Orofino_Tribune-06May1910_Cmplt

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*i THE OROFINO TRIBUNE………, . OFFICIAL PAPER OF r^ PERCE COUNTY.Volume 5.OROFINO, Idaho; Friday, may 6,1910
SPRING IS HEREand With it the 0. T. Co. can show yon the most attractive line of
^ Sprini^ and Summer Goods. ,Ever Shown in Idaho '
A few ofthe Many things:,'The Celebrated ! & S. Bing ciothing, in the latest .tyler and Pattern.A complete line of Ladie*', GenP. and Children'* Shoe. .nJ ■
/siiSte
mmv
and Lumber Company now have rooo cords of wood ready/for flume-
ing.
—————–aaa aaa^ CtyACr OHU JraiieiTlSA complete line of Ladie.', GenP. and Children'* Shoe, and Oxford.; ;; Spring Drew Good, of ah Shade, and Color., yVr4;C/ ’ Something new in Neckwear and BelU .HairOmamenUofaUkinda •.The late.t in Spring and Sumnier Head Scarf.■, ■ Lace Curtain. And Bed Spreads Straw HaU for aU Summer Underwear and Hosiery'A carload of furnitureju.t arrived 'Linoli,™ in five different .hade, -Spray Pump. andPruning Shear. ^ ' ‘Bring Your Friends with you we are always pleased to show Goods
a:.
Jfili:
aaftf.
Orofino Tradflig Company
KamialiMMoO.
Kamlah Defeats home Team In an Interesting Game.
A good natured crowd of 500
people witnessed the defeat of the
home team by the Kamiah braves ' here last Sunday by a score of 6 to j o. The game was a splendid ex- . hibition up to the seventh inning, when the hom^ team seemed to lose nerve and allowed the visitos . to score five runs in the last three Iinnings. The battery 'work of both teams was effective. Roose­velt, for Orofino. although pitch­ing his first game of .the season, swowed cunning and tremendous
speed, and 15 of theKamiah braves
failed to solve the puzzle of his j rou will nst no oth^‘ curves and shoots. McCoy Hill. ] Rev. Hnrst will fill the pulpit at
Local tUpTHmiog,.Insure your Live Stock wiUi J. M. DcCourccy.K. V. Pennoyer was a Lewiston visifor Wednesday. '7 different kinds of Washing Machines to select from at Orofino Trading Co.A. H. Hinkley and wife art 'isiting in town this week.
John Mix returned yesterday from a short visit at Moscow.
your Hardware. ^John Holt and wife have re­turned from a yisit to coast poinU.handle* the cele Try it once and
NUMBER 4S.
^ E«tatoll»h«d April lat, 1909
Bank of Orofino' Capital, $15,000.00Ofncer«s J. A. nUMBIRO, Pre«ldent dBROMBaf. DAV, Vice Rree. W. J. WHITE, Caehle
for Kamiah, pitched a superb game,
keeping the hiU well scattered and refusing the home team hits at critical stages ofthe game. Both Hays and Cavanaugh caught effect­ively, and had but one passed ball
each. The visitors played good ball And gave evidence of
much practice. The features of the game were two baggers by Leeper and Hays and a fly catch in right field by Grifflth, Hilton, at
j4i5S-fs—– ….nout an error. The grounds. for the same ufte^ May ist.SSw ‘although an improvement over last attended the Efemo-Sunday, were still slpw/and pre-(Lewiston Wed-j vented fast ball playrag. The j; umpire. Lewis Bradbury^ was fair, 1 < and his decisions, geu^lly-were running Wagon ‘ not questioned. Patented Wheel the Methodist church next Sunday.Leeper, the horse shoer wanU yon bring in all your crooked footed ho and have them straightened.H. Berg moved out onto his homestead on Whiskey Creek Sunday.When yon visit Lewiston be sure and Attorney Ogden and James DeCourcey were Lewiston visitors Wednesday. :.pOIr»ctor««' ;J. A. MMiriblrtf^B. M. Brown THoo. Fr*»hl»4f. Day 'hit Sim Transacts a Ocneral Banking Business. • Inte^t^ald on OepoAlte J ». Ko«W. N«ttS»HUr. anaJ,-;The home team W.11 play’ Koos- returned Saturday from a I j kia next Sunday, at Kooskia and a visit in Portland, Oregon, ffood eame is anticinated. TItA _ .. _ - . Milbum Wagon itmeted, lightest v» agwH raauc with Iron Axles. Mrs. J. M. Bartlett and children months Ruth and Gladys Blake, who have spent the winter it the Mi.s- sion School, near CJuldesac, are ex­pected home tomorrow'.The copious rains of the pa.^^t week are a blessing to the ranchers as the ground is now in first class condition for getting in the spring crop. . -C. T. miler returned Tuesday from a* visit to Boise City! He reports' everything on the hum in that section, especially the dem­ocratic party.The school boiM met Saturday and organized by electing John Gorman chairman and F. R. Linn clerk. No further business . was transacted.C. -W. Cochran, of Jnliaetta was visitor here this week. He re­ports the shipment of the piping for the water system and ^expects its arrival any day.Mrs. Anna Dobson, living at Gordon, Washington, wishes to thank her friends of Rhssell Ridge for remembering her on her i8th birthday.' She received 63 post cards on the occasion.Wes Woodin. Bailey Rugg. Edwin Lelatid and Sam , Porter made up a party from Peck, that took in the ball game Sunday.,.Sam had his usual luck. . ' ;Will and Charley Noble, accom- ‘ ^ panied bj'A If red. Peterson, return- cd this week from the Saskatcha- wau Valley, B. C. While there the boys filed on valuable land and will return in the fall to occupy their claims. They hrcj* much pleased with the country and re­port a big rush of land seekers in­to that section. [good game is anticipated. The Ijteara will leave on the afternoonThe Altar Society wll meet next Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Emil Notiea to Cc Seasonable SHOESMen.' RUSSETTBlkES. Imperirimble Sole, at $3.00 ^y^r^Men.'OUVE BIKES, Raw Hide Sole. af $2.75 Boy.’ OUVE BIKES, Raw Hide Sole. kt $2$0Men.’ RUSSETT MULE SKIN «t $2.50 Boy.'RUSSETT MULE SKIN' ‘ ,t $,.7$Youth.’RUSSETT MULE SKIN < ; " at $150 ^luuipuy on iis arnvaj. | Cid My BuFDed.i We have the Large.t Shoe Stock in Town to Select from. l>«ve aU Style, and Make.^ere Quality i. the Mme our Price, are Lower and where Price i. i. the Mme Quality i. Suneric. O..,
per pairper pair.;’?-^^'-'
per pair,' per pair . ;per pafe;.-V;.;/‘''
Orofino Mercantile Co Ltd
I – ^ Orofino's Cash Store
Grand Musical, Saturday May 14th.
Orofino u .ocky" n theXi^i^of
train and the game is scheduled to ah • • ^begin prompUy on iu arrival.I C. A. Wilson, of Anoka, visited j Orofino yesterday .'Md reports jeverything moving lively in his i section.
nis Fire t. >u.' witb Hatches. week visUing schools on the. V east side. ; ^, The three year old daughter of Blake is.^if^ng a. frameI Emil Hibblen, living east of town, i building on bis property near the i was badly burned Monday after-1Hour pool rooi. He will use i noon whUe playing with matches i “ ^“5 "“‘‘“K P“n»sea, near the house. The chUd, in com- j____.iuii, m cora-i The youngsters cf Orofino cete^
jjhe mother was made aware of its | day's fisitingi^' daugh^r, Mrs I dangerous predicament by tbe lit- Hugh Dresser, .nd family this
house, teUiug her that the baby’I was on fire. The mother hastened ; i to the child and succeeded in ex-i jtingulshing the flames, but not be- I fore the little one was badly burned ^Hmt the lotver limb* and body.Dr. Fairly was called and dressed, the bums and stttes that the child!! will recover under favorable cir- .I'cumstances. ;
the con^troctioa of a Steel Bridge on Little Canyon creek, on N. H. Carter
at which time the said bids will baand contract awarded _ …. ••• bidder. All work to ina and soecifi-
lur ac per cent oi US amouMt.
into a written contract- for the ^ terms of his proposal, bidder to furnish surclv bond in full amount of his bid. or ifepoait certifie!} check in 5o per cent of contract price
thri^d^of County
W'. L. CIKFORD,By V. E. DAGGETT^’ Deputy.
f
At The Big flume.}
Doe Bau IIn OperaUon Jane IStli.
Alexander Hamilton wMin town' !Sunday and reports things moving;
nicely at the scene of operations in' j building the big flume. One half, mile of the work is finished as well' I as the dam and the pond at the j head of the atructnre. This com­pany L miooo acres of timber land , in the, vicinity of the flume and j expect to do a big business in the j eordwood and lumber lines as soon
as the work is completed. Ten men are now at wtrk under the dir fetlton bf Contractor Parlin, who expects to complete the structure , by June rsth. The Orofino Log

#!ii:The
jGlearwater

Timber
.rj^ Genferal 0«ce. Orofino, Idaho. ~
"Itm WMte and Yellow Piiig
E. N-Brown, I
' ml.i
Agent.

MARCH OFIEVENTITAT HOME
AWDIABHOAD.
A Eesarne of Important Now* T

' farming states, should regard it as duty and a privilege to attend the next sessions.The 5-talent men and the 10-iaIent on can not escape'the obligations of comiiunity leadership. They need the information and the inspiration of the great gathering of fellow workers. They are capable of hearing scientists at the congress, not only With profit to themselves but often
inspiration in language and methods adapted to their own neighborhoods.In this extension work—the localleaders can find no aid more wUUngly given or of greater effectiveness than that of the newspaper and more es­pecially the country press, editors of which are in the closest tobch with the farmers.Doing this great work in an ade- ‘quato way I believe the dry farming congress deserves the fullest support,
in time and money, of public-spirited of each community, as well aa of
men of national leadership.
FASHION HINTS
Ties Up With Shuberta for Coming
a.
^^The withdrawal of Klaw & Er- langer's attractions from the northwest circuit means nothing at this time They were able to furnish me or the cii coit for next season only 14 attractions, srith repeats Hke “The Traveling Sales­man," "The Third Degree," Frederick Warde, and 80 forth. Not a new attrac­tion in the lot. I have made a con tract with the Shnberts and their aUiei for at least 30 high-grade stars and at tractions each sdason for the ensuing ■.of iU apparent weakn "road shows" is made by John Ck>rt, j?resident of the Northwest Theatricai circuit, in a wire from Now York.Be Oontrola lew Hooaet. – The Cort chain of theaters includds J50 houses in North Dakota, MonUna, Idaho, Oregon, Washington, Utah, CaH- tornia, Arizona and British Columbia, > Mr. Cort'i announcement that vaode- yille In the larger northwest houses, Among them the Auditorium theater in Spdkane, will itart in May, probably means that ths Klaw and Erlanger at­tractions will not last for. the rest of the regular season which usually ex­tends into June. Maude Adams, Mrs. I'iske, Henrietta Grosman, WflUe Col­lier and other syndicate stars have been reported as heading this way.' This Wcek»i Attractionsi Edward Abeles and Company, Charles the First, positively the original who started the "monkey craze," Prank Stafford Ab
Company, Arthur Kedfield, Harry Fid­dler and B. Byron Shelton, Prank and True Bice, motion pictures and superb prchestra.: It is easier to buttd two chin^syi ^ihan to top one in fueL , .
lH
This amethyst linen suit was charming
with its airoply shirred waist, and the embroidery of amethyst and white.'Hie shirred sleeves were of very sheer'’‘iTiTjaunty bi.ek >nd whiu h.t b»d ID owl', bnd u the onl, trimming.PATTEN'S BIO FBOFIT8.ado Nearly Half a Million In Bacent Cotton Coup.Profits of nearly $320,000 wore shown May 1 by careful calculation of the work of James A. Patten of Chicago and his associates in the great bull clique which has manipulated May cot­ton almost to the exclusion of every one else, and, victorious in deals for 200,- 000 bales, is turning its attention to buymg all the July cotton wMch is of-
Officers of state horticultural associ ations and commercial organizations it Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Mon tana say in reports to the Spokane Chamber of Commerce there is every indication that the fruit crop this year will be the largest and most profitable in'tho history of the four states. There is no danger of a late freeze, but should the unexpected happen the own­ers of commercial tracts are ready to do battle with hundreds of thousands of smudge pots or orenard heaters. It is predicted that higher prices wUl pre­vail as a result of the heavy damage to the fruit crop in the middle western states.F. A. Huntley, state horticultural commissioner, says that Washington will produce twice as much fruit in 1910
berries and other soft fryits the yield will be at least doubled owing to the ncreased acreage, ho adds, while theapple crop about 25 pcreage, ho addr will show an
per cent. Oregon, Idaho and Montana will have equally large crops as the result of increased acreage and trees coming into bearing this season. With increased transportation facUi-ties and the steady influx of settlers, the early attempts in the valleys and up- lamls have become more pretentious, sustained and systematic. Dry farm­ing is practiced extensively and irri­gation plants have been established by private individuals and corporations, also by the United States government, which is expending enormous sums in reclaiming the volcanic wastes so won­derfully rich and fertUo andry adapted to raising fruits,
and perfect in size and color. The apple is king. More than 350,000 acres of lands arc devoted to orchards in the four states and pomologists estimate the value of a full crop would un doubtedly equal $175,000,000.Northwestern apples are in demand in the eastern and middle western states and in Europe and AustraUa and the markets are being extended year by year. American and foreign experts,
who have studied conditions in the northwest, refer to the Pacific states aa "the World's Fruit Basket,".adding there has been established in a com­paratively short time a domain where the first foot of soil, properly culti vated, is worth moro than all the mine! from Alaska -to Mexico and all the for ests from the United States boundary to the Arctic seaAs gold was thk strong magnet which
nt the first Amjricans across thejiS^- known wastes of this continent to the California coast in 1849, so today the apple, the emperor of fn ing thousands to the wc belts.. Millions of dollars have been in- vested In apple lands west of the Bock- ies daring the last decade and beautiful
orchards of young trees today mark the spots where- but yesterday. was a waste of brown, barren sagebrush covered desert*Bomaice never played stmhA part in the world as in the fruit ^wing dis- triets of the northwest today. There is the romance of development,and of life that rivals the stories of centuries ago, when new empires were suddenly uncovered by people who
cultivation declare that uverproduc IS out of question, saying among other things:“uur highest grade of American apples cannot be duplicated
roads and steamship linos are ready and glad to take our truits to the ends ot the earth. The person then who looks for this business to speedily beco^ie un profitable does not understand tho sit nation. The ‘calamity howler’ may scare some people but not the intelli­gent fruit-grower who understands the situatuatiou.EUN TWO PAEM TRAINS.Schedules for Demonstration Oars Over O. E. & N. and N. P.—First Tour Starts June 20.
never even dreamed of their existence.and danger fadedJust as the mystery :
with his accountsofters.ofions on tho farm. V"I will if they invito mo," he ah- 8wora; / ‘ bjjt.th§y/rp so blamed rich and exclusive np^, they make mo weary.
Ucovered," so has that vast stretch of territory In the quartet of sto ►mo into its own.Americans are rapidly becoming fruit-eating nation. It is not so very long since the orange wai luxury, and this is true recently of grape fruit. Now they are
common articles of diet. Many have expressed the opinion that apples should be so common and low-priced articles of food as bread and butter, eggs and milk. However, these have at times almost become loxuries in cent years.
Although the domestic and fore
demand, for these fruits has increased, rangely enough, the producUon of the apple has steadily decreased. The apple ^3^000 to be less thanin excess
years 1896 and 1900, and
much less than the crop for 1905, when tho production reached a low figure.Statistics gathered by commercial or­ganizations show that the annual pro­duction of apples in the United SUtes is becoming less in proportion to wn- sumption each yw, and has aotnally been less in tbs,aggregate tho last few years than formerly. The figures since1895 follows:Year. Barrels._ _ _ _ _ _ _ 60,453,0001896 — – – – 69,070,0001807 – – -:- – – – – 41,536,0001898 – – 28,570,0001899 …- – – – – – 58,466,0001900 ————– 56,820,0001901 ———–L————— 26,970,00046,6250001903 46.626 000
Schedules for tho two first farm demonstration trains of tho year. hav€ been prepared by Professor E. W, Thatcher, head of the agricultural de­partment at tho state college and now in the hands of railroad officials.
The first train will leave Pullman im­mediately after the close of tho college year over tho O. B. & N. in eastern Washington. Tho second train will run over the Northern Pacific in tho Palouso country and tho wheat fields of tho Bend country, starting July 5 over O. B. &N.The following schedule has been ar­
ranged for tho O. B. & N.:Leaving Pullman June 20, spending the morning in Colfax, Elberton a^d Garfield in the afternoon. Farmington in the early evening and Tekoa later in
tho evening and tho night at that point.
June 21—Boekford in the morning; Fairfield and Latah in the afternoon
and a full early evening at Tekoa.Juno 22—Thornton in tho morning; St. John and Winona in the afternoon;a Crosse, evening.June 23-Wallula, morning; Touchot,
and Walla Walla, afternoon; Prescitt
and Dayton, evening.June 24—Turner, morning; Dayton
and Huntsville, afternoon; .returning to "allman, arriving late in the evening.Over the Northern Pacific.On the Northern Pacific in the Pa- louse and Big Bend, the following dateso announced:July 5—Palouso, morning; Belmont
and Oakesdale, afternoon; Bosalia in tho evening.July C—Plaza and Spangle, morning;
Choney, afternoon; Medical Lake, after­
noon and evening.
July 7—Deep Creek, morning; Rear- dan and Davenport, afternoon; Wilbur,City, morni line and Almira, afternoon evening.July 9—Lind, morning; afternoon, then returning to PSnow Labor Savings Devices,
Both these trains will carry diversi­fied farming demonstrations and a full staff of lectdemonstrations ion industrial topic;Features now being arranged farm electrical appliances, tho milki machine and the home manufacture concrete fence posts.The carload of prize live stock which will form a part of the exhibit on both trains U now on tho college farmThe lecture topics wUl be, "Improved Methods of SoU TUUge," "Better Live Stock," "Summer hlanogement of the Orchard," and a new feature from the lecture platform of tho trains will be tho lecture for the farm wife on "Home Conveniences.
WASHINGTON, MONTANA AND
IDAHO NEWS NOTES.
A . Few Interestlngv^ Items Gathered From Our Exchanges of the rounding Country—Numerous Acci­dents and Person^ Events Take Place—Business OnUook Is Good.
WASHINGTON ITfeMS.The boulevard from Walla Walla t( the state penitentiary was begun Mon day and 5U convicts put on the job.
unknown* graves.Following a quarrel with Will Morse, saui to be Her closest friend, Mrs. A1
mira Moser committed suicide at Spo­kane by taking carbolic acidThe result of the Seattle enumeration, when completed, is expected to be a bit­ter disappoiutqient, tho total population being estimated at only 235,000.K. J. Maclean, formerly president of Wilmuboard of trade of Wilmington, Del. has takeu up his duties as secretary of the Spokane Chamber of Comn succeeding Lbvi G. Monroe, who re­signed.Ellensburg.-Charlea Nason, or the wealthiest Indians in the valley, and known to old settlors aa a staunch friend of the white man, died recently. Uis fortune is estimated at from $25,- 000 to $30,000.Firing point-blank, at a distance of 12 feet, an unknown person killed James Boone, a rancher, and wounded Fred Roilen, his hired man, on the Har ris ranch, nine miles east of Sprague, at 9 o'clock Friday night.Mrs. ienn Sorenson and three chil dreh. were burned to death in a fire which destroyed their homo in Enum claw recently. Sorenson managed tc save the two youngest children, bui was himself badly burned.The Twenty-fifth regiment,’ now al northwest posts, United States infan
has a flew commander. Colonel Wil:vans, promoted from lieuten- lel of tho Eleventh infantxy'try, has a i liam P Ev ant colonel
on March 25, and his new command.After paying bounties for 50 coyote skins Saturday morning, at the rate of $l each, Deputy Auditor J. W. Sweasy at Walla Walla has received a letter from tho state auditor that the appropri­ation of $25,000 for bounties had been exhausted and that no more available for reimbursing the counties for bounty expenditures.
Miss Lottie Herdman, aged 24, and E. E. Saunders, a young man of the same age, wore drowned in Green lake, Se- atUe, Sunday, when a canoe in which they were riding was OVnrftrned by the swell from a passing launch. The young man's father, David Saunders, is a resi­dent of Bluefield, W. Va. Miss Herd- man’s parents live in Seattle.On May 1 the state board of finance ® took qp $400,000 worth of general fund bonds, which will
BBDBP NEWS DISPATCHES.Wheat crop prospeeta in Washington,
Oregon and Idaho, wore never so bright as at present, according to statements made by grainmen and bankers who are constantly watching crop conditioi
who u inspecting the company's hold­ings at Vancouver, B.‘ C., says that the work of construction on the m continental the scarcity
number of men needed to build the line have been secured.A long trial growingsummer of 1908, instigated and fos­tered by Ricardo Flores Magoon and
hU St ended ;Louis group of revolutionists, yesterday when Jv Do Leon of tho First I court handed down sentences against the ringleaders^ Out of the 70-odd prisoners, 13 were given prison terms ranging from four
Tacoma-May 2, 3, 4, 3, 6, 7, 8.‘^ Rattle-May 30, SO, $1, Jane 1, 2, 3,Vancouver—Juno 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12. Tacoma-Juhe 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19. Tacoma-July 4, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,10. Seattle—July 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17.. Vancouver-^Iuly 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24. Tacoma-August 16,17, 18, 19, 20, 21. Seattle—August 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, si. " Vancouvery-Augst 80, 31, Sept. 1, 2,
3he is very liberal in ner chari­ties," said one woman."Yes," answered the other, "liberal, but not always practical. For instance, she wanted to send alarm clocks to Africa to aid sufferers from the sleep- : sickness." ~ :
bonded indebtedness of that an even $1,000,000, as it is at $1,400,000 at the present time. On January 1 the state floated $200,000 worth of bonds to carry the state over the period untU the spring taxes began to come in.One passenger was kiUed, two fataBy injured and 15 others more or less hurt recently by a collision of car of tho Seattle, Benton A Southern Electric raUway and a loaded coal
on the same road at Rainier beach Lake Washington, seven miles from the center of Seattle. The man killed was Judge W. C. Bell of Harrodsburg, Ky.Ralph Kilcox of Mitchell has been notified that ho has fallen heir to $10,-
000 in cash, aq automobUo, a section of valuable wheat land with horses and stock, left to him by a sweetheart of boyhood days with whom he had sepa­rated in a loversquarrel, and of whom he had since know a young man now of 23but little. Wilcox, ►f 23 years, and his benefactress grew up in iars, and
Oregontown together, and when they were 17 years old became engaged to marry. A quarrel arose, and the engagement wai broken.The Washougal Dairy and Land com pany recently made a deal involving
$61,800 and 1,711 “ 'derson ranch, which 25 acres are in full-bearing prune trees and has 160 acres under cultiva­tion, with aU buUdfngi and two 100-ton sacs; alsasnffieieilt waterpower to
. acres. The C. C. An isting of 271 acres, of i in full-bearing prune
all kinds of machinery, valued at $30,- 000, was traded to Alfred Glenn for
a Walla WalU ootlnty wheat ranch, having a full section of fall wheat and
a quarter in spring wheat. This ranch consists of 1,440 seres and the valuation is $31,800.
IDAHO
JOTTOfOS.Vic Bargimen, who has a ranch a few miles from Elk CAtj afi^ who bants and traps during tho winter, has not been beard of since starting on his trap line March 7.Saturday aftero^n was given up to cleaning the city of Lewiston, the citi­zens generally helping.Bargain prices for booze obtained at every bar in Coeur d^Alone Saturday night until midnight. After that hour there was no price. There was ho bar, in fact, for the local option law went into effect and 10 saloons in the countywent out of business. Mining
and SmelUng company cen­to tho Bunker Hill^and
Sullivan
company tho Last Chance property at Wardner. The transfer, which is signed by F. H- Brownell, president of the Fed­eral, gives to tho Bunker HUl company 78 full claims in tho Eureka district,
held previously by tho Federal. . .•ine state Jund boaid has unanimously announced the Xuiiuwing in the mutter ol- the resignation ot Begisier M. a. church: “.iUter hearing all the evi­dence in the investigation just cioseu, and the statement beiore the laud board ol; Ai. 1. churen himsoit relative to his actions while occupying tho position or register of the siaie laud board, it
hereby accepted, to taae effect this date, and the board unanimously dis­avows and disapproves of the uctious disclosed by this investigation."
M-
MONTANA NEWS.The uuuuai meeiiug oi the No"rthV Moiiiuua huunaup ussociutiou will be hem in r ort iieuton, May 6 and 7.James Thompson of Jackson is in jail at Dillon on the charge of mur­der. no struck Frederick ileagy ou the head wiin a club last week, from tnu facets or which ncugy died a few days later.
James “Muldoon" Bullivan, a miner,
was snot and instantly kiliod at liutie
buuduy by Albert “iTenchy" Belin, a suioim swamper. The latter was tend- lug bar m tne Canon saloon ana re- tused to give bullivaa a drink because or ms disposition to quarrel, bullivan slapped Belin in the face and the latter shot him.
Charles Littlefield, a traction engi­
neer or Gfjscr, uiiempted auicide a lew' uays ug5~ by cutting his throat '
and wrists. Uruy tho luct that the razor was a dull one saved his life, but he has a number of ugly cuts.Arrangements are being made by those wno for 15 years havo been trying to get tho Ashley lake ditch through the agricultural belt of the west side of the valley lor an opening celebra­tion b unday, May 8, wnea water will be turned into the ditch for the first time Tor irrigation purposes. The ea-‘ lire ditch has been enlarged.Encouragement was given last week
to the project of a new Hill r way of the east side route alon,
head lake, when a party of busim 1at Columbia Falls. Two right of way agents of tho company have been in the valley this week, and announced that the road will be constructed, un-
less the holders of laud attempt to charge exhorbitant prices.It is stated in the offices of the Deer Lodge national forest, in Mon­tana, that as soon as tho improvement fund is available work will bo started on tho construction of trails and cabins ^ on several of tho prominent mountain Jr peaks of the reserve. According to mo present plans, trails will be broken^ to the summits of Mount Haggin,Mount Powell, Mount Lookout, Table mountain and Bow mountain.Five experimental forms of six acres each were visited recenUy and the pre­vious day by Professor William Shaw, head of the agricultural work of the
Great Northern, and the growing tests started under favorable circumstances.The gratoe include corn and eoTeral
kinda of fodder. Profeeaor Shaw de­clared u waate to bum the atcaw, and pouted oat inetances where he aaid the wil D0edJ,t^adly the bumn. reeulting from tho delayUgitraw.
Archbtohop Of Borton Boedl. Incidmit atboBM Mid Soema to Coodonm AUCoMMimd.Lowell, Maw” MayBooaeTelt’a aeUoi U not meetUg Popo'P OS on the former prealdent’a receit v.a.t to Komo «mi eiUled UeultUg and a vmUt.oa of Mr. Boowvolt-a prineiplo of a “eqnare deal” by Moat Bev. WU- l.am H. 0 -ConneU, arthiahop of Boatoo, at a public meeting of the American Federation of Catholic SocieUes ofSe diocese in this city today.
John CalUn O’LoughUn, former as- .UtMii mmxetary of .tat^ who eon. dneted the tiegoUationa between Mr
HEAB8T SOBS POE t.tihit.A»k* *100,000 Dauaga* of tba Now Totk nmtt..New ^York, May d.—wmiam B.
papor reported the . speech of Mayor
a falsification of a pibUc toLent
pnUicatioo he baa auffoied !** and aaka to bo recc Lt aon.Alton Eallroad ImUctad.Jianau City.-Eight indictment* woro ■' latnxned agamrt the Chicago A AHon railroad by a federal grand jury 'on charges of having sold second-class '11 tickets from this city to Chicago withfirst-class. Heket privileges. *^0 in- dictments are retnrneA on each of the * four offonwe alleged.
*
/

SENT ACROSSiTHE ATLANTICP* “*»y bo Ukon ua /all |t*ndard if priijcs paid to local prodacot. ootoldo of the city market niiniair nin« v I‘®' ‘bo commoditioa named:DURING PAST WEEK,
Bandit, of the Air Aro Kow Poarod byjgeese, lie lb; dreiwdrw^’litf duck.; Treamro Ship. Catryln* Oold—Big 20®; fancy turkey., 23cjao H. … dr^, 2Sc.Llnor* May Be Eauliped With Air- Y »blP» to OhaM and Bocaptnro~On ,;, .Ono Boat $10,000,000.
; Captain Kidd'. gricvou. error'in Uv- ■ng a century and a half too early in biatory waa .hown conclu.iTOiy thi. week, when $17,000,000 worth of gold coin and bullion waa ahippod to Bug- laud from Bow Pork, but notwithelaad- lug thi. fact It i. now pointed out that at Jeaet one of the transatlantic .team- .hips haiP begun to scent danger from sky pirates and before long the ocean greyhounds that carry millions in gold back and forth may bo equipped with dirig.ble balloons to,give chaso to. in­vaders that may slip from some .not on the bleak Atlantic coast or the shore of the British isle., trooping down o: the treasure carrying ships unawares.Heavlert dold Shipment.On Tuesday Taat the Kronprinzessii Cecilo carried^w*»y from Bow Yorkgreatest amount that been taken from this vessel.: On Wednesd _ followed with another $4,500,O0Q,ing the . week of these ship.
Eggs—Fresh ranch, $7.—Dressed wethers.Dive atOCk-Veai; fine';, a.aaa«aa, A„ lie Jb; steers, live, $5.75@ dr^d, lO3.4@lll.4e;It); large, 8@11cwt up; dressed, 10 3.4@il hogs, hve, U 1.4c lb; dressed, l3o Ib.Fruits and vegetables-Pofatoes, 65c •wt; apples, $l to $1.50 per box; ear, a. w- ,…50 per _ _ _rots, 60e cwt; beets, Ic lb; dry onions, loc^, 11.2c Jb; Oregon, 2c Ib; horse- radish, 12 l-2c Jb; cabbage, 2c Ib; pars.
Cecilo
carried away from Bow York cousigqcd to London, $10,000,000 gold, the greatest amount that has over * port on a single lay the Campaniatwo shipments VomblMd^’maT*’'heaviest outlet of gold in any the market’s history. UntU tbmeats -the week of May 14, 1904,- __9otoooi%jrt"'‘-*unt’ii Tuesday
increased output^^of gold iithe record shipment^ VA K«iu inAmerica indicates that the export oi ■ pld from Bew York will becomVmacb heavier. Elaborate precautions aro bo- mg taken for Kifcgoarding shipment, of the metal but the strides of avia­tion add. a new danger. Treasure ship, are safe from aeroplanes, the only thing to bo feared now are the dirigible bal­loons, eapablo of caroing five and six men and thousands of pounds of excess weight. The use of dirigible balloons make, it possible for outlq,ws to land in wmo secluded spot with their plunder. The danger from launches A a minimum, because vessels muit touch at a point with their cargo of loot. With a balloon tho gold could
be taken to some point removed from $3.50
cue; lemons, $s
to $5.5o’ case; orange., $3 to $3.50 caw; date., 12clb,-flg,,90«boxrlia.e,,20c Batter—Banch, 39a Ih… Obee.e-Wi«on.ia and Hazelwood, »e lb7 dome.tic Swhw, »Ic; brick
cream, 20c.Hay—Baled oat hay, $18 ton; wheat^.V^de’ **^“*^“’ ***'Graln-Oata, ‘$1.40 per cwt; barley,$1.35 per cwt; wheat, $L60 cwt.Hide, and Tur.-B.tML '
tows, 8c per Jb; steers, 8c per Jb; coif-
50c to $1; raccoon, 40c to 85c; bear,20; marten, $5 to $26. ' FuelPrlceo^BetalL Fool—Sawed, tamarack and Hr, $8 25-flr, $7 and $7.50; pUe. $6. Coat-Ca,- uey, Sheridan, Tabor, $9 ton;' Eock Spring., $9 and $9.50; Monarch, $9; Bo.-ly*,$8.60 per ton; Lille, $7.50 pe; Tom rPaclflc Northwwt Wheat. , Tacoma.—.MiUing blneatem, 88c; kliib le. Export, bluestcm, 89(&.90c; clnb,’Bortiand.-Track price: Club, 850
86c; bluctem, 88@89c; red Eussiaa, Si ^85c; turkey red, 87@8Sc; valley, 8C@
SHORT ITEMS FROM MOST ANY PLACE ON HE GLOOE.
k of Happenings In Both Eaat>m ard Western Hemispheres ITuring .the Past Week—National. HJitfl^teal Political and Persenal EvenUT^in Short Paragraphs.
FBOM
WASHINGTON. DThe 'Uhird degreemet hods ) will be invoipolice will be invostiga________Hey burn resolution which passed lu. Bonate by a Vnanimous vote. The worl . ^ , will bo done by a special committee o;Senator Heyburn i: « member, and police of ^ ^ ^S^ficials of large cities will bo summonedto testify. Heyburn believ.. tne third degree is most iniquitous,
The government’s suits against the Ilarriman lines on account of fraud of millions of acres of public lands in Ore­gon, will bo urged in a resolution by Senator Chamberlain of Oregon. Ho dl Clares that tho department of justice has been slow in this matter, settle­ment of which means much to tfc-
Btate. Ho proposes to allow tho ai torncy general special assistance t prosecute the railroads.The following appointments fo fourth-class postmasters in WashingtonManor. Clarke county, to succeed A
OTHEB MARKETS.
Chicago.
‘v£d"3^' T“Cblir
Highdom, who re.igaed, Boaji^to P Dunmuir, Melboutne, Chohali, .ounty,
Tice A. G om, reigned; Leli. A. Wil- W of Spokane mid A. a WiUima. of VnUeyford wqro appointed rMlway mall
f:
18 BOOBEVELT FOB *APT7 *He I. 8M4 to H.t» Wrlttm Ihetter. Indontog Washington, May volt, according to writton letnw-
my othera,.,M.imie.
2.—Theodore Eooe-writton retTera toresent administration, also show ho will not be " ' in 1912 nor for
Timothy seed, $4.40 ^Clover seed, $11.25. *
^^Short clear, sides (boxed), $13.50@
sSsais
DaWes, . 14
League bail at Spok$ue ijl this week -Spokane and Tacoma.Unofficial informaUon is that the cen-
kulumana have been removed to Bew- eastie jnU to serve the remainder of thoir respective sentences.Owen Moran, tho English Ughtwoighl pugilist, was formally charged with manslaughter as a result of the death of Tommy McCarthy, his oppoueat the recent prize fight in San PraucL…Mrs. Charles W. Morse, wife of tho former Now York banked noW la the cderal prjson at Atlanta, sobmittod to -a operation at her homo recently,it^'cMSy *® ■>*Determined to see his baby before he left Sheridan to go to work, James
McCoy attempted to visit bis wife’s chamber in the Newton rooming house at Sheridan, Wyo., and was shot TdiMffiady
A new portrait of Christ—new to the
modern world, though executed prob-
past in the tombs of tho early Eomaa to“l“gh”in^BSvCoa8tantiaopIe.-Witb a loss of 600,10 Turks captured Saturday from the Aibaniaus an important position at Or- hanieh at the north end of Kaichanik pass, but tho rebels stUl hold the pass.
turned
to Borne from Naples, to which plaeo she was summSued by the poUee
ir the -harboir last Saturday. Tho princess does not accept the police theory of .uicido or accidental drown­ing and IS convinced that her cousin -Tis murdered.Senator Aldrich of Ehode Island and Senator Halo of Maine, the two vot- araa statesmen of tho United States enato, whoso comiog retiromont from ivo.poiitics has just been offlcialiy
Ommna Prcporlty Throughout D Shoim in Savoml WapACoour d'Alone mining district in northern Idaho, where between 33 and p« cent of the total lead output of . United State, is produced annu- ally, in addition to millions of dollars’ leorth of silver, gold, copper and other Btals, required 500,000 pound, of eof- fco and 50,000 pounds of tea to supply tanie beverages for it. population, es­timated at 15,000, during the 12 month, ended April 15. James A. Allen ol Wallace, who made the compUation say. tho consumption of coffee wa. 33 pounds or between 1,460 and 1,500 cups per capita during the year, in addition to three and one-third pounds of tea. Miners in tho Coeur d’AIooe district •mong the beet paid workmen in northwest and they spend their y freely for the eomforte of li/o.
WHITE SLAVE TRAD£l._..
vuD Mvumnia or iixo.——————j tho co8t of living, whichagitated other parts of toe countrj^ last winter and this spring, caused little diwussion, another: sign of prosperity being that the banks have large^ posits today than over before i, history of the district.
JOTO WARD IS DEAD.
SlmnUard o/Wii* E^iabU-hcd.I8 moat difficult for many person# w -emember the slzea of fbelr differ, ent articles of wearing apparel. Ck>|. iars, shirts and gloves are easy' enough, because In the case of these It_ —————— « a matter of actual Inches. But thoWill Spend Fortune to Stop Luring Girls numbera are what puzzle———— – – most people, to say. nothing of themystery why a No. 11 stocking goes with a No. 8 shoe.This last puzzle is. however, easily eitplalned. Stockings have always been measured by the Inch from heel to toe, but the numbering of shoes was toed a Jong time ago by – ——–
wiiiiiEi.HmBimEfiiiiiiiiOCKEFEllER JR.
for Immoral Pntposos-Jolm D. Sr to AsMst Hi. Son la Wiplag Out This Damnable Practlco-Says Mewqpnien Wor# Fooled.
The Famous
Sculptor Dios la Haw York.2.-John, Quiae,Now York, May z.-jonn Quinej Adams Wsrd,.ono of America’s groatest sculptors, died Sunday at his home here in his 80th year.a 80th year.IiATE hews ITEH&Captain B. W. Boone, a prominent banker of Marietta, Ga., died reeeatly.Bailroad freight rates throaghout the country will bo materially increased by tariffs filed with the interstate eoo’^ merco commission by western trunl lines May 1.At a recent meeting of the stock- holders of tho Parrott Sliver & Copper company, hold in Butte, the sale of Jho Parrott property to the Anaconda Cop-
per Mining company was effected.Glenwood Springs, Col.—John H. Wil- son and James Edwards, convicted of robbing the Citizens National bank here, were sentenced to, not less than more than 30 years ’ imprison-
^Tho first glimpse of a very rich and Christian young man into tho misery and horror of tho underworld’s most sordid intitutsions—white slavery—wiii result in the expenditure of a fortune ) wipe out the traffic, not only in Amer- a but in the wide world.John D. Kockefeller Jr., the head of ho special grand jury which conducted the white slave investigation in New lork, is so appalled and horror stricken
t the revelations in New York city and tho international ramifications of the system that ho is determined to wipe It out. Ho says that he would spend any amount of money to do this and he is backed in his duterminutioJ richtla world'sI was stunned by tho revelations of this gigantic system of dealing in girls,” said Mr. Rockefeller Jr. when
The PYenchman the numbers of
The land adjoiss mnd w^ become'cart of their dairy farm, two^ Th. Oaara’..y. BzTiTvCwdElgin dairies each now have large’ w. B. C.-Ths EstaVkn wifaleh;•tattoB reports, that a body, belioved to bo that of young McAidlo, on* of- Si
H.1, PM. ..J ,u,„
mark, ____ .Ursts, 19 l-2c;
New York.
.Uvor, 541-40; Maxlem, doUars,
«vv.,uucs naa just been offle announced at Washington, entered euu- gress almost 30 years ago and have grown to leadership ia the affairs of tho nation. Senator' Aldrich’s refusal to bo a candidalo again is duo to ill hoaJth, ho dcclarod. Senator Halo also gives advancing years and phor health as the cause of his-retirement.Veteran of tho civil war and 30 years'
u. 8. A., ai.d .t hi. h… in
Boxbury, Mass. Ho was 85 years old.Steamer Ammur, which arrived ro- coatly at Victoria, B. C., from Queen Charlotte islands, report, that a largo fleet of Japanese sealers is engag^ off tho west eosst of the islands. Schoon­
er Eva Mario of Victoria, which pat into Skidgato to land a sick Indian, reported having sighted several Japa-
OOIONQTHEATEB ATTEAOnONS AT SPOKANE
THB AUDITOEniM, H. O. Hayward
April
28 and 29-”The Bed Mill.” Friday, Saturday and Saturday'Mat-
Skinnei: in ”Your Lmhle
BE SPOKANE, Ohaa. W. York, M»
prevailed upon to discuss his own _
tudo in the investigation which up to
io now has been conducted secretly in the principal cities of tho United States and Alaska.Mr. Rockefeller explained he could not make known plans for the future which would spoil work already done, but he expressed his own opinion of .white slavery and that very forcibly.”The wickedness of men and women responsible for this loathsome iusti tution is beyond belief,” continued he ‘When the grand jury started to worli I did not have a very clear conception of what would be revealed. In a short time, however, my eyes were opened.I was astounded and shocked at the sickening developments. Right then
and there I determined to spend any amount of money necessary to wipe out this traffic. The work of the jrand jury gave me the opening whichthought could lead to"^ subsequent revelations. – The ordinary Christian citizen who lives in the society of his class and attends church and believes that in doing so he is filling the ol^Ii- gations of society, does not have the slightest suspicion of the sordidnesj and misery of the underworld.**Aa I say, I was stricken with hor­ror. For a time I did- not believe :faat num and»especially the woman lived, who were low enough to barter in girls of tender years. I became more impressed -that it was my dnty
Preneb®•manently fixed AiutmwiTi oi snoes for all Europe and America, He arbitrarily decided* no human foot could possibly be tier than three and sevqn-elghth# ™es. So. calling this point zero, he* allowed one-thlrd of an Inch to a size and accordingly built up his scale. It follows therefrom that a man cannot tod out the number of his own shoe- unless he be an expert arithmetician. Even then he Is likely to go wrong, because all the shoe experts allow for ght of the Individual and the
OTIS SKINNER.
NO POORHOUBBS for kans/Charitable Institutions Omvrted Into
•prosperity baa become so general in Kansas that the poorhouses have been ibandoned as charitable institutions mnd converted into experiiiient staUons to add to the wealth of the farmers.Last year many of the farms wen
lae superintendent and pnid assist When the s(ata legislnture learned that the farma were net fuUUUng their origi­nal porposet a bill wan enneUd aUowingtho state agrlcultnrnl eoUege to takespot quoted $4.35@4.40.^ Spelter—Weak; .pot closed $6.25@ tao state agricultnrnl eoUege to tnki
-^uthern^oft, $i6!f^@iT25. ^ ^«^etin issued by the college, ^rnia raised 100 bushels to the acre and the feat is accomplished along the roadside where tho fanners can not help seeing It os they drive to town.
KpKxxriXTrand delightful four-act comedy b- ’Tarkington and Harry Leon Wik»;Your Humble ^rvant,” will be th( offering, with Otis Skinner in the stel lar role and surrounded bylavUhft'"””to order for mI^. SkranwandTra ^d « i,favorably compare with
Mr. Skinner’s delightful play of last m, ”The Honor of tho Family,”
and there aro many points of resem- blimce between that of CapUin Brideau and Mr. Skinner’s latest role, Lafay dght
of the Individual and – jf his foot before they try to de-
As far
as women’s shoes are com cemed the problem Is still more diffi­cult. because many of the manufac­turers Instead of keeping to the regu­lar scale have marked down thelt- num­bers one or two sizes to order to cap- tore easily flattered customers. Fbr this reason most dealenr ask out of town customers to send an old shoe ^Ith their orders.The system of measuring hats Is much simpler. Any man can tell what ^ze he wears simply by adding the width and length .pf the Inner brim and then dividing by two. Orders can alBd be sent to the shopkeeper by stat­ing the circumference of the head.— Boston Globe. •
Qiieb^S
and the duty of my associates 'to put white slavery. I marveledan end to
i very capa with aU thi
•te Towers, the optlmi.trc”t’ragedrii of mauy ups and downs.
'Zaza," with Jane VivUu Kelton ii the title rele, is the efferiag of thi Uwrence and SandaMiy company «t thi Spokane theater thin. weeg. Who. "Zaza" waa first produced ia thi. coun­try it aroused widespread diseussion but judging from the continued popu­larity of the play theatergeers^m apeed that it teaches a iewon, uotwith- sunding anything which may be caid re^rding the strict morality of the prices- Best
the craftiness of those who were [lonsiblo^ for this condition. Stories 0 appeared about the ”whitp slave syndicate” but it was a hopeless task to find just where the sjmdicate ex­isted and how it did its work. The newspapers announce that the inves tigiition has been given up as probers have found that the so-called syndicate was a mythical organiza without form or * *Here Mr. Rockefeller 'chuckled to himself at the manner in which news- papers had been led astray.Secret Investigations.■The search then commenced i vately, with secret agents to carryon in the west,” continued he.interested in the reports of thoind women r-*——-irhere and I. .w^/wevo W4, jue menmd women who were working else- astonished
HOETHWBST PEOFEB DIE. Sheldon Willie Qflbert died' at his.‘rx”’-”"'''’"'"'–»”
iontly, ^ 83, ywuM . .ThomM M. Meoitlu, who cmho to
nunsflix to his full
repUed: T’Brother, I am h
$35@32~
5S5S £•With previ. ^ T. AvoriJI, one of tho earljeat pio-sni'sss – “•
crossed, 2,200,00 bu.; totol American ^ ^ropeaii supply docreiuto, 5,262,-
Ha that ^th late must trot aH d$y.
pcarc.Omw 0 Mackie,' onof tho oldest
IP Soattlo recently iiom heart diseaee.Colonel Jamet Taylor Goee, at ono
tinjp department commander of the G. A.,S. tor Waahington and Alaekn, died Porttand
Prieea Drop. Portland.—Tho price of butter ia popping, and on Monday morning a further cut of S cenU per
two-pohnd ^uato WM made by local retailere. This in aaawer to a cut of two cents a pound in the wholesale price.At wholecale there will be a forther cut of a hMf cent In frcMi beef, hah o one cent a pound in pork, a half eani in bacon, and from’one to two coiti
pound on sausagea. With the wholetSJ foHow *'’®AdiMral HlchbrnSToiCA ^ ■^Mhington, May 2.-Bear AdmlriU Philip Hichbom, United Statea navy, retired, died at hi. home here SondS attheagoofTL Tho admirM had been
rhen I miw that conditiona in othc
“The deviltry of these men and women exceeds beUef. They are with­out shame. For the paltriest sums of money they will stoop to tho blwkeat of crimes. But this horrible institu tion must go, not only hero, but eUe-
where. There can be no compromise it must be annihilated-wipTruraTd destroyed for all time.”Young Rockefeller' was so appalled by the disclosures that hi went to his father and explained that in view of
A baby bom amid the. fiooda at ^ '^®“Attached to a tombstone in a Har- aden (England) undertaker’s chop to – card which reada: "You may telo-phone from hero.” .A cent’s worth of electricity, at tiff -verage price in this country, wlU raise ten tons twelve feet high with a crane In ieea than a minute.No coal U mined In this country lower UiM a depth of 2.200 feet, while . aeveral English mines penetrate 3400 feet down, and there are mines la Belgium four thousand feet deep. Eight-Inch seams of coal are mlnodJ commercially abroad, whUe few velns- less Chan fourteen Inches thick are- worked In this country.A woman who likes to have flowerw In her window but finds it imprac­ticable to do so in the city has ortt-ficl^ ones painted on the glass. The-windows are high np above the street and the flowers are to bright colors to- enable them to be seen more easily. The apartment house to which the wo man lives ia on Broadway, and the Y^Jk Sun''® ‘® ’'®” '‘‘■“““S—New
———-…. 4*1 >*t3W UZ———thought he ought to'de-rexXt:i®k“;^h”^":av^cfsthe em^o might bo made intoma- He told hi. father some of the il atones told the grand jury.B^efeUer UetenedVavely to and then told ^ «>n to
-X Qnake on lamg aund. k. T,
emsado might
tional. He told hi frightful stories John D. Bo this rectial ahead.“Yon have my eympathy in thi. work and to have thoeo who aro help «« yon and yon .hall have more thu ttot; you ahall have aU the matarislSit.'toS’SI’l!'®'”
Patrick Henry*. p«i
Je- walk
away with ,
Nordllexli, Kingston, Jama Alexis, ex-presidentlaica. May 8r-Nord ntofHMti,i.aa.a.
■®S5-wik^L®sir. ”;H^e,^ougotth.crcae.f
8t^u ahoat than I have.’*The man cleved. ;
“You
Montreal is said to be to « bad sen- lUry condlUon. The water enpply has been condemned to parliament, and the method of sewage disposal Is for from satisfactory. A medical member of parliament declares that the Montreal water furnished on the cars of the In­tercolonial raUway. where alcoholic- drinks are not allowed, la a dlstlncOr 0U8 beverage, containing “dis­ease and death.” Typhoid fever to- prevalent to the cUy. .The number of automewrea owned* by farmers is grtsnrihg- rapidly , OtH of ten thousand auio# Ih lo^ five- thousand are owned by tormew. Kan­sas fanners spent |J,200,0(Kr for auto- mobile, daring 1M9. and $2,760,000 in- 2908. lu one Nebraska town of elKht bimdred populauon. fort, told last y«ir to farmers near the town* and retired fanners In the towm Care­ful estimate of the number of auten mobiles owned by fanaew In®tho entire• United States Is 76.000; ®srvws izu' aaya from it** planUng time. Out In the great-oomt
the corn farmera put tho seed In tnw ground, 115,000,000 were poured Into* their laps until a grandJ total of |1 720-
000.000 was roller opt Air tho and silver in the whole Umtod'Stotes
… Hw Poem HwvvuwffT :
CapL Pritchard has Inkarlted aU th» fltort humor of the Oea H* waa aiT one day how ha woaM make paa>sm.a.-.rK.'Six•the crew should be on deck*■.■i.“rssssn;2r—«r,ssz,X3X'’.jx;.to compel thorn to ntlrer •Uae force to genUemen who aemlw wish to enjoy a fine nlghtl- ths commander.- “Never! r wouW'
"Whoa * womu goeo to e«U um another womsii; the Utter tktaks U honod. by conrtear, to U« her rhT Itor aone aaasto bafor* abA ——

THE OROHNO TRIBUNE* r. c. FoKKsMAX^-aitor nhd Puw;'hfr.OmciAi^Pj^et|l Ne2 Piwcg County Pahlt«h«i Krery FridaySUBSCRIPTION:
Entered a» leeond c1*m matter Seplemlx igos, «t the po»t office at Orofino, Idaho, i the Act of CougreM of March s. 1^79.
fli looks as though the law and order league was just a tride slow in getting in its work in Boise.
(Omclat Publication)Report of the Financial Condition-oflht-
Bank of Orofino
tAIngholeckaooo
M. E. CHURCHIKV. THOMAS LAWSOif. PaatorSumihv School………. lo: A. M.Preaching Service…… II: A. M.Epworth League…….. 7: P. M.preaching…………………………… 7:30 P. M.The Paator mia hU pulpit only every other Sunday. Announcements of this will be made in this paper from time to
re and flxtnrea 88S.40other banka and cash Itemt i.vooExpenses laaa eaminf………Total Cash………………………………….T-fl.1………………………………………….
IJnllwl Stat.a Land omce. t^ewUton. Idaho. March 17.1 Notice la hereby
tht BOLLINGER. Forty sew rooms have bden added and prices are the most rcaisonablc in town. 1W.61' ^ •“
T0..1…………………
I will stand the Jack, Grover, at my :p,„. in upper.
The Sbokesman Review corres­pondent visited this section Sun- Iday and Monday and saw all sorts!: of strange sights and scenes, new ‘ ’’to the iphabitantsof the village.
———————————— I [XOTAKtAI. aXAL]Ever>'whcre in Idaho the demo j euhacribed and awom i crats arc getting together and sing- * d*y of May 1909. ^ing songs of peace and harmoay.The republican factions, on the]Other hand, are busy belaboring 1' ______, .
, of 1910. Parties desirous of the i • of the Jack can find me at my n s|. J. W. CAVANAUGH.servicesrsidence.
Orofino. T.
H. BARTLETT. Refflatar.Notiea for PubI.eatiom Department of the Interior,United SUtea Land Offlea. Lawlaton. Idaho. March 17. 1910.Notice la hereby iriven that ‘ON M. 1
REAL ESTATE
DeCourcey & Walrath *
Money
FARM LOANS. TIMBER LANDS CITY LOTS and INSURANCE
to Loan on Improved Farms.
OROFINO, IDAHO
CARLTON.BALSLKYia Lanaford, North
When in Orofino, Idaho, stop at
HOTEL IDAHOIS. O. HAl|{Mon, F>ropi I«tor.(Formerly Hotel Carson)Bedrely new management. Bvcrytbing new and up to date ^ for all odationa for all. Dining Room Service ample 1ccniem. Give us a call
one another, and if there is a crime 1 «* it stands for. That means alie ** landlordism for more than on
LIADIWTIKS CxptUl stock paid infiurplo. fund…………..Undivided profiU___…….ToUi:…i………..
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
«, OrJ.r •« Show C«« Why Order .f S.1.of RealesUto Should Not bo Mod.. ; «Uo« xlfrg« th*t plxintiffu
third of the area of the state with the revenues derived therefrom turned into the treasury of the Federal government instead of that of Idaho. It further means a clash of authority between the Federal and SUte authorities at some time in the near future covering the ter­ritory of the forest referves. For water power sites it means that P.
M. BLAKK. Caxhier.(NOTARIAL SEAL)I and iwora to before me thu'jrd SCOTT OGDEN, NoUry Public.day of May,
Notloo for PubUeatlon. Department of the interior.U. S. Land oIBcc at Lewi.ton, Idaho. April 30. Notice ia hereby t
action alfege* that plaintiff U now a^d“for“ m*!rJ i than S month* immediately preceeding the ; commencement oftheaction.be haa been con-!! Win-tffI flutte. Montana. November 10. 1907. and at allIn the Probate Court of Ner Perce County, Idaho. , t liutte.'Montana. NovemberIn the matter of the esUte of Welling-1 aton Lamlon DeceastKl. ) fendint willfnlly and vofontlSv abifS’oned andFrank Gaffney, the administrator of | decried aaid plaintiff^and^ haa continued^to ao
poses therein set forth.It is therefore^onlered that allahlp36N R. iE. B. M.. in Nex Perce county,
The Paidce Meat Market
Oro Peeno LumberGilbert, IdahoManufaoturMRouffH and ^ L«uml>«r, UrAth, 3hlnstM,Bt6w
House HillsSpecialty
house in the City of Lewiston, County of Nez Perce, ,SUte of Idaho, to show cause why an order should not be granted to the said administrator to sell the realestate of that a copy of thministrator to sell all of of the .taid decedant and
a copy of this order be published at
the streams withiu her territoo^! Dated this 12ththe Federal government proposes jto absolutely control all power 3ites| Edw.rtw.Tiherio;;Em';?y simonthat are now included on govern-oi^oroHno.ment lands within the state and thus handicap auy development of hydro-electric power for all time lo come.—Shoshone Journal, Sbo^ shone, Idaho.
^State Dairy, Food and Sanitary Inspector James H. Wallace has
Issued bulletins, from whicn we 'publish the following interesting item: “^t the recent convention; of Western Foxi Offieials held at Boise, the question of bleaching of flour came up for action on the
T. H. BARTLETT. ReglaUr.. Notiea to Cioditors.rc« Couuty.
1 city and county.1 day of .pril, 191a T. O. HANLON,Filed .hUl«b day of a7»o';"’"-
iJl^nlh* Probate Court of Ne*
ss
NotlM far Publioation.J.S, uo’?‘SSS".‘’i!i?.Sri7;ha.'Notice ia hereby given thatJOHN W. BKRTHOLF March SllpiiiOro///io'
Feed Storeiff will apply to the
ByC.S.«07^K£;^E. MONTEOgden Morgan & Morgan AttornJ^ffo^plaint PoatoftceandeaddrcM Orofino. IdahoNotioo for^U.S.Land%«V"/i^SiS:^*'Notice U h^by given thatLARKI.VJ, FLORA
Fred L. Frazier, Proprietorgeneral stock of Feed, Grain, Hay, &c Chop miU in connection.Handles the Celebrated ^Goid Medal” and “Queen of the WWest” brands of flour, made by Nezperce Roller Mills.
County of
under the brovUiona of the i 187S. and acta ameudatory. known >cr and Stone law,” at auch value aa
J. 8.
United States Land Office. Leapart of the several Sute Pure {Food Commissioners there present. It is known pretty generally that the Federal Government holds that bleaching of flour by the millers is
T. H. BARTLETT. Raglater.f Cause wby Ordnr of Saloei___1J a . ae •
II ia at liberty to proteat thla pnrenaae i , or initiate A conteat at any ti»^ jcorroborated
tNV^.COL I. wha. on J
of R^d EaUto Should not bo Mado.Nez Perce of the EsUtc of WUliamIn the Probate Court *of County, Idaho.In thelmattar Dunn D*ea»cd.
. •* violation of the law, as construed onu.. .«hd.r .Mle of .11 of the mlby the Secretary of AgricultureJ …. In food.
inspection DecUioa . No. ci..ric.j.!…«» .11 of
Robert McKiMick. the Administmtor
.praying for an o’rder'ofj the real esute of Mid dgr
T. H. BARTLETT. ReglaUr.Notko to CootnictoriNotice Js hereby given that sealed .ids will be received by the unde
inspection DecUioa – No.100. the Department holds that “flour bleached by nitrogen per­oxide is an adulterated product. ,unc^er the Food and Drugs Act ofi?^^ed:"frrX^7" l^n" 'Z ^S: jf °“r^rw^vWe'??ho°^.» of June 30, 1906. and the character, “o^hllf '■ “> the'«id administrator to silland abulteratiou is such that no miifwow he townof Piorupstatentent upon the label will bripg |e May « fe, i '
T.'S: —r F
II SIMON
i==Si^=^
Just a Word
About the
Simon Piano
Company
Special Pianos
lindeceased, court hifi pettlioa
• • • ^PAug^erl^t‘id^'°Mid'^‘^At«.‘''of Qcarwater TdephoncDtmu. appear before this said Probate AUVJ/UVIHs:“ho?r?Arii'c.trA“bf:f.4i^°d.?: Line…………………………….«id court at the | ConnecU with F«:i6c Telephone
Lewiston, | “i^T oommuni^outside as weU as all local
bleached flour withih the law.” i wilfbe ;^ened7aSd"ontraor»^^^ •“.e lowest reaponalble bidder, ^'d puhlisbed m» sal ract i
: reaponaible djidder. such product and has the matter, piaMa'nd'^peoI in the courts. The food conven-1tiou at Boise decided to Ask the for five por cent of ItB amount, pay- Federal government to either push;
Ijovej rspecialty, this! yodrbusinefia.
Samson Wder, Proprietoraid city and county.Dated this 25th day of March T. O. HANli9io._____LON.Probate Judge.Notice for^ Publioation. Department of the Interior.United SUtes Land Office. LewUton.
Dr. BritanDENTIST, In Orafine 11 to 31 of each month In Kamiah 1 to 10 of each month! I ^ Office in Residence I
UutU'somc conclusive actioo »I P*'
mean, that you Uke no chances in buyin* the Simon PUno. Sold for pXiT’.t'FKto^pri^^We are the Wholesale and Retail Dutrib. utor. for the Inland Empire of the
MASON & HAMUN, MELVILLE CLARK, VOSE
& SONS, J. & C FISCHER, SCHILLER. CROWN, CABLE-NELSON, KNIGHT-BRINKERHOFF, CONCORD, and other pianoaMehrUIe Clark Solo AppoUo, Combinola, Fiochor. ola, and other PUyer Piano., MASON A HAM- UN and other orgwu.Write for Catalogues, or call at the warerooxas of
The Simon Piano Co.MOST RBL4ABUB '
WHITE PINE TRADING CO.^ ^ ^ — OROFINO, IDAHO
,FARM ————Shuldt, Lewiston, Idaho
apeoifleaUona. Btate the timer,!rz‘ Trk
of County Conimlaslon- sppUcatlon anO awom autement on the i»lh erg. day ofjunr, 1910.before Reglatcf and Receiver,Bollinger Annex, with iu forty ' By order of the Board of County “jC^,"“SSa“«WrtyhU purch.se oats toiakes this fsmeaa boetlerv- CoininUaianfcra.A ez Perce County, before entry, or initiate a conteat at any time;
S S3.““S& ssssi aRepairs, Needles
Ogden, Morgan & Morgan LAWYERS.Di^t. sute and Federal Practiot

IF8 oo Fer- appointetrict; J. C. er Third District, Clerk, by W. K.opened for furnishing 2000 lbs. dynamite for use on the W. H. Helm road, to-wit:Bid of Orofino Trading Co., for No. 2 powder at 15 1-2 cents; No. i powder 18 1-2 cents‘per pound.Bid of Wellman-McRoberts Co., for No. I powder at 18 1-2 cents; No. 2 powder at 16 cents per pound “ ■ ■ Orofino Trading 1
M A Means…………….IloHdw Co……………..V.;..H A Whitted……………………Current Expense Fund.Jame.H W Akers……………………..
viewers on the petition of J. 'V ct al for a private road in road district No 20.J. C. Cook, a county indigent, is granted relief in the sum of 5»5 <>o per Ih for the quarter by on order for iisaries.
lird Day .April I3U1. this lime E. D. Marl
Frank Grimm. R H Thompso WA NUon… EmraaM Ellis Geo E Mindcn
I D BrownBarbara A S subn:asked t I in the 1
mhlf"he county ottorncI-
monstrance petition against creating herd district, but in view of the fact Ih ih.above set pied and the prayer < hereby granto«l i ‘ ' of the applicaliop of Fr Kettenbach, William F.» lime E. D. Marlatt is granted O. A. Kjos and J. Alexander, of 5200.00 as a part payment on on the bond of Jas. S. Jac!the Geo. W. McKern and cx-offieio tax collector, bo eased from any further liability S. Jr -on of9th in which to complete bonds of the^sa'id Jas. S. Jacks.’ wardedurnish one ton of powde nhka for above price.Uie contract is awarded the said Orofino adingCo.to TradtredFollowing allowed:Current E.xpensc Fund.Etta Brown.......................................A. E. Hincklev.................Geo W Welker.............W S Dyer......................TO Hanlon................Nellie Hartman............LJ Perkins...................KW Wing,.......................J BDavis....................J C Bullock..............................CJ VassTir...........................W L Gifford...................Dwight E Hotige________....General Road Fuud.A H Cosner........................^ Ciurent Expense Fund.J cBuiiwk!;!!;!;!!****!!*!Cnas Hahn...............ThdsM Tabbr::vr;.v;*;..,.;Wm H Dew......................Win H Dew....................General Road Fund.W P Bounds.....................Current Expensfe Fund.CTStrnnahan................................John J Kennedy.....................Booth & Sheehv..................Booth & Sheeh'y............D C Wrighler..............J F Rice claim 572.20 allowedM McAulcy.....................................Jas S Jacks claim 5*562-50 F KRisley& Son*...,............HwHibbs.C G Hall........................McGilverv & Seeley........ Roy Wdktr......................Teller Corporation...............Clearwater Fuel Co.............Parrott & Co............ ,l.Hiwiston Tribunt.......................J I Campb^dl.-....................... Teller Corporation..........Lester S ulloxved Whcelock Eewiston-( road, and In the matter of the petition of V. Crabtree ct al for a herd district in part of Spalding precinct, and the i monstrance of E. S. Hickman et 5 hearing is had on said peti monstrance and same is remonstrance ayer of the petitioners is and it shall be unlawful for any person to let anv horses, cattle, mules, asses, swine, sheep or goats run any time of the year, within tor>* above described, from and days from date hereof, ng bids arc opened for con* of a bridge across OrofinoSw-eetxvater creek; Geo1 1 Dm Bros………………bondsmen 5266000 and the concrete piers for 511 90 F D Stotler…………sscssor per cubic yard. Chas Hockenson,mg re- Por building the Sweetwater bridge, 0on the
large at i territo'Xvl:uction < ling I creek and 1 auk BidofCc ach. ‘ build superstructr 5266000 and thei per cubic yard. John Walker...............Current Expense i L D Strong.....................George Earue.... Star Dray Co..,., DeWinter &Goudz warrant 29523..., Joseph Storcr..?., Geo E Erb.. $ 500 12 W 1136 00 9 00 Arthur j Stuart, dis clerk. B F Sliaxv, constable......J M MoHov, judge.........Harry Lydon. judge............. W J Hester, clerk.Kc:Fullerton,Frank 1) Boise, con E A Hicks, judge..er. Judge bondsmen having 1 board March 241I particularly once t ihc above named ’ of lilevl with this )io. The board5:i3.5o 1 takenr ot the facts alxnc set X declare the otSce of ete piers $1^. r building Sweetwater bridge 5109S.00. T lid of Security Bridge company to G section 16 Twp! U^N.°R thence south one mile, thence ea 1 the matter of the petition of Geo w. Dilletal for a herd district in a .and dematidctl that $ 662 16 part of Mason precinct, a.s provided by onier of record dec! 395 50 law, bounded and de.scribed as follows:1370 00 Co 150 <375 < J75J '?5^ 56 »5 scssor andfurther fact^i:S^r^=v“l^ Si; 5V^bondsmen appeared before the boanl : Bid of A. .M.board enter an O.'-ofino bridgedaring the offi ..............................sscssor and ex-officio Ux col comer of; vacant W. b: M., Mrs. Sadie K hrec is granted relief forth, they build superstructure of Orofino brulge Thos H D 52765.00 and the concrete pie ^ rd. and the Sv '■P- 33 b^r nccessarie : miles Following lughs......................aude Mortimore..................k'Yuen Dong................................GoldnerT..........................of .A. M. Vandyke to build the o P Branson claim*|40*^ aliu <4592.00 . I lowed..................CW Booth................•....*’.‘*LBartlett Lumber Cobid of the Colmlibia Bridge Com- collector panyj>eing considered the lowest and; bid offered Orofino brii
R. 3 W. Ethe southsjW. a M.; thence north, Cuic north west corner of T J Pea………………. 33 N. R- 2 W. B. M.; T D Hartnett… thence ea.st three miles to the northea.st Kenneth R Hill corner of section 16, Twp. 33 N. R. 2 L F Williams. W. B. of beginning. c::6^me J V Wilk
and|^l^^Xre50-^oofSJl
rufind Lo.lge No.* 00 F n1.‘'1‘oV*ioof
Cole''”^”'LeBaron*.lerai Ro^d‘*Fund *‘ I Smathers,……………‘HerRondNo;:^:'
m J Grovcclosc…….:,Bridge-Fund.92 75 ; W L .Abner……….11 8o‘ Current Expense Fund.3 20 ‘F W Lewis…………………..I…..12 65 DeWinter & Goudzward.;•a 00 J Alexander Co………………………os. & K claim 51jard………….Idson…..sviston’*.*.dug*’*’
lann Bros. .F L BrownLong claini' ^6 75 ’- ’ i N C^^^nuU………………………………. 4JooAJEr)ckarco.-;:;;;or.i. Clerk of the District Chas F .Man r and Re- Hotel DeFr o appoint Hotel DeFrance….,,at a salary of ! Samuel B Chase……and after tlmjj M Fairley……………ving completcil Orofino^Tnidi'ng' *Co. ing the construction 1 5164.75 allowed…..to the court homse, ■ H;iaser fie Holcnstein. for ,thc sum C W Dov.ns…………………..
' B S Rugg, trustee !) WHoLsc. …….:ic______100127 00 IT A Grinolds………..6 Illi W G^Rami^^^3 00 R W Cook…………………………….iChas Stcnzel…………24 45 George Gcrtje………..IK E Sparks……………….II 70 : Chas Dent……………121 09! Lrwisfei? Printing;* &Wg 54 57 ! Lelaml loxlgc No. 90 I O (
45 00 1 Whereas, Frank W. Ke t8 lo ; liftm F. Kettenbach. J. j 60 00 O. A. Kjos. on March 100 00 with this Ixoar 21 55 in writing.
6’ 00 Chas Shobbroo 9 00 j District Road No. i. Star Shoeing Co…………….
– 3 oo 'C F Brown………………….. . .I .0 John Speck………………
1000 Wells Kenyon………to 00 Bridge Fund.
1000 Wegner fic Rucks……IJ 00 Craig & Stuart*5 00 Ramey Lumber Co…..10 00 : Twill City Lumber Co. 10 00 Tiede Lumber Co……8 00 : Bartlett Lumber Co….. Orofino Electric Co….8 00 . Peckham & Co………………9 00 ' Wegner & Rucks…………..15 00 James C Gillespie…………10 00 Carlson Lumber Co,…4 oo;HMLockxvoo6 w ibt of the jojRcs, Cha-s H M ……………………….12 00 cleikn and constables of the election J V Wilks, oonstablc..examined and al- JohiYTliain, j'udge_____Arthur Srdmcr.^'d^ : 6 00 Naomi Reed, clerk…. 6 00 Tvna Wat-son. clerk Richardson5 59! Jesse32 15,, A A V33 90 Loni^
m
t Expense Fund, arquetle. judge… judge………….
rhile. clerk…., lor, Dis. clerk..ct more, judge…..JO , M ;rion W^kburo’.^ ci«k!!20 ; Hiram Allier, clerk_______47'D K Piipinger. dis. clerk.•••”•…………….. . 00 I J M McFatbicn: constable.orge having completeil his • A D Hunter, judge.:………..
of <200.00 is H F Chn ‘Of road dis- propnau-a for Tf nBakor; roads in road district No. 62. Robert '; Mrs. M. Welch, a county indigent, is O w Cli-derisan afidilional depu <75.00 per month fi date.Booth &'Sheehy their contracr of a Ixaseinen warrant is orderetl dr of 5988.00 in full of -un Icr sai«l contract. [Day nl relief in i for the qucounty indigent, is le sum of $15.00 per rlerby an order for ansferred f 1 F M Remington, CjNorbo claim1 ioweertJ Schultz….W^FGa^gili.*.*.*.*.*.*:.Joseph FW Rond district No. 6cWaJtin'BoyeL*.*.*:.**. CE Walker……..W C Osl>orne…….J P Welch…………………Francis M Taylor….Herman Weinman.. Snyder clain
Ft^diMud RVii:;;;;Ouis Lynch……….N Rogers.,…………W H Gage………HP Hanson……..Following reports 'are e^mined and approved:
Resignation of W. S. Dyer os janitor cf the court house is examined and ac­cepted.I Leachman is appointe– :bvtl.c■irattor.,c>^ have Ibis .inyapneare.l; J.ames ,S. Jacka. aascaaor, in the sum i A L Chap.nin. conami.40 OO j known antecexlents. ^ before
the lioard and dernandcal that of <5iXf0.oo B Kiniie imlgeFourth Day April 14. ; they be relea.send wed:
40
75 I the ap|X)intment of J. 1. Long as over- :
and c:176 00 seer district No. 29 is not granted. taken 121 00 J Following claims arc e.xaraincd and ; ers Wing, Day 32 5^'allowed: _. | here*Jlowed_ Distrset Road Na 3.89 50 ; Peter J Konen………….(Joseph P Konen………….52 ob! Current Expense Fu
20 75. Geo W Wilken……………116 00.'Geo W Wilken…………24 00; Geo W Wilken…….20 00! General Road Fund35 00! G D Cordell………………
02 00IJM Rice………………………….1500 Chris Dicterlc.,..*…59 00 G Riggs………………47 50^ E O Rice…………………..and Alvin Rice………………liam Plank
collector iient. Cnd Bullock concur rent expense fund in favoxand Goudzward for $36.oo m ucu 01 sam n r Fifth Day April I5. * lost, destroyerl or stolen warrant. : M FAt this lime Chas. Hahn is granted an In the matter of the application of i George H Court, clerk..KettenJ>ach. William F. Ket- i C L Fitzsimmons, clerk.45 tary toilet fixtures in the bisement of for ralease’frtm^iu%u?4ci*liihi1i^-” oil! A 31 64, the court hou.«^. the official liond of>mes S. Jacks! as- S F Pedigo, jmlge22 25 j Following lx>nds are examined amUams^ir.of, , 1 V – X- on official bond of James S. Jacks as Jno S Klaus, clerk.,.7 4, I …….——–^strict No. 30. assessor and ex-officio tax collector, Lornict No. 33 (<35000.00). In die alxivc entitle Tracy Haranic, a county ntcrl relief in the sum of f oversee! In the matter of the remonstrance ’ E. S. Hickman et al again herd di.strict out of a part, after due consideration .. len, dis clerk.. Stacy Wagner, constable,the entry of an order herein on . P A Snyder, judge. ._____h. 1910. taking sime under ad- J F Carrico, judge.......o„ April-eating a sufficient l>onds conditioned upon his 1 Fred II Judd, clerk………….Spalding faithful performance by him of his duties ' Clark R Christie, dis clerk
20 00. J V Wilks, overseer tlistrict No. 33 (<35000.00). In die alxn20 ^ j L E Williams, overseer d istrict No. 18. ter since the entry of an order herei8 00) John Senter, overseer district .Vo. 6i. April 14th, 1910, 4 00 H W Nelson, overseer district No. 55. viscnient, said Jai65 ^ ‘he matter of the remonstrance of on April 15th 19Undigeni» assessor and hich iKinds ha^ i* this boardof the court houMMlix for liquor u May 1st 1910 c luted.Following claims are examined alloweti: Harry Frost....................James M Jackson..........: , for the quarter. >wing claims ar illowed:General Road Fund.i'TS'E Simoutoii’. e L Fabrique
-officio 4ax collector, Chris Chrislcnfen. c been duly approved , Ellis Tuckey, . Judge day. it is therefore John Tribble, judge, enbach. Jesse N Jacks, jut jos and A R Lough, clerkhemse,ereb)i willia'ni;G'a’mblepetition of , william Varner, judge, for the ere- John E Bush, judge… district out C S Myers, clerk………..
ordered that said Frank W. Kettenbach. Jesse N JackL JudgeW illiam F. Dettenbach, O…………………………………… ’ * 'andc ……………….. – ______________________to arise J w liobwn, constable
_ Carper.^“W^uirFrank Wdkeii H C W’ilken.. C L W’cgner.. Fred Si blow.. Herman SdfiovM L Keyuli.is GcoWC Hr.n
Eeaiifi: Co,…77;;:: Lookout Hdw Co……Ziemann Bros & Hochti
sum of 56.00 per preci .uarterhy an order for , granteil.ccessaries. . In the nialtcr of the petition of V. VMrs, N. Han.son, a county indigent, is Crabtree et al for a herd district in a: Cuw.rS AK.:.u..emined and ^ lows: Beginning on the section line be- be ami they are < tween sections I9 and 20 township 36 N. any further liabi :R. 4 W. B M. where the same inter-, under said official bonds.$ 36 25 • sects the Clearwater river; thence north In the matter of the ; to the northwest corner of section 17, Stephen R. Witters ct al ‘ 10 00 ; township 36 N. R. 4 W. B. M.; thence atioii of a rural high school di.strict out C S Myers,39 60 east two miles; thence north two miles; of School districts Nos. 51. S4. 47 and 78 Al Reina. derk 21 00 thence cast three and one-halt miles to and 66. said petition is examined and Lewis Rexna, dis elcrk21 60; west boundary line of the Northern Pa- approvta.1 axd pursuant to an act of the J W’ Clark, constable..,loi 20 cific Railway Company's right of iray in legislature approved March 11th. 1907, A J Hill, judge.................22 40 section 6. township 36 N. R. 3 W'. B. M. it is hereby ordered that the question of; Julian Dobson, judge..46 95 thence south along the west line of said forming such rural high school district 'James weeks, judge...,th range be and the same is hereby submitted to C R wiley, elerk,.............St; thence the qualified electors of s.iid school dis-. w S Cunningham, cler le.nrwater tricts aWe named, to be held at the J B Dicks^m, dis clerk.. . long the school house in the village of Culdesac J R Fknkhouser, constableriver to in school district Nq,^^51, on Saturday Walter Frye, judge.................ig. all in Spalding pre- May 21st 1910, and it is further ordered James D Ellis, ju.,e Is considered and the that the clerks of the several disuicls J T
20 15 I petition, that due notice was given ac- revised cmle-Of Idaho, and that one of Bi^trice Riley, dis clerk 7 25 cording lo law. E. S, Hickman appear- said notices shall be posted at the school John F Hunt, constable 82 35 j «n person and by his antorncy,. Clay house in school district No. ^1. CL Matlock, judge17 6o|McNamee. to protest against tlic cre Following claims arr ’ ' —————- *37 55 I ttiion of a herd district out of the terri- allowed;17 95 tory ttliove described, and filed a re- District Road No. 49.
44 75 ^ Nam8 00 Fran14 00'J Milton Boren… 6oo,C WGreen…….u ^jw Asuwwi.-;:.-;9 00 f Frank Gaffney.,.15 00 j John Scott…………….27 0OiCL Matlock…..
l7 5o;jC Kaubic…….10 00 : John W^ .Snyder. 4
2ooo‘^uUN W^bite… 2698; Carter Robinson.. 8 o5' W J Todd……………
lo' line between rrr^thelwe^eander line of73 30 22 70 place of l>cg lp9 Toj cinct. Tlie
inlersectic
uthweste he Clear
man. constable.m’g…………………….Marckel, juilge……………..) Mabb<,u. judge.............. 00 6 WIS 6 006 00 Nathaniel G Looney, d 6 00 P.1U1 Johnson, judge............. li'6 00 S E Manriiig, clerk................6 00 W'K Baird, dis clerk...........6 00 MEMockler, comstable..ISJ 6 00 W’ M Chandler, clerk..,.,6 CO W' H Shaw, dis blerlr.....,6 00 Daniel Delaney, consUtble. .SO E A Jones. - 00 E K Gdl. c 6 00 TR W’oodward, dis clerk.6 00 TheophilusHarlson,constable6 00 John B Collins, judge...............6 00 Ed Harper, Judge............6 00 Geo S Montgomerv, judge..4 50 John Gaffnev. clerk....................6 00 M A KlHs. clerk.......................:6 00 Jrcob Gisel, disclerk.......L Harper, constable. WMJcachler, judge........6 00 .A L Etter, judge...........................6 00 Peter J Konen. judge................6 00 Albert Carbuhn, clerk......6 Aaron J Darr, clerk.............6 00 Edgar Evans, dis clerk......6 00 Roy Hoffman, constable.....6 00 Geo Gamble. Judge.................VS.6 00 w E Hoeppner,clerk............6 00 Charles Dixon, clerk........ :;x 22871 Carl A Teitze, Labor22872 Charles Talbott, Ubor Current Expense Fund.22924 Walter Dana, witness District Road No. 21.22910 61 50 91 75 8 OO 910 Geo Meachiin, labor, claim 22927 T M Davis, blackamithing 5 50 22860 P K Rice/labor 7 30District Road No. 2, >22859 James Matlock. Ubor 6 00 Distrfet Road No. 9. .22861 Fred Esterbrook, labor 15 50___________ ^ „ ____'22S62 John C Gillespie, labor , 6 00for the quarter. j 22863 C D Banks, labor 8 00
Mrs. J. T. Rouden, $15.00 per month 12286*1 Willie ^mltz. labor 40 00
for the quarter. } District Road No. 13.Mrs. Mary Jackson, $15.00 per month ^ 22865 Lorenzo Lowary, Ux refund S 72 (or t^ quarter. | District Road .No. 17,Mrs. Sarah Montrose, $12.00 per month 22736 George Hamel$12.00736 George Hamel, labor 736 Jay Ricketts, Ubor month 22738 M F Boyd, Ubor for'the quarter. . 22739 Wilbert Waite, UborChas. P. Manning and family. -$15.00 ! 22740 A S Warlick, Ubor per month for the quarter. 22M5 Flovd Ogle, laborJulius Meisel. $10.00 per month for the'22740 ASWarl;22W5 Flovd Ogle,. District RDad No. 19. 22867 W E Marckel, Ubor. I District Road No. 20.N A Emrich, labor, Mell call
for bids for the construction of
the Erick Olson ct al road in road district 59 accordihg to plans and specifications on file in this office, requiring that all bids shall be filer all bids la re­served by the Board of County Com­missioners.By order of the Board of County Commissioners. Ken Perce County, Idaho.
^ .90 per cubic yard substructure.to House Bill No. 69, 1909 Laws, approved March 15th
and ordered opened At this time warrant No for $4.50 ^i^ 1
Notice Is hereby given that j bids will be received by the signed, for the construction of Erick J Olson Road in road dUtrlct No. 69
Crockett: said bids wm be ^op^cned^and con-
witli the ColumbU Briege Co. for the construction oi the Orofino bridge forthe sum of $2660.00 for the superstruc-j Ruble is oracrea cancelico. ,i and $11.90 per cubic yard for tne j ^The sum of $99.00 U
d March 15^ appli^tfon^'^w? Snd of J. B. j ible bidder. All work to be doneIdaho Revised Nelson for renewal of ferry license to I according to plans and specifications i at this time operate Denore ferry is approved and | on file In this office. Each proposalmust be accompanied by a certified check for five per cent of Its amount, I payable to J. B. Davis, ChairmanMrs. Millie Cuttlcr, $24.00 per for the quarter. ♦ IBen Anderson, $6.00 per monthMor 2J907 lueii narunousc, the quarter. District Road No. 38.In the matter of the petition of C, R. 22912 Prank Armcnt. 1 Davis et al for a change in the boundar- District Road No. 33.Hesof schpol district No. ' “
I school
labor
, and section 2118 ______Codes, Vol. I. the board at this time 1 operate Denore ferry is approved proceeds to fix the annual salaries of the Keense granted. /everal county officers, except the county The application and bond of E. B.. ittomey, to be elected at the next gen- Follette for renewal of ferry license to! payi 22 25 I eral election for the term commencing | operate Evans ferry U appro^'ed and | Hoa iccnsc granted Tbcapp-
. 13 affecting 22873 W D Wilks. Ubor disUict No. 54 the same is con-122874 Clyde Clovis, supp recommendationme IS con-j,i ion of Etta t, the pray- ^ iClyde Clovis, supplies District Road No. 39.:ight, Ubor *- Uborled'from school district No. 54 and j District Road No. 40. exed to school district No. 13, "to- ! 22878 O T^ddington, labor Beginning near the southeast; 22879 C A Smith. Ubor r of sectiotf 2, township 32 N. R. 2 , District Road No. 43.
M. where the reservation line 22880 A L Harper, overseer
jtcraects said section lit ‘ – …………..—> the northeast corner bjP 33 N. R. 2 w.me mile to the northwest corner of j District Road No. 45. a 35 township 33 N. R. 2 w. B. M. 22884 L E Slalnaker, labor £ south one and one-half miles to 22885 Wellman-McRoberU / reservation line; thence easterly supplies tig said jeservaUon line to place of DUtrict Road No. 46. winning. j 22886 Harry ^I time County Attorney Dwight i 22887 George e u granted a leave of absence 22888 WillUn I :^ix^ the SUte and from the County U a period of six weeks.
At this lime bids are opened for the on of the ladies toilet room in
^ ^' on toe second Monday in January 1919 00 Clerk of the district court and ex-officio auditor and
.20 25 Assessor and ex-officio tax5 00 collector…………………………… 2000 (County Ueawer……………… 1500 (Probate Judge…1500 ( County supermtendent pub-19 00 Probate 11 00 County 10 00, lie instruction
3 05‘Scoranc. 16 00 Commissi
lion and bond of DanielI Board County Commlsslonera, of Nez Perce county Idaho, which shall be forfeited to the^^unty itrac?for*1 bo forfe ^ the,, bidder refuse* enter into wTiAt tWs'time the bond of B. F.^ work aa per term* of hi/propoial.
Following cUims are examined and | deposit certified check In 60 percent allowed; j of contract price for completion ofi ll 251 speeffleati^^/’^ The right to* rejectas45 701 By order of the Board of County I Commissioner*, Nez Perce County 57, « Idaho. .By W. E.< DAGGETT, Deputy. Bxpense Fund. B. M.; thence; 22883 John Holscr. labor hwest corner of , Distnet Road No. 45. I 22886 Harry Wray, Ubor------ - W Shirk, U1..Hodge is granted a leave of absence 22888 WillUm Ball, labor^------------ , - ^ . 22889 J WLong, laborDistrict Road No. 47. Mkrtopened completion of the ladies toilet S the basement of the court house and 2239222913 JackSm District Road^^Uken under advisement.At this time the auditor is directed to " v^f^raw a warrant on the bond interest &* toe!to pay the semi-annual i $85,000.00of $2125.00 crest on the refunding bonds due Jul/lst, Johnson, labor Douglas Bonner, Ubor Mike Smith, labor ith, lilabor I No. 53.Miller. Ubor . Disrrict Road No. 55.22894 H W Nelson, overseer District Read No. *56.1910. 22895 Fred I^ewis, laborAt this time the clerk is directed to ! 22896 Warner Danibls. labor rail forbids for the construction cf a 22899 Cliff Davis. Ubor . bridge across Little Canyon creek ou the,! District Road No. 59.N>H Carter road in road district 17 ac-i 22898 Melvin Beard, labor specifications on; 22899 Herbert Aiken, labor' ’ ——-Mben Simpson, laborWatson, labor .
allowed.District R tax collector, Commission- ■ spects lived op to and completed thebeing in favor of {terms of his contract covering the con-
– ___. __________r toe assessor and jstruction of toe I. S. SpUwn road the; ex-offido tax collector, therciore|2000.C0 • auditor is directed to draw a warrant for
91 73 iUherebj* declared to be toe saUiy of 1 the sum of $163.00 in favor of Wm. H. i the assessor and ex-offido tax collector i Dew as payment in full of baUnce due i the second under said contract. The auditor U di- I 4.,^ treasurer thelated by Daniels 8c xn of ' ^.00 donatedic purpose ofounty in defraying the expenses. r controct w6rk ou the I. S SpUa
iio zo (ur. iN'«rr ;
9 00 ; and ex-offido tax collector, Commission- i I ers Davis and Bullock being in favor of {
4 50 ,msaUr>' of $2000.004orr
60 40 county poor 10 60 j The certificate of indigencj- of J. 10 60 SanGarde is examined and app 15 10 and the aaid indigent granted tern relief iu the sum of $20.00 by anj-i'cd, ;a
3 OO'fornewswriw”''^^^ I the P. K.rr i certificate of indigency of ^uise [ d^Sarid*T"puWic *highJSy°^d55 10 HartAVig is examined and approved, and ordered onened.
cording
tb plans and specifications on; 22899 Herb file in this o^. Bids to be received up 122900 Alb« to May 21st, 1910 at 10 o’clock A. M., [22901 Jim ^ at which time bids rill be opened and j 22902 S A contract awarded ible bidder.clowest respons-{22904 j L Hollingshcad, Ubot ' The resignation of L. McKinney as] Gciun.1 Road Fund, justice of the peace weippe precinct is [22866 C L Nelson, labor examinwl and accepted. ! 22^05 Emil Horsman, laborFollowing reports of justices of the j 22V08 Fr«l 0>b
X910 fish and game licenses.for Wellman-McRoberts Co. . .
-t In lrjUtCall al the IdleHourforagoodamoke. toe Tom Keene for instance. -i-ivl
TTnIted States Land Office.Xdab« May 4 1910Sokict i* bereby glrrn tliat UJ)STEVE KOTARSia ;sOf Orofino, Idaho, who on May 6/
T. H. BARTLETT.
nwigktB. WhmmUHskOROFINO
Piesce .City timber belt and mtning BmU^Oppttg^r
IDAHOnatural mtnsay to thg. Pamons acarwater ^ i oomprit&g the Nexper^ Ptoirieuie
Gearwatcr Livery and F^dWHEELOCK & OPPUGER,Driving Teatns, SadtUe and Pack Horses^mi^^J^^r Fumipted an Short Notice.OROFINO – – –
Nebaho Lumber €cr
HartAvig is examined and approved, and ordered opened, ………..
the wid indigent ^ant^ temporary re- The ySLrs report on toe Henry ^ Goldn^ road is e^2^ed and approv3 fThe certificate of indigency of Mra. |Ida Casse'tto is exanWned and
and the said indigent is gran iu the snm of $12.00 jper month .v. .quarter by an order tor necessaries. * |The clerk is directed to call for bids for toe construction of a bridge across Lapwai creek near Sweetwater postoffice requiring that all bldf be filed prior to May'21st 1910 at 2 o’clock P. M., at which time said bids will be opene toe satisfaction of Groseclose has in
J- A; RoUTr<»d, the I HiltWaicriikV not granted.12 45 < said W. J. Groseclose s hereby released ^t this time the bond of Tohn 7 05 1 from any further liability und^saidcon- I . No. 29 1909 Uxes is examined s On recommendation o assessor and ex-offido tax < lowing erroneous tax sale certificates are! ordered cancelled, lo-wit: Cert. No.) c254 for 1905; Cert. 408, 447 and 185 for General Road Fund.1906; 377 and 692 for 1908, and toe and- [f Vincent..........................'....... • 2 00 ,iter is directed to make the necessary f P K Carter............. .................. 2 00entries showing the same are cancelled. | Chris Fredcrickson....... 2 00ioo3 00 160 00Robert Heutiger...............73 75At this time, idler reading andapprov- le minutes of todays meeting the board adjourns sine die. - | Attest: of thn vi«n« rapon onirte/Hcl^S ell, et .1 road in ro«Vl P. R. Seidel, bid 11250.00.to-«rit:! ^o®; j Booth & Sheeey, bid $4S0.00. *r*«» TheWdof P. R. Seidel being the Robert Hentlger................. •li I Seidel for the sum of $250.00 In the matter of the peiiHo »n- Michaelsoncl >al for a bri
7 05 i from any further liability under said
Merrill HouseOroftno. Idaho
Good Accommodations / *Convenient Sample Roor^
Home Cooking Only
i‘H.;dOTre[Um^n-M?Robm.Ca!!.’.'k H«rt………………ijbth Day April 19.
Huramond, * county
ed relief in the sum c
lonth for the quarter by
ecessaries.In the matter of the petition of H. eifert el al for the creation of a
21 95 It appearing to the board that many of10 85 I the public roads across Indian lauds20 49 having not been esUblisbed according 5 25 to law, and that whereas, heretofore th?11 15 ! board requested that Miles S. Johnson. 2 95 {Esq., to render services as an attorney 7 00 jin adjusting said Indian, road matters,‘II^ J5 i Kiry time to said road21 00 ! ivhtrea.4, the said mile _ ^ ,
, ,, . ‘ already rendered services in sa«; now. therefore, it appearing_____of $10.00 ^ I to the »card to employ the aaid Miles an order – fori jobnwn,“toe auditor is hereby direci
giving toe vncces- mailers. and that le.sS. Johnson has services in said mailers,
to
draw a warmtirant on the currrent ex­pense fund in favoc of the said Miles & Johnson in the sum of $100.00 for serv­ices rendcret et al to have George Holliday ing…………………………………….nted consuble for Cheslcy precinct f Ralph CUlland, consUble fees..i is not granteti.’ . . ; E Eastman, county aid…………v The resignation of Martin Carlson as J R Standley, ficla deliuty as-Jjttstfce of the peace for Upwai precinct; scssor……………………..
;s examined and acceptei. i T N jacks,,field deputy' On petition A. J. Lucas is appointed Vm Eapy, quarantine expense justice of the peace for Lapwai preciuct. Bollinger Hotel, meal for jury Following reporu are examined and Brii^c Fund.% approved: ^ W R ^int, lumber…………:| ► C. T. Stranahan, overseer county E^Brickwn,plumber…………..L. GiTord, auditors’ fee report. j General Road Fund.O. Hanlon,T)robate judge. ' U G Holmes, damages on roail
r. L. Gifford, auditors quarterly re- Beall & eompany, grader blades ’■^onowing c.in.. ara ,„d '"raSi.Co, .upplira.
Onpeliti et al for { in roadE. D. Briggs. . _hrincr to view out and
said road E- D. Brijtgs,Hancr are appoii Ution of Pat Scully et al for the out of a public road iu road district No.Following claims are examine allowed: V District Roa^bNo. 12
Roy Whttlockr>zbur:7.r;.;^:….;x District Road so. 45. 4 ’Orofino Trading Co supplies…… 325 00 Orofino
Feed ir Sale Stable^—-
«*LUUe0^yoD‘^r«^^ • ii ,, I. W. ScOtt, PrOpfittOT. -Jf
Lee Phiime>*. damages on road. 75 00 Current Expense Fund.
Geo. A. Manning, rent for,
29^$ 45 00 Fretl Mowry, Wiu e.s;………. 2 25IDA McKinney, wuue^………….. 2 2519 60 Phil Wyman, v/itnefis…………… 2 25• At this time the auditor Is directed to draw a warrant on the general road fund in the sum of $75.00 in favor of Ue Phinuey being toe amount of money that W.1S agreed upon as Nez Perce county’s share of the $150.00 that was
paid to the said Lee Phinney for right of way across his laud. The other $75.00 having been raised* by the dtizeus of Culdesac.E. D. Briggs. H. I. Lynn and I.
Markham arc appointed viewers on the petiUon of J. H. Mocklcr et al for the Uyitfg out of a public road in road dis-
w|„w..wx4. and contract awarded 'to the j I lowest i*«iponsible bidder. All work to
' •1“S‘33:ploRORNO.< 3.55 check for five per cent of its amount, whicli shall be forfeited to the count if the bidder refuses or into a written contractper terms of his proposal. ________bidder to furnish surety bond in full i amount of his bid, or deposit certified check in 5o per cent of coptract price for completion of contract acccording to plana and specifications. Each proposal must sUte the time in which the work 15i.81 18 50 10 00no 4 09 13 76 30 3850 00i 50 00 60 50. 20 00 74 6015 65 19 50 claims are examine andRoad Fund. ^daim^.5.^'Illowicd./.T.‘.^.’7P C Nicholto i, overseer $104 00 W H Young, overseer labor.....Expense Fund Current Expen>=e Fund.Haminund, county aid 10 00 Miles S. Johnson, Attorney………….Rgad No. 27. fees, Indian road matters…’. 100 00£86:4 George Richardson, labor 35 F M Fox, judge of election 1908 ' 8"0022869 Fred Schetzle. labor 59 CO At this time toe clerk is directed to
Eleventh Day April 22.Tlie clerk is directed to call for bid.s
for the construction of a bridge across Mission creek about onc-half mile above Slickpoo post office, bids to be received up to May 21st I9IO at 11 o’clock A. M. at which time bids will be opened and contract awarded to the lowest respons-
ibl* bidderThe clerk is directed to call for bids
for the improvement of a change in the N. H. Carter roatl in road ent a rerj tran- «nll winter. She had raroly been free trom Irritation for so long a period.For a week or two at Christmas ahe kad been a good deal tried by a rlslt town her son. who, to her surprise, brought his cousin, George Lumley, with him. That orer. she setUed down again te her books, her fancy-work, of which she was rather proud, her game of whist with some old Grafs and Bai^ one attached to the lltUe court, some of whom had dabbled In diplomacy and eren spent a few years In London,' and tosQuent visits to the opera, for almost her ^ly real pleasure was mu-^Jf. ate months before, Bdra lflavine
missed her when she
was ab«mnt for a couple of days, the Idea of parting with her now would lave struck her with dismay. She had aoftened gradually but considerably— to gradually that Hope Desmond had to look back'and recall her drst Im- ; preasloas to measure the change.The weather was fine, the sky bluei and sunshlhe beantifled all things. It ■eem^ Im^blb not to partake of the general exhllaraUon which pervad­ed the atmosphere. Yet Mtsi Saville’s fapresslon, if less hard, was Infinitely Mdder than formerly, ‘and. though Miss Desmond’s eyes were calm, and her air composed, there were shadows beneath the former and a somewhat worn look la her expressive face. She was Ihl^. too. as If she had borne some mental stteln.It was aftepioon. and the Champs- Elysees were crowded with streams of SQuIpages pouring out to tjie Sola Stemming this current, Mrs!^ Savllle and Hope returned from their earlier drive, and on arriving at the hotel found another open carriage drawn up at the entrance, from which a gor- dy was leaning while
•maU •T Who sayr
«l^of old dMd. and letui* In th.aap^dalljr abont U>«
toeelyr It wonid answer all pur;^3”j.’sr-«s.r2's
rather want a ohaneron. it wffl not
**Hew fortunater she cried. •TIero, pn the door; let me out!** And she sprang upon the ground.“My dear Mra. Sarllle. I odiy beard by the merest accident that yon were . In Parte. We ^ye been at Pan for two monthe. and are on our bomo.-"Oh, Indeed,- returned Mrs. Sayllle, nither dryly, ae ahe descended Tery de- J^tely and anbinltted to bo klaaed by her yonng Wend. “l am sorry for, ^r poor father. Why could yon not IM him rest In peace amon( Ue tur­nips and manael-wurieler: •“Why. I must thlnt of myself, yon know. How do yon do. Hopef I «n ao (lad to see yon! 1 cant eay yon are lookln, rery flo.rt.hlnt I peso yon ara eonitnc la. «> I oan pay
ron hare yonr old roomi. Mra. 8a^
^10 Mrs. Seville’s tpurtmeots. -I don’t ?5 ,mmder*t your looking wlwn^- Bm lanslmd m>d eh^ h«^^ Ton. aie eomforubl. eaonsh hare,
“Well, daar Mra Sarllle, and how
for nearly a month. Lady StyliT^ gnlto^ flood-nalnr^L Then aJTu.^ tho girls ceme over to Csstleton. but four ton permuuled George l^y to go with him to Dresden. A gr^i^ taker CaptainXumley was when he retnrned-eald It wmI^ forgotten holt! I met at Pau"~^te., etc. And Mias turned on a rapid flow 6t goaslp./^
«^e^^^^hM.htof,.daPSll«ce on the part of Mra Savffla while Iftei Dacra sipped her tea.“Whan do you come baek to Lon- Ion. Jtei.;aavlller “Not thin rm. I may go to Ingle- fleJd in the antumxL“ n soppoM you know RJehard Is
be verylala- “Miss D«nnc do as she likes.T 3 «bd any other chapertm
Hope did not answer and It was ai^ r^rt that Mies Dacr. ehonld call forher fsTortte confldante that otinla* en rente for the theater.
"Yea, certainly.-
or tntweat, or both, ean do so for a man. M^ldmUh, a. .a thla Im what emblttara aw most U my son's contemptuone dlarecard of me. 'Pe marry without a word of noUco, an at- Vmpt to win my consent, was ia' to-“Bnt Mra. SavUla. If I may venture to speak on a subject eo near your heart, do yon pot think that the hope- leaeneia of gaining your consent hold him baek from making the attempt?"“It ehonld have held him baek also from such ungrateful disobedience- He knew he would break-no. not breai my heart-mine It not th. kind ol heart which breaks-but harden II with a hardneea that pains, with a ^ ladeecrtbablt aching.- And ehs praaaed her hand on her bosom.“Oh, yea. It waa wronr-terrtbly wrong," cried Hope, and thsre was a sound of tean In her voice, “but yon know yonr ren'e nature. Rightly or wrongly, he loved this girl with all hie heart, and ahe waa alngnlarly desolate • friendleea, pennUesa How could he desert her, bilng the man he 1st how could he help her effeotnany save aa her hnihandt It waa Imprndent. I w, and very wrong, hut not nnpar- ibla Dear Mrs. Savllle, think how
80METHIWQ FOR EVERYBODT
'n^«^rp!^l!
not surprised that Hugh had nt '«• with her: Hugh ^•• ™Hope listened with norvona attan- Uon, growing alternately rad and
feared to utter s word that might of-
“I am ahraya doomed to dlsappolnt- "»•o^w^ont her ttonghta “There Is Richard; he
Of men. I would have i
b^ parted from you as he Is. and oh. think of the sad future of self-reproach and re­gret you are creating for his unhappj“Do not talk such senUmental rub hish to me. Hiss Desmond. It U nol like your usual quiet good sense. Hat Mr. Rawton placed you with me to Plead Hugh’s cause? Jf so, H ta wast ed Ingenuity. I wHI not be talkedwhile dilation.'“Probably he fears it would only
Qbitter you were he to try,**“No; It is pride and obsUnacy. He baa something of my own nature. How rood I waa of him once!“-And ao yon wOl be again.- cried Hope, cheerfully. “Fpollih, faulty, he may be. but he .haa done, nothing un- worthy of a man of honor. Doea a marriage of affection IncapaelUfte a man from distinguishing* hlmaelf In his profession? Do you not bellevi that when the heart Is saUsfled and at rest, the Intellect works more freelj and clearer’“And do you think that the heart will long rest satisfied when the lot of Its owner Is poverty and obscurity? Thera, that la enough. I win not hear excuses or pleading for my son. If I thought Mr. Rawson suggested such In­terference. I would beg you to leave at once.““Which I can do to-morrow. If you wish.- said Hope, her pale cheek Audi. pSiSlt »be spoke with aMre. Savllle Unghed. “Ton know I ehonld not Ilka yon to lesve mp” she said, more genUlIy than Hopo once thought the could ever speak. “Nor The
wind gangs on shipboard regia tere up to 105 mllea an hour, which Is as much speed as anyone expects.
A discarded automobile Ure makes a good life preserver. Its buoyancy U Judlclent to keep several persona afloat. According to the United States18 UWes. baaed on the prt___growth, the popnIaUon of New York City wUI be 9.000.000 In IJSO. Man­hattan leland wlU then have t.OOO.OOO.Slam has adopted the gold stanu- ar^ which really waa promulgated In 1908. and henceforth the unit of the Slamew monetary syatem will haye a ralue oQual to 65.8 centigrams of pure- Baltlmoro'a lehool board i»s under consideration the fluestlon of allowing corporal punishment In the pubUo
ichools.- The subject has been referred to ^ committee, to confer with the LcachcraPortuguese gardeners at Punta Del- tada. on St, Michaels, Axores, are get-
ilttg rich raising fine pineapples un- ler glass for the New York market They are the biggest and best that •each that town,
The cupof St Jacques, which. In xNew York. Is a dessert of delight with lu peaches, cherries, -pineapple, orange and citron en compote In delicate Ices, becomes In Paris a wretched compound of sliced sour apple In mushy snow.
French lights are the best along the shores, say the navigators. They are posted lo^, close to the water Une, and so do not mislead like
Trolley Mall Box.Many patrons of rural delivery routes.llve a considerable distance from the highway, and a device v would carry the man . between house and the road would be a l convenience. A Kansas subscriber Whose house Ish 90 rods from the roral route and who has a straight line of telephone poles to.-the road. Mks if an endless wire cable could to ta Aom. way to carA No. 10 wire can be Sittaebed to
the lUllan
The project for building a new Iron railway bridge across the Neva In St.
need you do so. If you will avoid vexed bent her head. “Ten——— you dl<3leave m^ what should you dor’ resumed Mrs. Savlll^ “if ? anything to push his fortune jui my hopes, all my ambltl^^torJ I him; and you kaow^yp,, j Mml~howhe repaid me.*^“Tsa, I have heard.- ] savin.crur..‘r.^re2::*!S5 ordorettont“ It STtaWmJ^ u*U not to b. forglvm. An uuSutabl. wlf. U a mtlUton. round a man^ nwk "It was a torribto mteiak^ a------^8h. .toppod anddenly.- “Are you Ul? Ton look whita and Wntl“ exclaimed Mra. SavlII*. reniad to attMitton by the eudden ceMatloa of her voice.„:'OnIy a little giddy and daxed; the enn wea BO etreng today." returned Hope, eteadyUg her voice by a strong effort “I felt faint when we were driving round the Iak4. Bnt. deer Mra SavUIe. may I eay thrt Wter rNo doubt she Is a designing minx But sha mil find that she wlthent h«- host when eh. caughtae the wife of a poornat^^oflirer le not rith a gross tonnage of 3.708.Sausw is served as an adjunct to roast chicken on the London A Great tvestern dining cars. It rather resem- )les a frankfurter In flavor and tex- ure. The dining car service U dill- ;rent and well-meaning and the food Is simple and plain. The car itself has about the same aspect of luxury as an American freight The common law of England Is an ancient coUectlon of unwritten max­ims and customs of British. Saxon and Danish origfn. which, by long use and approval, have become fundamental In English Jurisprudence. Many of the princrples of the English common law*
brokets fastened to the poles at such a, height as not to Interfere with teams, etc. A small bo. and carrier can be run over this between the house and the road. The box can be sent down and brought back from the house by the use of a cord or light twistedpass It through alpulley on a post at the road and around a drum .or through another pulley at the house. The trolley wire should be soldered to the brackets so tho carrier may run
Th« P«rmer'« AntomobllevWhile automobiles are expensive-' vehicles. In a sense, they are dally ' becoming less so. Improvements In methods, materials and knowledge have made a cheaper car possible and the fact that the purchasers of fancy cart> ^ already supplied has caused maa- ufacturers to devote their energies to turning out a car that Is ntedlum’ priced and of high quality. A new field for the markeUng of* the product of their factories was necessary, and! this field was found among the term- era High-priced, fancy cars would not go with them, but quality would, andr those mknufacturers wbo^ere shrewd: enou^ to make a car of high qual-;. Ity at a reasonable price have found: : ready customers among the farmers.It Is estimated that there are now IB use about 100.000 automobiles amour the farmers of this country and some^ thing like 6,000 of these are la Kan­sas. They are great favorites amongdairy farmers^tlme pavers In the delivery of mllkrfeul they are no less so among other termers, who find Ijv . them a means of rapid transit without disturbing the farm teams. The new 'term automobile Is here to stay.-* . Kansas Farmer.brat for Larina Hen*.eat»- belr of the bestMany farmers grow and sell wh chickens ^
MAIL BOX TBOILXT LIWE.over tt Without trouble. With a little Yankee Ingenuity anyone can rig up a device of this kind.—Farm and egg-producing
feeds, and It will pay to feed It to the hens at all seasonv even when It is above a dollar a bush­el Wheat Is similar In composition to milk and eggs; It contains nearly ,11
. A Heron*.“acrophylla, commonlr ^led the Moreton Bay flg, u a mercl- lew Australian parasitical growth, aaya a writer In the Wide World magazine It takes root In the forks of Its host tree (which in this case Is a Qu^n^ land bloodwood) and ultimately sraoth-
wlf A prnflenl. earetnl, aelMaayliiK would you not In Umo forgtve tisr.:^ pardon him for hie misfortune In MI. In« a vleitiii to-*er deeiensrpr^SSerSrwTffVr^oni
Km
in bte career. AU nmit come Cm him; and a wife te^Unred wMB bmiv
her daughterly care and attentloiL (To be cootlnoed.)• FiUl OiwiLamall village away, out Wert, and a native of the aoU waa appointed pootr master. After a while oomxdaUta were made that no majl waa aent out tiwm the naw office, and an Inapector was sent to Inquire Into the matter. He »d upon tho portmaater, and stat­ing tha cauao of hla visit, asked why no mall had been aeai out The poatr ater pointed
to a Mg «ad nearly pty maU Mig hanging up in a cor •. and aaid; “Well, I ain’t aent It out lie the bag ain't nowharea nigh tel) yet-—Harperia.Tn‘o Bmmt at tha 9m—4h.
Young Jamea had never beard tv. papa speak In public, and it was thought time to take him to hear Ms father deUver a lecture. During tha evening a stray dog which veotnrad upon the platform was dlspoaed of as gracefully as possible. On the way home James was asked how he liked his father's lecture, and pave the an­swer. “It was all right papa, but I liked the part where yem put the dog out the best“-^he Delineator.
hold In this country, and throughout the Engllsh-epeaklng world as well.
As to the name Smith, a correspond­ent of the London Chronicle points out that while there are now about 350,000 members of the great farnHy In Eng­land alone. In Old Testament times, ac­cording to the first book of Samuel, "there was no Smith throughout the
land of Israel." This verse the late Bishop Wllberforce said was the hard- sat one in the Bible to quote without imlUng.Just before the American fleet left ■or lU famous trip around tbe world here -waa some newspaper talk of a poetIUe clash with Japan. The yarn goes that a hlchly placed person aak«l Admiral Schroeder what he would do If tha Japeneee fired on hie ship. Schroeder mured. “They won't Are on my ship," said hA poelUrely. "But If they dldr "Now," said Schroeder, an­grily. "If they did, hey? What the «» yon think I'd do? Sue
"Lore your wife like your soul, and boat her like your carpet" This la a Ruulan proverb. Another of the same •plrlt: -Not long hurt tbe humps from » loved one’s thumpA" Wives have nn- lonbtedly been eubieeted to much 111- treatment In Rwla. where moat hus- bsnda have always held to the opln- ton that "Liberty ;,ppta a good Wlf A"
Some Rnsetan provorhe are eynlcal as » the delights of matrimony, and moat narried men know how to lay: "Wed )DCA waU alwayA’’
ave them.. the a»-
Fowlf require ealt In their ration In order to thrive beat, the same aa do all other animals. The mineral- ele­ments In the salt are desired by tho fowlA and their systems But only a lltUe salt Is more than a handful a week erage-elied farm flock. Too much may ho more harmfut than too IUUa Andsince fowls often do not know whiii they have had enough of It. wo dare not place tho aalt _ before inem. and lit inem eat all they want, aa can te done with most other farm animals. So the beat way la to mix saUy with the soft Thismash. This seasons the food and givesit a palaUble taste, as well .. proving EplU^Ut'” '»»*«•—Agrlcuitur.1*«riar to e.
differ*
side, A> that after aVhlto The“,tono will be ground out of elrele. jf iSt stono has to stand In tbe o~n a atT box ean …Uy be obtained to .mi. “
handle will always _ Of tee stone to remain this from exposure wlU
over the barrel, aarSie^wurare?-
TMtlaa u Xaembmta,During incubation, eggs Should M, tested on the seventh and fourtwnte ' days. At the first test the 'should measure about a quarter cf^
taken from the mlddU of th.“',JrJ:
a. growth begins the tree win bs«te te cover Its wounds with now wood wm creep over It from an (|14ml ral Worl# . –
tha outside pototo
ur*ffHor.«,9TWtb. seldom suffer from decayed “ teeth lltue on:teeth* but because of the rioting on tee lowerwhich lacerate th. cheek or penetrate the gume, creating a tendernw ^ prevento the proper.. maeUo^, *, food, annoying tbe horse eo much thff »w«Y very rapidly. *inxtare for Pa«twr^ MInneeota farmore hava found ,1. pounds of Umothy. are do3.^

Is
«•’•a
' Spring HumorsCome to mo«t people and cause mar troubles^r-plipplea, boUe and other eniplloM, besidea loss of appetite, that tired teeUn*. biliousness. Indigestion and headache.The sooner you get rid of them the better, and the way to get rid of them and to build up the system Is to takeHood> SarsaparillaThe Spring Medicine par excel ' as shown by unequaled, radicalu«., M,„M form or chocoiatod tablets known as Sarsatabs.
KASPARILLAThis sterling household remedy hss long been recognized as the bAt and safest Blood Purifier, the most successful prescription for spring humors and such disorders of the blood pustules, blotches, soi eruptions ICaspsriUa isisduring the close of winter and theopening of‘Spring. For derangements of the di­gestive organs it is a natural corrccUve, optsrating directly upon the liver and ali-
bcneacial influence tttends, however, fo f the system, aiding in the
I
t
m ■
I
I
s
I:
iood, ptomoting a wholesome, natural
slipati^ and the long list tly traceable to those ilions. Kasparilla d ness, headache, backache enndil{ons. Kasparilla dispels drowsi-i and despond-t is a
W. L. DOUGLAS:S3.00,83.5q.S4.00&S5.00
W. Ij. Douglag ■slices are worn!
by more meu than Any other make,BEOAUSCsW. L.DougUi(e3.00 th« lowest price,
futCdorettMt.
xs.fsirM,
Have You Stomach Trouble?Why not enjoy good health when it lies withiu your grasp to do sot By using Powell’s Stomaeh< Bemedy you can get a permanent cpre. For A. H. POWEIX, Mfg Ohemlrt, TryPadafot- Inland Crackers TrUl Bottle Wrmm Br MaU ^^s » Kpll«»p<^lold» Our« ItoTr^ SOUR STOMACH bowtla ia food wmdmMi. a reliable automobilesend to ns or call on os. vPACIFIC MOTOR CAR COMT, KDUee THE COST OF UWNS;useCRESCENT BAKING powder 25c. FULL POUND XE” MOTOB CAB.A most extraordinary two-wbeeled tentlon In England twenty years ago, baa been buUl and sent to thia country tlon.It consists of a couple of large solid- tired wheels, connected by, an axle from wbiyh hangs a platform sufficing for the engine, which la at the rear. Is of the single-cylinder type and develops four and a half horse power. The countershaft lies parallel with the axle of the vehicle, and-on the enda are a pair of roller chains driving sprockets that engage with the wheel hubs. The steering Is accomplished by an otdl- aary auto steering wheel,- which act­uates wires that move friction discs between the sprockets and the wheel hnbe, the, drive being released from one wheel < which It can be built and the vibration that results from the use of large wheels. The seat for the driver and passengers rests just over the axle.—Popular If You Are SicklyJust let Hostetter’o Stom* ach Bitters build up and re­new the entire system, make the stomach strong and healthy and keep thelxjwels free from constipation. It has done so in hundreds of cases in the past 56 years and most certainly will not fail you. T^r it to-day Headache and Malaria Fever. Ask for 1 BUBHBD PAPEB MOBTBY. At the redemption windows of the treasury and of the' subtrcasurles of the country any silver coin that has not beeamuUlatod willfully and which stlU is recognizable as from the mints of the United SUtes will be redeemed at face value, this in spite of the fact that the silver In the worn coin i not be worth half Its face value., the government sta portion of the loss from but, ‘ according to weight, these worn gold coins always are re- More 'Friends Every Y<, We’ll soon count you among them.^ BSYANTTESTAOAIK.pen of Oroom.Is the Bryan Leavitt reached Lincoln Sunday after an absence of several months spent in Germany. She was preceded by Lieutenant Keginald Owen, to whom she was married Tuesday at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Bryan. The wedding was a quiet affair, with guests limited to the family and the less than a dozen intimate friends. Sand lOo for Trial International HotelSPOKAHS, WASH. SASHa-^^DOORS o!b.williamsco.--:;‘ COMO HOTEL Phone Main STSO.WTProniAve, aaoi-W JL Riverside. Phone mein 17 8POKANK, WASH.JCEMACHINES _ BROWXS*S Bbonchzax. Troches 'Ss^n’STsO^t. sod IJ.OO pc* boou'.. Por want of a naU the shoo was lost] for want of a shoo the horse was. lost; for want of a horse tho rider was lost Vessels large may venture more, hul little ships ahonld keep ne» shore.If You Have Common Sore Eyes, if Uacs blur or run together, you neo^ PETTIT^S BYE SALVE, 25c. AI druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo sponge. She became so fussed wher a good-looking young clerk asked her what she wanted that much to thf amusement of the other customers she Tra ou -They do, my son.
Curious Charley—Then what tree does he doughnut grow out**
vflopAs and foil price Hat eent on sppUeeUon
Mothers wiU findSoothing S^p the_best remedy ^Mrs.children daring
Alcohol
not neededAyer’s Sarsspsrilli is not •
strong drink. As now mtde, there is not a drop of alcohoi In it. It is a non-alcoholic tonic and alterative. Ask. your own doctor about your taking this medicine for thin, impure blood. Follow his advice every time. He knows.
regular.
’^Hon,• bytAeJ.O,Aorer< Obliterate Them fMUndoflnitely when yon keep it paint- IktaUicAsphalttimRoofPsiat SPOrfilUOILCO,,a Cor-MadisonandRaUroad Ave.,Spokitto of Uw paper currency presented now.'note Issued, and no matter what the evi­dence may be as to total destruction of this paper currency. concerned. Fire may melt 11,000 worth of silver , coins and It Is wprth Its' metal TRlue. |t may melt 11.000 In gold coins and the mint, will pay 11,000 In new I lass.In paper currency Is without value. In the thousands of Area over the country every year involving buildings, factories, biislness 1 and family residences an untold total of legal tender notes of aU kinds are destroyed. Every piece of such paper iost Is loss to the holder and gain to the government or to luoatlonal bank. It is a promissory note hopelessly lost piece of paper to ^hlch he bad signed his name bad been destroyed by acci­dent and by no chance could turn up again against him.—Chicago Trlbnna B '. We’ll soon count you among them.* It’ 8 just a matter of time. More and more housewives are giving up the old- ityle, high-priced, Trust-made Baking owders. Thousands are turning to' 1#^ BAKING IV V POWDEROne trial does IL You’ll never go back. Speak toyourgrocer. Lighter,sweeter baking or mon,y r^etd. - Far bet- ms vo.,o.tIt'ail you tty for your* Oi^iovUCMto New War to Swear Off Taxee«The best way ol not paying ta on your personal property is to swear them off. By “swearing off* is mei going to the tax assessor and making a deposiUon that you really don’t live where you seem to live, that you real­ly don't own what you seem to owxi, and that, whUe you appaer to be very rich man. you are really overturdened by debts which you have hitherto suo- ceasfully concealed. Since taxes began, so many ways of Ing off have been Invented that the tax authorlUes bad that there was no new tax dodge un­der theBut the tax authorlUes were mis­taken. A few days ago a man came to the New jp-Dalicately formed and gently reared, women will find, In all ttio searons of their lives, as maidens, wives or mothers, that the one simple, wholewrae remedy which acts gently and pl^ntly and naturally, and which may be used with truly beneficial effects, under any conditions, when the system needs a laxative, is—Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. It.is well known to bo a simple combination of the laxative and carminative principles of plants with pleasant aromatic liquids, which are agreeable and refreshing to the taste and • acceptable to the system when its gentle cleansing is desired.Only those who buy the genuine Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna can hope to get its beneficial effects, and as a guarantee of the excellence of the remedy, the full name of the company—California Fig Syrup Co.—is printed oh the front of every package, and without it any prei»ration offered as Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is fraudulent and should be declined. To those thiseYork tax commlaalouBra is>call
led. To those who know the quality of ixcellent laxative^ ^e offer of any substi- when Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna led for, is always resented by a transfersbnal taxes. *1 have only |5,000,” said, “and that money to In city bonda and is being held In tniat.““For wbomr* asked the tax corn-
commissioner insisted. Finally. In a stage whisper, the swearer-off explain- sd:“The money is held in trust daring his llfeUms-for my dog.“—Succesa is
always resented
by t of patronage to some first-class drug ei ment, where they do not recommend, nor sell
false brands, nor imitation remedies. The genu­ine arUcle may be bought of all reliable drug- . . gists everywhere; one size only. Regular price 50 cente per bottle. Get a bottle today to have in the house when needed. -f
Moddl
Not Tb«t Klad.
YoaOmHaveaModelKneiien
as cod and whIteTa8''a dairy. No smell, no smoke, – no heat, no dust. ^ No old-fashioned contrivances. The ^Snow is rajpidly disappearing and farmers are getting busy.
Lots 6f rumors as to railroad building this spring, but nothing reliable. ^Census enumerator reports but few in 38-3 that are unable to read . and mite,Mrs. Blair Hoar started for Mil­waukee, Wisconsin, Tuesday, for a visit with her parents. In the mean time Blair will dig gold- for the McGann boys: . '
We have had some delightful weatlier of late.Mrs, Anna Howard has returned to the Meadows.Nels Paulson was an Orofino visitor this week.Farmers are rushing their into the ground, the pre.sent
IRRIGAtfON
ANNIVERSARYAccording to the most reliable data at hand, it was in 1870 that the magic Wand of water was first waved over the sagebrush wastes of the upper Snake ^ River valley. Two irrigating ditches 1 C.arUSn,.ney has Just ^Th« prospect for a good fruit crop from a trip to Coeur d'Alene City. H,ary Donne. They wh.tled highwater overflow ditches. other by
•ST'M. DK:o«rcey, Orofino.
Mr. Gray, with the Clearwater Livery Barn, was on the prairie ‘h* »f «>» »•».« 5«r Pretoo Burr.ll thi«i commenced the construction of a dam at:the mouth of Blackfoot canyon to raise Mr. Parmenter. of DeMqmes, water above the level of thirsty farm Iowa, was an arrival od the M^lands/OW9 this week. i following year, as a re^^ ^ , . n- f construction of these ditches,Frank Tucker, accompanied- by! „.at the first crop of potatoes was raised his sister, Mrs. Parmenter, visited , in the upper valley by Chas. Hiram cn Orofino this week. • ‘ i the Blackfoot river. Previous to thatM T Watrh T^MrobociwI a pommc* terre used in thUM. L. Ha^ pnreha^ a team ; shipptid from Utah,of horses and harness from James Mammoth
oak. from little acorns DeCourcey this week. | grow, and by the same token the mostJoe Nines passed over the prairie irrigated district in the westthU week, enroute to hU home „„ from the bnilding in this mar-Cow creek. iHe ha* been visiting ditche. 40 yearsX-' The w« "wa! m the Genesee country. ; paved not only for the construction of:———————————– I thousands of miles of canals In the upper ;Snake River valley, but the first step was taken to make possible the reclama- tion through jrrigation in the southern ; part of the state of the largest body ofngnei MMiiommer Sneder for Mootb Just Passed ! ‘h'
April Temperature.
Mean maximum Mean minimum……….-Maximum highest.,.on date of April 45….„ Minimnm. lowest, date Of.. April IS…………………………………..PRECIPITATIO.N-
i?ea‘;:t-in:X-rs.-d;i-ofApril 3rd…………………………….No. of days in which .01 or more precipitation fell…Number dear days…………………..No. Partly cloudy days….. No. cloudy days_______________
J great Minidoka project, aijd h score ot nn or enterprises, including our- 70-21 ^ownPortneuf-Marsb valley project and- 37-25 Fort Hall System. It was this in.signifi- ining 40
o mm^m o
Builder’s Hardware
Shelf and Heavy Hardware
'3ust received, a large shipment along these lines. All who con- template building should call and examine our stock before purchasing
We 11 man-McRoberts Co.ii;
54-i6 _ cant beginning 40 years ago that made 1
sx – ' ■■
9S;[, jSr.,,…………………………………..■.2.46Bear Lake….
Aerw Cov. ^le^resuk^ of^ th^ Secret-ary^on^S^ ^5.
HI.U '”'Thi^«n''i,^",«td' omi’i^ArticI; IV. 64.S73 Sec. I of the by law, of «.id corpor.tion 758.9401 MABELLE B. FULLER.Scerctarj'.
Notice for I
George Alteneder Observer.
Rocords For Sale.
238 1241 ^
Orofino Meat ^ Cold Storage£0
WILL PAY CASH ^
; > Live Weight Hogs, from 9 to io cts per pound.“ " Fat Cattle, from 4 to 6 cts “Chickens 10 to 12 1.2 cU “ –
IaSH paid for HlbES. PURE KETTLE • y fRHWER^
Totals'…………… 9865No other state in the union can cx- jhibit such a mar%’clous development j 1 through irrigation. No other common- I wealth h^ added more to the new clean ' wealth of the world, has provided more and better homes for more people, has I converted^ a wider desert into rose ,1 gardens, 'or more waste place sving fields and shady orchards.I It should be a pte Idut;[ rivt{the memory of those pioneer ditch ) builders who bnilded better than they {knew. ^
243,062'^25.375;*228,9501•7L026! ,, aph,110^ i ^.Notice U hereby given that * *0.»37 j .NYK ALK.KANDRR UTHKRLAND 552,865 ■ of Dent. Idaho, who. on 50,004 Kulry .No.
300.000 :
3.858.355!ariey«row^,.SiT. H- BARTLETT. Register.
Notice for Publication. Depi^rtmcnt of the Interior United States Land DlTTce, J^wiston.
CHARLKS J. LARSON .
luty for the peoplft of the great Snake ; ————-iver valley to honor in' fitting manner ! Cl.iowui u’niJe. •< Robert B. Swadener' Engrineer and SurveyorU. S. Deputy' MlnernI Sut-veyon for Idaho. l^Icon««ocl L«nd Survoytor for Idaho Mineral Rotent SurveysSubdivision of Unod. Etc. , . 0«IOB. Hotel Idaho CO.OROFINO ELECTRICDEALERS IN ' ;'v all 01a3fies of L,umber ' * ^IVow ori Harid / ^ ' |Dimension Stuff pnd SidewalK Lumber See tis Before Ordering Your . House Bill. I Ml® 'Mm R. H. LEEPERPractical . Horseshocr GEHERAL BLACRSHITEINGYours for First Class Work SHOP ON FIRST AVENUR Local Happening.. Prince# Flour Cheapest and B^st F66<^ S”----'-....... ...... Bwakfast rotrf9..J;L^L;X”'l.... ....Pototoafi._:x _____________Beansprincess Flour .L._____ --x •X 36541b 445 1030 1035 1185 1365 1439' 2025 " 2950 ;; 3040 aa40 One pound of Prmces$ Flour costing 31-4 to 3 give as mueb energy as. two pounds of cents. Ask your grocer for Princess ; nourishmeut for tbe least money. cents will meal costing 12.1 .-2 to 20 Flour and. get the most 1^1 Do Praying II desire to notify the reeidentsof Oro- fino that I am in the field for all classes Yours for business,P. J. NobulBlacksmith Tool, and Knder for Sale. WHAT TIME WILL THE CLOCK STOP rd*aa‘in"‘sell cheaply for cash c First issue April 29th. I have a tools Willof blacksmi good cond •ash or note. § xsxr’ WILL THE. CLOCK STOP Real Estate For Salo. acres 7 miles from Orofino. Good fruit} ‘ lands wHth-bearing orchards and good ! .springs on both. For information ad-{ dress. D. I. Towns, Blake, Idaho. f The French Coach Stallion, Decrepit No. 4159, will make tbe season of iqio as follows: At Orofino 3Iondays andTuesdays; at the S. E. Gainer farm near Cavendish balance ofvweek. For partic- S. E. GAINER, ndish. - ’ • ' tewistpn JN^n^ (^’y. Ltd. Clearwater Foundry S M^ufachirer of gang edgere || and Trinmera. { IIGeneral saw-mUl .uppUee. II EastHainSt. ULewiston Idaho, f W. M. Chandlerl^AL ESTATE ILoans and Abstracis'S IJVSUHA^CE ROTARY PUBLICOf/lem»OROFIMO -WHAT TIME'SS ? «... Our Uberal offer it as follow.: Commencing, Monday morning May. and, with every Cash 2 purchase of $i.oo you make at our store we will give you a M card on which Uie time of day is stamped. Bring in j'our - ysaLittkBetttr ^ Cheap®- 1.1. , Save all your tickets for the handsome drop head Sewing Machine ’ “ I
1 r , . iois:g!=»cajBOB=5aoBs==iipi
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