The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, September 26, 1900, Image 4

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TliK MOIiNlMJ ASWIUAN WKDNESlA. SElTLMliLk b, itlOIK
BTona closes at 7 r.
Fashionable
SKIRTS
In great array
' 'Most of our skirts come from New York's loading Wkers.
That fact establishes their tvlishress.
Most of them w ill tit without alteration, but if it should be
necessary we will have the
Headquarter! for Pry Goodt
ROBKRTS AIDS C.VIO.VISTS.
Complete Distraction of Boer Army
FurnHhes Larye Headlines for
the Unionist Press.
NEW TORK. S.pt. IS. A dispatch to
the Tribune from London say:
The Duke of Devonshire has replied
to the challenire from Delmeny and Mes
srs. Balfour and Chamberlain, the Earl
of Klmberley and score of canvassers
have been speaking within twenty-four
hours.
But Lord Rosetery's letters haw Im
mm tho ihlf Immilse to the liberal
canvass, while Lord Roberts has done the !
most effective work for the i momma.
He has fully confirmed the earlier re-
ptirts or tne occMpatHMi 01 ruinii,..i
by the British army and the appear
ance of the remnants of the Boer com
manders in Portuguese territory after
a few rifle sh ts had been fired.
The irurJs' brtes.1.?. which has held
the post of honor throughout the cam
paign, led the way into Komatipoort.
the final nbJjcMve point of Lord Rob
ert's strategy. That brigade has
marched In the course of the year from
De Aar to XIafrrsfonteln. under Me
thuen, and to Bloemfonteln. Pretoria
and the Portuguese frontier, under Lord
Roberts, and It nw stands (ruard over
the ba.-k door of the neutral bare
through which the Dutch received their
' arr-s and supplies.
The war has ended with the de
struction, of cuns and ammunition on
the edge cf the frontier and with the
disarming: of the refugees by th( Por
tuguese officials. Every mile of rail
way in the two Dutch states is now
under British control and every Im
portant town is garrisoned. Lord Rob
erts has Pnished his work and ran re
turn to England, after proclaiming a
state of peace in which belligerents will
be Hal de to summary punishment as
outlaws and murderers. . .
The Delapoa Bay railway, which has
played an Important part in the Boer
campaign, will now become an instru
ment of peace. It Is nominally owned
by a Holland company, but haa virtu
ally been the property of the Trans
vaal government. The Holland direc
tors, in order to prevent the confiscation
of this railway by the British military
authorities, will be anxious to clear the
line and put It In working order to Pre
toria for supplying the army of occu
pation and for the resumption of min
ing operat'ens on the Rand. The Inter
ests of the Portuguese traders are Iden
tical with those of the directors.
The neutral base, without which the
Boers could not have armed themselves
and kept up a. year's campaign, is con
verted by the completion of Lord Rob
erts' campaign into a center of nm
mrcw with the victorious army and
mining camps which are behind it.
The Boer refugees are disarmed and
even Imprisoned, and the merchants of
Delagoa bay are settling down at once
for a period of brisk trade with Pretoria
and Johannesburg.
The railway bridge at. Komatipoort
has ben saved, probably through the
good offices of tbe Portuguese, and raid
ers whr interfere with the prompt ' re
sumption of business all along the line
will have no friends in Delagoa bay.
The entire influence of the neutral
base will now be thrown on the British
side .against a prolongation of a hope,
less struggle bv train wreckers and
roving bands of guerillas.
Incidents which now fill Lord Rob
erts' dally bulletins and the meagre
dispatches received by the London press
are details of police work rather than
acts of war. Methuen .as captured
large droves of cattle and sheep. Paget
has broken up the camp of Erasmus
commando, and other commandoes are
picking up wagons, ammunition, horses
and live stock here and there and
squads of famished and desperate burg
hers. These are the closing episodes of a
campaign which has cost more in blood
nnd treasure than any -var of the
queen's reign, and the Unionist press
i. ,i... ji.. !..
.,.u r, lu aw, ay mem n0
large headlines for political effect as
proofs that hostilities have really ended
and that the electors are called upon to
decide whether the soldiers of the queen
have fought their battles and shed their
blood In vain.
Favorable as are the dispatches from
Komatipoort. there are croak-fs In the
military clubs who forecast a long per
iod of brigandage and plunder in -the
conquered territory and assert that the
British commander will find the HKt
stage of Dutch resistance more difficult
to deal with than guerilla warfare en
cumbered with its trains, wagons and
uroves or came ana sneep. rnev as-
sume that the thorough disarming of
the Boers will require years of syste
matic surveillance, since guns, rifles
and ammunition have been sown like
rtrao-nn fB(..h Kmr.mr fh Vnr,l. .i I
nmnn nln fatn PH " " J
mountain fastnesses.
this kind will cease, however.
.....7 i I.- r.
tf. Via
dignified as warfare and vlll pas with
out observation.
WILL BRING BACK REMAINS.
Inspector of National Cemeteries ar.d
His Party at San Francisco en
Route for the Orient.
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 25. D. II.
Rhodes, inspector of national ccmeter- teachers in the Philippines, and mny
les, and ten assistants have arrived here 1 inquiries hsvo been made on that sub
from Washington. Tliey will take pas- Hect, due to a notice in the newspapers
sage on the transport Hancock, on Oc- 1 1 nat Prr.f. Uklns'-n. superintendent of
tober 1. for the Philippines, where they (education In the Plilllnnine. hM'r.
111 mii-iiu 11 ine 11 a ri.-fioi iftuon to me
Vnited States of the remains of soldiers,
sailors pjid marines wlio lost their lives
and Acere buried in the island possess
ions of the United States and China.
HAVANA MUST HAVE SEWEP.S.
Yellow Fever .WJll Be a Menace to New
"Tork'TJlf Havana Gets a
Sewerag-e ,System.
NEW YORK. Sert. 25.-Health offi
cer Poty does nnt believe that 'y?1low
fever tvmeh has appeared at-Havam
menaces KwVork,' Bpeaklnif 'ont he'
said:
"The condition of affairs in Havana
m, except, saturdat.
change made at our excise.
on the Lower Columbia.
Is very bail Indeed, and the work of
stamping out the yellow fever there Is
made liitflcult by a considerable num
ber of cass that are not reported to the
authorities. But ner? In New Vork we
need not be ofrUJ .if this. Inepectlon
at quarantine l. made more laborious
for us and we tnav Ind a fever patient
or two: but the disease cannot live In
this climate and there Is not the slight
est danger of its spreadtnR."
Dr. Doty thinks there Is a side to tho
matter which should receive serious
conlderatlon by eonsrress.
The fever will continue to live." he
said, "and break out every summer un
til ton million dollars or fltWn million
dollars is rut Into a first-class sewerage
for Havana,
Cpnsresil would be obliged to do
th)l work b,cftuiw tne Cubans, as they
nn irn,mln,, wn 0Ot realiae the lm
port am of H sufficiently to spend the
monev. Besides, the reasons of a bus
iness nature alone demand It," he con
tinued. -
"The fruit trad Is practically shut
out frm the gulf ports during the sum
mer. No one can come from Havana
to this country by wav of Florida, and
even the shipping of New York Is sub
ject to serious delays and restrictions."
TURFMEN ORGANIZE.
Propose to Stand Together to Abolish
Abuse and Aid Helpful Legislation.
CHICAGO. Sept. M, Horse owners
and trainers In this city have organ
ised what in future will be known as
the "Owners and Trainers Mutual As
sociation." According to the petition circulated
among the horsemen, the purpose of
the association Is to form an organiza
tion of owners and trainers and elect
officers, thfse officers to appoint a com
mittee of five members, who. will meet
and draw up such, resolutions as they
may decide will be of mutual Interest
and protection lo members of the new
organization, to the owner and offlclais
of race track properties and to the In
terest of racing In general.
A committee of five are to appear
In person before all meetings of the
Turf Congress and ask for the adoption
of such resolutions as may be expedient
the same to be Incorporated in the an
nual edition of rules published by the
Turf Congress.
A meeting of all the members of the
association will be held some day this
week at the race track. It Is under
stood that the horsemen will file a pro
test, as its first business before the
Turf Congress, against the recent al
lotment racing dates for Chicago. -
The horsemen who ar most propo
nent In the organization of the new as
sociation explicitly deny that they are
reanizing with ary view to dictating
to the Turf Congres as a body or. to
the members- thereof. They, hmverer.
rrnoose after .effecting a regular or
ganization to stand together for the
at-olltlon cf certain abust-s which they
claim now exist and for 'the passage
"f new legislation which tbey declare
tr.e turf needs.
ROOSEVELT AT DENVER.
Met by a Hundred Mounted and Vnl-
formed Veterans.
DENVER. Sept. 23. The heavy spec
ial train of Governor Roosevelt and
party, to whleh was added today the
private car of benator wolcott. ac
companied by Senator Henry Cabot
i-iodge. of Massachusetts, arrived ' In
ienver at 5 o clock this afternoon:
At the station the New York gov
ernor was met bv 100 veterans of fh
I Spanish-American war in uniform and
mounted, and was escorted to the
Brown Palace w tel. where supper was
provided
Two evening meeting were held. Af
- -T.iaUlI HUH'Oll LOOK
Governor Rnoevlt. to Wolhurst his
U.untrv seat- twelve rnM fm riJ,
on the Klo frande railroad, where they
remained for the night. Governor
noooevelt made eleven speeches today.
At Broadway theater tonight Gover
nor rcoosevit wid:
"f have j'ist received a letter pur
porting to be from the governor of
your state, written upon official paper,
requesting me to state mv position on
the currency question and asking why
I should rot Riate it in Denver as well
asln r'hloago and Milwaukee.
T will surgeat to the governor that
hereafter he will do well to read the
iii. ... ' . .M ' ,7. . .
fT r
riubllshed In Denver exactly as in New
-"I. ui in .'mv iiukit. ne wouio nave
found his f;uestlons alreadv answered.
" '"''"".is aira-jv f
' Ul. OUt regard to that let me state
Tr.or I am fni- a nml..tl... . IN
7j a V . '" "-"i" mini, me
7f rnir flag.'
- -"i"i'-i"ii a.iiu inn Honor
TEACHERS FOR PHILIPPINES.
ArjplieaCons Must V.i Sent Direct to
Manila.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 2S.-The war
depa-tnwn has heen jn receipt of r.um-
mn lAij.ieiLiions tor appointments as
ten a inner to Secretary Shepard of
lm- -lauonni j-.uucatlonal Association at
W:nona, Minn., that he send normal
Kraduates tL tea-h..-'s on three-year
contracts: prrrary and prade tea.'hers
to receive a salary of $75 and 100 per
month; fcupfrint'jndents to receive
J-WJ to 2iM ptr year, and that In ad
dition lo salaries all expense to Manila
were to be jiaid.
The departnie,,t cabled to President
Taft, of the Philippine Commission, re
(fardiriK this matter and he replied that
the letter from Atkinson to Shepard
merely requested Information as to the
possibility of fcecurine teaoht-rs on the
terms named,: and, eass-eats that the
a'ininission win consider applications
with proper testimonials ent direct to
Manila. ,
RAILROAD CONFERENCE FUTILE.
Without Concurrence of the Northern
Pacific It Can Amount to Nothing,
NEW YORK, Sept. 2S.-That the re
cent conference here of western railroad
presidents l not productive of results,
o far as the restoration and nialnten.
ance of rates Is concerned, la becoming
quite apparent.
The absence of a Northern Pacific
representative from the meeting was re
garded as significant, and neither the
Northern Pacific, it Is said, nor the
Great Northern railroad has become a
party to any of the 'detailed arrange
ments proposed by the conference.
Those arrangement were pluced In the
hands of special committees, and It Is
helleed that something In the nature
of trntlic pools are to be formed In the
different sections of western territory.
The adhesion of the Northern Pacific
railroad Is considered necessary for the
accomplishment of the desired result.
As already stated. It has not been se
cured and It Is not likely to be.
President Mellen. of the Northern
Pacific, said:
"We have repeatedly declared that
we have nothing to do with any pool
and shall adhere to that policy. The
.Northern taclpc does not propose to
violate the law and gvt Itself Into
trouble, no mutter what other rouds
may do. W't maintain the regular rat
nnd endeavor to get along with as
little friction as possible with our neiRh-
bors. Of course we are In accord with
any effort to restore and maintain rates.
and I have no desire to criticise the ac
tion or policy of any other railroad. On
the advice of counsel, however, we shall
keep out of pooling arrangements and
particularly 'blind' pools, which Is
about what the appointment of those
special committees means."
President Mellen added that his com
pany hal no agreement -with the Great.
Northern.
Another pool mentioned bv President
Mellen was that all pooling arranse-
mcnts made by lines acquired by the
Northern Pacific railroad company were
cancelled as fast as they were discov
ered. MILLION AND A HALF LOSS.
Fire Near Occidental. California. Has
Turned Over One Hundred and
Fifty Square Miles.
SANTA ROSA. Col.. Sept. :3.Th
fire that has 'jen burning for the last
few days about Occidental has covered
IV) snuare miles, and the damage Is es
timated at Il,500.0o0. A stranger who
had been fighting the flames Is missing
and several of the volunteers have had
narrow escapes from suffocation.
The dre wis started bv a man whu
was burning brush at Freestone. So
desperate was he situation that the
women and children of .he town were
placed In cars and remained nearly all
night with an engine fired up and wait
ing to carry them out of the burnir. ?
district. i
Engineer Ph?lr and Fireman Elliott i
distinguished themselves by a daring
ride over a burning trestle, on the
North raciflc Coast Line, which fell
soon after their locomotive crossed in
safety.
O. R. & N. GETS TOO MtTH.
Santa Fe Disgruntled Because Return
ing Soldiers Go East by Northern
Routes.
SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 2:.-TroUble
s brewing among the tr.in..-ominentnl
lines over the dlvHIon of the eastbound
soldier travel out of this rltv. The
lifneultv grows -nit of the fact that the
anta Ke has not ree'lvM its pronil-ed
7 per "ent of the business, since the
Oregon. Railroad & Navlgvtbm company
hns succeeded in diverting to the Port
land route about 40 irt cent of this
traffie.
Tt Is said that forty men who re
turned from Mnnl'a on the Grant have
refused to be ticketed over the Santa Fe
nnd may go east bv the northern lln's.
There Is a possibility that the agree
ment for a division of the soldier busl
tiess may be cancelled.
RAILROAD SHOPS, BURNED.
Loss of a Quarter of a Million to the
Iron Mountain Railroad,
,' LITTLE ROCK, Ark.. .Sept. 25. The
Iron Mountain shops, located at Baring
Cross, were totally destroyed by fire
at 't o'clock this morrlng. No one seems
to know how the fire originated exctpt
that it started in the paint shops, which
were located at the rear of the machine
shops.
Four hundred men are thrown out of
employment, and their persona4 loss on
tools wiil lie probably $10,000. The shops
were the largest In this section of the
country, and were the main shops of
the Iron Mountain svsfem, their other
shons being at DeSoto. Mo.
The loss will reach J2'A00. The
buildings covered an acre of ground.
UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO.
New President Was Formerly Profes
sor In University of Colorado.
MOSCOW. Ida., Sept. 25. James Mc
Lean, professor of history and politi
cal science In the University of Colo
rado, was today selected as president
of the University of Idaho, vice, Jos
eph P. Blanton.
Professor A. S. Miller was reinstat
ed to the chair of mining, and F. A.
Huntley to the chair of horticulture.
SAMOA BROKE DOWN.
German Transport Returns to
San
Francisco for Repairs.
FAN FRANCISCO. Bent. 25. The
tranwport Samoa, which sailed for Taku
September 23 with a oal of horses for
the German troops, has put back to
port on account of the breaking down
of her electric air pumplnir apparatus.
LENNOX HAS SAILED.
Takes Four Hundred and Sixty Horses
and Mules to Manila.
PORTLAND, Sept. 23. The transport
Lenr.ox sailed for Manila this afternoon
with 4G0 horses and muleg and a full
carjeo of hay and oats.
HEAVY SNOW FALL.
Hnow Is Three ' Feet Deep In
Pace In the Rockies,
Some
. DENVER, Bent, 25. Dispatcfce itrom
various bofnts In the Rocky Mountains
show that there has been a. heavy rtiow
fall. At Red Mountain, near Ouray, the
snow is. reported three feet deep.
imwM
7
Uuccas F.o-tuuu.
And every Distressing Irritation
of the Skin and Scalp Instantly
Relieved by a Bath with
CUTICUiiA SOAP
And a single anointing with CUTICURA, the
great skin cure and purest of emollients. This
is the purest, sweetest, most speedy, permanent,
and economical treatment for torturing, disfigur
ing, itching, burning, bleeding, scaly, crusted,
and pimply skin and scalp humors with loss of
hair, and has received the endorsement of physi
cians, chemists, and nurses throughout the world.
Millions
Use Ccticdra Soap Exclusively (or preserving, purifying, and beautifying thoskln,
for cleansing tho scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and tlia slopping of (ullln
hair, for softening, whitening, nnd soothing red, rough, and toro hands, in tiie form
of bathi for annoying irritations, inflammations, and dialings, or too froo oroffunslTO
perspiration, hi the form of wwlics for ulcerative weakuefwus, and for many sanatlr
antiseptic purposes which readily suirgest themselves to womnn, and especially
mothers, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. No amount of
persuasion can induce thoso who have once used it to use any otlior, esMicially for
preserving and purifying the skin, scalp, and hair uf infants and children. Ct'Tl
CtTRA Boat combine delicate- emollient proimrtles derived from CtiTlctlRA, tho
fteat skin care, with the purest of cluausing Ingredients and the most refreshing of
flower odors. No other medicated soap ever compounded is to bo cuinpurod with
it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hoods.
No other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensivo, is to be compared with
it for all the purpose of tbe toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combine In OKI
8oAr at One Price, liu, TwEXTY-ms Cests, the best tkln and complexion '
eoap, the best toilet and best baby soap in tho world.
CUTICURA, THE SET, 11.25. Comt.lot Elrnl nd Internal Treatment for
Every Humor, cmiiit.nUnK ot Ciiticlka hukf it , to I'kuniw Uiu nklu o( rrunt and urales
nl siiftcn ihe thickened cuticle, Cltii.uiu ii.ithkst (.., to In-titntly allay Itrhlng,
lrrttaUon, anil InllamiiinUon, ami niMttliti ami hc.il, ami ( ( rn rk Hkmolvknt .), tu
cool ami rleaime tliu bknxl. A simii.k Shrlnnlu-n nutlli-li'iit t cure the mont Uirturtnir,
dlenxuiinK akin, walp, uml bluml huiuum, rueliun, ami IrrlUiUnim. with Ion of hair, when
nhrntrkinii, holtul, and all elno fall. Swl'l UiruUKlmut Uie wcirll. I'im UUUQ AMtf
vUEM. tow, bole 1'rups., Uuekui, ihut. " lluw to Cure vury liiunur." free. ,
CHASKD BY flLOOD HOt:.tS.
W'AU.ACE, Ma., 'Sept. 25.-()fllt 1
left Kingston tmlay with blood hounds
on the trail of the Atholene rubber.
THE LOUVRE
Strangers visiting in t lie mv will lind
tne Lonvre an Httrsetive resort wherein
to spend the evening. The Amine Sisters
jAadies' Orchestra is still on the lulls anil
uresentu niuhtlv a musical pwtrrnrn of
exceptional merit, Handsome pool snd
Dilliard rooms are a feature in connection
with the lioune. PalatablH lunches will
be served at all nonrs
ASTORIA AND COLUMBIA
RIVER RAILROAD.
Lee vs.
PORTLAND.
ArrU.
8:00a.m.Port!and Union Deptlll:10 a.m"
6:5a p.m.iror Astoria and lnter-j 8:40 p.m,
jmeaiate points.
I ASTORIA.
I
7.4i;a.m.For Portland A ln-ll:a.nt
6;10p,m.term?dlate points 10:30p.m.
SEASIDE DIVIBION.
ll::ir,a.m.
6:30 p. 111.
fldlR. tn.
2; 30 p. Hi.
ASTORIA
;SEASTf)E
4: i
7:fl h. in
:( p. 111
l?:r.m
7:fi i, m
All trains make close'1 connections at
Goble with all Northerii Pacific trains
to and from the East or Sound, points.
a. ' U. C. MAYO,
Gen'l Fr't ahd Pass. Agent
Dr. T. L . Hall
DENTIST.
673 Commercial Htreet,
A3IOUIA, ORE,
Ove ichlustel'g ciothins: store." "
1 1 " '
DYSPEPTICIDE
The grcattit aid to DIGESTION.
of
WHITE COLLAR- LINt
Columbia River and Puiret Sound Nav
igation Compaiy.
Rnlley Oatwrt leaves Astoria dally
except Sunday at 7 p. m.
Leaves Por"and, dally except Sun
day st 7 at -
VMt Collar Litis tickets and O. K
N. tickets Interchangeable on Bailey
Oiitzert and Massalo. Through Fort
bind connection with steamer Naheot.
ta from 11 waco and Lone Beach polnta
A. .T. TAYLOR. Astoria. Aft
U. B. 8COTT, Tslephont UL
Pregldent
Oregon Short Line
Railroad.
THE DIRECT ROUTE TO
Montana. Utah, Colorado
and all Eastern Points.
Gives choice of two favorite routef, vU
the Union Pacific Fust Mall Line, or
uie 1110 urande Scenic Lines.
Look at the time
Days to Salt kflke
2 J Days to Denver
. 3 J Days to Chicngo
4 Day 8 tq New York.
Free' reclining chain. tmholiUred
tourist ileeplncr cars, and Pullman tl
ace sleepers, operated on all treJna.
For further lnffirmntlnn nnnlv to
Or.. : :.... t--. -
C. O. TERRT, W. B. COIUH,
' Trrtv Pu.l'lirt n.n l-n
124 Third St., Portland. Or.
G. W. LOUNSBERRT,
Afent O. B. V N.
women
Mlil ANGEL COLLEGE
Conducted ty tbe Benedictine Fathers
THE IDEAL PLACE FOR YOUR U0YS
Will Reopen SeDtember 5, 1900
STATE NORHAL SCHOOL
jxj 5 i-H!fj lx)
INSTRUCTIONS
MIsh Bertha r.artln's
Decorative
Art
Boom.
f
K.h.iu S JO lUkum Itullillnf, Sd
I'OUINDED A. l. 17IO
SUN INSURANCE OFFICE
OK LONDON
THE OLDEST I'l KI I.Y 1 IKK OIUCK IN Till. WORLD.
C A'. ll.IJO,IMM
Caali Aat In Utiltad Hlnt, .nr.ulA
J. B. F. DAVIS !c SON. GENERAL AGENTS.
WINFIELD S. D.W1S DUItT L. DAVIS CAUL A. HKNltV
213 Saasomc Street, - Sao rram-lst-o, Cal.
SAMUEL OLMORE & CO., AGENTS.
riuvuvLnAruLTiAnAAJUxtiuxri
Hgx PORTLAND
PORTLAND, OI.
g-THo Only l?lrt-ClfiHM Hotel Iti lortlnnd $
diruvivvruvvivwinvn uv6
Pacific Navigation Company
StcuniBr-,,Sti II. Elmore." "W. II. IlmriMon '
Only line- Astoria to Tillamook, (iaribaldl, llay City, llobsonvilld..
Connectinif at Astoria with the Oregon lUllroad it NstIkhUou Co. an.l
also the Astoria A Columbia Hirer It. It. (or Sac Francisco, lVrtliiud
and all point a east. For freight ami passenger rale dp ly 1.
SamMol Blitiore fit Co. Oeneral Ai?eqU, ASTOllIA.ORE
(0. It. A, N. U. 11 Co., Portland.
Agenta A. k C. It. R Co., I'ortlati.l.
(B C. LAM1), Tillumook, Ore.
KOPP'S BEST
A Delicious and Palatable
Drink Absolutely Pure
The North Paolflo Brewery, of which Botfliw, nr ror fmnlly use or ke
Mr. John Kopp le proretor, wake Wr Ueer inpplicd at acy tlne. delivery it
for domestic and export trade. tbe city free.
North Pacific Brewerg
r ri.i
7IDL1
Of New Zealand
W. P. THOMAS, Mgr., 5an Francisco
UNLIMITED LIABILITY OF SHAREHOLDERS,
Subscribed Capital, -' ,
Paid-up Capital, "
Assets,
Assets in United States,
Surplus to Policy'Holders, - " ' .' ' 1.7 j 82 '
been; Underwriting on 'the rififlCpast oVtVlwfctHWiars.
Has
SAMUEL ELMORE & CO.
Kesident Agenta, Astoria, Or.
MONnoUTII. OKI.dON.
r! Tnn mmni Srilrmtirf llh.
ln.iu.li-iilnif Inn Simiial Hi lnml ' pfnrii
I" tak U10 al I'enlfli i luiim-llli l uu rsilu-
ilmiluslvt resjllr srrut iiul lltluu.
KM lii' nf )-ri Itnin ll.v lellM.
Humid Aiimlrmlr anrt I'niftiwltma' imnrsfe.
Mrw irlnl ii iwrlni. Ill in Mumul rtlnlB.
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