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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 4, 1900)
V . .. i fetUrPLEMENVrHK ' MORNING ASTORblft SATUJUW AUGUM 4, 1100 of i:Mrm;3 aiimhd the boxers. Addrvss I!y a Chinaman For Whose Head Bho Offers 65.00. Honolulu Republican. There Mt quite a large turnout of Chlneae reformers at Progress liaJl last night to Union to an address by Leung CM-lso, the Chines reformer, whose head '. sold to be worth 165,000, It de livered In China before the dismember ment of the empire take place. In the audience there were a few Euro pean who relieved somewhat the bru nette complexion of th hall. Leung Chl-tao la a pleasing Mongol ian, of medium height and rather In telligent countenance, Ue spoke In Chinese, hit remarks being Interpreted. "Foreign nations," Bald the speaker, ''believe that the empress dowager is in sympathy with the Boxers. I can easily prove that the empress dowager Is in sympathy with the Boxers, The Boxers formerly fought with their hands;' they had no arms. Where did they pat the weapons that they are fighting "with nowT From the empress dowager. The rifles and arms which the Boxers are now using y.ere given to them by the government. "On the iSth of May and the 1st of June the empress dowager Issued three proclamations. They showed conclu sively that she was tn sympathy with the Boxers. - The proclamations read that 'the Boxers must protect them selves. In order to protect themselves they must light. General Tang To Fung bas killed several Boxers. He was de graded Yor doing so. A few days ago I received word from China that Prince Twong had taken several of the Boxers Into bis service. These Boxers were under eight flags; and these Hags were united Into one by order of the Prince "The empress dowager has Indirect ly. through the Boxers' movement, caused so many foreigners to be killed. ' "Yotf "all know that the cause China -cannot go on very long because the empress dowager Is ruling China with a strong band. 'The people 'of China are a good peo ple. The bad' people of China are the official classes. If the people have turned bad It Is because they have been Instructed ' in wickedness by the offl' dais. "The province of Po Tung is the most conservative in China. Not long Ago no telegraph lines or steamboats were allowed there. The people would cut the telegraph lines and stone and de molish the steamboats. About three years ago a new governor,' a good man, was appointed to theprovince, and things have changed since then. Peo pie do not now oppose foreigners when they -go into that province. "If 'the Chines oppose foreigners it is due to -the Official class, who teach therri to oppose foreigners. If we have a good ' government and good officials, we shall let'the foreigners In, and then we can' learn' much from them. Those now In 'power In China' Wish to close the doors and not let any foreigners In, The Chlnehe always follow the official class. - When the' offlcial claw does wrong 'the' people do wrong. "NoV that there Is so much trouble between China' and the foreigners the remedy would be to have a new govern ment' for" China. It Is my Intention and the Intention of my party to have a new government; If China keeps well up wrtn the' world, other nations will be benefitted by our advancement It Is the Wish of ail' the powers that China should' have a stable government If the government be not stable there will be much trouble With other powers. If China" displays weakness other pow ers win take advantage of her. "For"years the empress dowager has had f uil sway1 over China's commerce. That 'la why' her commerce is in such a deplorable condition. "The Chinese government is not able to protect her subjects and that Is the reason of all these rebellions and revolutions of late years. "It wouldn't be safe to have an open door policy because It woulfln't be safe for foreigners to go Into' China. ' Al most1 every European nation has con cessions 'In' China, yet they are afraid to go and take' possession of these con cessldn. . "Everyone knows that China Is a wealthy country, yet foreigners are afraid to' Invest there. It Is a pity. "In the Hawaiian Islands during the last two years you have had prosperity. WhyT Because you have had a stable government; thai Is what China wants.' made In the stiff, square style that Is not unfamiliar. Ornaments are few, and of the commonest forclga make, while the bronae vessels to be ceen are all modern and coarse In workmanship. AMERICAN AND B1UT1SU AGAIN. The Louisville Courier-Journal finds "an Interesting coincidence" In the fact that American and British soldiers are again Hunt up together for a fight with the Chinese on the very spot where Commodore TatnAll backed the British so effectively In ISiS. It says: "Tat nall was a Georgian, the son of a revo lutionary soldier, governor and United States senator. When he wss made llag-oiccr at the Asiatic station in ISi" he had served In the war of 1S12, in the Algerian war, against the West In dian pirates, and in the Mexican war. For hours he stood on a Chinese junk, hatching the Chinese forts In Fel-Ho river pour a heavy fire on the British gunboats. At last he could stand It no longer. "Blood Is thicker than wa ter,' he said, and, Hinging out the stars and stripes, he gave the slgual for ac tion. He rowed to the British flagship, and. with his crew, took active part in the battle, which ended In defeat for the Chinese. Tatnall's conduct was In violation of the laws of neutrality, but It was heartily sustained by public opinion In the United States and by the government at Washington." The gallant commander was afterwards captain of the Confederate iron-clad Virginia at Norfolk, but he was not sus tained by the the same public opinion and government In that position. SHOCKED AT CANTON. ' The Chairman Mr. President, to make a long story short, we have come down here to tell you that you're it! The President (greatly staggered) What! Again? The Chairman For the second time, sir. The President (faintly)- A glass of water, please. The Chairman W e are rorry we startled you so, sir. The President (slowly recovering) Don't mention It. The only thing that grieves me is that I seem to have failed to have a friend on the committee who might have proved faithful enough to prepare me for the shock. The Chairman We wanted to sur prise you, sir. The President (quite rtcovered) Well, It's all right, boys, come in. Cleveland Plain Dealer. CAMTAU1N NOTES. , Senator James K. Jones, chairman of the committee on platform, at the dom ocratlc national convention at Kansas City, succeeded In eevurlng the inser tion of a plank denouncing the ship subsidy bill. Senator Jones Is know n to piefor the purchase of British rather than the construction of American ships for the carrying of our exports and Imports. o pledge the democratic party against private monopoly In every form Democratic, platform. Then why did the democratic national chairman, Senator Jones, and the dem ocratic leader in the house of repre sentatives, Hon. Slim Jim Richardson, both prorose legislation that would give millions of dollars to the sugar trust? We condemn the Dlngtey tariff. Democratic platform. Yes. But the democratic party was not honest enough to come out and openly favor free trade "in the interest of American labor." We oppose the accumulation of a surplus. IVmocratlo platform. The democratic party has always been a debt creator, even in time of peace. The democratic party la the tall to the populist kite this year. If the ship subsidy bill were passed, American worklngmen In the mines, the mills and in the shipyards would be employed In building the ships our foreign commerce employs. If it Is de feated, foreigners (chiefly British) will continue to build ships and do our carrying for us. Naturally, then, the democrats favor the defeat of the ship subsidy bill. llly, and dishonor to hamper them their victorious campaign. in HOW CABLES ARE JOINED. A new method of making joints In heavy wires and cables la explained as follows: Sleeve of soft copper long enough to receive the two cable ends tpr a distance about twice their diame ter are provided, the walla of the sleeves being sufficiently thick, so that the sleeve contains as much metal to the running inch as the cable, or more. The two ends are butted In the sleeve and the jaws of a hydraulic press of considerable power, but lighter weight and small size, are set on the joint One squeese at a pressure of about for ty tons to the square Inch welds the sleeve and the cable into a solid mass. so that If the joint is sawed apart It la Impossible to tell where the metal of the sleeve ends and that of the cable I begins. NOT EVERT ONE A WINNER. 0 Baltimore American. The story of Nome seems to be about the same as that of all wealth-seekers. The few find success; the many, failure, suffering and death.' And' yet, despite the warning that the government can not take care of the adventurers, the golden Ignis fatuus will probably con tinue to lure the reckless on to linger ing poverty and death. He is known as Suiter the Silent since the expose of the Boer fund ex penditures, The dictatorial attitude of Boas Bryan at Kansas City is very suggestive of imperialism. If farmer Bryan held hla hoe in the wrong band the farmers will soon get on to It when the moving pictures are on exhibition. Hon. Adlai Stevanson was originally a green-backer. Mix this with 16 to 1, and what will be the product? Hon. Don M. Dickinson predicts "that Bryan will not get within two million as many votes as he did In 1S94.'.' ' Governor Roosevelt's mother was a Georgian and his uncles served in the Confederate navy. He fought side by side with Southerners In Cuba, and is an ttnblt-m of the type that joins North and South. Since the adoption of the gold stand ard In Japan the currency of that coun try has been freed tram constant fluc tuations In Its exchange rate. Within two year this republican ad ministration has realised in caah or it equlvulom) the sum oi$134,4::i.6;i on ac count of the Vaeltle Railroad indebted ne to the United Stat- government, Mow than ono, half the money collect d wn fur novrued interest that hud not been paid. 1 lie passage of ;ho ship sutHtdy bill means work for tho Americans, its do. feat nn'ans work for foreigners. Nat uially the democrats at Kansas City who prefer cheap foreign labor to American labor oppoae the chip subsidy bill. Of course they believe in buying foreign u-hloily British) ships with which to build up au American (T) merchant marine, rather than the con struetlon of Americau-bullt ships for that purpose. On June 1, 1S06, the total circulation it money In tho United States was II Kl.BSt.JM, a llttlo teas than IJOO.OtfO.OOO being In the form of gi ld and gold cer tltlcHto, On July 1. 1900, the volume of money In the country was J-'.SIl.sw.bO, of which 2.0Si5.tM was in circula tion. In four years the enormous sum of half a billion dollars gold has been added to the people's money. This is in excess of all the silver mined In tho United States-at a ratlJ of 14 to I since 1SK Since Mr. Bryan began to tell the peoplo four years, ago tha; what they wanted was more money, they have ad del at the rate of $ll.i6T,0OO per month, or about Jt.Jtw for every working day, Every dollar circulating lit the United States is what Mr. Bryan calls a cent iluliur. This Is belter than the W cent dollar that he wants to give th people. NO DANG&K OF "MILITARISM.' CHiNESE h6U8ES IN PEKIN. In the fouf cities which make up the capital, and particularly In the imperial city, live most of the leading and opu lent classes, and, therefore, the houses are of a more important and solid ap pearance than la the rule elsewhere. High brick 'walls, with a single stone entrance, surround a multitude of courts, flanked by the roofed dwelling rooms.' It Is a curious custom among the Chinese to put' up Immediately fac ing the' outer door a stone or brick screen,'' bearing .'tablets or ' painted scrolls, inscribed with the names of ancestors or classical texts. The ob ject, according to time-honored super stition, Is to ward off evil spirits, for the demon on entering 1-nocks his head against the obstacle, and, being de void of all sense but an elementary hatred of mankind. Is repulsed and goes away sorrowful. There is no attempt at ostentation, or even of decent comfort, about these dwelling places. Within they are mere ramshackle bungalows, with stone-fts.-J l.-8 (,rid j-pT windows, fan tastically cut up by wooden partitions, and papered without taste or cleanli ness. The furniture is polished wood JlOW CROKER BROKE HIS LEO. Louisville Courtr-Journal. The richest thing that has appeared i print for some time Is the Hon. Richard Croker's exposition of econo mic problems. There has been some nystery heretofore as to how Mr. Croker broke his leg. Surely It Is a mystery no longer. He broke bis leg hen he went to work In dead earnest to think out the economic problems. TAMMANY'S NEW SLOGAN. New Tork Evening Sun. ' For the present the Tammany slogan is: "Get Into the Twenty Per Cent, or You'll Be a Slave." UNCLE ALLEN. "The trouble about onions," philoso phized Uncle Alln Sparks, "Is that when you eat them you have to take so many Int3 your confidence about it." From the Chicago Tribune. f THE GANG PLANK 13 OUT. New York Mall and Express. ; If there are many more Webster Davlsea In the republican party now'i their time for disappearing. The democratic party is divided on the shipping question, one part favor ing subsidies and the other part favor ing the purchase of foreign (which means British) ships with which to build up an American merchant ma rine. Each of these factions haa had Its say in congress, but the chairman of the democratic national committee, who was also chairman of the platform committee at their recent convention. secured the insertion 'of a plank con demning the ship subsidy bill, in or der, in that Indirect way, to whip those of his party associates In congress who disagree with him Into active opposl tion.' ' The war with Spain served to dem onstrate something more than the mil itary and naval strength of the United States. It brought to light the vast resources and wealth of this country. Subscriptions received from the popu lar loan Issued In connection with our war with Spain amounted to $1,400,000.- 0W within thirty-one days. This was seven times as much as the amount of bonds offered. It was a very different I result from" that accomplished under the last democratic administration, wh"n our bonds were hawked about the world at' high rates of Interest While Chairman Jones, of the demo cratic national committee, secured the adoption 'of a shipping plank In the Kansas City platform denouncing the ship subsidy bill, he was afraid to in sert his pet remedy for our maritime de cay of purchasing foreign (chiefly Brit ish) ships with which to do bur foreign carrying und1 our 6wn'flag." Under this republican administration, coaling stations for the' use of the Amc-rlcan navy are in process of erec tion In Hawaii, Samoa, Guam, Manila and Porto Rico. ' ' We renew our 'faith In the policy of protection to Am?rican labar. ftepubli. can platform. The demoratic platform renewe faith In foreign labor. Its NO DOOR AT ALL. The "open-door" question Is gravitat ing toward a proposition to take the door off its hlng-?s.-From the Chicago Journal. . Bloomers will not have been In vain 11 tne new woman can successfully compete with the old man in a match striking contest A London cable says that "Nobody In England ever speak of McKlnley as anything - but an uncompromising champion of American Ideas and poli cies." His renomlnatlon was received in England without enthusiasm ' and with quiet reserve. It was different when Grover Cleveland was nominated to head the democratic ticket.' The republicans have no party per- New York Commercial. Now that the duty of prolectli.g our citizens in China, both In their persons und !n the trade Interests that they have acquired there, makes apparent the necessity for a larger army, we ob serve that sonie of our newspaper neighbor. are beginning to be uncaay with regard to tho liberties of the peo nle. Th;v jnuareiitly believe that a larger standing army will threaten soirte lay to subvert the republic by what they call "niiUiaiiam.' .Such forebodings, however, under any condition now In sight for this country apH.-ur to be entirely unnecessary and calculated to do more harm than good by their expression. These prpliels of disaster do not take into account the strong commercial nature of the Amer ican people, nor d they recognise the fact that by any army drawn from the citizenship of thlH country, having all the relationship and ties thai are Inevi tably and infrangibly united to such citizenship, anything like the subversion of our civil government Is utterly out of the qu-Mllon. Officer and privates alike ar, through their families, fur more deeply IntervHted In the com mercial and industrial stability of the country than they potwlbly could be In any movement to place militarism on top. There la rut natural antagonism between an Anx-rlcan army, thus drawn from our own citizenship, and our civil government, and there is no likelihood, under any conceivable Amer ican circumstance, of the army sub1 verting the government than of courts- martial supplanting courts of law, with their Jury trials and safe-guards for the rights of an accu-d party. American intelligence is too broad to permit a reasonable apprehension of such a thing. MUNICIPAL OWNERSHIP. REPORT OF R. NJ CARNAHAN, Deputy 1-f.oml Hiipcrvlxor. IMmIiIiK, Numlieia One to NlneliMi, und liiy of Astoria, To the lionii 'iblo County Court of t'Utsop County, 'reoiii In ctitt'llioirt with (ho rvtiucid it Juiiue Urny. I herewith milunlt my re port aa Deputy Koiiil Supervisor, IHxttiets. Nuiubeis liit to Nineteen, Hint I it) of Aiioiin, mill respectfully nmke the following report to July I, )IKM), S.ild report Is nuuV from the reports recilvell from the District Humi-vIsoih, nml from collection made by me n Deputy and depmlteil with tlm County 1 rcnsuivr to their credit. I notl.M )n cheeking up their receipt stubs tlm; the ta payers in the Cmm ty it'M'l Districts Ittive- done- a great many more days work on tho roads than the taxes amounted to, and the foil Tax Is being paid promptly. Tho Supervisor! lullt for services rendered uppear lo bo reasonable, lim Poll Tax uiui i ropeny ioa-i i ax or ouo aim out" halt nuns na levi a ny tm mipervisiMS of the sevei'il HortJ Districts of Clatsop County umlor Section 4SJ of the Statutes of Orcgui umouuta to JJ.li.'a.;. , Districts, $l.W2.7. Dona are iiddliled lo nJmm t iMinta tin a (ml day, )ul bl'sum is, riisviirt ; k . to bloomer lit only a mutter of form, Any wonmii looks us well In bloomer n she doe In skirts from her waist un. Homo peuplo never walls how welt off they urn ui til they try to rliln a Whorl, Tho man who Hie lo leiu h a prut ly girl lo tide a wheel haa a steady Job. Killing a Mln el MtreiiMthen tint mu i' .almost as much a dodging uno line. Uv l blind. That I one thing In favor of the bloomer girl who wants a mislximl, If Ihs bleyr lii tieceeis In displacing the horse, It may nlsn do away with the nlulit-iimr. Th woman doesn't live who Is p. iose. t,i a bifurcated gainient-wlth a man In It. f nil Wlsit wonla from n Apportioned to nineteen iuittry I ,,,',i,,f1,,i,H," "r h"-"V pants I'otnl Amt. I'oll'd Still Due City of Aitorlu,... J2.a-.Hi.tHi 1,'t.VKJ l,;t tig District No. I, Warrviit hi p..'.iiu ; !S "iJS District No, 2, Cla'sop ,h.i,.!I 13 (Ul.Jl District No. ;!, Hi-asMe .-,nn ;ir..iui .ts.HO District No. 4. Molvlllo IV.9 Ml SX.H8 District No. 5. tiiadvvcll I ';-. Ilo.tK IU.U District No, 6. Young's Itlver SiUs -.it.m u.31 District N. 7. oiney.. , tit vl 53.17 j.Vttil District No. S. Walluskl.. tW.iM S.i4 4 (" District No. . Svensn ai M SiiS 3& Jl District No. 10, Knippa llilti-t Win fci ta District No. 11. Wesipoi !..... s 8i ;t2.U 4 DM District No. 12, Vesp r 73 74 1.V53 67,23 Dbtrlct No. U, UI.Me 77.70 41. M 3J.7D District Niv II, l'ush -.7,7!t S. II S2SH District No, 15 Jewel Kl 33 . ;i 17 40 l& District No, H. Itllnd SIoumIi,... 7'J U4 40.53 39.43 District No. 17. John Days sj 12 2." 2u M Vi District No. IS, New Astoria 117 73 111 M 3121 District No. is, Mlshawaka 41 fij 23.4 :t.l Pull Tax Coll'd M.uo Woo 2V.0O n.oo mioo 75. W J.'i Wl 3U0O C.W II, Itl 5W 51.75 30.00 dti.no 44 00 It I lint desllA (ill tlm i.nrf ,f tk cyclist (O rlllu ev lllnl nmlo-a Ih cyiin pllsuniNtleally tired. I'liHimer do not add to tlm charms "f a woman. The women who war thrm rldum liuve any charms to add . Kvervthlil is mieuoiuiiK liven pnitumiitle pis set-books are null.! roniiiiiMi. TiieU sing of the bloom nism lh imh.-i. but 1 he modern bleycl alii I a iiracli In bliMinier. rew men Work hard after lliev ..II. . . . . mu rnoiiiii in snow ix-tler. get Totals. ':,U.1.7ti II. WS l 2,4i4 45 Sam K. II.utUi donated to District No, John Wal 1 1 11 doimti-il to District No.ft-8 days' '7.0O 6l woik 12.00 I7M.61 the Toll There ni three Sus rvlsora lteHrts not In. They Mill Increase Tux collected to Moiiietliltu; uvi-r m0. UesiH'ctfully sutimltted, II. N. CARNAUAN. I'eputy for District, Ni. Ono to Nine- '' teen, and City of Astoria. Forthe Baby SiTortored Babes There Is at least one man In these United States, says the New Tork Commercial, who Isn't a warm advocate of municipal ownership. Very natural ly, he Is a man Interested In public s-r-vice utilities. He is president of the Citizens' Gas & Electric Co., of Jack sonville, Fla., which up to 1895 repre sented several corporate purchases, re organizations and consolidations. Mis name Is Samuel B. Hubbard, and the general hardware company which bears his name and of which he Is president a company well known In the hard- j ware trade her In New York Is the source and foundation of all his other Investments. "There Is an effort," said President Hubbard, In the lobby of the Murray Hill Hotel the other night, "to make it appear that the municipal lighting plant In Jacksonville has been a great success. Mow, I can tell you something Hilte to the contrary. That municipal plant. In my opinion, Inn't yeildlng any profit Itself and It has prevented my company from earning any dividend for the pant four years. Up to 1895 we had been paying eight per cent and there abouts, nnd we ha1 meantime reduced the price of gas voluntarily and regu larly from M PT thousand to about 12.25 not. Then came the municipal electric li;:ht plant, representing nobody's In vestment for profll. It slaughterr-d prices, drove us out of the electric light business, and forced us to reduce gas to about $1.62 net. We have not paid a dividend In four years, Increased consumption of gas might bring the plant up to the profit-producing point Our output now Is about 20.000,000 cu bic feet annually, and Inoroaolng but there Is nothing In it at 11.62. . And Worn-out Worried Alothcrs Find Comfort in CUTICURA. SOME MONT1I3 AGO OUR BABY'S ' HEAD GOT 80IIE. We took him to llio doctor, who pronounced it poiwm and gave us some medlclo wlili h did no good. Ills hut got m bad he would cry all night, and my wlf aould sleep -none, and bgan to look ghostly. His head Rot so sore thai w put a nlgbl rap on Mm, and foldad a whit cloth foor thick iinisos hmldsof It, and Just through the ui;lil a kind of matUir would oo out from a is brad, soused, through the rlotk and cp and on to tli pillow. Tb lop and !( k of Ms head was almost a solid ore, and looked so badly that word would not(WrillL Almost In dmpalr I told my wlfo I had cxi Ctrrn ua Ranamsa advertised and rvcotnuisnJrd vsry Uljlily aad I was going to try tliam. I bought tha Ctmi-t RA Rasoivairr, Cimc-oaa Soar, and Ccmfa OlntmrnL W far him half of Ihs Resolvent, used part of 1 tho cixVti of Rp, and before we had used the second tmi of Cunctia OlnUnroi he commenced lo get betur, and Is now a well and hearty a anybody's boy. Ha Is at merry as a lark, sleeps soundly all night, and his balr looks glossy, thick, and soft whllo my wife looks like adlffornnt woman, I look at him and think low it to yon and to suffering mankind to write and toll yon of this almost wonderful cur, W. W. ft J. K. MYERS, Box 00, Munrae City, Ind. Complete External and Internal Treatment for Cvery Humor. , Conllngof C'lmcusi Hor(Ji.), lo cImim Um skis of snitu od fllf lAllltn eslMMiiwflMi Uw Uilrkmftl sallel; Ctmelias OlSTMSHT (Mc.), The fifty-cent size is fust rkht for the baby. A little of It In the bottle three or four times a day will supply precisely the fat all thin ra bles need. If your baby does not gain in weight as fast as you would like, try Scott's Emulsion The result will please you. If IK Klku nllNM Iks VMAkaM I should take the emulsion. I 14 n-L it. S..J 11 1 nunc) me O'luy lOOa richer and more abundant j only buy (he dollar size -it's more economical. . Both mother and child win fed at once Hi trtn$thtnin$, upbulldin k! ana ut-protiuanj prcptrtk. ?i til d.iVH 1 ue s4 f a. ' ' auw.siu.UMw!.Myt. WHITE' COLLAR. LINb Columbia niver and Purt Saani Na.. igation company. Bailey Oataert leaves lAaUrta datta I eirPt Sunday at I p. m. Uv P01 "and dally tioept lua day at a. . , While Collar Lin tickets and O. R ft N. tickets Interchanf eablt on Bailey I Oatwrt nd HasValo, . ,, a. j. tatijOR, Astoria, Aft. IT. D. SCOTT. u TfUphont UL . rrNiidnL lo UMUinljr ll7 llehln. lnHinmU.m, snd IrrtlMloa, ud sooth and hwl; and CiTiet! 1Uh.tit (Mir.), to cool nd cImm lbs blond. Tltr 1 sr fi"i, n,T wiMwopuuicwn, iocnrvuwnMMiuriunnc, fliangunn. Inr Ar I Jll I """"n ssin, x-ip, wo oioon ntimnrs, wlta Haul Sslr, " "? an eiM wis. 1'u -uow 10 tlm liatiy Uumon," f rse. F - n"i uiiriii, wim hbbj ui Bsur. wimq urrsa Uaoo axb Cusa. Co sr., tkil lrop, Uotum, IJERVES DESTROYED BY GATARRIL A position of truHt and an aching tooth are always hard to fill. Some men irrleve two dollars' worth over every dollar they lose. 1 , ItuxiiJiious Travel THIS '-Northwestern Limited" trains. eJuctrlo ll(h(d throuahout, both Inslda and out, and steam heated, art with on 1 exaction, the finest trains In Xhm world. Thry embody the lalaaL utMto and best Ideas for comfurt, eonvenlene 1. ana luxury ever ottered tb travellnM ! public, and altncether are tha , suut .. oomplats and splendid produoton ol tb Duuaera' art. - . ., These Bplendld Trsina ' Connect Wlta ., Ttcreatf NorUicrt The Northern I'aclflc and The Canadlao I'mlflc - ' AT tt! PAUt ro CHICAGO ODd tl.c EAST. No extra oharre for these -iterioe accommodation and all olaassa of Uok . . et are available for passer ea th , famous "Northwestern Limited." All 5 trains on this line ar protected by ta " tnterlockinc Hlock system. W. H. MEAD. . (lentiral Aif 'nt. - ; Portland, Ore, H. U BISI.En.1' Travfllnf At. A FEW-INTERESTING FACTS1 Kr. Robert B. Mantell, the Great Romantic Arton Dr. Hartman, Columbus, Oblot Dear Sir The bottle of Pe-rn-na at hand. It is splendid and most lnrlg- orating; refreshing to tho nerves and brain. It it one of the boat tonics I bar errer need. It makes m feel like a new man; Tonrs sincerely, B. B. Mantell. CaUrrh la one of the ways In which a AaprasMd condition of the norrons sys tem shows itself. Catarrhal people are soon made nervous. Any remedy to effect t radical core of chronlo catarrh must operate dlrs7 tkxoogk tboBKralie rlioratUO 1 .Vi- , 1 . When neoDle trip, whether on, Puslaeaa or nleasurev. , 1 they naturallr want th. v.... i-T obtainable as far sa speed, comfort and .v WISCONSIN paNTRAxTUNtt rJ ' paid to serve the public, and our traina,, , -are operated so as to mk. i.r; . nectloha with diverging lines at all Junction point.., n , ' , , . ruliman PalaKa HiwmnV Cara on thromlt trains. - Dlnlnf eat service unexcelled., MtaJa . erved a la arte. ' . mmm " ' Mrs. 0. C. Filler, of 134 W South Ponrti street, Columbus, 0., writes! -Tot tea j vlo he ticket agent to tell you ' or (lftoen years I have been subject to ( 1 f.Tr"V v, v, , nervoua ayspepsla. I would have spells of quivering In mv stomach, with smoth ering feelings: I was suffering from fn oi will make direct oonneWone at what is called nervone prostration. 1 1 r' i;r.r'IICB0i Uwukee, n consulted several physicians, who treated me without doing me eoy good. I bad almost given np in despair when I beard of Pe-ru-na. I found it an lm mediate relief to all my disagreeable symptom." Br. Hartmaa' latest ao&l all nntnta Vamt For any further Information jfi W. any ticket asrnt, or corrcniwud wi ' JAB. C. PON D: den. PIH a mi or JA8. A. CLOCK. .' lUlwenke. tniV deneral Agent, , , 141 BtarkBU Portland. Or