Orofino_Tribune-03Jun1910_Cmplt


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mSOROnNO-1^^OFFICIAL PAPER OF NEZ PERCE COUNTY.
Voltime s.OROFINO, IDAHO, FRIDAY, JUNE 3, *910NUMBER 49-

JUST RECEIVED
A carload of the Celebrated Moscow Floor; ey^ sack guaranteed. Also large shipment of Doors and windows. Agents for Phoenix Pure Pafet Mc^miick Baders and Mow­ing Machines, Mitchell W^ons. Head­quarters for Miner^sand Farmer^s supplies, Gro^ries, Dry Goods, Boots and Shoes, Hardware, Furniture and Implements
: * < Orofino Trading Company road In road dlatrlot Vp. 66, and the May Term, Firatday May9th,1910.. Auditor is dlr^d to draw warrant -Board meete purauknt^ 1*; ^ i In the aum of $725.00 being the bal- regular aeaalon. Present: ,E. w. I *"'* contract, the•Wing, Commissioner Find District;!»°“ of $250.00 having heretoforeJ. B. Davis, Chairman Commission-j“V“ ,er Second District; J. C. Bulloek, I up^iirlng to the satisfaction Commissioner Third District; and Board that A. Valk has In, all W. L. Gifford, aerk by W. E. Dag-gett. Deputy.- This being the Ume Bet for the opening of bids on the SW |md Sogard Grades In road districts Nos. 13 and 50, bids are opened and Ukeounder advisement. ___; The Board adjourns to go and in­spect bridges and roads In roairndls- trlcts Nos. 6and 34.Second Day May llth 1910.Bid of Wm. H. Dew for the Im^ provemenu of the Shaw Grade for sum of 1970.00 Is examined and vpted.Bid of Wm. Dew for the i ment of the Sogard grade Uved up- tp and completed »of hk contaracfc covering respects lived theteithe coDstrucapn of bridge near Jaquea Spur the AuditorTs directed lo dra^ a warrant In the sum of MSaoO in foU of the amount due un­der aald contract Be It resolved that £. W. Wing be and he is hereby authorised to at­tend a meeting of the stockholder! of the Lewiston Terminal Company Limited to be held at the Company’s office in Lewiston Idaho at 2 o’clock p. m. May 21st 1910, and any ad- monts or conUnuances thereof.mproIS.",at the*Ume OP at any adjoum-um of $998.00 is examined and ae- subjiing E«tablUih«d AprtI l«t. IQ09 Bank; of OrofinoCapital, $1S,000.00 'S Otno«rMJ. A. HUMBIRD, RrMident UBROMBa. DAY, Vice Rrea.VV. J. WMITB, C««hl«rTransaet* a General Banicins Bualneee. Intereet Paid on Tlm« D«po4ilt« 01rOGtOf4Mcl. Xe MumbI e. IV.a«H>wn Rff.hl
cepted.At this Ume a delegation of citl- aenB of Nez Perce County appeared before the Board and discussed the bject of Good Hoads. After hear- evldence the Board appoints John MoCorbiack, D. J. JVyatt, and D. H. Sipes as a committee to act with a committee by the Country Club to ascertain the cost of various kinds of perma- nent improvements to the County I Roads.At this Ume the Country Club Is authorized to move the County Road Roller from Peek Idaho to Lewiston Idaho for use on the county roads.At this Ume Countv Surveyor Briggs is directed to reset thestakef^ on the Shaw and Sogard grades for the guidance of the contractor,r^At this Ume after reading and ap- >rovlng the minutes of todays meet-
lof the Company standing in the name of Nez Perce County or of the Chairman of this Board upon any asMl aU quesUons.At this time bids are opened for the building 6f a bridge across LltUe Canyon Creek near Peck, to-wit: M. F. Boyd, wooden bridge, $400.00 Co., steel bridge, superstructure and iai.75 per cubic yard for substructure.* Columbia Bridii^ Co., steel bridge,
$770.00 for superstructure and $12.00 per cubic yard for subsirucinre.A. Valk steel bridge $780.00 for
Mr. Mss. Browa Eatert^Hosts of frlend.s ansa’ered the In- viUtion of Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Brown last Saturday evening, and ' enjoyed, their lavish hospitality – during the evening. The groun^v – were strung with Japanese lanter^ between the pine treiui end the loft i of the large bam was decorated with electric lighto within Japanese lanterns^ and pines, flrns and thorn brusii overhead. In one comer a h was tastofuUy decorated and punch wa.s served the thtrsty danc- The music was furnished .by * Walrathand Shrlver. The seats were unique In character, being bales of hay covered with hlai|kcts. * AU thoroughly enjoyed the occasion and expressed a hearty appreclaUon to the charming hostess.
superstructure and 112.50 per cubic yard for Bubstnict,are.The bid of Secui^y Bridge Com- panyof Minneapoli Minn., being considered the lowest and best bid offked, the contract is hereby awarded to said Security Bridge Co. for the sum of $788,00 for superstruc- I ture and $11.75 for the substructure, IbeingareducUon of SIO.VO of the amount named in the bid for the reason that the Security'Bridge Co. secured the contracts on three steelAt thU time bids are opened for Stoner First District; J. B. Davis, the oonstrucUbn of a steel bridge 1 Chairman, Commissioner* Second f across Mission Creek near Sliokpoe District; J. C. BuUock,CV»mml8sIon-1 postofflee, to-wlt: er Third District; and W. L. Gif-1 Security Bridge Co. for stoel ford. Clerk by W. E. Daggett-, Dep-! bridge $580.00 for the superstrucUire uty. j and $11.75 per cubic yard for the
The Board meets pursuant to call substructure, to transact the following business: Columbia BridTo accept the contract work of E.D. bridge, $595.00
j provling the Board adjourns sine die.J. B. Davis, Chairman, j I Attest: W. L. Gifford, Clerk, ji By W. E. Daggett, Deputy.' Special Term, First Day May 21,1910.1 Present: K. W. Wing, Commls-
THEREB COMPORT
nrViA
msi
"FITS
LIKE
YOUR FOOT
­PRINT’
Orofino Mercantile Cb jLMOrofino*s Coish Store… '
Marlatt^dgeforCo. for steel superstructure the
$700.00 all work to'be^ done' ^c?rd^
sple for the
att^o^he. Geo. W. McKern i and $12.00 p€r cubic yard road sndlhdraw warrants in pay- substrooture,ment of same; | A, Valk for steel bridge $670.00To accept the contract work of F. [ for the superstructure and $12.50 per R. Seidel and to draw warrants in i cubic yard for the substructure, payment of same; I Contract awarded to the SeeurltyTo draw warrants in payment of Bridge Company of Minneapolis, second InsUUment of the paving i Minn, for the sum of $57a.00 for the district No. 1 assessment; {superstructure and $11.75 for theTo approve the bonds of James S. ■ substrncture, being a reduction of Jacks as Assessor and Ex-Offioio; $10.00 of the amount named in the Tax Collector; {bid for the reason t^at the saidTo receive bids and let contract, Company secured the contracts on for the construction of a bridge * three steel bridges, across LitUeCanyon Creek near the; At this Ume bids are opened for town of Peck; . I the construcUon of the Erick Olson'To receive bids and let contract ro^ in road district No. 59, to-wlt: for the construction of the Erick j W. H. GUlesple f Oleson road in district No. 59; i ?^00.00 all work to be To receive bids and let contract >r the construction pf a brideg leap across Sweetwater Creek near the town of Sweetwater;To receive bids and let contract, for the construction of a bridge' across Mission Creek near Slickpoo postoffice;To receive bids and let contract for the construcUon of a change in the N. H. Cartof road In district No.^;To accept the contract work of iChaa. Hahn for the InstallaUon of i toilet fixtures in the basement of the Court House and draw warrants in payment of the same;To accept the contract work of i Taylor and Cox for the construcUon • of the Carl Thompson road in road district No. 66 and to draw warrants ! in payment of same; jTo accept the contract work of A. •Valk for the cpnstmoUon of thej Jaquee Spur and Cow Creek Bridges I and ta draw; warrants in fiayment –
To take up and dispose of all mat- ; ters pertaining to roads and bridges that may prol>erly come before the meeUng. ' «It appearing to the saUsfacUon of the board that F. R. Seidel has In ; all r^j^ts Uved up to and complet­ed the terms of his
John Scott, the well known liVerjr-' man sold his John8pear- inee. The contractors have n laig^ force of men at work and are ppsht hig the work rapidly# i •. ^ . | 'JohnBneitoherni& Complet^‘hli ^ ware house and is Crete foundation auder his residence on Main Avenue. ' 'Reath mi EOea Peatmaa.This community was shocked Thufs dsy morning by , the announcement by telegram from Portland, Oiegbri, of the death ofEllen Peatman, wife of W. M. Peatman of ihisoity. Mrs. Peatman died at the Christol Springs Sanltarinm in Portland, to which point she was taken some weeks ago in the hopes that expert medical aid could help restore her failing health. AppkrenUy rallying under sklUful treatment, her recovery was thought probable, but the aU-wise Providence had willed otherwise and she passed peacefully away Tuesday morning at 6 o’clock. Mr. Peatman was enrouto to Portland when he received the sad news imd accompanied his wife’s remain home, arriving Thursday aftehioou. Two children, Roy L. Peatman*and Mrs. Nellie G/ CrookeU, together with the husband are left to moam the death of a loving mother, a dut­iful wife and a true friend- Tlie luneral was conducted this afternoon at two o’qUmk froin the Methodist church, Uie Rev. Lawpn officiating, rhe burial o<^urred In the^ village cemetory where a large c^dheoane issembled to pay Ute last sad jrites. I to his present residence. John O’Connors returned Wednes­day ftom an extended visit to Port­land and the Sound country.William Libert, the Lewiston cap­italist, stopped in Orofino Wednes­day night enrouto the Fraser country. "^ -: - -------------------------------- ............. , the Currant Expense Fund in the 1A. D. Kennedy, proprleton of the ' of $260.08 in foil of the amount | Idle Ho^r pool room and confection- due under said eontraet. 'ery, departed for Montana -this It appearing to the safisfacilon of i WMk on * »hort biu.lne«« trip. I the BoMd Ourt T*ylor and Coxhave] WlU erect a handsome residence on covering the construcUon of thej , the site of the old structure. East end of the Carl Thompsoi^ji The. .. Clearwater *sfg;PHill =smCa : .Ct»nl once, Onlu. IMw. Yellow ^ JR ft.SB. N. Brown, Agent. NORTHWEST ITEMS WASHINGTON, MONTANA AND IDAHO NEWS NOTES. A F«w Int«n»»Ua« litoB From Onr Exchanges of the wnnding Coontry-Nmnerous Aod- dents and Peaonai Brents Til Plac©~Bnalne« Outlook li QooA WASHIHQTON 8TASB KBWA ffhirtoea graduates from the We­natchee high school receired diplomasThe for -free ipeech-m.de by I. W. W. reptesentatires. in Wenatche; lias nsoUed in failure.The order for peach boxes for the Fakiisa Uorticultoral onion this year totals more than 200,000 boxes. licensing euUmatic rending machines.The big aixday eanraas made in Wenatchee during the last week eloeed with $38415 raised to erect a ^ M. a A. building. ^Fruit growers of the Touehet and Walla Walla ralleys are to exhibit two e cluuc^ged a distance of nearly two soiles, to a location doso to tho Colum- river.General Jami ______has announce his candidacy for the United States senste and will submit his name to the voters at the Septem­ber primariee.hundreds of circalari and posters have been seat out in which an appeal is mads for 5000 men, women and chil­dren to help harvest the Yakima valley druit crop tkU year.Professor Thomas Dixon Carver of the department of economics of Ear- vard university wiU deliver the princi-
Is
pal addnn 1ot WkUaian eoU«g«~ tUa year.A portion of oao of tho flnort lanehoa ij> Aaotin cooBty waa lotd rooonUy to Btehard Pattonoa of Aaotui by W. C Haliojr of Anatoao. Tha deal oobraooa $21JU0, and udadoa 1400 aeioa. Oomploto propaiaa of tha 3hd annnal
tia»o boon (aanod, the aetaions to bo bold in North TaUma on Juno 0 to » iaeluairATho $1,075,000 ajaeoament to pay for hbo propoaod eonatnietion of tho- lake Waahin«ton canal it hold inralid by de- ciaion of the anpremo court, the opinion
Senator Jones* biU allowing I JNrnrthera Pacific raUway to build abridge across the Columbia rivex be- .cUtion, was formed recent- ij with th^following members: D< Wohlenburg, Kooekia; Stockton, Gam- beU, Taines, Schaeffer and SeWusher, Grangeville.To have lived In Idaho county. 38 years, and yet never to have seen a railroad train since she left her home in the east to eroM the plains to Idaho companied by her husband, one o survivors of the Whitman massacre, is now en route to Portland to attend the rose camivaLMONTANA ITBUS.Since the first of the year 1544 cars containing settlers* Uvestock have into Montana,Judge John B. Mcaernan of Butte has returned from a trip of several weeks to Troy, N. Y.Seventy-five hustling wholesalers ' * * * seekers at NaUtorhim park, Spokane, jaonday night, P. W. Schneider, general Faraman of the park mechanical depart- onnt, feU 50 feet from the top of the 4jircle awing, dying five minutea later.By the traffic agreement between the Htome Telephone company and the In- denUU Telephone company, both of %okaae, entered into reeenUy at wsMiiag of the offieiale ia.that city, -coMblidatiwi of intereato waa afteete.., 000,080 Of in-Bernard Sebade, a young mualeian various cities of the state last week.It is believed that the Northern Pa cific intends to extend the line of tho Western Railway company, now beingbuilt in Custer coun^ ...................Service has been : theiof tho railroad commission, between Paradise and St. Begis, Missoula county. The train wiU be daily except Sunday. Thomas Bryant, for many years super­intendent of tho Original mine, and Thomas KilgaUon, superintendent of tho Stewart at Butte, wore the reciplonU of beautiful tokens of esteem from em­ployes in.those mines recently. With a bullet hole near his left eye end the course of the lead plainly visible to a point near the left ear, A. E. Gor­man lies in the SHvor Bow county jail, barged with having entered a ware- house. He was shot by Jonathan Blake, record made by aeroplw unce flight, and in iU entirety his flight eclipses anything man has at- tempted in a haavier-than-air machineThe start was made from Albany at 7:30 o*clock Sunday moming^dor weather conditions as nearly perfect the moat fasUdious aviator could de­mand. One hour and 23 minutes later he h^ made his stopping plsce near Poughkeepsie, where there was an hour*s intermission. Besoming his flighk at 9:28 he sped southward and landed within the boundary of Manhattan isl- and at 10:35.Only 100 yards north of the point at which his craft settled stretched Spuy- ten Devil creek, separating Manhattan island from the mainland. Had he faBed lis flight would have been in vain, but as he swept over it the prise was his. Thence to Govemor*s isl- flpeedlst Than Paulham*i Plight. Psulham*s flight from London to Man iester-188 miJee-exceoded this Cur- tiss feat in distance, but not in speed and danger. The Frenchman *s avenge " " ** hour, and below himiwland. Curtiss fol­lowed the windings of the histone Hud­son river, with jutting headlands, wooded slopes and treacherous palisades. Ho swung high over the gnat bridge at Pottghkoepeie, dipped at times within 50 feet of the river's broad surface and jockeyed like a falcon at the turns. Only once did his craft show signs of rebellion. This was off Storm Kin^laear West Point, when at a height of nearly a thousand feet, a treacherous gust fluke threw his pianos awry. The machine dropped 40 feet and tilted periioualy, but Curtiss kept his head and by adroit manipulation re­stored the equilibrium. A special train charte foUowed the aeroplane all the journey. The total time of Curtiss* flight through tho 150 miles of his trip waa two hours and 48 minutes. He concluded the flight at 12 o'clock sharp, and spent one hour and four minutes resting near Poughkeepsie, and one hour and seven Worry and Drink Had Bvidontly Got the Baiter of Him.St. Paul, May 30.-P. J. Gibbons, a Uvestock commission man of St. Paul Sunday shot and kHled his wife at theii homo in that city. A few minutes later Gibbons rang tho doorbell at thoFather E. J. Walsh, the young pastor of St. Augustine *a Boman Cath­olic church, and as the door was opened flrod two shots into tho priest *s head, killing him almost instantly.Gibbons has boon an inmate of a drink euro aaniUrium of Minneapolis. It is said there have been several estrange­ments between Gibbons and his wife, and that Father Walsh has.each time suocessfully intervened as peacemaker.At the jail Oibbona said: -Its a pe- cidiar world, looking at it from any angle. I *ve viewed it several ways and doa*t know much about it yet. I had wife once who did not care for me but liked tho oompany of others. She had ckUdren who were my children. She oould not have eared for them or she would not have dishonored them.-I knew her treachery forId nothing. She sui,.___I never tried to verify hei We Uved that way unti today. For mo it waa > hell on earth; for her I don't know, and she can't toll It is all over with us now, and 1 am at peace with myself. Let follow what^^When Father Walsh camo to South St. Paul I waa jubilant. He appeared eoch a nice feUow, and 1 wont to' him and volunteered what support was ia my power to give him. He thanked me, Md wo became fast friends. Then fol­lowed a game of treachor^ and deeeit—h>t^*tid*uJ ™“I had invited lather Walsh to my ttd faiujy“‘™^'““* Mm to my wifeThe virtta of Father Walah wore be- eeming too frequent to please me. Ho appeared at my home in the afternoons when I was at my offloa and n«nt aov
SHORT ITEMS FROM MOST ANY
PLACE ON THE GLOBE.
A Bevlew of Happenings In Both Sset-
owing list may be taken as a
ard of prices paid to produ­
de of the city market for________jdities named:Poultry—Lir^ hens, l«@18c; dreeeed 20@22cj lire, spring, 14c; dressed, 15@ 18c; old roostere, 11c; dressed, 12c; live
the Fast Week—National, Historical, PoUUcal and PerMnal Events T< Eight oasee.of chOdrea bitten bj dogs were reported to the police in Chi »go Saturdsy.Page M. Baker, for the latt 31 yeari publiaher of the New Orleans Times Democrat, died recently.Commander Bobert E. Peary was the fuest of honor st a dinner at the Sav ige club, London, recently. He wai dected a life honorary member.President Taft will make his first trip to the Panama canal cone since his inauguration in November, after the fall elections, if his plans are carried Clareuec E. Hagar, former aacrotory pardons in Colo-of the state bo^Hf rado,.has been placed under arrestao,.nas oeen placed under arrest upon warrant charging him with accepting a bribe to eeeure a pardon.Sixteen members of the Fort Collins (Colo.) High School AInmni association are seriously iU from the effects of pto­maine poisoning, caused, It is believed, by eating impure ice cream served at a banquet.A cold-blooded murder was revealed recently when the body of Luigi P. ^'«8cia, an Italian engineer, weU known tho Swiss and ItaHan colonies of San roprietor of the concern. Judge Basch wiU hold eo one 6 to permit pending s ll'c^ :4>t Spokane, convicted several months ago In the aqpesior court on a qhargo Arqpght by 17-year-year-oldwiti not be pardoned by Gov Namor M. E. H^, at leeet not until tho v^to exMtive takes time thoroughlyifiMoavsr bsaa a.m.lA-U>$ WhljiaA*^^- ty supaiior Mart which has atbaetad Mor. sttaatioa than that of H. M. T Boone, ex-president of the Pslodse State Jwuxk and formerly deputy state bank .axkminer, who is noyr on trial on a ^ fakaigo of embeuling^ $20J>00 of the i^dands af ike bank oi which he
^ fl «ad tWo mon wlB dis as tho roaolt of' V ^ a rnnaway oa tho tiaeh of-a aiV*r- ;; wick, Mveo mUca west of Baytol: Aa omployo of tho taash.wao piowteg irtth a gang to which seven hones wore hitched. When a lerd of young moloo ; etampedM «,d nwhoji tewiwd tho pto.; a team tho honee became frightened, and,I idekiag, started to run. The driver f ** .'“*• ">»«Mning alight
The
Clearwator reserve is said to eon- ; A bain more w|iito plnq/timbsr t%p iny i other reserve in the United States.
The Univertity of Idaho if, the recipi- ont, from thn BattotfleldJ.ij)>«(ick pany of Weioer, of U bead of flno i£eep 0 etate agri^tunl • farm. The
_ ^ ^ hold court ia ButteJune 6 to permit pending mattere to bo bron^t op and a day flxed when mo- tioae and domurrere can bo heard. The federal grand jury wiD be called Johe 14 at Helena. It U aipocted that body WiU bo in eeamon about three weekaOn iaformaUon and a description eup- plied by Thomae F. McGrath, James
Brovra -was isrreeted at Garrison for the aUegod shooting of Frank Shaafer, a Northern Pmsillc brnkemnn, near Clin- toa reeoaUy. Brown has baon idontidod by'McGrath and the Injured brnkemnn.Two expoditiona from the American Mnasom of Hntnrai T NOW York thii week Wyoming ia eearob three bona on four toes to sefeatisis kd^ ^ find
History wfll lemve c for MonUnn and of dinoeanrt with
OBAIN
JUDCmro OONTBST.^Dry Tma^ Qaagntm at Ofitaa ▼ataabla Priaastha Unitod Statoa, Canada and other parti of the world are eligible to
ithe furniture deal.
vaa drowned in tho Russian river,___aooneville. Cal., Saturday afternoon, vhen tho automobilo in which she and
her husband, their daughter, Hazel, anc B. E. Strange of San Francisco were riding plunged over a 15-foot embank meat into the river.Realizing that convieftion was inevita
charged with cashing a forged chock for $38 on the Finlcn hotel, changod hio
Jhe penitentiary. In Spokane Morton waa known u M. 8. Haajy and Bad Lee.Stealing Vag&tend tnaE to flnanee tho pnbbeation of hia murteal compool- ti0B< and, Inetdentally, to beotow val- Ca^ e« year, old, the raUway mail elotk who was aixeated recently on a eh»xgo of piUeru»;tho mails while working between Spokane and PorUand. MeC.rtet. hix e$af«Med to stealing reg- iatered letter, lor jpiore than a yeJ, and flUx thafte aggregate several hon- dred donmte, «, far te known. He 1. a graduate ^ the Bniversity-of Idaho.Star Sbarman, a fruit grower, and Drttee (Hrred and A. M. Hlggine, two phanuclete. hwo diaeovered a ^pray that it U elaixied will deatroy the homl- spherical eealt. C. L. Whitney, fruit MapjetM, eay. He work 1. flnal, aod P. A. HnnOon state horttenltuial in- ^ far triumphed over UI apray,. It can Uve on Bordeaux mixture, thrives on Ume^ulphnr and Mnaldare «?oo«)te a deUeacy. The e. of tho now mixture is eeerat.Aa& Cbeese-Wiseonain and Hazelwood. 19c lb; domeatie Swiss, file; briX cream, 20c. 'Hay—Baled oat hay, $18 ton; wheat $2o' timothy,Grain-Oaia, $1.40 per cwt; barley, per cwt; wheat, $1.55. 'iggs-Stamped eggf, 35e doa; local ranch, 30c doz.Butter—Hazelwood, 45e Ib; Yakima, 45c lb; Edgwood, 40c; htopleleaf, 48e lb; Biehlieu, 45e Ib; Botalia, 40e lb; Tyee, 40c lb; Home Brand, 45c lb; Jer­sey BeU, 40c lb; Premium, 45c lb; Meadow Harvest, 40c lb; aoverbloom,Eetafl Fruita and VegeUhlec Hothouse lettuce, 30c lb; young tur- aips, 5c bunch; fancy lemons, 30e doa; aavel oranges, 25e to 80c green peppera. 50c lb; Florida grape fruit, 15@20c; California grape fruit, 3 for 25c; pota­toes, 20 lbs for 25c; new cabbage, 5e >er Ib; apples, 5c to lOe lb; bananas, lOe doz; beets, 6c lb; young carrots, k bunch; cauliflower, 20@25e each lucnmbers, 20@25c each; string beans^ 25c lb; green beans, 25c lb; green peas, 20c lb; horseradish, 25e lb; Florida to- matoes, 20c lb; artichokes, 20e lb or fi lbs for 35c; leeks, 2 bunches, 15c; oys­ter plant, 2 bunches 15c; wax beaniy
25c lb; Winesap apples, $3 to $3.50 box;
Wagoners, $2.75 box, white boUing onions, 4c lb; young green onions, 5e bunch; radishes, 5c bunch; fancy straw­berry rhubard, 4 lbs; asparagus, lOe lb; egg plant, 40c lb; new poUtoea, 10c per lb; cress, 5e bunch; Bermuda oniona,3 lbs for 25c; mushrooms, 50e lb.OTHER B1ARKET8.Dispatches concerning market quota- ti^B, conditions and phases are » fol-Chicago.
Flour—Dull.Eye—No. 2, 76c.Barley-Feed or mixing, 50@55c; fau to choice malting, 59®65c. ^ 'Flaxseed—No. 1 sonthwestern, $2.13; o. 1 northwestern, $2.23.Timothy seed—$4.35.Clover seed—$11.25.
beeves, $5.50
@8.60; Texas steers. $4.90@6.50; west- — steers, $5.15@7.50; Stockers and
Hogs—Market steady. Light, 9.50; mixed, $9.20@9.50; heavy, 9.50; rough, $9.15@9.30; good thM-vy;$o:I?ichoice 40; bulk
Fr$d
Gardner
WOULD
ABOLISH MHMOBIAL DATttt Tree State'Way. SayeBay
Gr«id Aimy mWlhat TteMorixl flay ought tftbo aboUxhod," ixyi J. Wiaxrt thoMxxxMbi^
prMonteUvo Hoiut got oa xaxsd- adoptod to tho xaadiy civil bill ng $85,000 ixmiadtetely availxWo > of tho Fort-HtU lodiooreservation irrigation project.
Brown, commander of the M department of the G. A. R. ‘____
dxyx that I fool ran MnMthing wIU bo
dono Mou. Tho day i, 00 oV
xorvod with tho I -•country. It ix hotter not to obearvo the JV «t oU thu make of it a Fourth of G
and Harold Steek^uM of BandjK.iat oro dead andx"’z*'.x.rxn£;
tho>^*
floor. On arrival at the city dock at
SlUi AND aOT71»Al£IA^||GA / Koithxm XIBOX tad Denvor * Bio wm Bxohxngo Soxteoa.Tboqrio^P^gten
Now York.^^Bar .Uver, S3 3-4c; Mexican dollan,
etlirS!''«"■ -■
_ Poitund.fqllown” report* market a*
iboral iupply of“"ket ha. remained rarpris- per hundred on the week ia light, espe* arrival^of gr^
i^from .rat of tho
tion shown
ition Thereprices.———————–
«. .i».i mu, ., u.. Su¥.iE).55, the bulk of
'.hraS’xb^p,AYrtUbl* orrto SuppUra. I MblM and
“ISeluded traifio systema wiU^syrtema wiUMnterehange an enormous volume of businees in Denver and the oma a™ un
8,160,000 bnahel*.and Conad^, deerratadV
Mmo..Anna Bog*tad, thj>-flr.t woman member of the Storthing, which is the lowor hoax. i. the No?;* Jif ment, was teaeher in one of the primarv ‘a*^U whraM‘“ ■"
m
/

iWi
Eiva.'.
MRS. JUUAW. HOWE
MAKES FEW COMMENTS ABOUT MODERN SOCIETY WAYS.
Hu Just Her 91st BirtMay, and Discussed ' American Wonunhood- Oocktails for Women Shock Her- Ourse of Fait Idfe-Flve o'Olocl Teas Have Lost Old-Time Charm.
Ap^ Grower. Adopt K.w PUn. The Wenateheo Valley amlt Grower.' iation wiU Jdopt now method, in
Mr.. Julia Ward Howe, the grand old woman of America, authorew of “The Battle Hymn of the American Eepub- lic," who ha. ju.t pawed her 91.t birth­day at Bo.ton, Maw., today diMuwed the part American womanhood i. play ing in the 20th century life.airs. Howe boUeves that other women could Jive to bo 9X easily if they shun the fast life of society and look with old-fashioaed horror on the insiduous aud invidious cocktail. Airs. Howe's ideas are not so old-fashioned as herprecepts for living. For instance has lived long enough to see the en­franchisement of tho women throughout the United States.Insofar as the righU of equaUty go Mrs. Howe believes that 1
women are just beginning t their rightful piano.“Times and conditions have certainly changed since I was a girl,“ said Mr Howe; “some changes have been fc good, others for tho worse. We wer ail shut in and I can go back in memory' and seo myself, like a damsel of olden times, shut up in tho cast! my home.“1 have been shocked to hoar of tho prevalence of drinking among society women of today. Tho cocktaU habit, as I believe it is caUed, is the curse of modern society. That is ono of tho leading phases of fast life in society. It 18 alarming.“Imagine tho regret with which I have heard that some women have even acquired tho ‘breakfast cocktail habit,' and am I right in that! I am told it is a habit of drinking before breakfast in the morning in order to acquire an appetite. I shudder to think of the harm which is done to women, not only physically but morally, by this custom. Even the 5 o’clock teas, which were once so staid and decorous, have changed, and liquor is associated with the delicious and delightful tea which gave tho name to tho fashionable repas Idleness Leads to Mischief. “Society will change with tho franchisoment of women. I:
tho marketingIt proposes not to solicit bids as for-
morly, but to distribute them through the Gibson Fruit Co. of Chicago. Under the plan proposed the association wUl
Th. .rrangement i. expected to rtren^hen the auoeiation with ita mom- bera. Heretofore the pooling of tho fmit of the gromra in the aMoeiation and the dUpoMl of the pooled fruit in one •ale to tho highest bidder e.tabli.hed the price of apples. Grower, ootside the aviation demanded and received
these
independent growers were under
no expense of maintaining an organiza- tion, and in this respect they had tho dat?o“n^® of tho growers In the asso-For instance. If the association se­cured and accepted a bid of $2.25 a box for Winesaps, that figure, thereupon, be­came tho current quotation for that va- riety. It was asked and obtained by the independent growers. The grower in the association had to pay 7 cents a box for handling hia apples, and conse-“^fnetp'^The'’"'" rd“’couK,irice, 12.1
AFFMSINCONGRESS
outside the B helped by ibute anything toward
ice, and he netted tho fuU ■ice, 12.25 a box, for his apples.Under the new method, tho associa- ttain' tion will not move ita freieht at one sale
the Gibson company, which will have a representative hero to deal with any buyers that may come to Wenatchee. Another benefit expected to accrue from the new arrangement is that it will g;uard tho association from a combinaUndlr^Ye°"d plan b^ds were submit
hose dealers that could
PUrarailllEiiTOFSESSIOII
HE PDEODED.
BallxoaB BiU la In Complicated State, Owing to Merger Clause Offered by Brown-Few EepubUcan Senators Think That a Statehood BIU Can Be Agreed Upon.
Washington.—The plans of republican leaders in congress have gone awry so many Umes that they are chary of an­nouncing any program for the rest of tho session or of speculating on how long that period is Hkely to be.The situation in the senate on the ailroad bill is complicated by the intro­duction of an amendment relating to
fupils to eat owe cooxnra.
they cook hereafter, U the belief of the Instnfetora i wlU force the i
ciation and that wore difposed to come hero to submit tenders. Thii icy will enable the ;his year's pol- Jition, through agency, the Gibson Fruit Co.,
to offer the apples in quantities as low as carload lots to dealers in all the n markets.association estimates it will
Sion it'will pay the Gibson Fruit not been made public.commis- t Co. has
aUroads whichby Senator Brown of Nebraska, just before adjournment Friday. The provi- Sion contains all tho prohibitivo fea " res of tho original secUon 12, and me of tho advantages for tho railroads contained in tho section stricken . Tho Bonators in charge of the biU do not rant tho Brown amendment, but it may bo difficult for them to defeat it. It is not ^likely that tho leaders will have to make furthe: surgonts.There is a contest between advocates of statehood and conservation measures as to what class of legislation shaU next bo considered. Tho supporters of tho public land withdrawal bill wiU not give to the statehood measure without
concessions to the
Few republican sc to put the statehoodStatebood BilLtors are
More Land for Settlers. Klamath Falls, Ore.—According the statistics that have been compiled, 7 Indians have been allotted lands he Klamath reservation, which willhavo been allotted
> equa

reconyears the wealthy matron and girl have had no way in which to spend their time but in frivolity. Their idleness led to mischief. The ballot will impose a duty uponsomething to occupy their thoughts. They will have not so much time for silly and harmful pleasures that pass from sorno smart society.“Happy old ago comes only from health and a clear conscience. Health can only bo kept by simple and quiet living. I do not decry society at all; only some of the phases of it which have grown up from tho last 20 years.“Tho old-fashioned ideals are the best. Every woman who attains a cer-preaches ita docti old homo with itsto realize this and
ne. Give us a good easy comfort and its tranquil air of perfect peace and domes­tic tranquility. No divorces, no sudden voyages to Europe upon tho merest whim.Harm by Groat Wealth.“Perhaps great wealth haa done much harm to American society. I do not know. It has done some harm in the manner it has caused men am women to bo dissatisfied with thei
hotels,
of acres open for Aue worK of compUing the roll wis begun two yeare ago and has just been completed. Indians have, been al­lowed 80 seres of good farming land, or 180 acres of gracing and timber land each. The Klamath reservation com- prises 45 townships. The excess hold­ings will comprise between 800,000 and
900,000 acres of graiing land and a considcrablo acreage of timber. The method of disposing of these lands has not been deflnitcly determined, hnt it IS likely that it will be on similar lines ns were followed In the last reservations to be opened. The timber is to be cruised and sold at a fixed price.Wheat Acreage Is Graater.Ottawa, Ont.-Beports given out here how that seeding ont in the three monthwheiat acreage wDl be large, accordi/° ^0 reports, running from 10 per in Manitoba to 40 per cent in Al- berta. There will be practically no in- crease in the oats acreage.
bill through at the link theculHes between senate and house •e irreconcUablo, and that it wou waste of time to send the measur conference. About the only supporters in the senate of immediate statehood
are on tho democratic side, and they want tho house bill passed, as that would mean statehood for Arizona and Now Mexico in time for fall elections, and they think it would mean four tional democratic senatora.
The senat
Xaw Rnlm Expected to II for Now Jereer Pliy.J Bchoolglrli taking op the course of domutio science at the Carrol Rob-bins school wUl be compelled to eat….. . .that this exercisemore care and pay more attendoa to Instructions, a Trenton (N. J.) respondent of the New York Evening Telegram says.Just what tho result wUl ba Is a question. It Is claimed that some scholars who study domestic science only take the course as a pasUme and make all sorU of uneatable things Just to pass the Ume away. It ie feared that tho new ruling will provide more work for local physicians' and the hospitals.
The course Is compulsory at this particular school. Heretofore the pupils were only compelled to taste their own cooking and then make a: ■t of the value. Now, If a scholar makes six biscuits she will have to eat them all or suffer a penalty to be fixed later.Some good-Bized schoolboys havo suffered as a result of pranks played on them by the girls In the domestic science department “Eat this biscuit, aJmes; made It In school/' waa responsible for a boy scholar's, who thought this girl was the “only, only," having to ■pend a week In a local hospital.Gastritis of an acute nature waa the record made by the attending physi­cians. Numerous cases of Indigestion have been reoprted among' the boys because of some of the “eatables" turned out by tho girls.One boy recently admitted to several chums that he almost died while eab mince pie forced on him by one of the girls, but boasted ho waa will- Ing to “die for her."
THE UNITED STATES
niTAKECUIIliEIIFAFFAIIIS
INNiCAMCIIA.
tlncto Sam to Aasum. Control WBettet Madilx PorcM Win or Not—Voto WIU Bo Domandod-Stato Dopartment to Enforco Same BoUtlona That Pro- vaued at Panama.
A oisaESPECorni asimal.
Miss Caroline and Miss A^llda B^gle lived In an old-fashioned house with a lean-to shed, Che root oT
ritoric!
the gild( is biddiilife of today is very harmful. It makei people lazy. It removes domesUc obU gaUons.“Somo day it will be all changed, Some day all people, rich and poor alike, will realize that the old-fashioned ideas were tho best, after all.**THE BASLO SIINK.
V
The Passengers AU Saved During a Heavy Sea.Nelson, B. C., May 29.—News from that 1
there was no panic, and passengers behaved with calmness. While landing at Ainsworth, amid high seas and with the wind blowing a gale, the Kaslo struck tho wharf.Little notice waa taken of tho acci­dent, and tho steamer put to soa again. When a short distance from the shore Captain Moore discovered that a huge rent had been torn in the hull of the vessel and that the hold was full of water. The steamer made for the shore at full speed, it being feared that tho inrush of water would explode ’the boUors.As soon as the steamer reached tho shore fishermen plunged into.the heavy seas and at great risk took a lino ashore.
The steamer was soon emptied and all sorU of supplies wore piled on the beach. The vessel is in 15 feet of watery and almost submerged.^ After night fell crew and passengerslit fires on the shore and spent tho night around the fires or in neighboring
The Kaslo is one of the big boats of the interior of British Columbia lakes. She was boUt at the Great Northern yards at Mirror Lake, on tho main lake, near Kaslo, in 1897 by Elliott and cost
180,000.
Honor for Astronomer Hale. Vienna, May 31.-Georgo Ellery Hale, 10 astronomer and director of the Car-
igio solar observatory at Mount Wil- n, Col., has been elected corresponding omber of the Imperial Academy of
Thomas A. Edison was discussing with a reporter a criticism of his won­derful storage battery.
entiflc. It really makes me think of a dia^e I once heard in a museum. “Two young men stood gazing at ahim look so brownB^i1f'"d'"fi?i“y'^„fg“anTkor“"'‘'form^rio"^*^*^ with this eciontlfic In-
near his post. An officer with a lighted approached, whereup Pat boldly Bged him and ordered him to pnt at once. The officer, with ges- i of disgust threw away hia cigar,s; Si.r.K.S',*”'- •“ •— lenato
bill, favored by republican B, would merely authorize the ter- to take the preUminary
steps and would make it possible for them to be admitted to the Union only after congress had approved their proposed constitutions.
Insurgent senators are waiting for the sundry civil bill to offer an am ‘ for the establishment of a tariffwhich would report directly to con- gresa.Elver and Harbor BULThe river and harbor bill is still in conference. Some members are begin­ning to wonder if that “pork barrel** measure is not being used to hold mem- lers in line for the president's pro- pram.Even if tho postal savings bank bUl
hould pass the house and successfully emerge from conference, it is believed it would be a long Ume before any postal banks could bo established.Tho sundry civil bill does not contain an appropriation to put the postal banki
in operation, and some of the house lead ers are responsible for a report that thii legislation wiU bo ignored in the defi ciency bill.
PhUadelphia, Pa., May 29.-Marines and bluojackeU staUoned at the Phila­delphia navy yard havo orders to report for duty, as instrnctfons have been re­ceived from Washington direcUng the Prairie to saB for Blucflelds, Nicaragua. No marines will bo carried from here I the boat, but 1000 of the sea sol­diers will be picked up at Panam will be oa
crew of 300 sailors will
be oa boarc uador command of Lieutenant Com mander Lumis. A number of tonti were taken on board, together witl enough ammuniUon to supply a small army.Tho United States, it is officially an­nounced, will not recede from its inten­tion of retaining control of Nicaraguan affairs, whether the Madriz forces cap­ture Blueflelda or not.The navy department has conUnued its force of 100 men and machine guns from the Padneah at and near- the customs house at Bluefields. This force s to be an international police force, and is to remain indefinitely; in fact intil a political condition has been es- ablished in Nicaragua which will be ntirely satisfactory to the secretary of state and to the president.
This amounts, in theory and in fact, to an occupation of the soil of Nicam-
Tho Louisiana Code provides that If a donee baa attempted to take the life of the donor, or If bo has been guilty toward him of cruel treatment, cr or grievous injurtes, the gift wl considered revoked. In Grandchamp V. Administrator of Succession of Blllls, 49 Southern Reporter. 998. It appeared that Blllli had conveyed property to hie wife, who later had re- conveyed It to him. The conjugal ae- ioclatlon seems to have been stormy, concluding In the aasasslnaUon by Blllli of his wife while she waa fieelng
Gifford Plnchot Home Again.Gifford Pinchot, former chief forester of tho United States, who has been visit to Europe, has returned to tho United atatos. Mrs. Grover Cleveland and her children were returning passe
BOON FOB MEDICAL LABIH New Corporation to Expend Vast Sam
ng to look around, observed a beauUful iloud of smoke issuing i challenged FaHo at“Smoking it I nly k.epin> it lit I
just havo heard of tho arrival :he third child in tho Jones family •emarkod the woman, “Tho annonnt the firstborn waa madenent of the firstborn waa made by
>y a postal card.**—]one, though Plana
for bnUding a vast, modem sanitarium on tho shore of Medical lake, 18 miles southwest of Spokane, are
now well under way, and the company, known as the Medical Lake Mineral Water & Sanitarium company, which is behind tho project, numbers amongst ockholdors prominent figures in tho commercial life of Spokane and of tho Inland Empire. F. B. Culbertson IS president of tho company; WUliam Huntley, vice president, and E. P. Wag- goner, secretary-treasurer. Besides these well-known names, appear some thirty other names of business and profes-
I men who havo taken an active part in the buUding of the Inland Em-The scope of the oVganizatiom. em­braces plans for making Medical lake ono of the show places not only of tho great northwest but of the United States. The sanitarium, deaigned'at the outset to take care of 600 patients, will be erected about 1,000 yards back from
ed that Ingratitude sufficient 'to annul the reconveyance by the wife bad been demonstrated by the husband. The Louisiana Supreme Court held that tho death of the donee extinguished the acUon. because the revocaUon Is a penalty which can be pronounced only against the guilty. Even when the mediately upon the com- mission of the offense, this rule ap- pllea. The law having made no ex- cepUon, the courts can make none. It was not Intended to visit the sins of the donee upop the heirs at law.To the merciless broadsides of nn- consUtutlonallty, the Federal Employ- ■ LlabUIty Act, created to decrease
gua, which has been made necessary, the officials said, by the utter indefensi­bility of the acts of both Madriz and Zelaya. Madriz is not recognized as
The situation at Bluefields today ii complex, but it is entirely soluble bj the 8l
they noticed on approaching their dwelling that tbi churchgoers ahead of them paused Is Taselng, and gazed upward with ia ' and mirth. A moment later the> saw why. Their neighbor's bUly-goal bad escaped, mounted tbe leando U teben roof, and I of a flaring clrcui j^tej streaming banner-like from bis Jaws» ouUined boldly against tbe sky, mois on a mountain peak, calmly ^ contemplaUng the Sabbath proceesloa Miss Matilda laughed. Miss Caro line did not•Tbe abominable beast!" she gasped deeply scandalized. “I never naw anj^ thing so—so disrespectful!"The goat is Indeed a disrespectful animal. He Is no respecter either oJ. property or person, as many an. lnd> . vidual held In honor by mankind* baa rnefnlly discovered. Admiral- Evans has related with pride, as » worthy achievement bis triumph in his earlier days over a refractory goat ou ship­board, which refused to yield tbe mllb required for a sick man.After It had baffled everybody whos# proper task it was to secure tbe milk, the captain sent for Evans, and direct* ed him to go and get it Evans respectfully Intimated that bt bad not supposed “mUklng goaU U
be part of tbe doty of ar navJgaUng officer;" but tbe captain thereupon ash­ed It as a favor, and be undertook the task.
With a lltUo warm water, mudi per snaslon, sdme firmness, and a recoller Hon of tbe ways of certain "darklee* with nMsbehavlng cows, be succeeded;
and waa unmercifully doffed by bis comrades on his soocess. Indeed, be was far from happy ftr H until be ba<» taught bis method to V tho safeguards which mont has thrown aroi all possible conditions. isU are defeated and into the city the Uni state depart Id existing and If the Estrada- ire driven bach ted States sailoriwUl not permit them to bo slaughtered in the streets. If the Madriz forces train city they ini era* ; tbe I the lake on an eminence that wiU give a commanding view of a beautiful and picturesque country. There will be golf links, picnic grounds, danqing pavilion, tennis courts, swings and merry-go- rounds, shoot-the-ehtttes and bowUng alleys.Medical lake mineral water, the salU that are obtained from the lake and the mud baths that may be taken there are becoming better known with every year, as possessing curative powers for rheumatism and nervous and stomach troubles. ‘*8shalm,»* the mineral water, haa long been on the marketba^htlYrremarked a bachelor. “All summer long I'm supposed to sit up untU thesmall hours in the morning enterUin- - „ ____ing married men whose wives have gone coo'm «nce it was lanced, and accord- ^ew weeks.—Detroit Free surgeon, the emperor Emperor's HandHeallng.Berlin, May 31.—The abscess on the nperor's hand is taking a normal nber of railroad fatalities, sue- I In HoxJe V. New York. N. H. * H. R. Co., 73 Atlantic Reporter. 764. The ConnecUcut Supreme Court Errors criticised as ImpolIUc and vlo-’ laUve of the long-accepted common law the provision allowing employes to re­cover for Injuries received through the negligence of fellow aervanU. The prohibition against railroads exempt­ing themselves from liability for neg- llgence by contract with their em­ployes waa deemed vIolaUve of tbe fifth amendment of the Federal Coa- sUtutlon. prohibiting tho deprivation of liberty and property without due process of law. In that It denied tbe parties the right to contract Arbi­trarily making railroads while en­gaged In Interstate commerce liable to employes fer Injuries was consld- I Invalid, except as a regulation of ratate commerce. It not being snffl- clent tbet It remotely affected such commerce If that result was secured by Invading the setUed limits of the sovereignty of the States as to their own Internal police. Tbe secUon pro- vldlng for tbe dlstrlbuUon of tbe fund recovered in an action for death was asMiled thus: If the damages recov­erable are to be treated as repreisMit. Ing tbe esUte left by the decedent. It Is for the State of his domicile to reg­ulate tbe distribution thereof, and. If are treated as a fund ere- gray and fully 20 inches long. Mercy,** quoth Katie, “What a pc culiar place for a switch.** Then Katie looked close and discov- ered that ine hirsute bunch was held fast in the door jamb. With a paai key she opened the door. Morrii ated by the act. Congress may not Steigers, a guest from Salt Lake top- bring bto existence a new duty of backward, his 28-inch growth of executors or administrators to coUect whiskers free. Steigers, while writing a letter, felt a draft and went to the door to close it. A gust wafted his whiskers out­ward and they were caught when the door slammed. It was a catchlock, and Steigers was held a prisoner for an hour because of the mechanism of lock tory and enter the city they wUl be subject, in the first instance, to whatever police regulations may be es­tablished by Commander Gilman, who is charge of the forces of the Paducah Id of tho Dubuque.Election to Be Demanded.A summary of tho situaUon, accord­ing to the few revelations made by the diplomatic officials on account of the delicacy of the crisis, is that the United wm repudiate the presidency of Madriz.In other words, if the Madriz faction defeats the Estradaists finally, tbe armed forces of the United States wUl insist on a popular election. This elec- tion, as in the ease of Panama, where warring factions were suspected of in- tending to defraud each other, will be held under federal auspices.In this way only can the United States secure the presence dential chair of a NieSr magistrate with whom the United States can negotiate for an agreement of peace protection. Such an agree­ment, officials hold, is impossible unless the United SUtes is given sneh author ity as it held in Cuba, where aU the phases of intervenUon, occupation and retention of power for a given time made the Cuban problem ;Domingan groblem entirely Officials of the administration who hare charge of the straightening of the triangular tangle in Nicaragua are posi. tivo that the state department never authorized any person to say for it that thd Venus had a right to saU from New Orleans, or that the vessel constituted or could constitute a blockade of Blue- he U ence in the j caraguan as a chief keep on milking for the rest of voyage.He waa more fortunate than anohHorace Greeley._t a conspicao milker ito the farm and Bvana to tbe m When. In accordance wHb Mrs. Giwa ley's tbeoiTlee of diet, goat’e milk waa deelred for their lltUe eon, they oil- tempted to keep'York prvaaiaea, and ] took to mm W. ma Ignomlnlona i slee with the creatnm beoame a eon of delighted mirtb. to* Ws neighbors* , One 6*w from his reap windows the complete overthrow of’tbe great editor in bis back yard, while the goat re* mained victerJoosljr diewing the latest edition of tbe Tribnne* wUdi bad falF ea from Mi*. OxeeIe|fs pocket in tb^ contest He remtee^ that be calbHr down to him. gleefnByt “Well. Mr. Greeley, nanim tberei hasn't much respect for editorsl" goat In tbelr Nem 1 Mr. Greeley nndeiv I tns*- Sitting on bis bat and WHb one foo9 , in an overturned barrel; Mr, Greeleyi . In his high, squeaky voice, cdlM bnckr ' HEZICOB RICHEST UAS. ms WmSKEBS caught in DOOBSeattle Obambermaid, Surprised. Opens Door to Ascertain What It Means. Katie Merrill, who handles the linen on the top floor of the Hrtel Seat-hostelr^’the other day she saw pparentiy hanging from in on the top was tripping down a hallway in the other day shiwhat looked like a''woman*e s^Tritck“ll full: aiM CatUm Uterollr Vawm m mmnd Hills.General Luis Terrazas is Mexleo'n wealthiest man. General Tenrasas to 79 years old. the same age as PresK dent Dias. The lives of both mem have been full of atlrring- adventar«. It was in reward top daring mUtary service that Genera) Terrasas obtalneffl from tbe government large gifts off land which placed him upon the rooffl to tbe great fortune which be now po»- Mr. Smith ordered chicken broth at tbe Fatted cafe and after testing it bo caleld the waiter and said: "Will yon kindly teU me bow you make this chicken sonpr'W take de bollln* hot watab and nm de chicken fro, mlstab."-«WeU. Rastps. I think this chicken must have bad Its rubbers cq.--Boa- ten Ooorler. «I know it; Irat tbty nnist begin to let th^^^^jpw prottjr aooB.**-.T«to D«np«r on BSMmU'f BoeopUoa.Now Tork, M»y ?0.—"That a jigan- tic plot to miaimixo aa far aa poaaiU, tha propoaod reeoptipn of Colonel Thoo- doro BootoToIt npon hia return to thia coontry haa baan eoneoetad by tboao in ebargo of the event la a fact of which I am firmly convinced.**This was the empha^tie sUtement of M. Moore, preeideAt and editor-in- ihief of the Pitt^urg Leader. .It'a bMng one amaU Uaat for- naea than a dotan pnirio fliw. fc than ^00,000,000. Hia property bold- Inga an chiefly In the atate of CU- huahna, hnt ha alao has large lnTetb>– menta In other parte of tbe repnbllc.General Teriaiaa la the sreMtest land and live etock boron in tha world. It U said. Ho owns flftoen ranohj* In the state of Ohlhnahna. Th« ranches embrace an aggregate area o» more than flve mUlion aciea: Vormany yean apeelal auantUm-haa beam given to raising horaea op*ed Friday The present board of county from Dubois, Idaho and is visiting the missioners deserves great cred-1 family of J. M. Sanders.IC system I Mrs. Hugh Dresser came home from eretofore,; I^wiston Sunday where she has been visiting relatives.
According at item which recently ap-
comit for inangttraiing a san in bridge building. H thousands of dollars has been ex pended on wooden bridges with flimsy abuttments that would; has evidently made ! is no such person as Mrs. Chas. ^ ^ ‘ I Scolea in this vicinity. Miss Dessiethe present board and the stayingpolicy of more money expended , j,. g. gcolei. Cb.rlie does not boast With lasting benefits .to the tax^y-1i the line of internal | improvements and the^ present hoard deserves great credit for in
lumsy aDUUmenis inai wuuiu 'V«»u ; the Wells Bench items,out with the first freshet that has^dently made a mistakealong. Nowall this is changed i thanks to the good hard sense of:
Mar l» Skew Cause Why Order of Sale of Real Estate Should Not Be Made.In the Probate Court of Nez Perce county, Idaho.In the matter of the estate of m Minthe Slocum Minors, having thin court hln petition duly
n order of sale
160 acres of fine land, overlooking Oroftno. This land will be sold in five
acre tracts at fl50 per acre to suit pur­chaser. Also one acre bearing fruit will be sold for $1^00. This frnit is of finer flavor than the Lewiston or Yakima fruit and yields better. The soil is
black loam and yields nhundanlly. Is
fine place forborne.
REAL ESTATE
DeCotircey & Walrath
Slocum Minors.J. S. Hogue, the guardian of tl tate of the Slocum Minora, ha filed In thia court hln petition verified, praying for an order of of all of the realc.Htate of said nors for the purposes therein setIt ia therefore ordered that nil per- .sons interesfed In the said estate of said miuor.H appear before this said
A.
M;, of said day, at the court! A. L. Hinckley, the admlni.strator
Order lo Show Cau.o why Order of Sale of Real £»tete Should not be Mede.In ti»e Probate Court of Net Perce Countv, Idaho.In tfie matter of the estate of Al- Decea.sed.
iiS§iSiliiiSI to the said guardian U
Islied at lea.st four su< ickley, the admlni.'J of Alfred E. Fre is court dccededant for thewhy an ordi granted to the saidminoi^^^^ 1 . f persons 1i’ve‘’weiki'ln the Oroflno "TVrbune!** j ?i5^bnioc’etlmit, uppear l)eforc this nd published in ■ Probate court ou the 11th .irsoses therein set forth. It is therefore ordered interested in said 1 lasting benefits .to tl , This county is rich i have the best 1 \nth Mrs. ’ said citv nml a! Dated May. H.-VNLON, Probate Jude robate c of June, 1910, o'clock A court room Sckaol,NoHea of MaoHng of MemborsMrs. Ellis.Small propo.se.s to open ou the 11th day the hour of 10 ;aid ds court ain the city of Lewiston, county : Perce, state of Idaho, to show why an order should not be jd aaid administrator to Adaiu,... L.Ui: T.5.HANL0mng. 1 roie.s3or Thursday, June 16. 1910, |the hour of fi:oo P. M. of “Mr. and Mrs »assengera for Lewisto James Jacks, county I such ij and bookkeeping. Profe.ssor; John Holt were McClain of tlie State University, 1910. [X)N,Probate Judge.n Thuriday.jwUl assist in tho preparatory .^or.wasvo^ The Oroflno Ball team played the :Law Department.of Idaho, together with the church | of Abjahk.,, Idaho, who on March 23 building thereon and its appnrten-11905. made Homestead Entry So. 112 ances, allof which property now Seri.l No. 03470. for the South halflmv« from Myrtle Sunday’at the oP®"®**local park with the ueuaf result. j aurround- i. d her friend Mis. Stella Bennett ^ ^to her home In GifTord yesterday,! au f ___a ireturning In the afternoon. tultfon will be reasonable. Those i- - ^^^idVhJIhTs .^^h block II of the onginal town of Orofino, Nez Perce county, state he c NotiM for Publication, rtment of the Interior. U. S. Office at Lewiston. Idaho, May 20. village cemetery and there paid silent devotion to the old heroes and loved ones.Nye Alexander Llthcrland accom- panle^I by Wm. S. Holmes, visited MKS. E. A. .SMALL, Orofino, Idaho. this section yesterday enroute to Stitea. Both gentlemen own valn- oblo homesteads in the Dent coun-H<.a..U-..a50Theo. Fold, fire chief of the Clear- ^oc«ute. water Protective .Association, start- ed a force of men into the woods r this week to cut trail and in other corn mtai.jw rounds v a5.-a prepare for U.e more aoUve work of the summer.J. H.^Noftsger and bride who j oi..|^er; cr.^ pounds were wedded recently in Grange- ville are occupying rooms at tho Msciroai.Hotel Noble where they win reside during the summer. Mr. Noftsger { li»8 many friencLs here who welcome I r«i». canned. 3 cm the young couple and wish them! happiness in their journey throughi......“0/joining .... present building. This firm has I ju.it finished the building of a fine ; cellar on the property owned Oaorwo, Idaho, Jane i. 1910■kilo's?."..910. by U.; dlr«,o,.. PROVISIONS peudrt. The Orofino Trading Company isj soca.bakit build a large ware-j Hu’.SJSj ances, allof which property now ] No. 03470. for ' notice of intention to make final five Perce * 7^^ proof, to establish claim lo the land * e described, before Register and iver, at Lewston, 'Idaho, on theTw. M„.auCharles Adams r.ud Lewis Wliite, both of Ahsahka, Idaho. Granville Barnett of Orofino. Idaho, and Della Judd, of Lew- ;hc Probate Court of Net Perce County. istOB, Idaho.^ r. H. BARTLETT. ReefsterNotice for Publicatioii. Depertmeot of the Interior.8.1.snd office at Lewiston. Idaho, AprU 30..ir.i*ki5sn"hWw!ri;the neceasary vouchers, within 10 raonths kfter■- OXAA.JAMKSthe County ofSigned and Dated at Sthday of April A. D. Notice for Pubticetlon. Department of the Interior, Land Office, at Lewi.ston. MaiT. H. BARTLETT. RerUter. esent building, shed the b cellar on t by the firm back of'the present building. The.se additions are nec- e«<8ary to meet the growing demands cf the firm's business.The Knights of Pythia.s elected t fiicent here last Saturday night; The foUowing were named: a C;Chas. Bradbh, V. C. Chas. Bellmer; K. of R. & S. Jos. Kauffman; M. of W. Geo. Moody; Prelate, S.- Dunlap :W. of A. Mr. Ramey; M. of E. W. C. Palmer; M. of P. Mr. Worden, I. G. Eugene Departee; O. G. FTed Frazier.Jacob Bullock .commLssioner from the Third District spent a few days this week In the Peck and Melrose sections looking after the roads. Mr, Bullock states that the hea7 rains of early spring have practic­ally ruined many of the roada and grades of the county and much work will have to be done to make them fit for fall hauling.WilUam B. Kinnle of Dent, was a visitor in Oroflno ye.sterday. Mr. Kinnle is greatly Interested in the building of the North Fork wagon road, being ro:id supenrLsor pf the district. He says with the buUding of the road up the river as pi^ed wilt come increased immigration 'in development Kinnle left for his home Thursday going by way of Ahsahka and the North Fork.Sfarmyca C^f.One red heifer calf, eight months old, has Hereford face, long body, tip of tall white, no risible brands. La.st seen near the M. Tobin ranch. AdresaM.C. Adams, Orofino,Idaho. Company’s atore to gele.;t from,’ Wtf • B««cK h.a».'X: Fxed Frear w«s a vititor on the bench rithe firat of the week.Mra. Victor Dreaaerhas gone on a - viait to her old home in theMi» Edna autdem retnmad to Orofino Saturday aft«v^ i«Aa trfaU ^ wijh.home folks. S.nUi>c. 1 cue Sod., Uking » nouod.
SiT£^;r.u.. 'CLOTHINGButtons, agute. medium 15 zronChcrsectotb, 50 yds.Denim, blue. 50 yards GlnKbsm.d««.soo>-mrdsHnJSe?3ik1s.“wl!ci.*6^llo«e, women's t oross.0«vrslU. 6 doten.
WILLIAM M. BA.N.NLSTER of Greer. Idaho, who. on April 10th, 1 **1905, made Homestead Entry hfo. 11273, | Notice , Serial No. 01661, for the lot 6. north 1-2 |SW quarter and the SE 1-t SW 1-4, sec- ! ofOrofin
S.^Jsvy. 3 dosen.
L 5 poand single. y> CKLLANKOUS Axe*, single bit. x do*.Axe*, splitting, with hsndle* t-* dosca
.S.a.la..,do.oreKh.■ .each ■
ve de- U. S,
Notice for Publication. DepurUaent of the Interior snd Office at Lewiston. Idaho. May xx.is hereby given that JOSEPH NKYKNS
9th day of JuClaimant names as wi Thomas
Oliver P. Calvin and ^Michael Bogner, all of Greer, Idaho.
T. H. BARTLETT. Register.
In the Probate Court of Nez Perce County, Idaho.In the matter of the estate of J. P.A. E. Hiinkley, the administrator of the e.itate of J. P. Shady, de­ceased, having filed in this court his petition duly verified, praying for an order of sale of the real e.state of said deceased for the purposes therein set forth.It is therefore ordered that all persons intere.sted in the said estate of the said deceitsed. appear liefore this said Probate Court on the 30th day of June, 1910, at the hour of 10 ro'clock A. M., of said day, at the courtroom of said court at the court­house in the city of Lewi.stou, Coun­ty of Nez Perce, State of Idaho, to snow cause why an order should not be granted to the said administrator to sell all of the real e.state of the said J. P. Shady, and that a copy of this order be published at least four successive weeks in the Orofino 1 Tribune, a newspaper published and 1 printed in said county.
Dated May 21st, 1910.T.O. HANLONProbate Judge.Notice for Publicatiom Department ofthe Interior.United SUtes Land Offlea. Lewlaion. Idaho. March xy. i9t<>– Notice ia hereby given thatHALVOR B. GARDENwhoee poat-otOce addreaa ia Lanafon), North oa394.toporcliaaethe Lotai.a. §. and SW|^
stone Law." at auch value as might be fixed
fwtTtfcSs”'"'
t the entry. _____T. H- BARTLETT. RagUter.
****T«. ROWTON, Scctetazy
Miss Rosalind Armstrong depart­ed yesterday for her boi^ae in the Genesee country.
claim to the land above described, before J. W. MerriU, U. S. Commissioner at Orofino, Idaho on
T. H. BARTLETT. Register.Notice for Publioetlon.Department ol the Interior United States Land Office. Lowi Idaho. May 4. i9>o.Notice ia hereby given thatSTEVE KOTARSKI
itmake final five ytar proof to eatabliah. claim to the land above dearri^ before J. W. Merrill.
Claimant names as witnesse*Idaho.T. H. BARTLETT. Register,
Dr. J. M. FairlyPhysician and Surgeon
Oearwater Telephone LineConnecU with Pacific Telephone
outside os well os all local
your busineso.Samson Snyder, Praprietor
Dr. BritanDEimSTla OraiiaaUtoSlaf aachmaath
la Kamiah 1 to 1« of each month Office in Residence
Bollanger
HouseUwbtoo’t UMla4 Hotel Sm«UI IbrTMnU
LewistonIdaho
Ogden, Morgan & Morgrii LAWYERS.Dbhict. Stete «id Ptdenl Fnct OROPINO – – – IDAHO
FARM LOANS, TIMBER CITY LOTS and INSURANCE
Money to Loan on Improved Farms.
r OROFINO. IDAHO
Whon in Orofino. Idaho, stop at
HOTEL. IDAHON. O. HihlsMorip I>f/opi letor.(Formerly Hotel Carson)Entirely new management, Bvoything new and up to date. Accommo- dations for all. Dining Room Service ample for all comers. Give ns a call
North
Idaho Title Gimpany
ABSTRACTS OP TITLEFIRE INSURANCESURETY BONDS TRUST COMPANY BUSINESS : Lewiston National B.'ink Building, Lev
For the Choicest of Fresh
and Cured Meats go to the
Palace Meat MarketWells & Palmer, ProprietorsBeef, Pork. Poultry. Fish, Mut­ton and Veal always on hand
You will get what you want whe you place your^der with
j The Palace Meat Market j
Oro Peeno Lumber Co.'Oilbert, IdahoManufactureoiRous:h and Dresjsed Lumber, Lath,Shinfirles, Etc*CiiHouse Bills a Specialty
Orofino Feed StoreFred L. Frazier, ProprietorCarries a general slock of Feed, Grain, Hay, See, Chop mill in connection.
Handles the Celebrated “Gold Medal” and “Queen of the W*»t” bra.nds of flour, made by Nezperce Roller Mills.
KOP a Pleasant Half Hour Call at
The Idle HourCifirars, Tobacco, eonfectionery..F?rults In Season.F>ool and BilliardsV?. D. K*dit9dy, Proprietor -Orofino, Idaho
SHERIFFS SALE.
Walter H. Brown PUinliff vs Andrew J. Payne, et al., defendant*.
Under and by virtue of an order of sale and decree of sale, issued out of the District Court, of the Second Judicial District, of the State of Idaho, in and Nez Perce, on the 23rd the abov efor the County day of May. A. D action, wherein Wa1910, in liter L. Sabove named plaintifi obtained a judg­ment and decree of foreclosure and sale against Andrew J. Pa
i9io.“fo;
against Andrew J. Payne, Carrie Pav his wife. Commercial Cream Co. Ud., corporation, Frank M. Ha
Vollmcr, P. M. Setllcmier f on the ISth dayof May. A. E the sum of 1636.60, besides accruing interest and 9oats and, attorney’s fees which said decree has been recorded in Jndgment Bqok ’T‘ of Mid Conrt, at Page 61. I am commaiKled to soil the
Ss ISfSld'SSand described ab folio The Sontlicast quarter (SE-
east quarter the South-
. 1-4) of SectionFifteen, m Township Thirty-Sixeast quarter (SE 1-4);orte.Ue»BT'’i{‘;Uining.160 acres, mgre or less, to- gether vritL all the singular thehereditaments, and appurtenances there’ unto belonging or in othtr^visc apper-Public not Saturda 1910, front of. Court Houseat 10 o’clock. A. M. of that day in of. and at the front door of the House of the County of Nez Perce3 inT'd'elV'S'r;closure and sale, sell the above described property or so much thereof as mav be
necessarj- to satisfy said judgment with
of the United States.GEORGE W, WELKER., -Sheriff., > By LOUIS D. ^CHATTNER Dated May 24U1.J9I0.
Notice for Publication.Un„e6 rtj;""*"*”''’''"*"*"CLARENCE F. GRANTLand Office. Lewiston.
on Frooftoc«t*bli>h claim
H. BARTLETT. RegisUr.
Notice for Publication. Department of the Interior.United States Land Office. Lewiston. Idaho, May loth. 1910.“i, Notice UJxereby given thatJOHN E. DU.NLAP ,
sss«i!s
Bartlett. Rej^afr.
Lewiston,Notice for Publii rsutes‘*^^ 0/ the InterUnd Office,Idnh^Mav 31. 1910.Notice is hereby gsven that – /THOMAS J. GEORGE
on September 27.rw"!}»"E“?rsc' ;';a
to inake Final commutation Proof to establish claim to the land above tie- ^Mbefor Register and Receiver at Lewiston, Idaho on the 12ih day of July
Claimant names as witnesses:Andrew A. Clendenning, Ray Shnw.
T. H. BARTLETT. R«l,l,r.Mre. C. C. Smith Im* bezim the erection of lior cement l.lock re-i- dence which with lie commundins locution will preeent u luindsciu’c appearance, when llnishcd.

JBfPP
OROFINO ORCHARi iTRACf
f-
:^“vr ARE NOW:ONTHE MARKETJ^f^^
ThU Beautiful Tract of Land, lying within

•ight of Orofino is now on the market and
will
be sold in five acre tracU. This land it
the most fertile in the famous Clearwater VaUey, and U adapt^ to fruit raising and ^ gardening. This entire tract sub>irrigatet, and in addition can be watered by sprags from thehillsidey which furnish water in quantities sufficient to supply a city. -Secure one of these beautiful tracts at once and be sure of the advance that is bound to come in tte near future.
For sale by
• ^ft..-?V
^ ii
f.
' ■ 7 ^
-nosiTS^ ■
msV:
Hr If'
'WSS: 1,% ' w"'
Kii I
SH'S I S
OROriAIQ, IDAHO. ^ vgateway, to the largest body of STANtUNG r – . ; Kr-f .WHITE P/A/E TIMBER /A/tME WORLD^ ' 7^-'J,V''y^
27.i050. SKf. R. itioncie-J«r;
iaw.ran>r.thellnj?ome
D1SC.OURCEY & WAERATH
■ OROFINO,-iiQA.HO;=:'"~:f5; a• … . ,’V,- • J
lop 1Eureka Ridge Hem..
the
1Strawberries are ripening.|K^' .-Vlfalfu and clover harvest willHooQ be on.Judge Hogue and others were upfrntii town Sunday and organized a m Sunday Sclu-ol.
^
Au uld fashioned 4th of July cele- hration picnic will be lield here on
ade, rnceR. croquet, dancing, resting eating, drinking etc.Big UUod Net^Will Davis is building a new
hou.«e on his homestead.
August Antierson lias gone to Oro- lino and Lewi.sion for a sliort visit.John Dewis Ims returned iioine after c unpioting his work ns deputy
(Jus (irube of Orolino and Mr. Parker of South Idaho are looking for land in this vicinity.Dr, Fairley and K. N. Brow.n, of
()r«*llno. Were fishing at the Hihbs Haneh one day last wt ek.The river is fulling fast and with­out a heavy rain there will be no more high water tills season.Red:« Prairi; lUms.Weather is fine and crops never lo ked lietter.Joe Nines made a business trip to Orofino this week,Gus Gruhe expects to move up to Whl.skey Creek soon.Gus Hinkley is at his old stand on Gold Creek again this spring.Erick Oleaou was ' on W^hiskey creek this week looking for horses’Koad Supervisor Taylor is doing some work on the roads this week/Mi L. Hatch Is hauling hay from Bed’s Psairle to'Orofino this wet k.William Snyder of Cow C'reek made a trip out to Lewiston this wvck.
Frank Johnson, from Woodland, was on the prairie and Upper 'Whiskey Creek this week looking alter ids ranch interests.NotiM Ur PuDeptrtmfnt .of the Interior United Stales Land Office, Lewiston. Idaho, May 31, 191O.Notice is hereby given that HARRY H. HOARo' Dent, Idaho, who on Sept. 27 19o9 m.de He mestead Entry No. 03018, for S 1-2 SW 1-4, NW 1-4 i>W 1-4 and SW 14 NWl-4 Sec. 16Twp. 38 N. R. 3 E.
B. M. has filed notice of intention to make.piaal conmmUtion Proof to es­tablish cJaiiD to the land at>ove d^rtb-
ed before Register and Receiver at Lew- blon Idaho on the 12te day of July 1910.
C. H. BELLMERWATCHMAKER & JEWELERCarries the largest stock of Watches,Clocks and Jewelry in the Clearwater Country. A full line of Optical GoodsOrofino – – – … Idaho
LEWISTOIN BUSINESS CELUEOEWill give you more personal help than any other.' school. PERSONAL HELP MEANS GRE.TER PROGRESS FOR YOU. Shorthand. Book­keeping, Typewriiing, Penmanship, Telegraphy and all business studies.W'rite for booklet todayL,ew1«ton Business* Colles^s Lewiston, Idaho.
Herbert Riplev arid Thomas J. George all of Dent. Idaho.T. H, BARTLETT. Reg1ata>|' Notice for Publication.Departmer.t of the Interior United vSutes Land Office, LcNviston, Idaho, May 26, 1910.Notice is hereby given thatHERBERT CHALKER of Greer, Idaho, who on July 2, 1903, made H-^mestead Entry No. lOOOi^, Serial No- 01345. for SW 1-4 SE 1-4 Sec. 10 and NW 1-4 NE 1-4 Sec. 15, T. 35 N. R. 2 E. and who on April 7. 1906, made Additional Entry No. 11771, Serial No
01869, for SR 1-4 SW 1-4 Sec. 15. T. J5 N. R. 2 E. B. M., has filed notice of in­tention to make Final five vear Proof to establish claim to the land above dt- acribed before J. W. Merrill U. S. Com- raijsioncr at Orofino, Idaho, on the 9th, day of July, 1910.Claimant names as witnesses Amos Henshaw, Frank A. Wanamakcr, Miles Marten and Henry Greer, all of Greer, Idaho. T. H. BARTLETT. Reglater.
Administrators Notfeo of Salo of Roal EsUto.
Mav, 1910, I will in obedience ta eaid order en the 15th day of June next at Erb Bros.* store In the town of Weippe and county of Nez Perce expose at Public Auction all the in- t ireat of Wellington Landon, cleceaKcd. in and to a certain Lot or Tract of Land dea^lbed as followa: Lots 3-4-5-6-7-S Block 8 Lota 1 to 15 Block 9 Lota 1 to 10 Block 10' /I/3ta 1 to 6 Block 13
0/1^14 ^ec?15%^p.*35 N. R.^ E*’» Terms Of Sai,h Sealed Bids to be sent to Frank Gaffney, administrator Weippe Idaho, 10 per cent must accompauv each bid rest at conformation of sale and delivery of deed.Frank Gfenky,.Administrator.
IcIce will be " «« bui,cd to families
Notice for Publication.
**^l?olicc it hereby fietn fchatWILLIAM M. HALL
ofOrofiao. Idaho, who oa February itt 1909made hoineatead entry No. 01153, for te t-4 tec 15 twp 37ar3cb in haa filed notice of intention t* make final commutation prooflo establUh clahn to the land above dcacribad before reriaUr and receiver at LewUton Idaho on the iblh day of
T. H. BARTLETT. Regiater.
d Office at Lewiaton, Idaho,Notice for PubiicatTon. Department of the Interior United SUUa Lat
fi%-e year proof to catabliah cUioi to the Lmd above deacAbed before J. W. Merrill, U. 8. Com- Ino. Idaho on the fiih day ofAlbert Carr and Idaho and Albert of Frailer, Idaho.T. H. BARTLETT. Ra«tstar.
Dwight E, Wkmmtock EmiU OppllgmrOROFINO IDAHOthe most natural gateway to the Pamona Oearwater eountxy, ootapriauig the Nezperce Prairie and the Pierce City timber belt and mining diatricL
Qearwater Livery and Feed Stable.Wheelock a Oppliger, Proprietor Driving Teams, Saddle and Pack Horses
Furnifhed on Short Notice. OROFINO – – – 'IDAHO.
Nebaho Luhiber Co.
F. Z. Lumber Company '
mi^KM?Ihper
Orofino
Idaho
Open River Line'^Steamers“Owned by th« F>«opie*>T . Plying BetweenLewiston, Idaho <& Rortland', Oregon Regular Service 'Save Honey on Tour Freight Bills by Shining Via Open River Transportation CompanyFor Information Addres, John £. Nickerson, Agent, Lewiston Idaho Merrill HouseM^ ^ ^ Orofino, Idaho Good AccommodationsConvenient Sample Rooms Home Cooking Only The Orofino Feed Sr. Sate StablelT.W, Scott, Proprietor. .GOOD SADDLE HORSES ON HAND,Hay and Grain for Sale. | OROFINO, ____________Idaho:__............................. Clearwat^^ Dealers in I Portland cemenU Hard Wall P!ai>
ter. Lime and Hair < |OHOFINOIDAHO i Voflmcr-Qearwatcr Company Limited■ ■■ I ■ ■ . V ,We ve headquarteru foe Grain, Hay, Flour and Feed. We buy and aell at prices which are reasonable and just to producer and coi>. sumer. Those wishing anything in our line will find us either at Farmer’s Warehouse, or ; C Orofino Hotel ;
M, C. ADAiVlSs Agent.
HOTEL OROHNOHorac*N«b^ Proprietor Finest Equipped Hotel In the Cle
Everything new and Strictly up-to-date i White Help only Employed. * cT- .l
Miife

■iiC
I What Gold I
4 Cannot Buy P
V «r Jv«jv^r£jrxjvi>i;« 4#
1
I- -i
1^ as appanatly dMarted, that be Bw and her attendant panaad and leaked anxlonaly down made n iharp bend at wJJah thar had becnn to watt baok. «|a aonnda ot a deep, ronsh Totoe. tdtealn* obeerratlone Ip an nnknown tonria which eeemed hawked np from tkS PK of the epeaker-a atomaoh. i made themaelTca beard) preaanUr ap- poaied a tall, thin num. olad In hol- land OToraU troueere. a dark-brown knHted walateoat, and a belland jack-
?iiIn* lately eeen the waahtnb; • a wM^brlnuned etraw hat. turned np at (ha back, projected far over hU otm, which, aa be looked np. ahowed black and plercin, under buahy srlnled ero- bwwa Lon* lantern Jawa, thick nn- (rimmed monataehea, and a aUn like wrinkled leather *aTc him the air of a oonntrmed Pantaloon. Behind him came a broad^heated «ray horaa, a!- inoat whlU tram ace, hla hameaa aaoh mended with rope, and a teaJock faUIn* Into Ua eyea … WM drawln* aa old, maty, ramahackle anhrlolat. the hood drawn forward and t^dln* at oraty atop of the attalasa. Be waa led by an old, thlckwat man In • blue bhnue and a cloth cap pnUad down nearly orer hU earn Aa the towt of the cnrloua oouple approached . (ham, he lalaed hla atraw hat with aa ****“** *®“Wril. that la a *nyl- exclaimed Jee- aop. “I am enre he wonid not do for any one-a yonnc man, aren In a daaert to thla He'd want the Witch of aider to keep him company, he
oonld not apeak."Bnt I am not *eln* to leaye him more than a oompetenoei no. be doea not deaarra that I ahenld (Ire him ^ Of clronmatanoai bnt I hara a form with m*. and f.the^ UalwayaxaoertalarOHAPTHR XIX
r^r.rjzi's.'ss
•tron* for her. or rather that she had rpown too weak for the ali^-that the placa ^0 her melancholy, and aha womd Imv, next day. Hope permmd-nec over with wrape; for, thou*h the day waa warm, aha oonmlalned «f Ania and ahlvered
ten, tefina waa ■am* to he amr flk^ laM. after what eoomed acea. hut really aa aeon aa he could oom% the doctor appoarod.Thou«h tuaty and dtaloeatad In np- pearanoe, h. wet kindly and IntelU- *ent ^ eauntoln, hte patlmit he naked Home U abe wat her daushter.-A mnoh attachwl frl«id. th«ir he aald, whan aha anawered In tha ne*a- ttve."I fear the poor lady U eerloualy lU. It la rather dlffloult to foneoe how theee feverlah attaeka may turv-aml wa ^ only halp nature. There le Ub Ue to be done. I have brou«ht medl­ey with me. thanks to tha deaertp «oa In your note. Balnte7 plaaaant memories I have thoss ,wa^ Tha marquise and Ilost al^t of aaoh other slnoe. wo wero to Porta aha told mt
^n« a tlttlo watt on tha bmch. At dtonar aba could not sat. but oom- PlAlnad of groat (htrat Itaalto* savara h-Apeb. and dmwMaam ite ^ early to bed. Hope felt more nneaar “<>ha hS*^ floTille to 1st her maid aleep Then she retired herself, first to
At early dawn Jeaaop eaiae tote MiaDamo^room with an alarmed loek
What wlH beeoms of na to this poor mtaarakla plaoa If my lady gam mt Why, w. oonim^TdSthough that quaar man i^aaV ,mth. r~d yaaterday. ttey tell m^ ta ™ ^ W hut h. nvaa mllaa^
Igetupanddraaaatonoa.-
Bavnie to tha Island of Sa-
hta banker! bolleved ha would maka a abort stay, and that ha had talegmphed to MtrRawiaTwteCm isdoubt that ganUeman would lose noMma to wto* to SalntoCrolx.Stni the days and nights rolled haavtly on. and no ona cams.-If all our earo faOa;- thought Hope. yM a terrible poMtW te mettern done my D.MJ bwt wm Mm teTme*e p«>pi. thtox X haver If she dtao auroooacnwl to Hugh, what a tmg. cdyl- What momenta Hops eo^ ■part from tha tufferer aha ^
Gross savingfiguring…………………………………………….forget the shaves, the shines and the cigars. A great deal of money goes Into these unnecessary luxuries, and they are not less wasteful toan automobiles, which many thoughUess persons who buy shaves, shines and cigars foolishly Imagine are the acme of extravagance. Also should be Included tho cost of shampoo, massage and tip at the barber shop. Many men are throwing away fortunes every day. without stop­ping to figure their waste. And yet they think they ore skimping along without enough to live on constanUy. A good many of them talk about extravagance of their wives, when they, poor things, are buying fewer luxuries than their lords and masters.—Portland Oregonian.
the pi^ rmpidiy. ■be sent by the oo« that they
When■ho wwld b# hero aU July and An-
.s.tt.rsrsjM'S'iSfis:and har eyas dwcU wKh h •nxtona axpraaalon on tha •t^ to of har pationcaa.to b«u again to a quipt U unoouoloua of Hopa'a“PoorHughl Ba baa aamad hta mmlahmant I am glad r daatroywl my last win." And aha glaaoad «t tha topto Than, anddanly addiu«ta* Hope, “Ton will ba gbuL tea. Ton —y to have en>oTis#d hie cuiim. Mr. Rawtoa waa always devoted to Hugh, imd ypB have caught hU aQUmeiMnL
MT-adLrr-aiSir.^ immid not mak* np my mtod. I hST. teeamad of that wQl. and atnigglad with my hmrt. my pride:sa“‘bSsrs,,i.“s*.^spn^ aama on ma: I thmat tha paper ttat teomad him ta poverty Into tha :it to HqBhWtth." to UMWA
to dnaM aocordtoMy, Uttla thtok- Ite how long It would b. bafo “7h. M.onld^B,,,gutarlytob«L Mm SanUa saamed qulto haraalt whan Hope reached her badalda. e^I that her hands and Mcto were iry «d burning, her eyea bright and resUaaa. Bke to gat up to order to pre-pera for har Journey to Londoo. She aeamad favwtahly anxious to ba at home ones mom Than aba began to ■peak ahont Mr. Sawaon u if be ware thera, though they both knew be had atartad with hta daogbtar, for Swlta… land; abo aha tatted of her wlU, and har fear.that It ah# died inieataU her won Hugh would gat ■■ much of bar property as hta brother.aa she could get away, Hope eaUod tha landlord and begged him to dtapatoh a mounted mef the working, fighting and thinking all ths
lelds and barnyards.
The American fanner has always be^'n Just as Intelll. gent and Imp put fourteen < full share of the work way down from George Washington to James WIlsoi^ He got no rebates, franchise, subsidies. The free land that waa given him waa worthless until he took it; he has all along been more hindered than helped by med- ling of public officials.To-day farming la a race—an exclling rivalry between tho different states. For years Illinois and Iowa have run neck and neck in raising com and pats. Minnesota carries the blue ribbon for wheat, with Kansas In sec­ ond place; California has shot to the front In barley; Texas and Louisiana are Ued In rice, and New York holds the record for hay and potatoes.—American Re- view of Reviews. THB CURSE OF NOVELTY.F ALL the fads that humanity adopU, per­haps none is more detrimental to modern life than the unreasoning passion for the new, simply because It is new, and not be- cause It la one whit better In any respect than that which is discarded to make way for the novelty. This restlcsanese, without ithout any sense of convIcUon, real feeling in the matter except a craving for1 of t any basis of reason, without any sense of co'nvic with no real feeling in the matter except a cravingr and uncommon. Is dangerous to the Individual and harmful to the commun- orwtares have gina tev. iiMthar OM nor the other. They bw a complex eyetem or tobee mn- ntog to^j^oat tho whole length oI the body, by meane ot which air ta tended to every part of tha aytomn. As they are desUned to contain noth> to« bttt air, they are stn;ngly snpport. M to guard agatoat
preaauro.This support ta fumlehod by moans
same way that a garden hoM is pro-
With wire. There lire gwierally two Of these tubes which whole length of the Insect's b^.Many flisAO. larvae, live in tiwa.^ Arranged along each side of their bodies U a series of exceedingly thin platen Into each of which runs a se- rles of blood vessels." These plates act and absorb the oxyg« contained ta the water. The taO ends ta ^ ftherllk. projectlona ^ those the larvae causes cnnunti of wa. ter to flow over the gills and thus
MARX TWAIN'S WATERMELON.■ torr of 0.« of tHo Hton'orUC*. -‘Mon-
lcer>blneffi(( im H«niAlb«l.“Going to Bermuda, is he? Well. 1 can tell him a plan that'U beat that Let him come over here and climb up and down the old hills, chop holes to fljh ta Bear Creek and smoke some OW Fisherman cigars and he'll forget he ain’t feeling peart."Thus spoke Joe Tisdale Sunday morning when told that hU old friend ■nd playmate Sam Clemens had gone to tae southern Islands for the benefit If his health, a Hannibal (Mo.) corre- ipondent of the New York Sun saya. Nr. Tisdale had been out walking r. without gloves, enjoying the keen rtatry air. be said. It was then 11. tad everybody but Mr. Tisdale seemed to be wearing a heavy outer coat and thick gl01i vigorous'as V school boy. There U only a few years' difference between his age and Mr. Clemens’."Are you the man who used to make those long three for a nickel stogies for Sam?" Mr. Tisdale waa asked.‘T made cigars, sir, not stogies." re­plied the old gentleman with some In- dlgnaUon. “Began down there where Tom Foster kept drug store alongside the printing office. That was long be- fore the war—the big war, you know,
was in 1852. Saithere now 1
health ItyThe fearsome freaks which fashion annually tarenU cater to thla spirit among women Illustrate In a home­way the tendency of the times. But fashion U not one In Its craving for the unknown. Art, literature uslc, the play, law. business, every phase of life is af-
focted. Religion, morals and even the home do not ee- cape. Everything seems to be in a constant state of transition. Everywhere and at all times turmoil and unrest exist. Con:forl. quiet, friends, the Joy taat comes of familiar friends, old books, surroundings that give ~ sensation of acquaIntaacMhIp, all
Us feeling of the permanence of conditions! the s^^^of
home, which exists in the brain of the carrier pigeon and the family cat. Those who hope to enjoy life to tae tall should hare a care lest they misUke unrest for progress
He
Is a small maa, a trifle bent, but cUve and vigorous as
1 then and bought smok- say they were the best He. was a bit parUcuJ smoked, even when
About twenty years after Sam had left us he came back. 1 met him and told him when he wanted an old-time smoke to come around to my shop. I :ot up a box of the Old Fisherman, nd when he and John Garth came In made Sam a present of the box. ‘There were forty-alx L John Garth tolSam went to bed that night they »mok«l the entire contents ot the box cept two, which they saved for morning. 1 don’t gness there are many fellows who could smoke like 6am."That's the way he did about every- ^ng he went at It was no trouble If there was fun st the end of It We ntw supposed he was training for a funny writer, though. If he'd have stayed in Hannibal and wrote aU them pieces that's made him a great man the people wouldn't hare paid any a^ tentlon to him. They'd Just say. 'Oh, thats some more of Sam's fool non- s^se,' and let It go at that He sure
and Sacramento In Kalamazoo ($709). ($1,200). and lowest ($699) and Oahkosh
monkey-shines Into dollars."
befm she mroU to n«r for hsip and oounseL RlehaiA Savin* was away trmUlm. iMMy knsw wkvu; Mr. Bmwmm was trw^ Lom
Rvoton-^ ooaU Th»
gnat also Uves ta tha water os a larva. But it ha. no gllta TW fore It cannot breathe the oxyg«^ta dons by SMons of a splooda sltuattdat tha dp of lU toa tadsod. th. ton to prolongsd into a Uttla tubsL Tha larva float, along hoadidaw«w« ta tha wotor with
this toha M obm tha surtaoa to onabla It ta favCST Aftor ooma ttaia It ta prorldT^twamtiata^whjg^ In fha S
•pm to troda of tha wM mOmnta M mora than m Mm
"What did the people think of Sam i those days?""They thought ho was a dam fooL' The response was made with such promptness that ao one could doubt the old clgarmaker’s sincerity."He waa a Joke. Bam was, I re- member one Ume he got a I melon, the Lord knows hbw. but any- way he took it upstairs and laid it on his stool near the window. I was com­ing around the comer and as Flocked up I noticed Sam spying up and down the streetPrewnUy John Meredith comes Mod* end when he waa directly under to window Sam drops tot big melon right square on John's head. Gee, but It smesbed him. I think Johe’e lint Idee wee tot some buUding had fall-"John sew me grinning end——- „
the street and saw everybody
who dirit^dTe^never s^^i^ ta Sam from that day till they met yoors after at Pike's Poak."ta talking ahont it Bam said he ■tndled a long while which wonW be tha most fun, to eat the melon or drop U onjiomel^. head, and he flipped to find out which ha ought to
POLICE PEOTECnON IN CITIES.Attanflo CItr, M BtGreatest Amount.
United States, each having a po Uon of over 30.000 In 1907. are ^ prehenslvely assembled In the United States Census Bureau's specUl annual report on the statUtlcs of American cities for that year. ^«ricanpolice protection afforded the Inhabitants of different clUes is indi­cated by showing the number of police per 10^000 inhabitants, per 1.000 acres of land area, and per 100 miles of im­proved atreeU.It ta Stated that the number of po­lice to each unit Increases with tho size af the city. In cities of over
COLDEST CITY ON EARTH.How People Live la Winter In the.f Siberln.wcTm "'‘“‘’'“XJ place in thenorth J,.r‘'”o?‘"^'^ Verkhoyansk, in
"ct'c plain.
;^;frd'Sn='“‘rrr^
“* » Plac*
300.000 population the Uco per 10.000 inhabitants was 19 4 as compared with only 10.5 In clUes* of from 30.000 to 50.000 population. The cIUm with the greatest protection, ao- cording to this unit of measure, were AGantlc City (26.1), Wash (23.4). St Louis (23.2) and Neu (21JJ).
nber of po-
I New York
U on somebody's ]
The oompensaUon of patrolmen was mnch larpr ta the cities of over 300.-
000 popnlatlon thanta the smaller cities. The average abnual pay of psr trohaen ta clUea of over nlatlon was highest ta San Francisco ($M64) and New York ($1,228), and lowest ta NewOrleans <$780) and Buf­falo ($900); to clUes of from 100.000 to 800.000 populaUon it was highesi ta Portland. Ora. ($1,200), and Newark ,176), and loweat ta Grand Rapids.Mich. ($796), and St Paul ($868); te cities of from 60.000 to 100.000 popo- lation it was highest ta OaklandTiSL ($U00), and Houston. Tex. (|uoi), and lowest ta Kansas City. Kaa. « some imporune,. ®*«'”I“S the RuBelans Uv^iTS “ '“‘'■■Prtto and edaptabll- ~“, tick-. >lliousn*»s. hetdachts, tbe Aik your doctor• o.i,«0…iow.n.
80XEXHIHO rOB EyBBTBOST,
Tho teatben at tbe wUd ootrlch an •uperlor to tbon from lam Wr Tbe eranUos ol an automeblla mar now be dona from tba cbauttoar's seat.The maximum waca ol brakamen on Bnsltab taUwaya baa luat bean fixed at »7.78 a waek.Peanut eaka aaema to ba aupplant- 1ns cotton aead caka as tba pralarrad food for Bwadloh eatUa.Vaenom aucUon combs an now la
naa In aUblea to ciurr ’ horaeai An alaetrleallr drlren fan pndneas tta
cerlea In Hambn
In UberU coltaa traaa attain a betsbt of more than twenty feet. The price of tbe product Is S and f oaaU pound at tba plantaUaa.
Tba wireless api^ua on tba On- nard liner ConnU la tba moat power­ful ol any In staamsblp sanica, hav­ing a radius of 1,200 mllaa.wlndmlU appantas lor gan- orating electricity lor farm naa baa been perfected In EngUnd. A storags battery suppllea tbe current when Us wind la not blowing.
Uey Ulnk £y dUposa of thirty to forty pounds a monU ol awaat po- Utoaa to realdThat people wUl eat elephant meat Wlu a relUb baa been prored by butcher In Trankfort-on-Ua-Ualn, to his own profit and without Ue know!- edge of bis auatomera. This enter- prUIng tradesman learned that a at-mads a bargain lor Ue carcam. vnSr U a few days that elephant was trans- fbrmad Into 8,800 pounds of sausage meat and ereiy pound was disposed of at a good price.It was a year age Uat Ue London
r'f
At one of the mogt Important .re doing weaTo't
a?eIfon“5b?” “* 0««aa-
8POKANB PAINT & OIL CC Madison and N. P. Tracka Spokane, Waah.
Try a Packag« of—
Inland
Crackers
bylnlaad- ’ – ‘Company,
‘Triml Bottl* r««e Br MaU
^^S
I Our«

Constipation
mmmm
none MnEBuo,Ice MachinesK. 3S01 BWerelde Atc., Spokane, Wa.
COMO HOTEL
Plums Main 67». S17 Front Ata.
Automobile »2oo
pOft offleo directory contained for Uo first time among Uo list of trades 'seropisne msnnfscurets.'' Therswas only one Uen, but now six are enu- mersted under Uat heading. Subald- lary trades are springing up. Two firms anuounca Uemselrea as aan>- plane engine manufacturen, two are aeroplane fabric makers and theri U one propeUer maker, as well as « ^deP of -aeroplane timber and
Whltefleld. one of the founderi of Methodism, who died In 1770. waa a strenuous preacher. Hla oiaml pro­gram was forty hours* solid speaking each week, and this to congregnUena measured In thousands, but be often spoke sixty hours a week. This waanot alt For-after hU lahoia. instead of taking rest, he was engaged In ef. ferlng up prayers and Interoesslona or In singing hymns, as bis manner waa.
sonlng her husband? The question suggested by a recent Incident in Serrla. Sara Chumltch seems to have had an undesirable husband, for he
waa a notorious and implacable usurer. At the moment when he waa about to ruin, several families who were In debt his wife Intervened and poisoned him. Next day she received a letter of gratitude, signed by hundreds of citizens. She waa acquitted by Jury and left the court amid cheering crowds.Says the Pekin and Tlen-Tsln -A novel sort of crime waa dlscov- ered by the Tten-Tsln police when a portly native was arrested and asked explain hla embonpoint He had a thieves’ bag around his waist, flUed with dead cats to the number of seven. One of them, a very dne specimen of the tortoise shell, waa sUll quite warm. In a smaller bag was found the lure;consisted of bits of dried fish treated with some deadly poison. The man waa sent up to the yamex received thir
mmiBend lOo for tri.1 p.ckefe.
FASHION HINTS
m.J-W
m
yamen. where he Ir^ blows and one month’s
Ernesto
Nathan, Mayor of Rome, who declined on several occasions te accept a decoration from King Victor Emmanuel, was finally forced by a clever ruse on the part of the king to take the grand cross of the orownof Italy. Nathan was making a call Qulrlaal, and when about to asked to Uke from tbeat tbedepart _____queen a little parcel to his wife. The tez eonUlaed the decoration, which the mayor was compelled to accept, end by virtue of which he became a member of the small fraternity ofwhich his sovereign is the head/Although the use of telephonee la mines Is not of recent origin, the ad­vantages are. perhaps, hardly reaUy appreciated ontU they have once been tried. Probably at no time In the hie. tory of mining has there been a greet-
There-* lots of character to this suit of plain and striped pongee.The stripe is sort of an old blue, the same as the deep cuffs, and it tones so well with the natural color pongee.The knife pleated collar of net is a new feature.PARDONS OABTBB, THB PO^
John Carter, the young English poet, serving a 10-year sentence in the Min-penitentiary for bnrglary, was ed by the state pardon hoard.The pardon wUl teko offoet inunodlatelr.Ca^r declared he would In the fu­ture devote hlnueU to moaio rather thou Uteruture. It wu hi. poom. la literary periodical, like the Century that attracted the attention of literary tohi,«w.
telephoneo In mlnet i> at the Choi-
Are You Dieting And t^by hoping to cure yourself of that annoying stomach distress? If so, we waat you to try a better plan—take Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. It tones the entire digestive system and prevents any ^ei-eating distress, such as
Gas on Stomach, Sour
Risings, Belching, Indi.
gestion, Heartbnm. Cos- threnesi. Biliousness and Malaria. Always ask for
BPOKAJkII!,WA8H.
nee m COST OF uwmuseCRESCENTI BAKING POWDER 25cl full pound
JT cori mine dleaeter. How many morn Uvts could have been saved bad the mine been fully equipped with Ulw phenw IM entirely problematical, bul it if certain that the number would have been greater Imd opportunity efforded for communication be­tween the rescuers and the entombed men.—Phlhid'elphla RecoM.Employes of the Krupp works can oorily te dI.UnguI.hed, even When te- Uma to their Sunday test Bhrory workman, on his enrollment U pi» tented with a curlouely fahhloned scorS pin, composed of a mlntatnit artmory
■hetl made of platinum and set In all- After twenty years’ senrlco ha roeolTO. a second pin, modeled on the somt linen and mounted in gold. The hlgtor'gmdes of employe., Indudlns tha onglneera and those employ la the counting house, wear their iheUa In the form ol sleeve links. The work- , men are very proud of the dlstlncUon, {which they call the Order el the Shell, •ted wear on.every occasion
-How do you keep your ih«pr “Easy enouj. I hid.JSTpSr. o'^i.r'*her! Why. they don't fit at nIL" '•But U they dlA“-Ll”"* Gnest-Oracloust What Ions legs the new waiter has! Hoet-Yeo, | ^te him specloU, for the diner, who sre ta a hurry.—Ideggondorfer BUtter.Mlm Kldder-S’sh! Corrl. ha. dyed ter hnir bUek, Don’t tell miyteSt hto^tt-lsitaaoeretr iS^^^klrton Otote’~“* ^ ^“Wtet port of the raUwoy train da
*“S«ronsrteqnlrod the nervou. man. “The din-
-ni ready In a minute.” she i her husband. "You needn't hurry.op wme time later. **1 find that I shall have to ahave ag.ln.”-DetroIt Free Presl ^"I thought you said you told your wUe sverything you did." "I do.” “It’s mighty strange. She hasn't said a woM to ay wife about the |10 you borrowed from me.”—Washington Star.^ Patlenco-They.say she got all her furniture on the haatallment plan? Patrice—She did. She has had four huabaudA and .he got a little fuml- ture with each one.-yonkers SUtim-^ yon think woman’s snf-would be a fine thing? Ho-I know I could alway. persuade my wife to vote as I wanted by telUng her'I Intended voting the other way.—Bos­ton Globe.can't that prlma donna sing more than twice a weekr "I don't know.” answered the Impresario. ”un- less It's hecanse she Ured out hsr vocal co^ Wing with me about salary.- —Washington Star.Maud-So he had the eheok to ask y age. did he? Whil. what did yon 11 him? Ethel—I told him I didn't know poslUvely, but I thought you were twenty-four ^>n yenr thirtieth blrthday.-Boston Transcript "Now, youv conduct during the trial may have conalderahle effeet on the
Jury.” -Ah. quite «>.- re^KUided the ultrarawell defendant. “And ahould appear InUrested or Just mildly horedr—Kansas City Journal.Ton aay you have quit smoklngr "Yea. never going to smoke agaln.- Then why don't you throw away those cigarsr' “Never. I threw away a box of good cigars the last time I qult^ smoking, and It Uught me a leo-"The way to run this country.- said the egotist *Hs to put thoroughly wise, capable, alert and honest men In con­trol of affairs.” "Yes," answered Mias Cayenne, "but what are we going do? There's only one of you.''-Wash- Ington Star.Cholly-The cawnt go to the party. I have no col- lah button. Rcggle-Go across ths street and buy some, deah fellow. Cholly—But I caawnt. Nobody has my measuremenU except my Uilah. dont- cherknow.-Llfe.Mr. Dubhs (with a i It tells here, my dear, greeslve New York social call, by felei
^TO GET ITS BENEFICIAL EFFECTS ^ALWAYS BUY THE ORIGINAL AND GENUINE
SYRUPopficS
LLixiR OF Senna^ manufactured by the_5Caufornia Tig Syrup Co. ^
Theoriginal and genuine Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, known throughout the world as the best of family laxatives, for men. women and children, always
has the fuU. name of the California Fig ^ Syrup Co. printed on the front of W every package. It Is for sale by all leading druggists everywhere, one sire only, regular price 50 cents per bottle. The imitations some­times offered are of inferior quality and do not give satisfaction; therefore, should be declined.
For Om nsfioo UOa Bia
Bight after the i United Stetos Stwould make on inunodiate odvonoo of from S to « per eont in the wngan of ite M5.000 omplo/M, Involving na' nddl- Uonnl linbUltx on the part of th. eor- pomtlon of S9.000.000 or more n 7»nr, Jodgo E. H. Onix, ohnirman of tba eor- pUnn had> to ba proteoted in enoo of sblemant hr an aUbemtel,
Kiev, Mny 30.-Mnay Jmnlri, fimOIoa svo rMoived offletnl notlM that tboy .n,t lonvo th. elty in aoooteanoo irith th. determination of the Bnarina gov. ema«mt to bnaUh the Jo«. Thlnnom. ter inelnde. 80 fnmllieo to whom no- «e«. of oxpnUon were Mat today.
An additional 19S tmaiUo. Uving in the wbarte onteido tho dty proper are eabjeet to doportetion teforo Jane 18, naleoi la tho meaatimo thqr produeo !o of tholr right to realdeaea in their preeent eitee.
employee iinjury or < ___________^dovlMd aeeident and Inanraiiao aebamo, froa of eoet to tha wage oarnois. Under thin plan, it 1. explained, rw Uef wiU te paid formexxt, for permanent injurlee, and death. During‘temporary disable- ment an unmarried 35 per cent of his wages and a married man 60 per cent, with an additional 5 ^r^cent for each child under 1« year.The payments are voluntary by the corporaUon, and it is explicitly stated thaf the employes will not be exueeted Dr. Cook in BcotUn^Dr. Cook, it is reported, is in Scotland, preparing for his trip to Etah, whence he plans to bring hack his record, of his discovery of the north pole and his instruments that are cached there. He also intends to bring back the two Eskimos who accompanied him to tho pole. Dr. Cook's objective point when he shaU have recovered his records and instruments, says the New York Amert- can, WiU he Copenhagen. There he wiU present his completed proofs of his dls- CASTOR! AlorlfiiiuteuAOhiteHiKUYHBaiiiUnjiBl«|l Bieo ptodueUon in tho United State, grew from an avmago of lean tten 100,- OOOAOO ponada per ananm a few yaaia ago to an average of SOOjXW.OOO poaade par ananm in roeoat yonra, and reaehod over 600,000,000 ponada la 1008. Allen's Poot'EM*. < DOORS o".WII.UAMjiCO.-.' DAISY FLY KILLER I woman maksa .hone. Mrs. Dubhs —Progressive. Huh! She's probably like me—not a decent thing to Boston Transcript In a written examlnaUon on astron­omy one of the questions was, "What happens when there Is an eclipse of the moonr A student with rathor • good knack of gutting out of a dlftt- culty wrote; ”A great many peopU come out to look at It”"What’s that party kicking abontr said one New Yorker. “Oh, he’s one of those guys who are lucky and don't know it" replied the other. "He came Wo on a round-Ulp ticket from Bdelphia and loot ths return coupon.- —Washington Evening Star.Tm suro." said tho Interviewer, puhlio would bo Interested know ths sooret of your succs "Well, young man,- replied the - tala of ladnstry, “tbs secret ef anoceM has been my ability to kee; a seerst’*—Sacred Heart Review.Td hate to be a mUUonal -QoshI Why?” ”WeU. mllllonal Leader.“Why." asked the Judge, “do yo« think your husband U dead? To« ■ay yen haven’t heard from him fot m«re than a year. Do you coasld« that reasonable proof that he has pamed out of exlstencer ’Tee, youf honor. If he was stlU alive he'd he askin’ me to send him money.“^-<3hh cago Rocord-Herald.(WlnnaU Tourist (who, for thg first time, has Just entered ricepie'are unable toof this an antl-go ____demonstration took place reeentiy et Chang Chow. notes in a patent me&ine «no^ is riSht and good but inferior food products are dear at any price.
bec^omicaU-notCheap. TryThe best at aify price money back.AOl^ HFG.GO.
aat la Paris)—Have you ordered? St Lotds Tourist (who has reaehod ths jUble some minute before, and wha ‘ om I
oinni5a!.*^5i51 liSlte «P tom a French bUl of taro) Sissraas ! —Cincinnati Tourlat—What dM yon orderf St. Loula Tourlat (Inpm ttMlly)—Hoar do I ksowT—CUm«S Sour Nswa.
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m,RSliiwflsIgfii®
;t^?:
I
Commi..loner’« Proc^edingti Continuad. Krick Olson roadAt this time bids «re opened for Commissioners.At tbi.s time aftir due notice hav­ing been given through the Road Overseer of Road Dlst.ict No. 61 a.s provided by seeUon 938 Revised Codes of Idaho VoL 1. bld^are re- celved for the construction of two Howe Truss Bridges acros.s Sim- raons creek on the L*. A. Simmons wit:k $470.00 for one bridge for the superstructure and $8.60 per cu-Rrdley the sum of $4.50 ibio yard for the sUbstimcture. D.M. arch fo00 per perch for all excavating.ley t
rch for the stone abuttments
the
basement of
Wm. and Louis ^roses for the building of two bridges the sum of $660.00 for the supersUuctures.Qhrl.s. Jacobson for building two bridges the sum of $1376.00.Contract awarded to D. M. Rad- ley for th^j stone abuttjnonts for the sum of $4^60 per perch.
Win. and Louis Moses being the lowest and best bidders for the con-j Btructlon of the two bridges the
of same.At this time T. B. Henderson is directed to make certain improve­ments in tlie N. H. Carter road un­der the dixactlon of County Survey­or E. D. Briggs.At this time there is appropriated the sum of $99.00 for the improve­ment of the Uniontown grade In ooad district No. 28 and the Over­seer Is directed to perform the work | in the most p.actlcable manner and make due report to this board.Following claims are examined and allowed: ,Current Expense Fund. jChas. Hahn……………………………$882.25Chas. Hahn………………………………142.00FifUi Day May 26th. . 'It appearing to the satisfaction of that A. Valk has UvedIt appthe boaru tiiat A. Valk has Uved up to and completed the terms of his ‘ contract covering the construction ' 3f the Cow Creek bridge the Audit-', or is directed to draw a warrant on the Bridge Fund in tlie sum of $260 In pajTnent in fuU 'of the amount’ luo under said contract. jFollowing claims examined and- aUowod; ' . jBridge Fund. . j. – ………………………………………….!.$260.00;of $660.00. j At this timo after reatUng and ap-1Following claims examined and proving the minutes of today.s meet­ing the Board adjourns sino die.
tract
is hereby awarded to the said I Win. and Louis Moses for tlie sum I A. Valk.
J J. B. D
avis, Clnvirman.Clerk,, Deputy.
allowed;
General Road Fund.
E. D. Marlatt.:……………'……:..:4400.00Current Exprise Fund 1City of Lewiston * taxes on county j Looal Ha
May have a jo.v rlilo at the!At this lime there l» appropriated ! ii.thoBnmofJSO.OO for the improve- ment of the Upper end of the Foiin- atain Brado In rood dtetrict No. 821 °f c»n950: ^5.. i304a;5.||
^ 365
;;M5
iioir&tf
>439 ■
.ptnt^a”ri“Jfc"holi: Srsts
frame structure 22x!ij!*°Mr? Picker^ has not decided whether he will oc-
One iwnnrdf Princess Flour costing 3 1-4 to 3 1-2 cents will ■give to tatlch'energy as two pounds ot meat costing 12 1.2 to 20 cents. Ask your grocer for Princess Flour and get the most
for f ■
Lewikon Milling Co’y. Ltd.
me stru I not decide«y the building or rent it! Mrs. Dr. Britan received/ word j Sunday that her mother in Chicago was seriously ill and to ortcQ. She departed Mondav for!|i''aS'^^r^sTok"«So"o‘n'!reT"jS^^
Olo Anderson returned Friday! from a trip through the Alberta' country in Canada. While therein Mr. Anderson purchased 160 acres ^ of railroad land which he coiiskiers' ■rts!3 ‘
WHAT TIME WILL THE CLOCK STOP
WHAT TIME
? WILL THE ?
? “ ;C STOP ■ ■?
Oot liberal offer is as follows: ;Commencing Monday, morning May 2nd, with every Cash purchase of $1.00 you make at our store we will give you a card on which the time of day is stamped. Bring in your cards on Saturday, at 3:30 and a beautiful 42 piece dining set will be given free to the person present holding the card on which is stamped the nearest correct time the big clock stops at. It is necessary for all ticket holders to be in our store at the time wjien the face of the clock is uncovered.
■;-WiHAT TIME
? I f WILL THE ?
• :3?tIt'GLOCK stop–.,-. ?
at . – fm.;
y
Th^ SiVhite Pine Trading CoEVERQBODY’S 3TOREAlways a Little Better Always a Little Cheaper , -Save all your tickets for the handsome drop head Sewing M^hine

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