Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1882)
. Walton Brown Body. Dr. JarvUT. Johnson of Martinsville, Iod , gvca tlia Allowing account of how be como iuto possession of tie Vody of cDe of Mn Brown'i sons: I as the surgeon of tho Twenty-seventh Regiment of Iudiana Volunteora in the war of 18C1, and served in that ca pacity during the years of 18C1 and 18(32. In the spring of 18G2, General Hank's ni the Vftllev of thft Klieunndouh, and entered the city of Vinciiester, . iviuivuu a part of the said division. After we had enured the city I took possession of the medical college situated therein. In the mtmsetiin of said college I found a large, avim-trieal and anatomical hnman body or frame. It had been well prepared for p. enervation, and contained all the mn'!e, arteries and nerves. By per minion of General Banks, I took charge of tlio specimen and removed it to the Academy hospital in Winchester, which hospital was undor my control. After its removal to the said hospital, a num ber of the prominent citizens of Win Renter called upon meat the hospital, and each and all declared that it was the remains of a son of John Brown; that the said son had been killed at Harper's Ferry, Vs., in October 1859, at the time of the insurrection. One of the professors of the said col lege also called upon me in person and demanded that I return the specimen. Ee then gave me all the details of the manner in which the body hud been pre pared, and said that he did it himself. He told me that after young Brown was killed at Harper's Ferry, he had the body sent to Winchester, and then, upon con sultation with the other professors of the college, it was decided to prepare the body of young Brown that it might be preserved in tho museum of the college, as a specimen and an object of interest ' and note. The professor strongly ap pealed to me, in the name of my profes sion and in the interest of the same, and as a friend of science, to return to him the said body. He siid that when the . was nvnr the oolWe. which had been burned, would be rebuilt, and that it should be deposited therein. He cited the fact that the sons of John Brown had been killed while engaged with their father in the attempt to overthrow Vir ginia's cherished institution of slaverv, and Virginia was entitled to the body as an object of warning and curiosity. In answer to the domand and appeals of the professor, I said that the memory of John Brown and his sons and their heroio battle at Harper's Ferry for the freedom of the slaves were held in too high esteem for me to leave the body upon the slave soil of Virginia; hence I should send it to the free soil of my own State, Indiana. I afterwards, in the summer of 1802, shipped the said body by express via Franklin.Ind., that point betog the nearest express office to my own homo.then at Morgantown, Morgan county, Indiana; and tho said specimen has beeu in my possession and under my control evor Hince, and I have no doubt whatever but that it is the son of the heroic John Brown. 1 would have noti fiad the mother or brothers of young Brown lung ago that 1 had the body in my possession but for the reason thut X was not aware of the iact that there was a brother living, and feared that the in formation to tne mother might simply renew the great mental anguish which I felt assured she had endured about the sad results in years past. It was not r.ntil recently I saw in the papers that it was being contemplated to rear a monu ment to tho memory of her husband, and that she knew nothing of the remains of her sons, that I determined to write to the Chicago Tribune and makepublio the information. I have never tried to conceal the faot, but have always talked freely in regard to the matter, aud sev eral .years ago our local paper published an article in relation to the body being in my possession. I now freely and gladly, without price or reward, surren der tiio said body to John Brown, Jr., in order that it may be interred in free so l, and glad am I that I have been the means of thus preserving it for that pur pone. The fcody. which is that of Watson Brown, will be interred in tho family burying-ground, at North Elton, N. Y., by the side of tiie grave of old John Brown. Indianapolis Journal, Septem ber 12. San Francisco. Somebody has poked fun at San Fran cisco bv calling it "The Venice of the West." and then qualifying tho compli ment by explaining that the only resem blance between the two cities is in the volume and variety of the disagreeable smells thut prevail in them. But the Sun Franciscans take no notice of this explanation. They ucecpt the compar ison in its broadest sense and positively expect you to see a resemblance between their very wonderful but very new and very ragged town and Venice! Indeed, there is no limit to the San Franciscan's expectations from a stranger. No ex cess of admiration ever becomes flattery. They will cooly accept every word you say, and even then will think you have not risen to the whole truth about "the Golden City '"the Queen of the raciflo," etc., etc., and perhaps go away after all with a lofty sort of commiseration for your rustic incapacity to grasp all at once the metropolitan splendors of San Francisco. JCow, I was sitting in the hotel one day and overheard a party of San Fran ciscans bragging in an ou-hand way to a poor wretch who had been bronght up in New ifexiso or somewhere like it, and calmly assuring him that there was no place "in ihe world" of greater beauty than San Francisco and of more delicious fruits. (They said a great deal more about fine building, institutions, &o., 4e., which was shier nonsense, but let all that pass. I venture to attack them only at their strongest points.) Hearing the conversation, and being inwardly exasperated at the imposition that was being put upon the simple minded bar barian, I pretended to fall into the same easy credulity myself and drew them on to making such monstrous assertions as that San Francisco was a revelation of beauty to every tourist and the perfec tion of its fruit a never-ceasing delight o him. Having these grossly ignorant men thoroughly committed to what they had said, I ventured to inquire what standard of comparison they had for their sel.-laudation, what other countries they had visited and what fruita they consid ered California produced in such per fection. Now, it is a fact that these three impostors hod never been out of America; in fact, that except for short visits on business to the Eastern States they had uever been out of Cali fornia and Nevadat I then proceeded to enlighten them- told them that to those who have traveled, to the cognoscenti, San Francisco does not appear at all beautiful; that on the eontrary it is a great disappointment; that in America itself there are many places far more beautiful, while "in the world" tbere are scores of seaports with which San Francisco can no more venture to com pare iUelf than a mud pie can with a meringue. As for its fruits, tly re was not in its market now, in its best shops and the height of the fruit season, too a single thing that deserved to be called first-class. From tho watery cherries to the woolly apricots, every fruit was-as flavorless as it well could be, and as a whole they were ao second rate that they could not find a salo in the best shops of either Paris or Lon don. This was very rnde, I know, hut I found to my surprise that every traveler in tho room had been just as exasperated as myself by the local habit of exaggera tion and several of them corroborated me. It is a great pity that San Fran ciscans should have this weakness. They have plenty to be proud of, for their city is a marvel. But it has all the disadvan tages of newness, and in a greater de gree, too, than any other new places, for instance Chicago or Denver. Its popu lation, moreover, is more disagreeably unsettled than in any other town I know of exoept perhaps those on the Levant. All the mud aud dirt are still in suspen sion, and a very undesirable mixture they make, too, those half-breed and hoodlum elements. I have no douht, of course, that improvement is making im mense and rapid stridos, but to the visi tor the act of transition is of course in visible and he only sees the place at a period of repose between the last point of advance and the next. He can im agine anything he pleases. But this is not what he actually sees. For himself, then, I found San Francisco, as so many other travelers have described it, disor derly, breathless with haste, unkempt. Here and there, where trees have been planted and there is tho grace of flowers and creeping plants, the streets look as if rational people might really live in them. But for the vast major ity of the buildings they seem merely places to lodge in dark bungalows or rest houses, perches for passing swallows anything you like ex oept houses to pass one's life in. They are not merely wooden, but thoy are sham too, with their imposing "fronts" nailed on to the roofs to make them look finer (just ns vulgar women pin ourly "bangs" on to the tops of their beads) and their inexcusablo dearth of orna ment. In many ways the Queen of the Paoiflo wai a surprise. I had expected to find it "semi-tropical." It is nothing of the kind. Women were wearing furs every afternoon in Juue, because of the chill wind that springs up about 3 o'clock.and men walked about with graet coots over their arms ready for- use. The architeo tnro of the city is not so "semi-trophical" as that of suburban New York, while vegetation, instead of being rampart, is conspicuously absent. Three women out of every four wore very thick veils, but why they were so thick I could not dis cover. In hot countries they do not wear them, nor iv "semi-trophical." Perhaps they were vestiges of some re cent visitation of dust, which appears to be sometimes as prodigious here as it i i in Pietermaritzburg. But they might very properly have been made an armor against the flies which swarmed in somo parts of the town in hideous multitudes. -t N. Y. Sun. German Peasant Women and American Invalids. An American woman expresses her pain at seeing the German women car rying on their backs great baskets of earth, which men filled with their shovels; and at a Holland woman's pull ing, by means of a strap across her breast, a canal boat in which two men sat smoking, She had also soon women and dogs harnessed together dragging a cart in which sat a man, loying his whip impartially over both woman and dog. "Being a woman," she says, "thank God I was born in America." It certainly is one of the privilcgos of birthright here that women are not forced to toil, as the women do whom she describes. Yet in all probability, so fur aa lionlf h rtrflllftS liaDIHDOSS. Olid llBl)- piuess is almost impossible without health, the hardy peasant women of Holland and Gormany might not Lave much occasion to envy thoir pitying American sister. The chances are that the American woman has scarcely known since she camo of age a whole year of healthful heorty life; thut she has some ache, some ail, some weakness, brought on bv bad habits of living, imprudent diet "or fashionable clothing; that her hips are loaded down with several pounds' weight of skirts; her waist laced so tight that she can scarcely breathe; and the heels of her shoes are in the middle of her instep, and bound to pro duce, if they have already produced serious physical complications. The peasant woman's lot is a hard one, but she has a healthful appetite; and if she is killed by toil too severe, it is quite as likely that her American sister will die, or live a protracted invalidism, in con sequence of a too luxuriom and fashion able existence. Detroit Free Press. It would be hard to find a more pitia ble set of human beings anywhere than the female emigrants that arrive in this this country rrom various parts of Europe. They are cot only ignorant of the country, but usually without money aud frequently without heart, and so in too many instances aro the common prey of sharks and sharpers, who seek to use them in many evil ways. Castle Garden is one of the dreariest places on this earth. Whatever, therefore, Mme.Elise de Roerber and Lady Jane Taylor or other ladies can do or conceive looking to any amelioration of the conditions of the female emigrant deserves the popular sympathy of man and womankind. Philadelphi Times. Charles Reade ia described as tall, slender, and wearing glasses. His hair gray, and sparse on the top of his head. The Lock of Broken Cortet Miss Creiger snapped a corset steel at a picnio. Mr. Barnes heard it and begged to be allowed to make her a pair that would not break. She consented. Being a skillful mechanic, he invented and constructed an improved kind, and she was for three years supplied with them, at the end of which time they married. The question has been before tho U. S. Supreme Court whether the wearing of the invention by Miss Crei ger was such a "publio usage allowed by tin inventor" aa will prevent Barnes from obtaining a Datent. The court de ckled against Barnes, and Justice Miller dissented. "If tlia nuio spring," ue says, "inserted in a single pair of cor set n, and used by only one woman, cov ered by her outer clothing, and in a po sition withheld from publio observation, is a Dublio use of that piece of steel, I am at a loss to know the line between a publio and a privato use. Now York Sun. An Omaha correspondent of tho 19th instant gives the following, which will be of interest to tho Christian world, and particularly the denomination mentioned. He says: Almost an entire Pullman car on the Union rxcine west bound train to day was occupied by some American Presbyterian mission aries, some accompanied by their wives aud families, who are en route to various ioints in Eastern and Southern Asia, lev. D. McGilvary, Mrs. MoGilvary and son are bound for Laos; Rev. E. P. Dun lap, Mrs. Dnnlap and three childron, on their Return to the kingdom of Siam, where they have already spent several years; Rev. S. C. Peoples, J. P. Hunt and Mrs. Hurst, go to Lios; Rev. Mr. McLaren and Mrs. McLaren go to Siam; and Misses Wishard, Warner and Wirt to Laos; Miss Linnell and Miss Griffin to the land of the white elephant; Miss Hesse and Miss Garvin go to Japan, and Rev. W. W. Hayes and Mrs. Hayes to China. The party sailed on the 28th from San Francisco. Church Attiuctions. Saratoga was recently well besprinkled with postors announcing that tho Rev. Dr. Newman would pi-each the following Sunday in the First Mothodist church, and that Gen. Giant would bo present. As a re sult of this clover advertising the church was crowded to the doors; bnt people were divided as to whether the congre gation was Dr. Newman's or Gen. Grant's. Appearances rather favor the latter beliof, however, for when the preacher dismissed his hearers, not one of them showed the slightest inclination to leave. But as soon as the General walked down the aisle (after waiting five minutes, in hopes the crowd would disperse) thoy all made haste to follow him. NOTICE. To the Farmers and Mechanics of Oregon, Washington Territory and Idaho: We with to call your attention to the fact that our annual Catalogue and price l'ut for 1882-83 m now ready for distribution. It will be found very valuable and instructive reading, and will be furnished gratuitously. Send vor name anil vostoftice address to FARMERS and MECHANICS' STORE, 184 First street, Portland, Oregon. sept- lm I'. 0. Roxl") Mnven'a Yoaemlle Cherry Tooth Faata An aromatic combination for the preservation of the teeth and gutiiB. It is far superior to any preparation of iU kind in the market. In large, himlsnnieopiil pots, price filty cent. For aulo by all druggists.' Hodgo, Davit A Co., whole sale agents, Portland, Oregon. Frank G. Abell, tho Gold Medal Photographer of Portend, was the only artist that dured to nmke a display at the Mechanic' Fair. He is not afraid to show bis work anywhere, as it al ways stands on its own meriti. Book And Mitsio Bur-its: Send to Wiley B. Allen, 153 Third street, Portland, for any book or music published. Orders by muil filled promptly. The "Musical Pastime," a monthly journal of music, 50 eta. a year. Bend stump for big catalogue of music. Send $1.00 to W. I). Palmer, Portland, lor on year's subscription to the Pacific Ovenear, the great gomi-nvmlhly A. O. IT. ff. twoer. The only first-cla;s variety entertainment in Oregon is given at the Klito theator, Portland. Nkw, Bich Ann Pubs Blood! The use of Oregon Blood Purifier. DON'T BUY BOSS BOOTS UNLESS YOU WANT THE BEST. SEE THAT OUR NAME IS ON EVERY PAIR. AKKJ, SELLING & CO. The best liver regulator known, a sure cure for Di sr0ia and indigestion is Dr. Henley's Cali fornia I. X. L. Bitters. Turkish Boos. Sena to John B. GirriMn 107 Third street Portland, for catalogues ot de signs. Garrison rermir all kiwis ot sewing machines. Kxplamed at foot of this column, P tif Ml MICA l TIIK Ml'HH'AI. PAMTIMK.-A monthly Jour- ....I ..4 .o.li. i In. I I, ..ml mill Itinf rll 111 ltl H I I .111. 11 imiv MlilniM for -Vsts per year. Addreaa Wiley 11. Aden, puMMier and miixle dealer, IU Third street, 1'ortlitrnl, orrifr.n. f'itHil'm- Iff-. i m r.Tfliii, W. H MAl'UH-clvlTfciwIi.wr. I'uiitnu'iur anil mrv.-vnr. i)i)r Itoom No. Lane's K'lllrltnir, Kmu I'nn land. All kinds f surveying and drafting (loll- filT-HM)' 'KH Of til' '"""lr-V-,,WMWg ,B , HA K Kill VJ. l-'iilir, 1'nijn. tMUiihu-tiiFvni of Pilot lirwl, K IT.-riM', Wilier, tvmvm, nunnr mi'i nui-r riy nw iri Or-lim from l lie Irwin toiuted and promptly ais t.MIl"l M. AtAl'KK. v. . J :..: tit itt.-vu Vfui tfivei ix-nr W'HjilnKlon. Or, metal. mlmr.ti walem rml, elc, oaivfully anaivwil. Amivs for oM and silver .(. : other oietalp from K to ' Mold dun txMitlit and lian made. Orders by mall carefully attended to. J. H. MelXTOMI.-OT. Front aod stark. Chem-b-ai anali made f al. mineral atei-, etc. iir dliiarv axuays of rold, silver, lead or ropi-er, from M in 'V lr. V Harvey. I v-n-eilioir f 'hemi-t. mTTORVrV". D. P. K EX! "! V. AtlnrneT and iiun-e-ir at lMW UgMtlHn'ilnlHl'li Iieual bmliieni iieruiliiloc to Letters 1'at-iil f"r Invention-., tx-furi The PHtent I ni e ,r In I lie 1 v.iinw. a i-iHhr. MEN AND WOMEN, Bots and irrt. anyone wr. iranta lajht, pleaaa-it em ployment In whtrb from tol" per day can nr niac wlllvnd then- name and po.toftW addre-a Ui us lm-ne-llalely, and mrelvtxxlr deMllre clrrulanv Ad drew. It. M. U-rtekell A (. So. 1K7 triHit .treeu Portland. Ifrtrtn. t ver a&d i-icey durast vetoed by Dime Pills. EYE & EAR LNFIRMA11Y ASD SANITARIUM, OR HOME FOR THE SICX. MtwtMlaas Ban- bet, Prtr h4 W-m4 Mia,, "la I M-tlaad , Or. Pr. Pllklnron, late l-Tidi-mnr of Kvr Kar ruse-Men III the Miillcal lleiwrtnielit of Willamette I'lilventlty hiuenx'tedanhrlii.ildlii'.oiia branti'iil elevation In the mnilh l-nrl uf the ritv and Is preartil U artniuo. dntr pali.-ntiirr,.rlnie fniln all ill-a- of the KYK, KAI(rTIIII(i.r. AImiwIII pay upei'lal attention to pernios latwrtiif under I'hninlr Nervous anVrttona, ,1H tn dloeax-a peculiar to Wnmett.aiid rw-levtl a Hull led nuintierof raw exvr'tiii ronniieinent. 'I he Internum U t pmvi.le a lloi.ie for such i . isllh all Hie let liVKtenle sxeiu-li combined Willi Hit bint medical nklll lot, had In Ihe nii-ln.noll-i. (.-oiiNiiltliiff I'tiVHlt-tanaudiMirKiMiii ir. 1'liillp llarv-ev. Prof, of dlecav-iiil women and children hi the medical d,irtiiienl Vt tlktnelte l lilvemllv. A'.so Pr. J. M. V, Hrowne, I'ml. of PlirsloloTy Hied dep'l. Willamette 1'ulVenUty. for any amount of references nod circular, addi-oss J. It, rII.KI.WlNS, rve. It and WioHlmrlnii Wta., Portlnnd. Or, rpkla irwl SMrvaclkf I 1 anlna Kbm4Iw aaa erra Tola I the le gitimate result of over ' ear of practical esperl. nee. and I'l'Kl.i WI I II I'NKAII.INd t'KHTAIN I'Y, Kervotis and ''hvul I liebllliy, Hetuinal Weaker, Pnernmtor rlioea, Prosiatorrhca.Km ullsnlons, llnpntciicv, Kl Hauled Vitality, Prema tura lierllne and MHW or MA Mil (Mill, from BMRAWIlfttever Cftllne produced. It cnrli'ln-ft and purities llie hliioU, HtrehKlliens the Nerve. Hraln, Musclea, Durestion, Reproductive Or- tans, and rnysk-aj aud Mental ra'-uitlea. II tops any unnatural debllltatlnar dram upon Die sviicm, preventing Involuntary ees, de bilitating dreamt, seminal losses with the in lite. In., so deatructlT to mind and body. It Is asure eliminator of all KIDNKY AND Itl.AliliKK (OMPI.AINIH. IT lONTAINN NO INJI KIOI'" INtlllKlllKNT. T tkose Mlrrini from (be ef feeta f jroathrnl ladlarrelltma or rirfen, m speedy, IkirnsiH mn4 pennnenl il KK I bt AUANTKK.M. Price, At pcrhoitlr.or eve bottles In case with full directions and advice, WO. ttenl secure from otmervatlon to any addrem upon re celpt "f price, or V. O. I. To he had only of lr. V. D. aldeld. l Krnrny slreel, SSajt Francisco, (Tat. Oiusultntlons strictly t-onnden ttsl, by letter or a! office, r'HKK. Korttieconvenleiit-r of patlenta, and In order to secure perfect secrecy, I have adopted a private address, under wbk'b all pack aneiare lurwsrded. tkial noTTi.r rsrK. Rufflrlent to sh 'W It merit, will be sent xa sny on. applying by letter, statin hi symptom and afe i'oniinunk-allons strictly confidential. W. K. Chamberlain Jr. Thoa, A. Hctitnsnn. Lire Scholarship $70 8E.ND FOB CIRCrUR pep't ?irirn DR. SPINNEY, Ma. 11 Kaaray (iraat, h 1., fWaU all CaraW u4 racial Dt YOUNG MEN WHO MAT Hit HVFFKRINO FROM THH V fects of youthful follies or Indiscretion, will do well to avail themselves of t lit, the areatest boon sver Imrt at th altar of sufferlnc humanity. UK SI'INNKY will fuarante to forfeit SftU for every uf Henlnal weaanea or private disease of any Itli dor character which b undertake aud falls W cure. MIODLB-AOED MEN. TlioTeaismany at th are of thirty to sixty whe m troubled with too frequent evacuations of hs "ladder, often accompanied by a allahl smarting 01 bu ruing seiikation and a weakening of th svstein le s manner the atlent cannot account for. On exam InhiK the urinary deposit a ropy sediment will often he (nund, and sometime small particles of albumen vi.'i eppear. or the color will be of a thin mllklsh hue. iumIii chuiigitig to a dark and torpid appearance. J burp are many men who die of this difficulty, Iftno rmii of the cauie, which Is the second stage of Heiiil i oi WcnkncM. Dr. 8. will guarantee a ieifect cure Id til such cases, aud a beallliy restorailou of tils fenllo urlnnry oritans. OtH -e llutirs-td to 4 and g to . Rnnrtav from 10 1 II A. M. I'onntillalton free. Thorough examltiatioa andailvlce. t Oallor addre nn apixigcT jt ro.. No, II Kearny street, Han Kranrleoo. ( I. 3. A. WKSCO, Penman at the Portland Business College, Ri'Cfclvert the premium given hy the rOKTLAM) ME( KAMI'S' FAIR, For the best exhibit of Plain Writing, f'urd Writing r'lourisliiitg, lettering and Pen Drawing. The Portland Unsliiess College Journal, fniitAlniiis-Hoeclmens of ornamental tien worlc. exe- cuied by Prof. We-o, will he sent tree to any aildreas. nt-iiu name on postal cam. nmrn A. P. AltMSTItONd. se7tf Look Box lot. Porll-nd, Or, ajAllviW.lJAL'i.l.'w. 'kVUMJJ JiilMiM (t F.ISTA I H AXT TIIK BEAT IM TIIK CITY All .Modern Improvements. Open all day. .1. II. HHEWSJEK. Perrt USE ROSE PILLS. re .i. exok avykb. . s nwn n, rom.Tiu.nt ox. IIQI'IP OK IlltY, PItK'ItnnjATMOMIMIKP.H J liwii'llalora." price nop. Dry ( urennd liwuflla, loni mill ed mi receipt of price, with full direction for u.e.etc. h. il. KKlliMOIlK A (Vi llrugirlota 151 Ftrel vtn-et, Potland, 'Jr. rto'. aae'iU for the N. Pnclflt ,.,., e-n For('iiU,Hnnii, Sires, Uollsllp (aketl Breasts Compete., It liax no hi nal. hold lijr Knit; (,'IhIh and coud try Rtorea at 10 cent per box. iF'..n i,. i 1 - . i f W 7v at "4, H7I2ELL 10 000 Piano 1 .0OC Orosns. K.e. nir. K.,f f X wiTif.rtur, r, froio fil bill, laa. amler liiftlliu.nta CaWirug r.M, UNTISELL, r M.,t,Hl-,.wti Write to Cleveaad Oltcer.MTr. C'luvelsnJiO - for Pamphlet in plain (eaiet envei- ojie, describing an IN t kfRUMtSil (aora it ntghli f'ir curing MT tMlstil'lNA hiujsls, Cheap, .Sever Fail. Jtlblll jiitiy. USE ROSE PILLS. ai II i i w hnncALFiFi nni IIILUUVtNMIUIIl c 6i iSiys w ' ,. r ' - arm 1w rve our I f IsttHssBlai I i r::::i rrr aj llavaiauaal Jaatasaiaiiaasa r: ika. El rrvwan-ssn araaiar-raiaiaa -;f t-i r-ttirv' . a. ..... a . e0. fcaiaaiaiaaial taaiaiaiaiaiaial r: -iwi ;- asarwiraiHag B-vif ! wia va ! srsseyvs j.aii J I uit i E,,iit-'.a s I ..t.Ke . J . , -f4t "'? ir'SV"" Il ,rv rrtcv huAi Sm hI Vuaawaaial LaaaaiiBaaial La.aiaiaiaii.ul a, e- r::?s::i mmiw L-.::ij tii::::a d... rmmmmwim mmymmwwmm pfi tfVfy TVV L4lJ Lvt.4Miii J Lt.i.fii J LI oozz:ii:iiEimii3Emia TIIK Al PIKA IlOMKKTlvAD, of which th th r mninlftu pint, ta hHimIihI Mt M lt,itm.i4 bi twt'i'ii hihI iiu..,..,, ui aHst.i tut-1 ah iis.im ot r'tnirth ftin!. Kant INtnlmnl, ami Ihe Vmirtiuvir ihh.. 1 th IuIk In tin'kttlr!i,.,7, , VHbihI 0 tin iWxUi fwl, Hh Iweiny Uml itllt'VN itiruiiKh tli hlin kn, All (he u:h r Ku hi .ViU' hi t. i'lif Mrvf m hm wl,tr, hiuI IwveitU Ihvu ch-nrttl, whlliMht lulm.rt atttl h-wmmi 1 imi W VvTf riMily t'hiirt't). V now olU i iur nU fr iborl tlntvi. IIiiiUmI ntimbt-r of 1im lotnnntl blucki At nUNoiml)h prlrm rind oa wwy irnii. 1 11 K Al IUNA 1IOMKHTKAD l umiht'(ninh,.v th IhuI fl"ll r Invinlnicnt rim ih- mit (tirlrfitirF Itliwp for Uh hiI- h ihiv In (th' nmrkti, ItMi'luiH' pruxlmlty to lu t tllfRti( rorllHml hikI i nt lSrtlinn', tu.ri !w lb ItiKy ititpntvt iiifhtt ihw tifliitf (nrri(Ml out ly iltt vitilixiHotniimiiUHi unlt-r iht itlni'tioii ut Mr. n.ri liw I'ry i'lM'k KU- uliirw, .Mm hint Miom mut nihcr works of hiu minMiilin Ih hcunii'n hIw. to tin ,tli4tt Fi-rry.ti Ki'ihrr wlitt (he tniHiws mivi-i lUJwuy (nun I. Htrm Kt iry, In Km! 1'onUiiul. lil nmke tiM pruptTiy vt-rv m ttfKlIil from kit part of thi-mM iun. 'I 'lnn mlvmittuccM wilt nwHiiii Hy Hilrurt h ium- fm Ulrtthiii.nixl in ttit iiituitlmf mnkH Ihln thi tnmt popular mil vhIiikIiIh Miilitirluoi pttipTty In th: vftitMy, whtlf In tin mur fotun' It inimt furnUh Iioihm hr tli? rupilly inrnuMiiit iMipolHiloii of AIMim, mil lloti u vitliicwlll htMt ii-hm ts tlmtn wlmt luorv ocli-r It for. twlll nlinw tot proiNrlyRiiil irivv (nil liihtno Uuii Uiull who umy uppiy to u iM-rwumlly, ttnil h qnlrh ai'drftuHil to iiNhy umil will n't ivt ptoini l utuiuu. K. J. M A hlllT ( O., Ki-tU r-NtHt' .tiilr, 4: MuriiMiii ulni-t. mill lAiWaNMliAl.k A C) Km! Khuu Akfiiin, Wn-hi. a,:...! i. Pnrtixl.Or. BUCKINGHAM i HECHT'S BOOTS AND SHOES Are tho BEST and COST K0 afOBE than Other Brandt), and If the Merchant with whom yon Trade dooi not keep onr Good. It Is because It FITS better to tell a pair or Boots or Shoes erery TWO Month. thar erery FOUR or FITE. WE WARRANT EVERY PAIR ITe make. All Merchants In Good Credit can procure these Goods at onr Ware houses In PORTLAND or San Francisco. TRY OUR "HERCULES" BOOTS nECUTBR0S.&C0. PERUVIAN BITTERS. T'V-.:;- .1 I ;1 . ... x. 1 !i 7 A 1 .J Th Finest HITTERS) la th WORLD. TIIKV EFFECTUALLY Cl'IlB MALARIAL DISEASES. Vltiillae the Syrti-is and arrest the ravage a Ihe UrriHirul Alenhiil llulilt. lilfaOUlMA. Ask yuur Ilruggtsl or Win Mrrrkanl tot them. WILMERDIKO A CO., AgeaU, Baa fraa clseo. J. Ti Na.ru IJY VEK C-O, Porllaa Ladies' Underwear, INFANTMf AND CHILIlltKN'S COMPLETE WAEDE0BES, 165 Third Straat, Portland, Or. v. O. m SPOHTSMEN'S EMPORIUM. WM. BECK Iz SON I oi porters did dealers lo Gons, Rifles, and Revolvers Rods RwK Linos, ., st. , .'vi ,.- - Ntiirgeon Basket", 'J'ty-?-, t LI110.H, . b- V , yf. - Inler. Vv-.-Jl' allkliifts. Anders, tarf' " allkluds. 1) rallied and Tpered Oil Hlilc Lints. Six Spliced Split Bamboo Bods, 1(19 and 1ST Karaait at., Portland. Or tfl.OOO ItlOWAIlO t?OH AMYO.VK WHO Wfl.L I.FAR.1 I Kellnr( V Jlllam's )-ateH mt Itl-ras aa4 I Uwh I Nttta, ariit. with arurret meas ure ami perfect rtiuln, priidilre tuul Htlln larmenl. hs-veral llupnivemeuta liave Jur tMea maile. AK'-iiU to sell atit learh H snteil in ererr Uia-n. lejil aaents ran L.aice jn,m 110 tosii par dj. KKI.UUMI A Jll.lv-'V, Chener, i.iisiie Cn., W. T rpHB "WHITK." WE II AVK TTfTH PAY SOLD A. uur enure Intereat In, and transferred the ajfenrr of the While hewing Mai liine tolr. John H. Oarrl sun, of l7 Thlnl sir et, Furiland, Or. Mr ilarrSaiii III hereafter supply th. n,wti, deuaud for Ilia siinerlor aud y.ivuUt mhuj mai-buie. aU tUHXaDAl.K. r:::"i rzrmmi r""H skamauaauaj kaiassaaauaial a.a,SVwilawja f a, mmmwmm fsaiavi 1 iauv-l lasa,MSisaa1 IsaiaHaaiakai hmi ""1 .., J lm. mi mM t:u:zu tzimzi i:n: iini::i ml W"S tri. 1 e H L.v.. OILlI KCtlNtiMT IS WEALTH. Aad tiy lluylna Toar JiOOTS AXJ) SHOES rl(iM TIIK New York "Jteot and tShoe Honsct ., 1LH Klr4 llml, It. tH. r-rj YitiiiMll ttml Tnylor, !tilland 9liV Alk 11 Vol IIOW.V KVKAl.TI' ANI BT t'lllt Mm Hi II. hK" Mil' Will -If it.lUHiy fH'lH-r, W tutvit Ju-i rf ilvil 1 hi- niiint eU-t;niii ti-k of imJh i'vi r linniKlit to f'orttttitil.n'iH-h Mr M'llltiR .n4 Ihut lm t litr Imhihi- rnn, W .i.n yuii roni- tu ih Hr ttitif in yu-tr vln.l lumt'y ii'ut w will m II Uin pnetm hi n-tonltiuifiy I11W i r-. (Mittn fivinisa nmntry will Ih rmnitl)' ll-itut-i) iciuiU wi wiU fM$ ffitl t iu ftli Ku.hii hmu tn y.Mi. $1000 EEWAIID WILL BB PAID TO ANY PKIIMilN rilUDVO In a mora erTectual remedy than Dr. Kock'i Sum Cure for Catarrh, Which has stood th test for fourteen years. Ir rlana, Unwithna, and all who have naed and thor oughly tested It, prononnr II swrlflefortherarat! that luathsom daw, Try Ik Your dru(aa ka II, price II. Pr. Keck thororif My anderatandj, and at emlneaffy suoiesflful Id tb. treatment of allehroal aoi atfr rail ataraur of bvth sriti and all aie, hasu made a sieclalty of their treatment for fourteen yea" lie treats I'aasar without usln the knife. Iiataevr lie prrnrrlpikin I furnlahed to lady ralleala rise. Nolady should be wlUinut IL Youu, mlilille-iured r old, male or female, lusanliy or a life ol sunVrw; l your Inevitable dotim unleas you apply In thus In ia physician aim nnderslaiiila, and Is competent ti Uea yoiirraae. Waste no more lime nor money withsr competent physk-uuia All eommuiilralloiis allearte to with dtsiwtrh, and are strictly eonHilenilal, Meja. hiea sent 10 any part o( the country, t'irciilara, tatf- niollUUS, ana a lint in primed questions niriiamrv w aimllraUon. CUNNl' I.TATIM I'K'.r. a three-rent sump tor Iht and adilreir UU JAJIkJ KKC K , No. m Hrst stn-et, Portland. Or. U S E R O h E P I L L S PFTJITDER'S arntsntiusD reiusp ACH ll. 1IT9. VIGOil HEAI.T1T AND LIFE. ItrMFMIII It, hv ITItlFYlXfl ynnr ll'l.OOH Vim Itiiiulme the I Iver ami Kidneys, rliiuise Ihe niumikcIi ut all Morhld Hii-relloi't. aiel enjoy that irn ut hoini, ii'ind II1-11I1I1. No Niiileri-r shiml,l rdl ti Klve Mils luipnlnr reniwlv a 1 1 till, (let lilt- tl KN1! I.N K and ohservet lie Ti iide i Shirk. One lmllur r Imttle For sole everywhere. r ft. Akl k oa rrary pair, EYKBT PAIR GUARANTEED. Aunr. acLuao co. D. J. MALARKET I C3 Bpatlal attantlon ttrm to to. sal of Wheat, Oats, Floor, Wool & Dairy Produce. Band 1st WX1ICLT MICK mim.aaW fra s application. literal Adrance on Conslgnmeata. f, iiUncitnt and Orders Solicited, -VBorr rr., ijktiaxj, WILLIAM COLLI Kit, MACHINIST. Ovale la Xew aal SECOND HAND 3IA( IIINLKY, Madlaaa U. Partlaad, Or. Partte OrtHna Holler., Knal nea mr IIU MILL. Mil HIM HI .Hnareair by adaralais Mr. (ulllor. New and Second Hand MachIiior ao til aad saK r traded te auataaa. ? x CO n. u. rvnina. IT. V. leara. f,m "2 liBteiSlaTaW-1-; : rt c'V i i to;.' i 00 2 1 1 1 1 P" I S i. sU llIMiilTlsiiBat,eTEI " aa)