2 CAtiiißON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TEKMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. U paid in 1 •»» ADVERTISING RATF.S: AdTertUements arc published «t the rate ot •ne dul ar per square forone insertion and tlfiy •euts |.er square for eacn subsequentlluertlon Rates b.v the year, or for six or three months *re low and uuiform, and will be lurnifchod oo application. Legal and Official Advertising per square, three times or less, «2: each subsequent instr tioa iO cents per square. Local notices lu cents per line for one Inser aertion: 5 cents per line tor each subsequent eon ecutWe Insertion. Obituary notices orer fire lines. 10 cents ret lice. Simple announcements of births, mar riages nnd deaths will be inserted free. Business cards. Ave lines or less. i 5 per year', over live lines, at the regular rates of adver tising. No local Inserted for less than 75 cents per HSUO JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the Pukss Is complete »cd affords facilities for doini; the best c'ass of w rk. Pahticulak atti.niion paidto Law Pkintiko. No paper will be discontinued until arrear ages are paid, except ».t the option of the pub lisher. I'apers sent out of the county must be paid for in advance. All business or nearly all in Now South Wales is conducted through "trade industrial unions." Up to March. 1903, 108 unions of employes and 82 unions of employers had been registered in the arbitration court. "When a union has been duly registered it becomes amenable to the arbitration laws. Several members of congress smoko pipes, but only one has nerve enough to do so in public. The exception is Senator William J. Stone, of Missouri, who rode down Pennsylvania avenue on a trolley car the other day smok ing a short, black brier, and evidently getting a great deal of comfort out of liis pipe. A discovery of a large coal bed has been made in the mountains of the de partment of Yoro, in Honduras. The prospective coal field has been named "El Porvenir." Expert examination and test of several samples of the coal taken from or near the surface estab lish the claim that it cokes with excel lent result. The commercial relations between France and the United States continue to be thoroughly unsatisfactory, and must so continue as long as imports from the United States are dutiable, with a few exceptions, at the maxi mum rate of the tariff, while competing nations without important exception secure the minimum rate. Prof. Albert Eulenberg, the well known German neurologist, agrees with Dr. May Schiller's physician, that actors are more nervous than women. He thinks that the plays of Ibsen, Hauptmann and Bjornson are particu larly injurious to them, and mentions the case of one actor who was utterly wrecked by one of the modern realist ic plays. Paris has revised a new mode of dueling for young women whose feel ings have been ruffled. Two such re cently decided that their honor de manded a duel. Having no weapons conveniently at hand, ingenuity camo to the rescue. Each took ofT a stock ing and filled it with sand. At last ac counts the vanquished was reported in a hospital probably dying. Agricultural scientists are unquali fiedly enthusiastic over the future of the Cashew nut, which grows in Porto Rico on a tree which attains a height of 40 feet. Roasted, no other nut can compare with it in delicious flavor in the opinion of David G. Fairchild, ag ricultural explorer for the United States. "Rurnt almonds," said Mr. Fairchild, "are flat in comparison." There is one feature in the work of the Carnegie institution which is of wide-spread importance, and that is the selection of 25 "research assist ants," to each of whom is given a sum •of SI,OOO or $1,200. These "research assistants" are, for the most part, young persons who have already been well trained and are prepared to prose cute definite lines of investigation un der the guidance of older, higher quali fied leaders. Recent excavations on the site of an cient Naueratis, on the delta of the Nile, have brought to light, among ether things, a possible relic of Hero dotus, to whose description of the luxu rious Greek settlement we owe much of our knowledge of it. He visited the city in the latter part of the fifth cen tury B. C. The relic in question is the base of a painted vase inscribed "Herodotou." This vase was found within the Hellenic precinct. Mme. Takahira, wife of the Japan ese minister to the United States, pre fers American costumes to those of her sisters in the East. Madame is the only Oriental woman presiding over a legation at Washington. She is a dainty little lady, with the exquisite ly delicate molding of the Japanese. She is scarcely five feet high, but graceful in her carriage and move ments. She has learned to speak Eng lish fluently since her arrival in this ■country three years ago. Not counting the navies the world's ships are 29,943 steam vessels and 12,- 182 sailing craft. Boys of 21 can re member when sails outnumbered steamers 100 to 1. The familiar ex pression "a fleet of forty sail" will have to walk the plank pretty soon. It may be " a fleet of forty screws," or "a fleet of forty propellers." Eng land's part in the tonnage is over Ifi,- 000,000 and ours is 3,611.956. Ger many comes next, with 3,283,247. then Norway, strange to tell, with 1,653,740. THE PANAMA AFFAIR. Ainerlrnn lllglilii ami Interesi* Jus tlty the Chief Kxecntlve'n Action. When the people of Panama revolted against the venal and injurious control of Colombia it was inevitable thH.t the United States should recognize the au thority they might set up for them selves. There has not yet been a distinct and categorical recognition of an in dependent republic of Panama. There haas been only the anticipation of a de facto government which would be en titled to such treatment when it should be created, and meanwhile an acknowl edgment that the provisional authorities of the revolutionists are the only au thorities on the ground, says the Phila delphia Press. What less could our government do? There is no representative or emblem of Colombian authority left in Panama. The only authority is that of the revo lutionary force. It is in possession. It has already created a provisional gov ernment. What else can be dealt with? It will promptly establish a regulargov ernment. What else can be recognized? The full recognition is sure to come when an undisputed de facto govern ment shall be in full control; and the measure of recognition which the presi dent has extended was inevitable as soon as any matters came up which re quired dealing with the authorities in possession. The only question is wheth er the president has been unduly pre cipitate. We do not see that he has been. He has done only what would have been unavoidable soon at the latest, and his prompt and vigorous ac tion has doubtless conduced to a speedy and peaceful solution. It is said that our government has in terposed. in a conflict between a friendly republic and one of its own states, and that the interference is as unjustifiable as would have been the threatened Eu ropean intervention in our civil war against which we so vigorously protest ed. But there is no parallelism between the two cases. Our relation to Colombia and the isthmian territory is wholly ex ceptional. We are bound by treaty to see that the traffic of the world across the Isthmus of Panama shall be free and open. For more than half a century we have discharged that duty. By vir tue of it we have repeatedly put our hand on the isthmus. The president is entirely right in saying that we have not only a treaty obligation, but an ob ligation to civilization in the matter. We are trustee of the world of Isthmian transit. That responsibility compels us t\j interpose in the present issue be tween Colombia and Panama. If we did not there would be a struggle which would obstruct and imperil the transit, and to allow this would be to renounce our obligation as protector. The United States is the primate of this continent and in the common inter est it exercises the right of primacy. It has protected American nations from European aggression. It has thrown the panoply of the Monroe doctrine around the continent. There has been a grow ing feeling in thoughful minds that the nature of our leadership required a larg er degree of authority and influence over th 6 relations of the countries which en joy our protection. However this may ultimately work out, it is certain that we must be entirely tecure in the terri tory which shall be traversed by the canal into which the United States will put many millions of dollars. The presi dent is rightly taking thought and care on this point. In spite of the v'enaliiy and stupidity of the conspirators at Bo gota, the way is opening up for the con struction of the Panama canal, and the president is acting for the American people in making the most of the op portunity. PARAGRAPHIC POINTERS. might serve as the missing democratic issue. As far as defined, republicans have no use fork. Free traders alone are crying for it.— St. Louis Globe-Democrat. a more than usual fore thought. the democratic leaders in con gress have decided to ascertain whether or not the Panama issue is loaded be fore they blow down the barrel. —Detroit Free Press (Ind.). democratic issue, when found, has a tendency to evaporate suddenly. Imperialism is a recent example. It went out so completely that even Ed ward Atkinson makes no sign.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. story that Mr. Bryan and his frier.ds have agreed to unite upon Rich ard Olney as their candidate for the presidential nomination next year is just a trifle less startling than would be a report that they had decided to con centrate on Grover Cleveland.—N. Y. World (Dem.). tyßepresentative southern newspa pers are very earnest in approval of the government's course with regard to Panama. The south wishes that isth mian canal completed, as it has a spe cial interest in the business which will be opened up thereby, and it does not want to see a moment's delay longer than is necessary. If the democrats in congress who are talking of opposing the Panama programme expect in that way to make themselves "solid" with the solid south, they probably reck oning without their host.—St. Louis Globt-De mocrat. iC'The young men who have taken a contract to split the republican party wide open seven days in the week and 52 weeks in the year, are hard at work, but the party continues to do business at the old stand. —Indianapolis Journal. a."According to advices from Liver pool, Mr. Bryan, who wai interviewed on landing at that port, said, speaking of the- presidential election, that "he thought he would not again be a candi date, but that nothing as yet had been decided." This would appear to indi cate that Mr. Bryan is contemplating the possibility of his running again.—Bing hamton (N. Y.) Leader (Dem.). CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10 1903. MEN AND ISSUES LACKING. The Demoeritcy Is Without it Slufgle i'retext for lleiuic iu ExiMteu ee. It is significant that when Represen tative Grosvenor the other day cited a list of states which would give the re publicans 2G3 clctoral votes for 1904 no democrat questioned its authenticity. The 25 states on the Ohio congress man's roll give the republicans 24 votes in excess of the number required to elect. These are the states which are cited as certain to declare for the republicans in the balloting. While there may have been democrats with in sound of his voice who believed that some one or other of those states might have a chance togo to the dem cratic candidate, not one of these democrats doubted that the repub licans would have more than enough votes to elect their ticket. No dem ocrat anywhere who has any reputa tion for sanity predicts or thinks that his party will carry the country in 1904. Every man of any standing in the democratic party believes that President Roosevelt will be elected next year. One of the reasons why no democrat questions the general presumption that the republican party will sweep the country in 1904 is that no democrat believes his side has either a man or an issue which can command the pop ular support. While several persons—• Cleveland, Gorman, Hill, McCiellan, Parker, Olney and others— have been mentioned in connection with the nom ination, there is no enthusiasm in any quarter for any of them* The coterie of Cleveland idolaters go no farther than to say that he would come nearer to winning than any other democrat could. None of them im agines that he could get the 239 votes in the electoral college which would be required to elect him. Moreover, only a corporal's guard of democrats can be found anywhere who want him nominated, or who think that, if nom inated, he would hold all the states which Bryan had in 1900. No interest is felt in Gorman outside of a few of the southern states. His race issue, which he thought would create a cy clone of enthusiastn for him in the south, excites only a mild sort of an interest, althoagh a large majority of the democrats of the soum are in favor of the negro extirpation which Gorman is understood to be ready to champion. On issues there is as great a pov erty among the democrats as there is on men. No democrat can say with any approach to confidence what his party will declare for in 1904. Gorman attempted to get the caucus of his party in his chamber to attack the president on the Panama question, but it broke away from hiin. He found that his followers were so discordant on that and on other questions thaf he despaired of being able to get unity of action among them on anything. Not a question is before the people of the 1 nited States that the democracy can unite on. Every issue that comes up between this time and the close of the long session of congress next summer the republicans will be able to get democratic votes on if those votes should be needed. On the Panama policy more democrats are on Roosevelt's side than are on Gorman's. All the southern members, with a few exceptions, can be relied onto aid the republicans in the administration's policy on the isthmus, if any aid should be needed. The canal treaty which the administration and the rep resentatives of the republic of Pana ma have just framed will receive the support of many democrats in the sen ate. Neither an issue nor a man is in sight on the democratic side which can command any general interest among the members of that party. So far as regards the leading issues of republican policy, this is an era of good feeling for the country. Sensible democrats of all sections see this. This is the reason why predictions of big republican majorities in the elec toral college of 1904 excite no dissent from democrats, for they realize that while these estimates may possibly err in details, they are mathematically correct on the main fact that repub lican sentiment is still at flood tide throughout the United States. NoHiliik Slow \bont Them. Speaking of "quick action," there i» certainly nothing slow about the pres ident and Secreta y Hay, when it comes to taking advantage of any situation that may arise, and getting out of it all there is in it for the American people. The world has scarcely realized that there has been a revolution in Panama, but within two weeks the new republic has been recognized, its minister has been received in Washington, and a r.ew canal treaty has been threshed out, licked into shape and signed. When anything is to be done it may as well be done at once, and, so long as good judg ment is exercised, the quicker the bet ter. Now, if the senate will only be come imbued with the same spirit of energy and realize a good thing when it sees it—and realize it quickly—there is no good reason why work on this long-dc-ferred and much-needed canal should not begin speedily.—lndianapolis Journal. C "Bryan expresses surprise that peo ple in England should have recognized him. As like the Bourbons, he never changes, any recognition could not be very difficult anywhere. He will be lucky if the people abroad don't get to know him too well.—Philadelphia Press. fnTThe democrats are uncertain as to the attitude they should assume toward the Cuban question, which means, ol course, that they will keep their eyes open for political issues. If the repub lican senators are likely to approve the president's recommendations, the dem ocrats will probably take the other side. I —Cleveland Leader. I BUBBLE IU'RSTED. Dr. Dowie's Zion City in the Hands of Receivers. I'llinnelal niftlcullica Overwhelm Ilia Scll-StyleU "Elijah III" lle A|>- peulo to Ilia Follower* to Sfll Tlielr Properly and Help Ciod'a Church Work. Chicago, Dec. 2.—Financial (lifiiculi ties which began during the crusade ! of John Alexander Dowie, the self styled "Elijah III," and his restora tion host to New York a month ago and which have been rapidly increas ing since Dowe's return culminated last night in the federal courts tak ing possession of all the property controlled by Dowie in Zion City, 111. j This town, which was founded two 1 years ago by Dowie, has a population of over 10,000, Is the general head ! quarters for Dowie's church and is said to represent an expenditure of i $20,000,000. | Fred M. Blount, cashier of the Chi ! cago national bank, and Albert D. I Currier, a law partner of Congress*- j man Boutelle, were appointed re | ceivers of the property. Their bonds j ' were fixed at SIOO,OOO by Judge j Kohlsaat, of the United States dis- j triet court, who made the appoint- \ merit on the petition of several credit- | j ors. j The bankruptcy proceedings • against Dowie were based on the al- I legation that be is insolvent and that | ! while in this financial condition he j committed an act of bankruptcy by j making a preferential payment, on I November 2, to the E. Streetor Lum- j ber Co. for $3,770. Dowie lias beca hard pressed by his creditors, es pecially since it was announced that | his recent mission to New York had j proved unsuccessful financially. Dowie accumulated a large sum as j | the head of the Christian Catholic I church, the assets of the organiza- I tiou being estimated at between S2O,- | 000,000 and $30,000,000. There was a j large outlay of money, however,, j when Zion City was started. Then' J lace and costly candy industries were | started, and as both of these ventures ! have never been paying investments a great deal more money was tied up. Dowie's differences with liis brother- i in-law, Stevenson, over the manage- j nient of the lace factory cost more j than SIOO,OOO and other suits recently j begun in Lake county by creditors are said to aggregate a large sum. Last Wednesday Dowie's first con fession of weakness was made at a rally in tlie tabernacle at Zion City. "A lot of you people have cash iu your pockets," Dowie said to his fol lowers. "Dig down and get it out. ! it is God's and we need it in his j work. You're cowards if yo*.i don't ; give it up." Dowie talked in the same strain for more than an hour, tears glisten ing on bis cheeks as he told of the financial straits in which the Zion 1 industries found themselves. Instead of frightening many into depositing, this appeal sent a long j line of people to the bank on Friday, when they lined up at the paying I teller's window drawing out their money. Less than $3,000 was do- 1 posited in the bank on Friday, while j the amount withdrawn was twice as much. Yesterday Dowie asked tlie mem- j ber* of Zion more urgently than ever ! for money. He declared that he must j have $300,000 without delay. This I sum, he said, lie was willing to take in short loans, but that they must be j forthcoming immediately. In the ef- | forts to remedy the condition of af fairs at Zion City hundreds of letters ! were sent out to Dowie's followers in I other parts of the country. In these letters, in which glowing j prospects of Zion City's future were ' painted, and in which Dowie himself \ is quoted as praying that all those | who believe in him will "follow the Lord," all Dowieites are urged—al- j most commanded—to sell tlieir farms, ! stores and everything else and come j at once to Zion City and take up the ; work of the church. All of those who j have money in banks near where they now live were asked to draw that money out of the banks and send it for deposit at Zion City. Last night the receivers and their attorneys called upon Dowie and read to hiin the petition and order of court which placed Zion in the hands of a receiver. The order of court issued compels Dowie to appear in court Decern j ber 11. Chicago. Dec. 3.—-A great gathering |of the Dowieites was held in the tabernacle at Zion City last night. It was called by Dowie for the purpose of starting a fund of $1,000,000 with which to pay off all the indebtedness that hangs over Zion City and hiift» self. The outpouring of his followers was not one to bring cheer to the heart of the general overseer of Zion. Dowie gave to his followers a state ; ment of the financial situation of i Zion City, told them that the assets I were ample, the only trouble being | that he was not able to realize upon them at once. All lie needed was a contribution of ready money with which to tide over the present crisis in the affairs of the city and, this once done, Zion would grow to great er power than ever before. "We want $1,000,000," be said "and i I want the faithful here in Zion City to contribute half of that sum. I want it now; tonight." The collection taken tip is said to have amounted to less than SI,OOO. Accepted CarneKle'* lilf:. Philadelphia, Dec. 2. —City councils committee on free libraries yester day voted to accept from Andrew Carnegie the gift of $1,500,000 for th< building of 30 branch libraries in this city. The gift was contingent on th« city furnishing the sites, appropriat ing 10 per cent, of the total cost of the libraries for maintenance and purchasing the books. There wag spirited opposition to the acceptance of the money because it made neces sary an annual appropriation ol about $150,000 te maintain the libraries. A BRAVE MAN. Ronlaivnltl IJeery, lvlio Saved the Tor pedo If out Adder, will be Com mended lo ll»e Prenldent for Per forming an Hurolf Peat. Norfolk, Ya., Dec. 5. —The naval tug l'eoria, towing the submarine torpedo boat Adder, has arrived at the navy yard here. The Adder was saved by the heroism of Boatswain Deery, who responded to a call for volunteers and swam 100 yards with a line to the Adder from the tug and pulled a hawser after him. The Moc casin is ashore at Currituck and ap pears to be only slightly damaged. The Adder is leaking badly. When Boatswain Deery responded [to the call for a volunteer to swim 'to the Adder, a 34-mile gale, with mountainous seas, was crashing over the Peoria and burying the drifting submarine boats beneath tons of water. Deery, with a slender line fastened around his waist, plunged into the ocean and battled with wind and tide for a full hundred yards, finally reaching the Adder and gain ing her deck. There he hauled a thick hawser aboard by means of the lifeline and made it fast. At this time the Adder was being tossed about like a cork one minute, and driven far beneath the surface | the next, rolling and wallowing in j such a manner as to make it almost i impossible to retain a position upon j her scanty decking, but Deery held on and accomplished his work. Then ! lie went back to the tug hand over j hand on the hawser. It is said at the navy yard that ! Boatswain Deery will be commended ! at once lo the president for bravery. Lieut. English, commander of the j Peoria, says the little boats towed i very well until the; - were just olf the j Virginia capes. J There the heavy seas running at ! the time proved too much for the j frail towing bits of the Adder, which | was towing first, following the tug. j They snapped short and the two sub | marine vessels went adrift, j The Peoria sought to catch them, j but they drifted southward before | the wind rapidly. There were only | the broken bits on which to get a | hold, so the tug could only run in be ! tween them and keep them from I bumping together. The seas were running entirely too j high for the tug to run alongside the I boats, and it would have been suici- I dal to have lowered a boat. All the ! Peoria could do, therefore, was to | keep the boats apart. All night this continued and then the line between the boats snapped. It, was then that Boatswain Deery, who comes from Brooklyn, perform j ed his heroic act in a last attempt to save the boats. After he had made fast his line to the Adder and suc ' ceeded at the risk of his life in re ! gaining the tug, consideration was ; given to anchoring the Moccasin, but it was seen that it would be impos sible to anchor her. The tug could handle only one o> the boats in the i heavy seas. The Yankton appeared j and the Moccasin was left to her, I while the Peoria fought her way up : the coast with the Adder. REVIEW OF TRADE. Price* of Comniodllle* Average 2 For Cent. Lena than n Year Ago. Xew York, Dec. s.—lJ. G. Dun & , C'o.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: I Trade is seasonably quiet, except in j the lines affected by weather and \ those embracing holiday goods, which I are in good demand. Activity is es i peeially conspicuous among footwear jobbers and retailers. Commodities | are generally lower in price, although ; a few important articles such as cot ton. eggs and dairy products have | risen sharply. For the year there is | a decline of about 3 per cent. Manufacturing conditions are still < irregular, the best symptom of the | week being the steadiness of iron ! and steel. Textile mills still find it j difficult to secure prices in proper ratio to the raw material, the violent j advance in cotton adding to the em ' barrassment of spinners who have j only limited supplies on hand. Rail j way earnings in three weeks of Xo- I vernber were 4.S per cent larger than a year previous. Several encouraging reports are re ceived regarding the iron and steel situation. In most cases the proposed reductions in wages have met with no opposition and such business as comes forward is handled without in terruption. Another good sign is that the past week has brought no further reductions in prices. Steel mills have received several fair con tracts for structural shapes and rail way supplies. Failures this week were 331, against 204 for the corresponding week last year. Judge Springer men. Washington, Dec. s.—Ex-Represen tative William M. Springer, of Illi nois. a democratic leader conspicuous in the house of representatives dur ing the Forty-fourth to Fifty-third 1 congresses, inclusive, and once chair j man of the ways and means commit i tee of the house, died at his residence in this city Friday, aged 04 years. His death was due to pneumonia con j tracted in Chicago Thanksgiving day. Six IlexlliM from Fever. Butler, Pa., Dec. 5. —-Only 11 new cases of typhoid fever were reported to the board of health Friday, but t more deaths occurred than in any previous day since the epidemic com menced. the number being six, which makes the total to date 43. Last evening eight nurses and four doc tors arrived from the western end of the state. A Warning lo Kiigllnlimeii. London, Dec. 4. —The Board of Trade Journal for December prints a warning to British manufacturers from Seymour Bell, the British com mercial agent in the United States, prophesying an extensive invasion of British markets by American firms in the near future. Mr. Bell writes that the decreasing demand in the United States for many classes of manufactured goods indicates that American firms will soon be looking abroad for markets in which to dis pose of their surplus products at al most any price. CURIOUS FOOD COMPOUND. Old Doiicm, Alain, Flint and sll!ph irlfl Acid for Hafainig; Dread. Housekeepers have recently been so licited by Borne of the grocers and by peddlers to try another kind of baking powder—"cheaper and Just as good," aa tbey say. This is another scheme of some baking powder manufacturer to get a new brand on the market by offer ing the grocer a large profit. House keepers are not usually much benefited by such changes. Alum baking pow ders are generally low priced, but they are well known to be detrimental to health. Large quantities of one of them were recently seized in New York, being found to be largely composed of sharp-pointed grains of ground fiiiit and sulphuric acid! Most of the so-called phosphate pow ders are mixed with alum The manu facturer of a phosphate powder has pat ented the process of making the princi pal ingredient of his powder from bonea digested with sulphuric acid. Housekeepers do not want such mix tures in their focd. They should never encourage peddler* nor admit testers or alleged experimenters in food within their doors, and when buying baking powder should get a brand well known to be made of cream of tartar, which is a healthful product of the grape. CHICKEN LASSO. New liivenllon Ilelns Tried In lh« CommUilon of Cleveland, 0., .lleetlns iTllli (ireat Biicce»«. Ch'.-ken lassos are the latest. The inventor is a well-known man in the commission district, of Cleveland, 0., and his device has become popular among 1 the handlers of poultry in that locality. All dealers are sup plied and farmer# will be quick to adopt them. A chicken hunt is a daily occurence in the commission district. It is a common sight to see a crowd of men and boys running' down Broadway, over wagons, through yards and over fences, after cackling hens, turkeys or ducks. The race continues for blocks, and sometimes lasts for hours before the fugitives are caught. But the evil has been corrected, and it is now an easy thing to cap ture the fowls. The new invention is a stiff wire, ten or 12 feet long, with a long narrow hook about the size of a chicken's leg at the end. The operator stealthily approaches the fowl, hooks it by the leg, ana draws it in aj< an angler would a fish, then it is carried back in triumph to its coop. It Cares Colds, Conjhs, Sore Throat, Crotjp, Influ enza, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in firft stages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. l!te at once. Yon will see tho excellent effect after taking tha first dosa. Sold by dealers everywhere. Largo bottles a cents and 60 cent*. UNION PACIFIC SHORTEST LINE—FASTEST TIME TO Oregon AND Washington Daylight Ride 112 | of 200 Miles along the g beautiful Columbia % River. Two Through Trains Dally | Accommodation for all Classes \ of Passengers. Steam Heat Pintsch Light. TOURIST SLEEPING CARS A SPECIALTY. Full Information cheerfully furnished oa application to L W. G. NEIMYER, G. A., A 193 S. Clark St., Chicago, 111. WATERPROOF & jk OILED CLOTHING Made in black or yellow for all kinds j /OI 7/ of wttworK.On»leev«wvh«re. -Jlm \/J Look for the 3t{n of the Fish.Mid / M H/A %