Newspaper Page Text
SUPERSTITIONS OF TO-DAT. Sim if Um Popilir B«IWs it tka Front Dij Hew to Atom Diath« Lonn’ Qoor rcls, ait Crlibarr-UMd ant Bad Lock oo« How Bra«|ht 00. Man who swear there is neither God nor future will yet betray a strange weak new toward some pet superstition that they will openly laugh at. but secretly be lieve. We all have them—not only igno rant people, hot the best of os. Few peo ple would have the hardihood to ait down at a table with thirteen aa the total num ber. Few people will count the hacks in a funeral pcocepaion. Few girls will read the marriage service entirely through in. the face of the awful and mysterious su perstition that this indulgence destroys hope of marriage. We don’t call the fortune-teller theprieatof Apollo, the wart charmer a witch. There is a change ot name—the fact lingers. We are still superstitious. All the generations that have passed have accumulated and banded down to us a vast number of superstitions. Each country has furnished its share, and prob ably the most of them date from the time when the human race waa still in its Asi atic cradle. Birfh, marriage and death are the three moat important events in every life. Batae tbei auguries of. these three events have been most eagerly sought and moat carefully remembered. Death, being the most dreadful, comes in lor the hugest share. One of the beat ways given as of avoiding It when mortal sickness is upon ns is to allow the report to be circulated that yon are already dead. The chances are strongly in favor of getting well. Es pecially is this so if friends begin to arrange for the funeral. A sure sign of early death is for a person to scatter the leaves of % red mat upon the ground. It ia ex tremely hazardous to an infant's life to pare its nails before it is a year old. They should be bitten off, or the gnm dams will not answer for the oonse- So numerous ars the dangerous super stitions shoot marriage that one could scarcely avoid breaking acme of them. In this observation the philosopher may And the solution of the question, “Why is mar riage a failure?” For instance, the bride most wot try on her wed ling gown, or IH luck will follow. She mu* not look in the glass alter she ia (ally dressed and ready for the ceremony. She most not enter her new home by stepping over the threshold, but most be carried over it by one of her relatives. A piece of the bride’s coke mo* be broken over bar bead os soon as she ia safely o« the other side. It ia very unlucky for her to be in a happy state on her wedding day. She mo* be aa dolorous aa possible, violent fits of weeping being especially beneficial. It to a good Mm tor the bridesmaids to throw away aa many pins m possible on the wedding day, as this will hasten mar riage. The bride shonlfi throw away her slipper in leaving the wedding feast, and she who ratchss it will ha the fin* mar ried. The month of May to generally con ceded to be the most unfortunate for mar riages. The lucky months Sr« January, April, August, October and November. January to especially lucky. Lovers should ca«fuUx,avokl passing a sharp or pointed instrument from owf to the other. Snob things tend to cstaae quarrels. The wedding should be put -)ff by all means if a cat snecses on the eve of the wadding day. It should never take place if the cat is black. To sweep dost over a girl's feet or legs will be cer tain to make an old maid of her. Shoaid the younger sister of a family marry first, the older sisters will .he con demned fo lasting celibacy unless they dance at her wedding in their docking lest / 7 The wedding ring of the mother la an infallible owe for eruptions on the akin of thecHM. the ring moat be rubbed three time* around each MR. Cue is certain. The virtue of the dew that glitters and •parkfea in every leaf and flowed morning baa been recognised from the earliest times, (f a young girl wiahee to obtßln and preserve a glorious com pfec ion she should venture out of a May morning and wash her face in this dew. It qfoo baa peculiar power in infant cask otWeek heefc. A child thua affected can be cured by drawing If three times through the wet grass on tbs first, second and third mornings of May. It wfl| cum swollen neck. The treatment here ia, however, more difficult. If the sufferer be a male he must wash his neck in *ba dew that gems the grave of the last de ceaeed unmarried woman who died; if a woman, then the grass on the grave of the last young unmarried man most be sought. ' *— To apit in the band before undertaking anything, whether in love, war or busi- MH, win not fail to bring luck. If you •re out Ashing, do not step over your rod, or you will catch no more fish than did Simple Kirnon in his mother’s pail. Of births, it may be said In general that a crying child v ill grow up to be a peat and useful mau. This omen is not very clearly settled, however, and Is often given the other way. Home seer far back In the ages discovered the fol lowing: Bom on Monday, Fair In the far*. Bom oa Tuesday, Tall ol god's STM*. ■•ra oa Wodaoadoy, Sour sad aod. Bom oa Tbnndoy, Morry sad glad. Bora oa Friday, Worthily siren. Bom oa Bstsrday. Wort for your Urine. Benum Sunday. Tou will aovsr know wsat To racall a person after they have left Em house Is bad luck. To go back for nsrnething forgotten ie also bad luck, unless yon sit down before going out If, when yon ait before the fire, «• live ooel jumps out, it la a sign that you are to have good lock, especially in money matters. To waah in walar another has washed in is not only bad sanitarily, but also snperstitiously. He who makes many crumbs at the table will never have any money to spare. It is flying in the (ace of fortune to sweep dost out of the front doty or to allow it to be swept out. In so doing you are sweeping out your good lock. To count one’s gains brings (nek, but to find money la the wore! pos sible lock. The four leaved clover, once found, should be treasured, aa every aehool child knows and believes. It brings lock of every description. Eve attemptedtocarry a four leaved shamrock of precious stone from Paradise with her. but II fell and shattered at her feet. Think of the dis aster thus entailed upon the human race! To see the moon oyer the left shoulder Is aa unlucky as to hold the four of clul* at cards. But the new moon seen over the right shoulder, or straight in front, portends fortune as smiling as her own bright rays. One should be careful in writing a letter not to cross out a word la it. 1b do so means that any request you may have made in the letter will not be granted. It ia very unlucky to dry a letter before the Are, instead of allowing it to dry alowly and naturally. But unlulkiest of all ia it to drop the letter on the floor after finish- inalt These are bat a few of the many thou sands of guides to life. Follow them all, observe them diligentlv, and happiness awaits you. Toot fhee wfll smile like that of a young girl at thought of her be loved. Yomr pathway frill he strewn with roses. II you scoff and aeftrn, beware. For the ghosts and goblins and witchea, the spirits of your ancestors who believed all these things and cherished them os the eye, will plot together against you. Believe them even aa the child believes in Santa Claus. They are our only relics of the ohl, dead past—the faith of legend and story, of simplicity and frankness, when men learned only to shoot the bow and apeak the troth. They are the faiths of the childhood of our race, and as such deserve recognition. Reason may scoff, science scorn, but down in all our breasts the old childhood faiths re main.* The hand that tries to pluck them out is profane. IEW FA.UiL£D PttEL lev the "AtkrleT Was Serts *f Pe|rr. A story is going the rounds of the press, and is quoted by the New York .Sun, of a new poker hand, a sort of a consolation band for the people who are always com plaining that they have hard lock. The hand ia called the “Atherton.” It con sists of ace high, deuce low, and no pair. It is considered such and extremely diffi cult hand to fill that it ia ranked next to a straight. The story goes that Hon. J. if. Atberfoo, of Louisville, Ky., was playing ode evening in hard lock, when he threw down the hand in disgust, say fog that H was the very lowest hand that could be dealt. The party concluded th* aa U was the lowest haad it was worthy of some place in the game. So they named it thq Atherton, and now it is' widely used in the south and west, and is gradually coming into favor in the east. Speaking ot this, a veteran player said: “Of count, newfongled notion* get lafeo all gatwe. Ifoksr has been especially euliject to variations, and it In u very common thing for parlies who play much together to come to an understanding as to certain rule*. Some parties never play what at* called straight hands. Borne ran straight* op and down; that is, both way* from the ace. 1 have known of partis* who played pokar with a joker, permitting the fortunpte player to call the joker f wbat be so that he might bold five acts or five of any kind. Of coarse, this makes eoortuous bands and allowance mail b* blade for the pos sibility of each hands bciqg held. But is that yM can never know for sure that your opponent has not ae good a hand aa u hold whntpon bolds once in a century, aod perliapa never, a royal flush, you do not know for b ‘ ,< "Bat the beauty of the game, after all, is that you play it with no got J hands at all, bMeniyyjtmk, nerve, grit, sand, and tM'Mttt M-hhck k'. Wh.t n nublimo spectacle of courage it is to see a man calmly rale* the ante a cooJtyuHoud without a pair in hUT band, and stand "pot” aod raised it another thousand without betraying an emotion of fear. The great poker player really plays less with his cards than whh Ifl* nerve and courage. Bafbiu hia etalwart 'courage r him into exposing hie hand unnecessarily "The resources of poker are so many that them ia no need of the new tangled nations to make it interesting. You can attack the enemy all points. ■ You can attack the enemy from all poiilta. You can chafe aod irritaM bim with atro cious jokes, and it is ah fair. You can study his nature so as to back out at the right time, or tolnidkim on to destruc tion with the wAI-timed banter. You may play your new-fangled hands if you like, but the good, old-fashioned draw poker, with a stiff ante, Is quite exciting enough for me, whether 1 win or lose.” OpnttttatH* rniSM. The boon o< the Mkhijui Mate lcg»- (•ton hu pMHd the Jncknon clguelte bin, which prohibit, the manufacture, ■•Je, keeping for .ale or giving away ot nny cignrettee or any imitntion thereof, eompoeed in whole or in |ierlo( tnlmm., nr nay nabeUnce in the form at cigarette, oontnining nnrcotic element, or >oy rice paper, or nny paper deelgned lor cigarette wrmppere —Deled bar lor atle at the I. X. L. • STAB OF THE WEST. Htskligtoo Territory ud Its Great Resources. Hum for Wll Ilona .Wore—Vrerloui Metals, I.ombre on* Coal— t'rrtllr l.aada. Washington, the new state, the far re moved northwest corner of the nation, is to-day attracting more attention than any other territory in the Union. Her advan tages have been heralded abroad; her resource* have become of too much mag nitude to l*e kept secret; tales of her won derful richness have reached the ears of the mortgage-bound, drought-stricken, tax-oppressed eastern farmers. They eagerly grasp these stories of riches, and are with one accord turning their faces toward the great northwest. Of late years the eastern farmer has been hnrrassed on every hand by uncer tain crops, crop-destoying insects, CYCLONBB AMO TORNADOES in the summer season, and the dreaded blizzards in winter, destroying life and property, fatal stock epidemics, burden some taxes and a thousand other things that are calculated to discourage him. Blank ruin is staring thousands of them in the (ace, and they are selling off their stock and what property they may have free from incumbrances to seek refuge in the northwestern states and territories. Some may say, ‘‘We do not want a class of people to come who have, no means.” There you are mistaken. We want no drones, and as a rule that class is gener ally without means; but we wont indus trious men, farmers, men with families, men who are willing to work, means or no means. In this FAVORED LAND or OI KS The industrious can soon provide them selves with means. Lot them come to the land of plenty. Wo have here over 300,(WO happy, industrious people, ami room for several millions more, with whom we are willing to divide advantages that the eastern farmer never dreamed of. Here the terrible cyclone ia unknown; the hot winds that sweep across the plains states, destroying everything before its blighting brqgtb, is something unheard of; a failure of crops is not recorded in tli© memory of the oldest inhabitant; the best and purest of water springs from ev ery ravine; the bills are covered with tho very beet of lumlier-prodncing timber; her valleys of rich, productive soil are ready to produce in incredible quantities at the hand of the husbandman. Every variety of fish and game is found on her rivers and lakes. Her bays and harbors are unsurpassed in the world. HKR TOWNS AND CITTBS Are growing with wonderful rapidity. Her transportation facilities and connec tion with the east and south is good, and her people happy and industrious. What more can be asked? We are juat budding into statehood and prospects could not lie brighter. Ours is a great commonwealth, and It is not to be wondered at that thousands are coming to cqst their lot with us. Every through train on our two connecting lines to the east, is composed of from twelve to eighteen passenger coaches, all crowded with immigrants bound for Washington. A large number of these people have means and purchase improved land on arriving here, wliilc others push on to where government lands can be found- All find homes. We are advised from the the east that daring the summer, tqwna and counties will be almost depopulated in the rush for homes in the northwest. Again we say, let them come. We bare room for all-— Tetoa Globe. Kiilnd Ceulnrtkt. The Ra ; hcay Age says: Notwithstand ing the ad rue legislation of many states, tlie railroads are losing money, and the further fact retnaina that leading lines have agreed not to extend tract* already projected.' Mince January I of this year 666 new lines, with an aggregate mileage of 53,43 d, have been projected, of which 14,818 are already under construction or contract. The Hues in contemplation in twelve New England and eastern states have an anticipated mileage of 6094; tea southern states, 12,855; five central and northern, 5283; seven northwestern, 12,- 992; five southwestern, It, 508 ; seven Pa cific states and territories, 3845. Pro jected construction in Wyoming, 914; Montana, 998 ; Nevada, ISO; California, 1255; New Mexico, lulO; Idaho, 194; Utah, 907; Oregon, 840; Washington territory, 1513; Colorado, 1115. Kpnt fllj it tkr HarM. The largest city in the world is gener ally believed to be London, although some suppose that Hankow, in China, haa more inhabitants. But there ia a town in North Carolina which far surpasses cither in ex tent, being two thousand miles long— much longer than North Carolina. Its name ia Henderaon. When the city waa incorporated it waa intended to extend the limits one thonaand yards in each direction from the depot, bat the printer 'madethe bill read one thousand miles, and it passed the legislature without the error Iwiug corrected. 1 Ilajuu tpriti ,f WnUagteg. We are indebted to John W. Golden for a copy of the Yakima Humid, published at North Yakima, rton territory. It ia a live paper, and won! i indicate that the great northwest is destined to become one of the most wealthy and powerful sec tions of tbe United States at no distant day.— Augutta (Kama*) Journal. An Important Feature—Politician— What sort of a watch is that? Jeweller— It ia a repeater, air. Pbliiticiao—l’ll take It. While counting his money the cus tomer starts, slops abort, turns pale and j anxiously inquires; ’‘Pay, mister, is she republican or democrat?” -r Jtuvler’i Kind old gentleman (to street boy)— } Where were you born, my non? Boy— i Dunno, sir. “Ah, you don’t know. What are you going to do when you be come a man?” “Rob trains.” “Ab (musingly) the little fellow was born in Missouri.”— Antanaoa TrareUr. aTa® ifiNiaL AlUr fataria #f KpU4 Barbaras, Ugkt! The amunition of calumny has been ex ploded. The deadly projectiles hurled have missed their destination. The shafts and arrows lie Iwoken at the feet of vic tory. And when Anrora’eraya shall have pierced the smoke of the liattlefield, the name of the hiatogenetlc system of medi cine will glitter a bright usd imperishable star in the diadem of science, when those who tried to wind their slimy coils around the snowy throat have mouldered in ob livion and their epitaphs have vanished from the face of the earth. Beattie, Washington. My little hoy, when four years old, was taken sick with scarlet rash. We bad competent medical aid but he never folly* recovered. For three years he was sick, could retain nothing on hia stomach, sometimes would vomit ceaselessly for a week, not retaining even water. He dwindled away to hut a shadow of his former self. At last hia mind gave way. For two weeks he clung to me begging me not to bury him in the ground. He rec ognised nobody, not even me. We all concluded that death would be a relief to himf There was no use trying the old school doctors, of that we had had enough experience. Their medicines failed to kill me when every one of them gave me up with consnmption, saying that 1 could not live a week. That was three years ago. They would have had their say. too, if 1 had not called in Dr. J. Eugene Jordan. I had then been bedfast forever a year, could not turn over, suffered with excruciating poin and spot bloody pus. As by the aid of thegod-eontllistogenetic Medicines I recovered from the verge of the grave and was able to do considerable of my housework in ninety days. Well, we got Dr. Jordan’s medicine for onr little l*oy and his reason returned and so did hia health, and in two pi oaths from first taking hia medicine be went to echool. We are convinced, as is everyone who has used the unprecedented Histogenetic Medicines, that it accomplishes the ap parently impossible, and that to compare them to .all the other medicines is like comparing bright sunlight to Egyptian darkness. Maquis McDaniel. Edmund, Washington. I harp been sick for the last 16 years with a complication of disciuiea. Rheu matism and kidney troubles were very bad. but heart disease was the worst of all. Many times I thought 1 would not survive it. The sharp, agonising pain in my heart would take my breath and make me dixgy. I had to catch at things to keep from falling. In fact, I was an utter wreck. I tried doctors in Terra Haute, Indiana, Bloomington, Ottoman, Chariton and Burlington—allopathic, homeopathic, and every other kind of doctors. They used batteries, hatha, and all manner and kinds of nasty tasting drag*, but I received no benefit at all. I gaye it up In disgust,.. Every doctor told l me another tale as to what he thought was the matter with me, but thni did not erne roe. Going to Seattle, 1 beard of \ nothing but the new, System , end of Or. J. Eugene Jordan, its author, i Having tried all Abe.oW, I concluded to ; try the new, and after a few weeks' use I of the above medicine I completely recov ered. This was last October, and I have 1 been able to attend to my duties ever | since. I make this statement from gniti | lude to pr. Jordan and the Tliatogenetic | system, and also from a spirit of sympa* i thy for kindred humanity. JoSKm PcNMNOTON. Slaughter, Washington. My boy, ten yearn old, was, broken i down with rheumatism, ilia limbs were all distorted out of shape from the bane ful effect; he suffered great agony, and { could not turn In bed. the worst of all 1 his heart was greatly effected from it and it almost stopped bla breath. We gave him op, also did out neighbors. As a i last resort I went to Dt, J, Eugene Jor dan. whose medicine performed appar ently impossible cutfe in our neighbors. 1 Alter giving my h# tbqpempdidaee for three weeks he entirely recovered, his limbs all straightened out again, and he jis perfectly well in trery way. That was I ten months ago. As for 'myself I | had an injury to aiy finger which tamed j into carrls of the bone. Several doctors | were employed, but the reeuh was that I the bone kept on eating away. At last {they condaded that in order to save the i hand the finger had to be amputated. I [ bethought myself to Ib. Jordan, obtained hia medicine, and in twg weeks’lime it ! cured the bone disease and I retained my finger. How much suffering nnd expense 1 we might have lUvcq hfc! we known of j the Histogenetic Medicine and Dr. J. Eu gene Jordan. N. KaWALAVMI. My daughter, Mrs. li. W* hard, Ster ling, Washington, vn pretty bad with consumption, blending from the lungs, and cough general] v chavusleriatk of Ibe dreaded malady. The disease «« of four years’ standing. 1 came to Dr. J. Eugene Jordan, my daughter being 100 feeble to corns. She took iho medicine e week end ■be began to feel better, and in about two months time from Are* taking the,medl cide she liad entirely recovered. J. E. Hmrrm. j CAUTION.—The’ RMogenetic medi cines are sold in *4 ope agency in each town. The label around the bottle bears the following inscription: "Dr. J. Eugene Jordan’s Histogenetic Medicine." ’Every other device is a fraud. C. L. Os no, sole agent for Dr. Jordan’s Histogenetic Medicine. Mr. Gano has been appointed in place of Mr. O. W. Carey, whose connection with Dr. Jordan ■snd the Histogenetic Medicines have ceased. Medicine depot at May’s dry I goods store. WELL DIGGING. I Am fully prepared to dlfvella. cellar* and other excavation* In the crtjr or county. AU North Yakima, W. T. Harvey & Biggam, BlatoiMWapite NttttTH VARin t. HARH. rharguul the old »hop on Front *t., and we a*k a tliare of public patronage In anything In our line Repairing of all kind* of machinery and lloneshoelug done to perfection. HARVEY A‘BIGGAM. Te taasejapilal Stock. XTOTICE I* hereby given that a meeting of the Stock bolder* uf the Konewock DUch Company wiU be hold Hay A.U>, at 1 o eloefc / N.. at the Schoolhouae In Parker Bottom, for the purpoee of increasing the Capital Mock of *ald Company MMIJMMI A tall representation of W. E. Thobnton. Jos. Babtholkt. GO TO THE Climax Barter Strop For a Nice, Good and Clean Shave. OrPMITB THE HOTEL BTEINEB, Pin IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC Cigars and. Tobaccos Of All Kind* Constantly on Hand. Molomon Ac C^onld. Notice to Creditors. Ertafe of Clara Chapman, Dereantd: NOTICK t* hereby given by fhe undersigned. Administrator of the estate of Clara Chap man. deceased, to the creditor* of, and all per tout having claim* against, said deceased, to exhibit them, with the proper vouchers, within one year after the date id this notice, to the said Administrator, at his ph.ee of business, at the drag Store qf Alien A Chapman, on the comer Second street and Yakima aveuhe, In the city of North Yakima. Yakima county. Washington Territory. W. U. CHAPMAN, Administrator of the Estate of Clara chapman, Dated at North Yakima. W. T. March 27. MW. Notice to Creditors. Estate qf Margaret Hathaway, deceased: VTOTICE Is hereby Riven by nndenlgned. Ad iv miolstrator ol the estate of Margaret Hathaway, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against, said deceased, or against the commnulty estate of said deceased and John H. Hathaway, her husband, prior to her decease, to exhibit them, with the necessary vouchers, within one year alter the flrat publi cation ol this notice, to the said Administrator at the office of Kvavls Mire* A (Iravea. the same being the place for the transaction of the hu*l ncss of sain estate, in the elty of North Yakima. Yakima county, Washington Territory. John H. Hathaway. Dated March 20, MW. m muu JUST OPENED! Ill's Bill ii Bln Slum, orroslTX mi Oitili .nd Rovn. ■Mb ait Start life t« trtar. bpirng > BNW. * U# would respectfully solicit the patronage ol the people ol North Yakima and the sur rounding country. kUJLU A Compute Up# of Harness, Saddles,WMps. Gloves, ie. Has just been received by Ale*. 11. Hlnelair, at bis Harness Shop on Yakima Avenue. These Hoods see of Hie beet make, sad are sold at prices guaranteed to be as LOW AS THE LOWEST Offered in the City of North Yakima. . •» . .. • * * .. M Repairing a Specialty. UM. m, SMCLAIB, Yakima Ave. (near Depot). North Yakima. Constipation Demands prompt treat men ;. The re sults of neglect may be Bartons. Avoid all hanh and drastic purgatives, the tendency of which Is to weaken the bowels. The best remedy Is Ayer's Pills. Being purely vegetable, their notion Is prompt and their effect always beneficial. They are an admirable Liver and After-dinner pill, and every where endorsed by the profession. " Ayer’s Pills are highly and naiver sally spoken of by the people about hare. 1 make daily use of them in my p2bcSnn"" Pr ' 1 Fow,er * DrW «^ "I can recommend Ayer's PHI# share all others, having long proved their yalne as a cathartic for myself and fdmlly.”—J. T. Heaa, Leithsrble, Pa. •• For several years Ayer's pills have been used in my family. We find theta Effective Renedy tor constipation Mid indigestion, and Me never without them in the houso." Moeea Grenier, Lowell, Meat. "I have used Ayer's Fllfs, for liver ’sss nwMpMtoa which assmaod such aa oWtinau form that I gj!* compi.u cur..''— D. Burt., gwSawsj ssu: * ad alw.J. foimrt IbM ip,. masßsasr**** gwa 5«aaST aaa,«ft«sastisa »■ Am. Oak BoMoa, ‘ Ayer’s Pills, nwransnsr •r. J. C. Ayer A Co., Lowell, Mom. MlriUDalsililMUu. UTortla. Yakima, LUMBER YARD! G. 0. NEVIN, Proprietor. LUMBER, DOORS, SASH AND BLINDS, LATHS, SHINGLES, AC. Aiem for tie CeMed Aierill Paints, tie best Paints on the Market. AND A LARGE SUPPLY ALWAYS ON HAND. pact and Yard, Wet Side at tUllrad Track. North W. T. rum > raiuuw. J,,r ®* StLa.rdJ.ow g McDaniel, DEALERS IS Fine Wines, Liquors, Imported 9s Domestic Cigars. TINE BILLIARD AND POOL TABLES. Sole Apts for the Celebrated Jesse Moore Kentucky Whiskies. GENERAL MERCHANDISE. DRY GOODS. BOOTS AND SHOES, HATS AND CAPS, FURNISHING GOODS f AND GROCERIES. O'. O’. ARMSTRONG-, Corner Find street end Yakima Avenue. A complete line of aH of the commodities enumerated above will be found at thia store, and a general request is sent forth to tbe public to call and exam ine the prices and quality of the Goode. J. J. AraiHlrong’. ENGLISH SHIRE HORSE, Hu, since the tint ol Henry the Second, been considered The Best Draft Horse THE MOXEE 00. Heve ■ Magnificent, Imported, Thoroughbred English fib Ire Bullion, of the Purest Strain— Holbeach Tom, * T®*** ®ld. aad U “all bone!" Nothing nays better than to breed to the best hone that c * n he found. Holbeach Tom is the best bone InWashlngton Territory to-day. The oldest horsemen In the County bred to Ton lut season, and all say he la all ha aught to be. and haa prosed, a sure colt-getter. 1 Holbeach Tom will Stand this Season at Hoxee. TERMS) INSURANCE, *25.00. -i-. SEASON, *20.00. SINGLE IJEAP, *IO.OO. Future, »l .50 per month after first two weeks. Co. Allen <fe Chapman, XDHTJGK3KISTS. Ketp alwnya on hand all that ia pertaining la their trade. Nona but pare med idnee and chemioala diapeneed. Prescriptions a Specialty! Manipulated by a Competent Pharmtdel. Pure Wines and Liquors for Medical Use. A large I.in# of Palme, Pihi, Wsll Psper, Olaaa. Potty gosh and Doors. Come end set Us ia our Commodious end Beautiful Quarters. ni yirrPWßmMhffuijii mm gipk. Comer Yakim. Avenue and Heonud Straw. .... North ■Taklma. i. t. «*■*«,. o. W. Rodman St Eshelman, Real Relate ai Li Apis! Money to Ixxuin on Mortyagea, liiKtanli Mi til Pmurtf mu rirNn-Mdeols. £-%>•sst City Lots and Farm Property Bought and Sold. •e-wid-cw, rata. Mm mt hmltM, ««,,