EUGENE CITY GUARD
LATEST M5 Ntt SU3UIAUY.
BT TFLEORAPII TO DATF.
Fifty-five deaths from cbolcrt at Daroi
tt, Egypt, July 7th.
At Monaurab, Eypt, Julj 10th, 87
deaths occurred from cholora.
Fifty lives are renortcJ lout in the re
cent flood in Out irio, Cunuda.
A bail at rm, recently, destroyed 5000
Acres of crops in Iionbomme ana Hutch
inson conation, D. T.
At Tolk City, Iowa, July 10th, R. L.
dinger, a prominent citizen, waa asa
sinaUnl by two unknown men.
At M icon Station, Ala., July 10th, a
man by tho name of Curpeutcr was
fatclly alict by bis Lrothsr-in-law, A. W.
Smith, who noon afterwards fired two
abots in bis own beart.
At Quobcc, July 11th, II. J. Ereemer
lias signed a contract with tho Lake St.
John railroad company to conMrnct a
wbol line of railroad to Lake St. John.
Tb price to be paid ia between llnco
nd four million dollars.
In an accident to a mixed train on the
Natchez nud Jackson road, five miles
east of Xatebe, recently, revon cars fell
through a bridge fifty feet high. Con
doctor J. O. Jennings was killed and
seven of the passengers wounded.
A Paris dinpatah of July 10 says: A"h
ird baa introduced a bill in the chamber
of deputies authorizing tho taking of
oumlings for piers for a railway bridgo
from Capo Gresnez on tho French coast
across the strait of Dover to Folkestone
in England.
George-Bernhardt, a wild young man
of Erie, Pa., a relative of the Parixian
actress, gotint) a broil in tho snbnrbs
of Chicago recently, and deliberately
ripped open tho atomach of John
Strucker. Bernhardt has boon captared.
His victim died.
At Milwaukee, July 10th, a two-story
frame resilience of David Seel it? was
destroyed by firo. rJeehg, lus wifo and
four children escaped, but Dora, aged
12, Ilermine, aged 7, and Itosa, a god 3,
were suffocated in bod and their bodies
charred beyond recognition.
John 8. Gray, ex-secrotary of tho har
bor commission, San Francisco, against
whom forty-four charges of felony aro
pending, was released from the couuty
jail, having filed bonds for $22,000. lid
will bo given a ipeody trial lifter tho
Uambhn case has been disposed of.
During tho third quarter of the last
fiscal year tho rcoeipts of tho postofllco
department were Sll,Via,o7l; cinendi
tores, $10,729,4'J'J; urplns, $1,119,877.
For nine months of tho fiscal year ended
March til, itsj, the receipts woro Sjj.
910,350; expenditures, $31,'lii0,911; sur
plus, 52,1)1,142.
At OiiUosli, July 10th, J. It. Lnpor,
proprietor of a soai) factory, was ininso,l
by his employes, and after a search his
remains woro found in a soap vat eitfbt
loot deep, it is supposed that ho foil
la while emptying a barrel or fat. The
body was horribly docom posted by the
action of tho soap and lie, und tho
clothes wero all tubn off.
At Plainville. Conn., Jnly Dili.
travel train collided with a naeniror
truin on tho Now Engluud road, killiug
tho cngimcr nud a man in tho baggage
c.ir, and severely injuring tho exprrm
agent. Cjuho of the accident was duo to
tho carolossness of tho operator iu not
notifying tho conductor of tho passenger
tnua to wait until the gravel , train
cleared the track.
Tho Minnesota stato prohibition con
vontion met at Minneapolis Jnlv 10th.
The tariff for revenue only was tabled by
a voto ol 41 to zu. The platform con
demus tho conrso of both parties on tho
ini nor question; favors tho enfranchise
niont of women, and the election of all
olliceis by the people when possible
Tho following is tho tickot: Governor,
Chas. Evans Holt; liouteuaut governor,
, Professor E. J . Payne; seorotary of state,
j. u. nuore; treasurer, U. Mamleraon
A Syracuse, New York, dispatoh of
July mill, sajs: Monday ovaning
shortly after 7 o'clock, Lily Parroy was
abducted by her mothor, who lives in
Minneapolis, This girl has been living
wuii nor gramtmotber in this city. A
alraugo man appeared and claimed to
have a warrant for her. II o dragged her
out of the housoand forced her into a
carriage decpito her protests, and tho
carriage was rapidly driven away. It is
supposed the man and tho girl's mother
have takon her to Minneapolis. Tho
girl is IS), and worked in a dry goods
storo iu tins city.
A Galveston Nows Laredo special of
reoent date, autlieutically states that a
new construction company has boen
formed to complete the extension of the
international railway to tho city of Mexi
co. Jay Gould. Jr.. will bo ut the head
of tho organization, with It S. ilaves ns
general tuannger. lho money furnished
is principally from an English f yndi
eato. Work oa tho contract to grade
and u in. nil me road from Laredo to Yio
tori, the capital of the state of Tarn pal'
lus, tlihtauce from Laredo 300 miles, is
ordered to be commenced on tho 11th
inat.
A Greenfield, 111., dispatch of Jnlv
11th mvi: Tuesday night four har
Testers boarded a freight train at White
hall, twelve miles north of this place, to
Bieat a riuu. tt urn at ill is station lour
other men boarded the aame car, appar
ently for the same puraoso, but after the
train was in motion they drew revolvers
on the first fonr men, and after making
mem deliver wnat money they had,
drovfl them off the moving train. One
man earned Patrick Knight foil headlong
and waa killed. The four tramps re
sponsible for the deed wero arrested at
Brighton,
A London, Onl., dispatch of Jnly
11th says: The river ha risen here to
an unprecedented height and the de
struction of rrnprty m fearfal. 3o far
as known eight house were carried away
and three persons drowned. It is feared
that many others perished, as a large
Dumber aro missing. Barns have been
carried away by the score and railroad
trsvol ent off by the washouts. The
steamer Prineess Louisa fbatod down
the stream and was carried away by an
iron bridge. The water works' pumping
house is in great danger and is expected
to go. Cattle, horses, etc., were drowned
by the score.
Adrian Bolttor, French muaioal com-
poner, is dead, need 07,
Gen. Moore. Ameiiean consul at Cat-
lao, Peru, died of yellow fever July
litis.
The President recognizes Lamar Onto.-
ters as vico consul of Costa P.ica at New
Orleans.
Jams Carey, tho informer, has been
declared a bankrupt, owing to his failure
to pay his rates.
At Tripoli. Jnly 11th. twelve soldiers
woro killed by the explosion of a bomb,
whilo being removed.
News from Veneznala state that locusts
are doing a great deal of damage in many
parts of tho country.
At Batavia, Java, a powder migazino
burned and a quantity of war material
was destroyed recently.
A largo hall at Dolft, IlullanJ, spec
ially erected for tho cclubiation of an
anniversary thore, burned, Jnly 11th.
A disoatelt from Breckonierd. Switzer
land, says nearly all the cultivated Und
iu that district has been ruined by
storms nnd land slides.
The Republican state convention of
Pennsylvania met nt Harrisbnrg July
11th. They endorso Arthur's administra
tion, favor high tariff and fair wages.
Tho treasury department July 9th nnd
10th imncd warrants for tho payment of
$11,000,000 on account of army and
iiuvypenMions for tho fiscal year ending
Jnne M, 1881.
Threo thousand orangemcn at Toronto
celebrated the anniversary cf the battlo
of tho Buyne Jnly 12th by a public pro
cession, and afterward enjoyod games in
the provincial exhibition grounds.
Everything was quiet.
Reports from tho middlo of Texas say
that careful estimates state the number
of cattlo driven on tho trail in that sec
tion at 000.000. an increaso of 3;0,000
over thato f last year. The bulk of tho
cattlo will bo driven to Kansas, Nebraska
and tho westurn territories.
Hamilton county, Neb., was visited
lately by a destrnctivo wind nnd rain
storm, doing groat damage to buildings
and crops nud killing somo stocu. flura
erous business buil.ling) in Aurora wero
heavily damaged and a large number of
dwellings and outhouses wore wrecked
At Chicago, July 11th, a runaway
horse attached to a light buggy ,in which
wero seated four young people, ap
proached tho draw of the Harrison stroc t
bridgo at a furious gallop and plunged
into tho river, tho bridgo baving been
swung to allow the pasiago of a vessel.
The buggy was precipitated into the
river and all four wero drowned.
A dispatch from Florenca, Arizona,
states that tuo people of mat territory
are disheartened over tho preseut status
of tho Indian question. They have little
confidence in a peaceful result in replac
ing tho renegade Apsches on San Curios
reservation, bntnre of tho opinion that
tho Apaches should bo removed from tho
territory.
At Burnt Prairie. 111., recently, a
fatal nllcay occurred between Dongla
Gowdv nud Buck Williams, tho result of
an olil family fond. Gowdy went to
Williams' houso armed with a knife and
cut Williams revcral limes. Tho latter
ran but fas followed by Gowdy. lie
thon orow his own knifo and stalbsd
Gowdy to tho heart. Gowdy dropped
dead.
A Marysville, Cal., dispatch of July
12th mi-b: Yesterday Drmin Haggerty
and Uer.ry Dow'.iug, two hold-ups, met
James liinn and a svede, inreo mues
from town. Shooting Linn and beatinpr
the Swodo rith a oVab, thov theu robbed
them of a few dollars. Last evening
Haggeity and Dowling weroarrestod and
locked up.and afterwards taken from the
jail nnd lianirod by tho citizous. Linn
and tho Swede will die.
Tho stato veterinary of Illinois ro
ports glnudors prevulent in niuoteeu
counties in that stato. Ho claims to
have been prevented from killing the an
imals olUiotod. Tho attorney contended
he could only resort to this measure at
tor tho governor hnd issued a proclnma
lion deolaring glanders epidemic. The
nttorney general is now expected to
give an opinion as to tne powers oi me
state veterinary uudor tuo state law.
Dr. Mary Walker, having been noti
fied by renBion Commissioner Dudley,
acting undor tho advioo of Secretary
Teller, that she might consider her place
vacant on the 1st of July, replied by
mail that shv would still bo fouud at her
desk after tho date mentioned. She
threatened that if Dudley persisted iu
the attempt to dinmiss her, sho would
next winter invoke tho aid of congn sa
on her behalf and bring npon him an in
vestigation that would go to the bottom
of nfl'airs iu the pension offloe. Thus the
matter stands.
The Chioago Railway Age of July 12th,
publishes the following statistics of rail
way building for tho first half of the cur
rent year. These are: construction of
2.109 miles of main track, not including
switches or sidings, on 1110 liucs iu 35
Btatos aud territories. During a corres
ponding period lust year 4'JOO miles were
constructed. The difference is ncconuted
for on tho ground that last year was ex
traordinary favorable for tho early com
mencement of-work, whil tho roverce is
tuo of IliU year. In 1581 only 2300
miles were laid for the first half of tho
year. The Age estimates the construe
tion for tho entire year at 8000 miles.
Ciliforaii lends thus far with 200 mfles
built in 1883, Montana next with 106,
New York 103, Pennsylvania 180, Utah
150, Idaho 122, Arizona 120.
A conference called together through
the efforts of the Merchante' Exohange
of St. Louis to consider tho most practi
cable oourse to pursue in advocating im
provement for the Mississippi river met
recently at tho Southern hotel. The
eonference was oomposed of delegates
appointed by representative commercial
loaders of every important city in tne
valley states. Twenty cities were rep
resented, somo of them, especially New
Orleans, sending a strong delegation.
15iJ tne delegates luero were present
Charles Foster, governor of Ohio; U.
S. Senator Miller, of Ne York:
Speaker Keifor and ex-Congressman
Townsend, who are there, however, on
another mission. The conference was
called to order by J. C. Ewald, presi
dent of the Merchants' Exchange of St,
Louis. The convention then effected
permanent organization by electing B.
Wood, of the New Orleata Cotton Ex
change, permanont chairman, and O. L.
Wright permanent oearotarv.
The Future ol Judaism.
At a recent meeting of tho Society of
Jewish Studies in Psris, M. Ernes
Ronan, presented by tho Baron Alphonne
do Rutbchild, delivered a remarknbl
lecture on lho subject of tho original
identity and gradual separation of Juda
ism and Chriatiunity. M. Runau began
by predicting a great future for the
Society of JuwUb Studies, one clsuso of
. -.. a .....
wiioso statutes permits ueniues 10 iomi
purt of the society. Doubtless Jewish
studies belonged of right to the Jews,
but they belonged also to humanity. Re
searches relative to lho Israelito past in
terest all tho world. All beliefs find in
the Jewish books tho secret cf their
formation. The bible has beoomo the
intellectual ond moral nutriment of civil
ized humanity. Tho Jews have this in
comparable privilege, that their book
has liecomo a book of the whole world
a privilogo of universality which they
sharo with tho Greeks, a race whioh has
imjHJsod its literature on all ceutnrits
and all countries. M. Ronan thanked the
members of tho Society of Jewish
Studios for having udmittcd the Gen
tiles, like good Simaritaus, to work
along with them in a work that interests
ns all equally. Proceeding, then, to
speak of the subject of his life's study,
the origin of Christianity, M. Ronun
said that these origins ought to be
placed at least 7o0 years before Christ,
at tho epoch of the great prophets, who
created an entirely now idea of
religion, nnd under whoso ltflu
ence was definitely accomplished tin past
ago from primitive religion full of uu-
wholesome snporstitions to pure relig
ion. After tho captivity, in the sixth
century B. 0., the dream of the prophot
of Israel is a worsnip that might suit all
Immunity, a worship onsistiug in the
pure ideal of morality and virtue in
short, the reign of justice me lueai
constitutes tho great originality of the
prophets.and tho true founders of Chris
tianity, occording to M. Rensn, wero
theso prophets, who onuounced pure re
ligion, freed from all course material
practices and observances, nnd re dding
in the disposition of tho heart and mind
a roligion whioh can and ought to be
common to all, an ideal reiigion.consist
ing in tho proclamation of the kingdom
of God upon earth, und in the bopo of
an era of justico for poor humanity.
M. Renan next proceeded to show that
the first Christian generation is essen
tially Jewixh. Tho Epistlos of St. James
and St. Judo, representing tho spirit of
the first church, aro altogether Jewish;
St. Paul never thought of separating
himself from the Jewish church. The
Apocnlypso of St. John, oomposed about
A.D. 08 and CO, is a Jewish book and
the author is a passionate Jewish patriot.
After tho cspturo of Jerusalem oomcs
thu composition of the synoptical gos
pels. Here thero is a division, and yet
Luko, tho least Jewish of the evangel
ists, insists npon the fact that Jesus ob
served all thu ceremonies of the law. To
ward C5 or 80 A. D., many books woro
written inspired by Jewidh patriotism,
such as tho books of Judith, tho Apoc
alypses of Ezra and of Barnch, and
even tho book of Tobias. There is noth
ing more Jew ish than tho book of Judith
for instance, and yet these books aro
lost among tho Jows and preserved only
among the Christians, so truo is it tho
bonds between the church and tho pyrin
goguo was not yet broken they appeared.
In the epistitles and gospels attributed
to St. John and written about A. 1). 125,
the caso was altogothor different. Iu
them Judiasm is treated as un enemy,
and they contain symptoms of the op
proach of tho systems that will If ad the
Christians to deny their Jewish origin,
such as gnosticism, for instance, which
represents Christianity as being opposed
to it, whilo Marciou goes still further,
and dedan s Judaism to be a bad relig
ion which Jesus came tc abolish.
M. Rean remarked the singularity of
such an error having been able to mani
fest ititelf only a century after the death
of Christ, but insisted 'on tho fact that in
the Christian Church agnosticism was
like a lateral fit ream to a river, Iu the
second century tho orthodox church
always considered itself, bound iu tho
most intimate manner to the synagogue.
In Ih third century the schism becomes
more pronounced under the influence of
tho school of Alexandria. Clement and
Origen speak with much injustice of
Judaism, and tuo separation becomes
complete when, under Constantiue,
Christianity becomes a state religion and
oflicuil, while Judaism remaius free.
And yet Chrysostom was obliged to
rebuke bis congregation for going to the
synngogue. Nevertheless, tho separation
really grows more and moro profonud ;
we outer the middle ages; the barbarians
arrive, and then begius that deplorable
ingratitude of humanity, become
Christiau, toward Judaism. Tud crusades
give tho signal for tho massacres of tho
Jews,, while tho scholustio philosophy
largely contributed to embitter tho
hostility agaiust them.
Reviewing rapidly the condition of
tho Jews in Frauco in tho middle ages
and subsequently, M. Renan arrived nt
"a moro cousoling epoch, that eigh
teenth century which proclaimed nt
length the rights of reasou, the rights of
mnu, tho true theory of human society
that is to say, the stato without official
dogma, tho state neutral in tho midst of
metaphysical and theological opinions.
It is from that day tne equality of rights
began for the Jews. It was the revolu
tion that proclaimed the equality of the
Jews with the other citizens of
tho state. The rcvolntion found
here the true solntion with
a sentiment of abi)lite jus! ice. and
everybody will come around to this opin
ion. In point of fact, oontinned M.
Renan, the Jews themselves had pre
pared this solution; they had prepared
it by their past, by their prophets, tho
great religious creators of Israel. The
founders of the movement wero Isaiah
and his successor, then the Essenians,
those poetical ascotics who announced an
ideal of peace, of right and of fraternity.
Christianity, too, bas powerfully con
tributed to' the progress of civilization,
but Christianity was only the continua
tion of the Jewish prophets, and the
glory of Christianity and the &orj of
Judaism are one. And now that these
great things arc accomplished, let us say
with assurance, continued tho speaker,
that Judaism, which has dott so mcch
service in the past, will still serve in
the future. It will serve the true caue,
the cause of liberalism, of the modern
spirit.
Every Jew is essentially a liberal.
Tho enemiea of Judaism, on the con
trary, are generally enemies of the mod
ern spirit. The creators of liberal dog
ma in religion or your old prophets, the
Slbvllines, the Jewish school of Alex
andria, the first Christians who were con
tinners of the Jewish prophets. These
ore tho true founders of the spirit of jus
tico in the world, and in serving the
modern spirit of tho Jow, in ro-lity,
only serves the work to which he has
contiibnted more than anybody in tho
paft, and for which ho has so much suf
fered. The true nliqion which wo see
in the future capablo of binding to
gether nil humanity will lie the realiza
tion of the religion of Isiiah. the ideal
Jewieh roligion free from ail accumula
ted dro'j.
A (jlluipse of St. Helena.
Our first glimpse of St. Uclena is emi
nently ctaructeritdio of a spot franght
with so many somber memories. Even
ing is already beginning to fall when
through the mass of leaden clouds that
darkens the whole northwestern sky
looms a black curving line liko a peu
stroko painfully elaborated by some
child giant through a monstrous blot of
ink. Little by litflo tho jagged outlines
of high rocky psnks begin to grow out
of the gloom, but so shadowy, and un
real do they look that one might tuko
them rather for the phantoms of a mi
rage than for a portion of the actual
world of men. As the sun sinks nearer
and nearer to the sea its rays strike full
upon the cloud of dimness that encircles
the island, working a strange and ghastly
trunuformution. Along the whole of its
lower edge tho darkness instantly turns
to fire, and the vast black cliffs of ba
sultic rrck stand liko a fortress overhung
by the flame reddened emoke of battlo.
All around is masses of shadowy figures,
bodied from the rolling clouds, seem
rushing on to chaago other masses which
are advancing against them. Bnt not
the slighteat'sound is to bo heard, and
the effect of tho great battlo in dumb
show, full of furious life, yet silent es
the gravo, is indescribably weird and
unearthly. Suddenly the olouds are
rent, and on tho highest point of tho
great cliff appears a colossal face of
stone, the perfect likeness of the famous
emperor himself, turned upward as if
sleeping. Why doos he lio so still with
these clouds of war rolling above bim ?
He was not wont to slumber when hosts
were meeting in battle. Cut victory
and defeat are all alike to him now; and
he whose last thought! were of war has
dono with war forever:
A )f.l!fl pnl rnfll.'otti him whom not sufficed a!;;
llie email U now ss grim to him sa otcj the grtnl
wiu email.
Tho huge domo like mass of "the
Barn," tho wide sweep of Flagstaff bay,
with its frowning precipices, the great
black pyramid of Sugar Loaf point slip
passed us one by one in the shadowy twi
light, and, jubt as utter darkness sets in,
wo drop our anchor in tho tiny hollow
of James bay, almost the only available
landing place on this iron bound shore.
Two dots of light far up tho dark cliff,
and a third on the gloomy waters below,
are at first the solo tokens of man's pres
ence in this great fortress of nature. Bat
when the moon rises the whole colony
lies before us at onco. Imagine a stream
cf email houses trickling down a moun
tain glen between two mighty precipices
and widening as it nears the sea, and yon
have a fair idea ol Jamestown, with the
tall, narrow spire of its church standing
sentinel over tho white walls anil dark
clumps of i'oliago around, and tho chaf
ing breakers encircling it with a ring of
glitttering foam. The Lulls of several
-mall crafts and two or threo larger ves
sels loom out black and stern npou the
moonlit waters, along the edge of which
a line of batteries stand looking watch
fully seaward. On ono side of the town
the vast black cliff of Munden point,
crowned with a formidable earth-work,
rises starkly up in all its massive
strength a thousand feet into tho air. On
tho other side, a zigzag road, protected
by a wall, wriggles its way up Ladder
bill for tho benefit of those who object to
tho perilous ladder that ruus up the faco
of the cliff to tho barrack, the lighted
windows of which glimmer faintly 000
feet overhead. Bctwosn these guardian
giants tho main (that is, the only) street
of Jamestown merges itself in the nar
row road that winds away up into tho
interior, through tho finest sceucry of tho
island, along the great wall of volcanic
rock, culminating in Diana's peak, 2701
feet abovo the sea.
But the chief interest of tho spot na
turally centers in a quiet little white
houso of ouo story called Longwood,
lying iu a hollow on tho other sido of
the island, where a boy namd William
Makepeace Thackeray saw a strange
sight on his way homo from India somo
05 yeara ago. "The Hindu attendant
who was with mo," 6aid he, telling tho
story years later, "took mo ashore nt St.
Helena, und led me a long walk among
hills nod rocks, till at luhi we camo to a
smnll gardcu in which we saw a man
walking. 'There he is,' said my Hindu
in a terrified whisper, 'that's Bonaparte.
Ue eats threo sheep every day. and all
tho littlo boys ho can get hold of.' "
Wiser men than poor Tannajeo held
equally strange notions in those days re
specting "the Corsican ogre." To those
who saw him for tho first time at St.
Helena, his appearanco was probably as
great a surprise as it had been 17 years
before to Mnrad Bey, tho warrior chief of
the Mamelukes. "That littlo fellow the
greatest soldier of Frangistan?" (Enrope)
said tho proud Mohammedan, when he
saw the man who had beaten him; "by
Allah, Le dors not even know how to sit
his horse!"
It was fit indeed that ono whose whole
life was so strangely set apart from his
fellow-men should be born in one island
and should die in another, although the
auict old sea-side houso still shown by
tho people of Ajsccio as "la casa di
Xapoleone" harmonized as ill with such
a career as the prison like simplicity of
Longwood. Cor. N. Y. Timea.
Retention f ths Juices Iu Cooling
Heats.
Existing tbna in a liquid stato in our
ordinary flesh meats, it is liable to be
wasted in the course of cookery, es
pecially if the cook has only received the
customary technical education and re
mains in technological ignorance. To
illustrate this, let ns suppose that a leg
of mutton, a slice of cod, or a piece of
salmon, is to bs eoAed in water,
"boiled." as the cook ssys. Keeping in
mini the result ef the previously de
scribed experiments on the egg-albumen
and also the fact that in its liquid state
albumen is diffusiblo in water, the read
er may now staud ns scientiQo nmpire,
ia auaweriug the quostion whether tho
fish or tha flesh should be put in hot
water at once, or in cold water, ond bo
gradually heated. The "big-endians"
and the "littlo endinns" of Lilliput were
not more definitely divided than are cer
tain cookery outhorities on this question
ia reference to nsu. X reier 10 me two
which are practically consulted in my
mid. that by Mrs. Beeton.
nnd Borne sheet tablets hangipg in the
kitchen. Mrs. Beeton says pour coiu
w.itpr on tho fish, the tablets oiy im
merse it in hot water, Confining our at
tention at present to tne aiuiimen, wnat
must happi n if the fiili or fl-'sli is put in
en wktr. which is "radnallv heated?"
Obviously a loss of albumen by exuda
tion aud diffusion inrongii tuo waicr,
especitlly in the caso of sliced fish or of
meat emosiriL' much KiufaCJ cf fibers cut
across. It is al: evident that such loss
of albumen will bo show n by its coagula
tion when the water is sufficiently boated.
PrneHful rpadcra will at onco recocnizo
in the "scum" which rises to tho surfaco
of the uoiling water, and in themilkincss
that is more or less diffused throughout
it, the evidence of such loss of albumen.
This loss indicates the dodirability of
plunging tho Hah or flesh at once into
lwf. wnt.'i- pnnnvli to immediately coaL'U-
la to tho superficial albumen, and there
by plug tho pores turougu wnicu tne
inner albuminous juice otherwise
exudes. But this is not all. There are
other juices bosides tho albumen, and
these nro the most important of tho
flavoring constituent, nnd, with the
constituents of animal food, have great
rulritivo value; so mnch so, that animal
food is quite tasteless and almost worth
t9ss without them. I have laid especial
emphasis on the above qnuliCcatiou, less
tho reader should be led iuto an error
originated by the bone sonp committee
of tho French Academy, aud propagated
widely by Liebig that of regarding
these juices as a concentrated nutriment
when taken alone. Mattien Williams, in
Popular Science.
The Fees When Amy by an L'nglLsh
Pi ince.
Among tho items in the estimate of ex
penses for tho Duke of Edinburgh's
spocial mission to Moscow is 1000 for
"gratuities." Poople who think that
this amount is exorbitant will perhaps
change their opinion on learning that
w ben the Emperor Nicholas visited the
qneen at W indsor Castle in loll be gave
2000 to the servants and 1000 pounds
to tho housekeeper, as well as six gold
snuff boxes, with his picturo set in dia
monds, to the lords of tho household,
and Bix with his cipher to tho equerries
and grooms in-waiting. Thoso wore tho
chief gifts ; but for other dependents
about a bushel of ridgs, watche3 and
brooches were distributed. When the
late Emperor Napoleon stayed at Wind
sor in 1855 ho left 1500 for the servants.
Miivcu'a YOK-niuo anen j looili raMe.
An HroniHtie coinbina'inu f..r llie preservation
of the tePth nnd (turns. It ii far fupcrior to any
propiniion of its kind in the market. In large,
lian lJnnie opal p.ti, prion fifty oom.f. For gait?
by all drugsisls. llu-ie, Davis i Co., whold
w!e .".:en!s, Ajrtlaad, Oniu.
Garrison repairs ail kin 1 of sewinj m-iohire?.
1C7 Tliird St., I'ORTLASD, OHEGOJf,
JOHN B. GARRSON,Propr.
All III T.riuting Sowlilpr Mnrhlnr, OIL
KntllpH, AtlnrliiixMiU and iivuu
lue l'urm fur uilo.
All kiniU of Sewing Mm hlm-n lu-pulrad
hikI Wai-nuitt-d.
GENERAL AGENT FOR
lis E;:::::li ul While Siting Mfccs,
GENERAL AGENT FOR
WE TURKISH RUG PA TTERMS.
GENERAL AGENT FOR
T.;: UNIVERSAL FASHION CO'G PESFECT
FITTING PATTuriMG.
DR. SPINNEY,
K. 11 Kaaray rtrwl, . F.,
Treat all Chraalc mni Special PI it aw,
YOUNG MEN
TXTHO MAY BK PlTFEniKO FROM THK TO
T fecu ol youthful (nill.-a or tnrilacretion. will do
well to avail thenuwlvrsi of lil, the rr.i-est booa
i-Ttr IkM ai tilt- altar of aiiQeilng hum.i.,lrr. DK,
M'INNKY LI pii.mriu- in f,.r,oll ' for
ranf-of nominal Ucukti- or private dw-aa-a orf aov
kind or cbaracier viuli be undertake, and Aula U
CU" at ISnLE-AGED HEX
There are mar Y at the are nf thirty UmxtT who art
troubled with t- o tn-q uenl evarnatinna of tiieMadrtar,
.i.'le'i accompanied by a a;U'ht amttrtlug or horning
aenaatioii and a weakenit.g of the a Kteni In a maonat
the patient cannot acct.ui.t for. On rxamlniag tha
urtMary depo-ilia a ropy wMlment will often be ft m no,
ami Home timet small partkleaof alhuni.-r will appear,
iMherolor will be nf a thin ru lklli hne. acalo
ehaiKlnir. to a dark and to-pkl appearance. There ar
many men who die of this ilflt ulty, lni.rant of tha
cause, which Is the aecoiwl atime of Nwninsl Weakneaa
lir. 8. will niarantee a perfect cure Hi all aurb caaea,
and a healthy raatoratHin oi um feonur unwary or
Ofhce Hnura-lO to 4 and in . Punrtayt from 10 M
I A. M Conaultatloii Im, Thorough ejtamtiiauaa
and advice, a&
lluraWa MR. apiXJfrT CO..
No. II Kenri.y Mreet.sau fraucaco, Oat
a lata
Rroa. If.'.
ua with ar
and oriran
mrui la r
rant In i
of lOIID.
menl we
fofUnl
CHEAPEST 1TOUSE
FOR
AMERICAN WATCnES.
Elgin, Springfield or Waltham Watch
-ISO
.ISM
IT
a laarutn lama Onwla.
Mwtau IaltatlM.
A lao fun atock of
JEWIXKT. CLOCKS awd PKCTACI.BS.
Goods wot "CO n." to ary prt of th, caairtry.
JOBS A. Irrs.
Watcaaaaaer aa4 Jeireksr,
Itm rraaU M. fapaaaatai taa KaaasaC
rsrtland, Orefna.
Ia awaec Mill
la aaaea lllvar Caati ..
la 4 awaea Mrrar Coa. .
DON
YOU
OUR
Fur II
O. AIkII
work w
mailA
btuiuens.
Use ROSE PILLS.'
wovotni 1
la It
bars yt beat,! V!.i Ii1? " C,
T BUY LOSS BOO-M
WANT THE BEST.
NAME 18 ON EVERY
AKIN. KF.T.T tv
--'u a CO.
ia lust lihnuvrru,,!,, i (,
' (tnllerr, 107 r'imt u..,."".-P h
ill tear Ilia ino,! ,,.,i,;. ' 7 H.
Iiv f.nntnA :.. .... n J'i M ii
Ronrina catari of lionr-st n ,),uw ,
cam ol fun. and tha I, .i..' . ""Hi.
now bcin? Iiol.l nt tho r.lita t..,' JJ
ToitKIBH ItPOX. Sen.1 to Jol.n n r
.iin. ''V'tot
Tuk Tm. I'fimu'or 'a Oregon lilopj puri,
(O. N. V
MliB iJifiiij!
ASHAYKUIi.
V. . .TR;.F. A CO., X s WaikiTIT"
Aiialyntaof ore, nit-laU. ruala H
gold un laUver, 4 awaya iiti. "n '?'
ll'll'll m, - tug
prnniptly atten
Ml ski iioiar.
1. W. I'RENTICK, 107 lie,! aiZTT II
muiic dealer, liaiMin.oricuiia, aheet m, If
Ii'ilai"!'!'.'..'""'1" m mi . itr y
X. Y. JEWF.I K V Itl.
itutirnxfi wntcli. ( ..'iTitrv ipri.-M w,ii,.i,,
eiF.AL KfrOft lVr K4,
to B. FF.TY, Xo. Oil Oak HlrSe, ,"TT
er, manufacturer of notury and lilr. Z.
TEXT A X D A W N I . "
-Manufat-tiirer of all klnda nf tenui
t, inner awn lin
alj nntlona a .nHKltv, will mi country iTr.l'J"'
builder, and direct eirai.t f..p k..,i 1 V.ov
plimoa, has removed (rum M Vaiulilll to ill f!!
atri-et, near Alder, Portland. 1 tm
F. E. llCACIl k CO.-IOII From Hl,-IWta
in Palnta. Oil, and tllaei, D,,r,, WmiloiTS
Hllnils Send for l'.lc f.wl and fntainr-ie.
UHUOMA-VOKPEH, It Htnrti.-Monnmfna
lumlw, lleivlatonea, etc., (nrnUiied In
Atnerlcikii m:.rliA ,i,,. ....t..... mii .j 7
t-eiid for price. ndd i:;n, """in.
"t RVFYOR'a.'
OOPF.K .V IIAUII.TON, civil Knic'rieen n4
Hurveyora. Uoom II, Kirst National Manic biilMInc
l'nrtland.tlr. All klmlnnf survcyhut aud dralua
done In nny part of Hi couiitrv.
IIAkKUIIl.'
i:nplKI-: HAKF.Itl . Watlnninon. Von t
iUir,rrop luiiifarturvnitif Tilot hrtail, NxU,
Picnic, I'nttvr, IWwton.Siiiriir'uirl siKH Klvoriu kfn
unl.-rs (una the itaUu bolijiusl uii pruuiiuiy
l.'mJv'.'l tfi,
I). P. KI;M:DY.-.Atiortifr find Cuuiwior it
Uiw Kmtiu Uikiim'ai hiillcllnc. LpkhI bu-itii
pfTinlnmif ( IVtlerx I'.itfiit lor tiiwiuh;., t.wn
t i Mf n CiMirfa or In (hf Cimrt , n sin ih!i v.
JTST HKCFIVED AT OAHRtSON'S KWIXQ
Mruifliif 8ion 167 fhlnl ctre't. iNtrtlaiul. Urv
con, liU piiws of !IoiiH4'h)!(i Kuivit( M .'.'Srim-H. Diif.
Inn two hihI on h:ilf Vfurs' iw in ujvk;hi tin' jtHp.
ti In 'tan forrptl i(n vny lo tho imiit. - im HUfHitr
urV-itM nrr now wt-ll kn.vn to th pebiic. Agfoa
wiuitt'd towU In fv-ry tmvn In Offifvi.
I
PHILLIP BEST'S
T
Bottled expreaaly (or the
Pacific Coast Trade.
i fJunertor In duality ar.Jmriiy toil
-v.-, - r- Jl - ' ,..l,.,r-
SOLS DEALERS,
oinr iniiu o rn
FU0ST STREET,
ENLAEC'SD PICTURES
MADE IS TKK
Highest Style of tho Art,
BY
I. G. DAYIDSQH,
PHOTOGBArilfilt,
TOriTLAXI). OREGON.
E. S. Larsen & Co.,
WIIOLESALK onOCElW
3ii,rPiKoE.S.L.&CO. M1M
p.
YU.e1..a. .Mat I'"-.,. 1.1 ! ft ctrtfl
i:iiuui.d uuia uhiuiio.u .
realen tn Tropical nd Eomestlc rru'.n. h'utt
Comlsnmenli of country rwdnc oJIfllM.
Xaa. lit A 114 Froat Street. fortU.
C. E. McBUEEX'S
QUEESSWARE BAZAAR,
07 Morrlaoa "trret, roniaura.
TnK LEAPING AND mEAPeWT '
f,,rl.h: UmM III I'nrtUlid. T a
rtaa apectaltr.
AU 4oda below Flra Btrre. rn .
W. 13. MAHYE,
OtU Engineer, Snrrf jor A Ih-anghbmu.
A LT. KINDS OF FNOINKKRIVO FTFTTTl
l In the .tate U Oregon and ldabo. W JUH
and Montana terrllorlea.
Kmm Xa. 13. aver Fire Satlaaal Baaa.
rORTLAKn, OKEON-
mil St t of Teeth for $10.
w . aa. ftlS.
TFFml FIT.T.KO AT LOW RATK; RATI ra
Hon cwnte,Kl. liaa admlnhlered. Wnital nw
rrUal. Orraa.
Room M. Vulon Khk. Ptart atreet wtranc.
'lib BWwWTMTttTTl'''1 II
w in., Towi I i&f&w
Kal rata han.U-ncw Invention I Catai ,n!' k
l4y Aienu for apeclaltie, 1 ,nia.V
USE ROSE PILLS.