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Oakland Tribune from Oakland, California • Page 3

Publication:
Oakland Tribunei
Location:
Oakland, California
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

OAKXiAKP DAILY EVENING- TRIBUNE, TUESDAY 3SOTEMBER 1888. 3 gew To day. Beal Estate. AGRICULTUBAL. These lands, trenched and perfected with breaking by the plough Bew To-day.

twmi imi oil QUEEN OF SCOTS, A masterly work of artistic skilL Now on exhibition FREE TO BE GIVEN AWAY. This perfection of statuary, without a duplicate in the United States, is to be seen in the windows of the NEW YORK TEA If You Are Sick With Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, Billoosaeas, Blood Humor, Kidney Disease. Constipation. Female Trouble, Fever and Acne, Bleepleasnees, Partial Paralysis, or Nervous Prostration, use Paine's Celery Compound and be cured, la each of these tie caoae Is mental or physical overwork, anxiety, exposure, or malaria, the effect of which la to weaken the nervous system, resulting In one of these diseases. Remove the catrsn with that great Nerve Tonic, and the ikvit will disappear.

Paine's Celery Compound Iambs L. Bowkv, "prlngfleld. writes: "Paine's Celery Com pound cannot be excelled as a Nerve Tenlc In my case a single bottle wrought a great change. My nervousness entirely disappeared, and with it the resulting affection of the stomach, heart, and liver, and the whole tone of the system was wouderially Invigorated. I tell nv- friends.

If sick as I have been, Paine's Celery Compound Will Cure You! Roldby druggist. six for fS. Prepared only by Willi, BicHABDaen Burlington, Vt. For the Aged, Nervous, Debilitated. Eeal (JIM As usual with the above firm on all holiday occasions to offer some extra inducements to their patrons, they have adopted the followingplai, which they deem worthy of attention, and likely, as on all former similar occasions, to give undoubted satisfaction From now to January 2, 1889, WE GIVE, in addition to our regular premiums, to every purchaser i to the amount of 81 a chance in the drawing, which will entitle the winner to the possession of this most handsome work of art Four other valuable gifts will be added, making second, third, fourth, and fifth prizes.

Drawing to take place Wednesday evening, January 2d, at 8 o'clock, at the 1 Mew York Tea Company 839 AND 841 BROADWAY, Between Sixth and Seventh. Sts, Laundry Farm, Adjoining Mills Col ON LINE OF- ALAMEDA COUNTY RAILROAD. Train. leave San Francisco for Park Place 7, 8, 10 and 11 A. 1:30, 8,4, and 5 P.M.

Trains leave Broadway, Oakland, for Park Place 7:35, 8:35, 1035 and 11:35 A.M.; 2:0, 8:85, 4:35, and 5:35 P. M. Trains leave Park Place for San Francisco 8:10, 10:85, 'and 11:35 A. 2:10. 8:35, 4:35.

5:10, and 6:10 P. M. DEPOT ON THE LAND. mJ IffiEIH PATENT! Lots and blocks for sale. JBL 529 Commercial San Francisco, BEST OAKLAND AGENTS: CHAS.

J. WELCH C0 0or- East Eleventh St. atd Twelfth at Eailroad Depot IN YESTMENTS-Bnsiness Property. Qft nOfi-mA- "ne business property, desirable corner, 165 feet frontage, two tpOtljlUU story building 13 stow, situated on San Pablo Avenue; centrally located permanent income. This property will double in value in five years.

(421-e) Qt)7 fr A A Desirable business property corner lot, 50x100, modern two story yalfUUU brick building and basement; situated on the westerly side of San Pablo avenue, near City Hall; good investment. (422-a) Qf 00,0, eet frontage on the west side ot Broadwav, corner Twenty-tpLOmJJJ first street; two story building and stable. This property has a trood future and will be a first class investment at the present price. (422-b) Ql AAA A large lot with two frontages; situated on Broadway and graph avenue, near Nineteenth street; two houses on the property. This property will materially enhance in value.

(44-a) Q-J A A Prospective business property. Lot 103x100 feet. Northeast cor-tpLi0JJ nerof Fourteenth and ebster streets. House of 12 rooms. Central location, and within two minutes1 walk from the center of the city of Oakland.

1 1 (9c QAn nnn 100x100; a fine corner on Washington, north Of Tenth. iJOV.UUU 155,000 cash oiler has been declined. (432-c) -yj-FT rpQ to the depth of up and down overflow or nitration trenches bounding your water table at all times, will continually increase in xemiity moderately fed by manures deposited in open trenches above your series of reservoirs. Your subsoils, if of clay or of firm consistency, any soil, out side ol gravel beneath, will extract all aaimalculse and other solids and impregnations, and the sponge created above will, by the law of capillary attraction, lift the liquids, resulting in solution, and feed your plants "soup, porridge, or broth," always abundance and never in surfeit. All waters falling and found along the water sheds thus treated will move in uniform and constant flow beneath the roots of vegetation, and the deeper down the plane of the water table the more deeply will the roots descend to reach the water, and as the root so will be found the stem, stalk, trunk, tree, plant, foliage, bud, blossom, and fruition.

I grow strawberries upward of a foot in circumference with a perfect sponge, made by the spade fork to a depth of six feet before the water is reached in constant movement of overflow, winter and summer, and by sinkine a well twenty feet deep at end of' one" W. trenches upon a hill or mountain side, providing for constant overflow a depth of eighteen feet, filling your well with perfect vegetable mold, a strawberry may be grown of circumference of the ordinary breakfast plate. You will now, I feel sore, under stand me when I say the cost or agricultural or ordinary farm lands is placed at $30 per acre, and most perfectly fitted farm lands at $300 per acre. My most perfect lands, a hopeless clay and clod, filled with stone (more stone than soil when I began), are a perfect tilth or sponge, made so by the fork to begin with, and rendered absolutely perfect by movement of the water through them for five years, anamalculee left dead in track of the waters, and are this hour the most productive soils on the face of the earth. On these I am growing cauliflower from the embryo of the size of a walnut to thirty inches in circumference in from seven to ten days, rapidity of growth depending on atmospheric conditions the more hot and dry the weather the more rapid will the roots make for the water beneath.

It is this that gives me a cauliflower, full grown, in a fourth of the time from appearance of embrvo under ordinary conditions of growth. To show what mother earth is capable of doing at her best has been my endeavor. Thousands of people have been here to see my work. When asked what it has cost my answer has been "My very best acre mav have cost $400 or $500." In this I have included not merely the cost of Jtting, but of planting to fruit and all lae connected with the work for the first three years, inclusive of caring for and harvesting of crops. My most perfectly fitted lands have been tests simply, and on these I have grown Early Hose potatoes at the rate of 1200 bushels per acre; timothy and clover, three and four crops annually on the same test meadow, at the rate of three and a half tons of cured hay, aggregating from twelve to fourteen tons to the acre.

I grow, year in and year out, at the best, strawberries at rate of from 400 to 600 bushels to the acre and these from the size of ordinary ones to that of peaches and thence on np in some instances to the size of the average Greening apple. I have now growing on my place Cuthbert raspberries at rate of not less than 600 bushels to the acre. My raspberries and blackberries are growing upon lands costing not to exceed $50 an acre for fitting. I use no phosphates, nor would I take as a gift all that might be offered me. I use well rotted barn manure, but where manures are deposited in open trenches that these may be liquidated by the rains, there is no need of rotting.

The animalcule left dead in Boils is my chief reliance for fertilizing. The value of waters falling upon lands during the year in this regard is far greater than all possible manuring. In passing the waters through the clay and clod from trench to trench, as I am doing, the effect is to aerate, infiltrate, and render them warm, vital, soft, porous, and productive to the depth of trenching. And on lands where only three or four or fire inches of surface or productive soil naturally exists, the roots of plants will, within three years after lands are trenched, penetrate to depth of the trenches. Best of all, the soluble elements of the clay and clod are released, and alm-nium, potassium, and all else making up best of "soup, porridge, or broth" pabulum perfectly prepared for absolute perfection of plant growth follows.

More gradual will be found the fertilising of arid and sandy lands, but none the less sure. New England, were her stone buried in her soils as I am doing, would, I am confident, within a decade be producing more of value than now grown on all lands under cultivation in the American Union. To drop the waters of rains and melting ices and snows into trenches, enabling them to descend to the bed rock, would fill subsoils with water, and diffusing moisture in all directions, deserts would disappear, and in their waste places wosld grow glasses and grains, fruits and flowers, grand trees, deep rooting, and sendimg up great trunks with spreading branches, and along mean tain sides and in valleys, across arid plains of alkaline deposits, where the prickly pear, the sagebrush, and greafewood now revail, would appear the higher orms of plant life, and springs everywhere cropping out, brooks would be grown, rivers appear in valleys where none now are found, and lakes of crystal water, alive with brook front and other of the best varieties of fish would be found in dells among the mountains, and from these the waters can be dropped from mains to the valleys, and by use of the' water motor and the turbine wheel with cable attachments, the world can be set in automatic play of whiz and whir moving the most ponderous of machinery, and setting the pick and spade and shovel at work guided by the hand of man, the force of nature made to do the work now done by hand, from that upon the Panama canal, down to that of the housewife with her churn, the farmer with his threshing machine, the manufacturer with his mighty shaft perpetual motion, andthe lady with her sewing' machine, driven by a motor hung opon the wall as an ornament, magically mov-her knittinneeules ia automatic E. WOODWARD CO 4 J.HJJacdonald&Co. REAL ESTATE BROKERS, 470 Hlntli Street, near Broadway.

BARGAINS MT BKAL E9TATB 9 A per front foot, on Ban Pablo avenue: JP 0J cheapest place oa the avenue; good location for reMdence; will sell in sub-divisons; lotl6o176. (At) lot, 50x150. on pOIUU Wetnter street, between Fourteenth and Duraut near local train. (140) QOn Nicely located lot, 5tzloo, on the C30tVU sunny klde or Ban Pablo avenue: cable cars pass the lot; Al location for business orresldeoce. (Mj QOSn Magnlflcrat villa lot, near Broad-tpOOKJ way.

near two atroet car lines: fine view. 200x200 feet. (8139) 700 Klegant new boose of 9 room iud IP iyvjj all modern Improvements, located on Ninth street, wltbln minutes' walk of Broadway; lot 37.8x100. (3806) Bpedal attention given to the purchase and saleofBeal Kstate. Parties seeking homes, income, ranch, or btnlness property, either for permanent investment or speculation.

wiU be furnished a list of desirable places opon application to i J. H. MACDONAX.D ft Real Estate Broker. 470 Ninth street, near Broadway. WEBITEB STREET, Hie Best Opportunity EYES OFFERED.

THE BESriOCATiON. The Best Piece of Business Property IX OAKLAND For Sals in Subdivisions. No better Investment; win rapidly eahaaee ia valae. 800 feet on Twelfth Street. 100 feet on Elerenth Street.

A genuine bargain, at remarkably low figures. Sot particulars apply to CLOUGH DAVIS, 463 NINTH STREET. HARUIKOM ITKEETi N. W. WLNT0N, Real Estate and Insurant Citj and Country sale.

Orange Lands in small and large-tracts. Money to loan. Manager Alameda County Branca tni Insurance Company, 466 Ninth Street Oakland; SCRAflA JOght acres choice fruit and gar: OUWU den land; house six rooms: barn, well. 600 fruit trees. $1750 7 r.fl-Cottage six rooms; lot 37xi35 ieOOKA New cottage seven rooms; all tipuiiuU modern improvements; lot SO 106 four minutes' walk irons railroad station.

lot 7M: JQ Lot 60x160; elevated ground; easy A A and upwards Lots In all parts of )OUU ast Oakland and vicinity on easy terma. APPLY TO MATHEWS IiARTJE 626 East Twelfth Street, AST OAKLAND. flj A Cottage of five large rooms and S)AOOJ oath; washroom with hot and cold water, and gas; lot 86x132; street sewerd; one block to street car near Thirtieth and Chestnut streets. Vi5 1 AAA-Cottage of 4 rooms; lot 25x135; 3PXVUU near Thirty-fourth and Feralta atreeta. 114 ft! fi(ftCotMe, of 8 rooms; lot 35x90; JP (JUUnorth line of Xtith nr.

Urove. Hi I 4ffi 5Iet room cottage, with bay 27 xlUO on Thirtieth street; cheap. 111 McDonald Cameron DEALERS IN REAL ESTA. 474 Eighth Street. Oakland.

Money to Loan AMOUNTS TO SUIT. Low Rate of Interest WM. J. DINGEE, 460 and 463 Eljchth Street. Oakland.

Electrical Power. THE OAKLAND Electric Liffht and Motor Is now prepared to famish electric PAOtors trora one quarter hone power lip to tweiTe horS WWCXi my locality within the central business portion of the city of Oakland. This power is available for printing presses, operating pumps, manufactories, for elevators, ice cream freezers, meat choppers, and, in fact, for any purpose for Vhich power may be used. No fire men or engineer needed. Absolute Immunity from coal dust, boiler explosion, fire risk, and other nuisance Of steam plant.

No noise or bad smell as with gas engines. Occupies small space. No investment to user, as the Company furnishes motor and at, tendance. Parties contracting with this Company can rely upon regular service, as it has any amount of horse power that is used only at night, and is therefore a reserve for day service. Particulars at the office of Th Oakland Electric IMt and Motor Company, H.

W. Cor. Second ud Welster Streets. fircfiitectural Iron Work. Iroa Fence and Orcameat a EsUmates Forclshtd on application.

New Agriculture Practiced by A. N. Cole. SuMrrijration, Its Mettods, tn3 Astonishing Besulta. if Jattiir Col Tells Sow Stnvlxrriat Mj Be Grown Largt lroui a Breakfast Plata, Th following coming to our table, says the Labor Review, from Father Cole of the Home on the Hillside will need no extended introduction.

If there is now living anywhere a man appropriately denominated the Father of the Republican party, that man is Asahel Nicholas Cole of "WallgYille. For years this bold, brave, fearless, and independent Old of the Mountains, as he is nas maden concealment the fact thJ he is labor an4 land jeformer, and in mpathv with every endeavor of the indoalHlfj Clf ses to max their war up the 'FOd. Tub man has been from the first little understood, scarcely understood at all, in fact at times declared by the Demo-xrats a Democrat and free trader; again by labor journals a labor re form man, and we. believe also that the Prohibitionists have claimed that he belonged to them. We have known intimately the man since so widely spoken of on account of his new agriculture, sometimes denominated aquaculture, or subirrigation, for many years.

But we have said enough. Hear Father Cole WsaxsvnxK, July 21. made to you a promise Bomewhat in pleasantry, and, having done so, making it a rule never to make good Eromises and not keep them, and aving made bad ones to carry them out, I proceed to write. I did not say what I declared could be done for $30 an acre, but as I understand your soils, I conclude those on the Bur-face natrally rich in mold, and have clay subsoils, and will presume such is tne case. Again I conclude that stones are abundant in your section, a matter of great moment, since no country is well adapted to Bub-irrigation without an abundance of stone.

In its absence, resort to tile is a necessity. Even in countries where recourse must be had to quarries, the expense of fitting lands will be greatly increased. I will say, therefore, right along that in lands where round and flat tones prevail, these are invaluable, since, once fitted, with the reservoirs and overflows such as I am about to describe, there will be little work for you and your children and children's children for thousands c-j years, except to bow your grain, put in your potatoes and corn, harvest your crops of grain, grasses, fruit, and be happy. You will never have any subsoiling to do, and as for plowing, dragging, and working your land generally, inclusive of manuring, the rains and melting snows will do fully nine tenths of it, and the automatic inmovement of the waters will convince you within three vears from the time of fitting your first acre that there was a little more of philosophy in the heads and hands of your New England ancestors, with their stone in one end of the bag and the grist in the other, than in those of their sons still holding on in the ways of farming, such as have prevailed the world over outside of the semi-barbarous countries where folks like the Japs, the heathen Chinee, and some others have crudely done for thousands of years what I am doing on my hillside. 1 take it your farm is not a dead level, and that the waters of the Connecticut are, whether of that river or its tributaries, below the level of your lands.

That is sufficient. Yoor farm then is one of slopes, inclines, or watersheds. Take your pick and spade and start out on any of these and sink trenches, or dig cisterns into your subsoils fully five feet deep, making sure of getting below the frost line of winters. Let these be about three feet broad (three and a half better) keeping your surface level along the slope or incline, and guided by water you will find at the bottom of your trench from springs in the soil, or from the first rain, hold the bottom of your trench or cistern at a water level. Into your trench cast the larger stone and if these put on the size of a rock up to and above that of a bushel basket, in-crease-breadth of your trench correspondingly, burying all of your rock and stone, and tapering off till yon reach stone of the size to give an uniform surface at half the depth of jour cistern, when shingle with flat ones, double shingle, breaking joints.

Next cast sod, grass down, upon your shingling. Pulverize the excavated soil perfectly, as can be done by use of-back of heavy hoe. Bake out the fine stone from the soil after pulverizing, and return the soil till your surface over the trench is somewhat above the natural level. Construct like trenches, five xods, ten, fifteen, or twenty feet apart along your eljpe or incline, till you have one acre, or 100 as may be, covered with reservoirs "your trenches cover one, three, or five acres. Construct these, should you incline, as I have done, removing all stone, large and small, to the depth of two and a half feet, since every root and fiber striking a stone and becoming obstructed thereby becomes infected with fungus, and is correspondingly damaged and impaired in vigor of transmission of vitality to the plant, detracting from force, of full fruition.

Lands from which all stone are thas taken out, not merely along the trenches or between them, are made into a perfect earth sponge, lifting np the from the level of a water table, uniform in flow of percolation, begotten as follows: live rods, ten, twenty thirty apart, more or less, sink np and down trenches half the depth of your reservoirs, and in these drop your fine stone, raked from the soil, or, in absence of fine stone, gravel from the beds of streams or from lake or sea shore, as may be (pebble), to depth of six inshes, giving you fully two feet of soil (even though five and a half feet be required in depth of reservoirs), and shingle and soil as in case of longitudinal trenches. For highest perfection in agriculture of ordinary farm lands trenches five rods apart, operating as reservoirs, would be required, costing upon the average land3of Vermont and New Hampshire, snch as found in the cof nties from trr Hoal DE7sto.to Brokers, Warranted to color more goods than any otner dyes ever made, and to aive brilliant sort durable colors. Ask for the uuwmiuo 'mi no ouier. A DRESS DYED A CAT COLORED FOR 10 CEWT8 GARMENTS RENEWED A ChUd can use them Unequaled for all Fancy sad Art Work Atarnggiatsand Merchants. Dye Book free WEL Lh, BUHAllBSOJi 4 Frosdcter Berlin gtoa, VU Estate.

ege, Apply to owner, DOEETY, or 1230 Sib East Oaldani OAKLAND. ml tS 1 pq be Successors to Ghixacilli A TrTA. Wholesale and Retail Driers rOfiilOS AND VA'fjm WINES LIQUORS 1072 cor. I2TH ST. Sola Agantafttr Qhlrad1ns Celebrated Xagla Chocolate.

Co Bee and Ptr 3 aaa rertitionlce6 th world arln he last half century. "ot least amonf --a a 2 Sk, DC US tS-gS I a HI 1 2 5 corgis I I FtJ a I I Q-fL III st bC, rn at-s-s oQ Mj 5 2 a rt 2 a 902 BROADWAY, Seal Kstate aid lanaraara A teats, llsaeda aad Ceatra Costa Coaatitt. A T- OFriOB. 1010 BROADWAY, OAKLANP BEBStLKT Wlaaer Balldlag, epa. Berkeley Statloa.

PHILIP BOJBOK Baaaser. BAKTlflEZ Haaa-h Baildlag-, Bear B. B. Htatiea. OBE6IORY BABTHETT, Baaafrera raUCbarga Take ot Property.

Collections Mads iDTeatnienu Negotiated. Kaoacera OakJaod Branch Flremaa'sFond Inin ranee Go. i ff 4ROLLEH eft FAM I LY gaga THE MARCH CF PROGRESS! OUR LATEST I MPROVEM ENTSl "Competition Is the Ufa of trade," and if yo have not seen our latest imprOTed roods, yoaoanno Imagine how lively trade is, er bow bard onr eompeu tor have to work to ksrp within sight of us. Ask roar retailer for the James Means 9 3 shoe, or the James Means' S4 Shoe, according to your needs. Positively none genuine unless bavin; our name) and price stamped plainly on the soles.

Your retailer will supply yoa with shoes so stamped if yon tnsias upon his doing so; if yoa do not insist, some retailers it-ill coax you into buying inferior shoes upon which, they make a larger profit. JAMES MEANS vs3 SHOE UNEXCELLED' IN 4 STYLE UNEQUALLED DURABILITY AND i RFECTIOH FIT. JAMES $4 SH0Ei CANN QT, Al I TO SAT! THE MOST FASTIDlO! Such has been the recent proffrett tn oar branch of indnstrr that we are now able to affirm that the James Shoe is in every respect equal to the shoes which only a few years ago were retailed at eight or ten dollars. If yoa wiU try on a pair yoa wfil be ooo-vinced that we do not exsggerate. Ours are the original S3 and 4 shoes, and those wb Imitate our system of business are unable to oompeta.

with lis in quality of factory products. In our lines wears the largest msTwlatluren la tbi Vnited States. Shoes from onr celebrated ftictory are sole by wide-wake retailers ia nil parte of tlu country. We will place them oaslly within, yon reach in say stats or territory if yoa wiU invest eat cent in a postal card and write to us. Jeunea Kleans St Cosl Uucola 8b, Tlnaaoj rOBSALE BY NOLAN 107 Broadiraj.Oakland.

Oakland Hospital ASS HOTEL FOR INVALIDS, E. H. WOOLSEY, M. Snrgeon and Physician la Chief, TWELFTH STREET, Between Hadison and Jackt on Strecta OAKLANO, The Institctlon Is healthfully, pleasantly, and! conveniently located, occupying an entire block in a quiet neighborhood, sorror nded by iegant private residences; and yet within fonr blocks of the Central Pacific and narrow gauRO railroads, and accessible to their stations by the Brooklyn street cars. The sewerage facilities are perfect.

The wards and private rooms are large, sunny, wall ventilated, and appropriately furnished. The bnildipg exteriorly, together with its around, ia attractive. Interiorly thewoodwork la of solid a od carved walnut, the mantels of purest Italian marble and design, aad the walls decorated with exquisite frescoes. The Hospital Section, comprising' Surgical, 3f edical, and Convalescent Wards, is separated from the section for Invadda, each department being provided with special corridora, hatbA rooms, electrical appliances, etc Steam, Medicated and HUoctrto Baths, and all the appointments of a flrsuclaes general Hospital, and all tbo requirements, conveniences and comforts gf a Private Homo -for Invalids ara here provided. Tha Matron is an experienced the aursea and attendant (mala and Jemalo) are well trained and reliable, TKKMS (Invariably 1 advance): In Ward, Pr weeK In Private Roomaw .25 to teperweefc Two persons tn room each.

IS to '2 pT weelc In confinement cases an additional tee of $25- will be charged. Patlenta in private room deairlnc special nnrses la constant anenaanoe, wm am uMiw rnysicianst gw wvmm to maintain and treat private patitata in tbi InatltaUon. ANDEBSON'S OPPOSITIOII San. Francisco; Oakland, ani Alamsda EXPBESSe Ordere for TemoTlr rtrnitnTe, promptly and carefcliy sAtfeautvi to. CYTlCTSt grawr 1 I 3 rn.ii av WSJ- II a i ir.i fjndertaiers mcavoy McCarthy GXHKBAX.

FCWNIBHIMO QsiinTAIUI S73 WASHINGTON BTKEET, Bet.7U) and 8th, Oakland, CaLTflepboneo KvryUiln requisite for fuiierala atahori notlcs. IOHK BUCELKT. tr. X. HAMII.TOV HAMILTON BUCKLEY, Undertaking Parlors, 826 18th St.

(Diets Opera House). Kvry thing requisite for funerals on abort notice. Embalming a specialty. Orders attended to day oi night. Telephone 435.

Armstrong Qiiellen, (successors to w. w. MCKenxiej UNDERTAKERS. 366 Broadway, cor. bth at.

Telephone 240 HENRY EVER3, JSC 835 Washington Between 7th and 8th. Telephone No. 284. OAKUVrk. Pianos.

THK BKBT PIANO ON IABTB. Haines Pisao, Pattl't Prelereaee. A. L. BA-HCROFT A On.

132 Post 8. DEWING PIANOS The Best Piano in lie Market foi Hie i 1501 OAKLAND Lawrence. Ostram Go's -FAMOUS "Belle of Bourbon" 18 DKATHTO slaria. Chills aad Fever, Tvphoid Feveti Isaigestioa, Dysaepsia. Snrgieal Fevers, Blaod Peisoaias, Ceasanptioa, Sleeales- er lBseatafs, aa Moa-AisiaUlatiea of Food.

10 YEAES OLD. HO FUSEL OIL ABSOLUTELY RE. THE GREAT APPETI-fcEB isfromn'iswm'lik rf IT nrBHIMI in riuiuwwsu uun tut wm VSS. QKLT THE FUaTT ERRCMIKTIMT 87 THE 6WS TKCS FSCaXS IT Of FUSEL GH KFCSE ITB WSTltlEB Itits will certify that I hava examined tfce-1 aampie of BELLE ur nutaoun WHISKY received from Lawbemck. Os-, Tinu Co.

and Cnnnd the aamr to he perfectly free from Fowl Oil and all other deleterious sabsumoea an4 strxwy pnrr. i vinrrrixiuj rervnuoend tlte same for Family and Medic inal parposes r. barsbs n. FOR 8AL.E BY IRUiIT. WINS 1EB- CUajTjaiD UKUtUitl miiwraii In plain boxes will besent to apy address In tfcs Cuited States on receipt of $8.

Kx press paid Miaaoun river ft to. Seattle Coal The Oregon Improvement Company announces that hereafter they will be able to supply the public with Genuine Seattle Coal. Many other Inferior brands hare been put upon the market under the name of this favorite coal, but the original and genuine Seattle is mined and sold to the trade only by the Oregon Improvement Company. Ask your dealer for this and take no other. C.

A. SESSION'S, AGENT. GRATEFUL COMFORTING. EPPS'S COCOA. BREAKFAST.

By a thorough knowledge ot the natural la we which govern th operationa of digestion aao and by a cmrefol application of the fine properties of well selected Cocoa. Mr Eppe haa prorided our breakfast table with a delicately flarored bererag which may save macy heavy doctors' bills. It la by the Judicious nseofsnch articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built np until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. nnoaiToi 01 suove maladies are Boating around oa rsadr to attack whurnw thm i. 2 weak poiat.

We may escape many a lata) shaft by keeping ourselves well fortiied with pure oiooa ana a properly noanahed Service Oasette, Made simply with boiling water or milk Sold only in half pound Una, grocers, la- beledthus: AX EM KPP8 a KoaistoaatUe CheaUrta, Leaden, Ear. Ssa Fraaeiaf Deaet: KHIKWObD A wqo, tn aid JU Market Street. NEW FEED STORE. WILLIAM SA6EHQRII, Wholesale aad BataU Dealer la Flour, Hay and Grain Sixth Street, Bear Broadway, Goods delivered Ire a charge la irfparta tbeHtv. take the fas la mutes of that claia mt r.iafelie..

uiUh gmS Oter-xt tn a (he puMtc aad now -f 5 mm lamia- iTTl SOHST BOS. PAoroa" 4 at nam Pno- at TO DAYSA I (f i8il a.J mum tHrtsu. fta I Vrgsslykya 5 n. a. i i i ii 3.

piogTcsa If a Btethod and jstem of work that can be performed all over the coontrj withoat separsung the workers from their home. Pay liberal: any One can do the work, either sex, young or old; so special ability reqniied; capital not needed. Cot this out and retim to 1st and We will send yon, free, aomethin? of great Vatneandi m-portanee to yem that wl.l start you In bus new, which wi 1 briTi? yoa in mote money rie't awsv elm lr the (-' ti.i,;:.-. -itxzts and Light W.JT.tVATSONftCO., SoJ An9 fnr 'y iH i-leteiitii r- on ran i. V'rr' r-v r- I 5C i i.

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