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About Evening capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1888-1893 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 11, 1890)
VENING CAPITAL JOURNAL. VOL. a. SALEM, OREGON. -MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1890. NO. 138. E -i i i I HOLVERSON is: StillSellingSummerGoods- THE CAPITAL JOURML. Marvelouslv Low re These Goods Must go While the Season Lasts. We Want the Room for T. Fall Goods ffliich will Soon llprin In Arrive HOLVERSON (spfti The Oregon Land Co., HOFER BROTHERS, - - - Editors. I'UltLlSUKD DAILY, KXCKITSIHJD.YY, BY TIIK Caoltal Journal Publishing Company. Omce.CommerclHl Street, 111 l'.O. Mttlldlug Untemt Rt the ixvtoflleo at Snlpin,Ur.,H CCOIlll-elft IHBttlT. 20 PER CENT. DISCOUNT H01D6 OfllCC lit Sllloill. Omi, All Piwi ON BOOTS AND SHOES. ne A General 20 Per Cent. Discount THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE STATE por-ttie Next Two Weeks. Everything sold subject to 20 per cent. This i!0 per cent, reduction really means more than 20 per cent. A GREAT DEAL MORE. Have Been Dropping Prices Riijlit Along for 30 Days, AS YOU PERHAPS KNOW Aud have been profiting by it. But this 20 PER CENT, reduction for the next two weeks is really a Reduction on nil Reduc tions heretofore made. JdSySmnll Profits is a ruling principle of this firm. JAS, DENHAM & Co., 118 State St., Salem. S. B. CATTERLIN. W. T. RIGDON. W. E. CATTEHLIX catteriln, rigdon & co., Real Estate We now have for for sale on easy terms the most desirable Farms and City property. The celebrated Ankeny tract, comprising over 4,000 acres of the finest grain, fruit and pasture land in the Willamette valley has been Mirveye into small tracts to suit purchasers. You need not buy of us. We will send you direct to the owner of any land we have for sale, and you can make your own bargain. 156 State Street. O (In the State Insurance Building) and branch ofllees in Portland, Astoria and Albany, Has for sale a large list of Grain, Stock atid Fruit Farms; also City and Suburban Property. The Oregon Land Co. was especially organized lor the purpose of buying and sub-dividing large tracts of land, and ha-during the past two years bought and subdivided over .".,200 acres into Five to Twenty Acre Parcels. The success of this undertaking is shown in the fact that out of 2S0 tracts placed on the market, 22-5 have been sold. We claim that ten acres of choice land in Fruit, II l ill i Yield a Larger income than 1G0 acres of wheat in tho Mississippi Valley. Wealso make valuable improvements in the way of roads, clearing the land, fences', etc. We can sell a small tract of land for the same price per acre as you would have to pay for a large larni. nd for Pamphlet and Price List Churchill Sash, Door & Manufacturing Co., Sash, Door.?, Minds & Mouldings, Turning & Scroll Sawing. House KlDllilng made to order. .New im it I I.N, by which uecauntunyH keeps full Mipply or seasoned Mod; ofnll kind. Agricultural Works, Corner of Trade niul HIkIi streets, Salem, Oregon. Dorrance Bros'. Lumber yard . ... i on Slule Street, Salem. Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Finishing Lumber, Mouldings, &c, All orders promptly attended to. 1'rlie-. as low as the lowest. Mill on Martin plate 1 miles northeast of Sulem. Olllceln Bellinger Imllillin;. W. M. Sargent, Dealer in TIIK OIUU'.ONIAN'S SMlHUHHUHHI ioi.i mtrictT. The thinnest of all thin arguments appears in the Oregouinu of Aug. (1, to demonstrate the grow Iiik scarcity of gold, and to attribute tho alleged disappearance of gold to the coinage of silver aud issuance of silver certificates, ruder pretence of trv- ing to account for an alleged diap pearanec of $200,000,000 go d, the Portland sago on finance comes around to his usual stopping point where he delivers his august opin ion that too much silver money is the root ot tho evil and, that o7,00l), 000 coined silver dollars have driven $200,000,00;) of gold out of tho United States. The tieastiry report and other great financial authorities show that In 187S there was $82,000,000 of gold, ami in 1SS0, $,,7(1,000,000 of gold in the United States. This nightmare of the Oiegonian is produced for Itself in this way: Gold held by uatioual banks, $72,000,000; other bank, $;U,000,()00; In circulation on the Paeiile coast $."i0,000,000; in cir culation in the rest of the United Slates, $2o,000,000. Ualauce nunc counted lir, $200,000,1100 ! "What has become of if.'" excitedly asks the Oregonlan I ts question is Ive-cd upon an assumption grounded in Iguoranet, and its reply, that sliver has driven this 1200,000,000 out ol the country Is ridiculous as lis false assumption of a v200,000,000 deficit in the nation's gold ncc.uint. The whole object, of eon we, is tuciealc an objection to s'lver It American Hal silver coinage is driving gold from this country, m the Oregonlan alleges, where can ii drive gold to? If cheap silver doe. it, why should golit be not driven still more from count lies where a btlll cheaper silver coinage piovulli, as in England, wheie -IS pence of j silver bullion is converted into (Hi wa f pence of olu, and by order of gov ernment the dock laborer a re obliged 10 revive a ctirieney that Is fiat nearly fifty percent. Hut have won fiat silver coinage? It is well known that the nations ol Kurope employ a lighter and baser silver coinage than tho United States. It Is a fact that England can pi'y a price for our silver bullion, at which wo cannot nfibid to coin it Into standnid dollars, aud still make a profit at her coinage. At Eng land's rate of H'igu Ionise, that government can buy our silver dol law at par, make a handsome profit rccoluiuz them to pay her laborers in shipyards and in the purchase of Indian wheat to compete iththc American farmer. In tho fnco of these facts It i neither patriotic nor Intelligent of any JoiirnlliHt to orv one, that It Is not necessary to show up its dishonest treatment. It Is incapable of treating the silver quostlou fairly. Its grief that cheap silver certificates have displaced ex pensive national banknotes Is so poignant as to obscure Its vision. Scarcity of gold and ugold monop oly of finances are n cause so dear to its heart that Its tears over gold be ing driven out of the country arena slneoroas those of tho fabled crocodile. employed by such owners, in useful and productive commercial or agri cultural pursuits." Tho People's Independent party of Nebraska composed of farmers nnd laborers adopted a platform de claring tho land monopoly should bo abolished cither by limitation or ownership or graduated taxation of excessive holdings, nnd nllon owner ship prohibited. Land reform Is iu the ntmosphero nud tho Honry George agitation will bear fruit. WEBS' HMMmmiM JAS TH SECOND HAND STORE, Moore & Osborne Dealers In Furniture, Notions, Queenswnre, Glassware, Cigars, Tobucon, ('undies and Nuts. All kinds ofsecond hand goods, bought mid wild. Goods sold on i-nmiuUsbii. Cor. State and Liberty St. . j u wm xiBmamaxSMM Groceries and Produce. The 15et Canned Goods.- Choicest Fruits and Vegetables in Season. None hut First-class Goods Hand.ed. Every ; article guarantee, . represented. If you would be well served patronize The Grange Store, 5piprri.OreKon, 126 State Street. feaiem, wi . . i TITS"1 Wall Paper, Mouldings. Pictures Frames, Window Shades, IJahy Cabs, ISxpress Wagons, Notions down Die Ameiican silver coinage as and Toys of all kinds. lint money, and nttiibule to Us pros- A Fine Line of Etchings au(M5..gravjng and Chimin, i (.m.u n ,HNla.,irall(;u of KtlI(,( wh,ell I be cannot ))iove to have taken place. Hut lias any gold disappeared Iroin the bulled States? We have the Tieasury statement of an Inciease in the volume of gold lit tlie United Stupes of $107,000,000 in coin nod 72,000,000 old certificates In the pat eleven years. Ofootirfcc, I hi fuel eoiinlx for unthliiK In the mind of iheOiognulnii editor ooniared with his own itMatinipt ton (to mnlio his point) tlntt silver bus dilven i'iOO, 000,000 gold out of the country. The Oregonlan wuiii to prove that thin i-ouiitii huii Imil too much currency, uud that thellver currency ha been the "too liiueli." luuys: "The llilla tlon of theeurreuoy toyoud theutwd of the country by live itwu of silver dollars mid crtiltcte bus already cbummI IAJ0.0O0.0JO ol gold to disap pear, a It cued over flOO.UOO. 000 of nulloUsl bank iiuUm to be withdrawn. Thai Is, lb silver Jues under the old Ihh have ol late more Iban met the deuuMlils of growing trade mill Kmlmlon, and nave eon sqiiwtly lMfi not only uuwllog ttiaidsmsnd but crowding nut bank note mid gold." Without itUijifiiiiK U HitHr Um elmrgt) ofiidUpUiociiM'iit ofgokl mid Capital National Bank SALEM - - - OREGON. Capital Paid up, So.UOU Surplus, --- 15,000; It. H. WAI.I.ACK, l'reldnU W. W. SIAlllli'i' irnmuHii J. II. AIJIKKI'. - - Cnulr. OIRtCTORSi w t (Irjs W- W. Martin, j SlV.Martlu. "".""Jtr- Dr. V. A.Culck, J. 11. AJbwl. T. McK. folKin. LOANS MADE lo torrnw tm wttt Bd (Hber urnM- i wble produw, nn.lnl w ib Ue. eftbr Id prtvui mutrUmt publle wmreootus. Skk aid Gouty WuruU Fmeiil I'v. COMMERCIAL PAPER lMMMiuteJ i rMMoimM nl. Itmn KmB-loo, r"ortUio4.awto, ISH. Kt1la lluiur Knot nd (llmilUi. Pirst National Bnnk:s WED IN 1868 Til oldenl iiimI alnillgwl lUnk xiuili of I l I'ortlnncl hihI nor til of ."mi Knurlarci A) S Bankers, Iron Building, Salem Or. ' mm nb vawaraw b i iff imrt (ft woM bougki aatf mH4, iwuKnou uy ullvnr, Mrt im lw)Ulr ltuw of vtnttt imut-4 U mvvtong, Me- llrm k it h fuel? 'Ill ()rKuulmi lk( i out of tlw S76,W)0,0 gold euiu in .Dealer In- J Furniture and Carpets o9s Commercial Street, Oregon. Salem, GO TO GEO. F. SMITH, , COMMF-MCIAL TKEBT. I-OH Tents, Awnings, Lawn & Camp Goods, riAMSM ORKtJON. WM X LAUI'fc. lift. I MCVSoUo. Mil N MulB. I'reiiM-oi Vic 1'rmljM.I CmoIw Um uu4 ikruuf hnut ih t'ol will Imak. Iu llii. WuIiimKhi. ldabu ! til COMHlrV. MWonllllK l; tlH kTMUi- mid iwt)oui littHkn, nod mmwiihm GENERAL BANKING. -. j. ti ninimia. ihi . ' ' f"V ,.!- lr K .rmoil l-wgki r-.rmtr. wr4kUI lib u J-lbtr.! lft tumOe oa Ibr.l -! u nl ' KflM1 . .-o i ..'. i"1 thi- l-ok It. AfAHEMYOF TJIH SAfKKil HBUIT, balem, Oregon. CI..VHKSIIN-S OIIOICI: ir A 'KV IIOMK. l)es .Moines Keglster interview with J. S. Clarksen: "I hnvo now seen all portions of the republic, and 1 can best express what 1 believe after such observation by saying I would rather havo my boys tako their chances for life in tho north western part of this republic than In any other part ot it. First, it Is a new country and a rielt one, aud In such a country a young person al ways finds his best chances. All of the western slope Is good. Califor nia Is wonderful iu soil, In the beau ty of climate, and It has an Intelli gent, enterprising and generous peo ple. 1 do not believe that anyone wKhlug u new homo could go lo California aud fall to find a happy home. Tho same is true of Oregon, Montana aud all the states of the mountain slope. A congenial home 1 could find in anv one of them, but T believe I would rather prefer the country of the I'uget Sound In Washington to tiny 1 ever saw it 1 were i-eekuig a new home. It ha the Holiest laud in America, line scenery and the best climate. I'uget Sound, i:U) miles lonir, Is the inol beautiful body of water I have ever neon. Itlsihe M e 1 1 terra lie a u of Anierle.i. Sin rounded by great forests and elevated iiimmiiilns In eluding tinning them (be 1,'aluier, which, lislng fiom the level earth In its own integrity of a clear out line nearly lfi,l)00 feet, the most sub I .ue and beautiful of Miy mountain In America, located in the water of the hiuiiiI with a netting of lakes of fresh water about It. On tho west ern shore of tho sound rises tho Olympic uiuge, always snow-covered and wonderful in their beauty. I have never seen Mich a combina tion of mnuutniii, sea and forest as in that country. I havo lived all my lite iu the lint countries of Indi ana and Iowa aud know very little of any i.ther. Hut th'i Instinct tioru of mountain and sea, coming down to me Irom 1113' ixa-golug New England tin ostors, asbcitcd It self when 1 saw this wonderfully lie.iiitiful eountry, and hold mo cap tive." It Is to be regretted that Mr. Clarkson did not stop a few hours at least in Oregon, excepting an una voidable delay of his train at Port land. The rleh and beautiful Willa mette valley, with Its matchless climate, and hut a half day fiom the mountains or seaside, would never have permitted him to icturii to Washington. NOII'.Y I'U.S'N'IIII, Vi:i.l. O.illllllll) OUT. Mr. (.Jen. W. Childs, proprietor of the Philadelphia Public Ledger, xccii.h to have been a life long friend of great men. His polite attentions to the world's distinguished elti.cns have made him famous, and hu has probably entertained morn persons of eminent renown than any other living. Ills life-long devotion lo (ieneral (Irani lias erealed fur his "penchant" a feeling of kindness If not of gratitude mining American H.'op!u generally. Mr. Clillds has now placed "recol loelloiiM of (feueral (Irani" Into en (lining literary form. Of course, tlietst reminiscences of one of our 1 1 nest great men anil greatest true men, ar. very largely rnoiutl, hut mi much thereof us relates to gen eral irsluof his ohamelur Is a valued contribution to American heroic biography. Tim little book will lie listed miiong the iriattsleM by id I admirers or (irwiit, and may be wifely set down u oiim of those enduring mon ographs of greatiiM that defy the huud of time. Ills a worthy iiiiih terplec of biography, able to stand bld Gtmthu' Charles the Twelfth, or L'Hrlysle'i Frederick the Oreat, tho' by no tno-ns mi pretentious 11 Work hn either, and not alining to be mii Mi4itte bUUirhtil sKelch. It mrUluty due J unlive loOrmil' noble I rail.. IIKI.IM'OH 1UKI.AM). Oregonlan, Aug. 7: Tho circular letter of tho J rlsh National League, published yesterday, appealing for contributions In aid of the Irish nt home, is warranted by tho facts. Tho papulation on tho west coast of Ireland have In many places been reduced to starvation. The fishing season has been bad, nnd the heart less landlords iu distraining for rent havo seized the boats of tho unfortu nate fisherman, their only means of livelihood. The potato blight In County Cork Is making so great ravages that In Castlehaveu, Moy ross aud all other parishes borderlujr on the sea the prospect of nothing less than starvation stares many poor families hi tho face. Tho pota to crop Iu this region Is n complete failure, for tho blight appeared be fore the tubers were formed. Theso poor people hi their small, mlsorablo holdings can only feed a cow or two to give milk to their children, and their potatoes is their only means of support. When the potato garden Is blasted they get no further credit from the shopkeeper for provisions, and without aid theso wreohed jieo ple must starve, as they did In the same district of Ireland In 1810-17. flVBS7Tvr THS -1,J '. an., i VUtABRIDCrMSTAMMUk 4aW J.V1 YsrcrwMtyJ rffsisri Tin: rnisT i:i.i:oTito;iJTt.. Tho execution of a New York murderer, WllllamKemmler,by elec tricity, was a complete success and there seems no reasonable objection to this method of iullictlug the death penalty. Scientific men present are agreetl that death took place Instant aneously. There Is no room to doubt but that the method may bo so per fected as to bar all chance of acci dent, and entirely avoid the disgust ing spectacles so often attending hangings, where the culprit Is lefl dangling and kicking In the air for ten or fifteen minutes. The second feature of tho law, that no unnecessary publicity of sensa tional details bo given iu the news papers, was partially a success. A few leading Now York papers oh. served it to the letter, making a brief, formal announcement as a paragraph of news, that iho execu tion had taken place. There is no doubt electrocution Is iijuiccchs In every rcspeol. It Is lui iminuiiud certain, OltKdOX CLIPS, I.AMI Ut-rOKM IU TIIK AMI. I ndgmbblng i mi indigenous A tuwrle.it iIUmmh. To get all one cau ami kp hIIoimi cmi get, k to Is-ckmjoU- miixhmmOiI . Hut h kkiIhI re form I going to kHMHi wwuy the tout iraXW.OWi i in iril(loM. It fail lu atak llulou lu lh lrg muouut of gW uold by the gtmtni. ! lm) monopoly , the primary efftai inot, by pr1vt UiMklng wqra-1 & wblli U l emrt Imidlnrds uud tloi, by atal. eoOHly nod ally ' iMtipwr UimuU, or Ui wntkh th few treMMinrn. iy iwiviittf iImmmJU In ml tm mtMiM u( tin ittunv. Tbu wl'ntj&,'l5i5!,'t Uuk, d lb-gold bW by lb )o. Imkohnl Nmleusl ennventlon iiMsr dmbu-rm mi ik kmiouik "t o- diffli-ull bt And guudly attki at Dm ' lliia lawfraiib III II t-wll: ZZXIT' iU"ri tart,'u, ,0,, ' rsMt.tm,(Mm of r,W n l,W M wuj In -A .yn of Wml llmluaUm must Irru,. v-'-itwrUf . Umim.um in Mla , M iruak- Mm-klUtt. mim! txtm irflt ! flmtotkibl. mimI wUiilH ruMiu. iiuiioi.. : IAI M-atMjI. Wk. bl . -, w. . . .- . -.-. lfat unm 10 mw hum mi 0NnnMi aarpofitMoiift ot net to ktiwitfiil a MiMt b, rMirbMd U w iHMhlilp and vtto u$tmry to -uinA nt only Mieb iml iHmUuji U tilmtrttntm im i Mfttottm ImmmuIi,... m. fiittliv miilinr...! Iu lliiv alijirlttn li'nu l li Ofc Ti-r tmkm Um lmlitm4t..kwpmT-4iUw"X It WM kjai b OIWuil Ui lit tt. W.l all OWlMM of rwl mUkl, Wllll- & Tr'LhnttZXZtiV. iHton---. lml pr rlullrWi.Kc.Hbi-mo.lU 1 . J?? Jy " ' -tt""??.. "t.".?.'. b km tamity lg Ut i-M nt Umtlm b tmly mi1i mnouiitof leal VHBUt hUn Ompm. MhIvIv Uh aeMiM llkst i 4mm l HY- imdMU m I IWtlMlly iuplii nml i. ir 3 ri I v n a I 11 nmta 0a 1 B I P S 11 I I II B jKMtaitv, r.pi1iiaiixt mwnitti, lrU OHrm By K r S v I i Mil " n vmvnzzrm7i''izzrz . I- - - - - - hhs, h. rwvMia iwiowitg. -r wtm, u. Ik U. If It 11 LsuuniM ! kJiubA.M wmmn. If 11 'fMl ftwuftlr lA rlaftfti. irtult wtr-Atrit. An o.Torl Is 011 font to establish 11 dally mall between McMlnuvlllo aud Tillamook. Forty two bushels of wheat to the acre Is reported by a thresher on a farm near Kellevue.Viuiihlll county. Thu lowest the sanio thiesher has encountered thlsHCason Is JJ8 bushels. There are lots of complaint this year again about the Newport post olllce. There are about 70 aores of hops Iu the vicinity of H'llo, which tho Press ays will yield IftOO pouiids per aero and bring In $21,000 to add to the circulating medium. Tho average yield of wheat on the Albany prairie, says the Hub Press, Is between "J5 aud SO bushels. It Is said Anthony Noltner, weigh er and guager lu the collector ot mis loins' olllce at Portland, Is again to assume editorial duties and take charge of his old property, the dem ocratic Weekly World. The gas well Is Uiil feet deep, anil prosK.-etH favorable. Mr, Curbed went to Portland Thursday morn ing to see about a larger engine al ready ordered. Tho one which Iiiim Imwii used has not suillulont power to do the work required. Willi 11 new engine, Mr. Corbett will lu aboil l iv week, commence drilling again. Drain Kobe. Oregon I'lirrrlm. In tho signal service weather urop bulletin for this month, the follow ing HtuUmeut Is made by the New burg oorresMindont; "Cherry treod lu this country are groat hearers, aud make 11 fine npRtraiiet when loaded down with irtilt. Mr. Ah ernethy, ImIow town, has a 1 loyal Ami treu whioh produces I this year I8fi0 iMHimU of fruit, for which he reeolvisl V'W.'Jtl, Fruit trees uuuie Into IsMrlug ourller In this oountry tlmn in any we have ever known, and the fruit Is first ulu. Mure fruit uud Iims wheat should lie the motto of every one lu the (Jhehu lem vulley. Ifelwixm here uud Mo Mlunvllb the grain Is remarkably Due. Much of It Is now lu til ikhuek. Vmi.hlll euiiuty has un alHiudanl hunrut" UIMr4' llli(HMi suil l.lr I'llU. iu tm mtmn hm Hutmtri ANCIENT AND MODERN DON'T 1)B DUPED. A 80-oilIed "Webster's Una bridged Dictionary" Is being oilcrcd to the public nt nvery low price. Tho body of the book, from A to Z, is a cheap reprint, page for page, of the edition ot 1S47, which was In Its day a valuable book, but, lu tho pro gress of language for over forty years, has been completely super ceded. It Is now reproduced, broken type, errors and all, by a photo grapliio process, Is printed on cheap paper ami iinnsiiy uoutui. liisiui vcrtlscd to bo the substantial equiv alent of "an eight to twelve dollar book," while in fact It la e. literal copy of n book which in Its day was retailed for about $3.00, and that book was much superior in paper, print, nnd binding to this Imitation, and was then tho best Dictionary ot the time Instead of an antiquated one. A brief comparison, page for page, between the reprint and the latest and enlarged edition will show the great superiority of the latter. No honorable deabr will allow the buyer of htich to supposo that hob getting tho Webster which to-day lu accepted as the standard nnd the best. There are several of these reprints, dlllorlng in minor particulars, but, don't bo duped, the hodyof each is n literal copy of the 18-17 edition. WHAT TUB PAPERS SAY OF IT. Tho New York Times says: "Only those who are ignorant of the great advances that havo been uuuie lu dictionaries are likely to buy this reprint at any price. The American Bookseller of Now York, says: The etymologies are utterly mis leading, and naturally so, for w hen tho Webster of IS 17 was Issued Com parative Philology was in lis cradle. The definitions are Imperfect, re quiring condensation, rearrange ment aud additions. The vocabu lary is defective, some of the com monest words of to day, especially selenitic terms, for which 11 diction ary It most often consulted, blug entirely absent. In not one of these three prime requisites of a dictionary Is tho Webster reprint a trustworthy guide, or, rather it is 11 misleading one. This 'reprint' Is not Intended for Intelligent men. It Is made especially to lie foisted by all the arts of the book cauvassi r on those who have been precluded from a knowledge of what develop ments lexicography has undcritouc during the last forty-two years Tills is the crudest feature of this moiiey-miikiug enterprise. Tho Htilliib Christian Advocate wiys: "Don't be duped. Thousands are, or are likely to be, by tho llnshy, fraudulent advertisements of 'The Original Webster's Unabridged Dictionary,' which Is ollered for three or bur dollars. If any of our readers wish to Invest lu a purchase which they will bo likely afterward to regret, they will do so after being duly notified." The Journal ufKduoutbu, Huston, says: "Teachers cannot he too care ful not to bo imposed 011, since the very things which make a diction ary valuable lu school are wanting in tills old-time reprint. Any high- sciiooi iiionoiiiiry which can ue pur chased fur a dollar and fifty cents Is worth more for school use than this." Many other prominent Journals speak lu similar terms, and legiti mate publishers write us lu strong condemnation of this attempt to foist an obsolete nook on the public. The latest and the best, whhh bears our imprint on the title pao, has over ".000 pages, with Illustra tions mi almost every page. (J. 4fc V. MllltUIAM it Co., Springfield, Mass, Hupplled by T. McF. Pattern, 8a loin. liii-dw Pioneer Bakery AMOS STRONG, 271 Commercial Street. French and Ourmaii Wheat and Ityo Ilreaib lu Otty Stylos. Vicuna Hulls. HPKCI AII'Y OF FANCY CAKKH. Pastry and Confeotlonery Making In Full Stock. My new bread uud ctiko bakera uro llrst-elass artists In tholr line, and I aim to have Kverytlilng as Fine as (lie Finest. MSII Mill Capital Dairy Co A. O. MroWW, II. J. KNy UU sr iwiutrwi lo udlvw lltwli milk Milwlun tat, to miy jrt of tho etiy. l.HtvimlrsulMliiUt4 low's utl.lo. Capital City Restaurant. Jas. Batchelor, Prop'r, Warm Meals at All Hours of (lie Day I .A Kel Mitwtaaual mmI eookd In flrtt j TwHy.nr Mat r.r imaU 1 1C D KKON T. Cimik trM, isjtwMHi Journal OfHoo nnd MlnUi'k !.iviry. tk ktolc. t&rjcj lmt 1Mb J n. MiMi m M In mUm. m tmikmsly UluwltH Tiiy k ubitusitu U No ifrt4 iuiu l lb uu ul iMU. nlkwru 1 WAfTft Tuny wJats.llH l-4ii tulalU unilrlill 1 UfMI w.ot I-M(Mt uMr. AV KtM kUtMt Um U wiKMiwl In lit mi rv ! k hmO Uih", auumhsann. ai!wptu auTb.lhHt Hfft kU, o4uu iiiw4lxff, Ihvy ntii any lllw MHiMlln T IT I v sworn m 1-. . ui T"iuiwbuw ( ' itlllMtW, I A- I Ji'ii.A.. JtmVn II Pmmem wmmmimm 9 iiiyiiMwiiWOTiMiKwi-iiiiyiiai mmm mmSSmSSSSSSSSSSSSSSmS Myri J? fltakMkMM. m . . a. i, i imatmerWHSF' z"! r