The Editors of the Future. Considering thescoo of tbo newspa per of the future, the speaker was of the opinion that not a greater quantity of news must be printed, but uore news in tlio same space, ihat is, the reader will require the editor to sift, digest aud put the news in the fewest possible words. It was a pleasant conceit of Henry "Waterman's that, if Shakespeare wcro living now, ho would bo an editor. The fancy might have fallen better upon a contemporary of Shakespeare's the greatest, wisest, "meanest of mankind, who anticipated the modern newspaper, in taking all knowledge to be his province. But newspapers are many and perpetual. Shak'e&pcares and Bacons come only onco in the centuries. Yet of this we may be sure. The field for ad vantages through. enterprise in the mere getting of news is about exhausted. The great newspapers can now all command substantially the same facilities. Gen erally speaking, Uie news that one gets another can get, if it wishes. Recurring, then, to Watlerson's conceit, it seems safe to say that in the next great stage of journalism, the. enterprise that now exhausts itself on cosily cable dispatches will go to men who can make a great news feature valuable, rather from what it tells than from the money spent in carrying it to you; who-will buy for you a costly thing rather than challenge your admiration for the money spent in the costly transportation of a thing of less moment. If it must send a Stanley to Africa as we may well Lopo that feats so brilliant can,, bo repeated it will send us also a jlacauiey to tell nis story for him. A moderately in dustrious man might spend his life time reading, the authorities on which Motley constructed the history of the Dutch Republic, vet who spealan: of intelligent people in the mass, not of individual investigators who cares for the authorities! Who wants anything but Motley! I-3o-not mean that the news of to-day must be dwarfed into the 'space it would -receive in the histories of a hundred years hence, It must, of ...r la treated with the fulness which the present, or, if too will, the fleeting interest in it demands. But the eclectic principle is precisely the same. The reader of to-dav is entitled to have the story of the dav told for him as skill fully as if it were the story of a hundred years asro : as attractivelv, in proportion to his interest in it ; as briefly ; with as little waste, and as rigid in exclusion of everything tliat.nees not add to the viv idness and fidelity of the picture. It will be the highest achievement of the most enterprising journalism to make, daily, for the morning Tender, sseh a pic ture of his own city life, of his own country, such a picture for him of the world, indeed, of the day before. The elements of the picture will be arranged, too, precisely in the order I ave named. In the foreground will bo his own city ; the middle distance will be filled by his country; beyond that, in the smaller proportion to which its relative import ance in his eye and for Lis1 purposes en titles it, will be the rest of the world. But, if the foreground is to be the city, that will require the greatest care, the most elaborate work, and certainly not the lowest order of ability. The cLy de partment may then cease perhaps to be the place where the raw beginners wreak their will, and become the point at which journalistic graduates will be expected to displav thiir best powers and most thorough training. This then IJconceive to be the next great revolu tion in journalism. We shall not have cheaper newspapers. They are not the cheapest thing sold now, considering the cost of making them. "We 'shall not have continually growing supplement upon supplement of advertising. In dividual wants will seek mediums more suitable. Only general wants will seek the wider publicity of great journals, and these will be kept, by the increasing cost, within manageable compass. We shall not have more news. The world is ransacked for it now. Earth, sea and -air carry it to U3 from every capital, from every people, from every continent and from every island. We shall not "base bigger newspapers; they are bigger now than a busy people can read. We shall have better newspapers; the story better told; better brains employed in the telling; briefer papers; papers de tailing with the more important of cur rent matters in such style and with such fadnation tliat they will command the widest interest. There will be more care and ability in selecting, out of the myriad ot ftings you might tell, the things t&t the better people want to be told, or esght to le told. There will bo greater skill in putting these things be fore them in the most convenient and attractive shape. -Judgment in selecting the news; genius in telling it that is the goal for the highest journalistic effort of the future. In making a newspaper, the heaviest item of expense used to be the white paper. Xow it is the news. By and bv, let us hope, it will be the brains. Whitelaw Reid's address before Association. the New York Press Boys and Girls. A lady who had much experience in teacling both boys and girls, speaking of tie extraordinary obtuseness of a certain pupil, said : "In a physiology class, this young lady of fifteen inquired with languid serprke, ' Is there not a straight passage throagh the head from one ear to tho e&erf a somewhat natural conclusion," tfee teachar commented dryly, "it she had ever watched the progress of her own sabwL" " Which would you prefer teaching," asked a visitor " boys or girls V f'Boys, infinitely," was the prompt repj'. "Ko boy, for instance, would ever have asked such a question as that. He would before liave investigated the safcfset with a lead pencil Sot prob aWy, is Jm ows oars" she added medi tatively, rbutin his younger brotberV Scribner for July. Official inquiry into the Prince Im perial's death is closed. Lkuteaast Carey will be court martkled. ilnglish Skies. One effect of tbc climate of England (it mujt, I think, be the climate) is the mellowing of all sights, and' paiticulirly of all sounds. Life thec seems softer. .richer, sweeter, than it is with us. Bells do not clang so sharp and liarsh upon the car. 'I rue. thev arc not rung so much. as they arc with ii? Even in London on Sunday tbeir sound is not obtrusive In deed, the only bell sound in the great city of which I have a distinct memory is Big Ben's delicious, mellow boom. In coun try walks on Sundav the distant chimes iiom the imlc antique stares or towers float to you like silver voices heard through the siill air. Your own voice is hu:hed bv them it you are with a coi panion, and you wi'k on in sweet and silent sadness. I Khali never forge the gentle, soothing clmm of the Boney chime in Sussex, which, as the sun was leaving the world to that long, delicious twilight through which day lapse into night in England, 1 heard in company with one whose sagacious hps. then hush ed for a moment, are now silent forever. I hese English country chimes are very different from thoe that ttuu our ears from Biosdway steeples Ttiey are sim pie. and yet are not loiniless tatsgle; but the performers do not undeUe to olir opera airs affetuoso and con expression? xuth topes and iron hammers upsn hoi low-tons of meta1. Whether I wafavored by the English climate I do no: know, but in addition to this soft, sweet charm which the air seemed to give to rvcrj-.hing tfeat ws to be f ecn or herd. I found late Autumn there as verdant and as variously. boauti ful as eirlv summer is with us, and i h out the heat from which we suffer.. In Sussex the gardens were all abloom. wilJ flowers in the woods, blackberries ripen ing in the hedges, the birds tinging, and evemhins was fresh and fragrant. Among the birds, I observed the ihruh and the robin-redbreast: the lalicr not that taanr breasted varietv of the singing thruji which is here called a robin., but a fistic bird about haif as large, with a thin. DOinted bill, a breast of cr jnson, and note which is like a loud and po!onzcd chimin. It wou!d be cbarrnins il we could have this man-trusting litt'c feather e3 fellow with us; but I fear that hecocld not bear oar winters. In Warwickshire, I found roses blooming, blooming in great misses half-way up the sides ol a two-storv cottace on toe road t;om irtrat ford on-Avoi to Keniluor.M; and this was in the verv last dav ot October True, I hadonli a few days before -hivcr cd ihfuuah a rainy morning uitre in fcs sex. when the chill dampness sc roed to strike into my very heart; but on th wliole I found mvseli under .fcnshsa sties healthy, hzripv, and the enjover of a sue ces-ion cf new delights, which yet seemed to me mine by birthright. July Au2.r1.1c Sickness at Harvard. One of the rules at Harrard is that the students must put in an appearance at Gravers, early in the morning. The bell for prayers has been xupg regularly fjr altacst two hundred year. 1 n: students are averse to getting up earlier tian they otherwise would, on account of prayers, and consequently it has been found neces sarv to evade the solemn hour. The average Harvard student is never at a loss to overcome obsuces, especallr when thev stand in the way of bis ideas of "duty. And now President Eiiot says that the slim attendance at prayers is nor, he thinks, owinz to the ill health ot the student. A larze majority of the student, it ap pears, have ingeniously avoided the prarer shop by getting physicians ceruncates to the effect that their health will not permit them to attend prayers." Presi dent Eliot may yet pat these sick students into the bcspital. Letters written py t&e President to the parents cf ibrse stedtnts whose connect u not always what it snooia be. do not promptly reach their desuna ticn. The student, when he fiadeih out that the President has written a complain ing letter to paterfamilias, seeke h to bribe the loyal Postmaster, whose sympathy ic nature is taken ad an use o', and tucn in student reioicsth at his success in "beat ing" the bead .of the Universitr. Har vard is the nursing-mother of New Eng' land intellect, but its colli ge lite is jo what it should be. A man rocs to co lege only once during his life, and he is bound to get an the fun, as well as in good, he can out of it. The Death Penalty. It may be said that, there is at least one social reform on which M. Hugo has dwelt consistently thiough all its phase the abolition of capital punUhmem. Lik those branches of mathematics which in voire infinite quantities, any question concerned with human life and death is lurking-place of fallacies. We will speak here only of M. Hugos ground of objec tion. wnich lies in the cruelly of .the punishment So far as the cruely con sists in the pain of anticipation, that pain is divisible into two factors regret at leaving a family unprovided for, and ac tual terror. Tne nist lactor, if frit at al is felt equally by the convict who is go ing lo the galleys for life. And the second factor wc may surely ncjlect. If a man has left his neighbor's family moarnin;, we need nut be tender over a few days of selfish terror for himself. Then comes, according to M. Hugo, the crowning cruelty of removing him fom this world. We may reply that f we re move him from bis home to a prison for life we are pretty sure that we are doing him an injury. But if, instead of this, we restore him from ibcejrth altogether, we have no means of knowing whether we arc doing him an injury or not. Surely, there arc plenty of other benevolent causes lo be taken tip, which if hts sus ceptible of pathetic advrxacy, are also less dependent on a turn of metaphysics. The Nineteenth Centaury. American competition was agreed upon in a recent debase in the House of Cosraons as the ono great cause of agri cultural depression in England. Twenty-five years ago a Missouri boy left his homo and started out to become President of the United States. He got as far as Cincinnati. The boy is sow a man, and k also oae the beet shoemakers in the Ohio State Prison. PACIFIC WAST. A Drajr.Ont. Sax Ffjikcuco, July 5. I'rof. Colgrove and Miss Em rati Allison, of tho New York Graphic, saado a balloon ascoction in the afternoon and carno down in the bay, two rutin from tbo Alameda shore. luey clang to tho basket ot the balloon, going at the rate of a mile a minute. When the balloon strode the shore it threw tho aironauU out Into a mirth and then jumping akTwanl, came uoxn near laturop about an liour at terwardii. Colgrove and Hint Alliaon waded to solid ground and returned, looking aa though they had gone through the Zulu war. Tbn Kr-ceitt Horror oh tbc Cowvlock, ViEctxii. Crrr. July C The bodiea of t je three men lost in the bullion mine have been found Perry, who ni working at the 1,400, foot level, was fouod at the bOO foot level at the top of the incline. His can and lantern were found 1UU Icet ixiow. in body was much swollen. Donahue was ound at tie 1.400 foot level cooling station. He bed Uken a plug from the sir pine, bet "had not turned the cut off valve. He was naked and hsd a can of water by his side. He was ht&nding upright holding on lo the Knpports, and died with his face in front of the :o. liii txMyw&s iieeouposeu ;and terribly kwelleu. Crocker was sbeut 200 feet above with a pick in his hand. dead. No rultluc nil. Sax Faivcsoo, July 8. Dennis Kearney in a card notiQcr au tne nominees ei me W. P. C. not to par any political assess ments, as the nominee upon prost of such atticn will be summarily removed from the ticket. He propose to uise funds for the campaign by voluntary contributions and will eoavass the city lor such aid. Brndlusr fur Irrtx-ri. The Arctic exploring yacht Jcanetle sailed this afternoon. Long before the hour fixed for br departure the pier besd and ships along the. city front, aud hill tops were crowdtti with spectator: and the bar was lively with yacht and steamers. Some de lay occured and it was not till 4 F. M. that the order was etven to weigh anchor. Con roved by the steam tugs Miller. Griffith and IUVboni, and the city re tug Gov. Irwin, and atteuded by the entire yacht squadron. the Jeanrtte steamed slowly down the harbor amid thediDmn? of lint fccreraic of steam whittles, aad a salute of tea guns from text Point. The Jeanette being deeply leaded with coal and stores, and her progress was o slow, that it was not till G39 that she gt octiide the beads. lit re she stepped a few moments while the wife of Lieau DeLang was transferred to the yacht Frolic The steamers and yachts in attendance then passed the stera of the Jcanette, the crowds on board cheering -itcl. Deling and the exnedilion The Jeanette's engine again started, and in company with tho schooner t aiime A. uyde. which core to lfesnsg bea as a coal and proruiaa tender, ahe steamed seaward. Klrlke of Zjsbrra. Sax Fnxcaoo, July 9. The Central F cific railroad company recently diw-Largrd a large force of Chinamen eatnioyed la allisg in Loan VTharf en the Oallaad side. A re- qaet was itined by laUariac white men that Chinamen should be retdseed with w bit nui. This was dene ten day age. Yestet day the men. who were receirieff St 50 per day. hzt dissatisfied with this asooat, struck lor 2 per day, and sttpnUted that tea hours should constitsie a day's work. The work coma tied in mlntdfng dirt trxia frcm Kile. Some of he men expressed willingness to work for $1 70 a day, ths amount paid sec tion Lands. The Chinamen had been paid 15 or 20 per month and proviixiaa. ilr. Strowbridge, who has charge of the work. ref csed to accede to the demands of the zaen and as there were fears of violence, be ob tained policemen to keep the peace. These remained but a short time, as there was so evidence of i&ientica of violence. Two sen remained at work, wHliag to work for SI w) per day. The strikers are sittiag in grosps around the trains engage!, and it is understood they will repel by violence any attempt to substitute Chinamen. As yet nothing has bees done tsward employing men, and Air. btrowbridge has said that he does not rut strikers. tValklBcXateh. A six day go-as-you-please walking match win begin at the Mechanics ravuion at o'clock to-narrow morning for the following prizes : First, champion diamond belt val ued at $I,WU and I,W0 in coin; second. $750 in coin; third, $000; fourth. $2o0. The following parties have entered, drawing positions in the order named; C V, Thompson. IL Xorboff. J. Bowman, J. A. Santos, TT. H. Scott, J. Kennovan, P. Ueln- tyre, wn. Chenowith. J. Callahan. John Armstrong, John MeFarland and Fraak Ed wards. During the evening before the con test commences several Piate and Bannock Indians will ran a twenty-fire mile race. Powder Xaswxlac Explelea. Sax Txiscnco. July 10. A Bodie dispatch says; A terrible explosion of a powder xasg- azine, near the old standard machine works. has blown to atoms everything in that ricin itv. The Summit Works, a short distance os. were shattered to pieces. Many men were killed, the number sot being known at this writing. About SO wounded men have been found thus far. It is sot known how xaany,tf any, hare been injured in the shaft and undergroand works. The top of the shaft in the old incline is now oa fire but can surely be put out. The hills are black with people. The fire department is doing good work. Jamei Hickey, foreman of the mine, is slightly hurt. At this time no esti mate can be made of the number killed or wounded. As far as can be learned at present, the following are Hlhl: Frank Fjle, Thomas Flaherty. William O'Brien and several others whose naaes hare not yet been ob tained. Probably many were blown into the air and their remains scattered broadcast. Everything is being done that kind hearts and willing hands can do. The Miners' Union building has been turned Into a bos pitid. and the Macoss and Odd Fellows are active in their efforts to alleviate the suffer ing! of alL The shock was felt on the sur face a distance cf 20 miles. KtrloBS Mistake. Shasta. July 10. Yestenliy afternoon the son ot P. HcDoaald, named Stephen Mc Donald, aged about 14 yean, accidentally shot a boy named Gordon Is the leg. inflict log a slight desk weund. Stephen, think ing he had killed the other boy, went off into the wcoi 'and shot himself. His body wan found by his family to-day with a bul let hole in his head. 'rut Walklur Xatrk. Al the six day walking sich at Mechanics' Hall at 10:45 this Boraing the score stood: Mclatrye. 47 Kites; Scott, 44 S3 ties. 3 laps; Chenowith, 42 miles; Calbvghan, 42 miles; Armstrong, 40 miles; MeFarlane, 39 miles, 4 laps; Thompson, 34 Biles, 3 laps; Xew hoff. 36 miles; Bowman, 42 miles, 1 lap; Santos, 37 taUei; Kc&noran, 25 miles. Tfae laborer RlrJkc. Tho difficulties aririsg from tho strike oa the lo&g wharf at Oakland are assuming a serioue aspect. This morning tho foreman of under contractor Strowbridge carried over fifteen Italian to take tbo place of fifteen of the strikers who were unloading a. dirt train and who ref ased to work for less than $2 a day. When tho gang reached the end of tho long wharf are refased to go any fur ther as trouble was anticipated. The re maining tea proceeded to the train and began shoT cling dirt into tho filling under tho scperrieloii ol Strowbridgc'a foreman. They had been at work only a few minutes when a fores of bb BUBberiag about 300 proceeded to the further end of the train where the ItaUaae were at work and ordered then to leave, preemaiag that they were working for the aaeaat offered by Sirow fcridge $1 GO per day. A quarrel eataed between the strikers and the foteBaa, the Utter amiag Uauelf with atoaee, and Ike strikers throwing his inlo a trestle. Po liceman Wallaco drew his reyoWer and ordered the crowd to disperse. This had the desired effect. A few random stones were thrown at the Italians, who beat a re treat alongside the track to Long barf, thence to the end of the wharf. After re maining there a short time they took a boat for Kan Francisco. The denouement la anxiously watched, as Mr. Strowbridge, who hM a contract for the work, has expressed no Intentions and tbo train U standing load ed on the track. (la tbe Corastoek. YicoixiA. July 10. 'Water from tho north end mines will be turned into the Sutro tun nel to-morrow. Sierra Kerala will soon fol low. Water is fast decreasing, and tne yam about not being able to clear the crosscut in six months is pronounced as an absurdity at headquarteni. Tbe extraction of era will be resumed next week; $16,730 will be shipped from there to-morrow. Croascuttlng will soon begin at the 2.300 foot level, as the station is nearly completed. The shipment of ore from Alia and Benton to unggs will begin on iionaay. There is enough ore in right to keep tbe mill running a year. MAX rx INCISCO l'HOllt't i: HiKICKT HUT DUrATCU. Sax Pbaxcbco, July 9. WHEAT Markst strong for chbiee. Quotable at $1 70T41 75. MAULEY Dull. Ouotableat COUe ler feed. COTtX Large yelio? and white sold at 0c. FI.OUK Choice grade firm. Demand fair. WOOL No demand. Market dead and nominal. SXCOXr DXSTATCH. WHEAT Demand is very good, supplies of choice are very light and market strong. Califernis choice to. extra choice milling. 1 "2irl 75. Same quality shipping. 1 C5l 70. latter an extreme. FLOOB Demand good for local eon- sumption. Market is strong in sympathy with the wheat market. Local mills quote extras at 12He higher. Oregon and alia Walla brand are firm andquotalle at $4 50 (i5 00, latter for standard Oregon. Late re ceipts of good Walla Walla sold at 51 Ml on wharf. OATS So sales of feed reported. Maiket very doll. CHICAGO X&lKXST. ( niOAOO, July 0. WHEAT-SI 0l paid for Ausatf. liACOK- Short ntrviJt. t 95. LAUD "ked for August. POBK-fO lSKpaidf.rAugMt. yrw Teas xiakxxt. Xtw Yotx. Jaly 9. WHEAT In good demand and jiricrs ad vanced tn$I !0C! 20 per bn. FLOUn-Streng. WOOL Is quitt. Frier firmly held. HIDES Quiet. COTTON' -Qalet. What and pera oil. quiet. rmtnn corros xasjur. Lrvraroox Joly 9. COTTON In aoderate inquiry, vbiek U freely tuppued. Uplands. Cr,d. Ortraai, 7 15-1C. Home Kindness. Home life is the sure tet of character. Let a huaband be cross and surly, and the wife grows cold and cnamiable. The children crow up saucv and savase as roanzbeara. Tho father Lcconca crdhmf, peevish, hard, a kind of two-Ieggnl brnte with clothe on. The wife bristles in self-defense. Thy develop an unnatural growth, and the house is haunted by ugliness and domestic brawls. Xhis is not what the family circle should be. If one must be rale to anv, let it be to some one he does not love not to wife- sister, brother or parent. Let one of our loved ones be taken away, and. memory recalls a thousand savings to regr Death quickens recollection painfullr. The grave cannot hide the white faces of those who aleen. The coffin and the rrecn ground arc cruel magnet They draw ns farther than we would go. They force us to remember. A man never sees so far into human lifa as when he looks over a wife or mothers grave. His eyes get wondrous clear then, and he as never before, what it is to love and be loved; what it is to injure the feelings of the loved, It is a pitiable picture of human weakness when thovs we love best are treated worst. Dakota's Great Wheat Farm. The largest cultivated wheat farm on the globo is said to be the Grondin farm, not far from the town of Fargo, Dakota. It embraces some 40,000 acres, both government and railway land, and lies close to the Red river. Divided into four parts, it has dwelling, granaries, machine shops, elevators, stables for 200 horses, and room for storing 1,000,000 bushels of grain. Besides the wheat farm, there is a stock farm of 20,000 acres. In seeding time, seventy to eighty men are cmploved, and during harvest 250 to 300 men. Seeding begins about April 9th and continues through the month, and is done very systematically, the machines following ono another around the field some four rods apart. Cutting begins about August Sth and ends the forepart of September, suc ceeded by the thrashing with eight steam thrashers. After thrashing, the stubble ground is plowed with great plows, drawn by three horses and catting two furrows, and tins goes on unti about November 1st. Thcro are many other largo farms in the Territory. The average yield of the Dakota wheat frm is from twenty to twenty-five bushel per acre. Spirit of Kansas. Newspaper Tramps. The difference between the real and tho bogus journalist is so grrat that it is almost impossible to conceive how any one can be imposed upon in the matter. Real journalists, the genuine article, are ladies or gentlemen, as the case may be; they pay their bills as other ople pay thcrn; their demeanor is, as a rule, that of well-bred persons; they ask bo favors in tho way of free railroad or steamboat passes; they rarely mention the joarnals with which they are connected, they are not perpetually boasting of their influ ence or importance of what they will or will not da The tramp journalist, on the other hand, is exactly the reverse of tho picture. He k heralded in society journals and the local papers frora place to place. All his taeveseats, and those of his sisters and his cousins aad iis aunts, who generally aecoaipany hiss, are announced from day to day and al most from hor to hour. Newspaper notoriety of the cheap order is his stock in trad. N. Y. Herald. Great Block. The largest block of granite ever cut in the United Stales has recently been Uken from the qoarrv at Yinalhavcn. It is fifty-nine feet long, fi'C feet and a half iquarc at the base, and thre c feet and a halt square at the top. It weighs from 75 to 100 tons. It con 1700 to Watt it and move it to the ihed where it is to be finished. It is to form the shaft of the monument to Gen. Wool, to be erected at Troy, (N. V.) The shaft with the base stones will form a structure about 75 feet high- KaBrred Tweutr Yrart. "I liavo suffered for twenty yrara with itching and ulcerated pilra, Iiaving used every nunoly that came to my no tice without benefit, until I uued Dr William' Indian Ointment and reeoivtd immediate reliof." JaUIB CiRKOLL. (A n old miner) Tuoaroa, Nevada, If you an; goint; to point your houv, bant, waguu pr machinery, the wonder ful Imperishable ilixwl Paint fci wrtrly tho best, for it k warratl by their agvrita in your own town not to chalk, crack, pcol or blteter; to cover lett'r awl work tMlrr titae umf t4af plrt. T r 'rr-r-linthte I"'! w.i avniel 'tee Sr t n'H. ott all utber nl-. X U Oulraa Hutr Ktale Kalr. 1ST, lit rln-aUr rrora lbtr I Ar-at.Wb'cli eap'i lb wo4tfl dlwrr e'T. ' ! p't a1 cmale y Gold I MTCCSUKltr. Tkr Mamaa nfas I truly wamaalr 1 Brier happr wllh a ullan. raash. bUtrr4. r Ikcrwlw blrmuneu eatapirsn. mr brrthrrMtllelsartarst-tlul Uwrllj lrr Urr wlnii villi all lhermrr r elrxaat ral I art--! tut I brtlrrt let brr pal rllsU twertarrajr whlrb U hrt rail. MlllJ caaat nuke a trar nuu truly happy iltbst a "Cilraad rlear raotptexUa." Tbr arrzaa Bid farlEer. by IU zrrat Ma4 rlraa.lBX pewprtle. rram all blaletir. pimple, nr.. rraaa Ibr tfcla. irspamas " tbat parr, aaarblr-llbr flat aad brilltaarj a marb ailmlnrd by Ibc fair rx. la alar raw an! afrtrry lea.Caazht.rahU aad ratarrb prarrrd rran aad arlslaalr la tbr Mtnuk ar SUwel. riaadrr errs Blaad r a riser 1 a rrrtala rarr. W la nukln; mmy tarrban or Im trrilinz In mpanw a any nlvrrtlr- n.B( lu thla paixr jou wilt (itnwiain. ' lion lU nine at tbr paftrr. n.wi: vou 'im: PIIjX. X Snrr fa re raned at LaU .aaar.rrd aaSrr. Ammkr lb SaaJ. Mwlac, a kbter ai al anuitHhttMMtffl Vr It Wafaastti ladUa rwmtmtjl aim ir wi Ba, iai utauam A cud bit Lu rami tbe nt aU tbtaak om wt tatatf S aai taarlr J' !' i bax V" aa aa4 boi karat llua rt- aW tiauwM U limn. Xft artin laag iftaatUrr at atfbt siur rti; wsa Ja Wd . a pusa' nm aiitK al naif, aac w aywi I tt 7 It a aar .imi altot at Kkn. an I I aeMar af ax imhh kvu. m x ttw ryrtnirfaStni4i nnin a lawnlotrr trSnWia larr 1 hraii ar ta tc H aaiwn aal lra betfar aony ft lae twea h!W, vaa oja V jt Kadc. Vatfr. uil. BaSebf. atabram. XmUt i arala. at aa aa htr a bU )nr. tad rtt law tssfo ZTwtk abkb osd as aa pala. WiShiraad aimr bkfmanl aata I dMpalrtd d ak rr tta aastajtUycaa CasvSaar bsaful aaJtrralaartan mX afaay. bat tasal B bapa. Lat FaS I aa wOrrclaaSaad sadrnt a trrrfbarf efanUeo, ky tarv dvlm at taa Cmbad Qty UcafaU, troca u cct U wbtcb I artir clccial ta nwff AAcr Jj-la- rU an nr tak La U I ni aedt aa aa bctKr rwbttan. tor faa kn Ibaa In mil aflcr VrarW; ta iMpil taa bak triaili jtt xt f us aad u rrnt aa or. Bal, tX Got. aata u raoaeuareiM Dr WSKaaa ladiaa ftatanl, vaarb I triad, aal La-day. tbrrtb ku aSaamand, tb aojktecb rwa. 1 in carry aad fesewfsi. aad al baj ara- eSansi tarasa. It te ah da t tbit Sitfsl Otataait.aieb I mSB x-rr UXUratsasradaabrcaa Ibra. atb htt tt. tt ansa ta of, email kat acatad tb rmtb Bf tcrrSUt cadidf - JOII.V KObCa. Omaaad,Otr Jaaa Mrsu I sr VealiL-aaJ I eaa tsBy btu act ab r i I- WBSiasa t4Ua UattBtat. St r tretbtr vaald aa daabt bara bats ta bit rr x LT tx ll Ea aT Ucad t P SiuSOJUC. Taafbe r cd nsaerar, $fscriaa PalatM CaSir. CSriUed.Ota. ZTVt caU if baw.iea.-y prlat pvr t lrOrrr V drzsriat aad irtc csnd. praiaiar taai bcaaaroLittawili It ka a larreraaid Icl iuf aCbrr rS rrsaoir U It verU. taints Vil Vy Enters titj-W. SM U?naiIety Erdlalca A jut. ia rraaritca. aprVrara-aa Look Here. Jul TTbat Cteryaae Xerd! TOE COSXOrOtmX KEO KCBSER STAVT MS PAST. VaaeoBTrr, W. T, 2l saw taaataftsrlax tna tbr very bat BattrSal la taa tautet. rrr.Xtml irtaa tbe latrat binre wet la Ta leaalziax ktw-ra ta tbt Ari. KD KCSaOl STJUtTS ed mry tt rW aai rarlety. aal aa ters dctyfatr eaat titlaa lint jaiBtat U aad aad trae varU Tbay are lax abr' pilbal at aittraUUt; Ur tb pndraixiit cm. BcreSUaU, aaaaabetsrert aad aaa cbsaic. tar aB pathc a priii badMK. Wc BuanUttara Ztaliai-. Emlntaa aaj Xas Suapa, JLatorraaa. Xoaerrasa, U Utl aad &xirt; Sat!, ary caeext 1 aadScaeR. Areata Waaiad Try Ui' S-bI ftr Catalaco ' C C JXANMXC. jeS-ta Dubois &a utekto, Gcseral Agents, CornmiS5ian ami Forwanlinj 31 erckanU, 1 Front at reel, tit WaibtncUn lire I. IoUaod.Orn. Kan S'ranriam. Cat P pedal aatmlloD ctren In lb aale or U'ooi. oar urala and ITodsc la fortUQd aod Saa Fraae!a. rb IHn IH)DI)3ll M Jltal?li The Best Spring Medicine and Beaulifier of the Complexion in use. Cures Pimples, Boiis, Blotches, Neuralgia, Scrofula, Gout, Rheumatic and Mercurial Pains, and al! Diseases arising from a disordered state of the Blood or Liver. M8I.B BY AX.I. BRCUOIXTS. anlHlm "KTfWXiV "T1 nnderatrned wilt Jtfi UXJLwXtimaka cottrcUooa and at tend td butiues or all klndi lor partira In tbe country, cbarrtns only a amaltroennilttlon fur the aatne. i'rompl rtlara made from all cot IrcUom.and all balaeji matters will recelva Irntnrdlata attention. All ktndt or Interna tion farnUbed. lartiei holdmc bill acalnat perasns In Portland can bare the a me mend ed to. Addrrw, S' U EPriNOKR. J3U Box ". rortlanJ JOrecon. SOLU ACEXTa FOR tk uxrivaixed STAN DA KD AXB ESTET k3R8ANS, D. W. PRKNTICE & CO Wnak IWenJPuftiand. reran 1REAT REDCCnOX IK rWCES. j3 simon & co., Dealertia Doors, Windows, Uliails and (Jlass WE 0 HTS, C0RD6 AST) TVUXXi, las rreat SU, bctilfaaaiiBa-teM Alder, jetba POBTLAT, ORBSOK. HAWLE9 BBB & CO., PaHlaad, Oregen. ' OFFER FOR SALE AT LOWEST PRICES, A FULL LIME Of AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. Sola Agenta for tbei BUCKEYE MOWER REAPER, Tae Xcadli!s: XEnrrestlHs: Machine of tbe TVortd. Ws ?ierT lit detail aud if ,rH ernl feataix-. OIHTircrxiVIJ aad ii:cui Ait. nud ltBOtv ataud ttie Winn Viiim ef m inn Tlareakeraes was hare aaed er easplajrod tale aewr atjla of Tkreiaer, all waits la tcgtifyLsg that tkar ar taa SIT 7llltil S SZ: It la dttirud araOt axp ratal y far Oregoa aad Waaaburtea. br as trko taeroacaly aadorataaaa taa reqalrexaaata at tka oematrj-, aai taa diSUalttea to Va erereAe. Aeeata for HAINES' (Genuine) SINGLE GEARED HEADER, Specially Improvod for this Season Ten or Twelve feet eve. Mil 4 GUTS fOt THC CIO RUJ11U. SckutUer Farm, Frelfht, and Spring Wagoax SlafrfebsJker Wagons, Stedcbakcr Spring Hacks. Rulator Wind Mills, The most complete windsiill is ase. Elftfard Harvesters, Vastly superior to znj other haad btnda Harvester in rnarkcL Hl handle lodged or fallen griln, 2nd eleTSaf k better than any k -wn rnzchirx of its class. aafaaFSiiiaiBDlBaBBa UtBmWmWBBBiwHmMSULi Paaaaaaaaaaaaaaal I aaBaBRajBilaaa 11 BmQWmmmJKl Sent to our Office, we Trill send The San Francisco WEEKLY CHRONICLE TH : R EE Ta asy yen ! lia THE WEEKLY CHXONlCiE IS AM EI8MT ?ASE PAPft, 64 COllMiC, Cent lining the entire news cf the week. tVTTIir WEDCLT CrrgoytCtE rtppSg. lb n rSt-l -nt wgi at aX tb hair. tb tabarer. tbe rgaa.Ta dMawrciatbrsa.tUalixsltaryaaat TBX CSXAT FAXIX.T PArXS cf aixrrdacr (41 ) U-Tt ro-V t mHit- zuTUT ooc a -weri far ta-atia sotba it ta be besafaria fmaabtd tor CS-M adrxaca. Spml for Circular anil Sample Topj. Sent Free on apj licatks. TER3IS WKKK.LY CHROXTtLE, $2.50 per jear; DATLY CHRONICLE $5.70 per year, postage paid Address Cbnx. DcTshhs fc Ce.. Pablfeltert, SAX FRANCISCO, CAL. ci C3 CO en CO CO oo co co -D1LX.DCDCCL W E KISC Dubois & king, Wool CommissiM Merchants, Adraatra Xatieea CoBiljaBtntv IU WJLSIUXQTOS ST. Saa Fmcicaa, It rSONT S7 INrtU-iJ. CnUn al etKer bJsraatlco rern!!acttaWsl UarattrrsSaMimapcdkatieeUrtvtlaaJltdcae. csaru-ua I Benson's Capclne PPorousPlaster I A "Wonderfnl Remcdr. raerc U no eoapariaoa btea U aad th eornaen bVAw aj4l.M T.vm4 2rtr It in MHI Tit Lsparlcr la all oOer mcrnal rotedies. toflixSniJ Kiatsatat aaj Uvc ao-eaEed tJectrsral (peiauec. iu oaoulna oew axdkical tksaeaU hid la cceabitu uoa aith raaber. pviamaii taanmi catraorJiaarj jaia-rrflrtlrf, ctreBctbettlar and ccralliM rcperliea Any pjaidaa la jwir o-a kwaiity win eeoSra Ua aKea ataumest. For Lism barx, RbccaaatiMn. e'etsak WeaAnaaa. SSnbJxrn aad XecWeted ChAla. and Gocrfe. Diaaawd Kllarra, Wbocptsc CVnrb iSMctiona ct taa heart, aad attUlcr vtalch mc flaatm are onl.tt W !a:pyta bart knowa remedy .US. for Bteaoo'e Cafciaa rarous rUater aaduAi aa other. SoU by andracrbU rrtm H rata riat oa rantnt cd prtae, by iMabsrjr a Mam, T rtaU FUrat. Nr York-. inch rVlm i Painters5 Stock. W7iite Zcads, White Zincs, Zinseed Oil, Turpentine, lirushca, Colors, YamlsJies FOR SALS BY Hodge, Davis & Co., lanS-ir O-T720TSS Haattttzaea'a, hr7'a aa-i WlaeheMer RiOaa. GUNS tteatacioa', HSarp1 anit Wlaehrair JUSaa. Aad CnrldftorJt kiadsat rcdaoed prkM, BV WiX. BECK Or HOJT, s-lr tvtiid.Ors 52 s ass Se large a porilam ef tbe Gnus aau Grals Crepe of tio Paeo Ctut bar beea est by the- SUCXXTZXt tbat ae fax mer kere caa Ve l&uiraat ot its merit: or require orcwseBt to cmrrisee klas ol its Bperierltyi as it le too -veil and fa Terally Icae-ona to seed eemjsest. It Im the wecfeetlsa ef all Rper aad Knr. Ibc Xaeaiaea. call especial attention to our fieu and Perfected Tavjor Sulky Ralces, Self Dastp. ing and'Pbin. MenlUrandSira Barssfasg E. gtscs. Scadl far Special fTsiaiift, ais ay ew Hsnv Prica List. Burton HOUSE, Far. S aad Tkiral StrrrtiV Scar Om frt Laid- Forlland, : Orspt. trx;- a rsrnjtso. ftaoeieeaB. Ti. , spare no pains or expense to tasks this Loose the Lest ho tel in Portland. Msg -FOR- M OXTHsj C&lrl Slaica. ptai; r St' IMPORTERS! Wholesale anT Retail Dealers Ik General Merchandise ! Goods Sent y r TTeiTa Faff. Ortfers im tteCtiitTySBlicitri All kinds of rroOace Bt?t sotl Sel or Sold a CosaMrWiotu Jjthrt przsipih cuuvctrtd, Cemniryptt fit xc:ll sen ly eerrtjfixtdxg zcUA us. Gentemia! DMA) MiiifeStifi JVro. 169 and 171iSecoHdlSt. anii-ir Cflmsteck & Pfiagtr. TMontsomory'a I EMPERANCE KOTEI 21. U3S. SitT nad NMmJ IU . 8.iK KKANC1SCO: Cfeaa. Montfoaurr, Prop. TtiU U tbs only ttrietly teaapaa keMt la San Francisco, and oStj aayarter aeeammo datloaa to "tne intrcllar paMW. Board aad lodctnr per Jar. 71 eta. to SC: aa? iwr. MtnM. Single aeals. ceata. Six saearuexew. t O. A.. Sl?AtOAVJJItIIQjS. Dlmt TtHer aad Vcalae la LEATHER AND SHOE FWDttrSS, mat IK. SPSSl 1 S si aPBSaaawTaaaHaiK SSSpjav k. VlaaBaaalBaa, arayaaSW HaaaaaavvbraaL a'SKTaa aa