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tiVnstoiiflton fdmulnrfl HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Some Sensible Suggestions. Clear as voa go. Muddle makes more muddle. Spare neither soda nor hot water in wtishing up greasy articles. Kgg- will cook much more evenly if the frying pan is covered. Not to wash plates and dishes soon after using makes extra work. Nutmegs may he tested by pricking w.tli a pin, when oil will ex title from fresh ones. New stockings should always be washed laTore being worn, for the washing causes slight shrinkage and makes them wear bettor. Class covers for platters arc some times used instead of metal. They equally preserve the heat of tlie dish and have the advantage ot not hiding it. Kid hoots atul shoes may be beau tifully eleanftl by dipping a little bit of sponge in white of egg, to which has been added a little ink and a few drops of oil, and rubbing well. If a shoe he accidentally scorched it can he restored by spreading the place at onco with soft soap and, when cool, wiping off the soap and rubbing the leather with a little sweet oil or vaseline. To clean black cashmere wash the material in warm suds in which a little b >ra.x has been dissolved. Rinse in very deep blue-water and iron while still damp. If carefully done the material should look like new. Cooking Hints. Choose butler by its fresh odor, freedom from butter-milk and streaks of color. To make meat and fowls tender, put a spoonful of vinegar into the boiling water. If boiled potatoes be cooked a little too soon, place a towel over the sauce pan, instead of the cover. Nutmeg gives a finer flavor than mace, because they grow in the same pod, and mace is simply the covering of the nutmeg. Letnon juice will bring out the flavor of fish better than anything else can. Use especially on boiled fish, and cut thin slices as a garnish. Whenever, through neglect, any thing you have cooked gets scorched, the scorched taste will disappear if you put the vessel containing the food in a pail of water for a few min utes. For making coffee a drip coffee pot is best, as with this the water can be poured through the coffee as often as necessary to acquire the desired strength without allowing the grounds to soak in the liquid. Keep the coffee hot, but do not let it boil. The greatest drawback to tea as a beverage is the poisonous tannic acid it contains. To avoid extracting this as much as possible, pour the water on the leaves at the moment of boil ing and allow the tea to stand a few minutes only before serving. When Our Eyes Arc Tired. People speak about their eyes be ing tired, meaning that the rctiua, or seeing portion of the eye is fatigued; but such is not the case, says the «' Family Doctor," as the retina hardly ever gets tired. The fatigue is in the inner and outer muscle attached to the eyeball, and the muscles of ac commodation which surround the lens of the eye. When a near object is to be looked at, this muscle relaxes and allow the lens to thicken, increasing its refractive power. The inner and outer muscles are used in covering the eye on the object to be looked at, the inner one being especially used when a near object is looked at. It is in the three muscles mentioned that the fatigue is felt, and relief is secured temporarily by closing the eyes or gazing at far distant objects. The usual indication of strain is a redness of the rim of the eyelid, betokening a congested state of the inner surface, accompanied by some pain. Some times this weariness indicates the need of glasses rightly adjusted to the person, and in other cases the true remedy is to massage the eye and its surroundings, so far as may be, with the hand in cold water. ONE of the pioneers of Aberdeen, an old man named Drummond, was taken into custody and removed to Monte sano to be tried as to his sanity, the other day. Drummond went to Aberdeen in 1881, entered a claim on the south side of the Chehalis river, mado some improvements on the property and then left to accept the position of superinteudent of construc tion on the Canadian Pacific railway, at that time building through to the Coast. During the following ten years, Drummond occasionally visited Aberdeen, and finally platted his claim into the townsite of "Drum mond." While the boom was at its height he was offered SBO,OOO for the property, but refused to sell it. A few years later he disposed of the place for $12,000, and sgent the money in per sonal adornment. For some time he has been absolutely penniless. WITH adjournment almost at hand it looks more than ever as if the pres ent Republican Congress made capital of a repeal of the war revenue taxes with the single purpose of forestalling a general revision and reduction of tariff schedules. EMI'EROU William, in snubbing Potts, the only officer who impugned the valor of Schley, is another one who refuses to accept the dictum that the Schley incident is closed. The Heart Cry of the Motherless Maiden. " Mother come brick from that whole" shore And take nie again in your arms as of yore." When the mother is taken from the home, the loss fails heavily on each member of the family. But in time kindly Nature heals the wounds, dulls the memory, and comforts the heart. The little girl turns anew to her dolls and her plays and her mother bee. tiles a memory. The real loss that she has sustained comes to her much later in life, when "standing with reluctant feet where womanhood and girlhood meet," she feels the need of a mother's counsel. She is perplexed alxmt conditions of which she cannot speak to any other. She thinks of the family physician. But her delicate nature shrinks from the questions she might be called upon to answer. And so without counsel or help she drifts along while every day time tightens the fetters of disease. Young women instinctively know that certain conditions are abnormal. They know that heads and backs were not made to ache. But they do not know where to turn for relief. ANY MOTHER WOULD SAY what almost every mother knows, tliat Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the best medicine for the cure of womanly ills. It not only cures headache and backache but it cures the womanly ills which cause these pains. "I am so much better since I com menced taking your • Favorite Prescrip tion,' " writes Miss Jessie Simmons, of Thurston, Frederick Co., Md. "I am very much improved in health, and feel as though I had a new lease of life. It was just what I needed. Am more than thankful to you for the kindly interest you have taken, and hope that others will find the same benefit from your valu able books and medicines that I have." Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is not offered as a cure-all. It is a woman's medicine, and it accomplishes perfectly the cure of womanly diseases. It estab lishes regularity. It dries unhealthy and offensive drains. It heals inflammation and ulceration and cures female weak ness. It is a purely vegetable prep aration, containing no alcohol, neither opium, cocaine nor any other narcotic, and cannot disagree with the most delicate constitution. M. WACHSMUTH and son, Theodore, sailed over from Oysterville to South Bend in their sloop the other day. Mr. Wachsmuth was the first oysterman to import Eastern seed oysters iu any quantity for transplanting purposes, and he reports that he has succeeded in propagating them. His method he naturally declines to reveal. Ho ex pects to ship in about two car-loads of Eastern oyster seed this fall. Mr. W. is au advocate of the sale of the natur al oyster beds to private individuals. He says that the native oyster industry is doomed under the present laws; that Bill's channel, which has been reserved and has not been touched for some years, has no oysters in it, and never will have, as the starfish get them, and that there is no money in native oysters, any how. The ground, he thinks, had better be sold to priv ate individuals, who would take care of it and utilize it for Eastern oysters The men who have made any money out of planting and shipping native oysters can be couutcd on the fingers of one hand. THE largest individual lot of wheat, aside from that of W. 11. Babcock, dis posed of last month, which has been sold in Walla Walla this season, was the immense holdings of 09,400 bush els of No. 1 bluestem sold last week by Charles Hungate. The wheat was sold to three separate parties, part of which went to Portland parties, part to Waitsburg dealers, and the re mainder to Walla Walla parties. The price received was 58 cents f. o. b., which'is the top price received for any lot sold this year. MR. Carnegie makes no pretensions to statecraft, but he has what is com monly known as " horse sense." The present state of affairs in the Philip pines shows that " horse sense" was needed at the inception of the expan sion idea when Mr. Carnegie offered the United States $20,000,000, the price paid to Spain, to keep out of the Philippines. THE beef trust now Bays that it starved America to capture the foreign markets. Trade expansion may be all right, but not at the expense of the American citizen, although that is what much of it has amounted to. IT has been pointed out that if we invest $5,000,000 iu the Danish West Indies it may be blown into the air any day. We cannot eee that this is any worse than investing $20,000,000 in a ready-made insurrection. THE tune " Dixie," dear to the hearts of many Americans is " all the rage" in China and Siberia, the na tives having caught it from the bands of the warships which have been in Oriental waters. THE coal strike in Pennsylvania is assuming a grave aspect. It promises to be a stubbornly fought contest. Young women especially do not realize liow intimately the general health is related to the health of the delicate womanly organs. When the local dis eases are cured by " Favorite Prescrip tion " the general health at once im proves. The appetite is restored, sleep is enjoyed, the form rounds out, the cheeks regain the hue of health. Miss Simmons says in the letter as a result of using Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription she feels as though she had "A NEW LEASE ON LIFE." This is not only a feeling but a fact, as is shown by thousands of testimonials which say " ' Favorite Prescription' has made a new woman of me." " I am still improving more and more every day. lam just as well now as I was when I came into the world," writes Mrs. P. A. Graham, of 617 Race Street, New Orleans, I.a. " I will put it at that, anyway, for / cannot remember ever seeing a well day since I became a woman (twenty five years ago), until six months ago when I began the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and 'Golden Medical Discov ery ' and ' Pleasant Pel lets.' They are the best medicines on earth made for women and their com plaints. No matter what the disease may be even if called incurable by the doctors. If any suffering woman will write Doctor Tierce he will write her a fatherly letter and give her good advice and if she will follow his instructions will find out in a very short time that she has been mistaken by nutting her trust in home doctors. I had l>een sick for eight years until six months ago I commenced with Dr. R. V. l'ierce's medicine and it brought me out to where I am now, from ninety pounds to one hundred and thirty-five. Any lady may write to me, enclosing stamps, and I will answer." Women suffering from diseases of long standing are invited to consult Dr. Pierce by letter, free. All letters are read in private and answered in private, and the written confidences of women are guard ed by the same strict professional pri vacy observed in personal consultations with Dr. Pierce, at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute. Address correspon dence to Dr. R. V. Pierce. BufTalo, N. Y. A great many women who have taken advantage of Dr. Pierce's offer of free consultation by letter, have expressed their gratification at being able to escape in th'.s way the indelicate questionings, the offensive examinations and obnox ious local treatments, considered neces sary by some local practitioners. Dr. Pierce's wide experience and wonderful succcess in the treatment and cure of womanly diseases, enables him to obtain accurate knowledge of diseases by the written statement. In a little over thirty years, assisted by his staff of nearly a score of physicians. Dr. Pierce, chief consulting physician to the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., has treated and cured hundreds of thousands of weak and sickly women. The dealer who offers a substitute for "Favorite Prescription" as "just as good" does so to obtain the little more profit paid by the sale of less meritorious preparations. Accept no sub6titue for "Favorite Peescription," the medicine which makes weak women strong and nek women well. WHAT MISS GREER THINKS. " I think that your ' Adviser' is a fine book," writes Miss Flora I. Greer, of 107 Howe Street, Akron, Ohio, "and a book that everyone should own. If more girls would read it instead of trashy novels there would be healthier women and children than there are te-ckay." The book referred to is Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser It contains 1008 large pages and over 700 illustrations, and is sent free on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Send 31 one-cent stamps for the cloth-bound volume, or only 21 stamps for the book in paper-covers. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. j SENSATIONAL, clergymen who preach , on the dress of women do so in a ma ' jority of cases for the purpose of self i advertisement. Some have opposed 1 the short walking skirt and now one wants women never to appear in pub lic with uucovered head. It has been remarkable that many of the criti cisms have been in opposition to good sense. All of which goes to prove that " the shoemaker should stick to his last." CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought A NEW YORK court decides that a man who hires A horse from a livery stable and has a runaway accident in which the horse is killed is bound to pay for the animal. IN the Superior Court of the State of Waahing tou, for Thurston county. Aldana E. Bailey, j Plaintiff, ! vt. | Summon* W. H. Edwards Mrs. W. 1 Foreclosure of 11. Edwards, K. L. Sa- | Tax Lien, bin and Mrs. R. L Ba bin, Defendants, j The State of Washington to W. H. Edwards, Mrs. W. H. Edwards, K. L. Sabin aud Mrs. It. L. Sabin, Defendants: You are hereby notified that Aldana E. Bailey is the owner aud bolder of certificate of delin quency numbered 514. Issued by the Treasurer of Thurston county, Washington, on the 17th day of September, 1901, for the sum of fifteen and :t5-100 dollars, the same being the amount then dne and delinquent for the taxes for the years 18'.M, 1897, 1898, 1899 and 1900, together with penalty, interest and costs thereon, upon real property assessed to W. 11. Edwards, and of which you are the owuer, or reputed owner, or tn which you have or claim to have some interest or estate, aud which said real estate Is situated in Thurston county, Wash ington. aud more particularly bounded and de scribed to wit: Lot 18, of block 2. of First Railroad Addition to Olympia, Washington. That plaintiff has paid taxes, oilier than those included in said certificate of delinquency, for the years 1892, 1898. 1894. 18-J5, the snm of $40.35, paid Sept. 17,1901, and which draw interest from that date at the rate olio per cent, tier annum, and the further sum of 11.82, paid March 1,1902, be ing the taxes lor the year 1901, making iu all the sum of <42.17. You are further notified that plaintiff will apply to the Superior C'omt of the State of Washington, for Thurston county, for a jiidgtaent for the amount of said delinquent certificate, taxes, in terest. penalty and easts, and foreclosing his lien against said property hereinbefore described. Aounre hereby notified and summoned to up pear within sixty days after the first publication or this summons, to-wit: after the 9ih day of May, 1902, exclusive of said day, aud defend this action in the court aforesaid, or pay the amount due; aud in case of your failure so to do, judg ment will be rendered for the amount of said cere tiflcale of delinquency, taxes. Interest, penally ami costs, and foreclosing plaintiff's lien against the lands and premises hereinbefore described aud the same will be ordered sold to satisfy said judgment. Any pleading or process maybe served upon tiie undersigned at the poet-office address below e'ven. CUAS. 1). KINO, Attorney for Plaintiff. Post office address: McKeuuy block, Olympia, Washington. First publication May 9,1902. Practical Horsestioing. ON account of increase of business we have re moved our shop to 114 Fifth street, between Main aud Columbia streets. Your horse brought to my shop w ill be bandied by a man who under stands thoroughly every detail of the work of properly shoeing a horse. We make a special fea ture of preventing interfering and forging. Oood workmahsnip guaranteed. HILLMAN k McBRATNEY, 111 Fifth Street, between Main and Columbia. PROvlsiON STORE KEDEK & PHIPPS, - - - PROPRIETORS THE MOST COMPLETE STOCK OF^T> Staple? Fancy Groceries In the city, aud the constant endeavor in to maintain the reputation this house j has always enjoyed for quality of goods, fair prices and promptness in tilling or ders. THE FULLEST AND MOST COMPLETE LINK OF CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE 1 IIST STOCK. . : ;♦ >:£> :♦ <► o > «■ ♦ o ♦ <> I Talcott Bros. 1 ♦ : o i [f n : <► TDK OLDEST JEWELRY UOISE IY WESTERN WASBIMTUS. ESTABLISHED 1872, ;*£ : # * i —DEALERS IN I ♦ : WATCHES, DIAMONDS, JEWELRY, I v CLOCKS. SILVERWARE, CUT GLASS, ,'J. LEATHER GOODS, CUTLERY, NOVELTIES, tT SEWING MACHINES, BICYCLES, SUNDRIES A A MANDFAOTURERS OF W O * Notary and Lodge Seals. Rubber Stamps and Umbrellas * REPAIRING IN ALL DEPARTMENTS. V i t Imperial Monaicli, Racycle, Eldrldge I Crawford y •j, BICYCLES. • 'j? •• 421 and 42G Main St., ... Olympia, Wash. ! * ft ! — 1 *44-9 OUU f»t C I \ \MUK I BAKING POWDER I J A-4t 18 o< t ual t0 ar> y of th< high £ priced brands. i S « \ Only as Cents a Package. J | Sawuer & FIII6U. # i'OKNEB FOURTH ANll MAIN STREETS. C . | A/FT FOUNTAIN'-"SYRINGE | » I I 9 3 qt. Fountain Syringe and Water 4 < ► i A 4 qt. Fountain Syringe an<l Water I II ]lf ij\ I t 0 For Rubber Goods t * * i i Best Goods. Lowest Prices. J j[ B. L. HILL DRUG CO. f T WALTER CHAMBERS & CO., iutcliers, Pacta and Jtilta _ BEEF, LAMB, PORK, VEAL AND MUTTON Highest price paid for all kinds of fat stock. Fonttli and Washington Streets, . Olympia, Wash. Telephone iNTo. 931. I Connolly & Chambers, 1 N CHAMBERS BLOCK, FOURTH ST. TELEPHONED. S X FULL LINE OF MEATS FOK.TIIE J WHOLESALE 9 RETAIL TRADE \ V Wc oidic.l a share of your trade and will strive to please. r PIONEER IRON WORKS ». O. LIHTKII, I'roprlotor. MANUFACTURER* (OF MARINE STATIONARY ENGINES MILL MACHINERY, BRASS AND IRON CASTIN6S. Logging ear equipments of all kinds, w rougkt Iron w orli A specialty of concaved tram wheels. Repair work given prompt and careful Highest market price paid for old cast attention. Prices moderate, iron scrap, brass and copper. Third Htreet. ' \ Cm > ve^aro/ Dining Cars and Pullman Sleeping Cars on all through trains. •Daily , Leave 1 Arrive No. 14—For Tacoma. .Scat- i attic, Spokane, Lewis i ton, Butte. Minneapo lis, St. Paul, Chicago, New York, and all points cast and south east. *1:15 pni j ♦1:10 pm ! i No. 7—For lacoina. Scat tie, Spokane, Helena, I Butte, Billings, Den ver, Omaha, St. Joseph | Kansas City, St. Lo"i rt and all point* east and southeast. *2.50 t> in I •2:45 p in i A, D. Charlton, A. E. Stanford, A G. P. A., Portland. Or. Agent, Olympia line *md Union Pacific From the Chair Window can be seen the splendid scenery of the Columbia River Stop a few hours at Salt Lake City The wonderful Mormon inetroj.ulis. For particulars, regarding rates, etc., call on or address J. C. PEKCIVAL, PercivaPs Dock. Agent. Olympia, Wash. Phone 33. IN the Superior Court of the State of Washing ton for Thurston county. Fannie Turner, j Plaintiff, I vs. William M. I.mid and Mrs. | William M. Ladd his wife, Oliver Pn»uty and Mrs. Oli- | Summons ver Prouty his wife, W. 11. } for Dunckley and Mrs. W. H. | Publication. DuLckley. his wife. Walter ] Hiiichman aud Mrs. Wal- | ter Uiuchman, his wife. S. j Coulter and Mrs. S. Coulter | his wife. Defendants. J The Stale of Washington to the satd William M. Ladd and Mrs. William M. Ladd, Oliver Prouty i and Mrs. Oliver Prouty. W. H. Dunckley and I Mrs. W. H. Dunckley. Walter Iliuchman and Mrs. Walter liiuchmun. Defendants. You and each of you are hereby summoned to appear within sixty days after the date of the first publication of this summons, tow it within sixty (lavs after the 25th day of April, 1902, and deieud the above entitled action in the above en titled court, and answer the complaint of the plaintiff, and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorney for plaintiff, at his of fice below stated; and in rase of your failure so to do. judgment will be rendered against you ac cording to the demand of the complatut. which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court. The object ot said action is to ohtn n a decree uml judgmcut quieting title in the plaiutiff to lot 2, of ectliou 20. township 19 north, range 1 west, in Thurston county. Washington, and to declare any inte.est, claim or title thereto asserted by you to he invalid aud void and to enjoin you from fu ture assertion of any such claim or'title to satd lands and for costs aud general relief. G. C. ISRAEL. Plaintiff's Attorney. P. O. address: Suite 6, McKeuuy Block, Olym pia. Washington. First publication, April 25,1902. EVERYBODY J Has'to Lean on tbe STAFF i .„ OF LIFE. T - ► IT THEREFORE BEHOOVES t 4 ► *T " ► EVERYBODY to know that -4- THE NEW YORK BAKERY -£ «1 iS THE BEST PLACE ♦ In THR CITY to PLEASE ;; EVERYBODY. * ► NEXT TO BREAD. COMES COFFEE X 4 * + * - And our coffee parlors are apain + 4 - uuder the personal supervision of 4 ► Mrs. Scarighi. where you can net + 4 >• the beat cup of that delightful bcver- -4- 4 - age in town, at the X t NEW YORK BAKERY I 4 >■ + " ► Open from 6 A- M to tl p. «. ♦ , ♦ < - lUO FOURTH STREET, - OLYMPIA. ♦ P. J. O'BRIEN & CO. HORSESHOEING AND General Blacksmithing. GIVE T7S A. TRIAL. Sole (Kent, for Olvmpift Anil Thurston county for tlie celebrated STUDEBAKER Wagons and Carriages. Cor. Third and Columbia St*., Olympta, Wash ItHE GERMAN I | BAKERY | D The place to buv the best <iual- O x ity BREAD, CAKE an.l PIE. X X Visit my X 1 LUNCH ROOM | X Where you can get the finest cof- X X fee in the city. X O A. G. ARLITT, Prop.. O £ Tel. 2(16. 115 W. Fourth St. X ■^vvwwvwA^wv^wwvaA* mum i'Bend model, sketch or pboto of Invention for ' If reereport on patentability. For free book, 1 HowtoSecureTßinr UIDVO write' *[ OpposlteU^slPatentwfice! | S J M. G-. ROYAL, Attorney at Law Room 3, Byrne Building, Olympta MUM & PICKETT ALWAYS CARRY A COMPLETK STOCK OF STAPLE AND FANCY.... GROCERIES Also Flour, Feed, Hay, Wheat, Oats, &c. GOODS DELIVERED PROMPTLY Highest price l'aid for Farmers' Produce. 329 FOURTH ST. TELEPHONE 703. I CAPITAL BHWK CO. 1 •> (• (• ~ MANUFACTURERS OF THE - 9) 1 "OLYMPIAN STANDARD" | •) (® 2 + AND EXPORT * § | LAGER .BEER. 1 (• (• #) YOUR PATRONAGE IS SOLICITED. *) (• (« Storm «r-^1 Kibo ™—- Boot. | a PEOPLE OE OLYNIPIA fl*i Have discovered that if they want tljat tliic I vti v. a good shoe they must go where /CACIi W. \, they make shoes spe- J yn Only Exclusive Shos Etore ON EVERY Uc- /<?' hi shoe. £•• £" fl? I3sr OLYMPIA And we propose to do the shoe business, M p n L alu ' io order to do this we will always x'a Extra Heavy „j ve t | le hest value possible for vour ! V | ole - R °P e money. ■ _ Stitch, Ex- Our tables are now filled with bargains tension Edge, Low Heel. which wx* are closing out at unheard of Exact Reproduction of this Style Shoe. low prices. The 8 hoe'store. A. G. STEVENS & 00. | Nearly to While Ting This Season! | 5 OLUMBIAS S Thomas Auto-Bi X Iv T rvtrrT « vno £ Bargains in last year's models \ J | \LEV ELANDS * Snaps ill Second Hand A X V/RESCENTS S Wheels. % 5 RAMBLERS, % \ EAGLES, DAYTONS, HARTFORDS, i FAY AND CRESCENT JUVENILES. k \ %%%%%%»%%%«%% X \ & AYERY. f OLYMPIA MARBLE WORKS MTABX.XSKCKD 1889. EVER, jProprietor. AND GRANITE * * * Monuments, Markers Headstones, Etc. Fourth and Jefferson Sts. OLYMPIA, - - - WASHINGTON. A KBIT(.EMAN'S KESOKT Cunningham's g,>lnnn M. J. CUNNINGHAM, - - - PROPRIETOR A full line of the chaicest hratuls of WINES, LIQUORS AND CI6ARS Including Canada Club, .lease Moore, Old Scotch, Old Irish, Kock and Rye. Guckeuheiiner, The Old lllciid and Samuel's Sour Mash Whiskies. * OLYMPIA BEER A SPECIALTY ★ 113 FOURTH STREET, Bet. Main ami Sta., Olympia. Wash- FRED SCHOMBER, Reliable Fire Insurance AND COLLECTION AGENCY. Call at HIT Washington street. Tele phone OGO. W KKI| 50 YEARS 9 vlH^HpHH^H^^H^H^H ■ i i_ j j ii i ™ f.l I 1 I 1 1|■ k | I TRADE MARKS DESIGNS R COPYRIGHTS AC. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Comniuntca tiousstrictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive 9p<ciiil notice , without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific Journal. Terms. 13 a year; four months, |L Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & Co. 36,8r0 » d "«» New York Brauch Olßce. 625 V St., Wajhiattton. 1,. C. Tin I'orn tK J I TONY FAUST I I f ♦ t RESTAURANT. | i.4- ♦ t C. 110LT11LSEN, - - I'.iOl'lllETUli, J I % I ♦ ♦ -4- The ta'.i.c will ho served with all the ♦ ; + delleacioK of tlie season Open day ♦ ♦ and night. + II Olympii, Wash. J 1