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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 11, 1886)
- FOREIGN GOSSIP. There fire 7,870 womem employed i .e English Civil Service. A Russian convict is snid to have i vived a punishment of two thousand I,. The Kin ot Sintn has had h's new ) an 8on baptized by the name of (Ci-jje Wash'ngton. The ydim Princesses of Wales are port tricycle-ridors, doing sometimes i ty or fifty miles a day. One hundred natves and ten En, persons lost their lives through a (iruption of the volcano of Tara ura, iNew Zealand. The inhabitants of New Britain, an and in the South 1'aciho Ocean, lock ( ir girls up in cages in infancy and i p them there until they are to be xrried. The first city in Europe where edricity has been entirely substituted r pus for street lighting is the town of tirnoftand, in Sweden. The motive wer is water, wh'ch is very plentiful sere, rendering the light cheaper than is. Bee culture Is an important Indus y In France. The Minister of Agrl .luire reports that there are now !)71,86A hives in operation, which last :.ir pro luced honey worth 14,945,835 anc and wax valued at 8.755.2J0 aiics. ' In one of the most frequented thor lplifnres of Vicnnia, the Maria Hilter rawe, a young tailor, went to a physi ri for a oonFultat'on. On being told ;t he was incurable he fired two shots tho medical man, one striking the ' and the otltor the arm. The tailor i killed himself, firing seven shots a a small revolver. The wounds of physician do not appear to be dan- MS. The German newspapers state startling experiments have been 'e at ISc-rlin with a new descrip i of shell, charged with rolls of gun n, which produces extraordinary Its. No kind of defensive works, mutter how solid, it is stated, are bio of resisting so destructive a pro le. The German government, pletely satiHficd with the results ob )d at tho trials, has ordered 75,000 ese shells. A modern Rip Van Winkle h.w ap od in the Isle of Wight Forty 9 ago a?o a native of the little vil- of St. Helen's went away, leaving 'e and family, who from that time i nothing more of the wanderer, wife and. two of the children died, rs of the family left the place, and a the old man returned recently he id scarcely one person of his ac ntance left, while his own daughter not know him, having been a baby ma when he went away. Mme. de Valsayre, cf Paris, has ided a '.'Woman s League," whose 1 -fit is the arming and drilling of all i ich women. The League holds iar meetings, and has adopted a luf.on that "on the day , when ten will know how to fence, human vill be saved." Revolvers, ritles swords are to be henceforth a part lady's toilet, for only throngh the ng of French women the days of ry and vengeance" will come. How ,'the league proposes also to stem nereasing depopulation of France icoratin every mother who has d six children. LIFE IN COLOMBIA. Conntrjr Frre From Snow In Winter .and Free From Ileal In Hummer. Lion. Charles D. Jacobs, United States blister to the republic of Colombia, rrived in the -city the other day on a sort leave of absence. He was acconi nied by his family. While here he make an oflic al report to the overnment on the Panama Canal, hich he examined. A reporter met im and succeeded in getting an inter v, but not on the subject of the Col umn Republic or the Panama Canal. i said he could not speak about the '. eminent whore ho was Minister, 1 that the canal would be duly written in the report Said he: "Colombia dry wealthy In mineral products, t only needs enterprise to develop iU urces. At present tho French seem i-.ave greater influence than any for ers. The city of Bogota, thu capi . hits a population of 100,000. It i beautiful city, situated on a pla oi of the Andes niounta'n 9,KX) !-t $ above the sua level. The :r.perature rarely ever varies the a on round, and averages 65 Fah '.lieiL Just back of the city the n!es rise, beautiful and sublime. The uery is enough to inspire any one i'li its majestio beauty. Bogota is uiit up chiefly with adobe houses, that av a very unprepossessing appear tice on the exterior. But the interiors ! many of the houses are elegantly irnished and equal in many respects to Fifth avenue mansion. It cost $1,000 o pay the fre'glit on a piano to the city, et nearly all the well-to-do people ave them. From the mouth of the ' dalena river a piano is transported t the backs of laborers to Bogota, a ' Mice of seventy-five miles. This is . of the expensive items in freight ' There are no vehicles, the coun .. is too uneven. The city, however, - a system of street-cars that fome uprising American company built y are drawn by small males and ie very rood time. The fare is ten ts in Colombian money. The cur cy of the republio is greatly de elated and ten cents there is about bivalent to a little over five cents in United States. One great blessing t street-cars is that no one is allowed -tand. If there is no vacant seat the ductor will not let the car go until superfluous passenger gets off. "The mail facilities are poor and re are no letter-carriers. The houses not numbered, and it would be diffi t to direct a letter, except to the ieral post-office. The wealthy citi i have boxes at moderate renta's for ir mail, pretty much the same as The war residences are found is pie enough. The streets are laid off plazas and named. John Jones, a and such a street, South plaza, t in the neighborhood and mace in dies for John Jones. The houses entered through an area-way to the s'do, which admits first to an ante-' chamber. The wealthy all have court yards beautifully laid out "The police do duty only at n'ght in the day the citizens take care of themselves. Four policemen are station ed at the four corners of a plaa. Every fifteen minutes a bell rings which causes tho guardians of the city to blow their whistles and change posts. It is impossible f r them to sleep on their beats by this system. They are armed with lassoes, and pinion the prowling thief when he is trying to escape by the dexterous uso of this formidable weapon. They also have a short bayonet as an additional weapon. Petty thefts are the chief crimes. The natives are a mixed race, and are not imbued with that daring boldness which cracks a bank. They will steal twenty-live cents, a drink or a little thing. But you can easily trust them with 13,000 or $-'0,000 as messengers. When they work they go at it in earnest, but they are not fond of exertion. It is a curious sight to see them going about with loads. They generally go in pairs, ono behind the other wfth a stretchor. I had to move and was surprised to seo how easily they carried my furniture. It cost me no were than it would here. The natives of the lower class are fond of drinking and gambling. They have a beve age dialled chica, which has a vile smell It makes an American sick to smell this drink. It does not intoxicate as quickly as whisky, but it stupefies. The streets are drained by ditches run ning through the center. "Society is very exclusive and strangers call first If the visit Is re turned the doors of society are opened. The predominating language is Span ish, but all the upper classes sneak French. They get every thing from France, too, in the way of dress and luxurios. I don't know why it is they do not care to speak English. It is ab solutely necessary to speak French to get along. The city is a city of para doxes, of great wealth, of great poverty and a peculiar mixture of customs that often puzzle the stranger. Flowers bloom perennially. There is no season of blight, of snow, no season of heat, but one equable temperature that nourishes ana forever keeps plants green. Everywhere tho heliotrope, fuchsia, violet and rhododendron grow in rich profusion." K Y. Mail and txpres. SOURCES OF THE NILE. The Mystery ol the Nlle'e Ilead-Watera Not Yet Entirely Dispelled. The notion is quite prevalent that the explorations of the past twenty-five years have completely tolved the prob-i lem of the sources of the Nile. Tho fact is, however, that the mystery of the Nile's headwaters is not yet entirely dis pelled. We have fuller knowledge to-day of that later problem, tho sources of the Congo, than of the interesting question that battled geographers for iges until Speke partially solved it Lakes Victoria and Albert Nyanza were discovered respectively by Spoke and Sir Samuel Baker, and fur years these great sheets ol water appeared on (he maps as the twin sources of the N.lo. In 18(0 Gessi Pasha, one' of General Gordon's assistants, circumnavigated Alle.'t Nyanza in a steam launch. Tho dense aquatic vegetation at the southern end prevented him from reaching the' sm re, but Iroin his masthead lie could seo no river, and during his journey be did not discover a snglo important tributary. From hi voyage dated the notion that Albert Nyanza is not a source, but only a backwater ot the rile, into wl.icli tho river pours merely to emerge again a little further north. in the tame year Stanley, travoling due west from the north end of Victoria Nyana. reached a large lake,' which he supposed to be Lake Albert not know ing that Gessi had fixed the southern limit of that Kheet of water. This lake is believed from native information to be about one hundred and forty miles long and to cover about five thousand square ni los. Its north end, a little north of the equator, is supposed to bo sixty to eighty miles south of Albert Nyanza. Its native name is Muta Nz'ge. A year later Albert Nyanza was ex plored a second ' time by Mason Bey, who, reaching the south shore, made a very important discovery that had es caped Gessi Pasha. He found a river coming from the south about ono thou sand feet in width, reddish in color, which pound its sluggish stream into Albert Nyanza. Neither this river nor Muta Nzige has yet been explored, and e-eographcrs are divided in opinion as to whether the large lake feeds the Nile or the Congo. The quest on has some political as well as geographical interest for the Berlin conference last year agreed that the northeast limit of the Congo Free State should be the water parting be- iwe 'n me ionro iiuu me mie kjmviuh. If Muta Nzige feeds the Nile, a theory that is supported by the best geograph ical authority on several excellent grounds, a large region tributary to the lake can not as at present figure much lonerer on the map ol the (Jongo Mate. Stanley argues that Muta Nzige must empty into the Congo, because, in his op n:on, the Lira and Lulu, tributaries of that river, have not space enough. without the help of this lake, to collect their large volume of water. It can be said, however, that without the lake they have as much drainage area as some other important African rivers possess. Without enumerating here the many reasons for believing that Muta Nzige is one of the sources of the Nile, it may be mentioned that it is very difficult to explain bow it is that the Nile emerges from Albert Ayanza with nearly double the volume of water it pours into it unless that small lake is connected with the far more important source of supply lust a little south of it There can hardly fail to be an ample supply of volunteers lor Arnean ex ploration service as long as there if light still to be shed upon so interesting a problem as the sources ol the xue. X Y. tun. A rnsident of Campbell County Georgia, is said to have had thirty-six knr. nA antticrh tn fitrht in the IaIa rm wiw w ' ftj - bellion, and twenty-three of them were killed. U has been married nine times. OR. O. W. HOLMES. An Ardent Admirer' lerrltloti of t Iniiunrlnl Au'urrnt. When I went to tho St. George' Club, in response to an invitation tr meet Dr. Homes, Ifmnd its reception room crow led with ta'l, distingu'blud looking men stuiding around a small, grey-haired gont'emiin, whom I know to be the immortal Autocrat of the Breakfast Table. I was presented, shook h's soft, wrinkle 1 hand, and then made way for others who were waiting to Le Introduced. I engagoJ In couver- satiou with an American acquaintance. but like most of tho-e present wn really devoted to a close scrutiny of the little man who was the giant of thu occas'on, and I noticed about him these th ngs: He is quite old; he has passed three score, and perhaps has added the ten. He appmr to have grown old ently. lh snows ot age came not own in a storm, but sifted softly on his head. Among tho wrinkles of the patri arch he has preserved the smile of youth. He is very smalL His slight figure is perfectly erect yet his forehead scarcely reaches to the shoulders of most ot those around him. His head is remarkable only as having been the birthplace of so man v beaut Jul thoughts, It is simply a good head, and has no prominent developments in any direction. It is covered thickly with gray ha'r cut modoratcly short His eyebrows are unusual They are bushy and long, and project from bis brow with a twirl not unlike mus taches. They look fierce. They have refused to put on the livery of ago, and are a grizzled brown in color. The hazel eyes are bright and quick. Years ago. when 1 first began to delight in tho quaint puns and the other delicaeios served at the breakfast table of the w tty philosopher, 1 knew that his eye had in it just such a twinkle as I now observe a gleam which may bo either humorous or patlietio the glance ol laughter's dart or thu sheen of a rising tear. Around his eyes are collected those merry wrinkles which show that that during the long life in which he has made so many people laugh ho has laughed not a little himself. These wrinkles, converge? in his ryes like minute channels, seem to draw into them all tho expression of h's upper face and thus.acoount for thoir b. ightr ness. His nose is short and bus a de cided inclination upward, and gives an iuiU'biuv eApressiuu w uia i-uuiho-nance. His mouth is very large, and would be absolutely ugly in any one else. Genius is not onlv able to re deem, but almost to beatify this de fect His thick lips are cleanly shaved, as if to expose their sweet expres sion. They look eloquent; thoy seem to have syllabled many a burning word. His lips have the appearance of such as would tw.st and gather when his emo tions were excited! I never saw before such a sympathetic expression. Surely that man never was a physician, as I read in his biography that he was. I see in his countenance enough good will toward bis fellow man to make him de vote h s life to the relief of his sutler ings; but I am certain he could not stand to hear the groans of diseases. He never had any thing to do with the scalpel and the corpse. His chin has in it a number of those gentle indentations which may be observed in the chin of a child thil is about to cry, and which may bi called the d:mplesol grid, lhin gray wh skers fringe his throat under his chiu, which slopes away so uec.u.u ly as to give almost an appearance of weakness to bis countenance. 1 am conscious, however, that if this inde cision exists it extendi only to bis emo tions. Y ice could never tempt him, but he would be powerless to hold his tears when his pity is excited. Glancing up ward, I am therefore able to see in his bioad forehead and his stern brow signs that he is a strong man and a philoso pher. In his bright eye I see tho sparklo of his wit and in the smile of his l.ps 1 see expressed that broad human sym pathy which enables h.m to taste ol every joy and sorrow In the world, and supplies inexhaustiblo material to his philosophy and his wit And. comb n mg all the features, I am able to recog nize the foco of the poet which 's great er than e ther the man, the wit or the philosopher, for the whole is more than any of its parts. By this timo tho crowd around bim was beginning to thin; tho guests were departing. I went np to b'd him adieu, and as 1 shook his hand told him that I was a dweller among Craddock's Ten nessee mountains, but that I had not lived too far from Boston to admire aad love the Autocrat of the Breakfast Ta ble. Ho thanked me in a voice that was soft and winningly sweet He de tained me to talk of the scones of "Crad dock's Tales," and scorned to be inter ested to meet so far away from homo one who had been reared w thin twenty mdus of the lonesome waters of "Lost Creek." While we were speaking a servant gave him a letter, and as he broke the eeal to read it I took my final leave and retired, feeling that 1 had be m talking to some good boy's grandfather. London Cor. Cincinnati Enquirtr. A HAPPY LIFE. i Mr. Bom Webeter Bayard's Short Ityt In tereetlni; Career as Am Arrleulttrrtst. One of our highly valued exchanges says: "What happiness there is about the tree life of a farmer! What pleas ures, what joys are known only to the Jarroers' life." The fellow writes just as If he had been there. You can see at a glance that he knows what it is to roll out of bed with a wild whoop of freedom at four o'clock in the morning, gladly drive a-field and follow the happy plow all day only at about sundown to run against a stump and joyously foci the handle come up and hit him in the pit of the stomach and make the whole world turn dark and reason totter on her throne as he doubles up rapturously over the plow and hangs on while the team runs madly across the field and his limp and useless limbs nop delightedly in the happy, bprj even:nr zephyrs! Ha know the pleasures of milking the joyous cow, of grasping her free ant untrammeied leg as ii nies wuaiy anou. and hanging on to save his life sue finally being hurled across the yard an. having his glad and mirthful Mu le sets tered over about U n s uare yards of board fence. He knows the blissful hours w hi led away in leaching the festive mid imme diate calf to tlr nk, the U-iug bunt-d gaylv through the bam mid striking h;s head against ihn grindstoue with a free and ringing laugh. He has wen the b red man' lingers melting away before the mowing machine, has known what it is to t ike hold of a wh to oak pit h fork handle on a January morning and never fully recover the use of that hand; he has toyed with tho del ghtful kicking colt walked calmly into the barbed wire fence, peacefully gath ered the frisky potato bug, and had the glad and contented farmer tell him alter dinner that he might be throw ing the dirt out of that new cellar while he rested. He knows all about these things; he was born and raised on a farm and has been there ever since, and wrote about how happy it all was after he had been digging post holes all day in rocky soil. Koss vt ouster uavard was a young man whenhecanio out from Chicago to in dulge in the free and happy lifeof the gay and confuted farmer, lie bought a pair of boots each of which woighed some thing over twenty pounds and was four sizes loo large, and wore them until he tound it necessary to open correspond ence with an Eastern firm of artificial limb manufacturers with the view of petting a new sot of feet. He experi mented on the subject of tan bv roiling up his sleeves during one whole hot summer's day and subsequent y got sum one to write to his old friends, the limb manufacturers, for terms on new and second-hand arms. He was fast dropping into the easy life of the farmer when ho struck on a feature so exceedingly joyous that he concluded that he had got enough. One ra ny day the farmer whom he was working for directed him to hitch up tho colts and dgve them around for exorcise awhile. He soon had them connected with tho heavy farm wagon mid was on a couple of wet, slippery planks that were on in place ot a box. lie found the team very easy to exercise taking vigorous out-door cxeroiso teamed to come natural to them. They started around a forty-aero field with a freedom of motion that surprised Mr. Bayard. Ho soon discovered that they seemed to bo much more accustomed to that form of amusement than himself. He kept up for the first round and tho next one lie went down while the wet planks Hew up and hit him on all sides and thu colts filled the air with flying mud and water and made frantio efforts to lower the record. At lost they mado a desperate attempt to jump tho fence and Koss Webster and every thing else went down In ono wreck of matter. Just then the contented farm er came up and asked him if he slipped on the planks. This was too much and Mr. Bayard got up and went sadly away. They urged him to remain and learn what it was to hold the plow; to have the long, sharp point of the self-binder run through his hand as he oiled the niaoh no; to be bit ten by tho rattlesnake in tho moadows; to learn what it was to t aoh tho escaped pig the narrow road that leads back to the pen, or to taste tho pleasures of get ting over the barn-yard fence with the assistance of tho plavlui two- ear-old steer. ir.JSstcUiiie (V. T.) lieu. FUN ON THE FARM. Nome Itellable Opinions on Rural Life by b Journalist of Kiperlenee. It is a frequent saying that the 'armor has nothing to do but enjoy himsell; that when the bl zzards send in their cards he can draw a s chair up to thd stove, put Ids feet in the oven, and spend tho dav reading the O.'ofcs and and other moral works. Accord'n j to tradition, this occupation is only dis tnrlx'd when ho adiourns to the table and banquets on mince pie and divers meats. This is all a m'sUke. A close observer will soe the industrious farmer crawl out of bed four hours before day licrlit. soften his boot with a hammer ami ponimence his dav's work with a lantern In ono nana anu a uucuci oi 1 I .1 t-A. fm n 1101) In tho other. Ho haa from a thousand hop's, which shove their noses in his face and tip tho con tents of h s bucket on mm, wucre it freezes until ho looks liko a skating rink. When he has escaped from the hog pen1 he hunts up six or seven buckets, and emu is ihroni'h a wire fence to milk tu'nni v.snvMi cows. These animals wait nit I ' hrt has the bucket ncnrlv filled. when they kicu u over, a ming so . mat the contents will kaisomme sucn i .- I l. ! r.1 I, ' n . mm tliA IiIM pans OI Hie uuiil ti no n'v "p spared. Now and then they vary the monotony by kicking nun inswau oi wo bucket, which makes h m feel tired and hrtn.ii!L- Wlinn thu cows have been milked and he goes to feed the horses he finds the sorrel mare (louuieu up in li e manger with colic. He then has to mix up a lot of aconite and wafer, wh'ch lie attempts to pour down the animal's mnntli. and it hits him on the te th with its front foot and makes him wish ho had never boon born. He works around all mnrninc with the old mare, and then proce ds to curry the dun mules, which trv in see which can kick the hardest and by the time he is through he feels as though be had passed inrougn a corn shellcr. When he has fed the hens, and waternd eattln and hunted three hours for a twenty-cent pig, and chopped half a cord or elm lor the house, ana carneu fortv buckets of water for the horses, and shelled three bushels of corn by hand, and shoveled a road through ten feet of snow, and milked the cows, and curried the mules, and doctored tho old mnrA atrain In tha eveniuir. he goes to bed, and gets up again in the morning four hours before day-ugnt ana com mences the whole thing over again. Atchison (am) (J lobe. Strawberries from Florida come In top-boxes with a canacitv of twen'T- eight quarts. The ice-chamber is in tin center of the top, and the cold air from it muses down throug'.i a slit thn through small apertures into thetwr fruit chambers, one on cr.ch s'dc Through these the cold air ruu uj amonir the strawberr'es. carrying with it whatever impur.ties may be in th m up to the Ice, which absorbs more oi Iksl kivninir thn atmosnhere tiurcr. , I -f , - Thnsa ia-hoia arn in freltrht cars, and icing is dona every twelve ho irs. It costs about eighteen cents a quart to ransport Uiem inus. iwcn imc. Lie in Fib u Official Expressions" Royal" found to be the only absolutely pure baking powder. Governor Hill, of Now York (says a reporter of tho ilT. T. Tribune), Bays : " I liavo Icon astonished lately at tho extent of tho adulteration of food. It would uocm that every thing wo eat is adul terated. This adulteration of groceries is becoming a na tional evil ono that wo shall liavo to adopt sevcro means to chock." Tho machiuery of tho law cannot bo put at work too speedily or too rigorously against this wholesale adulteration of tho things we eat Both tho health and tho pockets of tho pooplo domand protection. There is no articlo of food in gcnoral U60 more wickedly adul terated than baking powder. Tho Now York Stato Board of Ilealth has analyzed 8-t different brands purchased in the Stato, and found most of them to contain alum or limo, many to such an extent as to render them seriously objoctionablo for uso in food. The salo of adulterated baking powders has been prohibited by statute in several States. It will be in tho interests of the publio health when their sale is mado a misdemeanor every where, and the penalties of tho law are rigidly enforced. The only baking powder yet found by chemical analysis to be entirely freb from lime and absolutely pure is tho "Royal." This pcrfoct purity results from tho cxclusivo uso of cream of tartar specially refined and prepared by patent processes, which totally remove from it tho tartrato of limo and other impurities. The cost of this chemically pure cream of tartar is much greater than any other. The high grado of tho Royal Baking Towder has been fully established by official chemists. Prof. Love, who mado tho analyses of baking powders for the New York Stato Board of Health, as well as for tho Government, certifies to tho purity and wholesomonoss of tho "Royal." Trof. II. A. Mott, lato Government chemist, says: "It is a scientific fact that the Royal Baking Fowdcr is absolutely pure." Dr. E. II. Bautlet, chomist of tho Brooklyn Department of Ilealth, says (April 21, 1885): "I have recently analyzed samples of the Royal Baking Powder, purchased by myself in the 6torcs of this city, and find it free from limo in any form." Prof. MoMcrtrib, chief chemist U. 6. Departmout of Agri culture, Washington, D. 0.,says: "The chemical tests to which I have submitted tho Royal Baking Powder prove it perfectly healthful, and free from every deleterious substance." Bread, cake, biscuits, etc., prepared with Royal Baking Powder will be lighter, sweeter, and more wholesome than if made with any other baking powder or leavoninir agent. mTPZrV- TT- -t- ... WmMmU..U, VL-S iWM .U for Infants "Caatorlaliaowel! adapted to eMdren that ,ndUa..upoanrPrcripUon kaowatom." IL A. Aacaia, M. D., Ill Bo, OxXord 8t, htnotajn, N, T. N DIGESTION A raoMit attack cf lndl(rftloa or ronatlpattoa b aa.lr cured it tlx rl(ht rtuwdjr la applied, butavarjr awdUoa except Hamburg fifr la ao dlaciutinf u taat or entail that a panon prefer io It the dieted take It enu r II the above loutloa cannot UeU tallied. U cent DR. FLINTS HEART REMEDY. nart dUeaee I developed br modern driilnUlon, and lalnrrnlng to an alarm. In extent, un aim woe ewee turn exletenc ot Uile eauee ot Hidden death . L. .hi. MfM1i mm anaa tl will eure I -. ai ui iMcrlntira tnaUaa Ilk acb bottJe or mailed tree. At all Drnigtata ; or address J. J. MACK A CO., and 11 front It, laa FraaoUoo, Cel. CONSUMPTION, l Beve a ooeltlre rawed i lr ike ebore 4)aaaae ; er I eae IhoeaeeOeereeeeeer tbe .fl tied ea of foef etaa4lea ae bewc.re. I it4, aealrmiela aijfalill leUaalSaf,lh.llwlll aenaTeio )TTlEi faia, BMMbarvua a TaU'Ail aTaATHl ee tkeSeeaee leaai aalrer. iraaior eaoa P O aaanae. e ' lx f. a. aWi,laaafienji25j.aatJ o. and Children. I Caster! eims Polio, Constipation, aSTi. d- I .uon. Without Injurious medication. Tsi Cbhtaus Coupmv, 181 Fulton Streat, H. T. QUARTZ BREAKERS AND .Pulverizers Combined - To run by Hand or Pmver. A Pracllcal Meohlne tor Cruh. Inf Ore to any denlnwl nneu.ee, Cheap, duralUe end ltecli. NICHOLS, 316 Mission St, 8. F. VAN H. lil.ASUMUrr, jUWJKW. W.THAVSB, rreudtinl. ioe rrautuuv METROPOLITAN SAVINGS bANl, PORTLAHD. Tranaaeta a Ueoeral rUuilni Huaiueeij auun uvenet on drpelu ea fnlJowe: On t Bionilia eertlnntea 4 per eent On eauwlheeertlnoawa t per eaut, Oa 11 nionthe oertlncaiee ( per eeut. uiaacruae: Judge W. W Thrr, H. W. Haiti, Jmle-e I I) Shattuok, H W. M.maatee, Hvlreater Karrell, I. W. H Herk, Hon. Richard WilUame, 1. J. Barber, Vaa & DeLeehmiitt, L F. Fuwera. O. H. Dodd. MB AT.J eh . . f mere, S WW ISeMIIVII A I !ti,al fair T.iialft UU..lUUul lak..ll lit Rh.ri.iiaitiaMa U'e..,!. la I 'lusscksi. f. lndlaimUM prut. ERIK MKD. CO. BUFFAIA N. Y. Z1 OS LONG LOANS, j(fr I J n rereeaeaeeraHteealrfcrliMeraat. AT m 1m Ba4 a MRU for prll.l.ii. Immm brett. ejinrmi. .ifc muii)if, T, a wereaer, rmf Sm Heeafer, ruer "eUAtat. CuMlaaau. O. OPIUM MORPHINI AN 9 WHISKT H.bil C.r r DH. SKKI.If 'l ItoaliUCblone. .10.1. tUxlte. Coat iar,.. t'tHrmm m.j ( Ik. nrae,i. amita m a.k.t eauM ItM. Call er wrila, PH. C. tt. anfataTeTaaaraaTraaTaiaa, Cah fhm Vh T or Rerriicf .Mai BM atpeatal for 1 1 Mr t. ft aVfantfcwciitaot the e.ecfatm et-vana. TS. .untiuuua Mreeej of L ECT R it H f .- taueaaa the pm ajoal ttneere Hub to araahr a.i u eat CDiifoatKl llua euh baKtrte ttetu ed.nal to e all true ad to toe. R a lot laa) ONK eprctlk porpOM. For otiulen (iriaf tal Bk eoraurtoe. a.Wre Ukuk See Co Kj "etJeWf. ... . . ,a DReTOUZEAU'S FRENCH SPECIFIC G. & G. Will enre (with ear.) the woe o-ee la ire to eetee tmfi Uch bnx eonteina a prcU-J treatiee oa ej eel dleeaeea, vith tuU ineeroctioa tor eaiKure. (Ma) pafea) erlo,S3. J. O. STEELE, Agent, IM Marat tr t. taw Frartdooo, Cat. l.P..U.HJil-...U.Nm E. I. !