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About Oregon courier. (Oregon City, Clackamas County, Or.) 188?-1896 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 20, 1895)
BAD BOY OF EUROPE. POWERS ARE APPARENTLY AFRAID TO SPANK HIM. Tba Unapeakabla TnrV Would Bar lteen Roundly Thrulird Long- Ago If It Wm Mat For the Problem of Dividing tlx ftpolli The Saltan and II a people. If it iH evcrdrflnitoly duoidod tlmt tbe Turk lunnt U.ue Lurotie, tbut the crnw tlitiR Oltoinuu eiiiuire moHt be fiiven tliH lluinliliig Htroke mid tbut the time Jinn come for "the Hick iwin" towwnllow a dune tlmt will end hin tualudv bv nnd- iiiR liiH exiHtonun, then will Europe tnnd face to luce with a ennm tbut ling Iouk boeu dreaded. .Inst Dow it looks as if that crisis were ubont. to arrive. Once more Abdul Humid, Bnltan of fuHiiiih and whatnot extrmirdiimry, linn nhown bimnelf iuou pttblu of governing bin patchwork eiu- mB mm ABIHTI. HAM!!) It. pire. Once more the Hhrieke of mnrdered JhriHtiuiiH liuve umdo the world thrill with . horror nnd indignation. Once gain Iiiih hn disregarded his oft repeat ed prom i sen of reform. It almONt ttecniH I hat the patience of the powers could not possibly he taxed for another moment. But the Turk is dooidedly an awkward fellow to deal with. If it were merely n question of deposing the weak and vacillating monarch who now rules the land of the -orescent the fleets of half a dozen na tions would quickly bring him to terms. But that is only part of the problem. When the Turk is turued out of Europe, who is to have his country? Russia is ready to sweep it up nnd make it H highway to India. Undoubt edly the czar would undertake to insure ' pence and prosperity to all Armenia. But John Bull objects. The British public may shout itself hoarse in de manding that the Armenian outrages hall be stopped, but as long as the fall of the snltau means an extension of the Russian domain the shouts will be in vain. England is not anxious to acquire Turkish territory herself, but she does not want Russia in control of the Dar danelles and. the Bosporus. Germany 1s almost equally jealous, while Italy, Franco and Spain are ready to protect it from like motives. This is the situation. There are enough ctber complications to make the problem one to puzzle the wisest diplomats of the age. The puzzle hue chunged iu its minor dotails from year to year like the formations in a kaleidoscope. But it has alwuys been a puzzle. At present a magnificent fleet of war ships is hovering around the island of Lemnos, which lies off the entrance to tbe Dardanelles, the gateway to the Black sen. England alone has 27 vessels in the Mediterranean and Red sea ud the flower of these are cruising in the AZeenn sea. For instance, among them is the Ramilles, flagship of the British squad ron and one of the largest fighting ships afloat. Some of her guns can throw a steel projectile weighing 1,250 pounds at the rate of more than 2,000 feet per second. She can steam 17.6 knots an hour and fire a broadside from four of these enor mous gnus. To consider the havoo which this ship alone could do in a city like Constantinople is enough to make a bolder man than Abdul Huinid shake in his shoes. Italy, France, Germany and Russia 11 have big squadrons in this same lo cality, and they are composed of modern engines of destruction, completely up to date in equipment and armament. There are about 80 ships in all, and thoy are within a day's sail of Constantinople. The boom of the first gun would be a signal which would send twice as many rrwra pasha, unnsTEB or fobbiob A Kf a Ilia. lore steaming toward the narrow traits which separate Europe from Asia. There is still another side to the ques tion. If tbe combined powers should de cide that tbe Turk must go, would tbe sultan fight? There is not much doubt that be would. He wonld be whipped that is not in question but it must be remem bered that he comes from a race of fighters. Be is a direct descendant of Selim the Grim, who drenched Persia, jP Egypt and Syria in blood, doubled hit empire and inspired all Europe with terror. U is true that from Sollm II to Ab dul Ilam id II tbe royal house of tho Ot tomans bus degenerated rapidly, yet the Turk lias always been found dangerou when in a corner. In the languagoof the small boy, "He don't know when licked." Time gcd time again the Tnrki fought the RiimiiiiiH, always losing in later years, but aV.vays returning to the fray with funaiia.l zeal, f untried by a religion which I rams them to be fatal ists from cliih'.bcud. The sultan's empire is a disintegrated one, it is true, but war might consoli date it, for there ure millions of hit subjects who are always longing for a fight. Ilis standing nrmy does not num ber more titan 21)0,000 in time of peace, but iu case of war ho could put 800,000 men under arms. The Turkish naval force is ridiculous ly small when compared with that of other European countries. Onr two modern cruisers, the Ban Francisco and the Marblehead, now in the Mediter ranean, could destroy the wholo fleet of tho snltuu and not half try. So it is apparent that but little could be done to stop the advance of the com bined squadrons. The best the sultan could do would be to sow the Darda nelles thick with torpedoes and man bis forts along tbe shore. This would only delay matters for a little. The torpedoes would all bo fiuhed up within a few days nnd a half hour's bombardment would silouce the forts. Should tho sultan still hold out after tbe hostile fleet had anchored off Con stantinople he wonld speedily find bis palaces tumbling in ruins about his ears. Aboard the eighty odd ships which would train their guns on his capital wonld be over 200 six inch rapid fire rifles which could burl 100 pound steel bolts for a distance of six miles und lit erally keep the air fall of them. No one but a Turk would think of fighting with such odds as these against him, but tbe Turk is a hard individual to "plnoe" under all conditions, and none more so than the present sultan. Abdul Humid, who may be the last to bear the title, is a remarkable man. While the fate of bis empire, which is half tbe size of the United States, is in the balance, he is concerned only about his own personal safety. He is absolute ruler over 83,000,000 of people, over every one of whom he has the power of life and death. Yet he does not feel safe in a palace guarded more strongly than any other in the world. He spends $30,000,000 a year in keep ing np a household where he is iu con stant fear of assassination. He solemnly assures England one mo ment that he has ordered the instigators of fresh outrages on Christians to be punished and the next moment he re wards those same men with honors and offices, He professes to be deeply interested in the education and freedom of women and keeps a harem in which 900 women are slaves in darkest bondage. The finest palace of the many that the saltan possesses, and one of the first TUB APPROACHES TO CONSTANTINOPLE. which would be dustro."- -d should tbe guns of a fleet ever be trained on his capital, is that of Dolina Bngtcbe. This is a fairylike structure which fiirly seems to Ling over the blue waters of tbe Bosporus. Its foundations are on tbe cliffs which hem in tho strait It was built by Abdul Aziz, Haniid's pred ecessor, who spent $3,000,000 a year .n keeping it np. It is a gorgeons pile whose walls blaze with gold and glitter w'th crystal, alabaster and lapis lazuli. It is probably tbe most splendid palace in the world, but Abdul Humid did not fancy it, and on a hill overlooking this palace built another, which is called Yildiz Kiosk, or the Palace of the Star. Here he lives with tbe 4,000 persons who compose bis household. It is in Dalma Bagtche, however, that all tbe impressive functions of state and the elaborate religious ceremonies occur. There he consults with his ministers. These latter functionaries are really of but little importance, for tbe word of tbe sultan is the only law of the land. His cabinet officers are mere puppets, who retain their places as long as tbey do as they are told. Sometimes they are used as scape goats. An instance of this kind occurred reoently when the sultan dismissed his minister of foreign affairs, whom he blamed for a fresh outbreak in Armenia. The insincerity of this action was shown soon after by his appointment to tbe va cant office of Tewfik Pasha, who was charged with being an instigator of the Armenian massacres. Armenia, the country about which all the recent outcry has been raised, is a district in tbe far eastern port of tbe sultan's empire and on the Russian frontier. This province, as are several of those adjoining, is overrun with Kurds. Some of the Kurds are farmers, but tbe majority are nomads and brig ands. The industrious inhabitant are Christian Armenians, wbo are openly robbed by the Kurds and subject to ex tortion from the Mussulman tax gather ers. Their revolts against this sort of persecution have been followed by the bloody outrages of which we have heard so much. Russia claims a right to protect these Christiana because tbey are all mem bers of tbe Greek church, tbe official religion in Russia. The sultan either cannot or will not protect the Chris tians, and there the matter stands. Eiwxu. Fobs. m ,-.:-.v fT THE SIN EATER. A Cnriom Funeral Klta Whleh Formerly Obtained la Wale. ' The nrinciuulity of Wales has within living memory possessed on official known as the "sin eater," says a Lou don journal. It wns the practice for a relative usunlly a woman to put on the breast of a deceased porson a quan tity of broad nnd cheese and beer, and the sin eater was sent for to consuino them nud to pronounce tho everlasting rest of the departed. It was believed that in doing this ho absolutely ate and appropriated to himself tho sins symbol ized by the viands, and thereby pre vented their disturb) ug the repose of tbe sinner who had committod them. Such au arrangement would obviously leave nothing to be desired on the one lide, but bow it worked on the other we ore not told. What was supposed to be tho condition of this spiritual under taker after the ceremony was concluded? Did his "appropriation" of the dead man's sins imply a sort of moral assimi lation of them, answering to his phys ical assimilation of the bread and cheese? Tbe question would obviously be oue of some importance to a sin eat er in- large practice. If the responsibili ties of his profession were as great aa they would nppear to have been on this hypothesis, he would need to retire from it early and to devote a consider able portion of his closing years to re pentance and good works. Again, it is natural to ask what hap pened at the decease of a popular or "fushiouable" sin eater. Would anyone among his professional brethren under take to eat his sins, even iu the first flush of satisfaction produced by step ping into his shoes? If so, then, indeed, has the epithet of "gallant" been right ly bestowed upon little Wales. It is as though one doctor succeeding to anoth er's practice should consent to assume the mural responsibility for bis late col league's treatment of nil his deceased patients in addition to his own similar burdens. We yield to none in admiration of the quiet and homely heroism of the med ical profession, but we doubt whether it would enable them to face such an or deal as this. As to the Welsh practition ers f o whom we have compared them, we shrink from pursuing the analysis further. It is evident that, as in tbe schoolboy game of "conquerors, " where a stone which can smash the smasher, of, say, 43 other stones tukea over all its conquests, and becomes itself a " forty -fourer, " so the responsibilities of these unhappy men might accumulate at an alarming rata One hardly dares to contemplate the internal condition of the sin eater of a sin eater who bad in life attended a long series of other sin eaters. The cheese would be almost oou verted into Welsh rabbit before he had got it down. THE SHIP WAS AGROUND. But tba Faaeenger Dlaoorered That Fact In Roundabout Way, , It must be about ten years siuue I was returning to this country from New York on board one of the Anchor line boats. We left quite early in the morn ing, and were steaming down the bay in high hopes of a pleasant trip. We soon got into a thick fog, and after passing Sandy Hook at about quarter speed the ship rati aground. The ma jority of the passengers, however, knew nothing of our plight, for the propeller kept on churning up the water in fran tic efforts to get the vessel off the mud, and the fog was so dense that very few people noticed we were not making headway. Tbe captain dispatched his first officer to Saudy Hook to telegraph tbe position of affairs to tbe agents, but as the en gines were still kept going no one sus pected that anything unusual had oc curred. Presently the boat returned, but no questions were asked, and no oue seem ed to have the idea that there was any need to ask them. Two or three hours passed, and an ocean tug came alongside out of the fog. Newsboys came on board to sell their papers, and did a good business. "Ex trarl Extrarl" was their cry, and these "extrors" contained on the front page a full and graphic account of the strand ing of the very liner on which they were disposing of them I "Great Seoul" exclaimed one man who had invested in a paper, "don't these papers know how to lie? Hero's one sayiug now that our ship has run aground !" "So we are, and likely to remain," answered an officer, npou which the passenger ran to the side of the vessel and looked over in order to convince himself. The news now, of course, began to spread all over the ship, but it was too much for everybody when a quarter of an hour later a stout old gentleman sprang up from his seat and yelled, "Jerusalem I we're aground," and then ran full tilt along the deck in a fearful state of terror. London Telegraph. One War of Finding a Scotomas. It is related of a successful Glasgow merchant that, sightseeing in Paris once, he lost his way. For a considerable time he wandered about trying to get back tc his hotel. Tbe hours went by. He never could speak French, and his Glasgow English only brought a smile and a shake of the bead. "Oh, for a body wi a guid Scotch tongue in bis head 1" he sighed. Then came a "happy thought " By signs he bought a basket, measure and berries of a trim Frenchwoman, and, shouldering the stock, went along the street shouting : "Fine g rosters, a bawbee the pint; fine grossets, a bawbee the pint " The crowd laugbed at tbe mad Brit on, but tbe familiar cry soon brought some Scotsmen on the scene, and the merchant was able to retire from busi ness and smoke bis pipe in tbe bosom of his family, thankful that be bad found real Scotsmen in bis hour of need. Glasgow Exchange. PORTLAND MARKETS. The produce market is without special feature, ''Ihe demand for fruit and vegetables was not strong, and, as there was not an over supply in any line, prices ruled steady. In farm and dairy produce and the merchandise murkeUi, loriner quotations ruled. Wbaat Marktit. Foreign markets did not not respond to the Eastern advance, and, as prices In New York and Chicago declined, the feeling among local exporters was weaker. For Walla Walla wheat, 60c per bushel was quoted as the extreme figure. Valley wheat was quoted at (33 53'viC per bushel. Produce Market. Flu it a Portland. Salem, Cascadia and DttVlun, are quoted at $2.00 per barrel ; Uolddrop, $2.80; Snow flake, $2.05; Ben ton county, $2.00; graham, $2.20; super fine, $2.00. Oath Uood white are Quoted weak, at 24c; milling, 28($30c; gray, 2021c. Hulled oats are quoted as follows : Bags 4.255.2o; barrels, $4.50(37.00; cases, $3.25. Hay Timothy, $9.00 per ton ; cheat, $11.00 ; clover, $0ut 7 ; oat. $5g6.60 ; wheat, $5.W)0.60. Bablky Feed barley, $14.60 per ton ; brewing, nominal. MiLUtTDvrs Bran, $12.00; shorts, $13.00; middlings, $10(18; rye, 75($80c per cental. Bottsb Fancy creamery is quoted at 27 30; fancy dairy, 220; (air to good, 17Hc; common, 10c per pound. Potato kb New Oregon, 26 (2 40c per sack; sweets, common, 2)4 cj Merced, 2 per pound. Onions Oregon, 6O70c per cental. Poultry Chickens, old, $2 (a 2.60 per dozen; young, $2 00(tt2.60 per dozen; ducks, $3.00(113.60; geese, $0; turkeys, live, P10c per pound; dressed 11 S 12c. Eqqb Oregon, firm at 26o per dozen ' Eastern, 22c per dozen. Cumbb Oregon tall cream, 10v per pound; hall cream, 6(g7c; skiui, 4io) 5c ; Young America, 0(j$10c Okkuon Vicuktabl,kb Cabbage, ljtfc per lb; radishes, 10c per dozen bunches ; gieen onious, 10c: cauliflower, $2.76 per crate; tomatoes, 6u($00c per box. Tropical Froit Oaliiornia lemons, $5.60(436.00: bananas. $2.25(33.00 per bunch ; California navels, $4.00 per box ; pineapples, $0(g0.50 per dozen. . California V kortablkb Garlic, new 8 10c per pound ; sweet potatoes, 2A-4c per pound; Merced, 2c; boxes 2c; arti chokes, 85o per dozen ; sprouts, $1.36(g 1.50; cauliflower, 13.75 per crate, $1 per dozen. Frksh Fbuit Pears, fall, 75c$1.00 ; grapes, $1.25 per box; llwaco cranber ries, $10.60 11 per barrel; apples, $1(9 1.25; common, 6075c per box. Wool Valley, 10llc, according to quality ; Eastern Oregon, 7Dc. Hops Choice, Oregon 47c per pound ; medium, neglected. Nuts Almonds, soft shell, Gll per pound: paper Bhell, 10(128c; new crop California walnuts, soft shell, U($12)c; standard walnuts, 10llc; Italian cbesnuta, 12g14c; pecans, 13loc ; Brazils, 12)i13c; filberts, 14 16c; peanuts, raw, fancy, 07c; roasted, 10c; hickory nuts, 8(l0c; co coanuts, 90c per doxen. Provisions Eastern hams, medium, 11)6(9120 per pound; hams, picnic, 8k,9c; breakfast bacon Ilk, 12c; snort ciear siues, etsvo; ary sail ides, 7i8c; dried beef hams, 12 13c; lard, compound, in Una, lyA; lard, pure, in tins, 910c; pigs' feet, 80s. $3.60; piss' feet. 40s. $3.25: kita, $1.25. Oregon smoked hauiB, 12o per pound; pickled hams, 8$c; boneless hams, 10c; bacon, 9c; dry salt sides, 8c; lard, 6-pound pails, 8c; 10s, 8e: 60s, 8)c; tierces, 8c. Country meats sell at prices according to grade. Hubs. Dry hides, butcher, sound, per pound, ll12c; dry kip and calf skin, 10llc; culls, 8c less; salted, 60 lbs and over, 66)$c;60 to 60 lbs, 6c; 40 and 60, 4c; kip and veal skins, 10 to 30 lbs, 4c; calfskin, sound, 8 to 10 lb j, 6c; green, unsalted, lc less; culls, l-2c less; sheepskins, shear lings, 1016c; short wool, 2030c; medium, 30(g40c; long wool, 6070c. BtarobandlM Harket. Salmon. Columbia, river No. 1, tails, $1.261.60; No. 2, talis, $2.252.60; lancy, JNo. 1, Hats, $i.7o(gi.tw; Alaska, No. 1, tails, $1.201.30 ; No. 2, tails, $1.90 2.26. Sugar Golden C, 4.Wc; extra 0, 4Jc; dry granulated, 5)c; cube crushed and powdered, 6c per pound ; jc per pound discount on all grades for prompt cash; halt barrels, 4c more man barrels; maple sugar, loojlOc per pound. CoprxB-Costa Kica, 2Z(g236 c ; Kio, 20 22c: Salvador. 2121c: Mocha, 2U(jg31c; PadaugJava, 30c ;Palem bang Java, 2G(jg28c; Lahat Java, 2326c; Ar- buckle b Mokaska and Lion, $22.80 pel 100-pound case; Columbia, $21.80 per 100- pound case. Coal Steady; domestic, $5.007.6C per ton; foreign, $8.50 11.00. iSBAiis Small white, o. I, zyie per pound; batter. 8c; bayou, 2c; Lima, 4c Cordagb Manilla rone. lM-inch. if quoted at 9)c, and Sisal, 6c per pound. bags. Calcutta, 44c. liica Island, $4-50($6 per sack; Ja pan, $4.004.60. SAN FRANCISCO MARKETS Flour Net cash prices : Family ex tras, $3.353.45 per barrel ; bakers' ex tras, $3.163.2ft; superfine, $2.36(32.60. jarlxy f eed. fair to good, WJ'ic; choice, 67sc; brewing, 72.SOc. Whbat No. 1 thiDping, II per ctl; choice, $1.01; milling, $1.05 1.07,4 per cental. Oats Milline. 70375c; surprise. 90it7; fancy feed, 7580; good to choice, 6575c; poor to fair, 67(8 g2c; gray, 657&c. Hops Quotable at oc per pouna. Potato bs Kweete, $1.10; Bar- banks, Oregon, 6O70c. OmoMS Good to cnoice ai norma, 50rr66c Wool Nevada, spring;, light and choice, 9llc; heavy do. 68c. Fall Short, trashy San Joaquin plains, 3(85; good do, 46c; Southern and coast, 43tic; mountain, light and free. 67c. Buttbb Fancy creamery, 2728c; seconds, 25 20c; fancy dairy, 20 27c; fair to choice, 24(3 25c Eoos Ranch, 27 30c Chbbsb Fancv. mild, new, 9 10c; common to mod, 3 6c: Young Amer ica, 68c; Eastern, 12Q13)ic; West ern, ll12)te per pound. Jot's for the Jadr4 and Good Health for all Mankind. JOY'S VEGETABLE ARIAPARIILA. 4 tin through liature'owa Joy't Vegetable 8urnpirllla curca Dy- Chronic Cnnnlna- tlon, I.lvrr CotnnlnliiU and kltliiry Alfcctiwu. Jot's Vegetable hursanurilla prevents tired feel ings, daggering sen sations, palpitation of heart, rtuh ol blood to the head, dizziness, ringing in ears, snots before the eye headache, bil iousneis,constipation of bowels, pains In the back,melancholy. tongue coated, foul breuih, pimples on face, body and limb, declineofnerve force dizzy spells, faint spells, cold, clammy feet and hands, sour risings, fatigue, in somnia, and all dis eases oft lie stomach, liver and kidneys. Joy, Vegetable 8ar aparilla 1 cold by all druggist. Refuaea Biitatllute. When you pay for thehestaecQiat you get tbe beat, q i hi! Tho.. r. Oiiki Umry O. Payne, Henry C. Bajuw, Kectivrn HvPORTHERN xi nAoinn nv rauinu ni. N s Pull limn Sleeping Cars Elegant Dining Cars Tourist Sleeping Cars iHT. PAUL I MINNKAI'UI.18 I DULITH FAKtiO TO J niiAi GRAND FOKKS VKOOKStdN WINNIPEG HKLKNA and BUTTK THROUGH TICKETS TO CHICAGO W"AHINOTON FHILADKLPIIIA BOSTON and all POINTS F.AHT and SOUTH. For Information tl::e cards, map and tlckeu, call nu or vr-lle A. 1). CHARLTON, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agent, Portland, Oregon HAS Mor.-Ion Street, Corner Third. o n Xjitreumq jo sjh Xep-Xj3A3 UOUIUI03 aip sanv) : sup WW lwd V -puBjs ujspoui sqj, Ho re (A re r re WANTED-AN IDEA thing to patent f Protect yonrWoal ; thry may bring too wealth. Writ JOHN WJCUDBrU BUriN CO.. Patent Attorneys, WaabincWa, lamiul from I hcrlx, and f cunlalna no I I nlatril f drug or i jfaw dcadiy poln- fclifSs on Jov'a ICySi) Vegetable rob the M Jfe blood of all l ilHjil te, and lSZT''0rft: enumr all """Ori thuw linpuri- M ft. o o c 1 It it au Indisputable lact tnat for I than fifty years, children, from tba age of three months to tea yeara, have oeeai benefited by Surdman's Soothing Pow ders. Thwe Powders are termed soothm jr because they correct, mitigate, and re move, disordera of 'be tyatem iucidemt Un teething. COPYRIGHTS. 1 TAN 1 OBTAIN A PATENT prompt amwer and an bonest opinion, wrHvta fa II N N ic CO., who har. had nearly flfly yaanr tiMdiiiM In ftha natnnt btulnaaa. Commaaloaw Hon. trtctlf oonfliltmUtl. A llaoaba.a of la. formatloa concerning. Patent and bow to at tain Lbm lent f rae. Alio a catalog im ol BMfcaa leal and clentino book, MUt free. Paunu taken tbrouth Munn Co. raaafr Motal notloaln tba HrlentlHe Awaerlraa, aaaS that am brought widely before the publlo alia, out out to the InTmtor. Thla aplenilld jiaaaa. lanud weekly, elecantly limit rated, haa by 6vta4 larveat circulation of any Mientiae work In tna World. $3 a year. Sample enplna aent rraa. Bnlldlnf Rlltloo, monthly, Kl.60ayear. Bloata aoplM, 'li oanta. Krery numbor contain baaaw Sful plate. In colon, and photograph, of an ouaee. with plana, enabling builder, to riiow taw atuat dflm. and aecura oontraota. Addraa MUNN i CO- Ml Tom, JHI BauaBWAT. . McN ML, Receiver. TO THE EAST QIVKH THS CHOICK Of TWO TRANSCONTINENTAL EOUT IB S VIA VIA GREAT NORTHERN RY. SPOKANE MINNEAPOLIS UNION PACIFIC RY. DENVER OMAHA AND AND ST. PAUL KANSAS COT LOW RATES TO ALL EASTERN CITIES OCEAN STEAMERS LEAVE PORTLAND EVERY 5 DAYS ..FOR. SAN FRANCISCO For fall details call on or addrew W. H. HURLBURT, Gen'l Paaa. Agent, Portland, 0. EAST AND SOUTH The Shasta Route or THE S0UT1IEM PACIFIC UU. EipresnTralni Leare Portland Daily. South. j North. 8:6u"r. VmATSJRADE MARKsP v copyrights. rar I. ILv Portland Arl 8:10. I. Lv Oregon City Lr I 7:iUU.ar a". I Ar BaH Fraucisco Lt I l;Wr. a V:STp.M. 10:4b a.m. The above train Hop al Kaat Portland, Owo. City, Woodburn, aalein, Turner, Marion, Jelfen on, Albany, Albany Juuoilou, Tnugtut, Hheddav Halaey, HarrlHburit, Juuutlou Cuy, Irving. Eugene, Creawell, uttai. KOSCBUnu HAIL DAILY. 8:H0.M. 9:t!A.U. S:20 P. M. Lr Lr Ar 1'ortland Ar Oregon City Lv Koneburg Lr 4:40 r.t a:M)p.i 8:00 a. HALEM PAS8KNGKB DAILY. 4:00 PM 4:49 PM 6:16 P M Lr Lv Ar Portland Oregon City Balem Ar ' 10:1ft A I Lv i.ai Lv 8001 DINING) CARS OH OQDEN ROOTS. PULLMAN BUFFET 8LJSBPKR8 AND SECOND-CLASS SLEEPING CARS Attached to all Through Tralui. Weatfllde Dlrlalon, Between PUKTLAND and COBVALI.l MAItTBAIM DAlI.y(XCKPTOMPAr.) 7:80A.M. I Lr PoTtiand Arl 6:40 P.M. 12:16 P.M. I Ar Corvallia Lvl:IWP. at. At Albany and Corvahla eonneclwlth tralar nf Oregon Pacific Railroad. IXPIIEH TAIN PAM.T(KXCBPTDr)nAT.t 4:4nP. M. I Lr 7.26 P.M. I Ar Portland McMlnnrille Ar8:2r.A.M Lrl:MA.kr THROUGH TICKETS TO AIX POINT lit THS EASTERN STATES, CANADA AND EDROPR Can be obtained at the lowent rate, from L. B. MOORE, Agent, Ortfoai fltf R. KOEHLKR. K. P. ROGER", Mana'er. aat. a. P. A P. A enl Portland, Or. soman's i?m:i rsn For ChiUnn Cutting thtvr TiM. IN USE OVER FIFTY YEARS. ttllm frmit Htmt, awnri H (a, Ci aaaf ' ( tlal 1 maalllirlaw aWaf mitt tl To COnOUIPTZYCO Tm onderaurned harlng been reatorad k bealth br alniDle mean, after unertna far- areral year with aievere lunf affection, aadt mat a rata aieeaae miBayim, i eaxioo ap make known to hi fellow tirTeren th aaenna ol cur. To thof e who deatre It, he will ebaer fnllyaend (free of ehanei a eopy of thapreaertav tion need, which they will And a rant ear law Cnaaptl. Aathana, Catarrh, Brwaeha tla and all throat and lunf Maladae. Ha hope all BurTerer will try hla remedy, aa It la Invaluable. Tho dealriof tba preaert pilaw, whleh will eoet tbera nothln(, and Buy pravw blaaaluf , will plaaMaddraaa, Rtf. Edvar. A. Wilaaa, BrMklyi, Y