Image provided by: Oregon City Public Library; Oregon City, OR
About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194? | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1898)
8 OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, JULY 8, 180M SOME CLOSE CALLS. INSTANCES TOLD OF NARROW ESCAPES BY RAILWAY MEN. A Locnmottv' Honmrkablo Jainp Th KWliIng t'r l'twnpr on Hough : KodTrnlr That Left the Track and Kvturnrd Running t Full Speed. There is uo question that well an. thentientod cases ore cu record whew disastrous vrtiks of railroad trains Lave been averted by almost seeming miracles. Jnnies E. Whito, general su perintendent o( tlio railway mail service at Washington, relates tho particulars tf a romnrkablo jump of 2H foot made liy a locomotive. As Air. White tolls tbo story, it was on the 1st of Soptem tor, m$, whtn a New York and Chi cago mail tram on the New York Cen tral, whh b was 1 1 hind time and run " ning nt a vey high rate of speed, reached New l,n:.l,urg, wherva t fool draw of a bridge was open, which open Fpaee it is claumd the engine cloareo" nud landed r.U ly on the main portion of the bridge, tb rest of the train go lug down tLr ugh tho opening. Whilo the engine, it is s-.hl, made tho leap of SS feet i:i s;.:e:y, the engineer and tire men, not haviiij time, to jump, were loth killed. John II. Cain, a postal clerk, was kilbd, nud M. K. Towney, tderk in chmj.p, was eerionsly injured, the other pot.il el. rks escaping unhurt While m-nc i t the local railroad men knows of t;:y locomotives that aro as pood jumpers ns White's cr that do the bounding j.nkry act, some of them know of miraculous and hairbreadth es capes. Carlton l'uris of tho old Ohio and Mississippi fi r many years and mora recently with the 13. and O. S. V. tells that he and h'd twift a number of years ago were riding en a train over the Ohio and Fis shindy road when an ac cident was narrowly averted. But let Paris tell the story: "Tbo road was about the roughest at that time I had ever ridden over. There vrere only a few passengers on the train, Swift and i were in the forward coach talking to the conductor when the soli tary sleeping car passenger came stag gering in and said: 'ilr. Conductor, your road is so rough I can't sleep in my berth. 1 have been pitched out of wy berth twice in the last quarter of an fiour. Intro must be something the matter. ' "The conductor picked op his lantern and said, 'Come on, and I'll go back with you and see what's wrong.' Swift and I sat wbere we were talking, and very soon we saw that the bellcord was being very violently pulled and the engineer was whistling for brakes. The train finally came to a standstill, and fcwift and I kept onr seats and kept on talkiug. As. after five minutes or more, there wero no signs of the train going ahead, we concluded to go back and see what was the cause of the delay. "The conductor and trainmen were grouped about the sleeper with their lanterns, and we soon found out that the sleeper had left; the track and Lad Leen running over tlio ties for how far we never kucw The Light was pitch dark and it was raining very hard. It took the men at Last three hours to get the sleeper tu the rails again. The wheels were very near the end of the ties, and had the train gone 100 yards farther tho sleeper would have been off the ties and over a high embankment." Frank Martin of the Missouri, Kan sas and Texas said: "I remember of a disastrous wreck tieing almost miraculously averted on the Memphis and Little Rock road along about lbb3. A passenger train was traveling at a high rate of speed when the engine threw a piece of rail about three feet long out of the track. This piece of rail was thrown at least 25 feet from the track. Strange as it eeems, the tender, baggage car, coaches and sleepers went over this place where the rail was out and gained the rail again without one of the cars leaving .the track except when the wheels went down on to the tits at one end of the troken rail, only to mount the rail again at the other end of tho track. About all the inconvenience the pas sengers experienced was a slight shak ing." Assistant General Passenger Agent liy mi said: A SCP.NE ON THE SOO. Iha Kin( of Franc Tmik IShumnwIuii of th Laud Two tluutttvd Yi'r Ago. In St. Nicholas there is hii article, on "The Givat Ukes" by W. S. Harwood. Mr. Itarwood says: hilo wasting for my steamer to bo carried through canal locks of tho Soo, I stood one summer dav near n lull (in which now stauds Fort llradv, over looking tho rapids of tho Sou as they flow from Lake Superior down into tho H. Mary's river and so em to join at last tho waters of Hureiu. On tho ton of this hill, as nearly as I could divide from tho topography of tho country, was witnessed two centuries and n quar ter ago one of tho most remarkable, ouo of tho most significant, scenes in t!m history of tho new world. It has been brilliantly described, and I may but mention it. On Juno 14, 1071, a strnngo bixly of men was assembled on this hill. It was composed of four classes tbo official representatives of tho king of Franco, tho Catholic missionaries, thovoyageurs and tlio Indiana, Weeks beforo word had been sent out to tho chiifs of 14 of tho different tribes of Indians in the re gion to meet at the Son on tho date mentioned. An immense cross of wood was made and carried to the top of the hill overlooking tho swift flowing rapids. A stout timber with an en graved plato on it was si t up near tho deep hole in tho ground which was to hold tlio foot ol '.ho cross. When all had assembled, St. Lnsson, tho representative of the king, lift.ii in one hand a clod of earth and it the other bis naked sword nud in tho name of his most Christian majesty tho king ol k rauce took possession of the land. embracing in bis assumption "all tho region from the north to tho south scu and extending to tho ocean on the west. " Ihe cross was then raised beforo tho motley throng tho representatives of the government in their most gorgeous suits, tho priests in their rich vest ments, the voyagenrs in their hunting garb of skins, the Indians in their most fan last io feathers and paint As the cross assumed position the priests in toned a stately chant of tho seventeenth century. Then the French exclaimed "Vive le roil" while, as one historian puts it, "the Indians bowled in cou oert" The plate upon the smaller timber bore an engraved inscription deuoting tbe king's possession of the land. A GEORGIA HEN COOP. It Wm Hum l'rmif AtlnM tit Inroa.U of Oiitalili-rn. "There isn't n more faithful being on earth," said u Uoorghi business man to a reporter, "than ono of our tloorglu names. Neither Is them ouo more mi perstitlous, nor yet again is there ono who loves bettor tho products of tho hen coop. And Curtor&villo isn't any dif ferent from any one of a hundred south ern town. When I was dowu thoro fomo time ;;, a customer of mine who had a fancy for chickens and who had always had more or less trouble in maintaining ownership of them told mo bo had a remedy and usked mo to go around with him mid set it. I wanted him to tell mo what it was. but ho in- fisted on my seeing it first, so I went slong with him, and in a few minutes was standing in his buck yard Ufore what was to mo tho oddest chicken coop t ever saw. It was constructed of r.ro timbers and there were n dozen places in its walls where a hand could bo run in and even-thing cleaned out within reach. Then tl. re was no fas tening on tho door, nor was there nv kind of protivtion to tho fowls. I couldn't undi r.-tand how such an In viting snap could be of any use to tho owner uiu vu-.l a:i i::i:eh " 'The charm in in tho timber,' said ho " 'N'o,' said I. " 'Tact, ju.-f the km don't sco it on tho oi t know if. hut i!n. do, and tlkv SHOE HIEROGLYPHICS. v.'saU ho. 'Yon idoand you don't ;ie i!.iri.n s around hern won't come within 100 A SCENE IN SALONICA. The Jews ud Jcwtuw Tht Inhabit the Heart of the Town. In tbe true ghetto, in the noisome heart of the town, where the cobbled streets run slimy and the people chaffer witn the butchers for tho refuse of tho slaughter house and chicken block, 'you see the unchanged Jew of the middle ages, ilo ho bearded grandsire or tiny boy, ho w ears a long loose galardiuo to his heels and tho fez of his masters. If be is well to do, tho garment may be fur bordered or it may bu cf silk, but it could not iiitro surely bo soiled and greasy if tho law reouind it so. With marriage this survivor of tho dark tigcs ! grows a biunl tu II and thick and griz zled in the chl men, vuryuud Llatk and very sparse in the younger heads of fam ilies This is as it is in Lust L road way and Chicago and Le-rlin, tut when you look upon the wives and daughters in Halouica's ghetto you see mediaeval characters who have staid in the east, but sent no representatives abroad. These Jewesses love display aud court admiration. Ihey are much fairer than the men, milky skinned, with a pale pink flush, as if they were hothouse bred. Their clothes are gay, red, green aud blue being their lavcrite colors, and tbe married women all wear decol lete bodici s fashioned very low in front and showing a fancy shirt of embroidery and lace, which either reveals the mold of their forms or makes startling ex posures of tho forms themselves. Their chests are always quite bare. This in a laud where the other women expose nothing but their eyes is all the more astonishing. On their crowns tho Jew ish matrons wear very showy, often beautiful, he-addresses, composed of a cap of red, green und yellow silk or cloth, that is curried dowu the back of tho head in a Lag that envelops their yarils of that coop ir tin y can help it. I don't core h uv full of chickens it is 'Cause why? It is built of tho timbers cf a gallows on which a man was hum.' anout tnree months a-;oin another coun ty. It cost mesuiuething extra to get it, nut it bas more than paid for itself 6inco 1 have had it. and I am in tho market now to buy all tho secondhand scaffolds in ( leorgia. If you run across a stierill any place with ouo for sale, let mo know ly mxt mail, won't please?' Itwasatruo I ill," concluded tho traveling man, "for I saw a darky tried tin it, and bo refused a big silver dollar to go ilown to tho coop to get a chickeu for breakfast." -Washiri-toii star. you. TEAS AND TEA: thing Oure rseil or Now fwd at Rnbll tutu For thr Chlurao H.irb. Of course every ouo knows that wo drink a good deal that i n't tea when we drink a cup of tea. We drink or are supposed to drink some tea, some lead aud some straw. But there are sev eral "teas" that tho drinkers know are not made rf tea leaves and yet are not adulterated. In Peru they driuk mate, a tea mado from the Ilex pnr.igneusi.-i, a species of holly. This is tho only mate tea, but there is a Brazilian ten, gorgonhu, call ed mute there; another tea used in Aus tria, called Brazilian tea, and several other H.x-alle.1 mate teas aro made from different varieties of tlw ilex. In Bah rador tiny make a tea from two sis-cii of ledum. Oswt go t. a was made from the scarlet nionarda, and mountain tea from the dwarf evergreen, (Jaultheri procumbeus Then clover tia and tansy tea and catnip tea nud mint tea are used, though not as beverages, In Sumatra they use colfco leaves to make tea nut of, and tho beverage is said to be very refreshing. In Mauritius tbe leaves of an orchid, Augroecum fragraus, are used. The TnnoiiinoKe nave teas or tuoir own, made of leaves, terries, barks aud woods. Tho A by sinianA make tea out of tho leaves of the Catha edulis. When a sentinel can't leave his post to get a cup of tea, ho can chew a leaf or two of this plant, and he won t feel like going to sleep an uignt. in iasmania there are said to bo more than 200 substitutes for tea: in England they used to make a tea of sage, betony or rosmary and of rasp- Dcrry leaves; tu t rauce they use black cu.raut leaves aud borage to mako tea, ana a century or so auo thev L-atherM Occult S) iiiln.lt Tlmt llnvn llt-.-ii l,viil to )--lvt WoiiiHiihliul. "IVopio often ask mo tho meaning of tho apparently entity hieroglyphs and figures that are stamped ou tho inner side of the uppers of ready lliiulo sh.ies nowadays," said an F htnmt shoo tlmil r. "As every shun manufactory has a secret stamp code of its own aud there is, therefore, uo possibility of the gen eiul public learning nioio than that uoh codes e.vlst, I may its well tell you that the vaniiy of modern mortals, aud es pecially women, Is at tlio bottom of these peculiar stumped characters nud ligtires. You'd bo surprised to know, for instance, how many women there are who imagine that they weuru .No, 3 shoe when in reality their sl.o is n couple of liguns larger. A shoo sales man ivho understands his business can tell precisely the Ulllnhi r of tho shoo a w oman customer wears at a glaneo. But a-' t ften as not a woman whoso foot Is a No. 0 calls for a shoe a coin lu of ul.:t smaller, and tho mysterious stamped hieroglyph scheme was devised for tho I purpose of encouraging her in tho belief that her foot is a couple of sl.es smaller than it really measures in i,hoo leather. "When a woman calls for a No. !! to fit il No. 0 foot, no shoo bailsman if! this era who cares anything for his job I going t,i say, 'Madam, your foot ro an ires a No. 6. ' lie Umply brinks out li ! ihoo of tlio style the it (iuists that ho ' feels cnimU lit will fit her comfortably und lets it go nt that. "A won.au ran ly thinks to inquire If tho shoe is redly of the hb-.osiie aslod for, for she takes it for grnntid (hat tho salesman bus given her what she do- maiided. But when a woman irk, for instance, 'This is a No. !l, i it?' it's the salesman's lusiiiess to uiiblushiiigly reply, 'Yes'm, it's a No. a.' The wo man customer might examine tho hiero glyphs inside the uppers for a week without finding out any different, and ivi n if sho had tho key to tho puzlo it would only make her ft el bad; so what would bo tho use?" Washington iftar. 2 I A Beautiful Present In order to further introduce f IA.STIC STAuCil (Hal Iron lliand), the inanid.u hirers, I. C. Ilubiiuter llrim, Co.,ol Keokuk, lows, havr decided (o (ilVU AWAY a beautiful present with t-.u li pin kajje (if stareh sold. These presents arc in tho form oi i DM II Mires The-y arc 13x19 inches in litc.anel are tin it led an follows: Lilacs and Pansles. Pansics and Marguerites. 1 xtQpLxy j it wj mw v- ' " ' ". 3 w-""- ' CI i SAW t's 1 i,'.wv u " '.' Mvj iter , tir.C i ' At U Oil! 1U,.ut W,. 1 i At Ml At A Col .n i.s & KAw "I r Tiiryr.ra l"Y0 f,i1Hio.L,v:i.,..i w Vuvji,! 7 j L Wild American Popplea. Lilacs and Iris. imstrl nrtlM, X iiei ht tublei ti A ARITHMETIC 1700 B. C. These r.ire (lieturrs, (our in number, bv Ihr rei.nwnrd S R. l.cKoy.of New Yo:k, h ue l.i 1 n 1 tu.nn from lie- vcrvih Jt in bis studio ami are inv olieud fur the bint lime m tin- nuhlic. 2 The plelurcj arc a Tur.i'ely ii jik hn e, in all tho toh.i.i ma d In the orlg- iii.di, and arc pronounced by roiuprtrnt rrltiii, woiks of art. $ I'.istel plettirrs are the oirrect thing for the boinc, nothing Sur; ajitlng t- in- hi 111 i,iuijr, in iMit-.-is ii 1 mill nun iuw.-ui nierii tine ol thcie pii turcs m will be given away with e.n II tai kaee of 5 mri based ol your gus er. il i.i ibr b. si i.iuudiy stan li on the market, and S is sold for ion-tits a p-ukagc Ask your gt.Ht-r lor this st.irih ami get a 9 beautiful picture t ALL GROCERS KEEP ELASTIC STARCH. ACCEPT HQ SUBSTITUTE I i 5 s 111 1 mm nun arti.-.tii niern. ill English gardens and fields ash. chit- am! sloe leaves, and the leaves of white tnorn una blackthorn, out of which to mako tea. So it is evident that there are teas and teas. New York Kuu. tresses. Often theso Lags are finished "1 remember f.vo instances when the at the bottom with b.ay gold braid. Jives cf tugiiKtia and treuic-n were Eflved by u sicking iuttrveiition of lVrovideuce. A numher of years ago a new trostlo was being put in, and false works had been 1 rected to permit of tho temporal y puseiigo ef trains. Tho work men had failed to put in some necessary bolts. Tho first train that came along was a freight. As soon as the engine struck tho fulso work it gavo way, and lown went the engine. Tho fall was lie of 60 feet, and in falling the engine made a complete revoluliou and alight d ou the ground upon its wheels right fide up, and tho engineer and fireman loth escaped injury, although they were probably pretty badly jarred by tho fall. "The other caso I know of is that of a train running at a good speed when the engine run into a largo rock that bad fullm on the track just at the month of a tunnel. The impact caused the tender to bind up from the rear end and form a proiee ting hood over tho en gineer and fireman in tho locomotive cub, and they v.iro uninjured. Had this not occurred, they would either have been badly injuro or had their lives crushed out. " Another passenger man said yesterday: "When 1 1-3; : sh.-.- ping ear conduct. .r cn the old i:eo li-n. about DO years ago, the train was lot", and wo wero going j long at a pretty lively gait. We were j within about ii e mil. s of Indianapolis j when the engine aud four cars jumpt d ' tho track, and wo thought there wouhi be a smash up, but beforo tho train conld be stopped every wheel was again cu the rails without the least damage being done to any part of the train or any of tho passengers, barring the trig 1 t ve all had." Cincinnati Enquirer. In tho W ake of u War, " by Julian Ealph, in Harper's Jlagaziua. K.iml tu the Occasion. They tell this fitory in London about the Countess Waldrgravo, who was married four times: Ono evening she appeared ut the opera in Dublin during her fourth husband's occupancy of tho post of chief secretary for Ireland, An audacious Celt, catching sight of ber ladyship in one of the boxes, shouted out with real Irish temerity, "Lady Wald'-grave, which of tho four did yon like best?" The countess was equal to the occa sion. Without a moment's hesitation she rose from her seat and exclaimed AulmaU' Fright In fchart. (V question that has often been uslrod is, How long does fright last in a wild creature? The closo observer will bo surprised nt its brie duration. They are not subject to "nerves" like human beings. A partridge after running (or rather flying) tho gantlet of half a dozen guns if we may be allowed a mixed metaphor dropH on the other side of a hedge and begins calmly to peck as if nothing had happened. You would think a rabbit after hearing a charge of shot whistling about its haunches aud just managing to escapo from a yelp ing spaniel would keep indoors for a week, but out it pops quito merrily as soon as tho coast is clear. A fox pur sued by hounds has hi en known to halt and kiM a fowl iu its flight, though wo enthusiastically, "Why, tho Irishman, t may assume that his e-nemieH wero not ui cuuimj a reiuaru wuicu naturally close to Kevnard at tbo tune V 'brought down tho house.' A New I'.oad Found. "Oh, John, dear, isn't your Undo Ceorgo dreadful?" "What's up now?" "Why, I called ut his office today, and he was talkiug to one of hid ch rl.s tip stairs. " "Nothing unusual JI41 that." "And, John, he told tho poor man to go to you know w here through tho eptaking tube." Pick iMo Up. lilVO been led into thinking about tho matter by noting what took place at a cover after being shot over. 1'all Mall Oa-zette. Sunn OverU hU-h Kk)I1u f hlhlrvn 1'ua. lrd Their llralu. Probably tho oldest copy book fot homo lessons in arithmetic was recently nuearthed in Egypt. Tho papyrus,whlch wus found iu excellent condition, dates from tho period about vl 700 il. C that is, about 100 yeurs beforo the tlmt) 0 Moses, or almost U.OOO years ago. It proves that tho Egyptians had a thor ough knowledge of elementary mathe matics almost to tho extent of our own. Tho papyrus has a long binding, "Li rection how to attain the knowledge of all dark things," etc. .Numerous exam- pies show that their principal opera tions with intiro units und fractions wero made ly means of addition aud multiplication, fcubtnetions and divi sions wero not known in their ereseut lorm, rut correct results wero obtains nevi-rt In-less. Equations uro also found in tho i.-apy res. Among thti cxainpl. s given is this ono: Ten meaunn s of I arb y are to bo oiviciori among tm lUM.iisiu such a milliner that each suln ijti. nt pirson re ceives one-eighth i f 11 unasuroless than tho ouo before him. Another exumplti given is: There uro seven men, each ono bus seven cats, each cat has eaten seven mice, each mouse has en ten seveu grains of barley. Each grain of barley would, if cultivated, bavo yielded seven measures of barley. How much biirlev has been lost iu that way? Tho papyrus also contains calculations of area, the calculation of tlio an a of a circle am its transformation into a square, and finally calculations cf tho cubio meas urements of pyramids. Pbiladolpbi Record. WHEN YOU BUY, ALWAYS GET THE BEST Thin ajijilics to real estate as well an other coiwxlitieH. Kvery family in need of a homo tlcHireH tho host location. SOUTH OREGON CITY Has the greatest nvimher f advantages to its credit, of any of tho Hiluuhs of Oregon City. It will jay you to investigate this property. (!onl clear reasonahlo prices on easy instalments. Call address ts at on or T. L. OHARMAN, Trustee. Slinking Hand. Men shake hands with strangers of their own sex with far greater readiness than do women. Two men, on being presented to ouo another, will frequent ly extend tho hand in a grasp of greet ing, which gives opportunity to form u general idea of each other's mako un. and know w hether they aro attracted or repulsed. Occasionally there is a man with sufficient good nature and courage to refuse another man s hand without causing ollenso. I hero aro nu n who bavo been so impressed Willi tho (lis coveries of bacteriology that the-y main tain hamlhhaking to be the cause of ili-) semination of disease germs. Tho bare hand comes in contact with innumera ble germs b.ol.in;' forpUBliilaoeon bouni vulnerable spot of our anatomy, A cot or abrasion on the bund leaves n door open for tho admission of tho enemy. Therefore it iH with reason that mon arguo against promiscuous handshak ing out of tho borne among the men met in business life. Hcienee long ago frown ed upon the practice of nroiniscuous kissing, which prevailed among women. Is tho ungloved handshake al.10 doomed? Kow York Ledger. j In the maikeis of Brazil one often I Bees live snakes a species of boa from 1 10 to IS feet long. They aro employed iu many houses tu hunt rats at night, ' being otherwise perfectly harnih cs. I They become attached to a house liko a cat or a dog Doing CloUn-K. The ('lying of clothes in frosty weather is sometimes, in the case -of delicate fabrics, attenderl with tmn-itii of tlio quick Milfeiiing in the I 1 air. A simple precaution :1 prevent buy such trouble is ihrco or four handfuls of in the laht rinsing water, iog it, in fact, a weal: brino. rinsed will not suffer from e. ill) the cold. b( causi very c which to diss., coarse thus v Artich or stiil' There, aro 1,45 characters iu the 24 books Dickens wrote. The , cause t tho ac1 impea. Auoi.i, Eauk o becomo palo from fear bo ,1 utal emotion diminishes 1 the heart and lungs and so i iuulation. io. 000 sovereigns pass over the i.ngland couuters every day. Great Hat t'atehrni. According to an account in Tho Joru- mil d 'Hygiene, rats have become so abundant in Brazil that a domestic snake, thogihoya, which has about tho circumference of tho arm, is sold in tho market place in IJio Janeiro, to bo kept in tlio house as a protection against ro dents. It would seem that tho serpent pursues its prey more for the pleasure that thero is iu it than from a se-nso of hunger, since it is said it rarely eats the rats caught, Similar in ItH habits and attachments to tho domestic cat of our more- northern latitudes, tho gihoya will, it is said, find its way buck to tho house of its master oven if transported to a considerable dhitanco. Charman Bro's. Block, Oregon City BPlnr Li. PORTLAND TO THE DALLES y tlio fiint and coin modioim Htf.'imer Regulator fELLOH -Oregon City oftire at- I. eaves Portland daily excent .Sunday at 7 a. in. Thin is the (!reat Sconio Route. All touriHt admit that the Bconerv on the Middle Columbia is not ex colled for hoauty and grandeur in '... I4...1 C.-...I. .. t e Hie million omra, run niioriiia-. it . 1 . tion ly addressing or calling on 111111110 V S JJl'lliT SlOW. J.N. IIAIINKY, Auent. Tel. 914. Portland. Or.. Office and wharf, foot of Oak St. 18fX) inilcH of long dis tance telephone wire in Oregon and Washington now in operation by the Oregon Telephone andTel egrapli company. Portland, Penttlo, Spo kane, Tneoma, Salem. Wnlltt Walla, Pendleton, Albany and thiol ber towim in the two KlatoH or- the line. Quick, iKourato, cheap. All the satisfaction of a personal coimnuiiication. J)inlaiic(i no ell'cct to a clear iinden-danding. Spo kane as easily heard ad Portland. J. H. THATCHER, MANAGER, Portland, - Or on. Tho seal worn by tho popo and used by him on ollicial documents to which his Nigiiaturu is attached has 011 it tho engraving of a fish, with tho cipher of tho wearer. Sinco tho thirteenth centu ry every popo bus worn a ring of thin character, and it is shattered with hammer when tho wearer dies to pr vent its use on a forged document A. W. PHILLIPS, LA AND DELIVERY Prompt attention to hauling to any part of Oregon City. Moving attended to promptly and carefully. Special raten given on hauling to ana trom Oiaelstone and Park-place. I''?filhli,i'4l t I Gl'ffllll, PIONEER lm$kt and Expfe, Freight and parcels delivered lo all partH of the city. RATES - REASON ADLE. i