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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 25, 1886)
FOREIGN GOSSIP. rfir in China trhnrgn from flvi iriita it visit, and uio suKI tu l ( lirm f London catervri m, 1 lor tht) privilegi) of wllinir if nU at tlio Colonial Kxhili t'o i. of Icjul In an e!ovnl. fur- coinplotolv tlU'iat'l by .1 of lightning, no trace of tli: l ing found uitcrwnrd. c Inmost jx-arl in thu world w;t. London ru .enllv for i'fi.so. f Inclit-s lono; anJ four Indict in Vrcnec, nuil wciglm.l tluv. n krscst crystal of nlnm r-w il, woiglrnw over oiplit tons. bi nt to the Kilinburgh InU'riintioi iiition from tlie Manchester :: him works. , luithoritio of Liverpool do n to like guy color. They Inv isxned an order forbidding a iy ilder to exhibit a flag of an tVde of hid house, Klliot Stoek has receive I tli oik of tliA room in the house :it i s in which Hubert Hums d cl 1 transform it into book-cot no iiition of the poet's works, ti n important n'ft'niseript.H' Irit I'otert'd in the librarv of t lily of Wur.lmrjj throwing nnc 1 fie hixtory of the lost author an, who wu.s burnt as a heretir es iu 385. ?omun villa has been discovere 1 our of somo excavations rt rs, near Perigueux. Among th" fiiund are coins bearing the elli t'i-o and Faustina, and a bronze of Mercury. illy published French stirmir there are over two million :itnro vears who utterly fail to ,'the beauties of matrimony r north, nearly one-fourth of tV .! population of France are i mountainous district of Bu rn is a town called Mittenwald, ! v snow-clad peaks and deno in which every yard is oroN-wil rinthof ropes and poles, on udretls of v olins arenung up 1 or a couple of centuries tho r.stry of the town has been ':lng. ' 'T phntographrjior the nrcro - known in tho flays of Cicero itions that tho wholo of Horn hud been written on a ph co nnt so small as to be mcloseil A Frenchman, alter atcticing. wrote the -four can- vers of tho Rom m Church on finger nails. t Atraord'narv discovery litis in Aberdeen, Snot land. A : laborers were digging the of a building in Ross's '; jKr K'rkgate, an. old thor , when about three feet below V they discovered a bronze i ling iiloiit tifteen thousand 'ver coins of the reign of Ivl !:. is supposed that this forms booty secured during on.' of into Kngland during the itury. HALF CENTURY. roug-lit iii Hfty Year Imoiint ( to 1 riniKforinalloii. (interval of more than fifty I : oposo taking a second look at ij) of Europe. This will give .r, as well ns the writer, a i to which we both seem en It is a Hip Van Winkle experi Meh I am promising my.-clf. .vna wrought by balf a'century ..uiitrics I vis'ted amount almost -formation; I left the Kngland ui' tho Fourth, of the Duke of ti, of Sir Robert Peel; the i'f Louis Phil ppe, of Marshal f Thiers, of (iuizot. ' I went uQhostcr to Liverpool by thu wl, tho only one I saw 11 looked upon England from ' a stage-coach, upon France 4oupe of a diligence, upon iitlie chnr'ot of a vctlur no. 1 windows of Apsley Uo,te ' boarded up when I was in The asphalt " pavement was Paris. The Obelisk of Luor r ia its great boat in the Seine, bi r it. I did not see it ere: t 1 . havo been a sensation to Jon, the cngineLr slanding 'K so as to be crushed by it if i-1 him by fulling in tho pro for tlu dynasties that have 1 u'h other ' like Dr. SehKe i"jan c. ties, there is no need ngover a hitory w liii h in- is constantly ending w t!i - i rogaid to the changes in thu conditions of soeiity and the in human knowledge, think moment vliut fifty yc.-irs has 1 liuvo often imageiibd mvs lf ' sumo wi.vc man of the East to d-iy Club, where wo often have obid rtrat'gcrs as our gnestn - there sat by mo I will l.ot fay Nuwton, fur he has been too iy from us, but that othr 11, whom Prof. Tyndall names " him in intellectual stature, s along the line of master ii country from the davs of !,-our own Dr. Thomas Vdied in 1829. Would he listener, if we were s de by ovtT humble I might feci h nee. 1 should bo so clad in jr of the new discoveries, in eiis, I had to impart to him 4 seem to myself Ike the "of an Emperor. I should 'h'! ocean team'rs, tho ra 1--pread themselves like cob the civ lized and half c v I- of the earth, the telegraph phone, the photograph and cope. I should hand him a the morning news from Lon by the eh cti ic light, I should .with a friction match, 1 e him with the incredible tanastltcsia, I should aston 1 the later conclusions of jre tild electrify him by the ful y 9ctrne of the correlation of tould delight him with th I should confound hin evolutionary ajiocalt pse 0. ' All this change in tho a Jon, beliefs of humanity i nco tho time of Dr. Young's d. ai i. the date of my own graduation from college! I ought to consider myself higlilv fa vored to havo lived through such a'lub century. But it seems to mo that 'n walking tho streets of London and t'er s 1 shall revert to my student days, an ! appear to myself like a relic of a forui 't generation. Those who have been bo 11 into tho inheritance of the now civil y.a t on feel very differently about it from those who havo lived their way into it. To the young and thoo approach ug middle ago all theso innovations in lite and thought are as natural, as much matter of . course as tho air they breathe: they .form a part of tho frame work of their intelligence, of the skele ton alwut which the r menial life Is or ganized. To men and women of more than three score thev aro external ac cretions, liko the shell of a mollusk, the Jointed plates of an articulate. Oliver Wendell Holmes, in Atlantic STORY OF A PICTURE. Ad Intenneljr Intcrrallnc Tale Which It Worth HftmllnK, Whrthor True or Nut. A gentleman on a train the other day, to bi guilo the weary journey, told a story which interested a numbers of lis teners. Said ho: "I was a guest of an old friend of mine in Chicago recently, and on retiring to the guest chamlicr I found hanging on tho wail a picture, and involuntarily turned away, but some attraction it possessed caused me to gaze at it again, and the longer 1 looked the more it engaged my atten tion. It was the portrait of a man's face, so frightful and unearthly in its expression, though by no means ugly, that I found myself irresistebly attracted to look at it In bed my imagination was tilled with it, which broke my rest. In the morning my host, seeing that 1 slept poorly, asked the cause, which was told, lie exhibited much vexation, and said that it was his order to remove that picture when any one slept in that room. It was indeed a terrible picture, he said, but it was so finely executed, and came into the family in such a curious way, that he could not bear to destroy it. The story of it was "this: '"My father was traveling in Europe, ana at Hamburg, whilo eating at a coffeehouse, observed a young man of remarkablo appearance enter and beg'n a solitary meal. His coutenance bespoke the keenest mental distress, and now and then ho would turn his head ns if he heard some terrible sound, and then shudder, grow pale and go on with Irs meal as before. My father noticed the same young man in tho same placo daily for nearly a week, and at length became so much interested that Ik spoke to him. His approach was not remil-eil, and tho stranger seemed to find somo comfort from tho tone of sympathy used by my father. Ho was an Italian, poor and living l y the strictest econo my upon the slender profits of his art as a painter. Tho intimaey'ineroascd, and, as my father had friends in Hamburg, he was ablo to throw somo business in the way of his new friend. " 'At length tho Italian, seeing that my father seemingly wondered at his invol untary turning and shuddering, volun teered his story. Ho was a nat vo of Rome and had b vn somewhat fam liar with a young nobleman; hut miarrel rose be! ween them, and his patron struck him. Stung to tho quick by the disgrace of tho blow, ho brooded over it, seeking some opportunity for re venge. His late friend, now his enemy, was a nobleman, and ho could not chal lenge him, and so he secretly as-as-sinated him. Ho fled from thu country and finally reached Hamburg. One day, a few weeks after, whilo walk'ng in an unfrequented street, he heard his name culled in a familiar voico. Ho turned around and saw tho face of his victim looking at him with lixed eyes. From that time he knew no peace. Whilo walking, talking, eating, painting, his attention would be attracted by tho call ing of his name in that tone which had grown so terrible to h in. At last, in a mood of desperation, when his ghostly guest visited hiin in his studio one da), lie looked li'm siiuarely in tho face and drew a picture of him. That drawing was afterward elaborated into a paint ing, and this picture that d sturhed your rest was that painting. Tho Ital'an :i:d that 1 fo had liecmno an undurable burden to him, and lie was determined, when he had obtained money enough, to return to Rome, give him-clf up to justice and expiate his crime on the icaflbld.' " Indianapolis Journal. A SILLY CERtMONY. low dm Order of Knighthood III Con-fi-rreil by thu t.n Hilt Queen. The ceremony of conferring the Or ler of Knighthood at the hands of the Queen is not imposing. It is not, in fact, a public ceremon'al, and only those are permitted to w'tn-ss it who, by their ollici.il connection with the IJuecn's household, may attend her. The loyal subject upon whom such dis tinguished honor may lie conferred may not even invite his "best man" nor fie members of his personal circle of rela tives or friends to l.e pre-ont. Arrayed in whatever uniform he may be enti tled to wear, or whatever dress emit etiquette and the time of day mako proper if he b a civilian, the sub ject presents hims' If before his sover eign and kneels at her royal fo.:t Seat ed" upon the throne chair, the Queen lavs the shining blade of a sword acros the shoulder of the kneeling but exalted benelicary, and says, using the title which she is about to confer: "Arise, Sir So-and-So.' Plain Mr. ( lichen-ham-Iirown is thus by a s nzlc. stroke of HT Majrstv'sfworu transformed into Sir Knight -OHmd-So. and he is permit ted perchance to k'st his sovereign's iing r-tips in grateful acknowledgment of Uie d stinguished honor. In other cases than this of a plain knighthood, and when the title carries wit!! it a decoration, the Queen, with her own roval hand, pins the glitter in r a d oore'f d 1 anble noon tne coat of I, ri l.saK i siH.(.. t. This is all, but the recipient it is a ,eat deal. X. Y. ;. The M-a-on's seal hunt off Xew ictind..tud was a failure. Owing to I ro n sciions hunting, the animals are rapidly disappearing. lieAon Journal. CROCKER'S EYE-SORE. The retire Itullt by the t'ulirornln Mill lollalre Around Neighbor' Lot. The stranger in San F'ranc'soo t goes about to view tho dwellings of tli rich Is struck with wonder at a s'ng da monument which rears its unsiglnb shape on Sacramento street, beiweei. Taylor and Jones, On all sides but on. it looks like an overgrown ico-hoiw and as it stands within tho broad shadow of tho palatial homo of Charles Crocker the observer who does not look beyom appearances Is disposed to view ct i n adiuirtlion of a love for cooling bev r ages which manifests it-elf by the keep ing of a sheltered iocltcrg so near 1 one's door. This conclusion, however is erroneous. Tho other side of t mysterious strueturo tells tho story. It is entirely open to tho street, and lis tb eye plunges into a genuine cul-de-sur, u also reflect tho surprising fact tiiat there is no roof overhead. The i iclo sure is no ice-house, but a mere pea. minus a gatj; it is formed by a heavy leaden-colored fence about twenty lee high, w.th a level and continuous cop ing ou top, and strongly, braced at sbor intervals on tho outside. It incloses, in fact, a building lot, thirtv-six feet wid by - ninety bmg, in which a variety of exuberant weeds hold riotous sway lii year round. About nine years ago a house sto nl there, the property of a wealthy under taker named Yung. When Charle Crocker had secured tho whole of tli.' square plot which his residence occupies excepting this parallelogram, he wa willing t ) pay dearly for it. Mr. Yun knew that the lot was worth a great deal more to his aflluent and powerful neighbor than to any one else. When Mr. Crocker made him an offer ho de manded a much higher sum. After awhile the would-be purchaser resolve I to pay the price, whon he found that it had again been raised. This experience was repeated several times. Mr. Crocker's final offer was $20,000, but Yung wanted $25,000. Then the mill ionaire found himself at tho end of h s patience, and he registered a solemn vow never to b.iy the lot from its then owner. Furthermore, as the presence of a dwelling so near his own mansion, into whoso amplo windows it looked, was a cause of hourly annoyance, ho gave orders to have a tall fonco'erocted around the lot, shutting out all viow on three sides of it The lot was then a good deal lower than tho grounds sur rounding tho Crocker mansion. Tho fence was built almost thirty foot high, and it intercepted everv raj of sunshine that d'd not descend almost vertically. Mr. Yung may havo repented of his ob duracy, out he made no sign. The vengeance of Mr. Crocker was compara tively complete. The enemy beyond tho fence did not vouturo into I li gation, and after a year or two the house, which had been put in blinders, as it were, was removed and tho lot was left vacant It was subsequently leveled up to tho grade of tho Crocker grounds. Tho fence was blown down, but a new ono was erected a score of feet high. It is still there. Charles Crocker pro fesses tho greatest indifference as t i whether the lot ever becomes hisor not. Intimate friends, however, confess tint1 it hits been a sort of hated thorn in b s side, and it will probably, therefore, lie good news to him to learn that there is at last a prospect of its being plucked ont, and without it lining necessary for him to break his vow. Mr. Yung, the undertaker, is dead, and his widow is well enough to do to disdain the consid eration of a fow thousand dollars as a hopeful incentive to the keeping of a persistent clutch upon a property thai is to her useless. People on Californ a street hill were astonished about two weeks ago to see tho s'gn "For sal"" posted up in lofty conspicuousness on Mr. Crocker's dismal fence. The agents are a well-known firm on Montgomery street. Inquiry at their office rovea'e tho fact that Mrs. It Yung, tho relict o the deceased "undertakor, is far less e orbitant in her expectations than h Was. She asks ifl2,5(H) for the lot which is equal to $'l(i'l a foot front It is un derstood, however, that these figures are far from being her ultimatum. San Fraucineo Chronicle. MONTANA WOMEN. Pitmen and Milldenn Wonderfully Rrll-lte-llulit and Independent. With the remarkablo development of tho Western Territories has grown up a class of women totally difl'erent from their sisters in tho States. Tho very fact of being in a now, wild countrj-, ofton left alono to look aftor tho herds and Hocks has mado them wonderfully self-reliant and independent I run across women up in th's country so full of pluck, grit and endurance that I verily believe that in a stand-up fight with hostile Indians or marauding horse thieves they would bo equal, man for man, to tho same number of cow boys or soldiers. These ladies, by reason of their wild lifo on the frontier, do not by any means lose all the gentleness ami refinement of thoir sex. To be sure they become somewhat roughened by hardship ami exposure, but through it all, they still preserve their womanly traits, and when the necessity arises for tliciu to ride, hunt or shoot you wdl find them there, and in the end perhaps a little better off than many males would be under similar circumstances. There are all kinds of women in the Northwest From the cultured dames of our best cities the grade runs all the way down to the female road agent Hut. as a rule, the girls of Montana arc miide of tho very best material to l had on tho continent Scattered all over the broad prairies of Montana an refined and cultured women, bred ii atlluence and ease, proud, young an hopeful, called by tho m sfortuncs their husbands or led by their desires i enter and achieve in new' fields the m s'on of life, to surrender society, t home and friends and scenes of fit vouth, and march boldly to a far- wilderness and endure privation, io labor and suffering. But these worn have grewn to be brave, industrV s :lf rel ant full of pluck and ene: perfect horsewomen, healthy, lie active and independent, ana in m. cases about a pretty and as plump the very best of climates can m (hem. Sow, the typical Montana g f left alone, will succeed whoro an ordinary man would fail. With no iets, they stick closely to business, and f bent on tree-claiming, homeste.ulin Or pre-empting a quarter, half or whole section of land, they generally stay by thu claim to tho end and prove up oil t mo. Many of these enterprising damsels wouldn't have a husband at any price. Again, many, after laving tho 'founda tion of a comfortablo fortune, are taken in by some lazy bachelor who comes loafing along, sees tho chance, marries the maiden and settles down into a nice ready-mndo home. Our girls aro bread winners, and no mistake. They aro up to all sorts of schemes, sneh as ranching, herding of sheep or cattle, school super intendents ami even polities. The latter should be expected, how ever, as the females of Montana havo the right of suffrage extended to them in case they happen to bo tax-pavers. As nearly every woman in tho Territory is a tax-payer, why. of course, sho votes, as she has a perfect right to do. In liozeman, ono can see plastered all over tho town placards appealing to the passer-by to "Vote for Hamilton, the people's choice," or "Give your vote to Darcy," or "Vote for Nichols and re form." Hamilton, Nichols and Daley were candittates for the school siinerin tendency of tlio countv, and a fourth candidate was in the liold a man. It is needless to add that "tho horrid man" was beaten by all three of tho girls, Hamilton coining out ahead. Cor. San yraneinco ihronir.te. JAPANESE SURVEY. A Curloui Empire Now Iteliif Surveyed (or the Klr.t Time. During the past five years a work of (Treat national and scientific interost has teen going on in Japan. It is only within a few months that any thing has been known of Japan in this country or in Europe. It has revealed hitherto unknown features of tho country, and has thrown a flood of light on its' geog raphy, geology and resource, both actual tnd possible. Whon the survey was bo gun there were hardly any maps which were reliable. The proportion of ex plored ami unexplored resources was not known. Tlio coast surveys were quite correct, but tho interior of the country was almost a terra imvynita. The nature of the soil, the face of tho Country and a topographical survey, were matters to be systematically exam ined ami nut on record. The survey is conducted by throe departments topo graphical, geological and agronomical. A fourth a chemical section was created to investigate and test tho ma terial presented by the geological and tho agronomical. The dilliculties of the work have been numerous. The Japa nese chain of islands is little moro than a hugo and complicated ritngo of mountains, which, in parts, is hardly passible. Away from tho main roads tho survey could lie accomplished only by great physical vigor and powers of 011 ilurimee. Tho ina lequate Iraiirng of inginecrs and tho isrnornneo of cortog raphy a understood in F.uropo havo proved ser ous obstacles to the success of tho work. Aga'n, when the stage of p ill slier was reached, tho governiii"nt, wlrch would not fur a moment allow tho work to bo done, out of the country, was at a lo-s how to acoomplish its ob ject. Lithograp'ry and heliogravure were trii d, but tuo Japanese did not un-iler-tand theso arts. Ultimately, the T.no.lo Knginoering Company in Tok o was intrusted with tho work, under the constant superintcmlenee and cumrol of a director, and it is curious to note that tho maps aro all eteliod, not en gat ed. Tho maps publ shed are: A geological map show'ngtho distribution of primitive, paleozoic, mesooio and teitiary depos.ts; an oroplastio map, showing tho surface shape, represented by horizontal layers, and the depths of surrounding soil; a magnetic 111 a 1, representing tho Isogon'e, the isoclinal, and the isodynamio lines of Japan; maps of tho great h'storical earth qiinkfs. Tho scient'lic digest shows that almost all tho systems have hud part in tho formation of tho Japanese ra"go. It show also that the mountain chain is of unilate id structure and bn y ml a doubt hits been shitted from the side of the Japanese sea to tho sido of the free ocean. Another striking foat.ire is the great transverse depression which crosses the man island near the capital. Science. TALKING OF TACT. The I to 1 1 cute Compliment to Which To lite IrUliinnii Osve Uttermior. "You talk of tad" said tho short hand report. "I re, number a case of laet that was as pretty as any thing I can imagine. It was at the house of a Governor of a We-t i:n Si.at. His wifo was one of the most refined and charm ing women I ever knew, and she wa just 'chock full' of tact. Tho (Governor iiad to give receptions to influential men in tho State, and you can fancy that 1 m i of them were very unooutli and uneducated. Ono evening thero was a largo dinner party, and a rather rough old cove, it wealthy nn l important man, was the ch'ef guent. The dinner went along very nicely, lteyond making a few rather gauche remarks the old fel low behaved pretty well. Hut when the ingor-bowls were put on the t ible ho was rather knocked over, and liko nany other heroes of such- stories ho took his up and drank out of it. Nobody happened to sito him except tho hostess, ami qti'ck as a wink she sig naled to the sort ants. They removed every finjrer-bowl lcfor,o anybody could touch them, and thu old fellow doesn't know to-day, if he's living, what a mis take he made. Now, that s tact!" That you call tact!'' said an Irish man, sitting opposite the stenographer. "I can beat that myself. I got nut of a sci ape the other n;gbt at the Baldwin riieaU r. J had a seat in the middle of t row, and there was a mighty pretty woman I ha1 to pass to get thero. I ivss squeezing my way along, and I souldn't help carting a squint at her as I went While I was doing that I trod on her toe and she gave a Tittle scream. The fellow with her looked as if he wan going to lick me. 'I beg your pardon, madame,' I na'il, pol U ly. 'I co.ild not, judging by your hand, imagine your feet wore so large.' What are tou laugh ng at?" "Oh. rJothing." San Francisco Chronicle. A L OF PURITY. Royal a Perfect Baking Powder Absolutely Free from Limo. The Royal Baking Powder ia considered by all chemists and food analysts to bo a marvel of purity, strength, and wholesomeness. Furthermore, it is now the only baking powder before the public free from limo and absolutely pure. This is duo largely to tho improved method by the use of which it has been made possible to produce a perfectly pure cream of tartar, from which all the limo has been eliminated. This chemically pun cream of tartar is exclusively employed in tho manufacture of tho lloyal Baking Powder, bo that its absolute freedom from lime and all other extraneous substances is guaranteed. Professor McMurtrie, late chemist in chief to tho U. S. Department of Agriculture, after analyzing many samples of cream of tartar of the market, 'testified to the absolute purity of that used in the Royal Baking Powder as follows: " I havo examined the cream of tartar manufactured by the New York Tartar Company and used by tht) Royal Baking Powder Company in the manufacture of their bak ing powder, and find it to bo perfectly pure, uud free from lime in any form. "All chemical tests to which I have submitted it have proved the Royal Baking Powder perfectly healthful, of uniform, excellent quality, and free from any deleterious substance, WM. MoMURTRIE, E.M., Ph.D., " Chemist in Chief U. S. Deftt of Agriculture." iwnny 1 11 1 1 1 1 1'l for Infants and Children. "CMtorU li to well Hptd to children thsi I Cxteria curt Colle. Constipation, I raoomroend It u superior to snrprcaoriutJoo I four Btonwch, Dlarrhma, Eruutiiltoa, known to me." ill Aacni. lt D, . I KUiSiT' " 111 80. Oxford 8k, Brookljru, N. T, Without injurious medication. Tna CBMTAca Comjmnt , 188 ful too Street, N, T. .DIGESTION A iwnt ttic rt Imllircetlon or cotwttpttlon U eu.ly curwl It the rlj-ht i fiumljr li applied, but ever; UKxIlrtfia ex' opt IlurnhuTf Viyt it to diairuotlnff U tuts or mrl thut a pcrvm profura to lt tho d!eu take Ita dure if ( :j r'uvu .o.Uioa cannot beou. Uiuul. . 1 1 CI' . DR. FLINT'S HEART REMEDY. . Itrt dlieane la develop! by modern JPA dvlliiutlon, and U Im-rawlng to an alarm mst' exU"- I'd falm ha nnievte the V -VlVl MiiteiK t of thi cam ot ridilen death Xj, tk tlila remedy at onoa tt will our iaWfjrou. II M- betcrlpUve tnatlx with each bottle or mailed Ira. At all DniKKlxU ; or addreef J. J. MACK & CO., 9 tnd 11 Front tt., fan Franoiico, Cal. Tlie niYCua- Ulilv. .. leaned dept. and March, each fear, tr VSA pan". 8 San lnchM,wlthOTri 3,600 llluelralloiu a whole Picture uallrrjr. tilVUa Wholesale Price illrKl to eonnuwrrt on all Rood tot prreunal or tamlly u. Telle how to order, and jtre riact eoat of ery thlaa; reel nee, eat, drink, wear, or hare fna. with. Three Ifl VALUABLE BOOKS contain Information glranrtl from the market of the world. We will mall copy KHI K to any mi dree ipea receipt of 10 eta. to drfraf expeBeo of maUlnu. lt h hear from worn. Heepectfullf, MONTGOMERY WARD A CO. T ek tir Weeoali Atraae, Cbkmao, III. tan'a KomNlr Sir CatarrH Beet, KMital 10 Vet, and Cbaapeeu 1 the ft 2 J A Ion roM Sir Oo'd In the Hmd, Ileaoauie.l 1, liay Fever, Ac Iu cent. all WANTED A WOMAN of eniTKT tut ImnliiM lit bar liHwIlty, Salary M. Referrnoea It J. Jubnnm, Miuifr, IT Harclay Ht , N. Y. POUTLAM) 1 MECHANICS' FAIR October 7th to 23d. riuWti! wilt b wilri l.r the O. RAN. (V, O h V K R ami urerfotiuu tinn m I'nrv ahi ujiib m i H i AUK Hilt It'll Nl) TK1P. TicktrU gKKl fur Tvu Iy, SPECIAL EXCURSION 0 Ui0 RAN Cu.'lllnaat I.KPMTIIAN HAFT KAUIC .hi lictoUir rlt.lt and IMi. Tkkuu ruod till October 14th anil I'll,. A. S. "WHITING, Sup't, ill SUrk Street. Ill I W tJ lly'serroua!' I HI I . 1 1 1'nto I- lixl Utk aunt en W"". rmiaiint t Mai. limn! Ik-l.ii. urruuniiMia, Wawm. Ne iiUMer. liMluputaltla pruole . aunt eaeJvd, irae JCTUK MED. CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y. CONSUMPTION T hv ft -wwltlvR r-m-Hlj I r Ui abort! dtaaaM : 6? 14 m ihiun)tureaanftii l klntltwidof font ttaxllntf hr(jttll':ura I .l-'l. ot-m ls dit fal'fc Id urticw r.H.Ht 1 wi i miki th) hui rL a r hki, tufftthar lui ft ViM A U fc 1'KKATIfcMoo ItuitliaaaM Iu ant auffwrtr. .Ttri''"Mitiil O rnddr tt. a liit.T. A.aun,tM,mra--(aA.,(wTatt.1 - DReTOUZEAU'S FRENCH SPECIFIC Will cam (with care) the wood oune In Sreto tr tor. Each box contain a practical tnatlee oa r eial dtoam, with lull luetructioa lor taK-cor. (li pa) rloe,3. J. 0. STEELE, Agent. CM Market Street. Franelsoo, Cat, .TT a- nt .1 "...f t ii'iviiw ti mj.'l) ni.cwli t r Wtt vuia ul tW.-fet ,f Vt-( tlt l(tMKrtllt ' faVH. 1 ' t C'-I'MAli SB at tXr-tTkli TVpcmrtwi tTtCWh tl-t WH fj RUvft ihvm tu sVAtithf aitsuft. n A atmA ihia wk hiactm hmkM arirrriMl W Cun U iUi ll m berevei tO IM II iuf UM ON K H'V- ptpoM hut OfvesWa Ktosng Ml ! frnnli..n l-liWa ( kcm lrtlM tkca iu.. aWh .isf WMt Mlt.t, VlM.4(lW i-V 1