Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, November 06, 1891, Image 8

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    A Reversed Mml
o
By ROBERT a V. METIS 3.
(CVpyriKlit by Amrrfrui IYiwi AJvitkw.l
CHAPTER m.
ttw f?n5 nU of noU upon tht bting
ctmls.
AH at once there came a low knock
Milt
cm the stndy door. His wife roused j the touch of garments on the wall, aud all over again. But if he knows the truth
herself, and with a little easeful sigh j in the doorway stood a woman. The wm n not th'" me a creature who
turned from the fire. prisoner's dock, the witness stand, may : k,Ted him and his fair name not so much
"How sweetly Estelle is singing to-1 be supposed to hold pale faces, bnt the 1 w I kved the idea of thwarting my hns
night!" she said. Then in a raised ! judge had never before looked npon a I ud. whoee blighUid life was all my
toice she called aloud, "Come in !" The face so utterly devoid of color as this ' fanltf My husband has been drinking
door opened, the music froui the other woman's, framed by gray hair and dimly j hard since this affair, aud today he died,
room gushed in, and a white capped j illumined by faded eyea. Perhaps the j The paper are full of your praise,
maid entered and went np to her mis- I regularity of the features, the fine out-1 Among other things they say yon hare
tress and said some words in a low tone line and the immobility of the expre-the distinction of never having had t
of voice. "You know, Catharine," said : sion tended to accentuate the absence of decision of yours reversed by the blither
il. T : t. l i ..... . ! . . r.
uc iau.T, wat i ui w wj pui m awp
o this."
"I know, ma'am," returned the maid,
-Dm sue loosea eo laggea out i couwn
- be snappish to her.
Maybe the judge s reflections as to his
ViwnM, lifa i.fttiiM.1 Kim 1.. , k
j men ine woman s eyes were nxed on
owed his wife a little more than usual. she tooJ the tivrmhoU or aQ
k v a . . . . lnstant Kuded over into the
"What is itT he asked. "Anything I dosed th, door hind her.
an do for yon, my dear' i When she sjxike Uie passionleas quality
"It is one of those tiresome women ; her voice was as though that wwe also
come to speak with yon," his wife decolored,
answered wearily. "Must the mothers j ..y01ir niUtook me for nar
and wives and all the female relatives ' Dunlap s mother," she said, "and I did
of the men yon try come to ask yonr Bot correct her. I am his aunt-he is the
demency for the accused ones? Why j of my husband's brother. I came in
should people be so preposterous? A i to hia case. I wish to learn if ex-
jury are the judges of the facts; a judge tennating circumstmces may not tend to
has nothing to do with conviction." ! Wn the tenn of hia impri3onment.
"Ton are a good lawyer," smiled the The missing money U a large amount;
judge, gathering np his loose papers, he was a trusted bookkeeper, and the be
"and hue most women you are against trayal'of that trust makes the offense all
your own sex. You don t say a word , the more heinous."
about the men who come here." i oi.,, nnt w at, ..
"These women irritate me," she went
on. "The criminal class appears to sin
gle out the houses of judges. I suppose
they argue that personal appeals will
lighten sentencw about to be impoeed.
I believe some of the women who bother
us borrow the babies they briDg with
them; a baby is supposed to be a most
pathetic adjunct to an appeal. Do you
remember that old toothless one who
came here with twins in long clothes?"
"Then the wife nnd baby of an accused
man are down stairs."
"His mother, sir," ventured Catharine.
"And without a baby."
"Well, I suppose I shall have to set
her," said the judge's wife. "It is the
mother of the man whose case you are
engaged on."
"What manr
"Dunlap."
Again the name of the man may have
Influenced the judge. As his wife urtwt
from her chair he said:
"My dear, perhaps yon had better slip
on a shawl. Your diamonds, your gay
dress they are such a contrast to the
woman you will see."
"Nonsense!" she said, "nonsense!"
"And, Catharine," said the judjje, at
the music in the adjoining room became
more brilliant, with a man's voice added ;
to it, "tell Mis Estelle I should like to !
eee her." !
His wife gave him a quick glance be- j
fore sailing from the study, her velvet
train swishing a yard behind her, and ;
cautiously followed by Catharine. Then
the music stopped abruptly, there was a ;
light movement outside the door, and '
twenty years of Hondness and beauty
entered the study, a good many tinkling j
ornaments jingling as she came along.
"Papa," she said, "you sent for me?"
"Sweetheart," said the judge, "I
should like yon to interrupt yonr con- j
cert for a few minutes. There is a poor
woman down stairs, the mother of a'
man I am trying, and the music, our because they are loved. My husband be
cheerfulness" i came a gambler, a drunkard. He ill
"Oh, you sensitive papa, you!" was
the merry interruption. "Is that all you
wanted me for?'
"That is all."
"Then I will go back to Mr. Elwyn
do you hear him picking out a tune on
the piano? He says he only knows two
tunes; the one is 'God Save the Queen,'
nd the other isn't. Did you ever hear
that before? And papa, he is all alone
in there."
"And I am all alone in here."
She looked at him, and the color!
rushed to her face.
"What do- you mean?" she said.
"There's a difference."
The judge leaned back in his chair and
regarded her.
"Surely there's a difference," he said
slowly; "surely there's a difference.
Come here?'
She went aronnd to him, putting her
arms about his seek.
"Kiss me," he said, "my 'daughter."
So she placed her rosy face np against
his, the faint perfume exhaled by her
garments, her tinkling beads and ban
gles almost as a parenthesis in the caress.
"Now go back to the lonely young
man," said the judge, gently pushing
her from him. "Surely there's a differ
ence." But she kissed him once again and
smoothed his face a little before she
gayly left bim, and ho waited, listening
for the last faint jingle of Iter ornaments.
"Surely there's a difference," he said
softly. He picked up the papers he had
tvritten that evening,, made a roll oil
tlu-tu and slipped robber band over nil,
With thU button he tapped iku tli
table, thinking of the letter he had yet
to write before going to bed the letter
regarding his coming nomination for1
governor. Surely there was t differ-
ence, u EsUdle hsl said, bnt turvly tit
father owed his daughter this now honor
despite the difference between his lone-
linoss stui that of her lover.
The governorship and after that!
He looked up at the limiting of face on
! the wall Webster! The cabinet! His
wife had said it!
Suddenly there came the sweep of the
velvet rolie, and his wife entered the
room.
"The woman appeals to me," she said.
"She wishes to see you. What you said
to tne regarding my dress aa I went
down to her maybe rebuked me, for I
could not torn her away. Will yon so
her? She looks sensible,"
The judgi recHll.nl himself.
"I can do little for her," he responded ,
with an air of resignation. "Hut so
loug as yon have told her you would get ,
my 'yes' or 'no' I suppose I must prepare ,
myself for a bad quarter of au hour, i
Let hex come op." j
His wife left the room. She called '
"Catharine," gave a low order aud passed ;
by the study door to the room whtre the
daughter kept the youtig man from be-.
ijig lonely. ;
There was a laboring np the stairs.
i coloring in tne eptaernus as muoh as the
1 Jan colored gown and bonnet the woman
wore. At the first glance he had of her
t the judge thought of a splendid intaglio
tent into sard whichwas among his wife's
jewels.
I m .. . I
! though there was an obstruction there.
Then she went on in her dull voice:
' "The reputation which you bear for
integrity, the confidence the community
' places in yon, the applause of the papers
1 over a future honor likely to be yours
actuated me to come to you with the re
cital of that part of my nephew's case
which the trial failed to bring out"
Her eyes had drifted around the room
af she hist spoke, as though she com
1 pared the comfort there with something
that sIle knew, ami now they rested on
the portrait of the judge's wife in all its
beauty and idealization. Her profile was
; toward the judge, and whatever doubt
he might have had before was dissipated, :
I and he uttered her name. .
"Yes," she said, turning to him; "yes,
' for all the change you recognize me. I ,
knew that you would. Now listen to I
me. I know that you regard the crime !
1 of which my nephew is accused very I
sternly; there has been too much wrong 1
' doing by trusted men, and leniency ,
; wonld almost amount to complicity." !
j Again her hand went up to her throat ;
j and pressed there. I
j As 1 say, this man is my nephew. I
have never had any children. His par
; ents were dead when I married his nn
: cle. He came to me a mere infant, and
! loved me as his mother. My married
life was not happy, as I knew it couhl
not be, for I never loved my husband,
who loved me and knew how I regarded
him. I wronged him in marrying him;
my carelesnness of his regard for me
only tended to develop in him baits
which a wife's affection might have
eradicated. His nephew was everything
to me; his innocent love kept me from
despair when my husband went wrong
time and time again for which wron
I blamed myself, seeing that he cared
deeply for me while he was of small ac
count to me. All women cannot love
! treated me, and my nephew protected
me as a son might protect his mother.
Yon will not need to hear details;
you know many a similar story in
your professional experience. This
money, which my nephew is accused of
stealing, was in his care. He had taken
a half holiday that he might consult an
oculist regarding his eyes, which close
application to his duties had impaired.
He volunteered to deposit in bank a
large sum of money paid that day to
his firm. First, though, he went to his
oculist. He was detained longer than
he had expected to be; it was after 3
o'clock, and the bank wag closed. He
did not return the money to the firm,
but brought it home with him, deter
mining to take it back with him in the
morning. He never took it back with
him. He acknowledged that he stole it,
and despite all promises, despite legal
acumen, he haa not divulged where it is
or what he did with it Why? Because j
he does not know where it is because
he never stole it He put the roll of
bank notes under his pillow that night;
in the morning it was gone. He believes
that his uncle, the gambler, the drunk-'
ard, took it. He accepted the shame in
order to shield me; his great, unbounded
son's love would do that for me, for he
thought the last blow I could stand
would be to know that I had
made my husband a common thief,
as I had always said that through my
not loving him I was morally responsi- J
ble for his faults. But my husband did I
not take the money! He knew that it
m in tha bouse
Thin iu the tttgli
(Wl MOlll and
notes frvmi uud
iu h place of safety. Am 1 loft
Inutil grasil my rm; my ImolMtml
had wine for the money and discovered
ht I hud done. Ho led tne down
stairsand there he demanded tho money,
Ail the hatred that was in me assorti-d
itself, and I said hot words to him, lie
struck me. and he had never struck me
before. The tiro was burning in the
stove; I threw the roll of note upon the
biasing coals, 'Now,' I said, "proclaim
mo a thief. Give me a prison cell; it
Willi heaven to any further life with
you.' Hut he faced me smiling. 'I will
do more than that,' he said. 'My wif
shall never be called a thief; Henry shall
be accused of the theft, and I dare jron
to etilighton him as to Uia truth.' It 1
was so; his revenge on me was com-!
plete. I would not, indeed, dare to;
tell my dear boy, for he love me, !
sua ne nas monuzou me into a mar
tyr, a saint I am all that he h.u
in the world; to make me lees than
he thinks I am would ruin his be
lief in heaven itself, aud in me who
have only him aud his faith in me to
carry me through my wa.st.nl life. l
is glad to sacrifice himself for me. He
will come forth from prison a strong !
man, and we can go somewhere where
we are unknown, and he cau begin life I
' couru i wisn yon ro reverse tne decision
' Tn nT male in this case. Now yoo
know why I am here. Do you believe
mat I am telling you the truthr
Believe her!
CHAPTER IV.
Slu Mt the touch of tip.
The judge had not spoken since she
entered the room except to whisper her
name. Every word she said smote hint;
his long experience had given him many
instances of women wronged by men.
Here was woman as deeply wronged
by a man as she could be and the man
was himself. AH that she wan he had
made her; the wreck of all that should
have made her othur titan she was; her
wretched married life, her husband's
downfall, her rmphew's disgrace, her
own torture that shonld List aa long as
she he had done it all. What misery
of soul had been hers since that day
when she had stood before him and
asked him if be wished to ninrry hrl
Her love for him bad made this ruin
snd he had loved her and wronged her
love, hhe had alwayB been fair to look
npon; she would have been beantifid
with other environments than liad Unn
hers, more beautiful than his wife; the
education she had gleaned somehow or
other, her dignity of speech, could not
he himself have brought it about and
molded her into a brilliant woman? She
had loved him, and her love for him had
wrecked her and all those nearest her.
Did his wife love him? Had not ambi'
tion, rather than passionate affection,
brought her to him; had not ambition.
rather than the maternal feeling of this
woman for her nephew, made his wife
anxious for this match between Entelle
and John Elwyn?
Believe her! To doubt her wonld have
been to exculpate himself. Believe her!
Though the woman watching him may
nave uiougnt mm only com ami callous.
"What!" she cried. "Do yon hesitate?
Do you feel that nothing is my due?
Have I not sufficiently accused yon?"
With a despairing gesture she threw
herself at his feet. Believe her!
"No, no." she said pleadingly, "1 do
not accuse you yon are innocent, the
whole world is innocent, only I am not.
I came to you because I am not quite
dead, ana the affection that made you
its idol holds to this child of my adoption
with all the tenacity that availed it so
little of old. I loved you once, and that
should be something to you. I ask for
something for my dear boy, as I ask yon
to screen me for his sake from justice.
Will there not be sufficient punishment
for me when it is always before me that
I send him to prison and must withhold
the truth from him? I I" She could
say no more. She kneeled there with
uplifted pallid face.
. And the judge! .
"Salome The said nothing more. But
the agony, the remorse, the grief In that
word were apparent to her who heard.
She looked at him, her life surely con
centrated in that look. Then she rose to
her feet and tottered, and he put out his
arm to support br.
"Oh, Salome! Salome!" he said.
He held her thus a little while, and
from the adjoining room came the low
murmur of happy voices, while from the
wall looked ilown ujmmj him the pictured
eyes of his wife. The face of the woman
he held had undergone a strange altera
tion. What years of privation and re
pression had wrought still remained
there, bnt it was as though a soft light
had flooded down over brow and eyes.
She disengaged herself from him, and
;
l
er his pillow to put them fAiiillUAVtVJ J J J J I X S rAVSVd
tne room -w
1
I ?C til
'WWW
itl went to myneph- IVVIl rlKWZ Jiff ' imi
na manitl it-. , i
if t.t yfi f t f ' w r ?
7 . if y I 1
Nrf Iff T
. ' 4
I --a - T A"
V- v v XI f
THE
b a fl-ii jlj.
(ifKKIIH IMift-KMI'MS TO
H0DE SEEKERS
INVESTORS.-
We have lot ..Ox'.MO feet, lUOx'JW fi-H, nil favorably locattxl. TI.eso
loin twict' the ordinary uo are hut hull tin? usual price of other lotn situ-
ilarly hK-att'd. Wo have ono-acfc, two-acre, five ami tcn-acr tracts,
suitable for suhurbnn home, convenient to town, schools, churches,
etc., aiul of very productive soil. A large, growing "Prune Orchard," of
which we will sell part iu small tracts to suit purchaser, and on easy
terms.
Call & See Us
AT OKK.iOX (U T
HOHEKT L. TAFT,
t. A SMi.rU M.,
he took the roll uf pr he bail written
that evening, crushing it in his hand.
'To-motTow, he said. "I place iu the
hand of your neiew's employers the
amount of the money that ia iiiimunir
My word will be taken fur whatever 1
shall aay. And I will have the sno
tencing of your nephew! I can say no
more."
"He will know the truth," she cried In
sudden terror: "my boy will know what
I did."
"When you tell him."
"And yon say tltat you will havo the
sentencing of him. un mean tlmt yeu
will make his sentence light?"
"rm the lightest.
"Do you know that people will blame
you for tltat? They will call you un
just; and then there is yonr chance of
being governor; may not that bo weak
ened by what you would do?"
She still thought of him and his wel
fare despite her own great pain. His
eyes were looking into hers, his face
came nearer her wan cheek; sho heard
Ilia troubled breathing, and then she
felt the tiuaVh of liiw she had not felt
since sho was a young, pikwionate girl.
"Koliert!" she said softly, and ho put
his hands up over his eyes and knew
that she wont from him, without an
other word, without another look.
Half an hour later the judge's wife
rustled into the study. She was radiant
"Asleep?" she said brightly, going to
the table where her husband sat "Then
wake up and lot me tall yon how glad 1
am that Dunlap woman came when she
did. For when I .went to Estelle and
John they bad boon having a little tiff,
which 1 quickly patchod up, and the
reconciliation, as all reconciliations will
do, lod to far gruatur tenderness than
before. John will speak to you to
morrow, and bstelle Is in the seventh
heaven. "Why," she said as he rais.il
bis face, "how old yon look. It is all
that Dunlap cam, and"
"vvui you leave iner ne snm iu a
dominating tone of voice hitherto un
known to her.
"Mercy I" she smiled. "Youaroangry
because 1 helped to expedite matters a
little with Estelle and John?"
"I am not angry," said the judge.
"But 1 shonld like to be alone. 11
have a troublesome matter to think of."
She leaned over and put her lips to
her husband's forehead.
"1 had forgotten your luttor to Oen.
Wayne in regard to the nomination,
the said. "I am to happy on account of
Estelle and John that I forget every
thing. Go on, my dear; apres moi le
deluge after the capital of the state,
the cabinet, governor!"
She went from the room humming.
In the room beyond the muaio was re
sumed; from outside came the jingle of
a car ball. The pictured eyes of justly
celebrated men iad there been no ro
mance in the lives of those men? looked
down as asking the occupant of the
room by what right he should assume
the prerogative of the higher position
offered him, while the eyes of his wife
demanded by what right he should re-
ruse any prerogative offered mm. ' But
the judge heeded no fancied question,
lieeded no question he himself might
h i w aKked. He sat there motionless,
winle the voice of his daughter sang a
song of love nnd truth to the man who
I Kir I tri'leil ln'i ,
tni:;:i;i, l.iiil .loll uay, by the
nllki il porin. the United States col-Ici-U
$;:! nnd spends .$ 101; the interest
on the public ilubt was f!)B a minute last
year, or just cxnctly equal to the amount
of silver mined in that time.
f
If h1
will nrl vt-ri.l huii.trwt dotlarn (r jer,
whn lts riKiimlt in I r,
A.Nt-
& Get Prices
Or'Hi K. OK ON
at Portland Oilier,
I'Olt I !, .
Loal In Ilia Culuraxla) taaaart,
John McOrath has rwrivnd a letter
tmdnr ditto of Muy 19 from Walters, on
the O dorado d.wert, tailing of the tarri
lite rata o a miner who ha-I limt his way
on the dtoM-rt. from tlx b'tter it U
teamed that two purtu of pnwiwtors.
Miller and M.Hti'ra and Bownn and his
partiii-r. wi n. tiglhcr, and that on May
Miller, as ho was known, started from
Ottonwtxid .Spring for Walters to hunt
'his burm, which had gone astray. He
had with him tire quarts of watr and
provisions for one day.
j Nothing was thought of the muttar,
; and no one dreamed but that he gut
through all right On the I It It the bal
ance of the party went to Walters, and
reaching there learned that Milter liad
not bmm seen. They immediately put
hack tn search for him. and found his
tracks where ho took a cattle trail which
would lead him to Die Colorado river, in
a direction directly opposite to Waltars.
As they had no provisions they fltiuld
not follow the trail and returned to
Walter. Ha has been given np for
dead, as since the 4th of the month, If
ho hail ruachfd the rivnr, he would have
had time to return or to have written
back to his companions.
rtiwi'ii uniit to Um Aiigidnt to Miller's
friends to have thoin come and search
for the missing man, bnt np to tha date
on which the letter was written no word
had Imon received from them. San Ber
nardino Times-ludex.
Tha llaKlaolnj of tha Kml.
The natives of Piku county are prepar
ing for the end of the world. A few
weeks ago the farmer, Zar.k Myers,
startled his neighbors by the announce
ment that ho had received a divine com
mission to prepare the human race for
the impending demolition of this plannt.
While plowing one day a cload hove in
front of him and a voice said: "Before
this century close Die world will end.
Man shall be no more. Uo toll thy
brethren to prepare; toll them to devote
their few remaining dayt to prayer, etc."
The sect of the Zacharitos haa already
assumed proportion! that are beginning
to deciminate the congregations of the
neighboring churches. Their prophet
adds that the day of wrath will be an
nounced by the sound of trumpets and
the appearance of fire balls, culminating
in general conflagration. With or
without the expected musical prelude,
the severe drought of the last four weeks
will probably be suspected of forming
the preparatory stage of the final cata
clysm. Philadelphia Times.
It la reported that thief has been
identified at St. Louis by a bhnd man,
whose hearing was so acute that be wat
able to identify bim by hia pronuncia
tion of "Good morning." Strang to lay,
the blind man's assertion was conclu
sively proved by the accused confessing
hit culpability. , , ,
Tho Smithsonian institution hat re-,
eeived from China a pair of stocking!
manufactured from human hair. They
are worn by fiahennen over cotton ttock
tags (being too rough for the naked
latin;, ana under ttraw shoes at pro
tection against moisture,
During a hoary rainstorm tB Indiana
mod turtle at large as a man's band
fell from the olondt near Grawfords
ville. For an honr the reptile lay mo
tionless as if stunned, then It began to
crawl away, bnt was captured and kept
at cariosity.
'M1
urn. L:,i, 't 'a It,. 4
Lnnn
Go.
AiliiilnUlrat.ir's Notles.
Nolleela hl.v vtvoit III inntrl lift
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NnlU'n In hrtili)r tlmt thU liilluwlui
tlHIIInl I'ltll'l linn Sli'il lliillrp III III tllllMlllnll
to mk Anil I'""'1 " "'il'"" "I I'l i laini, ami
thai ailil t'loiil "Hi l luailn Imlnra ItoaUlar
au.l llnvUor ul tlm I1 S I mttes. l iirvguii
I'ltj, Otv(nti,im liei-emlier tli. Il. vl,
Ji.lm W NlruotivH,
llulllf. trail KllllT No,IITt. tur Ills . , l .
t ul am, a I. S a r I w.
Hanamra Ilia lulluwltif wIiimmi In ,ms
hli i'.miI ma traiilvuo ii'"U ami riillaluii
nl aalil laml, via
II V. hi., ul au.l llltam Heult. ut Wlllamivllls
t'lai'knuiaa I'liiuity. Iirntmi, str.lirii N 1'iwla
ami l liaitna Aalini. nl M l.tillelun M aililiialnn
r-Miulj or'Ut J f. ArrasxiS, Itrjlilar.
IU II '.
NOTIt K rH I'l'lll h'AritiN
Uml tipjira at drrj.m t'fty. (HMn,
a. iwi,
Nllc U hrttty ilwn that Oio follow. ir
tin mil MMitttr nls titiiit'v uf tt ijiU'tiiimi
I In mli0 lli.nl rtMt In uin-orl nl tit rUiin,
ami ittti tftr win ix Hti iwioi im
ltrtlltr llilil rtr-tU.f of Itttt f 1 "Hit Oftlt'O
lOrrfin K'Uy, irr..u, ,.tt Ntv V. lwt, via;
,4V.f HltKlik,
ll..tiici-.l titirv No. ru fur th n. ir ut
twt At, i u , r 5 1
tl(i 111 I) to- Ihr ttttti'Wllttf WUhMftr (tj UroW
his ritiiilnutttts tiilIH, lil'Otl, Mlitl tJimlMI
iti)U ul . litltt), Vll
I'ofri Vurltlra, I II Tttnmaa, Krntik irlilr
tiO UvKttft Kayt..r,l m( V Kholl, I O ,( Im tt.
IUtM I O,, OrruU. J T ACrRHMON,
0,lft II-JU Uoglater,
itrt k mi
Kuilr la brly ilvpii Ihm lh fullowttif
llumttl aulrr liaa rtir.) tioMt til It la lmttil.n
in mstko rlttal brm( hi tiiMtrt ttf lila rlaitn ait4
1 IpXlJZfrtplSXl
l"""",u
h.iniaiiMj anlry, Ni :i l'r lit Hal hall ut
Ilia niHa l mc II 1 1 1 1 1 a
Ha liaiura tlia Inliuailiig aiUltaaaaa In prive
hla mitillliiliHia rralilaar ujnitt auil culltiratlie
ul aaul laml. via
ll.iitli'li Ualiara, Allwrf Hunl. rralikllll t.
Mltlrr. Hllllaia t Ulll.f. all nl Mllik. V O.
t laraamaa iniuuty. Orranii.
Ii IIU i ArrarK, Mafiatar.
KOTUK rR I'flU U ATIoN.
I.ijui orrti i it osiiKia Cttr iia
r ft 3V lrl.
Niitli la harrliy Mtteu Ilia! Iba liiltawlnr
hatnv.l arltlrr ttaa flint lnillt' uf lila llilrlilinlt
; tu Hiaka Sua! tir,Hi( tit atiMirt nl hta claim auil
that aal'i iriHi! til !, utmlo Imlma flia Itrfka
tpr aiul Itmtvff i (ho r S ltul nft)i- at Or
' t'ltjr, (lrv.., uu Nn. It, laal, ill
t.iia Jamaa.
H'imfiatra4 attlrv- No ivrl. fi tha ult ul Sa
aim a "i lie- m am- a. I I a. r a
Ha Itainra tlia Mlnli lltg wltunaaa In )Mvt
hta eiiiihniiiia raaltlotira upm aiul cultivation
l(. aali! tanil, via
Arttiitr HautKlrra, rVtur raiilamt aM Auanai
raulann, ul l.alitirll Palla, auil Pl4 tlM
Ari.l. ul Taylur, all nl Mtiltinnttati euimlr, nr.
J 1 Arraamix, Itaglalar.
NOTIi X FviH rTJiUlATtotf.
I act nttu-a al (lrna 'lir. Uwoa.
Oct a. laal
Nntli-a la birtha given that Iba folloarlna-Haina-1
avttler liaa fflatl untie of bar llilvtl
tlnu lit mala Sua) ir,Mif lit auitnrt 1,1 bar
i-laltn. allil thai aal.l prtMit will b tiiala twtura)
Ilia Heglavr anil Kai-vUrr nl tha I'lillnl fttalra
laii'l uttii-a al litra I'ltr. Vraf on, uu Nua.
17. Wit, via
Matlla It, falmrr,
llnltlaateafl Ullljf, .Nil t0 tot 111 a', l'l 10
I. Hi. r a
Hha liatiiM III liitlnwlllf wltnaaaiHl III r-rnr
bi-r riiiiiliiiimia rralitmira titcu atnt iMilllia
tli.n nl, aalil Uml, via tb Jnnra ami Aitnltl
Arli..(t. nl Marnml. I' tt . f A Mvllilt, ami
I baflra llailry, ul Satiiljr, all nf Clacaama I u
or
l'MUIJ J, T. Arrim. Uatlairr.
KoTII'K Full rTJU.It'Al
Ion,
l.i si. iicru r um.i..
I'tT. o
(h i. j, i'H.
Nntlra la bi-ffby Rlvatl lba( (ha liilliiwlll.
tiauii'il aatll.-r liaa 1114 ti.itli'a i,f lila llilrlilinlt
In make final iiiikiI in atii..rt nl lila i-laltti ami
;tiat aal.l irnnl v 111 I, a m-i.la brlnrfi iIiii Katila
tar ami lln'rlvar nl ilia lr. H. laml ntlire al urv
t"ti I lly, tin anil, mi Nnv. In, lat, via.
,SV!a Nalaitti,
huiitaiti-ail entry, Nn tavl, tnr Hi tt1 nl aa'4'
ami ', nl aw', nl ari" ,Mi.i(
Ho tiniiiaa tha InltnwIiiK tl!tiiara In prnva
Ilia rmiitlnii.itt. rralilt-iii a tiiull ami cilltlvatlnli
lit anli! laml. via
Ira t,un,ar ami J Plisfirslil. ul Pnvar, F. o.
I'. I Muai'ii ami II. Iti'liiuT, ul Oanrti I'. O., all
nl t'lai'kalllaa C'ti , (iirgnu.
(nil: II lit J. T. A I-mum x, krilatcr.
NoTICK KOH iTIIUl.'AiliiN.
I.tMi orrti k at OKftiiiia t'lTK, Ontuns,
Oct. S. IMl.
Nullm la tinrtiliy alvan Itiat lh fullnwliifi"
itamwl hair at.lMU .if l.ul U .lHMMM....l
; baa rtli'it ttntlrv u( lila lltlmitiiili tiiniakn final
1 (irnnf Itl aiiiinrl ul hla rlalin, ami that anl.l
iriMr will tia maiin timnrn tha Ki'itlatar ami Ho
ralvar, nl Ilia li. s. Uml oiim, al Ori-tuu I liy.
ori'Knn, uti Nnv. is, lul, via:
(i(nri((i It. Taylur,
one of lh halra-at law nt Levi H. Taylur, ita
nnaaril. lur Ilia l'r, li. H , Nu. m7, ai.4 olaw'i
ami aw1, nl ai4 nl aw 7. t i a, r H a.
Ila liainua tin, InllnwIiiK wltncaaoa In prnva
ttiiuluntliiuuiia raalili'iiiit. ulU'vl H. 'I aylnr, ilu
iiiniai'il, iimii ami iMilttvntlnn ul, aalil laml, via:
bulla Cnlliilian ami tlally Wtlllntita, n(
MnlnlU; KranK Itiikor amt iliiurua klainor, ut
aliinilnw Itrnuk, all nf I'laraiiinaa ouiinty, l if,
K. A. llHinai y, wlia ni nlu I'm l, H, No. 7il.1l la
aaorlnlly niintl'l tn Aiiunr allil clll'l' what-
ijji-i-i inn ua may nnvw tu aunt tiriiut.
U) St. II III
J. T. Al'I'KHauN. Ibulalur,
TIMIlKH I.ANII, AI'T JI'NK . IS7S.-NOTICB
KOH Ft' ltl.lt; AiloN.
I.anii Orrti l' AT Ohkiiun ( itv, Oh, Sept. '01
Nulleo la lieri'by tlvsn Hint Iu rnmiillaiii-f
with IIiii iirnvlalutia u( tho act ul ('niiiiriaa ut
JininH, IM?a, (intltlvil, "An sol fur Ilia aala nf
tlnilii'r IiiiiiIn In thn .talna nf t'allluriila.firnKi'ii,
Nivnila ami Waahluiiiun lurrltury," Wiiioilo
O'linnnnll, nf Halmnn, county uf climkauiaa,
atalnol Oreiiun, baa llila tiny hlf.l In ihlaulllre
hnr awuru aMtniiioiit No. '24711, fur tho mr
ohiiiH) ol tl aw' t of auo Nn. 4. In tuwnahli No.
i auiith, ruiiK Nu. 7 aaal, anil will oiler iruuf
tu aliuw Hint tho Inml ainialii la rnnra valuable
lur Ita llinbiir nt atutia thau fur airrlcnltiirnl
iiniiuana, aim to nainiiiian lirr main
m lu aalil
laml bulurc tlia Hnulatar anil HccuHor ufthli
or uf thli
Hlllll! ai IIM'Kntl I lly, (lrii(nn.
ou Ihiinnlay,
lliu allh day ul liaimiuber, lnul.
Hli unities aa wlluiiaatia Jnmea lUrpor, anil
1. 11, t'elura, oKjat I'urlbiml, Or., Krntik Hull, nf
Forilnml.Or. anil John Muiutlrv, 'f Hslinun, Or.
Any anil all niiranna rlaliiiliin ailvarroly Ilia
aliuvil-ilnnrrlhi'il Inmla am riiloalail tu tils
thoirnlslina In thla iittlve ou or bulnrn aald 'Mih
ilayol Dwembor, Imil. J. T. Ai'I-kbhuh,
;iail Hmlator.
TIMHKK LANII.AC TJIINKD, 1H78. NOTIUKFOlt
FUIIUISATION.
I.asii Ornrt at Ohuuon Citv, On., Bopt. 24, '91
Kotlne I. horcby mlvua that In oonipllaura
with lliu provlaluiia ut tha nut of CoiiKroaa of
Jiinii , IH7H,ntltlfiil "An ant lur lha aalouf tlm
borlnnila In tho Htattn of Cnllfnrnla, Oroaon,
Nuvmla, and Wialilngton Territory,"
HnurlotU M. O'bouimll, '
of Portland, (.'ouiitjr ol Miiltnoamh, Hints
of Oriiaon. hna thla rlnv Slii o, Uii ..tn...
her awurn Inliimenl Nn. 247li, far the piirchitae
of the ac4 uf aoo 4, In tnwuahlp No. 1 loiith,
rntifoNo. 7 at, and will oltor nroollo allow
tlmt tho inml aouitht It mure vitlmibla fur tim
ber or atono tliun for aKrlnultnritl niirimana,
and loeatabllah Iter elalin to aalilland uelnre
tho ltiKlter anil Receiver of thin ollloo at Ore
inn Olty ilrcKon, on Thiiraday, the Mth day of
IieooinlHir, 1KUI,
He immm m wltnoaaei: C. K. Hlmfer, nnij
Chnrliii (Jntta. of Mslinon, OraKnn; Kranlt Bell
and B T. Durkce, of Fortlatiil, OruK'iu.
Any aiil nil poranna olslmInK ndvnraely the
almveiltiiicrlbeil Inml aro roqiiealitd to file
their clnlina In thla nllloe ou or bolnre anld 'Mh
dny of inoiiriibcr, InVl. J. 'f, ArncitHun.
KMH1W1 ttejintor,