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About The Medford mail. (Medford, Or.) 1893-1909 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 1898)
TO tUV-C UftASa AM aUlk.4 ky tb North WNt RMMlUDMk Km aula far ha Aalaaala, au That ri sa U r Is Ik Haas A Pe ' bUiImc Praaleaa " taaalva. t The intarcstliiif news comes from tha city of Butte. Mont., that in several parts of that state horses are so nu merous and there is so little use for them that they are being killed by ranchmen and their flesh ted , to hoes as food Instead of corn. In Mad ison county several horse meat canning establishments are now in operation and the product it said to be shipped east and then to Europe.- Horses can be bought for three dollars a head or even less when purchased in large num Jjera. These facta suggest the inquiry as to what is to become of the horse. ' With the introduction of electricity On street car lines, where, until a few years ago, horses were practically the sole motive power, and with the ever-increasing use of the bicycle, there seems to be less use for the horse than ever. This use of electricity and bicycles makes it probable that horses will be bred in very small numbers hereafter. In the states of Montana, North Da kota, Idaho, Washington and Wyoming hundreds of thousands of dollars have been invested in cattle, sheep and horses. ' Large herds were formerly driven from Texas and the southwest to fatten on the nutritious grasses to be found in the states named, but the constant increase in the number of cat tle, especially those of the half-breed variety, has also caused a reduction in their value. The .establishment of canning fac tories in Madison county, Mont., where horse meat is put up is not the first ex pcriment of the kind in the northwest In 1893 it was made in Portland, Ore. where horse meat was canned and shipped to France. It was found, how- ever, that the enterprise did not pay, the demand being insufficient, while packers of beef refused to add horse meat to their line of trade because of the prejudice which would arise. Reports from Madison county state' also that horses in some instances are driven into corrals on the ranches. killed and the bodies dragged out into the fields, where the hogs can devour tbem. It seems almost incredible that this should be the case, but it has come to be a matter of self-preservation with the owners of large grazing districts. ,- vnew mere was danger that the horses would eat up all the grass, thereby leaving no fodder whatever for beef rattle. The few horse canning estab lishments in that part of the state can not,1 of course, use up all the horses that are offered to them; hence it be comes necessary to kill the animals and dispose of them in the manner stated. It is not only the half-breed horses that are found to be a drug on the mar ket, but such fine stock as Clydesdales and coach horses are being offered by ranchmen there for very small figures. One ranchman in Madison county is saia to have a herd of 1,700 horses of Clydesdale and Norman stock which he is Willing to dispose of for $15 a head. He is unwilling to sacrifice his stock for canning purposes, although the herd is eating the grass required for the grazing cattle and sheep. The cattle herds in the northwest are numbered by thousands, the prices for which ace ridiculously small. The feed on the ranges is not increasing, hile the cattle are, thus making the problem of finding feed more difficult These immense herds roam the prai ries of North Dakota, Washington, Mon tana and Idaho?"-" The Montana advices referred to state that those per(nwhp,hve established the horse eannmgfactbries believe that their project. wHl be successful. There seems to be little likelihood, however, that much, if any, horse, toeat will be sold in the United States. N, T, Her .aid.' 5- RUSSIAN WOMEN. Knl Loi( Ao Thar Were Treated as Tarklsk Woan Arc. It is curious to think what a short time it is since tbe emperors of Russia treated their womankind in the same way they are still treated1 in. Turkey. In those days the czar chose his wife from among his subjects and she was never considered his equal.' The mat ter was arranged in this way : Onacer tain day the nobles brought their young daughters to be looked at, and she who took the emperor's fancy was forthwith chosen to be his wife. -" . . The, princesses were kept with the esjne strictness as eastern princesses, and marriage only changed their place of residence, but gave them no more freedom. They were allowed occasion' ally to be present when guests were re ceived, to whom they would band a cup of wine and then retire to their apart' menu, there being n suite of rooms at the north side of the palace- reserved especially for them. . If they were ill the room was dark ened before the doctor was admitted, and he was not even allowed to feci their pulse, and when they drove out the windows of their carriages had drawn curtains. ' " ' The first czarina who emancipated .reJf from i.hi uteta of nlaverv. and 1 ...... . . , , .1 so insututea a new ana nappier era ior Russian women, was the beautiful Na thalie Noryscbki, the second wife of Alexis Michoelovitch and the mother of Peter the Great, and her triumph was when she obtained her husband's con sent to drive with him in. an open cnir-j-lftge to the monastery of Troitasky, a proceeding which at the time occa sioned a great scandal. Naturally, when the Russian princes Iicgaa to intermarry with other Eu ropean royal families they were obliged ,1o treat their wives differently, but it .was a long, time before the court of (Russia become as civilized ns the rest of MENDING MANKIND. TT it' i! Manroloua . ReaulU Aohirod the Modern Burgeon. by A NMlM Maa Has One o( Ills fluasn IWupUstM to Hla rasa nnd UlH With! a Fa, The nose is such a prominent feature that it is apt to. suffer severely wheu there is anything of a "smash-up," and it accordingly happens that surgical kill it very frequently called upon to pateh up broken noses, and sometimes . even to plant a nose where were is none. One rase, likely to be long known a "the blackbird case," la recorded from the London Royal Free hospital. A eery- ant girl waa brougnt in with her noje smashed by a hydraulic lift coining in contact with it. The surgeon sent out fora blackbird, took out the breast bone and . managed, to Insert it where the broken .cartilage. had been, with com plete success in restoring the maid's former appearance. 'A severe task was set for the surgeons of another Loudon hospital by an un fortunate Individual who, having by de fault of nature no nose at all, wanted to be furnished with one. Willing to oblige him, an amputated flnper of an other patient- was grafted on his face, but it was found that amputation had caused tbe fiuger to die, and it failed to take. . ' The undaunted "noseless" man then agreed to the surgeon's suggestion that one of his own (the patient's) linger!) should be cut off to furnish the missing nasal organ, but Sn order that the linger should not be wasted, should the opera tion prove unsuccessful, the patient's arm was inclosed in plaster, and for four weeks he had to bold his finger to his face, in the hope of its taking root .' . It ultimately did, and was .then cut off from the hand, and now remains fixed as a nose, having been so manip.i lated that it can no longer be recog nized as a finger, and the process of shaping it is proceeding, so that ulti mately what is expected to be a very passable nose will be the result ' There was recently seen at the Paris academy of medicine a young woman to whom Dr. Berger, the eminent French surgeon, had supplied an entire under lip in place of the one nature had given her, which she had accidentally lost He had mode good the loss with a piece of flesh cut from her arm, and had ac complished the substitution with re markable skill. There was no appar ent disfigurement about the mouth, and the lip was red and quite natural look ing. The French, when thev wish collo quially to refer to something that does not exist, use the phrase "an army pen sioner with an artificial head" much as we speak of the "horse marines," or as, on tbe continent of a "Swiss ad miral." But there has now been found something very like the first-named phenomenon, for in a village near Lille there livesa retired artilleryman named Moreau, who was a hero on the French side of the war of 1870. In action he was wounded bv a shell. which exploded right in his face, lie was cared for by the surgeons, who were much astonished to find him still alive at the end of four days. Nothing re mained uninjured of his face but the forehead and jaw." An operation was performed, and no fewer than 35 pieces of bone were taken out of the wounded part A wax mask was resorted to to hide the hideous cavity in his face. Mo reau recovered and for years plied the government with petitions to be sup plied with a platinum mask, which he at last got some ten years ago. It answers well, only requiring to be repainted from time to time. Dr. Peau, another Paris doctor of emi nence, recently showed his colleagues of the academy a man, aged 41, from whom so much of the throat and wind pipe had been removed in operating on tumors that speech was lost An ar tificial larynx was made and inserted, and has restored his voice. The mechan ism consists of a spiral silver tube cov ered with India rubber, which causes nd discomfort, and can be inserted in the throat or removed by the patient himself. London Answers. ' NATURE'S LAKE OF SOFT SOAP. ACarloneForaaatloala the Far Nortk west Watch Lather at a Taaek. The Great Northern Railway com pany lately announced a rate of 00 cents per 100 pounds on soap slush from Northern Pacific coast points to Chi cago and Mississippi and Missouri river points, says the Seattle Times. Some one has requested a rate on this com modity, but there does not appear to be many people who know what soap slush is. One ingenious gentleman said that it was the product of certain small lakes on the line of the road that are filled with a thick silica water, which, when one's hands are washed in it, gives a lather that would bring joy to the heart of any wosherwbman or ton-' sorial artist When the hair.is, washed in this wonderful native product the head swells' with lather till it takes the proportions of a snow mountain. Sunburn on tbe face vanishes as mist before the sunshine in June. . .. , -"There is a lake of this wonderful liquid," said this veracious informant, "over on the East side. It is a mile long and proportionally .broad. , Do .you Vnow t.hnfc we are-resllv vi know that we are really yet in ignor ance of what we have in this country r' Local soap people, when asked to de fine and tell about soon slush, were non plused. They bave I tup. Another party said tbnt not long ago he received a curious product from Walla Walla, a kind of sand mixed with soap sub' stances, from which " it was thought scap could be probably made here to supply the washerwomen of the goat commons In the New York Btiourbs. A last effort tojdetcrmine the char acter Of sonri slush elicited the Informa- tion that the commodity originated at Portland, probably at the horse meat cannery. M...; j.. SmiNG TUK . SANDS. How tha "Bech OomberB" Work When Storm Gomes, '., mkUii for th Last . Valuables et Summer Bathsrt Mining la tks Band (or atlaslnc "'I "'"'''. m : A storm It just us good us n fire, though. When the "bench oomuers see one coining, across the waters thoy pull on their rubber bouts and oilskins and forth they tally. The first wind picks up the light dry sand and blows it uwny In little swirls. That take oil one layer. The "oonibor" hurries around after the swirls unit picks up whatever Is exposed to sight,, Layer after layer of suuU is removed, uncover' ing mure and more coins and trinkets for the scavengers of the seashore. On the day of the last great storm one man picked up Us, which it the' beet day's work remembered by any of the men talked with. 'This storm chasing is pretty hard labor. The men liuve to run around front place to place after the "blows of sand, and the wind soon begins to lift and throw In big waves, which,, with the tide, pour In shore and cover the beach, ho protltaule ia it however,- that tbe combers searuh till the water Is over their boot top. Tbe most profitable work of all Is the hardest. That is digging around the base of the piles of the Iron pier. The pier in summer is a promenade ns well us waiting-room. From It all sorts uf things drop, and, sinking in the water, are given up by the owner as lost. The comber kuows otherwlxe. Ho lun learned that the ebbund How of the tide washes little eddy bolus around every pile, and that everything that comes anywhere near these holes is droited in them, lie is aware, moreover, Unit eeu heavy objects are borne backward and forward by the waves, and that consequently the chances are in favor of the pile hole receiving, on some in and out flow of the tide, nil things worth recovering. So when the beaches are left by tbe summer crowds and the hucksters, the combwrs go out with their big shovels and sieves and dig up the sand in the holes. They say that the finds are of good value and very mis cellaneous. Most numerous are the pickings from the surface of the "hurd pan" from two or three feet down through the surface sand. Upon this hard floor the coins stand on edge In a position to penetrate to the safe regions below. But the comber, understanding this, shovels down three or four feet further, and though It Is heavy work and exhausting afterward when the sieve has to be used to release the sand the patient placer mines' makes sure he has reaped the summer harvest before he leaves off his task. There are two rich places which have not been explored. One is defended by amairtuid his wife who own the ground. It is a line of poles set up for the bath ing patrons. Four years ago a young man went into the water there with two $20 gold pieces around his neck. He was about to be married and was saving up the money for the event. It was too precious to be left in the bathhouse keeper's safe, so he kept it in the littla k'ather bag at his neck. When he came out of the water the bag and tbe gold were gone. He wept and cursed and made such a noise about his loss that everybody "on Coney" knew of it. The combers were not alone in the search for it but it was not found daring the season and in the fall the winter men prepared to dig around the life-line poles. Gebbard was afraid tbey would dig up the poles or loosen them and be foibade them to work three. The police assisted him when they were within call, but whenever they, and GebbarJ were away down swooped the combers to search for the gold. The owner found it necessary to leave his wife to watoh while he was away and the com bers have been kept off ever since. But they mean to have those double eagles yet; they know they are in the pole holes and.. Dave Stewart, the negro comber, said recently: ' "I'se goin' to have them goldbugs if it takes till Gabriel blows." The other untouched spots are also life-line poles, those that once carried, a line from the pier to the Scenie rail road. When tbe bathing nouses there were torn down the poles were left and the combers are welcome to delve be side them. But every year they nave been passed over because there were enough other places equally rich to Inst through the winter, and now the tide and the sand drift are gradually rising over the tops of the poles. They, will soon be burled and their location will be forgotten unless some energetic comber attacks them. N. Y. Post. , BREAKING OFF MATCHES. OaUfaers . wltk - Their "Raadsm" Wards Do IiOta ot Mlscklef. , The "random" word, which, accord ing to the poet, may "soothe or wound the 'heart that's broken," may also do n. ereat deal more It may change a des tiny.' Many a match husbecn nvule or prevented by Rome casual remark which has bad its influence pro or con in the beglnnlngof events. . - Such creatures of impulse and change are we that at certain times the wisest of .ua are swayed by the merest trifles. A criticism from some one whose opin ion we do not' even particularly value, a word of ridicule and a dawning prcf erence may tie quickly nipped in the bud, while, on the. other hand, a few words of kindly praise work wonders id opening the eyc of the blind. ' - ; ' It was remarked the other day that a certain coterie of admltrers that used to surround pretty Mrs. Z a decade ego have all remained unmarried. "What is ie reason, do you think?" said one ofTher acquaintances; "'were they nil in love with her, do you sup pose?" ... "Of course not," said her companion. "Mts. Z was not.ln the least a flirt It was the way she out up' everyone; not a girl bad a oluince wlio came, bar way. She mode everyone ridiculous nd the men of her set saw with her Rheumatism. v thi mc or rr. JAOOkk oil or omWo omrnca : or Mft-iom MrLAMMaroftV oaaia. THini't) no ocarina, ITOURM. ' eyes; that wuk nil, It did seem nitlier a pity likithe we of Minnie S , for she really liked John Brown ami heoer tnlnly gave her uuuse to think that he en red for her; but It never came to any thing and they sold, at the time, that it wns all on account, of Mrs, Z- ' ridicule and mimicry, . ; "She lmd such a way of malting every woman: appear (dladvuntugeously to 'her men' without really saying any thing actually untrue or unkind. ''Minnie 8- never married and John lirown is a dixgruntM old bachelor, all on aeeouut of a few disparaging words when the scales were evenly balanced." It Is tin unfortunate phase of human nature ithat n derogatory olwervnt ion makes more Impression than a word of praise, but a kind remark aptly spnkru sometimes does a world of good at a critical juncture. And It U a great pity It Is not of toner freely given. N. V. Tribune. BICYCLE VOICE NOW. Natalies of Whrrllaa my It AIttt tke Voal rhoriU. All the talk of the bicycle face having practically died out, the foes of the wheel have now trotted out another scarecrow, claiming that as a result of wheeling women tire becoming loud talkers, with un uiipleasuut quality of voice. 1 hey . assert that wheeling, es pecially with the mouth open, has a detrimental effect ou the vocal chords, and when to this is added the strain to which the voice Is subjected In an effort to keep up a conversation while cy cling the danger seems something more than a shadow. Some persons who have made voire culture a life study are Inclined to fall In with these views, asserting that exercise on the wheel Is responsible for an apparent alteration in the voices of women. One vocal teacher says: "While bicycle riding people fre quently fill their lungs with dust, and this is, of course, injurious. Then the exercise leaves the system exhausted and unable to resist the bad effects of excessive perspiration. A severe cold Is detrimental to the speaking voice, and when these colds are frequent, as they are with bicyclists, tbey will ul timately result in permanent Injury. If women would ride but a few mile at a time and would keep their mouths closed there would be no danger, but I find that ninny ot my pupils cannot refrain from overdoing the sKrt. Pro fessional women realize the harm that bicycling does to their voices, but they say that they cannot bear to give up wheeling. Calling to one another a wheelwomen frequently do cannot help but strain the voire if persisted in." Another vocal instructor holds total. ly opposite views. Said she: "I am strongly, in favor of cycling for wom en. It is n most healthful exercise, anil so cannot fnll to b beneficial to the singing and speaking voice. I do not believe the old-fashioned theory of things affecting the vocul chords direct ly. Of course it is possible to strain the voice, but I should think this most unlikely when wheeling. The very tend ency of the wheel is to keep the rider quiet. - If riders should call from one to the other when outdoors their speak ing voice might be affected, but tbe most strident speakers are often the sweetest singers. The soft, well-mod ulated voice of the English girl docs not give us as many brilliant examples of tbe song bird as the leas pleasant and somewhat nasal tones of the Amer ican. Nine out of every ten successful singers abroad to-day are Americans. This is because t be other girls are never allowed to expand their lungs with the same delightful freedom, A good di gestion is the first requisite toward good singing. 1 should say poor cooks bave more to do with spoiling tbe voice thim all the wheels in Christendom. A theory has been advanced that the rapid breathing necessary when riding the wheel is injurious. This is wrong, as the vocal chords' are completely pro tected when not in use." Philadelphia Press. ' ' WOMEN AS LINGUISTS., The Ave Quick to Learn Bat Ion li . . Profundity. ' ; ,.. One of our university lights who la deeply interested in the study of lan guages, declares that what woman loses in profundity she gains in quick ness. She excels in tact, and extricates herself from a difficulty with aston'slii ing. adroitness. In langdago she is mora apt than man. Girls learn to speak earlier than boys, and old women are more talkative than old men. Among the uneducated the wife can express herself more intelligently than the husband. Experience in couduco cational. Institutions shows that women arc more fuithful and punctilious than men, and at least equally apt. . In col leges where a record of standing is kept the' women gain probably a some what higher average I n the years im mediately following graduation the men make much greater intellectual progress. Women reach their mental maturity at an earlier ago and develop relatively less aftor maturity. In many kinds of routine work, especially that requiring patienco, women aro superior, but thev are less liable to endure pro tracted overwork. Wo' have seen' that woman is less modified physically than man and varies loss from the average, The same is true mentally. Women are more alike than mon Mid more nor raal, as It were. The geniuses have been men for the most part; so have the cranks. Woman's thought pursues oia rather than now lines, iicr tendnnoy Is toward reproduction, while man's if toward production. Woman loves tlio old. the tried, and the customary. ' Hho Is conservative' and . acts as society's balance-wheel. Man represents varlo tion. He reforms, explores, thinks out "i "i m i in i") OLD NEW YORK, MARKET8. , I'her Did i'hlMis Ulffarenllr liTown Tkrit Hundred Years Asia. It is more than 300 years since the au thorities of New AuiHterdum rnolvcd "to ervut a meat market ami cover II with tiles, to have a block bought there in, and to leave the key with Autlrles, the' baker, who shall have temporary charge thereof." This was lb jiloucer New York market, established ou the green in what Is now Buttery park, aud It was resolved by the authorities of the stiuie time that the cuttle should be bltehnd "beside the, churchyard, whtu-ssomestakfs ware fixed "on Broad way, a little above Morris street. For few years this waa the only market in New York, but the local reformers of the time, insisting presumably upon a change, it was determined to open n fair or murket for the tale of "store and fat cattle, steers, cows, sheep, goals, hogH, bucks, und such like," and to Unit end stalls were built This market was opened on Oetuttinr to uf each year, anil was kept open until the lust day of No vember. Twenty years luter n market wns oH'iu'd on what wns railed "Ihe water side," near the bridge ' which spanned Wall street, and It was thrown open to the public on March ill, 1077, aud continued open every .Saturday fol lowing for three years. At the expira tion of three years market day was changed to Wednesday, mid in lutel an other step lu advance was taken. There were three market duyH in each week Tuesday, Thurwluy and Suturtlay. Hut tlss precipitate -.enl and energy of the oHt Dutch Inhabitant could not tie re strained even by the conservative burgomasters, and so In MH4 it wus ordered thst thereafter "fish shall be brought for sale to the dock opposite tho City hull and may also be sold In the house that Long Mary formerly lived in likewise herbs, fruits, roots, oVc." Afterward the Uroadwiiy mnrkrt house wns leased out to Henry Cross ley, a butcher, who stipulated to pay for It for seven years a rental of one pound per annum, and kerp It in good repair. As the city of New Amsterdam was at that time somewhat short ot funds, a plan was- adopted, which, in these days,. would never obtain the favor of Uie board of estimate aud apportion ment. It was arranged that each mar ket should lie built and kept lu repair by the neighbors, and at the end of so years It was to belong to the city. In this manner a two-story Riulliling was erected by the neighbors at the fool uf Broad street Another wns put up on Hanover square not then Hanover square and a thlnl at the foot of Maid en lane. The latter subsequently come to be known as the Fly market mid hud a practical monopoly of the business of the city on that side of the town until the establishment by the neighbors of a market at the tout of V.'nll street, to be known as the Meal market It was "esfabllslied exclusively for the sale of corn and meal," and also "slaves stood for mile or In bcvlet to hire" at this point. In 17-13 these primitive market arrangements were done away with and the present system, sinee enlarged and iuiiproveil, superseded it. The city now receives In u j't-ar In murket rents $L'HS,- 0, cscliislve. of V:n lt rents and market pei mils, i'lic wholi: public revenue iroui thi soured Is about :IIH)JJ90 a year, and ('oir,pliollei- Fitch hit In- reused it beyond the receipts of any f Ids prriteeiHsors. v. V.Sun. Major Alf Brant of Kansas City. Ho., died recently in that city of Mean disease. ' IIu was born iu Tuscarawas tounty, 0. Mr. Brant made a brilflant record in tlio Fifth Kansas cavalry and still later in Hancock's votoran re serve corps. I ! Thousands ara Trying ' " In' order to prove the great merit of Ely's Cream Balm, tbe most effective our for Catarrh and Cold in Mead, we hsvt pre ps red a generous trial size for 10 oants. Get It of your druggist or send 10 cants to , ELY BROS., 60 Warren 8t., N. Y. City. I suffered from catarrh of 'the worst kind ever since a boy, and I never hoped for otirsj but Ely's Cream Bslm seems to do even that Many scqiisintances hsve used it with' excellent results. Oscar Ostrum, 45 Warren Ave., Chicago, III. Ely's Cream Balm it the acknowledged cure for catarrh anil contains nooooaine, mercury nor any Injurious drug. Prlco, 10 omits. ' At druggists or by mall. , , firillYou can lilLll.be cured If you itifTer from ny of th liu oi merit coma 10 im ouie Specialist on the Pacific CoaUt, 0H JORDAN ft 00,. ' 1 08 1 Market SL Eit'd IBM. Vav Hen And middle Mai tbikb who Avr aiiffcrinK fromtha effect! erf youthful inriinaetioiiior Vsrvn... unrl Private-. J pMlliy3MFrtiRr7,L4tManhul in ill liKConiplifHt fount Mprmiktorrlif0Bt Trrnummvr 'of ITrlimilnrf, vto. I(y combination of ramedlfliiof great curative pow eiVthe Doctor hut no arranged hU tretment that it will not only alTonl Immediate fellef but permanent cure. The Doctor dne not claim to perform miraclet, 1it It wetl-ltnown to be a fair and -quire Phyticlan and Surgeon, pre-tmlnent in hiiinecitlty Dlntftl Of Hen, ft.rpbllla thoroughly ejrmllcatod from tnft ayittm wlthoutnMrig n retire nVDKV MAN applying toanwIHtO Celvo our hmtM njrinton uf IiIh rotnplatnt. . . W wttl (iunranten a POBiWVHOlJRK in tvtiry cann we wuimnke, or forfeit One f ThUMunct Ilollnrfi, Uonumation fkkig and atnctiy private, ClIAHQEB VERY HKAHONAIiftK Treat- . ment pernonally or hy letter. "Tha Fhllnaoiiliv ol onoifliv of Mrrlagetri jr. ' nana iut utxik. i free (A valuable bonk for men.) Vlr.IT DR. JOBDANH Groat MiiHoiim of Anatomy the finest and Indent Mitwumof lis kind In the 1 world,. Coma and tenm how wonderfully you oremndej how to nvold dlcVnCM and dineane, we tire contmtmiiy adding nw Hnadimaufc CATA.IAXJVU XHKH, UaTlorwrlt ' lOSf Mirfcat Btwat. San FraneliM. OaL .a&drttai 6 iuureat. f f. 0,0, r,-fn)s Ma, M, aieeis I in Wo. u. aieeis is I, D, r. bsii every rv Hutunliv nt st ln.ni. VISUM brolhematwsirswiiUMnHi. liu A, fiisi.rs, N. a, 0. 0. TtlfMH, Hon, Hon. ' I, O, U, IT. Uoriiii Klvnr ICiiusuipnioiit. No. Ml, meets in 1, u. t), IT. lull tho nooohU null (our to WwlnesUsya uf uaoti tuimta st u, iu. ... & MAxur.U, 1. 1. A Wnn.Horllio, "' . ., , .OllVd llelHiUhT.miNo.lW, niliot. Is 1,0 0,K. bull llrnt sial Uilru TUomloy, of situs nioiilb. VlnlllugiilHlnrit tnvltoil toutl.nit. Miih, 1,'i.aha liiimao, N, O. Miss Visum WomiroMii, Ituo. Buo. day' evnn'liK st u. iu. VlHltl'iiK brutkara si .... u I ... ...... u u 1... ii n W nt II 1' 1 1 .. . - .. U.t... M M. .. , . u Lt . . . I HA A, 1'lisi.M, K.ofH. and ti. i ' A, V. A. My-Moot. lint ITrlday on or b, (ore full mum st o u. m,. In A. (, U. W. hall. .. . , W. . VAmnvW. M. r . ,W. V. MrriMuorr, Una, Hoc. , Knlsnt of tlio MMeaoeee. Trturapu Teat No, 14, maou In regular review on tlio lat and M Monilaya of wk month In A. O. U. W. Hall at7:.i)p. m. Vlalllns Blr UoIkUIs oonllal ly lavltwl lo attune. A. A. UArrtasoK, COuwaader. W. T. V0BK, 11. K. ... WiuyluM, II.- WuM A.m... I,, tot , u every Taur-ilay avoalus Is A. 0. U. W. ball, Mcxlforu, Ureiniu, 1.. Si, 1IOOVSH, V. V, Uno. K. Wsasaii, Vhua. A, U. V. W,-Ix1ko No, US, neela ttvory lira nil third WedaoaUay In tbe iniinlb nt p. iu lu Ihelr bull In Ibo opera block, Vlnllln brolbors Invlled lo ntteud. . . o, w. Woirtns, M.W. R. A.' JOHNSON, Rnwrdsr. W. M. 0.-!bnatnr A. ArlUur Uorua No. moots bcuuimI and fourth V'rlday of oaob. uinulh nt S o'olook . in., lu Wonlt'a hall, mum. I., li. iuiiiisn, i'roa. Mu. U, K, DAVia. Hoo. U. A, It. (Ihnntor A. Aruur I'oal No. menu In A.O.II.W.hall ovary aooouil and fnurlb Baturday ntuiruoou lu oaob utontb nl'io'olova. .. . . W.T. It MS, UOUI. KM Kwiibii, Adlutnnt, W. O. T. t' l-Moots every Wodnomlar allor uuou In tho inoy lllack. Maa. Km ruusu, I'rea. Mrs. 1. V. Wll.UAMa, Hoo. n. . w. w., m'Hiva ui lldfior H"tunr louua, Nv. ns, moola ovoiy Tuoaday vonlns' nl A. O. Ut W, bull. AM.lt K. KUVVKL, C. Of II, R. A. JoiiMaoK. Hoo. 0HTJB0HEB Of MXSVOIU). Halnt Marks Kulacoua. Humlav Honoiil mnoti at Kpiacopel church ovory Kundoy morning nt lOo'clook. Ko. Wni, Hurl, Hoo lor; B. B. i'ouli, Buporlniendunt Mnthodlat Uolacosal Otiuren Bdw. omnia. Daalor. lraatihlntf every MablHkOi at 11 a. m.. and T:M p. m. Sunday aohwl nl 10 n. m., K. K, Thompson, aupl. Ulaaa uinoilns every Hanbatb nt oloao of aoitnon, I.ovl Kauoelt, loader. Ku worlh lontue every Habbath evonlnx nt S:U, II. aj. imaor, pmt, junior league erory aaouaio at an. m., Mlaa Ha; lhlppa, aupl. itasular weekly woekly oraynr moolln every Thumdav ovenlng at 7: JO, Ladloa aewloa- olrale every two oeks. Mm. Ileldlenian, proa. Mtaatonary aooletloa homo nnd furelsn, Ural Krlday In eaob month, proaldenta, Mra. Vau Antwors and Mrs. Hubbard. Preabvterlan Ghurah ltv. A H rnminr nM. tor. I'renohtneat 11 a. m. .ml 7-U9 o. m. Hun. day aebool at 10 a. m. Y . . a. O. K., : IS p. m. Junior Kndnnvor Hoolnty si s p. m Hunday. Prayer aioollu on Wodnoaoaf oveolnx nt 7 o'olook Hnntlal ohurah O. N. Annoa. tiaatur. Wnr. ablp and proaoblns every Hunday uiorulns auit evonliiN- at uaual Houta nr cburrb acrvlect. Covenant moellnir nn Haturdnynt o'clock pro. oeodlngeaeb llrat Hunday.. I'rayer steeling on Wedueeday aveslnir. ItaptlM Vount Poonloa Union monianl S:ausntlundtr ovealuf. Hun dny arbool at lu a. m Ohrlatlnn chuirh Cornea of Hlvlh ui. 1 alreeia. lroaohlng st II n. m. sud 7. p, m. Munday aahool nl 10 1. m.i Junolr Kndoavor at S p. m.iv. 1. H.O. K, nt S.ai p. in. I'rayer meellng every Ttiuraday evening. Ladle Ubwlonary AaiUlsry lo a W. U. K. Snl Thura day 7:W I. M. raob month. Choral Union every Friday at TJO p.m. Thnpeople weleoia. mi r inner yanwr, luiaiuoa aa wo oouroa. Molhodlat Kntacooal nhiireh Anulh.nMv. J a Cnitobnold, paator. Servlona nl II n. m. nnd 7 p. m oo tbe lat, Und and 3rd Habbath; Babhatb aohool at 10 a. m. and ICpworMi LoaguoatSp. m. every Habbalb at Uedronl. Hnrvlouaon .lh Habbath at HodaHprlnga at It s. in, and Nell wrve Ronoui oouao ni a p. m. a ncany wol -ovmolosil. ...... u DUIIUIJ nUUVUI U Hm Wootfn ball ml 10 a. ni owry tundy. lira. mutiiiuo, oevrowrr. TVTORTHERN j PACIFIC RY. 8, Pullman Sleeping Cars Dining Cars Sleeting Cars Elegant Tourists FREE -:- COLONIST SLEEPERS T. Paul " iMiNNiaaont lasaaa roaa. IWINNIH I lH"-' " lBUTTI THRDUGH TICKETS -TO- CHCAQ0 WABHINQTON PHILADELPHIA NEWVORK BOSTON AND ALL av TOlNTjy:A8TAN0 SOUTH' ", ' ArD.CHARI.T0N, AnnlHtnnt Oonorsl PsnaonRor Agent. No, DM Morrlaon Ht;, oor. TblM. ' ' ""nSTLAND, OIK Or W. T. Yonu, Tlokot Affont, - , Modford, Oregon, S. F. CA is, Tlokot Agont, , : , First Nut'l Bank, Grants Pam, Ore., Hotel Nsah Barber Shop Bates Bros., Props Flt'ut class work In nil branolios of tlio tonsorlal art, Satisfaction : . , ...gunrantood... , HOT AND COLD BATHS (Europe. Montreal Star, n new way . .