Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The west shore. (Portland, Or.) 1875-1891 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1879)
i6 THE WF.ST SHORE. January, i87g, rWWMB OK I i HANS. Thi i,T ,.f i i ' that I. life UhM on Whrti lfr It Ita rOOf, Jt.ll MW III lief; Hit baT, ktll -.11 Hull In Inlr-ly Mur A rtWlli l.lali If M llttlel. imliii-l WM I." 'In ', Ufa llslll Ml it a ""' 1 ' I'li'Uil Vul Hlll'll Hit lain I fa ,a l,atlliM OH JIM ftliKII, WlHV..l t laa aift4illi (if I Mf iTMClMf ', ttll'll InUi I'n it !" a tuul a- tut I l.i i.,' (fmrtall . -r v i , MM Ii H.lt i i.i a lia.1 faalul friHII Ultt all A l.aa, M Ullflli am) ilmli-flnifl The IhoUftil wu Mutual II,.. I hlntral I, vvu then, TIi m.iirr "f am 1. Mdl ! aO In. Mint! T.. aaff. and 0, aarll avta-k I Mp-. It t lltglli lilrml Hiilr Ilia timnohy ami atllNaUMfi Will. ,.lttrr Ulna, Irt tlifln Itllt flaw 4 frlilnl Wli.faa, malll Id.) ma) act ufl, til rtnlimr, Ami III.) , .1 :. t Ihai. In am b'lji'at 111 tlfMIIU llirlr ..Hli a.atrati lia..lluM. Kavrlt. war not aata I USotjl Ml I. ntt1 M III ra, KlMiof I Iff Itrar ami III) iiiltfl.l a.llrr. Kliawiittii flotair tl vraaa. Iliat Mill atlra T- warlltt, Mi an, ami ithlinr t..tli n.iulrv Hill Ui f.nol llarll in ,, .In,- Mod Una ..I Ufa a li.wl), aaililli Illlinlf., Lnry Ifr.Ufi, ifi ,Vitn,r.ir .1 ,,,,,, . HOME m i:ks. I liu. .lull, Rujlioobolr, moping thing; I MHMi Iwrt existed la the hum doom with mm tim.Lf f.tr ilnglt nth. ri, raopm a.-., am K'hK" l niner llllle.; 1,, gaycty ,, hi mm Hi" moping (or the bnibud, in " .".pp man l when In, ,,,!,,,, plenty ,.f a,,., i, . , f luui,,,,, fr other., bat 'f riwrvwl uoltuirelj fur him, I flu Ik, ill all.' II , ..la rtii,, whaMf! aa .1 ..l ' 'V i' irnriliailljf Jin. mm tim tm Mfnlag in n. i, ( ' ., . -"t iinntf ; ami anil .M unit, imifctl I lilVl'Ino . aMttxr, MH)t imr mm, mm. ft ami rom iniiy, m.l making UM.boMi ring with here mntMil mM h . rl,liui MMomim n it I l,l li m MOM hIii. Ii i. f,M U.. n ....i Ml lli" l,.ri.,.l MdWW ihiim. all,., tatum ... hi wim la MWMan tin. rtmiiif half Hi" NM MWJtW in tin. middle rank u( hf,. I t AIIV 11.111 ,,l.a. tie a I ... tm ual-. i w th W&i, tlm liMMivt toad f , r-l"" "r " fiililn ii. ,t dim i,, Sin. i!a pri4 ih".v nut,,, t , .,, tr.,111 tli ir own .nil ititii ,i I, i ..... r . . , ,7 " fiiiKiian. , vtoltt MM kUthi ..,1, Ltki . bom, JZ ., nii'irrn m (,.,. muiu mm HteMd, inn i wonli bMin ""...wa ilM.1.. LM I I.,,,),. ,,, i niiiti. u. h.i.im li, f., . I,.,. , tlii, ivi ! iJ. i" ,T " I-"... to ElZj. . . ,,",u" "My, 1.. li.. I '""! 'f" tlio l. k. l "' 1 mm nrr botMM, IU1 I ..M.I . i.v. I. a. ! ,. 1 "all! 111 fc, S,,, mm HwtoboU otM M Kt3K L JSV 'l??'- "ultx""' n3 oV, liii MM A tai ,Vi A D1NNKK 01'' EOftSBPLESH, "I went on Satunlay," writes a Paris corre pondoot, "to boroo-noih dinnor, givon by a M. Dnoroix, Vuterinary in-I'liief to the Etat Major of I 'arm. It wan prepared by an ordinary rook, the hunt winhni:. Ihh guests to know tbat the fooil plaeeil before them owed nnno of its ialatahle virtues to extraordinary culinary Bci 0000. Everything except the sweets at dessert was of ( lieviiline extraction. I thought the soup lictter than that made from beef. The liouilli was Wry toothsome; 'ChovoJ a la mode' was also OXOWOOtl hilt the crowning dish was roast libit, which was very tender and succulent. There was no llavor or odor that in the re motest reminded one of the stable. 'Tho weak point of the feast was the salad, which was dressed with oil taken from horse fi-et. M. Iliirriiiv I. if. emfVitialaaf .,, .,... n(llu of iiotliing less than cheapening meat, and ren dering the lives of horses tolerable by getting people to btooin hippophagists. f the ulti mate fate of the horse was to be sent to the butcher's shambles instead of tlm slaughter house, cabini-ii. In nninwi ,,1,1.1 l. ...... infill. ti the beasts they drive, and the poor would he able to fall bosk from dear beef and mutton upon cheaper and more nutritive tnoat. Since hippophagy lias been introduced here. more than 12,000 hODet annually have fallen Into the Ktin pans mid soup-pots of the Fronoh capital. It aiipears, indeed, that the supply is MOMOly eipial to the demaiiil. "On sitting down I felt, I confess, somewhat m i vuiis. li occurred to me that sundry cbeva bue diseases were propagated by innociilation. U. Dnoroix, who suspected my mUgivinsi In. lormod mo that the iMpodMoa of horsclli"sh' for the lleah market ia more close than beef. The living annual has to pass a veterinary surgeon ami when it is reduced to the condition of MtObOt s meat, it is airain subjected to a micro Moplo examination. BonM mombon of the so rtOt (t.r the protection of animals have invited M. Oiicroix to l,d to make arrangement with them for a lu.rsu-llesb buqnot atCrvs'al I alace, piepared by a I'reuch oook." Imiohhini, voi, pRiWM.My noighbor ia in . live bu.u,e.s Md Im only. fr,r just out W with bttle ,,t intorott, bringing up andeduc. tfnga family of children. He conn's to me, hiiblmj, ut onto, large, for mo to sign, -Mreatacco latum to n,e, , n, yo u ill only have to nUt your name. My answe "My fn.,i,.,yu really umlcrst, ,U h , oy.,tmn W nld , I r, and ('he I were to do tbu? I should instantly I" " l ion Hut friuninuieof oomplota boW '"". MM Without the alfgb,,,. reason for a ...... Ur favor from , alhl fi,r o con.id r , hotovrr, ex,,,t fnendabip, I have agr," U e mv.,1, .hfrukolyour l.s!m J. , t I;,: " '""'" r- ifM,,;,,,:', our t , . ".'l.vtl...;Uhould.il; iHifo cth, ,,,, , , ;;H'7r-"l ben I really k,! "'"". -;.UnoM..,l in so fr belt SSJA -t .nan true b- U ,T """ ' " n. Ik- bUrn. .ll any right-iiiinH-.l. il f, , . .. j "tiiii rnuil, xtStS: iiwi "Although btrn..l'J, "T" "l'"'.".ty. -miner r f-tur, .1.11,,,: u r Ul" " the bu sLxmt! f har "" " gpowrrof the futurfc IMmVlUUALITY. An applo once said to a pear, swinging on a limb close by: "What gives yon that form, friend ? What, this to me ? The parent stem which supports you, differs but little from that of mine in appearance, and seemingly, the same conditions givo to your cheek a bronzed color while mine takes on the red." "Your query is a deep one," remarked the poar, "and calls to my mind the experience of the husbandman who persisted in feeding from tho samo bountiful trough, tho same kind of food, to bis poultry and pigs yet feathers would grow on his poultry and bristles on the pigs. The hen, would bo a hen and the hog, would bo a hog. So it socms that our separate existenoe depends not so much on the sustain ing power as on the creative ; that which con stituted us distinctly individual. There are curtain olemcnts in the earth and atmosphere, which your organism calls for, to perfect you .mil givo you that rose-tinted cheek of which you boast ; but you do not require all the sur rounding elements to perfect your being, else a pear w ould never have been. Some parts which would have beon rojeoted as unnecessary in your composition, could be used to the comple tion of mine ; because of the very difference in our construction, lie it as it may, I am satislied to be a pear, Biuce I can bettor carry the stamp of my own individuality than that of any other. In the case of the heu and tho pig, parts of tho food given wore absorbed to compose the liner llosh of the Jowl, whiln the remainder was thrown aside as waste material; yet, that which tunned waste material . for the fowl, could lie used to make up the coarser body of tho pig, thence tho difference in the result." "Your philosophy is satisfactory said the apple, but why does not tho same principle apply in the human family! It seems that a pear can be a perfect pear, a hen a perfeot heu, etc.; why cannot a human being lie a perfect being ? On tho contrary, we Hud him with a mind warped and dwarfed, purely from the ina bility of the body to supply the conditions favorable to tho growth of the mind toward perflation, lie renliues this and has to con tent himself to bo incomplete, although in his "rig.,, was tiroununceil thn mmf , F....I .,1 ..l created things." I rue, soul the pear, "but for them to nuiko the most of this realization seems their hardest accomplishmout If they would but r..lt....f U... ...:n: . J ... . ..ov. iiw minions oi your mates, andol mine, have fallen to the ground and have perished, while influence after intluonoe was being brought to boar uimn our germ life, throimh 've,-changing conditions, until we were finally l.roiiiiht to our present standard of worth. "ll they could realize that to bo satislied with their given individuality, and that to make the liest use of its powers to possess the good and to resist evil, is their (mrfect life work. The end ot human ambition would have been itis Led in each individual, and each life a oompleto one as :rtains to the earth. "Ttiiis olcimmtH In principle Uojh c-lvii to l( lu mu And from Uio Inurmuiiu Incomplete Mike lino stiijKmdiitta whole. Paeic Rural Prist. Tux Uiukaltar TuN.Nxi The proposed tunnel between Spain and Africa is still before the public This tunnel, according to the plan t present contemplated, is to extend from within a short distance of Algocinu, on tho Spanish side, to between Tangier and CeuU on the African i.l.. tl. i .i" a.. . ton, i Ti T ' "-"gin oi ino suiimarine .. in, i will be nine miles, with au inclination of i. . "uuuraa, ami the approaches will grcalint ib nt , f th. iiwZrt. a j ti t. .... , o,ui.rv icei ; ana, mm fw-l of r L i to have a thicknesa of some 300 tee rock eft wtween tho q( tannel Z iL lhu' ',':W0 below Mm tJ o tbywlnt ny thi. ,,ual-