THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13. 1893. The Weekly Ghronicle. Enteral at the poat.iflie at Th lialltt, Otvirou, a M-imtl ola mall matter. Inst mure votes proportionally, than did j the populist in Kansas; a lartfv part of of tlit) HiuiUt vote I. ail migrated to the Cherokee strip; the populist made larger SlBst'RIPTION KATES. Y mail, rooTAua rKriit, in advasck. 11 Mi Salem oti everything. The aver age life of domestic hog it lee thau a year. When they fatten to certain ex tent thev cease to Us profitable ami are elautfhtered. r-leui i trying lo de- j guiiti in the cities than the other parties ; vour all the swill, to the exclusion of the ; a,,,i if the republican in Virginia hail other towns in the state, which shouKl i voted the jiopulist ticket it would have have their riuhtful portion. Saluiu j carried the state, etc. Coinrnrnfinan must be slaughtered. An Injunotion on j jerrv is to be admired for the wonderful ielay tliat i iiatiencc disnlaved in Inn collatsiration, NEWS OF THE STATE. One ve.tr Thr'm.miha je 1 the branch asvlum would a.) delay that . patience displayed in Aitverti.inn rate rnimiiable, and matte known j project that there would be no hot of aml for the aubdued roy tint wliich lie on aiiiii-niniu. Arid all nimtminittna to "THE t'UKON- STATE oinci.vi.s. tt.iveraw S- rVnnoyer Secretary u( State ",. W. Mi ltri.lv Yrva.-.uri'r . ... lbilllv Mi'TM'tian iupt. of Itibuc liwttucUon K. 11. MrKIroy tJ. N. l-!i'H beuaton ,j4 Miuhel! Hermann '.oiisressmen tan, State rrinter Frank Ber building It anywhere In Eastern Orepjn j has succeeded in imparting to the tin under the provision of the act of ill? j ilied work. His hopeful vista is ft hit legislature, and the construction would . 0f genuine political mosaic; antl it be delayed at least two years, and per- j might appropriately be preserved iu haps longer. Meanwhile the number of ' gome of the art museums s a souvenir insane persons taken to Salem are daily 0( the ill-fated party of which in its day COVJiTV OFFICIALS. Counrv Judge Geo. C. Bli.ielov tlnerid'. T. A. V arj Clerk ,..J. 11. ;-roiuen Trvauurer VYr.i. liehe;l t.ln. lirrtflle i r mil K IMt'&ld Aseeir Jis'! W. k.imu Purveyor E. F. Sharp Sunerinceurient of PuMic aehuols . .Tr-'v slitll.-y I'umtitr N. yi. haUvvewi Mr. r-impou was par excellence a most rniu(1 States Marshal 1 1 .- worthy and exalted prototype. CommlKiionen . THE SEW BILL. Just as tite people were congratulating themselves that the tide of the financial stringency was turning it is swelling again since the ntnrs of the new tariff bill, prepared by thedemocratic majority of the ways and means committee. From its very announcement the symp toms of depression, so pronounced in the early summer, are again apparent. This is no free trade country. Again and auin the voice of the people has pronounced against it, but, undismayed, the democrats keep bringing it up for perennial inspection. They should let it alone, and if they cannot resurrect some oilier old issue that stands a better chance of adoption, set their wits to work and make a new one. In conse-1 tinence of the projected bill, wool imme diately tumbled to nothing. Free wool wa9 of course looked for and is much re gretted, but free wool means a complete transformation of the industry, the re learning of the whole business, and the re-equipment of our mills. Before the domestic manufacturers can adjust them selves to these new condition? under these proposed rates of duty the foreign ers will have had opportunity to possess themselves of the domestic market. There will be an interval of a year or two in which they will have things all their own way in this market, and in the meanwhile a considerable percen tage of existing machinery will retire permanently from business in despair at the future prospects. The rate of wages in those mills which do operate will be lowered from 20 to 30 percent. The bill is a terrible blow to the wool industry. Hie Neiv York Mail and Express says : "The South is beginning to comprehend that it has great interests in maintain ing protection. Louisiana, with its sugar plantations , Georgia antl Tennes see, witii their marble and oilier depos its; Virginia and West Virginia with their coal mines, and Alabama, with its great iron resources, are greatly bene- j iited by the McKinley law. The Louisi ana sugar planters and the West Vir- j ginia coal mine owners have already j asked the house ways and means com-j inittee to consider their interests, and the business men of Birmingham, Ala., have invited the congressional delega tion of the state to visit the place and learn that free coal and iron will mean its ruin. . . . , , increasing, ana the state ayium, al ready crowded to its fullest capacity, be comes more so, interfering with sanita tion and making the whole routine of work burdensome and unsatisfactory. Why should Salem keep interposing ob stacles to prevent what the legislature, I the only representation of the jieople, j enacts. Salem is offensive, she hath be- j come gross with mercenary passions, i ....:... ..Afrt.I.... l . .... mill ... . . .. cl , , democratic administration are like the nothing for humamtv. She should be i The following vatent have tieeti granted to Oregon inventors : W. K. Higgins, Portland, Pavement; J. I'. Kolsey, J. Wallace, J. B. Thompson, Iatbunon, rotary wheeled harrow ; A. MiMier, John l.ty, hay knife. A few tlave ano Mrs. Armstrong, re- siding Utween O-twgo and Oregon i'ity. anil mother of Thomas Armstrong, died suddenly while sitting in her chair. ceasl whs over loo years of a.je. The cause of death was heart disease. J. 1.. Cowan, president of the defunct Linn county National bank:'! A Imny. was arrested Saturday ni;.: ,'i'uty IN EXCHANGE FOR GOODS. ill V it Cannot tiso Wheat that i. or growing in the sacki rotten Ue uill fow 50 tfB. per Sa CURRENT PRESS COMMENT. The newest political party will have to find better eudorsers thau Mrs. Ia'ac and Jerry Simpson before it is taken seriously by the country. The workiuguien of the country under The Oregon National bank of Portland has failed, this time for g'Kxl, and will at once go into the hands of receivers. Col. North says the new tariff bill is not on a line with the Chicago platform. Who said it was? Congressman Ellis for a novice is do ing grand work. He is the father of the house bill granting further time to set tlers, and has stuck to it with bull dog tenacity nntil the end was accomplished. Incidentally it is noteworthy to say that it was one of the first bills to pass both house, and went through without alter tion or modification. If the president has not yet signed the bill we will war rant the assertion that Ellis can't help it. An American woman, Mrs. Mary Vir ginia Treherne, lias just embarked on a perilous enterprise, a pilgrimage through the desert of Syria to the Bedouins and lepers of that region, varied bya week's stay as an inmate in the most noted harem of Damascus and various joints of interest. She is accompanied only by her son, a muscular youth of eighteen, except that she will have guides on en tering the Holy Land. She has letters commending her to all the tribes in Syria, and expects to live in the tents of (he Bedouins and follow their customs. Her journey will end in Beyrout. Anarchism is cowardly and besides productiveof nogood. The bomb thrown Saturday in the chamber of deputies at Paris will have no effect on the govern ment but to strengthen it, and will cor respondingly weaken the canst; of the anarchists and the socialists, who are in nocent sufferers. If the cowardly shots which killed Lincoln and Garfield, or the bomb which killed the Chicago police men in Haymarket, have resulted in any benefit it has yet to be demonstrated. The mission of some men born in this world is to destroy, not to upbuild, and hese are mortal devils. given a salutary lesson. Let the next Eastern anil Southern Oregon represent atives be elected who will favor moving the capital to Portland, the great heart center of the state, and here let It re main. lIOyOLVI.CS AUKS KLKMKST. No part of the argument of Messrs. Oresham and Blount in defence of the revival of the Hawaiian monarchy is weaker than that which criticises those who overthrew the monarchy as a smull minority of aliens. This minority iu numbers, savs the New York Sun, represented then and represents today a remarkable propor tion of the intelligence, the wealth, and the questions that at least the Ameri cans and those born there of American descent are for the annexation of Hawaii ami as long as when Daniel Webster was secretary of state, he found that "five sixths of all the commercial intercourses of the islands is with the United States." A few years since a petition to congress from our Pacific coast asserted that while the shipping interests of all other parts of the country were depressed, !' percent, of the Hawaii-Pacific commerce then amounting to 12,000,000 a year, wascarriedin American-built and American-owned ships. Out of a recent prop erty valuation of rw.oog.uw in the island, $20,500,000 was In American hands.. Again, even in the matter of popula tion the appeal to numbers is mislead ing. The natives not only are in a minority in the islands as a whole, but at Honolulu the census of lS'JQ showed Ti7 vurnlii writ h rnlv ft Sf.' nf thA native race, besides S.OOJ balf castes and 2,480 "Hawaiian-born foreigners," classed w ith the element. But the essential fact is that the gov ernment has always been practically in the hands of foreigners, since constitu tional legislation was established. The action of the leader of thf- foreign ele ment in overthrowing the monarchy was as truly the action of the governing element as if there were twice as uianv lilies of tho field. "Thev toil not; neither do they spin;" and the mug wumps tell them that "Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed" as they are. Which is true. Minister Willis reM)rts to the presi dent that he docs not find conditions in Hawaii as they were supposed to be when he left Washington, which is merely the diplomatic way of calling "My Com missioner" Blouut a liar. It is said that it was Colorado's bach elor miners who carrird the state for woman suffrage. It was a sly scheme to inveigle some of the superfluous female population of the east to the Eveless Eilen of the wild and wooly west. Col orado will make a surprising showing at the next census. t 1 t 1 .i..i;... .t. ini;.,M u. i , bii mien 11.111113 1111: imi..i, 1 Portland, under the indictment returned against him several dsy ml". He i charired with abstracting and misapply iiig a largo amount of moneys. A nutiilier of mwasltos hay Ixen hanging urountl town this week. I'liev have just returned from the inoiinntln and are endeavoring to barter f tro phies of the chase lor spomliilix with which tn purchase Christmas prcM-nts for their sweethearts. Annum other merchantable articles are veiiiaon, deer hides, u few fox skins for which thev ark 2.rU, and arrow heads. Poor Lo is not finding as ready a market aH of PEASE & MAYS THE DALLES, OR. There is No Undertaker Trust! :A. 'i'i!'ti.it ivvriiivc xt.Km.-i viniu av i'it:i!TAk-t-n Vore tnrlftm1.! Irttm miioiie win, i1.-e nut helnti ti the ..fti't.illii. Mini 1 tuiv '.. . .. .... , , i llnviiif uheii the mi''-..,rv ure ul lunlrili-ll ti In hinUiiiulhK. tun n itrtrn. hiiu nu- ;nu in ... p., , . times." Condon t lole. ..Ml (HI IIRlll'l . The Prairie Farmer is uiarchiiis for ward all the time in circulation. It lias matte a net increase since iK't-etnlier 1 , lHili, of nearly L'',H,0 new yearly sub scribers. This record hits never been approached bv any other farm par. Tiie Prairie Farmtr pun regularly each week into more homes than anv other agricultural journal iu America. There is no secret about tills marked success. The Prairie Farmer api-als steadily to the intelligent farmer and his family. It is tho acknowledged mission in a neat letter to Secretary of j leader of the agricultural press in Auier- State (iresham, that reads very much as though it was dictated by the president himself. It is the most perfect example of making the best of a bad bargain that has yet been given to the public. Van spent his foO.OVO and has heart burnings for ids boot. THE MARKETS. Ti'ksuat, Dec. 12 The eity business! traffic is fair to average. The country orders have been light in nearly all lines. The approaching holidays do not seem to infue much of a spirit or disposition among buyers to make purchases other than that which seVms necessary. The city it well supplied with all the luxur ies and withal prices are maintained throughout. In produce the same conditions pre vail as mentioned a week ago. Quota tions are steady on a full supply. The egg market is easier .and presents a weakening tendency. 2o to 2. per ilrvson urns iwilil ?mlltr .. r, ........ ' l ....!. .1 1., tl rft , i . , t .,1 LlUli 111 11-17 t1 7Ui.ll vi fciiuiii in ri The butter market is also weuk, as the j ' , or nwv w,ti aeiut uie i nun' and supply is in excess of the demand. The receipts of poultry continues! aof ivn iinil tit,v- kavi. tin trrml.lf. in ! paerrt ICH. It is clear cut, right up to tlate, prac tical in every one of many departments. It is u positive necessity to the furmer and bis family. It now has more than 2"O,0t readers in all parts of the civil ized world. Dwigbt L. Moody, tite greatest evan gelist of the dav, Hon. Win. C. Brechen- ridge, and other eminent writers, have beeu engaged for special articles during the coming year. Yet their valuable work does not stop in publishing the beat agricultural paper the publishers are bound to give their rea ient the advantage of very low price in securing other journals ; ami by giving u guarantee of a lurgs nuinin'r of yearly sulwcribers, they have secured special cl-jbbing prices with nearly nil of the leading journals in America. They ndvise us that they will send each of our reatk-rs The Prairie Farmer and Omaha Weekly Bee, Imth paer one year, for fl the regular sntcri- a year; rairie Farmer tlil!ir i 'tbilnuiK to tin In- . .ln-. Cixix 1 -r Ovl J ocl X3ny or l'l M V tiK Ill hlSK-- ( rin-r ul TMid aw! V iial:iiiKt'-il Mft-vt. ii:tii e. it .Km: tint triHt. All un!t"i tvititi'ly tttiemtnl t'i. I K TI KK.-; riUMKlt In lUUi. U AT HIKUIT !t(TIt K m lire-iar,,! lutm.- KhslliKNf'E- WW. KICHELL, Unftna&cr and Emtafe' 'Then is a title in the afans 0 t-nn x.'hn'j. taken at it i'l (1IS t'tt tO fitrtHMt ." The poot unquestionably had rtif&renc to Vt C nv-Dit in m FraiiE k Ca at CRANDALL &. BURGET'S, Who are ftelling these Roods out at greatly-reduced r I M1CHF.LBACH BKICK, . PNJON cT. alieus in Hawaii. The native race owns getting enoti'.'ii to meet demands for , 1 home use ami lor export at fi.tH; to fo.-o mh tlmn riv-7. iir punt nr lip vuhirt 1 1nn a ; 1 ' to assume that the if... . umiteu ami i cts. per in. live, is atiottt of the islands : regulation of the great property interests should be left to such a minority is absurd. No colony, no country would endure what the logic of Messrs. Ores bam and Blount seems to suggest. All the civilization and all the good government of this hemisphere would have been put in jeopardy at its founda tion by such views of "-aliens" and "foreigners'" as are indicated iu the words of Mr. (iresham and Mr. Blount. Our countrymen have been the chief means of making Hawaii what she is today, and they did not propose that a reactionary queen should nndo their work, destroy their property and take away their political rights. "Town Topics," a New York sporting paper, nevertheless a careful and learned authority on finance and stocks, says : "January disbursements will amount to 193,000,000. Some portion of this must be reinvested. Money is already too abundant; watch speculative bonds and good stocks both are going higher." From which we judge that times in the east are livening up quite perceptibly. the price. Tho market for ducks and geese' is quite flat. Tho principal buyers are the Chinese. $3.00 to .'5.o0 is the range of quotations. The live stock market presents no new feature, beef cattle range in quotations from $l.f5 per cwt. for fat cows to $2.25 for prime, fat steers. Mutton sheep are in good supply and $1.75 to $2.15 per head is the market range. The hog market shows a decline in prices. Yesterday a fine lot of fat pork ers were sold at $1.40 per 100 pounds on foot. The top figures, a leading dealer told us today, would not exceed $1.50 per 100 pounds. His opinion was the farmers were rushing deliveries of pork beyond present reqniremenU and were they to hold nntil after the holidays better prices would lie obtained. The grain market is unchanged so to speak, although it was somewhat off, as buyers were loath to put out money on the small margin in sight at present prices. In eastern markets rejiorts say there is a firm undertone. The best time for workmen to strike is when business is brisk and when, conse quently, labor is in great demand ; when, for the same reason, employers cannot afford to shut up their mills or railway companies to reduce their scale of operations. The worst time to strike is when business is dull, for then there 'f COMPOUND. rpcent dijeowy by mn Id )mnnthlif fcy th&ua n of Latlitu Is to cnljr jK-rfoei! Ufa and reliable m.icinn d eorered. Beware of unprincipled drugUM who k4V .-!.. lo tlnl la latv t. .m are always plenty of men ready to take . took-, cotton li..ot Compound, tak no vacant places and employers find it t tot'ow at nl o cnt in potnin letter sail we will aend, dealer!, fry return ma!u FuJla-nucI places and employers more profitable lo quit business or cur tail it than to continue in full force. Fgo, the present is a hard time to strike. Congressman Jerry Simpson, of Kan sas, has been analyzing the returns of the recent elections, and so far from being dismayed, lie makes haste lo pro claim that be has found much in the later returns "to cause the populist to feel that the future is very bright for them." According to the honorable Jerry, the greater part of the popnlist rote was cast in the country districts; whereat the first newspaper returns showed the result in the cities only. Furthermore, he says, the old parties parti-alam l-i plain envelope, to ladl only. Itampi. AtiarvM Fen4 Lily Company. Kn. S 'Ubr IlliKk, Detroit, Klch. hold In The bailee by illiikelev at Houston. fibiloli's cure, the Great Cough and Croup Cure, is for sale by fcnipes & Kin ersly. Bucket size contains twenty-five doses, only 25c. Children love it. cold ty Hnipes & Kinersly. Captain fSweeney, U. S. A., San Diego, Cal., says: "8hiloh's Catarrh Kemedy is the first medicine I have ever found that would do me any good." Price 50 cU. Sold by Snipes & Kinersly. Use Mexican Silver Stove Polish. the Weekly Inter Ocean, both one year, lor ifl.-o. iiiey also have many other special otIVr at an v ceedingly low price. These secial offers are made exclu sively by The Prairie Farmer, and the very low prices cannot m secured from any other source. The oll'ers are open only to January 1, lhi'-i. Make all remittances to The Prairie Farmer Pub. Co., 100-luS Adams H., Chicago, III. Karl's Clover Boot, me new blood purifier, gives freehness antl clearness to the complexion anil cures constipation. 25c, 50c. and $1.00. Sold by mmikm. A Kinersly, druggists. THEY LOST THE WRONG MEN. It Vim Only the od hnllnrm Who le evrted the t nreln-n llimt. The number of ilewirtions that actu ally occurred whilo the foreign rthips of war were here h not liecn pul lished. but since no complaint has Wen heard from the commanders pcnerally the number cannot have Wen large. Down at Old Point Comfort, just as the ship were weighing anchor to move up to this city, a reporter of the New York Kun nuked the captain of one of the Entflihh ships how many men he lost in Virginia. "Only four, sir," said the captain, "but they were the wrong; fonr. When we dropped anahor here I culled up a number of men that I hail had my eyes on for a long time, and I suiil to them: 'Itxik here,' I tutitl, 'you're a lnd lot. You're always making trouble aboard nhip. I'll tell you what I'll do with you. I'll give you five shillings apiece if you 11 cut ami run when you fro aahore here.' "That's what I ttuid to them, but they're with me yet. You enn't pet rid of bad pennies like them. They'd rather stay antl stir up mischief, it'a the (rood men that we lost, and more of them take French leave in New York. It's .the ambitious, push-nhetid fellows who think they'll pet to bj Vantlerbllts if they have half a chance' those are the kind that turn up miss ing every time." DOWN IN THE QULEH THINCJ I JAPAN. MiulliuenlMl Vlewe of tlio Tropin lltrar. Ins; Kluireps antl .lurrmir. The JapaiiPM have a plant caller "Omoto." ttliw growth anil cumlt tion are believed by tunny of that enri tni race to typify the miirriti'.-e r.'.iiU' When a young cotrole of ' U-lievi f ." marry, they curry with them to tln-ir home a specimen of the omoto, plant it and cnr-ttilly tetnl tut.l watch it, in the full confidence that iw 1o:ij' ui.it aliowi. heaUliy lievelnpnu nt the permit;. elite ami prtperily of the m:.rrui,"e for tunes involved lire Mit'-ve1y a.-.tn- .i Tin- .lupaiifM-. us i, well liine.vn, n:e full of sentiment regonliii;: Mowers, am! niill another li;tulle of th! tn!t (M i-nrs in the matter of prorniMiU f murrinfre. In hou where there t.re nilirria(.'etble tlai!;;hter, it ih the ein. tom to Mihticntl from a windoy.. nr ver nndtt, by lie;ht chuinn, nn empty fuse or llowcrMit. The miitor, irintcad of sertMiatliuir bis innmonita, approaches, her dwellin;'. U-aring siinie choice plniit iu his hand, and this he cureful ly tlejMMiits with the nee.-st.ary earth in the empty vane. TUs is done ur-rcptitiousl-. ;:nd the 0 t is never wit neshed. Hi, performance, however, is viewetl in tiie 1 i; t. t)f an honorable proposui or iii.ti in regartt which t!i youn.r- lady interested free to tie. iue as ?.(, ple:isos. If the donor is. tiie right man. she take cure of his f.'ift. tends und watert, it, antl thus muUcs it evident thut he is her ueoepted suitor. If. however, lit is not in favor with eitherthe lady her self or her parents, the plant is r morM'lessty torn from the vase and thrown usitlc. wlierv the waitiny and anxious lover (iritis it, blighted like his Ijo)m'. THE INNS OF ITALY. Cnnilltlmi. U hleli Would Not lie A(r. hie to All Trmmlnra. Hiiliati life is, even in small villnirrs, .ill tiiit-of-tliKirs. The kitchen of an 1 Utlian inn, no matter of what tlerrei,' Ms always a warm hearth, and its larder ia more plentifully stored than .1 public house in Kiie-lund of the same description. The only fuulU -some one iniiy think it in a long ami a rather complete list are noise, dirt untl uni versal disorder anil confusion. Thev never know what nsuns they liiive; they bnwl out to eneh other, the landlord to the landlady, and the latter lo the waiter: -Try nunilsT f'tflv-M-ven or forty-six!" till ut lust they find you n betl'diumlier. In the morning there is kms-king at your next (,ior neighbor's, or by mis t.iKc nt yonr own tloor. to nsk whether it be not you who ore to be off bv curly conch nt six: ormiivbeit is Shiloh's Vitaliser Is w bt too tutu dys;H-Hiia, torpid liver, ysliow kin kidney trouble. It is pttrinteed Kive you satisfaction. Pri "4e M by fniiMa A Kinersly, drnggiitt. NOTICE. I' . I.st (irrii s. Tint riu i Sm. i, I t',mt,ln!nt lur lie Iwiji nti-nvlt t,i,A lv smIi.hi s. Sniuii Hv,ilut V.jiujm J,'r-'w; 'i iituoiiliniliit; Ui . ii-iiti-..irmil ..'jlrv ,ti, 1 ilnlnl Mel,. !l. I , iii. iii W. ,Jnr 1 i li" in.i. Niirtli. tliiw u tin, iu I i riniiitv , iritrnu. vt ith h Wfw hi Uv mttiUU' I nt ftfiitl ciitr . lli- "Hl -rtie kit lun-rrf m- J ! iniilirl to tiiMMr l till i-ervuli tbr 1.1b ilni J ' l.-ii-i'lnlwr, li-i,;. si lit i.fk A M., t' ir. I nml tnrtii.li Ufumiini'X tsmectmut ui! lili'.i ! NUiuiliilnui-lit. J ; JOHN tt . IJ.W'.t, Kfirt I ; Addistrator'BNot: f.ntni I lieri-iir veii that thi. iu ' lies Innii Uuly Ml'lmthliil 1'T lis t entity t niirt of tl hm-ii nitinty, rtilllllrrl.r ill II oatelr ol Jot.lt ba sm'ii emintv. Mtilt linw ih-rtsw.4 All peraettii riuOiE rleuiie mit will iiis.--nt tli.iii. iliily veriiiit, " iiltiiw of Hi- t i il ii tn tun l-erkit thevotner ill Unnl nml V. ..-hlliittiit; Imlliot .lv. WeM-i, ('.iliiitv, t Inn'. ' lliiilitlm flnm t!ie lint- ul till" IKHIi listed l iielko t;it, ".. 1st '.' I . k. t riiit' ul aii;:l Ailtn'r mWitf nl J""H Ho"" Administrator's Sals Wtu-rrne. tin- linliiitnlilil Ciiuiitt I eel'' rttamn t,.li, lirr rr. eiinim. " ' iiv ul Niireniiirr. Il, iliily '" rtln me. the llllllerlfliril. Ilw e-ll' ert. qiiHliHi-rl anil wIiiik ailiiniiW"'" nlnlrnl Wlllliiui A. Ailen. I"' Ininl-atirl .r, iiil-,,. la'imiKinr I" ) hamnaltrr ll-.i rll.il. at ptllilte eaJK1 hivlimt tiiililer. Iiir rh In uawV "' line, hi iiuiatiaiin nl aalil will, mi Hie Ith ilajr of January. I" nt the himr nf two o rlia k In tlw alii ilny, at tliv Inmt il.air nl ' tnili- Iu i,ill.n l llv, .n nioil-' ' , at imlille Hiiiitli.fi In Hie hixli-t ",. In liainl, tiie ImiiiU ion! l,"","""Ji,Lti . mid etMte, mill mrtH;ulnrl j lewa, W-wit. rtSfV The elilln-iir't linrUT im1 Hi , ,. ter nl tlir aniitlmiKl iiirliT l v ji' tiiwililmp I mirth, nl run W "' . Iillliette .Merllllllll. Ill VaMSi f '"j eiiiitninliiir iii a-r-, more if '" Ki'tlier with all anil liiainr "f 1 thereim. Sinil (Hlewlll lie I""'' , pVnvnl ami eimiiriiiHtiiiii nun .... ,r u - tttCil CIK1". ' MINES. It takes I,.-,oo,o(M) men lo work the ctiol mines of the world. Al.AdK A prodlleed ,ll()l,(.(,() worth of fr'old last your and f'ulifoniia l-.'omi -WW. ' Twt-THIItl.fl t,f the ,ru, ,UIW UM, in the world was disevereil tlurinir the last fifty yenrs KlOIIT THOI .TtAMi, tons f K, I(11VI. been mined throuvh-mt the world dur int,' tiie presi-n; cenl-.irv. I tor flu- waiter. olHeiininiy wuKinn; you up to inform you that "it is only four, and you have still two hours for your si um ber." You alwuvs seem to t-ateh them at the wroni moment, always llntl them unprepared, its if theirs were anything but an open house, and a traveler the most unlooked-for thinjr In the world. Their cordial frroelino; nod friendly bustle help y,m to overlook the discom fort thut every traveler is sure to ex perience, and the abundance of the ta ble is on the plane with the innkeep ers appetite he is ever reodv "to eat and let eat." I n t,il nt IihIIi-i litr, itii tiny of NnvetnlMir, I""'1 l.r l IlidE -itdilj.t Ail in rentiilviil ni. o - i i. , UoilertakD; EstaMsb Ci,t)t NITSCHK, PEAl-EKe IS J Furniture and Carp ( " nil"'11 W. have addetl to omplete t, ntierii-s ntrtr i i . . i net WV 0"u 1 the Untlertaker.' Truit, oar P be low accorlinsiy.