Orofino_Tribune-28Jan1910_Cmplt

Volume 5. •OROFINO, IDAHO, FRIDAY, Jin, 28, ..^^^'•'HUMBERai'.
Rej^ardless Co|t
-r-;':«-r^Vr,v
V;c:S.:;Sfe
f^}
;Just got through invoicing arid
;; find that we have several broken
lines which we are going to close
; . out regardless-of cost.
Lots of things for less than
, l^f the regular price.
bound to close out
"■^ ~;these brokm lines. Drop in and see.
….
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IMBIRD BUYS INTO BANK QF OROHNO;
9WealthyPurchases KetlenbaciL Holdings ofi^hlsFinancier _J: 'jrBanWrtg InsHluHoM Mach"r^:^t;t«
. ^ x:xThis important announcemAt was made this^J.w^ following the visit of Mr. Humbird and party into this section last-week; This move has a far reaching signifi­cance for fhVpeople of this section. The purchase of the control of this banking institution by a man of Mr. Huinbird's standing in the’ business . world, speaks vol­umes for C^rofino, and has a wide bearing, on the pros­pective developement of the Clearwater country. Mr, Humbird is one of the wealthy lumbermen of the United States, with a home fri St. Paul, and interests in bank's;-. •lumber companies and financial institutions throughout the west aud his name at the head, or in the ; directorate • of any banking institution s'hould inspire confidence in its stability as a commercial-factor in any cornmunity. As an additional security'to its patronsj this bank will! be. examined several times a }'ear by the auditor of the Union Securities Company, of Spokane. The bank, as a state institution, is subject to examination twice a year. Mr. y. J. White, the present cashier will remain in charge of the institution.
II
.ill
Orofino Trading Company
:n. /|
Ank your grocer lorPriuceas Flour Coupons. ,See DeCourcey if you want a loan on improved farms.latest styles and colors in men’s and boys’ clothing at the Orofino Trad. Co.
Tlic Bollinger Annex, with its forty new uK>ms makes ihis famous hostlery one of the best equippccal HsppcTOgs.. With.every sack of Princess Flour you get a coupon.R. B. Hassen and F. J. Klossoski, both of Spokane, visited^his section this section this week. The gentlemen Avere registered at the “Hotel Orofino.With every Back of Princess Flour, you got a coupon.The Pastor of the M. E. Church will prLich Sunday, January 36. at Orofino. Subject for morning. “The Bible” and evening;, “Judas Iscariot.” All arcasked to attend these-meetings.Joe Gray, Wm. Walch,. EIHs Small and Ridiard Payne, who have been em­ployed in the back country
tor the past month, returned home Tuesday. They report aii average depth of snow of Uirce feet in the North Fork country and about six feet of snow in the back inoutitains. Thirty degrees below zero was expenfenced by the party on or two different occasions during
With every Back" of princess Flour you get a coupon.Ciias. Green, of Lenore, had the mis­fortune to get Iris hand cut Monday, while engageti in repairing a portion of the landing at Iris tramway. A friend jeng.iged in helping IHxn struck bis- le.t ! hand with a sharp Iwtchntt just back of the thumb, severing the big artery and causing much pain and loss of blood, Mr. Green came up to Orofino on the afternoon train and had Uis hand dressed by Dr. Fairly of this place.Don’t forged to get Princess Flour coupons with every sack of Princess Flour.The slate Normal at Lewiston has for its student body a greater average milc- i age than any other normal in the United I States, Of its 250' students Uie distance travelled by 1 the; the Lewiston Normal Students are now in attendance from every section" of Idaho; eastern Oregon and eastern Waalringion. The increase in enrollment this year as compared witli last year is 45 cent. .
*Feed,;;iOate …Barley. ^‘Barley.
For Sale By………………………………………..
iilIJk(®nb'Mercaiitile Ca'LWil^H' ■■ '‘v.l Orofino's C ash Store……….(mmmm.■mu.
a 250'students Bed by I them in going to Normal is 119 miles.
Anni^ermiy Daiice.^The Knights of Pythian, the Odd Fel­lows, and the Modem Woodmen, col- lectively, will give a grand ball on the antuversary of Washington’s birthday. The diflercnt committees are now at work and a definite date for the ball will soon be announced. .CaamHn^ Club UsThe Commercial club was called toffi£'r.s£g'4"„'as;&cs.ing of a wagon bncjge acros/ theOrpfino at this point. A full meeting was bad and the coriceiisus of opinion v{^ thatland theling to doISiSSSS'A'S
►uld not-aff f50o.;but power to help A committee of John Mix and W,
Rod’s Prairieof »noiM. I.. -Hatch purchased some cattle from Bawl Fry this week,Charles PTuaf has rented the Ed Eentou ranch for next year.
mam
Tucker brothers have erected a ' ne^v house on the Jesse Tucker ranch.M. L. Haich was iharketmg some fat cattle to Luttropp Brothers- this week.
Walter Jewell is making a tour of the North Fork country ' with his dogs in search of Cougar. ^We undersUnd Walter Haring purchased the Byron- Courtney ranch , from James Blak^^a short time ago.
Our sleighing is alv5ut over with, here*'E. King has been liauling corn fromi Grant Simpson’s.Gran. Burnett sold a horse ,to A. McGee last week.Albert Simpson was hauling liav from the Tyra place Sunday.
.mam
mmui
Tyra place Sunday.C. A. Pittwppd’s family has been hav­ing a severe time with colds.Jack Adams moved up Sunday to cut wood for the Orofino Improvement Co.Martli find S m'pson have finished^ their v,hod contract at R. Hawkin’s and are cutting fot E.'King.There will be a literary and debate at our school house Samrday night Ev­erybody invited to attend. -Quite a number of the ridgeites at­tended the Snyder sale, D. C. Cloud bought a horse and A. Simpson a 5vagon.Milwaul^ Fintthes Weya. ? .The Milwaukee Railrt^d company has finished its surveys bn the North ^'ork and will have alHts men and ma­terial out of that territory by the last of the week. The surveys/^run by this company extend for a distance of fortv miles' up and down the North Fork from the mouth of Elk creek to the mouth of the Little North Fork. The survey also exterida for some distance below the “month df Elk creek. Itis now definitely * ^known that ths Milwaukee engineers- ‘ “failed to get a satisfactory grade down Elk creek owing to the shortness of the distance travelled in reaching the river. I > ; ’ I'l" – jrhere is considerable speculation as tov ^Vhat route wnll be taken by the Mil- waukce in reaching.the North Fork or ■ Ithe Orofino country. As the case now ‘r;.' Vl- have coppered I . „
;;*ai
looks the N.. P. seems to its rival, in the Clearwater country- at that was to bethe mouth of the, .. id is slilL preparing :;' to go deeper into the mountains. As an 11 I evidence of tlris a pack load of bear pawr Asnow show was taken in this'week for – * •
-'ll'
teen milesLittle North Fork and is slilL preparing -; ^ the mountain^ As an ^ l '5 was ta:of the surveyors along the route.As a further evidence of their intent to go deeper into the mountains, they are enclosing their brims along the.rout^and making arrangements to look after their-^ – stock for the remainder of the* winter. ^ ;Pontoon ferrys are Also being built and . ' other improvement^ of n character wbicli Iv ; shows permanent occupancy of the , country.'
The supreme court of Idaho ‘ Weducs-. – -.QV.i-' *;
• decision in favor of the Lbcalsweeping dec Option _
Board of County Conimiwtoricrs. Judge: Steele passed up tlie point raises! as toLewiston’s liquor 1 pass wily on the question of whether preBeut petition was in accordance with the provisions of the local option law.
exemption iq the present owing to Its charter and will
petition was in accordance w

*i –
yXi.Silillfiiiill'C
MM
The Pirate bf
RUPERT SARGENT * HOLLANDA^astair
AMhw y nil. Cooni .« Hwrud.” M., OWTUJtt. tooa. by J. B. tippjocot>•••••••••••••••tt Company,
8b« amU«« at BodMgr aat at ■» lapartlany, and Ilataiiad attantlTdr M ♦THTthlof Dnponc«n aald. Ehrm Obarlaa Mt har Infloanca. 1 conld aaa him Un«ar In tha doorway on tha alart to aarra har.Braal6»t cama to an and. and Barbara Inatatad on handaylnc Bodnay’a arm. I think ho wui aorry that aba ahoold know how alight tha wound really waa, for he domorred. though with a look of great aatirfactlon; but ha finally conaantad to roll up bta aleere. 1 draw Duponoeau away to my den, and tha two ware left alone for a long half-hour. Monalenr rierra and I diecusaed mattera of defenae. men we returned to the llTlnrroom
••••••••••
' chapter XVJ.-(Conttna«d.)The larder waa well-atockad, thanka to
Oharlaa' forealgbt. and we made a moatSSrpfo^Mt.Clo^rholl^alonly Charlei kpowa how. While aupper waa being pre(>arad Duponcaan and I 'Mde the round of the hou^ potting up the great atorm-ahhttera wlS^ which I ua- vou• oally ptptected tha wlndowa from tha the• winter gaiety and piling picklng-boxea and extra-heary furniture agalnat tha‘-.*7 dyprlaed totha cottage. It bad been-tha rongheat of ott-ahorc _____Barar thought of It aa naeful for
«raa not a man'a i lure.'! opened the abuttera wli d on the balcony. Xow b
' tod h”^^ **“*”'■oS-ahore galea, butIbouaa la caaa of attack by land. I wu W^reod of It whan wa barred tha laatMeanwhile Oharlaa waa apraadlng tha tabl^ and Rodney, radlntng upon « couch M became a wounded warrior, waa puf-
TJttla did I think, Saldan," aald ha. ^en I Inndtad with you that day. that Td ha coming back aa a member of laldalght garriaoo. defending a myatarioua gentleman In' a bta^ cloak, who popped up out of tha aaa. Not but what I enjoy
It." ha add«l. aa Duponcaan looked hla troy; “I haren't bad auch a good time
“Perhapa I can amnggla Charlea ^u^ tha enemy’a Ilnea to tha club In a day or two," I anawerod.Rodney grunted. Tou talk of a day
or two aa though time were nothing. The whole bottom might drop out In ^ than an hour. Howerer, I don't care ao long aj> aupper’a coma."Wa diapoaed of a prodlgloua meal, dnd Duponcaan exam­ined with great Intereat an armory of bid ^or* and other. war-llke Inatrnment. *at hung over the mantel-place. Finally he unhooked two long and ruaty bladea, «mparrt them carefully, and, carrying them whh him. want to the atalra.claimed ” * “■.•■Certainly not; but poaalbly wa can «d^thla campaign tomlght. Coma withRodney and I followed him up to my atudy. where our prlaoner waa atretchedflnng the two aworda on tha canter-table, and I could aea a quick look of aUrm flare up In the captive'a eyea.“I am about to propoae." aald Dupon- caau. “a happy aettlement of all our dilB- cultlea. Inetead of your band of aix or eight outlawa fighting my three comradea
atahtly law Wlth'thla lure.^ atepped on ip the balcony. Now bel low me I aaw -Barbara, dreaaed for rid­ing, the color in her cbeeka high from ao muA cannonading.^O.^ mornlng."»dio called to me. "I
looke
of the bonae. May I como In?"b.'^hrwd^lgr.t-Sa^rtn'r^
"Ton forget. Mr. Selden. that that waa
and I'll bo down at tha doc
barm a voice crying. "Walt, wait I"Rotoey Jumped from hla couch and Joined He M well aa I had alapt In
“Miaa Onbam la oottida and wanta to *‘*“*’* to me towilt. I’U open tha little aide windowI alid the wlndow-boH and looked ont Two me^ the dlaagnaM>Ia chap of our flrot ^tlng and another aurly-facad Indl- vldMl. mood aoma twenty feat bach of“• ‘-V“Now. than, what do you men wantT’
His arm ^^age and a liii it. rII .vou tarfe me over to Itarhara, jumping up; r turn to gloat, for alii poking into every nook and < lenming how two men left to deviOta lived, and on improvini flushed, and Rodney's was wound little gold pisBarbara’s face ob.filrs With'ff fn.slomil it.“U'ill .vou tale me over to tbe asked Itarhara. jumping up; and i to gloat, fchousergloat, for slie insisted on cranny, on—------------.j their owndevioy lived, and on improving what she found. I. who had once been averse to feminine Influence about a bouse, surren­dered. She atralgbtened the plcturee, re- ari^d.the ornaments and knick-knacia. and finally started in upon my deak.cUlmrf ^ “■She stopped and looked at me. “1___ney let me fix hla arm when bo didn'twant to, and you------••"Please do." I aald. modonlng towkrda the pape^ aud aha placed them in UttleSout^*•;N ow I've beau horrid enough." she said when ihs'd flntahed., “I dan say moo are hotter off llvtag-alone. Think how uugry you'd bo if a woman ahoold do that ovary day.”"Ttot depends on Iho woman. I coaM Mrat K^frlifrralor.The acconip.inying Illustration showi the plan of refrigerator with meat chamber attached, the accompanying Illustration is given. Provision must N’ow.^"We don't want the lady to go In,” tho and myself, whst ssy you If yon and I iccount. for you'd Usifight It out, you to withdraw your party ““ Monsieur DuponcoaIf I win. I to go with you if I ^7 b««“ f«-" 'Come, that sounds fair ” a. f would have drifted ont cCom^ that sound, fair enongh." He the bandage from the prlmmer's month. The wry smile reappeared.“What do you take me for'/ I'm no fencer, and the parties back of me Vtonldn't aund for inch a game anyhow. Ibey want you taken quietly, delivered up. and don't care what happens to any number of me.”Duponceao looken taken aback thought over the man's words for a mo­ment, then turned to us. “Yon’ll bear wltneas that I't. done everything In my power to settle this affair with tha loss dlaagr^ble-looklDf one replied ••Does the Udy.want to?'* I nAtd oea.” said Barbara, In a nmi tone of voice. ^she shall. Slide-back the bolts, Rodney," I whispered. "Now If any one chooses to Interfere ^ith her entering my house, he can reflect that he’s looking In- ^ a straight steel barrel."Tbe door opened, and Barbara, her head high, walked in. I shut the small window and put the revolver In my pock- et. "There's a pretty mad-Jooklng pair hoos^"*^’'' ^ **^®*'^®* to the log-But Baroara waj not regarding me."Why, Rodney." she exclaimed, "what ha-v happened to your arm? They didn’t shoot you, did they?” She n a I i" hemight have been potted by that badly shooting snipe."She looked at him, her face all admi­ration. "It's like you to speak lightly, but you've been in danger, and partly on Uever have laid tt If It hadn’t t's nothing, Barbara," he said, beam- ing; "only a scratch. I i ave drifted out of the room If I could, bat I waa caught between them and the-door.Rodney smiled; I could Imagine how pleased he must be feeling.••We’ve had several scraps on tbe Ship,” be expUined, •‘and when our iood my offer was refused." Rodney and I,'Turn him loose.’ said Rodney. “It’, better to have ril our enemies on. tbe same aide of the bouse.”. Duponcean was of like mind, ao wa took the man down-ataW, and. opening the front door, sent him out Ihto the night. “I’ll tell the chief about what yon offered." he aald,aa he left, "and If he ays le. a go, we’U bring our beat fencer With a flag of truce. But you needn’t expect him, for from what I’ve beard the boas won’t rlak no diance of loalng you.” I doted tbe door, and double-bolted It Oharl<» had Uld a fire and lighted It. for we were all stiff with • our life on board the Bhip. and aa I stretched ont comfortably before It I remembered the old EnglUh saying that a man’s honse la hU castle, and was determined that nc rivate achemen Ithout my full con- ^IHAMBHXVU.I waa drtumlng of tha sharp enuAIe ol mnaketry whan 1 asfoks to tod small In my bed-a. beeams tbs guest of honor.., 3iawffisafei.-.,w.: ,1.*. <» -I. I'COt»ld>a ^y tbs wbiU top of tha nearer ,v tnd a sky pi chradleM blue, thetad blue as perfect as aver painUr Althrtugb I could not * -M . Visitor.' It was evident that tbs
«
waa_ visible; for a Wr atona ^.''3;A'-:-,'i,i;-i;i'.4;;ntnick -the abuttap-and-fell oo to IIm bal> ' n – – .Curloudy enough; It was wrapped sad «. which I J*.
this time I wa. Indnded In her word^ “I’ve been thinking of you every minute of the last two days, and wanting to come ov«r to Join you. Well, I’ve stolen away at last, for a morning rlda, and now I’m going to sUy here , with you."“Buy here wfth ual” we both exclalm-“Untll aftor breakfaat. I’m going to set-your table,, and pour your coffee, and
fix your rooms, and show you In general what a woman can do laWe both had bad vialona of that al­ready, I fancy, I caught Rodney’s eyei he smiled, and tbe color rose to bis lacs.,"Where’s Cbariesr’ Barbara damandtsi I led her Into the kitchen, whan Oharle. was buried, tod Bodney and I sat on tbs dre«wr land watchwl whll. Bartlan roll­
ed up her eleevea, pinnep a. napkin over her dress aa an apron, and pnetsded to direct Oharle. aa to the cooking things.of oa would have been su­premely happy If tbe other had not been there.When the table was set. and the break­fast on It» way from the kitchen to tbe dining-room, Dnponceau appeared, for the first time ^ of the cloak bs had worn on the Ship, but still all In blask, save for hi. gold chains, snd sUU savri- oped In that peenllar air of mystery which Instinctively »t him apart from all ordinary brings. Barbara
always told yon you were Imagina­tive" rte broke to. "The woman yon conIA toiagto. would probably be a nymph."“Tea," I agreed; “she Is." crrat^Ae^*" illppsvy“Tes.’^o I've heard."ont t'mot^rfVniucJ ”‘*'Sh. .at down to nS'blg drak-dmlr. “Poor Bodney." she sighed. “It teems as If be were sacrificing a great deal. Think of hU stocl. .and bonds."I ^ “onitot later Iadded "I havmi’t written a Itoa for ever •o many dayg.”“And It’s so; Important that a broker ahonld keep to toneb with hla ofllco," the nadeo.'-And thnt a writer should wrVU."••Then why did you give It upr Duponceao," I answered. Our eyes met, and we both laughed.There was a brief silence, and then she rose. I have a feeling that the critla is coming. Remember that I trust you to leld my pirate. I must go back to the
We went down stairs, and Barbara made her adieux.‘Til go with you to your horse." said Rodney.the ^"I am not so valuable a man as you." us off "Barbara looked from one to the other
friend,
and, much as I feared him, I could but admit that he was entitled to the privll Isll
JJA
woodchucks, but after ieveral morsi lugs of imtlent waiting, capture by trap proved unsuccessful. But, having heard that they were very fond of ialt, he mixed a liberal quanlUy or Paris green In about a quart of salt and pla<;ed a* handful near each bur- row. He was not troubled again that season, and this has been his remedy ever since.Th® Cowpea mm m Fertiliser.The cow pea Is a large beanllke plant that produces a large amount of forage. It Is valuable as a green food or for plowing under for green ma­nure. It has been used successfully for improving wornout soils, especially those that are light and sandy In tex- tura Its greatest advantage for’ this purpose U Us ability to gather nltro- ATOB WITH MXAT CHAMBO,made for the circulation of air so that It will not become stagnant at any point and by coming In frequent touch with the Ice w^ll be kept cool. The relative sizes and positions of the Ice chamber and refrigerator are shown and these can be made laf^er or smaller In proportion to meet the »^ulrementa gen from the air and mineral elements from subeoih When the crop !a plow-* ed under, these are left near the sur­face. where they will be available to shallow-rooted crops and those which cannot get nitrogen from the air. It has been little used for hay In tha North, because It cannot be readily dried In this climate. It makes a good green feed for milch cows between August 15 and September 1$, or It may be preserved In toe *sllo by mixing with com- fodder. For green manur-cast In' late June or early July, at the rate of one and a half bushels per acre. It Is especially valuable for growing in young orchards. Wheu wanted for fodder It should be sowu In early June. In drills 2^ feet apart, at the rate of one bushel seed per acre. K®«ptnff th« Whe«t Par®.Onre of the most Important factors fn growing Improved wheat for seed Is to keep the wheat pure. Many farmers are careless on this point, often planting new seed on old wheat i Fly n®p.ll®r. The Kansas Agricultural College haw experimented with the various chem­ical formulas to repel flies from llvw stock and recommends the following’ as fairly satisfactory; Resin, pounds; laundry soap, two cakes: fish oil. one-half pint; enough watbr t» make three gallons. Dissolve rttla In a solution of soap and water by" heating, add the flsh oil and the rest of the water. Apply with a brush.If to be used as a spray, add one-half pint of kerosene. This mixture will cost 7 to 8 cents a gallon and one-half pint is considered enough for one ap­plication for a cow. At first It will b» necessary to use two or three appll- xou;"h.*2l4"Rodney most not go," ehe finUhed.It waa my turn to Btart for the door. ••Nor mnst y<^" she continued to me. "I am mneh* safer alone than with either of•rile matter^e matter was settled; we could only nee she turned and waved her ? In farewell. It was cruel that turned and waved her well. It was cruel that ritooM b. panned np within fonr wall.CT7to, slond for Joj- osy, nna tne was iroing ont to It tnrned back in at east towards each other, tod Jnst then a ballet plonghad Into -i'r.o.'sS';-"'”'’*(To be conttoned.) Fig. 1Tho form of a horse’s foot deter- ralnes the peculiarities of the ehoe that Is best adapted to It. Viewing tho foot from the side the regular post tion la that shown to figure 4, In which the weight will be borne to best advantage. ‘Looking from the front tho regular form la that shown In figure 1. the wide toe being Indicated by figure 2. and the narrow too by figure 8. With the. regular or normal shape tho weight falls near the cen­ter of the hoof, and Is evenly dis­tributed over the whole bottom of rxcI of ths old-and kissed It with tlmssdiooh ••We srt not qulto forgotttt by the out- Barbers lo<*ed pleased 1.1 that Dupoaosau was still her oomd ese IMungoo of ....forget that A physician waa snmmonod to a very sick man, who waa very much preoccupied with troublee of his own. On arriving at the tick man'i bed, he said to hie wife:, ■7onr husband to to the laet throes. Every movement shows that the end to hearing.”At thU moment the tick man’s head fell over the pUlow,' when the doctor a ehfm, thin voice the tick man’"Tatn’t io. Marla."At once the wife laid her^hand on hla head and remarked: "Don’t dla- turb yonraelf, Rufna-the doctor knows beat"—Harperij MontlJr. iIm the Wioagr, nsM.It was not untU/three batsman ij Bueoesston had'struck out that a dl» guatsd patron In ths bisachera ysUed:."Hayl Ton mntu oughU bo up hare. Ton’re nothin' but fans."—Kan­sas (hty'nmas. the hoof. The toe. points straight for- and when the horse Is moving straight line the hoofswardforward Inare picked up and carried forward In a lln?. parallel to the middle line of the body. A pair of hoofs of tho form shown In figure 2 allows the Jl weight to fall largely Into the Inner half of tha hoof. In motion the hoof Ifl moved In a cIrcl^>Hor8es that ari^ •toe-wide" are likely 😮 Interfere whem
Cl), m
mm
/I
In motion. In the third form (flgura S) the weight of tho body Is directed on the outer half of the hoot. Th* Irregularity of form causes a paddling motion and frequently Interfering.
B«» r.Bdyrii—Would yon many a man to rtform hlmt %Moun*-®®! If I miMl M a man who didn't need refbtintog.
mixed with votomeirVheat*t^flm th" h!lr^4?om“‘”year. ThU mixing of varieties causeT —®°a‘od with th» wheat to detrlorate to yield and qual- Ity. When wheat la grown for seed It should.’be on clean land, which Is free, from volunteer wheat and from other volunteer grain, rye being esp^ dally objectionable. Care must be taken In harvesting and threshing the seed wheat to keep It front becoming mixed with other, varieties of wheat Again, In order to malnUln the.qual->Ity,and yield of wheat U la necessary to maintain the fertUlty of the soil snd to give the land good culture.-B^rmar®* Mail anil Prorawra . /
Of the world's popuiarien tbm ti*il*® >niiiipD whh Ai*
Farmers' Hall and Breeze.To Dmlroy Woodahs^.A Pennsylvania farmer glvea this experience'with woodohuckg (gnnmd hogs): He had set several hnudred early cabbages, and In going through his patch early one morning he found sevend planta missing. He found the woodehuckg- hole under the wall–to tact, several holee—near hla cabbace
Frovenfin* Dl.eaa®.It Is more easy to prevent dUbase In animal, than It le^o cure.^«stotlona of the country, but In the ma­jority of cases It la due to tho eon. dIOon of the herd, and mlamtotot ment to feeding than to any othV
substance, are not to a direct w preventive of cholera, but thsr -keen the mrimri. to a mori thX 51-*.-".“® *^®®‘‘ ‘J*®® l«*a t»
Wind.tteel ti»p» and used all hla enw^g M iittln, the*, to the burrow. 5®*
Horse-ra^*Jmy be harvested In the toll before yM to the fl,rtog' before rank top ; ^wth hegtoa. Run plow deeply along to*!? J® remove earth. Uft ont ,and ^ main root; thoroughly waifli -T-
. V.;……..

u

'Scrofulaf Few are cntiwly frw from it. /• It may develop so alowjy as to causejMKissr"'’"*""”'''*
MmpUon, before caadiig eroptions, eorea or swellineorea or swellings.
Hood’s SeieaparillaIn asoal liquid form or In chocolated tobleta known as SarMUbSs. lOOdoseitL*Child Badly Bunied.
St. Helens, Ore.—^Three* people'were injured, one perhaps fatally, by the ex­plosion Of a%gasoline stove here recently, -Mrs. W.'P. Taylor, in ittempUng to
light the burner caused the explosion, which set her clothes on fire. Her little daughter tried to help her mothe/qx- tln^uish the flames, but this resulted only ip the little one’s catchingAre. .Taylor, who'was in'an* adjoining room, hearing th© screams of the mother and child,* ran to their aid. He was successful in putting out-the fire
in-their clothes, but was badly burned. Mrs. Taylor is not expected to live.Medium—The spirit of your wife craves leave to speak to you.Man—You’re a rank fraud. My wife would never ask permission to speak to me!By resolution of the Vienna city fath .crs a plot has been set aside in Bt. Mark’s cemetery for the Strabss fam ay.
TheBjccepfionalEquipmentcf the California Fig Syrup Co. and the . scientific attainments of its chemists have rciidered possible the production of Syrup of Figs and Elixi*- of Senna, in all of its excellence, by obtaining the pure mcilic- inal principles of plants know n to act most bcneficiaUy and combining them most ekiUfully, in the right proportions, with
its wholesome and refreshing Syrup of Cklifomia Figs.As there is only one genuine Syrup of Fi^ and Elixir of Senna and as the gen- tiine is manufactured by an original method known to the CaUfomia Fig Syruo Co. only, it is always necessary to buy the genuine to get itq beneficial effects.A knowledge of the above facts enables one to decline imitations or to return them if, upon viewing the package, the full name of the California Fig SyrupCo. is noffound inrinted on the front thereof
Insomnia“I haveaomnia, with which____for twenty years, and I can say that Cas- ‘ ' ! relief thanr tried.ocrtamly recommend them to my friends
have been afl9icted I can say thatcareU have given me more relief than any other remedy I haveever tried. I shafl
mis O^. null It Witt rear
Hotel RaymondJ. A. TtivMi Prop. Bat« SOo ud Up eUROPEAN PLAN CwrUmllir 3oe.tad-Bo.3to W from .U
Only 90 centsHotbdd Sadt, open.———^ JOHotbed Bash, glaaed.™™ 8.W Size 3 ft. X 6 ft.-‘C Hotbed glass, $2.70 por box. . We are the largest makers and distribnters of hotbed sash in the
Northwest Made in mill. We have only one sell to any one, and ship any­where, safe deUveiy guaranteed. Send for price lists. 'Endows, dooys, glass, mouldings, frames, roofing, etc., all sold at our one price tq any one. ^ -' a B. WZLX2AM8 OO, 1010 Western Ave., Seattle, Wariu
Broom Cora ffituatton.
With brooms higher than for years, the following resume of the broom, com situation by Twin City Commercial ulleUn in interesUng:If the 80,000,000 inhabitanto of theUnited States were divided into families that consisted of five persons on an be 16,000,000 supplied with brooms, ling that each family would con- ono brodm every three months, four* brooms a year, it would re- 5,333,300 dozen to furnish this
average, there' would families to be
furnish this , wever, is not required. From th< conservative estima Lildiog^, factories, as 'Ites for railroads woU as for D-third careful and pubUc bnil and all general p 'exportation, it is agreed that ono third more, or 1,777,700 dozen, must be pro­duced to supply thir demand. This, then, in round number^ is 7,000,000 dozen brooms required annually to sup­ply tho demand upon tne broom mak-'°f>o°m^th7bcginiung of the broom in­dustry it has been estiiqated that it roquiredT ^0 pounds of broom corn to make .a dozen brooms. That is, with­out doubt, 4po low an estimate, because of demand ih later years for a heavier article. Taking that venerable tradi-
tion^however, a^s a bMis, shows anerebroom corn since 1907. mated OklaIllinois 28,00' tons, all other sections 7,000 tops; totar 69,000 tons; corrob­orates with reasonable . accuracy the estimate of tho annual production.The market price of broom com has a wide range, depending upon supply
A few yeais ago it sold as low as $30 to $40 per ton. – In 1808, as a result of a famine in the crop and an inflated currency, broom corn sold from $450 to $500 per ton. The range within the$80 to $100 per ton! Tho latter price ia considered a good price and yields satisfactory and ro- ' ‘ its production.of tho crop in productive sea* I. Tho crop of
of 70,000 en a normal ci n produced in this country , In that year it was esti- ahoma produced 34,000 tons, ,00' tons, all other sections
past year, or until the crop harvest 1909, has been $80 to $100
munerative profits for On that basis the valutho United States 3 $7,(easily explained, many years there was little carried over ' . crop into the present one,w or manufactured stock.The umrket was bare. Dealers in anticipation of lower prices when the now crop came in, forced their stock down, to the lowest condition^ Okla
from
tho 1 either in
homaLVvast terrinin.*a“uc*"condi-favorable and to it broom corn men looked for a yield of 40,000 to 50,000 tons. Late in tho month of August tho hot winds, like the deadly simoom, swept over the country, and whatever green thing it touched was dead. Broom corn offered most resist ance to the fiery heat, and farmers in many section mowed down the grow­ing crop to make feed of it for tho keep
of their stock through tho winter, in which wo will soon enter. Instead of the expected yield in Oklahoma there will be several hundred toM, just how much nobody knows, The plant in Hlinois was injured by early many acres planted were abandoned, and the tonnaTO per acre greatly reduced. The fact that Kansas and Missouri during the past few years have practically dis­continued growing broom corn, except in small areas, contributes to tho force of the present situaUon. It is esti­mated that there is less than a half.1.present year was I^own, prices rapidly advanced untfl $200 to $220 per ton was reached. Under existing conditions there, prices appear reasonable and legitimate. It is some satisfaeUon in these times to know that no trust orIt is^me satisfaeUo to know that no tn idicate has had anything to Dipolating the market.
Don’t make resolutions unless you inte^ -to keep them, advises the Inter- state (St. Danis) Grocer, but suggests t^f^owing in the shape of fixed busi-Besoive to make your store better and cleaner than it was l^t year. You may think, and many are justified in so thinking, that the limit of improvement has been reached. Look around closely and -see if that is the case.Resolve to cut prices on no goods you handle. If every retailer would dd that how much better off they would be.Resolve to see that your clerks are always polite to c that you set them^md*the^4wti?^. of if you are fortunateResolve to attend your association, if you enough to be a member Resolve to^devotoyour business.' ^You may flu can save a little more* here and shut off a few Resolve to give tho Golden chance to operate in not a bad one to follow.
of Ie to devoto a little more time to both the buying and selling end of'thwe
that yon are in. It h^lpa to better yours.Resolve to work against parcels post and for a redaction of ^he ten-cent tax
oleo tax is hard oh them.
yon fcoowyonoan-k…'‘tLis is your son’s third yeaiL at college, isn’t it!””Yot, and he’s doing roaly splen-^»&ental or *thleUef”he poses fbr sU these piotores
Tosy -lt is possible to m»ko » haggle of * bnngalow.
When the
Hair Falls
Stop it! And why not? Fall­ing hair is a disease, a regolar disease; and Ayer’s Hair Vigor, as made from our new im­proved formula, quickly and completely destroys that dis­ease. The hair s^ops falling out, grows more.rapidly, and all dandruff disappears.Dec. ml drnnt* the dor of the half.M Teren^^
wbf each ingredient is used, and ex­plains many other interesting, things. After reading you will know why this new hair preparation does its workao we—kmu by tapJ. 0. Ajtits w 00..1
Trial Bottle riw« Bjr Mall
Bottle and give/DB. W. H. MAY, I
teclei end Eye-gleBaet
Send name or coupon for Home Eye Tester—
equals a peraonal riilt. It will be
OUp and mall today sPleaie send me your Home Eye Tester,
without charge.Ken^tr……
Files Ourod In 6 to'14 XHtys. PAZO OINTMBKT is guaranteed to cure any xase of Itching, BUnd, Bleed­ing or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days
”Somo people say ‘1“tr’Lr/thfnt-’*
feminine.
the same thing.”don’t think so. My idea is thati’ is' masculine and luncheon’
Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup the best remedy to use for their chUdren during the teething period.London has*a population of 4,795,757.The coal bUI of the navy last year, including handling and storage, was $5,544,945.
DB. MARTEL’S FHMATiB PILLS Serenteen Yew tha SUndaid.Prescribed. and feeomm«nded for women’s aUments—a oeientifieally pre­pared remedy of proven'worth. .The re­sult from their use is oniqk and perma­nent. For sale at all Wg stores.The man who iweara off swearing off often swears oftener after he has sworn off swearing off-than he did before he
To Ours a Cold In One Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money if it
fails to cure. E. W. GROVE’S signa-
Colstoun famous for its carefuUj guarded ”luck” in the shape of a dried fruit kn^wn as the (Tolsioun pear.HOWARD B. BUSTOir, Asssyw tad
___ ”Isn’t your hat rather, curious in0 Golden Rule a riiapef” asked the nninfonqed man. 8toX It 5 a "ItiV. , hM to be. Any hat that wasn’t onri-… . n… in gknp^ would look floeer,”PotUt’a Bjra Salvo for Ovor too Toaia baa hood naod for eongost^" and In­flamed eyes, removw fllm or scum over fae oyeo. AH toggists or Howard Bros., Bufhlo, N. y. . . j
..^’i*’rr,;’r‘s.!sss2awas 70,300,457. pounds, of whioh 65,819,- 457 pounds was domestic, as compared
To Br$ak in Hew Shoes.
Always shake In Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder. » cum het, '
Btatna of ”Bn2k Balsa” Laws.The vaU^$y^ of sututes requiring merchants to file notice of their inW- turn to'sell the whole or a largo part of their stocks has been lately passed upon by a number of the courts of last resort of tho several states, says Eli Grocer and General Merchantc Different conafcnietions have been put upon similar acts by different courts; and some of the states have upheld acts that other of the states have declared
to bo nnconstitutional; so that the law
Mr. ' Everett B.. Boeder, oue of the ! of St,
i regard to this subject, at the present ‘ ‘ 1 condition
time, is in a much confusedMr.' EvereU B.. Boeder, ___ leading attorneys and counsellors Louie, furnishes the following with re­gard to ”bulk sales” legislation:. Almost all, if not all, legislation upon this subject is of recent date. One of the latest decisions upon the matCer is that of the Supreme Court of Connecti­cut m the case of Young vs. Lemionx, n which the validity of the ”bulk sale” law of that state is sustained. The court held that
the act of that state, which passed in 1903, was a proper exercise of the police power of the state and that it did not interfere with property rights. The eoDstUntionality of the Connecticut law as passed upon in the case of Young vs..Lomioux was also sustained by a. federal court.
A New Yoik law of 1902, relating to tho same subject, was declared to be unconstitutional. The law was Uter amended and in ito amended condition was upheld. The first act declared a sale in violation of the act absolutely void while the second one substituted 1 lowing provision,*”'Will bo presusecond one substituted thefol j provision,*”'Will bo presumed be fraudplent.”Aconstruction act was sustained.An Oklahoma law, somewhat similar to the New Yo
Pennsylvania law conforming in traction to the second Now York
Fork law which was de
When You’re Hoarse Use
PW.?5I Gives immediate tAL Tbefint 1 I *•« ixtnnanently for sonm ’Weeks
' .tocome. .' ■ ' ;■■■
Noticb is h'ereby'’^i ental plats of portions of Townships
named are corrective of. the
T. H. BATITLETT. Recfat^ Dat^ at Lewiston, Idaho, t^iia 26th day 0/January. 1910.
ratorofiemlauls on the 9lh day D."1909s. for the sum of ^500.00 besides accruing interest and costs, which said
.0 «11 u,.' o.iai. pwcelcs of land, situated, ly-j : County of NczIdaho, and bounded and follows to wit: •
:Mir;DeGourcey. dealer m Dirt -FARM LOANS, TIMBER LAND^ CITY LOTS and INSURANCE
Money [to Loan.on Improved FarmW [fS . OROFtNO, IDAHO r# ' 'firi?
together w4th the .
Bank of Orofino
;ssi.’ia5r''
’ «%•■:> ;-cotnef-rFor information bearing 6n the wKereabbuts of this celestial wanderer Whfily to Dr. Frederick Cook, address unknown.
– Clagstone was governor of Idaho for three days and did not know it. •What a [pity. It is hioft Ufiah likely that he has servedi longer | withhul ihfe p«»ple*s consent than
'week-the iffidkl countjr coigin^oners^ the Local Option >"El^on. qoestioais now placed squarely……………… before the peflpTe dor? theif’^dccept-ance or rejection. •’ Itj is supposed an active campaign will be soon wagered by both sjdes in the quest
•Notice of ShNotice beaspc of theCompany, Limited ^ _toe com^y. at Orofino, Ner Percensrr,
tenements ^nd
Nezl
urday, the twelf A. D. i9io, at a o’c day in frpnt of and st t Uie Court Hou^ of theUie Court Hou^ of the County of: ]
cree of . foreclosure
property or^ necessary to satisfy «iul judgement with interest and cost, etc. to the highest and best bidder, fd^
– ^ Oroflno’s New Bank^ . Opened for Business April 1st, I909r, Capital $15000.00:c; OFFICERS -Frank. W, Keltenboch, President; Jerome J. Day. Vee PreSideri’h :Wllll>tiff‘**e' '^JV^ -ton. D. C.-Tanuary'Trth. , It .-is
>eech of ^^ator Borajh delivered
Dr. J.’m. Fairly
Physician and Surgeon
jtoi pi^btf
Office at Residence *
– TDAHa
needless to say that the speech eloquent, timely and 'thoroughly' appreciative oLlie brilliant Hamil­ton, 'so^little und«y?<50d an'tF'a'p- prtciai^by the presypt generationl-f lowaf‘“^j^^ce; have been and Qearwater TdQ)hone V ^ ■Connects with Pacific Telephone mmnnication Wit onuide » . weir as all locali:8pecialty!“'‘re^c^U3^SHc‘itpoints, a-apeci . yonr business. |^%pn£3«W^^liivtsWthe : reciuf yjat Gqvernw^ame _______ ,.tkM ;Unervfe*ea , ,^Csnhjecte, interest to^^hte'frtate/sUid deltv^si'^"" *“*— BmlU Opptig0r ',- ; C'"IDAHO ' '. "0$) ''Wl;Pierce City timber belt and mining districL Qearwater Livery and Feed StaWelff^ Wheelock a OPPLIGER, Proprietors ;3:;2 DrivingTeams, Saddle and Pack Horses : : ,;;aho g|- Nebaho Idimber Col?, Zelsnka a Linn, Proprietors '- ; ' • , . Successorrto ' • ,''i/'5^':;.’'' F. Z. Lumbep Company ?Lumber, Lath, Moulding OrofinoIdaho! trill'; , . Rouxh atid.Dreaap^vit ' L;umt>®r>, Lath,' S'- f '£.■%■ Shlngrlets^ Etc.
Abstracts of Title; House ' Biiis a Sp e ci a 1
cons^atiqn;“What Wc* dc
almost ever defendant
^e^ha^ js^ rifitoric»ting exo^ that'he has^liquors to such;.,.i'dffand »Iwiness; that almost continoously-S'
.1; ■‘ L^tston i . vv.ADstract . .VGompany.
paying the fed^ goverament ajtipn on part of p^htiffl’^dk ^T'^i 1 ^dti.W^rt.°‘‘’'^ hand Idaho has!>“? and locked her down, andgovernmrat as its share of toe proceeds ' J“»e. 1908. defendant knocked plaintifffrom the forest reserve alone. At the • her .over the side and«tnerate,if the developement of tiie [foiUdcr wito a shot guu;■tote continues ^ it promises, within . Provided plaintiff- or her^ ytora weBhall be handling ovlrt a) ^dren wi^lh the necessarira of life; pillion dollars^ a year tribute tn thei^^“^ they have two children to wit*^ I Charley Herold and Mium'e Ednavation, , . hrm to keep
1 government.:are abeolntely inf
, but we want to fiiperson
– -if Cf ‘ ^ arrival in Nez Perci comity 1.^, “ i '<=l‘«TWent time, and will hot advocate state wide, prohibition at toe cqming state primaries. We are glad uj be placed- right on the goyernor'a attitude on the question, ai we , had no wish to at him in the*mattw. >
. f P*“=*>* >“ “ wrong attitude. ; -t; – ‘he people on the tcmpcrence quie-riot.: probation J.
^gSigi CleuwaterFdnndry15to day of Januar“ ,, – . – " –^ V 'Manufacturer of ganijedgwi and Trimmers. General ^ saw-miU supple*. . ^t JUinSt. f v. .Lewiston -, Idaho!
w. L. GIFFORD,.By q. B.MONTEITH.'”*'’ •Deputy,
.ShefifPs Sale. .. ' ,,9‘ iorecloBuro sale by'' Ogden, MorgM^ Morjan
– lawyers. ; X;District. State itea ,F^«raI I^e, '
.^utely toe greatest values ever offered to the
are Oie Whnlesale and Retail Dittriib- . : fnr the Inland Empire of the
M^0N & MELVILLE CLARK. VOSE
– CONCORD, and other pianos.
' ^eIviUeCl»^ AppoIIo/Combinola, Fiacher.
oIa, ai|d other Player i^noi, MASON & E4M-^*^ ““** o*‘«anfc 😕 /- Write for Catalogs: call at toe wareroonw pf
mostreuPianoGo;
… PINETBADWC CO, –aas
i5S&a
I;:::*'-*

1 rred Titus, jne^enger for the N. P.»^ V nude his regular.trip this week report- ; ^ ing a very snowy time. :5 ; vThe snow is abopt two feet deep on . the bars along the river but much deep^; on the hills and still snowing.John Lewis and J. Sroilh of Big Island . Uepanment of .he W Avere blismcss Visitors of this place re- United litnteii Ua4 office si Uwiston Idaho -;~:«nt!y, appraising the personal propertyof the late Morgan Woodard. PKTJiR j. HOLMHEJid
__ to move, but have no. trail built and filK. no.l«?f in*'n?!oSl? fi'.V ‘*** ^*‘"^ Idaho, on or hfter
cannot UM their boats on account of ice. ?riuybrfo*fc‘‘lSci'tc!-"..‘.d ’9»>> day of Jammry, 1910 andThey ha.4 moved trail camps U,is week ' "“h'" «>>“■>»»>» thereafter. . _: moved trail camps UiU week,I soon have the trail ready.F. C. Larkin has just hnished puttin in a pontoon ferry at his ranch on tli North, Fork and tfie N. P. R. R. Co. has j
T«ra» of Sale.CASH—10 per 1T. He BARTLETT, Rcfflater>, Notice for Publication, made a trail from LiUlc North 1-prk to j United the ferry where they will cross «ith L«y aben .ha.their pack trams for (he upper North payi;TTic culp
of thepackers.large barn and caom on me Larkin j i.cu 7. s. SK1-4 ranch for the accomodatiou of the ; noU« of
Wells Bench Items.Jas. Vanhorn is cutting wood for John Wells.
)H—10 per cent pT each bid “ must accompany sanie. .^The undersigned rfr- , the right to reject any and all! ' s J. G. BTILLOCK,1 ' – V V Administrator.' NotlewSlK«^^
Notice is hereby given that the co-,________
. «erriU- HoiiS®bench visitor

Edwin Chandlerthe past week. . |* Nifice for Publicatron., Our-phone man recently insb.lled a] Cni.rd Idaho• rphpne for John Wells. j giv.n ih.t ………………….- Good sledding is a thing of ‘the past I Benjamin TayToruntil it snows some more. *Edgar Oldfield and Paul Rs^stoftssen are cutting wooidiho, jMiuifyj+ -, CoHvenlentlSanipIe Roomsi"i*
Home Cooking Only
■t i»i i»i a i»i iiw
'1*^* Untoji, Warner
T. H.; BARTLETT. RcglatirTWJK: .daB,,
Notice to Creditor..Idrho^' Court of Net Perce County,of the estate of iMliella Irwin
admimsirator of the wilA crew or men have been engaged in f Irwiu Deceased, to Ihe creditor, of. ind nil urbu thc^
,_P w i..p.y of Net Per
t names as w’itiieM:
________________IRTLETT: Register,Notice to C^Mlitara.Miho" C«“rt Of NeeiJ-erce Countji.of Clarence’K.otic^ls hereby given by the underatg^ Ad–
Orofino Improvement Co.WanU a North Idaho Mtii.There is one thing about the candidacy of B. F. O’Neil for governor that cu-
erc'ir*l*S?a?c of Idaho.**
Signed and dated at
Orofino, Idaho
AM D. IRWIN, Administrator.Notica to Credilora.
January fI, 1910.Notice is hereby given (hat AUGUST AI.BKRT A
titles it to serious consideration at the hands of the peopli of Latah county.!He is a north Id.sho man, and as such j would, everything considered, be prefer-! , . .able to any southern candidate. H is; fu?,
jfino, Idaho, on^thc
Woodarl«iir.M]rh'«
The Orofino Feed ^ Sale Stable.T. W. Sortt. PropHeton '' ^
"GOOq SADDLE HORSES ON
Hay aBd"Grain for Sali.
OROFINO; ;. -; . – , – ''
^ this section, and enable northern : •„,'S:ion^:'i!l>''ro6ao.Idaho to demand and get egmnderation. ‘’SX'Z:. n‘.mc..So far Mr. O’Neil has been.a. consistent l-red Kricbe. Joim Lewis, j.nies II. Smith and friend of the University of Idaho. „rov-i- ing one of its warmest supportersduringl,______ T. H. BARTLETT. Reglater.
. Idaho, thU the *,jShn 1Estray Notice.Notice is hereby given that the under­signed has taken up the following des­cribed ptopeny which he wiU seU under Department of the Interior ' the astray laws of Idaho: On
OrofmoMeat^CoIi
Rr^sh ancl Cur^ Meatii. – and Rbtiltry ^ .
Ruro Kettle Mlutorecl L.erd
Notice for PublicaliiOne c
steer, stag horns, white ds visible. 'HitsL'C
the session of 1903, Mr. O’Neil being the state senate frem Shoshone county^^ Everything being equal, it will certainlyIwiTaL ontr Th I '"““'"-by *1… 1 will be sold in Orodno on thb .ath dayaway an opportunity to get the governor, j FRnfiKRiEBR [bf February. 1910. at the hoar of itThegame is yet young, and in the | «fBI*f»ta"d. Idaho.Vlio; on j«ly,. „ia,, made-lo-clock P. M. DANfliL DELANE>V; .nfcantime the people ought to do some j S-"?ot “ , t, -serious thinking.—JIoscow .Star-Mirror. ' Notic. for Poblicatlbn. -• . ,——————– . ijearproof.lo trtablUhclHlnitotbc 'ond'alwscl ,, '’•'•‘“ABTlIENTOFTHKlNTHRrOR-^ C^A^nr grocer for Fnneesa j g^;gS./-.^h<^'r Notice to Contrecton. sz,S“..".5 5!.,s '.i''srSSSu."”' ““ -“i ^x'ZSniVtm^ Notice UUcreb T. H. BARTLETT. Register. splSSyS^ ,Cpnipaay- iimited- * t! ^.■BARTL^^°R«giator.' • : ' 0; K. CONFECTIONERY O. K. partbrsi for Cindies, Nute. Fruits, Tobacc^, Ci- fiars, Post Cards, Etc.-Lunch Goods In Conn^tlon. ifoi’The Lewiston Laundry Company ' , " - - ■ ? . r ORIN CROCKETT. Pro’^rletor. ' ’5' •.Notice for PubUoatlon. aDepartmcol ofihe lulcriorOfllce. Lewloton. ilStt ■ Hum Of 5 per cent of the arao V* vyach bid to accompany the same, rfeited In case bid la acceptc cuted. Succcss- ORANT SIMPSON be for -2,^ PfJ*® 0^•^V0^k. 1. T.IL BARTLETT. Register.The Board reserves Uie right t*p^rtm«t of U,c Interior,United States
Idmd Qffleo, LewlitakIdaho, Pecrmber’ir. ,^. ' : ~Notice la herebjj givcq that aoud f . -ANDRKW CLKaNDKNlNG
………Redomption . ,f ,C,unty[aWammU. – |;''t-»'o». W»h..oolhe ..Adayofl-ebruary.
j County Warruuta if presontod for i T. H. Baijpoyinent at iny ofUce withinI ^^/^Warrajita of the 19(« ScrUs on
.11 ofBARTLETT^Reglater.
United Stales Land Ofllce. Lewiston.
the 4th*a»wUne*«4:*T“ *t ;wAHo jomNos.The First State bank of KeUogg baa just been installed in its new qoari •n the Cox A Brown’s brick Mock.The county treasurer at 'WaUaea re­cently remitted to the aUte treasnier $71,520 county Ueenaes andtaxes forHutehinaon died at bia raneb ^ Pii ridge recently. Thirty years ago Hutchinson homesteaded the land which he died.Members of the Western FederaUon ot Miners-in the Coear d’Alene district have each been aaaeased a snm for the relief^ of idle miners in the Homestabe •distriri in South Dakota.V . The Eev. Thomas Warren of Lapwai5" month of Gar-:: s ,• dontarna 120 acres.> , Jamea De^wcey, jnstiee of the-.,y, PCM of Orofino, baa rant in Wz rcaig. nation tc thwcotraty-lbonffl,- !)^^• o' h»ring;.a«anUed a elti-^rfolatcd Ua oath of• ^ ' ^ '***!0»> United SUtra immigra.2^ In^ry baa apprebenaoa.^“* Bonnera lbriy.wh0.rain»'to- wmntry wiUwnT^^'
*tS%, •Ssr^»“s
wm Engage in Contests find blbltioB PUghte at Variona
Los Angeles.—AU of the aviators and aeronauU who took part in the 10-day aviaUon meet just concluded in this city have departed, with the excepUon of Glenn H. Curtiss, who wiU leave for Hammondsport, N. Y., soon.Louis Paulhan and entourage left early for San I^aneiaco. 'Charles K. HamUton left for San Diego, where he wUl try for the alti­tude record of the world in the futnro.Charles P. -SVaUard has gone to Preano, where he will fly under the management of Prank Johnson.Clifltord B. Harmon and President Bishop of the Aero CTub of America started for New York.Dick Porris, manager of the avia­tion meet here, has loft for San Pran- cisco and fram that city will go to Salt Lake and Denver to arrange for the appearance of Eanlhan and his associ­ates in those cities. Divers
Chop Into Ice.Divers descended through the cruet of ice on the Spanish river into some of the submerged cars. Hardy sub­marine workers could remain in the frigid waters but a few moments. Their uncovered hands were almost frozen as they were hauled to. the enrfaee. Working in relays in the.-glaro of bon­fires built at either end of the bridge, they chopped their way into
the cats in an effort to recover the ghastly freight.Wreckii ^fasten chains about to hoist them from the bed
New York.—James J. Hill, the rail­road magnate, who is in this city after a tour through the west and northwest, sees a menace to western prosperity in tho tendency to invest beyond the cap­ital available. Mr. Hill says that if there comes a panic people can not look to the government to help because it will be a serious condition brought down on the people by their own acts. Generally speaking, however, the rail­road builder sees nothing but prosper­ity in 1010.
Mr, Hill said: "Western banks areloaned up very closely, but still there is plenty t)f money. The only menace I see is a tendency to invest beyond the available capacity. If that hap­pens the investors can not look to the government for aid."Speaking of his” railroad Mr. Hill concluded: "The Great Northern is in fine condition. It is running trans- continental mail trains on faster schedules that were ever done be­fore."
tions in the initial movement’of tbe^ government's second big fight to break the alleged combination of packers to maintain high meat prices.United States District Attorney Sims will , open criminal proceedings against the packers wifh a presentation of a large amount of data gathered by‘him­self and assistants. That tho govern­ment intends to wage a vigorous and hard fought campaign is believed to be shown by the fact that civil proceed­ings are for the time made secondary to criminal. Sims has a score of witnesses here and has been working quietly for several months. These are expected to go before tho grand jury, and upon their testimony Sims expects to secure indictments against leading packers.Will Boycott Meat Trust.Poughkeepsie, N. Y.—Members of tho Glass Blowers' union have voted to ab­stain from .using meat after February 1 until th^ price has been considerably decreased.
Morgantown, W. Va.—Two thousand employes of four glass factories and of the American Sheet and Tin Plate com­pany have signed a pledge to abstain from eating meat fox^a days.Minneapolis. — The organizedstand in Minneapolis against tho high price of meat was taken Sunday when
more than 500 men employed in the Chi- :ago, Milwaukee & St. Paul shops joined the boycott.Clergy Boast Meat Trust.Baltimore. — Discussing the lugjb ?rice of meat tho Rev. Francis H. Scott, of tho Catholic Union Christian 5hurch *, in a
iail with the oppressors of tho poor. There is no civilized country that has ts vitality sapped to such a degree as has the United States by tho trusts." Tho Bev. Dr. Henry M. Wharton of BranUin Baptist church, referring to the meat boycott, said: '‘If such agreat movement does not alarm tho trusts and wake up congress then something else will happen. It is the first muttering of the distant thunder.
sermon Sunday said:
TO TAKE TAX OFFOLEO.Texas Member
making futile efforts to fasten chains about tho ears of thefrozen stream. So fearful is the cold and so great is tho hardship faced by the workers that slow.The divers have succeeded in reach- ing tKe amoking compartment of the first-class coach and brioiriiKr fn ih.
progress is cruelly
bandits hidiko nr sr. LouiaWho Hold Up lOraoml Pacifle Train Bald to Hava Gotten at Laaat $10,000.St. Lonia—The.fonr men who held up and robbed the Missouri Pacific train near Eureka, Mo, are reported to be hiding in St. Loins. Two hnn- dred man and six hle^onndo the greater part of St, Lotria eo'nnty in an almost frnitiesa search for the boat in whieh the bandits are aupposed to have floated down the Meramee river to a point convenient to St. Louis and which was stolon n few niiiee from the scene of the robbety.Bewards aggregating $7,200 wore offered for the arrest and eb'nvition of the outlawB, who aw boUeved to have obtained. $10,000 in th^ tobbSry. Gev- ornor Hadl«r . offsrad the mazimiim whieh m ^ allows, $800 foe eeeh nraiB the Masmri Eaelfle, $800 for man, and the United Siatra poat- -iaspeethm department $l,000 for taHngofthemendaadoraHve.
-class coach and bringing to the surface four bodies of traveUng men who were playing cards at the time of the disaster. They ware frozen stiff in a great block of ieo when sent to tho surface and had acsreely moved from their playing positionb.At the scene of the wreck a raging blizzard was wreaking its fury npon the gangs of wreckers who were work­ing. in the teeth of a bitter and blind­ing snow.For three hours ono man hung by hU hands to the transom of tho coach, bijathing what Httle air remained at the roof of the ear, whUe hU body was submerged in the water,.Bobert Burroughs, manager of the BeU Teiephoner oompany at Sault Ste. Marie, a passenger in the Pullman ear, whieh did not go into the river, said Screams of the Victims." When the Phllman wont down that embankment and turned over I was thrown in a corner, stunned snd braised and covered with debris. AU around ns I eonld hear the screams of women and ohUdien in thS bnniing half of tbs raeond-class ear. They
Says It Causes High Price of Batter.Washington.—Bopresentativo Bnrie son of Texas appeared recently before the house committee on agricSlture in behalf of his bill repealing tho tax on oleomargarine, whieh tax he assertedoThnUr”’*”®Before this tax was imposed, Mr. Burleson said, there was manufaeturod annually 130,000,000 pounds of oleo­margarine, which he characterized as a pure and wholesome food product, and which was sold from IS cents to 18 cents per pound. The price of but ter was then 20 pound.cents to 30 cents per
E-thew
Hew Ym am look-^voraWy upon the iseomo tan. Of eoarae nofc 7b«$
were aU eoflsomed by Bumaghs declared he had' to force his way through the debris in order to get out of the. oar. ."lYound a'woman on .the floor lying pUned under tho raat," ho continued. “Sbe tried to rise, but could not and aaked mo ttf look for her husband. I made her as comfortable as I could and flnaUy found her husband deed. Whan I returned to tdl hte she deej .too, her 'Sp&s hiring been orokeiie"When we-began removing tbn in Jured n Utflo boy wtuppea in n blanket was banded up to mo to pais along the lino of reranea. As I^k hS «»e wind Mew the blnnket aside and he woe so horribly crashed that it was bard to boliovo ha was human. I said,
HAEBY THAW IS NOW BANKBUPT.Opinion Piled by Bsfsrra on Pstltton of Trustee.Pittsburg, Pa.—That Harry K. Thaw is a bankrupt and that his estate is subject to the United States bank- raptcy laws is held by Beferee WiUiam B. Blair, who recently handed down an opinion on the petition of Eoger O’Nara, tractee of Thaw’s estate, for leave to rail the bankrupt’e real and personal property to his sister, Alice Copley Thaw, at private sale. The I^on was opposed by New York

CHINA TO BOBBW lABGE SUMEngl^ Pirane^ Germany and United States to Parttdpate.Now York.—A settlement has. finally ^n x^ed regarding the Hankow- to^nra raUway to a loaa of $30.- 000,^, It was reported in banking eirclos reifontly, and the allotment of^hira *’*England, Pranee, Germany and the United Statra are each to share a one- quarter intereat, or $7,500,000 of the
!TOOK 8TBY0HNXKB H3T MISTAKE.W^onua SwxUows Large Boee ^ of PoUoa to Bark. :^Ter, (^-Miatak&g a lmttle of
Secretary Wilson Talks. "Undoubtedly if the farms were raising more meat the price would be reduced,’’ said Secretary Wilson of tho department of agriculture, in comment­ing upon the widespread boycott against meat products. "There are not enough people on the farms raising rood and too many people are going to the towns to bo fed. ‘Three-quarters of a million peo­ple,” said Secretary Wilson, "are ng to tho United States annnaUy from abriad. They do not go to tho farms where they might help ralra food ' for the nation. Farmers can not getand they have to bo fed. The eitiea produce nothing to eat although they to produce something to drinkf”"Have you any plan for inducing people to go to the farms where theywaf raked.^" **®'*‘"y"Jim HiJI says they will go there when they get hungry," said tho'see-
BULLET HOLE IN HBB nrxsaw"“Logan" Jura;ni.lt, Discorezy Known After Trial.Colville, Wash.—Unknown to the prosecution untU after Frederick Wfl- liam Jahns, alias Prank Eomandorff,
discovered a bullet hole in th? cloaT worn by the murdered woman which was introduced a. evidence.
Lopn" fired three ehots from behind at the woman. He has confessed that he struck the woman with his fist knocking her from the wagon sSat, but a^ts that she broke her neek in
^Attorneys for the defense, it ii're . .

I
ir–
Ei- .^ TME LOCRE ,:>RD or MOST IKffTiCT^JiTTie yetr 1906 I* destined to figure « sn Important one In hUtorr. What % twelremonlh it hat been^ and how peat iu manifold wonders of happen­ing and accomplishment: Flying a sertalnty; the North Pole diacoTOred; rnrkey Reformed; Persia reformed; England's IdOas of the ethics of taxa­tion upset; India reatlTe; China sub- lected to a mass of new Impressions;. Belgium passing under a new and. it to to be hoped, more beneficent rule; >renu now in progress In Nicaragua that may lead to a, further extension -*f clTlllratlon and pence: the distance ICT088 the Atlantic further shortened; the dlsUnce across our own country tbcat to be decreased; wireless teleg­raphy entering into the realm of com­mon utility; efforts now being made for the better protection of life In nines and on the great waters. If the care man lived to^ay he could hardly repeat his now famous doclara- Uon, "Romance is dead." By science, contrary to many fears, wonder and mystery have been increased.
The year 1909 is associated with •vents of supreme interest and Impor­tance at home and abroad. A glance at this summary will recall them to mind, and preserved for future refer­ence It win be found a valuable aid •o ail:
m
fflOES.FLIOITTBB TEaR t»0911—Dekth of Profe Simon N•woom^ astronomor.Naval manauvara bagln off Maa-aachuaetta coaat—–Steamer John D.Cowle sinks in, lake Superior with fourteen of crew,1«—New Shah proetolmed In Persia . .Snell wlU case .decided in Clinton,
aalla for Af23—Sian und worn Whltla boy, arrested Ex-Presldent Rooaev rlca. ^26— Prince George ct Servla nouncea right to auccession.27- Creek Indiana arabuah offleera ar Hickory Ground, OkJa.
JANUARY.t—China deposes reform Gi Councilor Yuan Shi Kal.-Earthquake rocks Stromboli cily andrarahlp fleet ar- fives at Suez and sends boats to relief of Messina.4—Supreme Court voids 129.000,000 flno against Standard Oil Co.6— 7—Severe cold wave envelops country.7— Niirht ridera convicted of murder
In Union City, Tenn.8— Rev. J. H. Carmichael kills Gid-
10— Twenty-four men kUled In mine txploBlon in Zelgler, 111.11— Rev. J. H. Carmichael, preacher- murderer of Battle Run, Mich., kills?lf in Carthage. IIL -Explosion in mini Va.. takes 100 livea 14—Death of Vice Admiral Rojest- vensky in St. Petersburg.16—T. Jenkins Hains acquitted of complicity in' murder of Wm. E. Annla.—–Great strike of hatters in Eastern
Btales begins.19— Ellhu Root elected Senator from York.20— Sixty lives lost by burning of waterworks crib in Lake Michigan, off Chicago.22— Sentence of Herman Blllek, Chi­cago poisoner, commuted to life im­prisonment—–Congress votes to buildtwo large battleships.23— Six thousand die in earthquakes In Central Persia.23—Liner Republic sunk near Mar­tha's Vineyard, after collision with Italian steamer Florida; six lives lost.26— Death of Coquelin. French nctor.27— Former State Treasurer Frank P. Glazier, of Michigan, convicted of misapplying State funds.28— United States withdraws from rovernment of Cuba; Gomez is inaugu­rated President29— Earthquake'and tidal wave de- rastate southern coast of Spain…. *J'Ierce blizzard sweeps United States.FEBRUARY.4—Gov, Haskell of Oklahoma Indict­ed for land frauds.6—Disastrous floods In Germany.6—Battleship Delaware launched at Newport News,
APRI!.,prison to FL Lcavsn- worth. Kan., bums,2~Great Are to Fort Worth, Texas. ….Death of Admiral Cervent.6-7-Couniry swept by destructive storm.8— Dcath of Helena Modjeska. great Polish actress.9— Death of Ethan A. Hitchcock, for­mer Secretory of the Interior….Payne tariff bill passed by House… .Death of F.^ Marlon Crawford. American novel-10— CIprIano Castro forcibly expelledfrom Fort de France. Martinique…. Death of Algernon Charles Swinburne, English poet. ^22—Death of Gov. Llllef of Connecti-
23— Gov. Willson of Kentucky par- dons alleged Goe^jel conspirators…. Death of ex-Sen. Stewart of Nevada.24— Constantinople taken by consti­tutional army.25— Sultan’s palace in Constantino­ple surrenders.27-Abdul Hamid deposed and his brother installed as new Sultan of Tur key. Mehmfd V.30—Daughter bom to Queen Wllhel mina of Holland:.. .Severe atom sweeps lake States.
10—EIIA Olngles case to Chicago »nds in her acquittal.,..Tunnel under Hudson between New York and Jer-
ipton^Ii^., bank robbed of |60.-
000 by assUtant cashier.28-28—RioU and j^rnage .to Uarce- iona, Spain.30— Severe earthquakes In Mexlca31— Osaka, Japan, has grsat fire…. Conference report on tariff paized by
NEWS OF THE WORLD
SniT ITEIIS FIM EVOY-
WHEREAUTIlETIIIt.
moBXBST joAT FOB omoHisraL
InBotliBgrt. MB gnd Wasura BAmtopban. Dwin, tlM Faat Weak—Battoul, BIMatfcd PoUUcal and ParaMul Eveiiti tsld in Short Paragrapba. :
AUGUST.Payne tariff bill passed by Senateand signed by President___Coniadjourned.,..Chicago street car voted to strike.10—Alabama Senate passes Inc tax act….Death of Col. A. A. Pope, and of Richard Golden.12— Court holds Harry K. Thaw In­sane.13— Death of Rev. Hiram W. Thomas of Chicago.19-21—Fatal automobile accidents to Indianapolis.27-28—Destructive floods to Mexico..31—Pennsylvania train held up near Lewlstown, Pa.
ati-Japanese legislation defeat ed In California Assembly.12— Centenary of Abraham Lincoln’s birth generally celebrated over United States.13— Train held up and robbed -|J^ver…. Protocol with VenezuelaW—Three hundred ^le in burning 7—Death of Apache chief, Geronl-
Iheater In Acapulco,17—Death of ApacJ’eslgns preal-lency of Michigan University. ^21-United States fleet arrives off Hampton Roads after globe-glrdllng Wp….Bloody race riots In South Omaha. Neb….Death of Carroll D.
Wright. 0
march.1—Death of E. J. (Lucky) Baldwin, doted turfman.Fire to New York .tenement house kills ten persons.. ^—'Wm. H. Taft and James S. Sher­man Inaugurated as President and Vice Presldent….SlxUeth Congress ad lourned sine die.■e—Death of Joseph W. Blythe ofIowa.8—Tornado at Brinkley. Ark. >-Naval battle between Nicaraguan and Salvadorean vessels. ^^ X5-Congre„ crinvenea In extraordl-
of George T. Angell.totroduced li,^W.lina Wbltto wanapea from
Lille WhI
I— Strike of lake seamen begins.3—Second peace congress begins in Chicago.5—Steamer Adelia Shores goes down to Lake Superior.
e—James Boyle convicted of Whltla kidnaping.8— Mrs. Helen Anna Boyle convicted of Whltla kidnaping.9— Death of Mrs. Augusta J. Evans Wilson.10— Mehmld V. made Sultan of Tur- key by sword ceremony.II— Capt. Peter Hains convicted of Annls murder—Twenty persons drown­ed In Ohio River near Pittsburg.14- Tornadoes in Kansas. Missouri and Oklahoma.17—Tracy & Co., brokers, fail in New York.15— Death of George Meredith. En­glish novelist.19-Death of Henrj’ H. Rogers. Standard Oil magnate.24—Five children burned to death during school exorcises in Central City26—Earthquake shock fell In lUinols and adjoining States—William Lorlme L'lected Senator from Illinois29— Tornadoes in Oklahoma… .Mad 3en. Pouchot and Boyle convicted of labor grafting In Chicago.30— Zephyr. Texas, destroyed by
SEPTEMBER.I— News received that Dr. F. A. Cook, American, discovered north pole April 21, 1908.6—Labor day….Paary reports dis­covery of north pole.8–Dcath of Gen. H. C. Corbin.9~Death of E. H. Harriman.II— Halley's comet sighted from Hel- delburg….President Taft names torllf commission.15—President Taft begins his Western trip—–Secretory Ballinger clearedof Alaskan fraud by President TofL21— Explorer Cook arrives at New York..22— Death of Robert Hoe. prInUng press manufacturer.25—Hudson-Fulton celebraUon be­gins to New York.29— Death of CoL W. R. Morrison.30— Peary reaches New York.
Elinor WUliams of aeveland, Ohio, once a nurse in the homo of John JD. Boekefeller, and a wideljr known local character, to dead, aged 100 years.
Ezra Kendall, comedian, died of plexy recently in a eanit.
UnsvUie, Ind, The first news of bisi of apo- at Kar-
Ninece«i OaptmM FromMheral* in Bocent Bootingin London. c-this is the liberal program when the I new parliament meets in February: – ^Passing the Uoyd-George bill, tax- ; ^. wg tinearned inerement of land, in- ^ creased land taxes, tbe supertax on. ili-i ‘ comes, death «d licensing ditiee. >. The ref^tion of the honse of'
JU.rds, taking awa> m Vote powe? on flnaneo m^asnres and limiting the power
life
of veto on other bilto.3elf.govemmont for Ireland- in purely Irish affairs, while preeerving the in­
death received by friends outside the immediate family was wh«i the body was brought to CTovelaud.Native reports estmSto that a'thou sand deaths from smallpox have oc­curred at Chang Chow, one of the largest eiUes in China,, in the last week, principally among children. The bu­bonic plague also to reported to have broken out again at that place.George H. Schumann, president of the LontoviUe Anzeiger company, and one of the oldest German-Ameriean news­paper men in the United States, died recenUy at LonisviUe, Ky., aged 73 ye^ Mr. Schumann had been at the heid of the Anzeiger for 30 years.The executive committee of the Na­tional EducaUonal association an- nonneed that the 43th annual conven­tion wiU be hold in Boston July 2 to 8, 1910. San Francisco was under consid- eration, but the choice of Boston was deemed advisable,, as the associaUon met in Denver in-1909.Mrs. Theodore Boosovelt Will saU for Naplce February 15 on the liner Ham-
Kl
tegrity Of the empire. -, V :*Beform of the fraachise laws doing fe away with dual yotiug. '
JUNE.
Edward Everett
iltla restored to fatherfe, ‘ Ci®veland, ,110.000 ransom being waa..r.Gov. Curri of New Mexico ^
1— Alaska-Yukon-Paclflc exposition opened in Seattle,2- 3—Riots marked street-car strike in Philadelphia.6—Death of CoL A K. McClure.9— Ship canal at Sault Ste. Marie. Canada, damaged by boat….Elsie Si gel murdered by Chinese convert in New York.10— Death of Dr.Hale.11— Liner Slavonia goes Azores.12— Earthquake devastates secUon of Southern Fran^erporal shooto three officers at Ft. Des Moines. Iowa.14—Death of Presideht Penna of Brazil….Ona hundred and forty-nine perish In bumtog ship near Japan.18- 19—Automobile races at Crown Point, Ind.19— Nine of totcrurb Ind.22—Daughter bom Queen of Spain.
27—Bomb explosion in Chicago In­jures seven persons and does $160,000
JULY.1—Earthquake at Messina. Sicily…. lugar trust officials indicted to New^?-Tramp murders four persons near Rudolph, S. D. ,4—Patriotic celsbraUons tsko twelve fewer Uvea than in 1908.. 7-J^FIoode In Mtosourt vnlWy.|—^nate passed tarllt Wll. ' '
OCTODBB.5—Fatal collision on Ullnols Centra. Railroad near Farmer City, IIL ^Death of Dudley Buck, orf^nlst
13-Steamer Georg. Stone wrecked tn Lake Erie.16—Presidents Taft and Diaz meet on International border….W. I. Bu- chanan, ex-misister to Panama, dies In London…. Nebraska bank guarantee law found invalid.19—Death of Prof. Caesare Lombro so. Italian crfminologlat.21-Death of U. S. Senator M. N Johnson of North Dakota.23— Nicaraguan troops defeated by Insurgents.24— Death of Justice Rufus W. Peck- ham of Unlf -•IncSteamer Hestia lost in Bay of Fundy; thirty-four persons drowned…. .Death of Gen.. O. a Howard.29—Government troops defeat rebels at Salamls, Greece.( NOVEMBER.2-Stato and municipal elections.8—Eight men burned to death lo Brooklyn (N. Y.) Bre.11—Negro and white man lynched In Cairo* DLdisaster In Cherry,h^mu“dr.rr.::‘PhnalSsL^'18—^th of Richard Wataon Gild- “> Nicaragua. 20—Twenty-one men saved alive from Cherry mine… .Sweeping decto- Standard Oil Company of29—"Weta" win In Alabama election*; leatfd'rinsu^^-^to^ Nicantgua ds-
the budget bin.western roads go out on strike.DECEMBER 1—Diplomatic dilations with Nicar­agua brokeiv oft.^^6-Regular session of Congress open- 8—1760.090 Are In Kala
her way to upper Egypt. Ac- ng to news received from East Africa recently, ex-President Roosevelt WiU arrive at Khartoum March 15. After remaining two or three days at Khartoum he wiU meet Mrs. Roosevelt, He wUl be back iu the United States June 1.Richard H. Rushton of Philadelphia, president of the Fourth Street Na- Uonal bank, one of the largest finau cial institutions, died recently fron complication of diseases. Three years ago his nervous system was almost wrecked by a bomb explosion. An on known man who had been refused money, dropped a bomb at Mr. Rush- office door, instantly kilUng him­self and the cashier of the bank.The body of Alma Cunningham, a daughter of P’. Cunningham of San Francisco, who has been a patient in a sanitarium here ever since the disaster of 1906, when her nervous system was shattered, was found recently floating in a reservoir several miles from a sanitarium in Mill Valley, Cal. It is unknown whether the girl fell from the steep hillside above the i
way with dual voting.
Report* were received for 70 leata or­tho aert house of eommona, but of thow 63 were voted recently. The resulta. show tbe foBowing:
The standing of the parties is aa fol- loWBi;, Unionist, 218; liberals, 185; borites, 33; nationalists, 67.Total gains; Unionists, 100; Uherals, 14; laborites, 1. Gain for seats arez Unionists, .19; Uberals, 4. •• ,The nationalists are assured of th»;: control of the house, according to all*, political prophets.It was reported that Premier Asquith, would resign and request the king t» summon a conservative to organize the government if the liberals failed lo se­cure a majority of their osra party, so- that they eonjd conduct legislalive- business without help of their Irish. aUies. Politicians, however, do not • credit this report.
The excitement over the elections ia London, althongh stHl in-^n^i-fnthe provinces.riNDS- EBB BOYS AT LAST.Sncceas Crowii* Search if Two Year* ' By lbs. SoegSB of
herself into the water.pool or threw Tacoma,
’^i^ah.—The search of » mother for her-two boys since March^ 1908, when vthey were kidnapped by their father, which continued to Alaska;
returned to this city with the boys fron» Victoria, EG.After following the trail to Alaskm and losing it, Mrs. Keegan, who so- eured a divorce from, her basbancT shortly after the kidnapping, wa» forced to return to Tacoma. A shorttime ago she took up the trail in Canada and finally located the two boys, five and seven years of age, in a con­vent three miles from Dunean on Van­couver toland.Habeas eorpus proceedings were- started in Canada recently and theXch'il- dron were awarded to the mother. NNo- trace has been found of the falhW_ He is said to be in contempt of courtin this country …………….court order-to pfor failing to obey produce the childron..
16—Zelaya Nicaragua)
Prtao fo. Tabercalo.!. Cur*. Tale UnlyortUy has become the cue-
known '
resigns presidency of
secret, but
Physicians
to become members of a board Whose doty It will be to pass onthe merit, of cure, subrntued. T^ta"on the money wlU be used In to- vestlgattoir such cui'es imd to pay ths expenses of quarterly meetings of the AdvUory Board. To prevent the c^! sideratlon of bogus remedies, “ is that any remedy to bV I' must have been In use
51- ' '
John R. Walsh has been initiat^into
le office as reading .cleak in tfA bu­reau of criminal identification at the federal prison. His duty is to read newspapers and clip'from them write­upsof criminals, which are preserved at the prison. Walsh »s hands are drawn up with rheumatism, crippling him in such a manner that he is unable to work deftly. He worked with a pre­occupied air and made slow progress through a large pile of newspapers.Jeffries and Johnson will meet to de­cide their argument “over the title of heavyweight champion of the world at Ely, Nev., next July 4, according to a statement made by a close friend of Tex Rickard, one of the promoters of the match. Jeflfries and Rickard met at Salt Lake recently and held several hours* secret' conference, Na official announcement of the outcome of the meeting was mad’e, but a friend of Rickard, who claimed to be '*in on i know, * * whispered ^ * El *»One of two charges of criminality against American railrpad men in Mexi^ CO that have attracted nation-wide at­tention in the United States was dis­posed of recently, with the release from prison at Monterey of Joe Woods, engineer- who has been confined for three months on a charge growing out or the accidental kHllng of a fellow engineer. The other egse, that of Con- ductor James A. Cook, who is being held in jail at Guadalajara for com­plicity in the robbery of a train in his charge, has been passed to the jurisdic­tion of the prosecuting attorney.
Drastic proposals for dealing with drunkenness are contained in the po­lice jurisdiction and summary. offenses I bUI, which is now before the
PINOHOT STILL IN PIGHT,
Elected President National Conserva­tion Association,Wa^ngton.—The election of Gif­ford Pinchot to succeed Dr. C. W. feliok as president of the National-Conserva­tion association was announced re- centl:^ Dr. Eliot, at whose suggeatiom Mr. Pmchot was elected, retains the- honorary presidency. Mr. I^^mchot will take active charge of the aasociation headquarters of which^wiR be in Wash' ington. Two weeks ago Mr. Eliot wrote- . to the executive committee of the as- s^iation that Mr. PSnehot, as the recog­nized head of the conservation move- .. meat, should take the active leadershipu He'wrote Mr. Pinchot a personal letter, suggesting that he accept the presi­dency. At Dr. Eliot’s direction a meet­ing of the committee of the association was held and Mr. Pinchot *s election fol­lowed.
The National Conservation associa­tion was formed last July to help through a large individual membership, to put into practical effect conserva­tion principles declared by the confer­ence of governors in "May, 1908. ^It to announced that an extensive- campaign to extend the membership: :, into every state wUl be carried on. ':
FHOM TWINS TO QUARTETS;
and parliament in Anstralia.l^r * first offense the oulprft will be fined 20 shillings, for a seeond within six months 40 shUUags, and fox any wh- seqneat oonvaction. within a similar peri^; 60 shining*. Af ter' a third con­viction the offender «'ehaU be deemed a habitual dxnukard,” and power to given the court to remand a drnnken person to some bospital. or asylum . forenrativo treatment at bisown expense.
No Bace Sniclde to TU* Los Angeles Family.Los Angeles, Cal—A mixed qnartet of babies—two boys and,-two girls— ^ved recently at the home of Mr. a»a Mrs. W. W. Wilson in this city, mi^ ing 12 children born to this eoni^ b» nine years. The Wilsons were mairicA iu Chicago 25 years ago. – Two seta of triplets and one pair off twins have previonriy been born to ths couple, eeyen of whose chndren. inelua-born roflonay, survive'.To ^ Huge Aetpplaiie; .Los Angeles.—Glenn H. Onrtto^ the- aviator, has Ipft Los Angeles for Ham- ’ mondspbrt, N. T., whore he wUI begin, the eonstruetlon of Us monster plane.. IWe eraft, he totends,.shall out- aWp -the Farman type of biplane both, in .B^ and pasionger-earrying-power.

:■ ;:.f
LoolHwi^ og :Cus Griibe ntxle a visit tewiston tuesday. . ^ ,’ , ; ' ^ ^Aakyour grocsu- for Priuooaa Ftou;coupons.. , . ^ . 'U. S. ConuitWtmcr McGill is ou tlie »iek ibt tbi« week. ; .Insure your Live .Stock with J. M. IX-Courcey. – ^ >J. S. Jones, of Peck, was visitor Wednesday. -Oroano
Sweaters
of air Iclhds at Uic Oroano Trading Co.County Treasurer Hinckley visited in OroBuo over Sunday, ane lineof h- ling Company.With every sack of Priucesa Flour you got a coupon, / 'Banker White visited LewMon Wed­nesday. returning Thursday.
H. Walrath visited his mother at her ranch near Myrtle, this week.With every sack of Princess Flour you get a couiH)n.Drop into the Palace Meat Market and get one of those choice cuts of beef." Frank Jones visitetl Gcncssee Monday ^ to attend the funeral of a relative at that place. .
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as sAfs"Attorney Ogden is in Lewiston this week attending to some business before the Land. Office,Money to loan on improved fa EjiguireofJ. M. DeCourcey, Orofino.
The Odd Fellows arc improving- the front of their building thb week by ji new cqat of paint.Don’t forget to get Princess Tlour Cou^tms^tvfth every sack pf Princ-
Chas. Jones came up from Lewiston Saturday and spent Sunday^and Monday here, returning Tuesday.^ Mnfc Horace Noble returned Tne^ay from Juliaette, where she is taking treat­ment at the local hospital.Will Noble, who ha, been cookinfi in a mining camp for the past two months returned home Wednesday morning.J. M, Bartlett, who has been ill with the typhoid fever ^or the past month, was able to be about the streets again this week.
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Sunday in this localitydool^ing up lapd.Miss Maijle Holmborg yctumccl Wed­nesday from LewiaUm, iyrhere she hasi completed her course in the Slate Nor- .malSchdoL:,_^^2..The Ladles* Aid wHl m^t at the homt of Mrs. PittblcRoberta next Wednesday February ind. * All are cordially in^ vited to attend. . *jJohn Swanson is haypg erected on him lot -on Johnson Avenue a warehouse 24×76. Walter Tain will have charge of the w^k on the structure. ,The W. C. T. U. will meet .next Fri- day, February 4th: at 2 P: M. at the home of airs, Frank Jones, All mem- bera are requested to l)c present.Ellis SinalL^who has been cu^ged as guide ahd cook for the Milwaukee people in the North Fork country for the past two 'menths. rctnmed home Wednesday.We print this week the quarterly re- 1 port of the auditor and treasurer of.NesI Perce county, which shows a balance on ' hand January 3lh at 1278,375.51. The amount of taxes collected is 1243,316.04.John Wells recdvcil this® week a 6ne Berkshire , boar, Avhich he purchase^ from Frank Mix, of Mosepw. Mr. Wells is a breeder oif fine hogs and cattle and always keeps his stock up to the standard.
Lumber is now being delivered for the tram%'ay to be bnill by the Orofino Log & Timber Company. _ Fifteen men are at present at work cutting timber froi^ the right-of-way and getting fliings in shape for building operations.Chas. Sublet, well knowd here, was married last vSunda3T^n Greer to Miss Ivy Currin, whose parents reside, near that point Mr. Subletfis engaged in freighting supplies into the Ozark min­ing district and with his bride will re­side in Greer.The ladies of the Needle Work Club liave appointed a committee, to investi­gate the >>ssibilities of establishing a free public library in Orofino. This committee consisting of Mrs. A. E. Holmbcrg, Mrs. Theo. Fohl and Mrs: J. G. Bullock canvasse More Goods’*.
7 White Pine Trading Co,, Ltd,
Everything to Eat, Eveeything to Wear. WAlways aTittle Better, r® -. ® , Always a Little dehper.
I- ^ •-' ” ^ 'I -.1
; General school FnmRoad Fund………..I………………….-Bond Int & RedejLption..;,. Current Expense Ihihd……Warrant Redemption Fund.: .City of Lewiston*City of Nez Perce….’.,…,.VilUge of Culdesac…….. .
District Schools.Tax Redemption Fund .. . . , v. Institute Fhnd…-General Road Fund…V..v. Shoshone Redemption Fund. UnappoitiqiKdV,;..
Nothing Better 7
in This
Everybody ;
Knows Them
Prices Ffo%a _ o
. 75cts.
up to
$3,50
45-55il.st
wm
i r’: ;' . v’ ' * that the foregoing sutement .U true and correct:-
iii,upu>-»
-I- fe'li
Bridge Fund Overdrawn.
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