THE RED MOUNTAIN 3AU IT IS GRAPHICALLY DESCRIBED BY PRENTICE MULFORD, Im Vn4invlltd rnultM A Sa-ttla-mtent In Knmliar Siaall, In Iultvlilnall ty I.anr Soma Qur Charavrtara avail fcveata "Old Mae" and lllomly Hill. IConyrlghted by lha Author.) V. HE California mrning camp was cphvinoraL OfUn it was founded, built up, floari&hod. decayed ana nail , weed Hud herbiViW , jl'jr" j growing ovir its site I ' ' J I and hidintf all of lUall'a, W ' work insi.le of ten. ywirs. Yet to one witnessing these j changes it seemed the life of a whole iroiuratiou. Of such settlement Kedi Mountain Bar was one. Red Mountain ' lay three miles abov Swett's Bar, "up river." 1 lived "off and on" at the "Bar j or numtuy appropriated om unocoiipuHl ktT5, and for the nwt-Krinneil. From hia little piggy ey to hi doublt chin Koon'a faca was a permanently ai'ttled grin. Keen Fann had Uyurneil about twenty words of English and would learn no Iiiore. In hit wtimtttion Uierw twenty worth, variously used, afur a aort of grammatiiid kaleldvieeopio fashion, svoimil athvpiate to convey everything rviiniriM. One of hit presumed Lnglish exprtwlons long piiMtloo' the boys. Ask ing the prieo of article at the store he would say, "Too muehee twllyfoot." At hut the riddle was correctly guessed, lie meant, "Too much profit" For protection Keen Fann built hit house opposite the ttor. The Mexi cans were tlien attacking and robbing loolated bauds of Chinamen, At one Bar a tew intlot Mow, then deserted by the whites, the Chinese had inclosed their camp with a high ttookad of logs, Yet oue night they were attacked. The Mexicans beeieged their fortrtwa for hoars, peppering them from the hill ids with revolver, and at last - they broke through the Mongolian wurka and bore off ail their dust and a doaen or more revolvers. Keen Fann' castle was in dimensions not more than li by 15 feet, and in height two storiot. Within it was partitioned off into rooms not much larger than dry goods boxes. The hallways were just wide enough to soueese through, and wiry dark.' It was intensely lahyrinthian, and Keen was always makiug it more to by devising new additions. No white man ever did kuow exactly where the structure began or euded. Koou was a merchant, deal ing principally in gin, fish and opium His store was involved in this curious dwelling, all of his own construction. In the store there was a counter. Be- hiud it there was just room for Keen to in itM living .lava. I Raw it decav Cfentlv i and peacefully. 1 saw the grass, trees1 sit uown, ana in trout mere was just andherbase gradually creep in and re-j room enough for the customer to turn n thwir im-..iv all nvr It nit as thev . aronml. hen Keen wat the merchant - J I 1. . 1 i . 1 : . J j. . ua louKcu iuiKuii iu au iiuiueuse pair of Chinese spectacles. When he shook his rocker in the bank he took utT these spectacles. lie was a large consumer of his own gin. I once asked him for the amonut of his weekly allowance. "Me tiuk," said he, "oue gallun hap" (half). From the upper story of the castle pro truded a huge spear liead. It was tuade by the local blacksmith, and intended as a menace to lite Mexican bandits. At they grew bolder Bnd more threatening, Kivu sent down to San Francisco and purchased a lot of old pawnshop revolv ers. These being received, military preparation and drill weut on for several weeks by Keen and his forces. He prac ticed at tar,ret shooting, aitnel at the mark with Ixith eyes shut, and for those in its immediate vicinity with a most ominous aud threatening waver of the anu holding the weapon. It was proph esied that Keen would kill somebody with that pistol. None ever expected that he would kill the proper person. Vet he did. One night an alarm was given. Keen's castle was attacked. The "boys," hear ing the disturbance, grabbed their riflwt and pistols and sallied from the store. The robbers, finding themselves in a hornets' nest, ran. By the uncertain light of a waning moon the Bar was seen covered with Chinamen gabbling and wildly gesticulating. Over the river two men were swimming. Keen, from the bank, pointed his revolver at one, shnt his eyes and fired. One of the men crawled out of the water and tumbled in a heap among the bowlders. The "boys" crossed, and found there a strange white man, with Keen't bullet through his backbone. I experienced about the narrowest es cape of my life in a boat during a freshet on the Tuolumne crossing. I counted myself a good river boatman, and had just ferried over a Swett't Bar miner. lie had come to purchase a gallon of the had done ere man's interruption. I lived there when the few "boys" left used daily, after the close of an uu Kuccwtoful river season, to sit in a row on a log by the river's edge, and there, surveying their broken dam, would chant curses on their luck. The Bar store was then still in ex istence. Thompson was its proprietor. The stock on hand had dwindled dowu to whisky. The bar and one tilled bot tle alone survived. Ou rainy nights, when the few miners left would gather about the stove, Thompson would take down his fiddle and fiddle and sing "What c.iu't be cured must be en dured,'' or "The king into his garden came; the spices smelt about the same" a quotation of unknown authorship. Of neighbors, living in their cabins strnng along the banks for half a mile above the store, there was Keen Faun, an aged mercantile and mining Chinaman, with a colony about him of lesser and f.scu.'ly invliatiugnishablo countrymen of varying numbers. Second, "Old Harry," au aged negro, a skilled per former on the bugle and a siugcr who offered at times to favor us with what he termed a "little ditto." lie was the Ethicpic king of a knot of Kanakas gathered about him. Third, "Bloody Bill," so called from his frequent use of the sanguinary adjective, and, as may be guessed, an Englishman. Fourth, an old Scotchman, one of the Bar's oldest inhabitants, who would come to the store with the little bit of gold dost, gathered after a hard day's "crevicing.' complaining that gold was getting as scarce as "the grace of God in the Heelands of Scotland." Fifth, Mo Farlane, a white bearded old fellow, an other pioneer, who after a yearly venture into some strange and distant locality to "change his luck," was certain event ually to drift back again to the Bar, which he regarded as home. Down the river, nestled tugn up in a steep ana picturesque gulch, stood the oockeye, native juice of the grape, which was embowered cabin of old Jonathan then grown, pressed and told at Bed Brown, the ditch tender, a great reader Mountain Bar. When he crossed with of weekly "story papers," who lived like . me he was loaded with it Some of it a boy in the literature of the Western I was outside of him in a demijohn and Frontier Penny Awful, and who, com- j tome of it was inside. Indeed, it was in in? to the store and perching himself on side of us both. I set him across all the counter, would sometimes break out right On returning, by taking advan- in remarks about how "Them thar In dians got the better of 'em at last," to the astonishment of the "boys," who imagined at first that he referred to In dians in the locality, suggesting possi bilities of a repetition of the great Oak Flat uprising of 1850. At the ' top of the hill," a mile and a hidf away, stood the "Yankee ranch," kept by a bustling, uneasy and rather uncomfortable man from Massachusetts, aided by his good natured, easy going tage of a certain eddy one could be rushed np stream counter to the current coming down for a quarter of a mile, and at a very rapid rate. It was very exciting thus to be carried in au oppo site direction, within ten feet of the great billowy swell coining down. It was a sort of sliding down hill without the trouble of drawing one's sled up again. So I went up aud down the stream. The Red mountain wiue mean time was working. Night came on, a soo-in-law. One rainy winter's day the glorious moon arose over the mountain "boys" congregated about Thompson's store became seized with a whim for the manufacture of little pasteboard men turning grindstones, which, fastened to the stove, were impelled to action by the ascending current of hot air. So they smoked their pipes and wrought all day until the area of stovepipe became thickly covered with little pasteboard men busily turning pasteboard grind stones. Then George M. O., the son-in-law of the Yankee ranch, came down the hill to borrow an ax. George was of that temperament and inclination to be of all things charmed with a warm stove on a cold, rainy day, a kaot of good fellows aboc it, a fre quent pipe of tobacco, maybe an occa sional punch and the pleasing maanf act are of hot air driven little pasteboard men turning pasteboard grindstones. He forgot his ax sat down and began with the rest the manufacture of pasteboard men and grindstones. And he kept on till a late hour of the night, and staid at the Bar all night and all the next day and &at next night, until the stovepipe was covered to its very top with little men, all working away for dear life turning grindstones; and on the second day of his stay the exasperated father-in-law suddenly appeared and delivered himself in impatient invective with re gard tojsuch conduct on the part of a son-in-law sent forty-eight hours pre viously to borrow an ax. Such was the cirja oft gathered on the long, rainy whites eve about the Thompson store store. All smoked. Keen Fann fre quent1? dropped in. Ho stood respect fully, tid a healhcu should kx such a GV ibiiin asseiablajie, on it outer etb?e. ' tops, and I kept sliding up and down the Tuolumne. I became more daring and careless, so that suddenly in the very fury of the mid-stream billows I slipped off the stern sheets at a sudden dip of the boat and fell into the river. I was heavily clad in flannels and mining boots. Of my stay under water I recollect only the thought, "You're in for it this time. This is no common baptism." The next I knew I was clinging to a rock half a mile below the scene of the sub mergence. I had been swept under water through the Willow Bar., the walls of whose rock channel, chiseled by the current of centuries, were narrower at the top than on the river bed, and through which the waters swept in a succession of boils and whirlpools. Wet and dripping, I tramped to the nearest cabin, a mUe and a half distant, and staid there that night, Bed Mountain Bar, on seeing the mishap, gave me up for lost all but one man, who was nega tive on that point, for the reason, as be alleged, that I wad not destined to make the final exit by water. I reappeared the next morning at the Bar. When I told the boys that I had been swept through the Willow Bar they instituted comparisons of similarity in the matter of veracity betwixt myself and Ananias of Old. It was the current impression that no man could pass through the Wil low Bar alive. Chinese Camp, five miles dislaiititnod aa the metropolis for Red Mountain Bar. ' It contained bat a few hundred people. Yet in our estimation at that time it bora the same relative importance that New York does to some agricultural vil- Writ fAf Vfaffi Ftff1 'f St 4ff ! J f f M ,f f 4 I oii mirttut irtinv trvoa. It net uu tmi Itiul. .till nut kvitkI lminlr.l italUm or yut, then mmgh le botr. THE WILLHMETTE Uand Company OKKKRS INUl'rKMKSTS TO HOMESEEKERS Twwltpr't Vutil. T mlUMI h.II"Uii tor iiiim"'rlil In Hit N.irlli Amerli t Muliial M.'IH-Nt AmwUIImii, "I t lilense. Ill amhim J. n. "( ' li-l Atxiil, tl NlnlU, oti'"ii Nullc nf filial Hottlrniflil. Nulle It tiMi-Ly lvta Ilil I , ''t1 I fliml rnitl In lli t.mmire.Mirt " . omn.iY, otvii..N. ..liiiliillil..r l Hi" " ' kIJ.whiOi rMomioo, .Iiw.m.I Ari'l l" linn Ki.r-..llilml H.'..U. Jill"' ii Iwl V 1 ...,l time r..r lierln auelt K'P'il i"l ' ;'" A.linliiUlral.irel l wUle hV' ' tu'o, tlm'rM".1.!: (. m i Mitt lit, lr.UI. " . Ilrlil Mill rr M. Thf mill t Hoi ' l !"' IUMI1..I....1 .iti"ii "I 'i)f mil I" i-""""'J liMt.eil"ilillii ttillm.'ii'"li "''l,;'" l.l l.u.t will. lh.tt.UI .r...rl)r. ';'"",'",(','' will l ill nii.l ii wriMii'wl mmrun m,,i,l l ull t t'l'livM a- C kl'l'l" . N" r.rn, Orvnii. annlgmVt V'hIIi'O In Hi I'IkiiII t'mirl ol llio ! ' Urvtun tor t li liiii e"iimr I In tli mailer t Hit Mlnit.nili'l K.0nM. John Utmii '! I! A. .!, iwruwn iiu.lr lh firm nui l Urrwi H Iwwbml. dvlilor. I'm. nullw U hr' l""tt Out Hit nf imiml hu Ihwii elui'iKl itv M li l ih liv iiiiiv4 liiliil .lWi. H'I iluW uimllHml atirlt All r.i bunit rlliiuliil Ml.l lii"lvim rliil'ir .m tl -t I" i.r.'wl II." "" jrnwrljr tltr' lu ill llh,l."lll"l l III" l"" Ctiv tt.wlcu iiiilU. - rut u.4i nlilila llir l9i lumilli" lrm lli .In'" l l"' timii't. VI A in.i Ixtcl Ny It, tll. Awlinw ,V .i A jn -AM- NulH K Kit I'l'lU U ATIoS, (.Axil iirm t at OKt.ion t'ir, list , Nollce It IliTrl.f llvrll Ilia: llm l.'ll..r Imncl m III, r li nu.l ulli-'f I'll lulnnlliin In mk" final i.i.h.I In aul'lKirl "I llli rlalm anil Ihal lalil pM.it III I- lna.lt- Ihr l;. lli r rolirr hi I lainl I 'III'' al i'lit" Ort(on ,ui July I", Iwl, tit. Aari.n It t'.idvw. i.illialra, Klilllr N.. ,Val. .ir Iho tii,lirlli.a aai I U. I ,, r n Mn ii.iiio, inn I, '!. ' H, oil- j hvMia l.i .rii. a hla r..tillu.t..oa rta,liw U...U We have lots .Wx'.HK) foot, UKl.x'itX) feet, all favorably Wutetl. Those ; rtJVurni"..,uc?'Aai,."''i!uiTir. iTum un ... , ! ham, all ul A I una I' It , l"la. aatnat tv.iililf, lots twice the ordinary size ore but half the usual price of other lot nun- j t 1 Htiaint Investors - r f iii'im ilarly located. We have one-acre, two-acre, five nnd ton-acro trui ts,; suitable for suburban homes, convenient to town, schools, churi'lu',. Noiit is roii rtMJt'Aiio.s I on Orru I r oaau,'. rir,oaa , ,1. IM tu.. etc., and of very productive foil. A largo, growing "Prune Orchard," of; Ni'llrv la hr,)r lalt Dial lha ,,II,.1'JJ . . tlaim.! arUWr liaa tlwl lnll.' uf lir hitrlilloll which we will sell part in small tracts to Hint purchaser-, ami on onv: i.. mk mi i.r.-r n ..ui.m i..r claimant 1 t thai aM i.r.M.I n IH I.r ltia-1. tUtre Ilia htlalrr an, KH-i.r ..I Ut I a laii.1 olftca al orpiu : t lljr. uri j.'ii, .11 July It, tvl, via terms. Call and see us and get prices at Oregon City office or on Robert L. Taft at Portland office, No. 50, Stark street, Portland. iage a nunanni unlet away, t'himwo Camp imvint rtwtaumnts, where we could revel in the luxury of eating a weal we were not obliged to prepare oursulvet, a luxury noue can fully appreciate save those who have served for years at their own cooks. Chinese Camp meant sa loons, palatial as compared with ttie I tar grogry; it meant a daily mail and communication with the grout world without; it meant hotels, where strange faces tuiK'ht be seen daily; it meant, per haps, above all, Uie nightly fandango When living for montlis and years in such out-of-the-way nooks aud corners as lied Mountain liar, and as were thou sands of now forgotten and nameless flats, frulches and bars in California, cut off from all regular communication with the world, where the occasional passage of tome stranger is an event, tht limited stir and bustle of such a place at Chines Camp assumed an increased importance and interest Chinets Camp justice presided at our law suits. Chinese Camp was the Mecca to which all hands resorted fur the grand blow out at the close of the river mining season. With all their hard work what independent times wars those after all! True, claims were uncertain as to yiuld; hopes of making fortunes had been given over. But so long as $1.50 or $2 pickings remained on the banks men were com paratively their own masters. There was none of the inexorable demand of busi ness consequent on situation aud employ ment in the great city, where, sick or well, the toilers must hie with machine like regularity at the early inomiug hour to their posts of labor. If the Red Mountaineer didn't "feel like work" in the morning he didn't work. If he pre ferred to commence digging and washing at 10 in the morning instead of 7, who should prevent him? If, after the morn ing laljor, he desired a siesta till 2 iu the afternoon, it was bis to take. Of what nature could give there was much at the Bar to make pleasant man's stay on earth, save a great deal of cash. We enjoyed a mild climate no long, hard winters to provide against; a soil that would raise almost any vegetable, a necessity or luxury, with very little labor; grapes or figs, apples or potatoes; land to be hail for the asking; water for irrigation accessible on every hand; plenty of pasture room; no crowding. A quarter of a section of such soil and climate within forty miles of New York city would be worth millions. Contrast such a land with the bleak hills about Boston, where half the year is spent in a struggle to provide for the other half. Yet we were all anxious to get away. Onr heaven was not at Red Mountain. Fortunes could not be digged there. We spent time and strength in a scramble for a few ounces of yellow metal, while in the spring time the vales and hillsides covered with flowers argued in vain that they had the greatest rewards for our picks and shovels. But none listened. We groveled in the mud and stones of the oft worked bauk. Yearly it respond ed less and loss to our labors. One by one the "old timers' left. The boarding house of Dutch Bill at the farther end of the Bar long stood empty, and the meek eyed and subtle Chinaman stole from its sides board after board; the sides skhmed off, they took Joist after joist from the framework. None ever saw them so doing. Thus silently and viysteriously, like a melting snowbank, the great ramshackle board ing house disaiipnared, until naught was left save tho chimney. And that also vaniHliixl brick by brick. All of which material entered into tho composition: and construction of that irregularly built, 'smoke tanned conglomerate of tmuoM nut clustered near ui ft.wn Fann cAstle. j "Old Urhuly" McKarlaue went away.; So did Bloody Bill. So the lUr'i popttla-1 tiou dwindled. Fewer traveli-rt, dothke, wore seen cliiubiug the stwp trail o er Ucd mountain. Millar, theChimwoCainp news agoiit, who, with mail bags well tilled with the New York pa'rx, hail for years canUired from Red mountain to Morgan t Uar, emptying hit tack at lie went at the rale of fifty and twvtity tiro cents pr tht, paid the Bar his last visit and cloned out the newspapur busintwi Ure forever. Then the county supervisor abolished it as an election precinct, and its name no longer figured: in the rvUmw. No more after the vote an n..ll.wl u.l ksi.U lm .H.I active and ambitious partisan mount hit horse and gallop over the mountain to Sonora, tho comity teat, twenty milea away, to deliver tlieofficlal count, tignnd, sealed and attested by the local Red mountain election insctura. Finally the Bar dwindled to Thompson, Keen Fann and his Mongolian band. Then Thompson left. Keen Fann grieved at losing his friend aud protector, lie came on the ere of departure to the dis mantled store. Tears were in his eyrn. lie presented Thompson with a banket of tea and a silver half dollar, and bails him farewell iu inoohuruut and intnuis latable words of lamenting polyglot English, Pincmt Muuxaui. MartarxJ Wall. Itiimrairail Cmrr Nu X.U. ..r Ilia .( a't n' .if IV, aixl ! uu1, sx I J a. r a Shp liatlio. Ilia ffllun ili( tOieavea In r.e har r.iiilluii,.tia rtll'iii. ii.ii aii.1 n lHialt.iU ..f aat, laii.l, it ll.'ttr) .st.-u.,, IUlt.1. Sl.'lia, Sti,livn Mil. I.wll an,! iolin Mi ln) ra, allot t hen iv ilia I u , t'U kamaa rxiiiiiy. or.'t"M J.VI1 J.I Arrar a K, Mrauiar NolIl K pMK l"l lll.ll AlloN 1.AMB Otni a? tt a-ii.it I itY.nai, M) l. Iml iiii.' la iioroi.r airan iimi ihr l,,lluiii liamv.l (..-lllrr lia fHr.1 li,ll.' ( hit liilriilli.u l.i make Dual (irivil III Blll'.,rf if li.a rlafln atl-1 thai all )rn.,f will li m-v l.'.ri. lha rrifla.ar an. I rrcritar ul ilia t , I an, I oniiii a". m..u I'll)', Ori-g.m, mi July IX lain, s ta Jitlll. U W II. V ll nnxalrail Hmrr S.i (.if Ilia ,it iii , an, p1. , ul Mao Iwp r to tiatm, Uir f. !,.. itiK tt llu. t lri,t v tilt rli tlll'l.Hta rtfKlllia lllM.ii ah. dittl . BU.,lt ul. laii.l, ait. I" I C.ailrgr, Klmvr I h. inaa. alaa Mnaavl, A I . ItH liiaa. .:i ..I WUliult ' y, t Urkal-.iaa tillllljf, Orrcoll J. I' ArrKHMiM llralatnr A ill Tana. The fi.ili coinmissioii't exhibit of aqna ria at the Chicago fair is to be Immense ly attractive. As thus far xoavi-d, though details have not btiu perfoctiai, the annex for the punioae will be ISO feet square and entirely of glaMS. There j will bo 1,000 feet in length of glass tanks! filled with all sorts of water creattm, oue half being devotivl to marine life' and the other half hi thedirqilay of fnh: watur specimens. Tho visitor will walk ! between two lines of sqtuirin the length of tho building. Washington Star. Which la I IT Governor Hoard says that during a re cent trip through the oldtwt ilairy sec tion uf New York state he taw on a day with the memory down to wro hundreds of herdt of cows pat ruling the fields np to their ankles in snow, In many instances the owners were fodder ing the cows, dither With hay or corn stalks, on the snow, rods away from tht stable. He wondors if these owners kept cows for profit or for fun. "The average salary paid to men clurki In Washington it f 1,831 a year, while that paid to women in the same depart ments is only $$69. According to a German statistician there are 8,088 paper mills in the world, and of tho 1,804,000,000 pounds of paiicr turned out annually half is used for printing, 000,000,000 pounds being re quired for newspapers alone. The panorama was invented by a Scotchman named Robert Barker, who obtained a license in London in 1787 and erected a rotunda on Leicester square. He was associated with Robert Fultou, tha practical inventor of tiie steamboat The celebrated diamond necklace which tho worthy Ismail Pasha pre sented to the Empress Eugenioon the opening of the Sue canal, and which was sold, together with the test vf the French crown jewels, a few years ug is again for sale for tflH.tm. In Bolgium the voting is restricted to those who pay a certain amount of direct taxes, and the whole electoral power of tho country is vested is loss than 133,000 persons. Ill Great Britain there is one elector to aliont six of the pripnlnUuti; iu Belgium only out to about t ortTsix. Nollt'K Full IT ltl.lt ArioN l.asii nan. s t UKi-i" fitt. lias , Mr la. ivwt. Kmli'B la liaral.)r lv.-n thai lt l.,ll.lii tiamn! aattlrr liaa Sl.'.l reUL' ..I liar llitrhlint tn Itiaaa Slial pni.it III u....rl ..I her rial in ,n, that ail,! iinail Hill I- in., In il,irrllia K.l.ir ml Kx-slvnr ..I ilia I'. S I an.! uffioe al Uri-jnii Clljr, Orru, it), utl July 14. Iwl, ill UhalHl.ilia. mi.Imw ul Kll.u St.ina. ilmraaa.1 lli.itiiti..l Kriir Nu Stu. Inr Ilia a U ul u', ol mi, ', ul ii', c, j. i j t, r a. She liatni-a Ilia ttlluiaii,, alliiri I,, ,i.,ra hrr lii'litlliuoiia rralilaurn uimii au. rtlltlYalt.ui nl aalil lin.l, vU. Jua- pli Wall, Jau Wall, tlviih en Mlti hall. ;,.lui Mi liiiyrv, all ul therr) r. ( t'lai-kainaa count;, tlra J. t ArrttaanN, ltc(l.(cr. NOTII T KtiK i't'llUCATtoN, Lasu urrti i at Unxms Citt.Oh. alar It. I""'l. Nnllct It hfruha iItbh thai Ilia lnllnwlm namr.1 aotllrr liaa nir.l lintlea el hla liiiaiill.ni In malm dual ir...if In n,,,,ri ,i( hi. claim ami Dial al,t prihil will Imi nia.la Indira lha Hi-irla lar aii.l karri vrr nl lhi I' S Uml "Sli-a at or (ua t'lljr. Ori'ie nn July 10. lui, via Charlna K Shalar Preemiilliiii I) s Nn 7iJrt. .,r lha ni; ,, Mr Hi. ti 1 a. r 7 t lie riamra the ImIIowIiii nil tli-aara In iimvii hlainilitlliniiiia m.l,lrtir iiih.ii ami nilllvailiin ill aahl laml, l J,,hn W.-ln llrr, T. i: Hllanii anil I'haa l(,, fh,.rry. villa, t'lai-kainaa mumy, orrann, ami T C O'lN.nin.11; ill l'nrtlaml, Multmimah rniimy or''"ii- J. T. Arrxaaus, llel.l.r. ' NuTli'K roll I't'HI.ICATIoN, I.amii Orru at Ohkuiis I'ity. ot. May II, lv. Null la hi-r.-hy iilrrn th tha U'Uim ln iMini-l .'ill. r haarlli-.l m.ili-n.il hi. luiriuii.ii t,i liinke tlr.nl liri.nl In Ui.,,rl nl hla i lalm ami ihai.alil ,r,ml n III I,.. iu,l0 ,IP n,.,,i,. ler ami IIi-.cU-it ul lh. f. H nn, ,r lJin. Kim t:ly, orvii'iii. .hi .Inly m. laul, vlt: I'llnrl.a fnlu. I'm . 'ini'tlnn It. m n,, , ,,r ,, ,i , ( M, . lwi 2 a, r 1 f Hi. num.,. tho lull, , In, W. ui'.-a tu tiruva hla e'ltitliiuiiiia ri'al'h-hri. iim,h au,l rilltlvnllntiiil anl.l lull, I vll: C K Krhntrr Jim. M.-lntiri., T Vtllanii, i O H, uiicll all til Cherryvlllc, Clai'kninaa e, unity ori'i,ii i-ti lWm. J -- Al-l-KHwiK, Iti-Klalvr. IS, Mi Too Much Load On the liver will break down nil rho nn ergies ol life and unlit you for work, bus iness or pleasure. ImiVritiot), CotiHtipation, RWp loftncfls, liilliousnoHH aro the firrst alarm nature sotindu to warn you of danger. MOORE'S REVEALED REMEDY h KinK of tho I'.lood, Liver and Stomach. It, has nnvor failed, IInn,lr(.,(ni, liraHiiiiinlniH llku thin; ! K. Mlllirr, Aaturln, (lrn wrlli'., i,ii...ui mn0(,,0Vc,, liver .ml Mloc.l tr,li.l,lo." 1 DAVIES' GALUi rortland, OUINKH rillSTAtuTAYUi'it OVERLAND ltOh T,.li..lll,l,'..ll ' A M aiid Ul l". M. ",s. TICKETS isr&fe'f m4 IJrn theint Nm Dimghkui l'maiMN I'ulsre Kl(.mr. KM KB t'OLONlUT HLKK'Wj. run Tliroiiuli on K.prsiaT,.' -TO-. OMAHA, COUNCIL BLUFFS ' KANSAS ClTli chicac: Ik'l-llill! 1IU.U... A M' I rUwt ft utl luitl lnuhri t.t... IT,it ttltlliMt Itaftlfltilara I ...... . u . I - ' ''i"aiw ul lha Inuiimuy m i. i.i-:k, I'erlUK.h O. H. .111:1.1.1:, H Northern Pacific t Great Overland Rout TWO FAST TH AI NX DAILY' " NOC'IIANOKO!" Shortest Line to ChiuT, AuJ all polula J" r. I'Art AMI llaNArut:,T ... fl Tht Wthrm 1'arlHtl.l la Ilia only llua runaim) l'aM.iirir Traina, j Nvoliil-t'laaa ,sihii (fitaij) , l.ttitiriotia ly l'.i.li,, w l'tilinali I'alrti p S,M.nt(lAt 1'lUrai lillilltg l'i,it f rom rurlland la Ui !" Cm) lliat ) ulir til kr)U Ivail fj 1 Norllioni fa. Hlr II K . Tltr.itifh I'lltlman t'aiar Utararti aant la (..-ai-lica, niial ,aiara .fit . -laara -,,oluJ. l.rnlna auj anb I'aily aarvt.-ai. .i.4iitnir aaat.Uru'l !. Ara, HI., I'arllnad, lr. a f Afr-Iri. c. a.r rirai aoJ U Una a. THE YAQUINA ROUTlf Oregon Pacific Railt T. V.. IllMiti, Unviwi OEEODN DEVELOrHEHTainuT SHOUT LINK TO CALUi'l Htlhill T AND r'AUKSTHKlr Train No, t will nm THti' ,la ml balurtlayi, ami on e I ilnya aliptt liary ; i train No alll run MiiinUrt l Uya ml Frtilay, aint on linna hnn tiiHaary : H htiMintr Halllnr ""U I Iain. Yatiaa-lllamrtiaW' ih, inii, ma. Iliraa a.rai.ti'iax-WIIUaa T" March M, Ijtq il.t, aak, ' Tha rmmfany raav tht rlalr, talllni ilauw ailhaul uutlra. J Tralin Bounihri uh lha O 4 C. Iij llnalt alt.'nrtallla an, Alhaur. Tim Ori-uon 1'at'ifltf pr.atiib'w Willaiut'ttv rivwr dlvlaiun t I'urlUmt, aoiil-houml, Momltjr. n, ilitv. ami l'ri.lMi ) II A M 1 IV Curvailia Timawlay TliiiriuUy v lav al 3 .'10 1'. M, I.kv. 1 H inirlli lioiiiiil, Motnlay, WnlW" in rriuayat HA. Al. a mr Tiii-ailay, Tlmrailay anil HaliitJi'i. I'. M. on .Momlay, WmlniiaiU; tluV. hlilll Hurt la al.il ai. nth. lain: 111 III) ovnr liiuht at Kalnin. Ii'tvicf I A, M, Frrltrfil ati't Tlrkttl lift! ttt HalmttB IT-:' I'nrilauil. f- 1: C" MutitK, U. riMtr M, : --ai EAST and SOtl VIA ; Soul hern l'acilic 1 SHASTA LINE' Exjinm fralna luavo Portlw'' Hnll.h 7;U(lr. M. 1Mr. a. 10 IfiA M. T I'nTTUllJ Ar l ' I.T OrrinulMiy L ' Ar H. r'raitrlam l,tjl' Ahnrii traina atnp only at th Wl" llinia nnrili ul itnanuiiri: atl''",-i, nn Oily. WiMMll.tirn, Halam, Alhwj ji flhwlila, llaliwy, llarrltuurf, JucU-J' tlhau,l Kniimn. ItOHKHIIHG MAIL (tlallr1 A :A."i'.TLv fiTriraiiiTar '. M. LV Ornlillt!lty I. B y.r. I Ar Kiiaiihur li AI.MANY LoOAlTlhally, P"V- T.v T'nrtiaTi.i At IE A Mm r. at Hiifx.) I.r OrMim Cltf J ;'.'"" j, at A i nnny OLtit. Pullman Buffet SleC TOURIST SLEEPING C For(ioomntniliitln of HihwihH:!"' " AtMcbud Ui Kxpruai Train ( Weal Hlrta DIvKIoH' A,-, BKTWKKN l'OKTLANI) ANU C0l)m Ull Tralu, Daily (K.oopl BtipJ'f' u 7 :HI . a. I 1, 12 .a. Ar HorlUiiiTT' L (;iirvlll 11 ill,..,. ....I IU. ntifiCt'L. ...niiinti. hii.i ,,,rvnii.n r of Ori.tfnii J'Hiiirto Knltroail. Kirea Train Dully (RP'' B ir.H. I Lv I'lirlUinl A' W1 7 rah r. a. I Ar McM IiiiivIHp JJ. a THROUCH HCKEl TO A I.I. POINTS , ... . Al I'l CAST AND S0UT t Vmi- ll,l I t,,M InfLrlilnllr1" L! riltsa, tiiilpa, (,lu Ollll 1111 t:iniil"w ( ' Omitnii (!ity, , V,,, Vafc-Hnli) by all clniKKlBin. n, aini,Klt K. V. V" Mauagor. Aii'tO.K, "' li. C V lfBli, ,1