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About The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947 | View Entire Issue (July 11, 1894)
THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY. JULY 11. 1894. The Weekly Ghroniele.j . okkoon Til: tl.ll.l.fcrt, " ; 1 " - fi vv T- ClUDDing JjlSt. The Chkoniclic, which gives the news twice a week, ha niatle arrangements to club with the following publications, and offer two paers one year for little more than the price of one : Kenur our pntV IHl? pruv puce firoiirlr ui V V Tnknu CtruiirU iW rrlU rff mill .. Ciruiiel ui lif.ilii lifitut . .2.50 1.7o 3.00 '.'.tX ! . 3.00 '-'.25; (.()) TII7.V C.ARS Only one Mwer can break the dead lock caused by the strike. Everywhere deputy margin's are hooted, disarmed and beaten. In California the state ni.litia fraternized with the strikers, turning state ammunition over to them. Only in Chicago are there men set to guard property and prevent disorder be fore whom the mob retires in resjieetful silence the moment they appear. These men wear blue uniforms and carry am m.init ion for other purpose than divi sion with rioter. Oregonian. The big dally down in Portland always gets wrnthy when a dispute arise between corporations and their . , :" ' . .. , .....-- ........ . ..vo . ........v , . .. o dii-s not admit that this present strike has two side to it, but instead assails the strikers and its editor grimly gloats over the prospect oi bloodshed. He is a tit companion for Pullman, believing in the divine rights of capital and conced ing nothing to labor but the privilege of oleying its behests. In common with Pullman and the railroad corporations, he uelievea the United States army be longs to the corporations, and that it is organized and maintained for the pur pose of enforcing the commands of capital to labor. Looking at the privi leges of capital the Oregonian editor Kates into ihe small end of the telescope and objects seem exceedingly large. Examining the rights of labor he re verses lua telescope anrt things are re motely distant and ridiculously small. The United States troops are maintained for the protection of all the people, not a part of them, and General Miles will j hesitate a long while before ordering; tbem to fire on American citizens. The situation just now shows an organ ization of the railroad companies to crush labor, and an organization of labor to ' maintain its rights. These two organ i cationa have met in battle. Who is there shall pay which side the troops should join? The business of the country is paralyzed by Pullman, and by him alone. Ti.e railroad companies are standing by him, and at the same time demanding the aid of the govern ment to protect them directly, so that Pullman may be protected indirectly President Debs offers to submit the whole matter of the differences between Pullman and his employes toarbitraiion, and plrdges the latter to abide by that -arbitration. To this Pullman says there ih nothing to arbitrate, and calls on the railroad companies and the United ; States troops to back np his assertion. We in common with every other man in I the country (except Pullman and the i acts of lawlessness will set anarchy wild raiiroa! manager) desire to see this ' and threaten the existence of the govern strike ended, peaceably and without ment. It is time for every patriotic citi bloodshed; to see business resumed be- j zen striker or not to pause and consider fore suffering and want strike the i well where the tnd is to be. It would masses; to see labor and capital adjust j be a strange spectacle indeed to see a their differences equitably to both ; to civil war growing out of this strike, yet see every man and every corporation i it promises that. Should such a thing given full rights and privileges. But ! occur the conditions under which the now that this strike is on it is better for late war was fought would be reversed, the country that it be not fcettied for and it would be the South on which the years, than that it be settled wrongly, j government would have to rely for its by force. Mr. Debs makes in behalf of J greatest, strength. We think, however, labor a fair, manly proposition to nrli-1 trate the differences between Pullman and his employes. Now let the railroad companies force Mr. Pullman to accept or refuse to pull his cars. That will settle the difficulty, and it will settle it r'K,lt' .1 FOOLISH AGENT. Most of this community is finding fault with the manner in which the mails are delivered, or rather are not delivered here. At present the mail from Portland Is brought op to Bonne ville on the U. P. construction train, then hauled by wagons to the Locks and sent from there by the steamer Irma. This community does not ;are how it get its mails so that it gets thetn, but it does find fault with Special Agent Yaile, who in order to stand in with the Union Pacific railroad keeps it without mail service that tan lie depended upon. No doubt Captain Coe is doing the best he can with the Irma, but that best is not vid enough as long as there is some better way. The little steamer Irma is not calculated for so long a run, or to buffet the rough waters of the middle Columbia. If Mr. Yaile would send the muil by the Kegnlator it would reach here between 7 and 0 o'clock each night, and would leave promptly at 6 o'clock each morning. As it is there is no cer tainty about it. This community is entitled to better service, because that fcetter service can be procured with no greater expense than the present ar rangements. We know of no reason why Mr. Yaile should have developed so jrreat it regard for the Union Pacific, or 10 great disregard (or the rights of the people of Eastern Oregon. Wo suggest I however, that if the postmaster general ' cau't control the wild exuberance nf hi ( I gpjfjai agent's allection, ao that lie can j perform Ills unties in a manner to satisfy the public that lie'Vall out the troop." I That a the wiv the business of the j ' countrv has to be managed these day the t:si all right. is probably the t ii. u tin.l The present strike iu.t .,r..,.,.iru.l .flair of the kind ever j aUeu(,etl, vet the result show that the game trouble that ha met every strike ha alllicted thi one. No one doubt but that the great majority of thme tak- ing part in the strike are law-abiding, patriotic citiiens; but the unruly ele - mom tins Ptr...llv destroyed the eili- ' caey of the organization by violating the I law, and also, no doubt, the obligation they each took on joining the order. It is truly unfortunate that this strike was not settled on lines within the law, a it could ami should have been. The question between capital and labor ha to be settled, and it might as well have I been fought to a tinieh now as any time. The issue was made up and made souarely, but it bus been superseded, i It is no longer a question between labor and capital ; between Pullman and his ' employes, or between the striker and i the railroad companies. It is now sun I ply a question between rightand wrong; j between the government and those mis- guided people who have attached them- selves to the strikers to the latter' undoing; lie t ween law and anarchy. There is but one conclusion for the affair the law must win. We know the element of whicu the railroad em ployes are the perfect type. They art bright, energetic, vigorous, determined men; good citizens, good patriots ; and no one need fear that if the question conies as to whether thev shall choose however good it may be, and that for which their grands'.res fought at Lexing ton and Monmouth ; at Iirandywine and Eutaw Springs; consecrated at Valley Forge and sealed at Yorktown, but that j the answer will be such a the descend- ants of such sires should make. ; The amount of bloodshed, of suffering ! and of sorrow necessary to a final solu , tion of the difficulty depends largely on the action of the strikers. Ana.chy lias struck the strike and given it a death blow. THE SITL'ATIOS SKRfOiS. A dispatch appearing on our front page entitled "An Appeal from Debs" is a sensible statement, a comprehensive grasping of the situation in its true light. No doubt the position taken by Mr. Debs is indorsed by nine-tenths of the 1 strikers, but it is the other tenth that raise the trouble, because they cannot be controlled. In Chicago this factiou broke away from control and burned cars and properly valued at nearly a million and a half dollars. This has brought the issue directly lictween the strikers and the government. The latter must arrest and punish those tak ing part in this lawlessness, if it takes every dollar and man in the cointryto do it. Why? Becaufe if it is not done law is a farce, and anarchy will rule. Indeed the situation now in Chicago is such that failure to promptly stop the ! the backbone of the strike is broken for 41. I I I ,1 1 'I Ml u.e tooier neau among ,ne tmaer w... be driven to abandon the movement, if Biich acts as those in Chicago are to be ! the result. The situation is serious more so than most of us dream of, and if it does not rise to the dignity of a civil war, the nation will be fortunate. The president has proclaimed martial law in Illinois, Indiana, California and Idaho, and the strike in those states will be carried on in a peaceable man ner, or it will not be carried on at all. There are some little tricks about mar tial law that few people understand. Liberty then consists in doing what one is permitted to do, going where one is permitted to go, and in fact getting a taste of such law as the despots of old administered. A trial by court martial has nothing farcical about it, and is re markably brief. When the present troubles are fettled the government will do a good thing by arresting anil deporting Ilerr Most. The deportation should be made by way of the hangman's noose, thus guarantee ing his remaining aw ay perpetually. The Oregonian waxes sanguinary over the strike situation, and wants somebody killed. If someone would lend its incarnadine editor a gun and a blue uniform, the strike business would soon be settled. Has anyone heard anything of con gress and the Wilson bill recently? Or Djvid Bennett Hill, or any other little thing of that kind? j UROKMUil AS A I'ROl'llET. Judge llroiiaogh of rortlaiul predict the end of tiie world in 1SW), getting hi idea from the bible. The judge goes hack to Moses, Abraham, Noah and Panicl for hi proof, and make a show lug perfectly satisfactory to hininelf. Ho also takes iroiisidcrahle atoek in the : demoruliiing ell'eet of un pota, ac j counting for Hood, lire, strike and the 1 democratic enate bv them. We think ! liu correct in his idea as to the : general euesedness of condition, but i gene " of making the venerable charae- t ... f ai...iunt lin.aa ak) mill! Itltl t,r v - : '" lk ll0"- j Tin political conditions, where.., the ' to override the des reto.ee j ' -''''ll"T i Kre.nl of cor- ! "orations, and the consequent unpnrta- lion of immense horde of ignorant la'nirers ; the anarchistic tendency of this latter class ; the getting nearer to Mammon and Baal, and the getting farther from the do-trines of the Naza reno and the golden rule; the desire to possess without the willingness to earn ; the false teaching of political dema gogues; the waning inlliience of the pulpit, and the degeneracy of the press all these combined form cause enough and are the factors entering into the problem. Mr. Pironangh need not go back morn than thirty years, or possibly more than ten or twelve, to find abundant reasons for present social and political condi tions. A firm executive and the regu lar army will tinet Mr. lironauh's thforle and wie out the can so of his dreams and visions. OTHER VEOfl.r. S RldUTS. Men sometime become so keen in i pursuit of their own right that they i forget the rights of other. This has ! ta-'n the case in the present strike, ! There are thousands of people in the pension of traffic that have no interest in the strike or the causes that led up to it. Little children are deprived of milk, grown people of fresh meat and vege tables. Thousands are thrown out of employment, and will even suffer for the necessaries of life. The question natur ally arise, Have the strikers the legal or moral right to deprive the balance of the country of its rights in order to pro tect its own? We think not. Debs in his appeal grasps the whole situation. Any men or any set of men may quit work whenever they please, but the balance of the world has a right to jog along without them if it can. The farmer has a right to sell and the con sumer to buy, in spite of the fait that Pullman did not pay enough wages, and this they will do in spite of strikes that are fought by the use of force and vio- ienoe- The strike is getting "no better fast." In New Jersey yesterday strikers cap tured a milk train, uncoupled tiie en gine and rail it up the track half a mile. Then they started the engine back un der a full head of steam, letting it crash into the cars from which it had just been uncoupled. The milk train was demolished. It is expected that Debs will play hi biggest trump card today. How many will follow suit is hard to say, but the ,utention to Imve cvery labor orKa"'- zatlon in the country strike today. Should this move prove successful, it would make confusion a hundred times worse confounded. The typographical j union are about ready to go out, and should they do so and be joined by the telegraphers there would be neither newspaiiers nor new s. Should the other labor organizations go out as Debs ex pects them to, the strikers would num ber nearly a million of men. Prendergast is to be hanged at Chicago Friday, unless Governor Alt geld interferes and commutes his sen- lece- wuh runljj wl,j , chi u ig not R eooJ . live clemency, and it is therefore proba- ble the execution will take place. It is tough on a poor devil like Prendergast that his neck must be broken on account of the strike, but such is the case. If there were no riots in Chicago the chances are as ten to one his sentence would have been commuted. Special Postal Agent Yaile should be arrested, for he is the only man in Ore gon interfering with the transportation of the mails. If it were not for him, and the sending of the inail was left to the postmasters, or any common, every day business man, the mails would ar rive here every evening. As It is, left to the supervision of n man with a num ber twelve hat, they get here semi-occa-sionally. County Contt. The commissions' court will proba bly conclude its labors today. Nearly all bills have been acted npon, and a great number of petitions for assistance in repairing roads have been read and decisions reached. Owing to the record books being constantly referred to it was impossible for ye scribe to got hold of them long enough to get a good start on them, as there are over 400 docket entries. Whiskers that are permanently gray or faded should be colored to prevent the look of age, and Buckingham's Dye excels all others in coloring brown or black. i, i rivpi n irn uMiUI L'VTl I l.l ll.lt .VI Ml ".A""' TO iirc't' K TilV. K T LI A HI. IE LKAKT TO.MOHIIOW. Ueb Hay tUm Hlrlk " III K.a.'h Trail ami that It Will Cul minate Tomorrow. It Will llvarh all Trail. all Cint'A'io, July 10. Special to The Ciiiionu i..! President IMm in an ad dress to hi men today, says: "The in dustries of Chicago will be completely tied up tomorrow. This trouble has gone beyond the control of the Ameri can Hallway XTnion,orof any other or ganization. The masse have taken hold of it. and atrikeo( the most gi- gantic proportion i sure to come. So , i far a the l!ai wav I nion I concerned, things look brighter than ever. Vio- lenco I what we most fear, and if we can restrain our hotheads and keep clear of the mob of thugs who are try - . , tug to ruin us, we will win. A special grand jury wa sworn in today. llrlilire Hurn.il at Kllvn.liurtf. i.i.LKNsiu-Kii, July iu.-i.ine pnn oi Northern Pacific bridge across Yakima river, seven miles north of here, burned early this morning. No particulars ob tainable. A f irce is now at work re pairing damages. Transfers will be made and running of train not seriously interfered w ith. Everything quiet here. Troops for Nurramviito. J San Ekancisco, J'lly 10. The steamer Alameda, carrying two troops of cavalry . . . I striker are well armed, having KKX1 j Winchesters Iwsides shotgun and revol- i vers. A liattlo is expected. A I.varivr Arrvateil. Miuv.u'KKK, July 10. President Frank Archibald, of the local railway union, was arrested today. The right at Chicago nuturriajr. CuicAiio, July 7. The regulars have opened fire at last and twenty men at least have gone down before thorn. There is no telling how many are wound ed. A fight occurred on the tracks of the Chicago & Western Indiana road, at Forty-seventh and Loomis streets. The mob attacked the troops and the latter at once replied to the assault with a volley. A train is now bringing in the wounded to the city. 4 :05 p. in. The cause of the fight was an attack on a wrecking train made by the mob. Western Indiana workmen had partially succeeded in clearing away the obstruction when the mob drove them away. A company of regulars were close at hand, and word was sent them for aid. The regulars responded on the run, and in a few minutes were confronting the mob. The rioters were ordered to move back or they would be fired npon. ' They refused to move on or disperse, and the order to fire was given. Only one volley was fired. The number killed is variously estimated at from 20 to 3U, and tiie number wounded as many more. As soon as the news of the shoot ing reached the army headquarters, ad ditional troops were hurried out to lend assistance, and a dozen patrol wagons loaded with police oflicers were hurried to the scene, but before their arrival the fight was over, and the mob, which fled like sheep at the first shot, was com pletely routed. In a short time the in jured men were picked up by soldiers and members of the wrecking crew and taken up on a train which started for the city at a rapid rate. Again th Tarlft. Washington, July 8. The final effort to reconcile the differences between the senate and house on the tariff will be made tomorrow. The democratic co li fe rrees will meet at noon in the finance committee room. The republican cou ferrees have not been asked to be pres ent. It is not as a committee, there fore, that the meeting will be held, and it is understood to be the purpose to hold no meetings of the full committeo till the four democratic senators and foil democratic representatives have reconciled all their differences. The democratic members of the committee say they can expedite their work lietter among themselves than they could, if constantly exposed to the harassment of the minority conferrees. Willi this program in view there may be no meet ing of the committee a a whole for a week or ten days. In the meantime the democrats will proceed with the work and when agreements have been reached, in whole or in part, the republicans will be called in and the committee as a whole will act on what the democratic members have previously agreed. This is similar to the plan followed by the ways and means committee in framing the bill and by the democratic mem Iters of the finance committee when it was in that body. Th lalon Taninc. Oodes, July 8. The situation is rap. Idly clearing. This morning eight com panies of regulars from rort Douglas, under command of Captain Palmer, numbering 450 men, reached here on a ami live companies o. aruuery i" comiJent of their know ledgo ot the per for Sacrameulo at noon today. The , pctrator. 1 special I'nion I'acillc train. I'pon ar- , a ,.Hlllp wa formed, a line .iretched aiound the depot ground, sen- I tine! placed, and all striker and public ordered to keep out. No attempt wa made, by the striker to prevent train arriving or departing. The Kioliraade. ent out two trains today. The regular overland train for Denver and the F.t li ft on lime, w it li three rullmiin. The I'liion I'iicitlc sent a local train over the ITlah Northern this afternoon, also a ! train to Salt Lake. No Central Facilic IrilillM have arrived or departed. Six companies of regular will remain until train service i established. The I'nion Pacific w ill reauuie all train on nehcd ulo time tomorrow. Several fire were started thi morning, which seemed to have Inen of incundiary origin. , Wut, t lnulli chargvil j IUwii.i.k, III., dulv S. Sixty empty ; Ihix car owned by the P.ig four and j Chicago & Eastern Illinois road were " r.ii.i, burned here tin evening. I.arly in the I n mnh sried a Vuhah engine and I rt,H),, i, disperse at the slnirifl's j command. A company of military j l.rg.-.l the mob. several peron being badlv hurt bv bayonet, " N Trams 'an Kasi Chii-aiio, Ind., July H. I n k now n inicreaiit set lire to and under- i mined one of the piers of the railroad bridge over the drainage canal, just south of the city. The bridge is now impas.-ulile, ami no Wabash or port Wayne trains ,-an pass until the repair are made. Itrlilu" lliirnml at Ml. I'aul. Sr P.vri,, July S. At " o'clock thi morning the Chicago dreat Western bridge lietwcen here and West St. Paul was burned. All Ntockyard traffic on the road will be toped for the present. The lire was incciidiarv. The notice are I ' MlU'lirll Nntna. Mitchell' improvements are still going on. Wo are to have a cabinet shop. Mr. Andrew is the proprietor. Sheep shearing in the Bridge Creek country completed today. Mr. Carnett relinquishes hi right to the stage line betweeu here and Ante lope today, and the new proprietor starts on his first trip tomorrow Also Mr. Seigfort, the contractor who carries the mail from here to Canyon, has made hi last trip, and Mr. Marion Gillan takes charge. Mr. Gillan is well known by cvery nuu iu this section, and all wish him luck. The weather notes of the last ten day have been changeable, with a few days of last week quite cool. At present it is oppressively warm, with thunder in the distance and clouds hanwing thick, having a very threatening appearance ; but, witli the abundance of rain that ha fallen all spring and summer, the ground at present is dry, and n shower is much needed. The general health i very good at present. Although there ha been much complaint, there has lieen no seri ous illness. Mr. Sjssers children have been complaining some tlio past week with a slight attack of the grippe. Grandma Mansfield puscd out oi this' life the last day ol June at the ripe old I age of 72 years. Let u not mourn fori one upon whom so many years have been crowded, with the multitudinous cares that must come to one that has tiie management of a home and i sponsor for the well being of a family, which ha been numerous. Let only the tear of n pleasant memory conre ! the cheek a you smooth the snowy j li:ks of that aged mother. Let no re-' grets come to you that she has passed over to the mystic, shore Her lite work i done, and it ha been done a well as she knew. She wa so tired, so weary. Let your voice ri.i up in a thankful ness that her tired feet will stumble no more over rough and uneven ways; that her toil-worn hand will loose their weary tenure as she i pilott'd on )y loving guides to her haven of security, of ace, of quiet, of rest that come to all that have lived a life of worth. Farewell, but for a time. Mitchell is making a many prepara tion to entertain as sumptuously ns these hard time will admit on the Fourth. I do not think the.ro will te any fireworks, or, In fact, not anything of much dimensions, for you know Mitchell hn been one of the sufferers from high water, and there is no room left for such displays. E. V. f ;. Mitchell, July I, lsii). iMifnr linings. The weather has been very sultry, taming the grain to curl somoM hat and in some eotion the aphis is working. Mis Mary Douglass ha relumed from a visit to relatives at Eagle creek, CUckamas county. Miss Maud (taunt left for her home nt Center.llle, Wash. Mr. O. K. Butler made a flying trip on biiHiness to our berg the other day. The Fourth was celebrated here by a spirited game of baseball. In the even ing a ball was given at which a large crowd was present. Nearly fifty couples participated in the mazy tread of the light fantastic. All who attended ex pressed themselves ns well pleased with the evening. A party consisting of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Johnston, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnston. Mr. and Mr. C. P, IUci. Wm. YuiiderMil and family and sevr(j other went camping a short ditane( from Shell Kock, where they ta several days tihing, limiting and enjoy, ing the scenery. One special featui was a shake drive in which Wm. Van. derpool took out U'lween 'J000 and :tOuo shake that were floated for the diHtanct of over half a mile and caught at th lower end by a dam and piled in placs. The ladle partook of the pleasure , well as lending their iissistance. Qui wilt be absent for an outing u two or three week and will le,, Query to gather the usual weekly hmli of Dufur bon-bon of business, lov OT tragedy. Mr. tieo. Dufur spent hi Fourth nmoiig li. Mr. Frank Menefee i in town visit mg Mrs. Slusher ami w ill reiiinin sooit time. Qtlx. Last Juno, Dick Cruwf.ird brought liii twelve moiiihs old child, Miiffcring from infantile diarrhoea, to mi!. It had been weaned at (our mouths old and Mnj sickly everything rim through it like water through a sieve. I give it th usual tieatuii'iit in such case, but with out benefit. The child kept grywinf thinner until It welk'lii'd but lilt In, more than when born, or perhaps ten pomuli. 1 then started the father to giving Chamberlain' Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Lemcdy. Before one bottl of the '.'i cent sire had lieen used, a marked improvement was evn and iti continued use cured the child. In weakness mid puny constitution diiap peared ami it father and myself heliuvr the child's life was saved by thi remedy. J. T. Milium, M. D.. Tamarm, 111. for tale by lllakeley A Houghton Drily- eit. Lighting i getting to be a little too prevalent in thi cction to be comforta ble La! Sunday afternoon a thunder shower came up and alsiut three o'clock the lightening struck the new school building at tlii place. It first hit th belfry, tearing off most of the trimming and shuttering it badly, then pasted down through the root, torn off a lot of ceiling and rustic just alaive the front door, muhed the transom, split th two large door into splinter, and then passed down through the floor out of sight. Large piece of laiurd wen afterward found fifty yards away. Tbt damage will amount to '0 or f7o. It is but a short time ago that the light ning struck Mrs. Ulisun, and killed t horse belonging to Boyd Ahby. An telope Herald. For nl or lint. A two story house, f) rooms, villi s well kept garden surrounding it and only lo minute walk from the btlineN center, will be Mold or luliit fall rented. Inquire at thi ollice. '.'ts daw. SAILED THE SEAS 38 YEARS. One of His Experiences. I nr tlilrtT-ck'M yi-nrs ( npt. I.'Mid folio" tin Hi-ii, tnorti uf Hint I line In ent-li-r of vm" ju'l. null i m tti Htrlni: from Km vaicr so- in iMiPio il liy ine Cs-orelHry of tiie linlnsl r''" 1 r-iuiury In Mj'roil'lit Itie --eul lt.h ' f l-- la Ala-.Ua 'which Ki.uion lie tielil tivo ycnru. M riiiis one e fTii'ii-e i. follows: . "I't.r ".overal yi-un I hud Iss-n troohli if ''" fTi'iii-rul iierviiu.im-sM imii pitlli hi tin' lv.:i'l of lov hiirt. iVIy (inniiwi ntlh'-llo'i r:M kOi.-nlAKjnutiM; H wa iihiioet IniptttUhl' ul "n7 lllne loollMln rest mill o-i i. Iluvlii;( ishsj I r. Mil. nimetll.-s luKenl-eil I h.-ir.il. u-tn Ni-rvine. Afi-r luklnu n small iiuooi' n Is'iiflu n tvi-il wa-- so rival that I en."Ge lively lll.miwll, llihlklio.' Hie IfliH-ilv C" lalni-il oplali-s whkh would tinally Is- tii)"n oiis In iiim; hot on Is'tnir H-siin-il hy thi' limit' Hit that It wiih wrfiftly harml!--. 1 loll,l in it It hut-ther with llni Heart ure 1 ciiti coii.-.-li-nt loudly say Unit lir. Mil'".' sloruiive Ni-rvlne iiiiiI New Heart Hiiiv il" in. in-fur mo than miythhm I Inul ever Ink" I ha'l Ih-ioi Ii-i'.'iIimI hv eminent pliVHli'inn In Sew York ami 1-an KranciM-o without tn elo I owe my niMit. k.xhI le-alih lot" Judii'loiisiixiiif lli..4- mini viiluatile renieilns. ami hi-ariUy rei-ommi'itil Iheni lo nllalll"'"" s I was." I ant. A. I', bouil, llampileii, lir. .Mlli-s' KoHiiinillve Niirvhieanil New' ult nmiHilil hy nil ilruu'itlstMiin a poslitveioinrnie l.-e. or hy lir. Mlliw Sleil(-ui '.. t.lklitrt. lint., mi n-i-elptof price, SI per lioltle, or J hottli-s fur , eipreMi tinHilil. They W fn-i- frum all opiate and chiiiKuroUn UruK -A. USTEW 0k IMtINZ & NITSCIIKE -IIF.AI.KK IN- Furniture and Carpels. We have added to our business complete Undertaking Establishm'"1' and as wn are in no way connected wl the Undertaker' Trust, our price" be low accordinglv.