titanic struggle over the speakership of house of repreaeatatives, which reached its dimar late Betarday in the deatruc' tioa of the apeaker^a power la the com- mitide on nilee, yet leaving Hr. Caanoa the tpeakerahip itarff, may have marked not ao much the ending of a^three days’ batGe aa the beginning of n groat poliU- cal war.'The recognition by all faetioaa of this possibility was the principal feature to-of whom shall bo membera of the gay ia the political situaUon U Washmiaerity party*^‘The speaker ahall not be a member of the oosMBittoe and the committee Ml deet lie own ehairmaa from itsWithin tea daye after the adop- doe of this raaolBtioa, there ahaU be en election of this committee and im­mediately upon its election, the proaeat eommittee on rules shall be diseoived.” The iiUMiigeata, in defense of their defectiom from the organisation, have that the dght was for pria-dpia, for the right to represent thdr «(MMdtaoat to have a decent obaaec to got a hearing for biUs of import- jtaco to their districts, or for the gea- 49ral good. To a large proporUon of
these men, the situation has apparenUy beam cleared and they will, for the prea- #at at least, rest ooatont.How OUmax Came.The aeaaatioaja climax st Uo elooe of the tarMont session, when the off- M life of Spoakor Cannon was at •take, l^M, aooording to the iasur- gedts, that what they sought wss the power and not tho blood of the esar. Half an hour after they votod to de­prive him of hia power, they voted not to depose him from the i^kerahip.Bufieooa (derm, Texas), tall and fiery, fqaight off coUeaguee in his party who wdnld deter him, aad proaimd a motion that the <eech Sat­urday before the lUinois Republican as­sociation. in which he contemptuously denounced the insurgent members of the house who stood bv him in the final testu i.V to Ui. tow” to … » to to,, .to. …imposed by the Norris resolution.Comfort was extracted from the re-
wah to the three parties to the conflict.The OciWMM**The following insurgent republicans, fi5 ia aU, voted with the solid demo- cimtlc aide, against, the motion to table Hbrrie’ appeal from the decision of the speaker:Nelaoa, Kopp, Carey. Coop«, David- eqa, Lenroot, Morse of ;Wiscontin; Davis, Inndbergh, Miller. Steenerson, Velsted of Minnesota; Kendall, Hub­bard, Good, Haughn, Picketts, Woods of
Iowa; Hindshaw, Klnkaid, Norris of Nebraska; Madison, Murdock of Kan- eaa; Heeriaad. Johnson, Taylor of Ohio; Ames, Gardner of Massachusetts; PMker, FWh of New York; Poindexter of Washington; Martin of South Da­
kota; Groana of North Dakota; Powler of New Jersey; Hayes of California.The insurgents had estimated their •trength at 33, but they gained three, HowlanJ- Johnson and Taylor of Ohio, and lesi Panone of New York, whokesetofbre had voted with them intcr- BiittMy. Martin of South Dakou was alto eoiiaidared an aeeesaion.IMUMMT Iff tMr WMk. Moaday-Dtobs imt in Chairmaii Smithes District of Columbia Mils, Tuesday—Demoerata aad insurgents defeated provision for maintenance of Vito praidant aadruling on ovto-g—Wedntoday Cmmpaiker
mied by aDien
Norris, insurgeiit leader, ptoMuted amendment Increasing ifiettbMship of rules committee to 15. Point of order made against Norris. Amendment by DalxeU, regular leader. Regulars be- fto filibustmtsg to obtaiB enough votes to sustain the W«akM. ^ Three efforts by Toted$bwn by mm to 4Minn jffinight
lions,” has cut to the quick those wrho responded with their votes to what they say they believed to be their duly to the party and to the country, and sav^ed him from utter humiliation.Today the feeling among these in- lurgents was one of bitteraess and re- lentment over the attitude assumed toward them.
The portion of^the speaker’s speech that has thus enraged the inaurgeuts who saved him the speakership follows:’’There was a new majority made to­day. It consisted of the democraU and a 15 |>er cent slough from the republi­can party. Tney destroyed the commit­tee on rules. Then what did they dof A resolution was presented declaring the office of speaker TMaut-’’Then what did these men who have been danunciiig my persfenality, these simon-pure followers of Cummins and La PWlette, do then? Only eight of them had the courage of their convic­tions. The result was that, while I was elected speaker by a majority of 26 last March, they refused to turn me out by a majority of 36.’’This combination abolished the committee by rules, which has, after all, stoiply Urn power to report to the tfbuse, and seem to think it is like the biblical example, ’Let there be Ught and there was light.’” You in Washington know different­ly. But the people in the country ap­parently believe the uplift magtotoee and the corrardly members of oongrew! who wrought such havoc today* They said the speaker should not be a mem­ber of the emnmittee OB roles, which they made over into a committee of 10. Mueh depends upon the makeup pf that committee.’’May God bless and keep these men, for, so far as I am eoaeeii^ He only
Many repub-in «a *r«tiyii* to ontoo Bqr»aj,m.»» 1
NEWSOFTHpORU
SIOIT ITEMS FROM mST ANY
PUCEONTiEhlOBt
4 levlew e? BUMMi ta Botk Btob
•hort
Faragrspha
HawaitonRapid City, a D., has adopted the eomnueslon form of goveromeat.Mrs. ’’Jack’* Cudahy now iatimatee that thtoe would be a reeoneiNaUon be­tween herself and Mr. Cudahy.
Tho annual meeting of the Umatilla county, Ore., Fioneer aaeoeiation will be held at Weetoa Kay 27 and 2$.JunM WU^, » dwiag BtMpl.jMk, feU 70 feet tnm a .mokMUck whieh h. was p,ir.ting ia C^ieaga raoeatlr. Hs
Fifty flahsrm'ea who wero Mt adrift Open an ice floe which broke away from the shore near Peterhof, on the south shore of the Gulf of Finland, are be­lieved to have perished.Lieutenant Shackieten, who holds the record for ’’fartheat south,” and who is now in the United’■States, has hU plans well advanced for another ant­arctic expedition to 1911.
BroETma news itsms.8am Langford will soon meet Jim Barry for 2$ rounds at Los Angeles.Mike Donlin will not play baseball with the New York Nationals of with any other team the coming season.Ad Wdgmst says hto next fight would be with Owen Moran and that it would take {dace in Los Angeles, early to June,
The Jeffries Johnmm fight hM. et Iset taken on the real aspect of a battle for the heavyweight championship of the world.Billy Papke, the ’’rUinoli Thunder- bott,” knocked out WlUie Lewis in the third round of their championship figfht in Paris reeently.A four team bttoball league is to be organised in the Coeur d’Alenes this
seasev to include Wallace, Wardaer, Mullan and Murray.
H. Smith and Hollensbeck won the Spokane city championship two-man bowling touroament with a total of 5,367 pint for 15 games.On the night of Tuesday, March 29. will be held the annual exhibition of the physical culture department at the Washington SUte college.The Spoktoe Rifle and Revolver club will meet the Bonthern California Rifles in a dual meet by telegraph next month with standard United States Springflsld giflea.Liverpool. — The grand national steeplechaee handicap of 3,000 sorer- eign* for 4-ye»r-old. and ti^. four miles jaud SSO yards, was won by Jaaklns- I town. ^I President JooO^hn of tbo SpokanePtoto. T..
sign a pioclamhtion giving France aad Algeria the minimum ratee of theAlger Payno-Aldrich law. Terrorized by the
pitcheifor the coming season has been secured.James Joy Miller, the famous Mich­igan quarterback, who was found em- ployed on the Blalock fruit ranch near which pre-;^^,,^pre-!vented s_re.umption_of eerviee by thejj^y, ^^en shown pieturo. and scene.Co**”*–lembian employes of the eompaay have i „ aoqnainUnce.I Another race between Nelson, Wash-A. Mto… to-«.ss.nto-.rsrrJir'a >*• »'
Struck, refusing to make further at- tempe to move the cars.
may
off this spring in connection meet between the two colleges, whichwhile her sister Alice, 16 years old*eoBid noVbe found. All of the d^d ;iirb;Wd In MosVo;. girl’s Ciothes and a suit ease were nusa- tng.
. pulled ^ith the
Detuls of tho story pof the United Stotosto tho efteet that Japan kad propoa^!“Su«:”ir and th.part of the prosa
Tho Spokane City league will open the oeason of IBIO on Sunday, April 10, and eloaO the season on October B. The Harry
|CampbeU;s team and the Brownleeand outUnsd a new apeement with the contestAmerican governmeat have been re-L„a Vamey ft Sosaers and the Hazel- coived with more wpnse at Tokw.j^^,^The Lieign office denied the report positively.RECENT DBATH8 IN THENCBTHWBfft
It will be but a short time now be­fore the Northwestern league fans will
get their first real taste of baseball for thU season. Already players in all the cities in this league are limberingalmost daily recruits and regulars being added to the fold.At a recept meeting of the executive committee of the Montana racing cir- was completed. The following dates were fixed: Butte, month otJuly; JoUet, August 22 to 24; Big Tim­ber. August 25 to 27; Bozeman, August 29 to September 3; Ijewistown, Septem
Mrs. Evaline Maddux, wife of J. R.Madui nn a weiJ-k^wn pionoor, died, ,home m Ellonsburg, aged 72 j a iLent m^tino of thyeara.General L. P. Bradley, one of the cult was completed. The best-known men of Tacoma, died at hia home in that city from paralysis, aged ^arly 88 yev*.Robert Spurgeon MacEwan, aged 96 years, died at Astoria, Ore. Mr. Mac- ber 5 to 10; Glendive, September 12 to Ewan was the oldest male resident of 14; Miles City, September 15 to 17f the state, having lived there since 1846. Great Falls, September 19 to 24; state I. Frank Kirby, one of the pioneers ^air at Helena, September 26 to Oc- of Montana, died at his homo to Butte, Aober 1; Chinook, October 3 to 5; Kalis- aged 62 year^. He was well known, P«». October 11 to 14. having lived in the vicinity of Butte Vancouver, B, C.—Dorando Pietri for 30 years. finished first in the 15-mile three-cor-Louis DeMars, who held the distinc- race here, winning with ease fromtion of having been the first white St. Yves, the Marathon cham-to enter what is ‘ “died at his home there after ing illness. He was in his 79th year..jMne. E. White, n pioneer setUer u,i4i»ta»«e. « »trnu.ed tendon m hia _Io8 Klickitat vaUey, to Washington, died at the home of his son-in-law near. In-
the
first white man ives, tne siararnon cnam– the city of Butte Pion, and John Marsh, Canadian, ore after a linger-i M'arsh dropped out to the ninth mile, 1 in hia 78th yenr.l^t®Vke had
led the field moat of the
dinn Springa, Klickitot eounty, aged nura. With hie father ho came around the Horn in 1847, aettUng firat
in Portland and later in Klickitat eounty.
Whole Oaog OoUty.ConnaU Blnffe, Iowa, llareb 21.to^ofan C. Maybray and 13 of hie aasociatoa, who for 10 daye have been on trial in the United States district court, charged with illegal use of the mails, were found
guilty. The jury returned a verdict shortly before noon. Tho jury disagreed in the ease of Robert Goddard of San Antonio.
Those found guilty are John C. May- bray, Leon Loser, Tom S. Robinson, Willard PowoU, Clarence Class, Edward Leach, Edward K. Moms (tolored),encq F
Scott, Ed McCoy, Winford S, Harris, Bert B. Shores and Maiah. .The latter three entered a plea o noHe contoudre, whto the trial opened that to eftect being a, plea of guilty.
Strike to Oenttoiie.
PhUadriphU, March 2l-*BSpndiatln] the offer of eettioment from the PhUa delphto Rapid Transit company throng the asriatance of United Stotea SenatPenroee, the executive eommittee of th striking carmen late tonight voted continue tho strike unless the compan grants all their demands.
making him quit: St. Yvee and Do
rando alternated in the lead for the next five miles and then in the last mile the Frenchman stopped to tie his shoe. Dorando took the lead, opened a gap of half , a lap and it was all over. Dorando le<3 half a lap.TWO KILLED IN SMA8HUP.Brakeman With Foot Oroabod Qravla Through Oaajroii to Flag San Bernardino, Cat — Conductor CharlM Robertson and Fireman Joh Rowe were killed and Engineer C. £. Magee, perhaps fatally' injured, whUe Brakeman A. D. HeClellaa had his foot crushed off recenUy when a fast orange train on the Santa Po wrecked at>pago Siding, 60 miles northof this cityi The train was tohrunnin_ nt a high ratoWilliam (OIa)JP«^tj^ .Siding, Writ*
ling through Cajon of apood, when In
The Sim
618 LEWISTON. IDAHO. Co^ WASHINGTON, or 1(WHITE PINEOROFIN
CatUoguea.|
imonMOST I
train™ FATAL
P^DLENN, ORE., SMASI-UP
OBT TWO LIVES.
Tm
Through a Ftcullar Aoddtot the Block Signal Failed to Warn Approaching Train—Bfiglneert L. Risk and Ed 1^’Hopple InstanUy KiUed—Othera of Train Crew Jump Into the River.
Pendleton. Ore., March 21.—While rounding a car'o at high speed, eight miles east of Pendletou, near Cayuso, at 11:45 o’clock this morning, an Ore­gon Baarokd 4 Navigation company gine. No. 215, and tender jumped the ^ ick and, striking the embankment^ was totally demolished, killing Engineer L. Risk and Fireman Edward Hopple. Twenty minutes later extra freight train No. 385, westbound, struck the rails broken by the preceding engine and plunged off the opposite side of the track into the Umatilla river, carrying five freight cars with it. Engineer Walter Robertson, Brakeman W. O. Rose and Fireman C. L. Wilson escaped by jumping.Blocks Shown Track Clear.Because the first engine leaped clear 0/ the rails, the “block signal” showed clear track to the crew of the extra freight, and the break ia the track was not discovered until the freight was within 100 feet of tho wreck.The engineer, fireman and brakeman^ the cab of the loco- into theriver. They narrowly escaped >drowning.The engine and fi^ cars were partly ibmerged. vIs ffraldfdEngineer Bisk was scalded to death, while Fireman Hopple was found buried under u ton of coal. Both dead men lived in La Grande, Ore. Risk came to La Grande about a year ago from the North Dakota division of the Northern Pacific. Hopple came from Harrisburg, Pa., a few mouths ago. It is stated that ' his.sister, who was coming to La Grande' from the east to visit him, is on the train delayed at Durkee.
The engineer had been hurled back- v ward on top of the coal, and except that pinned down by one arm ho wss completely free of the debris. Had he
-■;s
who were occupying the cab o motive, were forced to jump aatilla
been
litorallr cooked by escaping steam he might havd lived, though his arm was crushed to a pulp, his te^h knocked out aad his head badly bruised. Rails Shoved Over Wreckage. Though the throttle of the train be­hind the engine first wrecked had been closed and the brakes set, the impetus of the train on the down grade eansed five of the loaded freight cars to pile on top of the engine in a cpjQiuaed ss. The first car was loaded wHh steel raUs, and many of-them were burled on several feet In advance of where the train stopped. The second loaded with cement, which was scattered ovei^vorything, and the third and fourth were loaded with coal, while tko fifth was loaded with steel rails. ' The track is not badly torn up, and though the wrecking train did not ar- untU late this afternoon, it is be­lieved the track will be cleared for traffic by tomorrow noon.Coroner Folsom held an inquest over tho two victims and brought their bodies to Peudletoh. The jury faUed to fix the responsibility.BEAD HUNTERS KIU. T^.•M-
JapuMM amd PunltlTa EzpwUtion in FormoM.Victoria, B. C.—News was brought by the steamer Empress of India from Formosa of a disaatrons raid by For­mosan head hunters on a Japanese ghr- rison at Giran. Ten Japanese were kUled and their heada carried away aa trophl^ and four natives killed. The Formosans surprised the station. A Japanese punitive expedition was sent in pursuit.Tho Japanese cruiser Ikohomn has been ordered to Argentina for the cen- lennary celebration May 27. The Iko- — horns wlU afterward proceed to London for the ADglo Jnpanoae celebration. She
will bo-the first Japanese warthip seen on the east const of South America.
Captain W. Smith, from waotern China, reports that severe famine is
■-1
•1Wi
,vi4l
the*Tang^‘“tt“w‘*‘‘’
Flramen Strike TBiaotaed,
Chicago, March 21.-Prospecta for the settlement by federal modiaUon of the controversy between 27,000 firemen on western railroads and the railroad
manaprs are said by W. 8. Carter, president * of the Brotherhood of Loco- motive Firemen and En^inemen/to be
BSUa luTader of Hit Homt. . ^ ^ Kansas City, March 21.-Nathan A.?' Onll was shot and killed here today by fifT. Jn a qnarrelthat t(»k place when GrUl found Brody his home. Brody escapefi. '
•-iv’;#-:
I
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mmm items
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WASHinaTOH ITXM8.8iwba«k kM • MW «a«,eoo Ugb iMmI.A MW «MT ail] it «• te «imm< »t VaBkirtlte.B. W, CmH«K t %t*i 93, WMWrM r«e«Bti7 i* th* ObtMM MaBtwvAreki« UeOoBBld, » miner, *hot him' ••If r«««tly nt Loomin. He w«» 4e- IVomiMt.^ ThMtM r^jrtin, • Huilie, itttioMd »t tM BiMMrtu Mey fr«rd, ww aar " |M* naMtIy.I Jtmm Kawn, wkaaa talaoB at Ee- iiiatt karaad taaaaay aight, eoamittad •aiaidaaMt My.By pitKlamatioB imniad by OaTeraor Say be urgea geaeral ebaarvaaaa ef Arbor Day, April lA ^Tha Wal^ WaUa Coanaaraial elab bmM aa axcBiaioa to Paaeo, Kaaaawiek, Barbaak aa« AHaUa TbaiaMy of tbia waM.Tha WatarriBa Uaioa Oiaia company, ba Mgaaiaatiaa eompoaod of memben of tbo fanaen’ naioa, baa let a eon- tract for S«t,WO graia baga.Thera baa roaoBtly boea orgaairad a auto haataM aoeiaty' to taka wf the work that city ioeiatSaa do ia rapoH- iag ior pnaaaatioa aay naa abwiag aaimab or ckildrea.EbM W. CaHiale, aged M yean, who raaaatly died at Colfax of aaiiHe decay, wan one of the early pioneera of Port­land, baring croeaed the plaini from, the Atlantic aoaat in 1848.The fraachteewoekiag railroada, the North Coait and the JfUwaakoe, will bMT tha axpeaaa of a qmetal election la Spokaao to aacertaia poimlar aMat OB the terauaal rate qaaaticA eoapaay haa hcaa orgaaiaod at Pa- loaao to derelop 1,440 aciea of leaned landa, including the Bishop farm, where coal wan encountered at a depth of too feet while ninkiag a weU, last qaiag. i died at K^a Siding, soar Karray. racoatly. ICMaa wmi holow a pile logo whoa OM be­ ing high Kocmo and no far-ba the BfaUanw i coraoi, an the oaly «ww for aaMwaWa agitatioa. The praanat Beaaae is psw ianpeaod hy tbs city and t7« by the auto.Por four months the wife of Oilef Jnntieo Oeorge Q. Stawait of Idaho has Uis ia a ttate ana Boiaai. eaMnag fran a «asaM which ban baned tbo anoMcal frat«n%, act aloao of hM of Bpokbao, krtload. But Xaks aad eastern aitkmCarl esaaa, a twBbMmaa, was i«- itaatiy killod recently at Gratia, a iog- ging eaap on the «. Marios rirer. OleoB was working near the log chute and did. aM notice a log oeatiag down upon bira. He was etrack n tin bead aad,kaoohod, MBaUom into tbo water.f.' ‘ --------------M OMTAITA HSWaTbo police of Batte have been in ntrwtcd ta strictly caforcc the onrfew Aa Italian nnderbons was run orer aad killed by tha North Coast Uraited at Kadec rcMStly.Beecntly Dr. A. P. Budd of Je«br- -oa aty cut hia throat with oaa af hla augloal iriatrumoats. 'D. 3. Coburn haa boon arraotod . Great Palla oa the charge of having psnacd a annbor of forged ehecka W. D. Kora, a prominent architect of Moatoaa and weU known throughout tho Borthwea^ died reeontly in ButtA The JeArioo-JohnaoB gght tickeU wiU range from M to «80 each, aad Oleasoa expect about MM.OOO. The arega wHl be like a theater A eehaot whare Aato CANNON’S AiRm WUliMKHTEIEinnffl HiiiMDm. i •an Ha Has Brer Bald Dp to Pi«A curteo Of the Bopttbltetii Partyj^ TogeHMr-gaya Majori^ Dose Bit *'0h, I aappuas I shaB go ea apeak iag aad ptaySj^» ha salAPAOHIO OOABT H0T18. B. A-^TM'OaoadjMwHilga obUldAilgM-^railway in ,prs|>«|ridg>« baild fioa eat sf Vi^r^ to tbo north aadof TaaconvBafcaeMtoU, OhL-With hia thibat cut awarent^ by a faxor, a man aopposed to be Charles Main, a stranger in thin
wae iMad dead in a corral.Baa Praadaeo, Oal.—David McDon­ald, a former bartender, U Under ar iMt here charged with aminting Robert Gore, a young rancher, to commit •aicide.
Thm B#w am lights for the hew streot
Ughliag eyitem of Newport have ar- riTOd and as soon as Ue txtnrss for
*hs Tnagstaa lights arrivs they wUl bs iastailad and Newport will have an np- ta-date Ughting system.Arraagomsats are being, eomi for the annnnl etate D. A. B. aseemblT, which m to bo held at OlymiAa on April 7 and from preoeat iadiestionn tbo eoBToatioB wiB bo among the latg- ori ever hold ia tUs atato.By proelamstioa Govornor Hay has doaigaatad Seaday, AprU 24, 1210, as “taboreuloeie Sunday,” and recom- sMBda that on that day aU religious de­nominations give eonaideration to the problems of the etody and preventation of tuberenlosis.Superintendeat H. H. Jobaeoa of the Pnyallap Indiaa schools has received foraral notice that the aame of the inatitittien wiU on and after April 1 oaming he chaaged to the Cushman In­dian aehoolr, in honor of tho laU Con
may be Imfned for mUitary aervieo to bo bold andor tbo iaatnietioo of nbo^*t*V‘™J ** HarriiOBJMn Stagord, who bnrtally aaaanlt ed Thomao EaseraoB at Botomaa aev oral weeks ago with the aakaowledged objoet of robbery, haa ‘to servo 13 years ia the ateto priaoa. f Sheriff Wdla of"J!^ City ia in- veatigatiag a ease ia i^SrH>ia alleged that a man aamed Nelsoa attempted to poiaoa a number of porwma by plamug -tryehnine on a qnartor of L. Plegal baa shipped ia a carload of horses from Malta. Tho aaimala wiU be nosd dnriag tho coming annuD f^aporting. anpplios to the mineo In the vicinity of Libby and in baoliag out
Spring flnda unp.in ril lines of indmrtrial aad eommereinl devriopaseat at Dayton. Plans are no^ under way for extaasivo improvemeaU 4a- the country roads; the planting of at least M orebarda embracing 700 acMs, repreMnting aa investment esti- hoated abovn »3SO,O0O. Surveyors ars at work oa the proposed state road out of Dayton.Every eoaaty in the state of Wash­ington where the Oregon BaUroad t Navigation company baa property, will laatitnto suit against the railroad for payment of taxes aiweseed upon the company's holdings aa.a result of the refnaal of the railroad to pay taxes dae ia the several eeoaties, Samh U tha semi-oOeial anaoDaemaeat made by ofleials of tha nUioad at Walla Wajla, >
iPABO JORoroaThe aearwatfr brueh of tha NoAh- arn Faeiffe ia again blocked. ,BUa *

a Potlatch section is ahead. Thon- ^ sands of acres will ba gaown in the Pot­latch district of wUi^ Jaliaetta it the , eantar._»^d«ata of tha viriaity of Hope aad Clarkaforlt are dim in their belief that
the Standard OU company is after tbs oa and ^ fields recently discovered j ^ Bear those towns c , At Bovfll reeentiy Bea Ty ; – ^ lumberjaek, was shot twice bv11 reeentiy Bea Tyndall, a . was shot twice by ^bert it U said, in WilUaai Ben- M Mir” ipint- Tda -first irsd hia knee eap 4sd theWith hla akBD. fractured, hjbih legs mad Mood pouxing i|om hit
UeMmumt,•liot ilimHmred nm mamd emp da Bd took in hi* groin, y
oraW. daytoa Maier, genetal of the Federal Mining and Smelting Mmpany, announeee that Frank Davis, for several yearm foreamn mt tbo Miaea, had been temporarily appolated to succeed the late B. H. Paaeoa ae tuperinteademt of the Stmadmid-Mmm- moth aiam.Thirty dve dolUri warn realixed for one priae box of Rome Beaoty apples at Kalispell Saturday night at the ^n- ter apple banquet, and the 10 boxea on display brought $117. The applefl
priM ^x was bou^t by H. O. Miller Md wiU be sent to Louis W. HiU. This “ J*^***** *>» » box of applesBut for the heroic efforts of Mrs.
ThooM Noyee of Nome, Alaska, wife 6f the pHneipal owner of the greatest placer project on Kotxebue sound, the natives of the far northland mlMt be continuing the old tribal eu^ of weeding out fmaale iirfaau. Mr. and Mrs. Noyee and their » year-old daugh­ter, Bomue, who was born far up in the
sretic ctfcle, are now in California vis.IK"?.,'"’"-'"""Fiwmer Senator W. A. Clark recently mMe a trip through the Bitter Root valley to look over the eleetrie pole line system which he it eonstructing throngh that diatriet. Tha senator went on to HamUton, and on his return prea^ himaelf as pleased with the devriopmeat of the country. When the robjeet of an electric railroad between Missoula and HamUton was broached Mr. Clark, while maintaining a degite of reserve, said that a trolley line is quite pomlble, but that ha derir^l to know the reaults of Ua inveatmant n^n the daetrie high Uaa to SUvens- viHe before furtber exteaeiona of his utereata in the valley are made. WashlngtoB,
March ».-^oUowiBg |a part of Speaker CaAaoa’a remarkat>leddrees ia the beara SiitarMy after- PraMlaeo.—After apaading twoBoaa^efferiagto Ud •W tho q»eak«r-!''«<‘ka in qnaraatiaa, the armoredahipr «n>i»r WaehiagWa haa been released" AatidM, Mt words,, fietarraiae tbe mw aaebored in warabip row
incoadaet and the siaeerity of men in harbor, tha affairs of Ufa. This is a govern- ment by tho peopli^ acting through the repre*fntativ«a of a majority of tbe people.**Eeealtf caauot be eeeuxed except
by a asaiarity, i* th* house of rep- raaaatativat a majority boing reaponai- bla sho«^ bavo fall power and aboaU axireisa 'that power. Otherwlao the majority ia iaeficieat aiid doea not per­form iU fonctioa.
WASFAMIHlSDlEl
FUSlKWr TM ANB EAIL
OlEyWEIEPIESEKT.
OMsta Of iruverattr Dtob at Albaiir.
New Terk, Satardar Nlghb-BoM ■Makars 7oiaad ia a Fla* for WoiM, wld. Pmwa-WIH ArgM Tariff Nego- tlatiwa TUa Week.
1
■aattto—Tbe eommaadsnt at Puget Sound navy yard has ordered that all men employed in the yard be „ einated. This follows a. onthreak of s^pox at Charleatoa, just outride tbe yard.
■aattla—The body of J. Braekmaa, aa elderly rancher of Watervilie, Wash, who was killed in the WriUngton ava­lanche while mnking hU first railroad gurney in 4« years, has been recovered. Braekman is said to have left an es­
tate of $S0fi00, ^u^ direct heirs.iJUtWt, OaL—Tbe destroyer Perry, ia company with the rest of the midget fieM, u here dying the ehamaiom^nere aying the championMip of tbe torpedo fleet. Th* paw was awarded by tha a*vy depart­ment for battle praetie* with gone and torpedoea at Magdalena bay last No-
body of Bavid WUmof Dwyer, ton of a wealthy Holly- wood famUy, was found In an isolated raaeh bouse recently. The body was
fearfully mutilated, and though rela­tives of Dwyer said they were eertain it was a ease of euieide, deputie* an seeking eluee to a murder.
Mlaority M Check.“The ofilee of the mlMrity is to put the majority on its good behavior,
adveeatiag ia good faith the policies which it profeeeee, ever ready to take advantage of tbe miatakea of tke ma- pority party aad appeal to the eountiy for ite viadieatioa.“The eooBtry believea that t|ha i«- pubUeaa party bM a majtwiqr of .44 in tbe hooa* of rapraaenterivaa at this tjma, yet this is not' the case. The pieseat speaker of the house hss to the beet of hU abUity and judgment co-operatod with the republican party, and so far in tbe history of this eon- greca the repubUean party ia tbe house baa beea auabled, by a very -mrii
jority, when tbe tost came, to legialatu
ia eonfoimity Wltk tb* policies aad the platform of the npnUiean party.0a» Is OotUiMd. , Ban Praiidae*.-Wimam Knaxe, theThe qieaker can not be unmindful young urtiat nader arrest here chargedof tbe fact, M evidoaeed by three pro- w«h steal' * – ———-viona elections to the speakership, that la tho past be bM cajoyed tbe eon- fldeaea of tb* repubUean-party of the
eountiy, and of tho repubUean memben of the house; but through the aaaanlt upon the speaker of the hoot, the minority, rappleaMnted by th* efforts of the ao-eall^ inaugenta, eonatitating per eeat of the asajority pswty, is now ia tbe majority. That tbe qieaker of tbe kanae is not -in harmony with the actual majority of tho honee is ovl. deaced by the vote just taken.There are two eouraea open for the speaker to pursue; one u to resign and permit the new eombinatioa it demo­crats and inaurgeate to ehooae a speaker in hanaoay with iU aims and puipoiee. The other is for'that com­bination to deelhre a vacancy ia offleo of qwaiker and proceed to elee^ of a new speaker.Bealgaatioii Not Wla*-■After eonrideration at this stage, the house, with much important legia- lation pciidiiiff. iavolvixur tha nladfp«B
with wUmling a 1X0,000 MiDet painting from the Memorial mnsenm in Golden Gate park, any not be sent to priaoa, it is stated. Several promineat German leBideats are befriending Eunxe and have employed an attorney to lepre-
Pwtlaa^ Ore.—Henry Torrish of ^utb, Muuu, represeating eastern ctf ttaliat, baa completed the puiehaae from a Benson of Portland’of 28,000 acres of timber land for nearly 03,000,- 000. Tho land lies between tbe Oohim- bia river and Nehalem river and forme one of the moat extearive traets in the woat.
AbJedoen
—Thirty high school pupils appeared the other morning jaoet)^ in
xmaaion to school. In the Afternoon 50 girls appeared similarly bedecked. They were told to go home, but refused and thr disturbance that foUowed was only peadinff. involving* tha ^ arrival of a policeman,of the repubUean platform, ifd^ “>0 streeto with a
a raiaeua tariff was betweea the H’nited
States and Canada, Prorideat Taft and' Earl Grey, governor general of Canada; Joined Saturday night ia a plea for World-Wide peace, at the annual dinner of the University chib at Albany.At the speaker's table with the preal- dent and Earl Grey were Governor Hoghee, Speaker Wadsworth of JHeir York, W. 8. Fielding, Canadian minis' ter of finance; David B. Fraaeia, fqa- mer governor of Mlsaoarl, nnd ifr,' Ernest Fox Nichols, president of DarW- moutb eellege.At the executive maneioa tbe finaF effort win be made to adjust the biteN> in tbe Canadian Ameriean tariff neMUS' tiona Minister IHelding and June* Mae^nald of Toronto wUl repj«ae*ff Canada, while President Taft will hr
At tho dinnef BaEMd«7 »i«M. EarP Grey deUvered a speech that c L -i-x.,.- — OOO and the BvUesbv oomnaiiv will
Fntal Wreck, Winnipeg Ply«.St. Paul.—The north bound Winnipeg fly«,on the Great Northern raUw^ wUeh left St. Paul at 5:15 p. .m. Sun­day, was derailed at Bogan, Minn., tbe engine, mall ear and baggage ear tnrn
ing turtle in the ditch. Engineer Con neUy of St. Paul waa killed and the baggageman was nerionaly injured. Tha passengers were severely shaken up.Portland, Orm-Balfour, Guthrie ft Co. have aontraeted lor the eoaatruo. tion of n large flour mlU and elevator to bo erected in this city immediately. Tbe mfll and warehonee will be 300×100 feet ia dimensions and five stories In height. The miUs will have a eapaclty ,000 barrels a day and the elevator will hold 4,000 ton. of whMt.
confession of weaknaw, a mistake, or an apology for pant aetion.” • (Loud applause.)Stritiu Toll. WAD. *Members and spectators were strained almost to breaking by the exeitem«nt attending important ntagas of the «bn- test, and the demonatrationa were the meet strennona ever made in oongie* StUlneea, so eompleU m to be oppreae-
ive, feU on Ue ehamber each time the clerk turned to hand the speaker a tUp
OOO and the ByUeaby company wUl reallae a profit of between *400,000 a^d ♦500,000 on tho deal. Two
Man Dead, On* Dyink; as Semitt. of Odd Aedd«nt on OanadlfiaNrison, B. C.—In
a raUway sceidenk MeNlelUe’s Siding on tbe Crow**
Nest branch of the Canadian Paaifl*. railroad Saturday morning. Head Brake- man Campbell Md Fireman Ford loa*
train eraw wm ahunt-
ing cara to clear the traek for aa east- bound passenger, the engine and tender ne detached from the freight and Jumped the rails, plunging 150 feet- down a steep embankment to tbe Goat river, turning somersaults as they fellw
m
m‘PKAOB DBAL IS OPP.”PtMldent of tbe Stnatcar Strikers Witt . ArbUrata No More.Phljsdclphla, Pa., March 21.-Preal- dent W. D. Mahon of tbe eleetrie rail­road employee annoonlted that *U peaew negotiations between the strikei* and the peaeemakera, no Em ae he ia eon- eerned, are off. Some of the peace een- ferenees with ontride persons, ho said, placed the men in a wrong light anJ have lad to no result.IiEB FAIRCHILD IS DEAD.
8oatUe.-Announcem*qt In mad# at
the offices of the Oregon and Wanhing- ton railroad of a reduction of 5 cents, a hnndredweight on enatbound carload I P®«‘. bumorist, aftm- di ahipmenta of saabes, doors and blinds to points in Wyoming, Idaho and Utah.The new rates apply from Seattle and Tacoma to points on tbe Union Pa- eifle, Oregon Short Line and Denver ft Rio Grande. The rednetion beeoraenof paper giving the fatefiU result ofroll call. AU of them; favored tbe iffeotive April 22. The reduetion in
fmight rates irill-make a difference in
Yet there is always a fighting against nurria^ being a faflu^;
allies, and tbe anrunnoement of successive victory brought them to thrir
feet. Even the members of the diplo- matie corps, who erowdad their gaUery, were ttined by tbe drama oa the floor.When the height of the excitemeat was reaehed late ia the day the pree- »ure oa the doorkeepers ia the maia hallway became so heavy that womea for the first time stood oa the floor of the house during a sesaioa.
Speaker BBilXea at L«at
New Weatmlasbar, B. a-BepresonU- tive* of the Canadian Northern railroad have anthoiiaed the annonneement of their plana with regard to 3000 acres of land which they have pnrehaaed be- tween Bon Accord aud Liverpool, across the river from this city, and which in­cludes the building of a raUway town,
^ si-i« £;rr.:;'s.’'3ssri's?lower step of .water doeks at a cost of several millionstanding
the flight that leads to the ** throne,
geated that, aa It* had been paaetieally Bees were unknown to tbe IndUnau spenker, it wou'^ '■—–k . .. . . ~ *»>*•»«»,propriato that he shonld country what he would do.
PoeE and Hbinorist Passe* Away in New Tort After Brief IUimm.New York, March 22.—Lee FnirahUd, uaoriat, aftm- dinner speaker an<* campaign orator, whose intellect wa* fostered and first developed on the Pa- eifio slope, is dead. Ho succumbed to- pneumonia, after an illness of only two- «x Dance for Fifteen Hoar*San Prancisco, March 21.—When th* police stopped the world’s championaMp “ dancing marathon here Sunday after­noon after six eontestanta had be«M dancing 15 boon and six minutee, • etonn of protest arose from tho 3000’ speetatoia in the pavUion and a riot waa* prevented only by tbe determined man­ner in which tbe blneooats handled th«> crowd. The world’s long distancM dancing record of 14 hours and 42 min- ntes had been broken and the tbra* uples still on their feet begged far- allowed to continne. Probably tbe .a

i
dellara Thera is a posaibiUty that tlis rri^a^ra^TheT^^^^^ «f'jTbo allowed to continne. Probity
ost remarkable feature of the por-
ap-jbut they were brought ovm from Bag-
the land only, few years.-'…………….I of the PUgrim father*
.-V ■

'■-SI.
.ff
Millinery Millinery
Mrs* L, A. Torsm has opened up a-
compkteandtip-to-datcstock of Millinery.
Come in and bring your friends, ui *n
Next Door to the White Pine Trading Co.
Ste Wenman McRob«rts Co for ingilMars.
P*W«y w»» a Lairurton vUttir
hut reeciTCd complete line of Fiabise Tackla at (aofaoTradii« Compaar.
■<* Tena Snail reUurnsd Moodar from the Dent oomtrj.loeore jomr Live Stock with J. M. Wm. Penoyar and KoeMM Vollmer .pent a tew hour, iq Orofino Tnaaday. enroot* to the Ford. Creek aectton.Get OroSao Trading Company’, price, on Hardware if yen cooteniplate bnildiag.joaeph Kaaffaaa retamed Monday from a few day* *i«t to Craig MounUin. He report* much mow in that aection.Be mre cad tec Wellman-McRoberto Co.’* tine efo*-e this said Probatec^rt on Ae 30th day of April, i9io. at the hour of 10 o’clock A. M. of said day, M. Iraida, the Ceneitte tailor, has at the court room of said court at the moved to Orofino knd located his taUor courthouse in the city of Lewiston, shop in the DeConrcey building. He U j County of Nez perce, State of Idaho* to pre^red to aU kinds of tailoriiig! »how cause why aft order should not be work, cleaning and pressing. Give us a granted to the said administrator to sell
prices are the iJ. B. Davis. ( an ^in Vollmer Wednesdsy, prohsblc candidate tor republican ticket high in the couticil! as being good citizen.
JR. Forty I an d our !in town.board of his homeMr. Davis is a
trial.FOI^SALE, two heavy lumber wag- amson Snyder, Or^
Prank Jones received woni this week from Alaska, that his father-in-law. M.
C. Harrb. who was reported to have died in that country aoiAe time in Feb­ruary. was alive and although ha had •offered seve ely from freezing his feet, WM otherwise doing well. This is, j inderi, KO^ new. to the fmnily *nd fneada, sod effort* are being made to ! commnnient* with Mr. Barn.** aooo •*
.priog open*.
– ——-i administrator to
all of the real esuta of the said above i^ed decedant and that a copy of thU orierbet»WUh«d.tl..*t fo« anccea- »ive worts in the Orofino Tribune, a newapa^er printed and published in said city and county.Dated thi. J5th day of March, i9lo.T. O. HANLON, Notie*
for RubheaHon.Department of the Interior.United statos Land Office. UwlstOfL Waho. Mareh 17, 1510.Notice is hereby given that CARLTON M. BALSHLVWhow
under the proviaiotn
i. and acts amendato
iSpisi
hi? 0^353!’’mT
The latter left property valued in ex- O. HANLON, cess of 1100,0000. Mr. Snyder expects Probate Judge. ^ be gone about six weeks.
Netioe for Fubliostion.y Department of the Interior.United States Land OfllM, Lewiston. Idaho, March 1Land Om^ 1fi‘Jea that ^ JR B. gardenHALVOR B.GAKC
.^€f’LSS.S3.S=
s.C’rKT.ySise'Tss.': si wi****‘““^^ estimated i.Tde.ooo board •ppUc.tlo. *i,d .worn Maument oa lb* uih
H. BARTLETT. ItogUtar.defeat the entr V. T.
Wellmsn-McRoberts Co. have the Pump Knapsack and Fountain Spray
When you visit Lewiston itopattbe BOLLINGER, equippedhotel in the
PMCESSFLOUR
CheapestUnd Best Food
■ I
n
w:
I
to ctM wtu buy tk» foUowlng proporHon •/ Entrgy iit tku foUowlmg ArHcUiM……………………………-……………… 365
445 1030 «035 ^ 1185-i.?65 >439; aoas 2950 ■ 30406840
Butter………….Breiifrtt Foods..Rk*………….
OUR MOTTO: “SAME GOODS FOR MONEY; SAME MONEY ■ MORE GOODS"’
We have just received a shipment of the well known Cohen & Freidlanders RED FERN line of Ladies’ Tailor Made Suits, 1910 models.inspection of sanie will convince they are right-up-to the minute for style and prices; bet­ter than you can get elsewhere.
Obc pound oi Princess I^our costing $ 1-4 to 3 T-il cents will give as much energy as two pounds of meat costing 12 1-2 to 20
cents* Ask your grocer for Princess Flour and iret the mnat Aotinfihment for (
Lewiston MiMing Co’y. Ltd.
■•
j:**■■ Say,
Mr. Man, when you get your new Hat, why not get a GORDON. Everyone knows
the GORDON. We sell them at the same price t^t other merchants get for their common makes,' We also carry the STETSON. We are exclusive agents for the GORDON HAT. Everyone made of Genuine Belgium Hare fur.
The ^Vhte Pine TradAlways a Little Better , Aiwa'
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