The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, December 23, 1898, Image 3

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Tfcs Dalles Daily Ciironicle.
FRIDAY
DECEMBER 23, 1898
FINDS IN FIJI.
Exploration Party DImoth Hew
Wonders on' the Island.
A scientific exploration party in
charge of Prof. Ag-assiz recently paid a
visit to the Fiji islands, making some
discoveries of much general interest,
reports the Japan Gazette. At Maram
bo they located an extinct volcano, open
on the north side. Dotted over the sur
face of the water in the crater were
numerous mushroom-shaped rocks, and
the water itself in the light of a burn
. ing sun revealed to the visitors hitherto
unknown beauties of color. AtToloya
s crater of an extinct volcano was
found, into which the steamer could
enter and sail around. Here, as in other
places, the visitors were entertained
with a "miki, miki," which seems to be
something in the nature of a corro
boree. In the various lagoons visited dredg
ing was resorted to for the purpose of
securing specimens of coral and marine
animalcule. On the rocks at the base
of the Solos lighthouse, near the North
Astrolabe reefs, at Kandava island, two
- sea snakes were caught by Capt.
Thompson, who saw no less than ten
of them in as many minutes.
The capture of several live sneei-
mens of bulolo, or coral worms, ap
peared to have caused much gratifica
tion to the searchers, who, aided by the
natives in canoes, discovered them in
thousands. The worm is said to dis
solve after being about two hours on the
surface. When the results of Prof.
Agassiz's investigations are made pub
lic they will, doubtless, provide much
interesting and valuable information.
EXIT THE ARCTICWHALE.
Pursuit by Man Has Virtually Extin
guished the Deep-Sea. Monster.
Whalers, and especially the man with
the harpoon, have always been popular
characters, and, indeed, the perils and
exploits of their trade form not the
least stirring chapter in the romance
of commerce, says the London Graphic.
It will, therefore, touch most of us with I
some slight sense of loss to learn as a
correspondent of the Pall Mall Gazette
assures us that, as far as the arctic
seas are concerned, that chapter is
closed. This is a prosaic age, and the
results of that famous corporation of
whalers, the Dundee Arctic Fisheries
company, limited, for the last two years
have, it is said, not only not satisfied the
shareholders, but have resulted in a
heavy loss. The right whale, which
provides the famous bone, has become
so scarce that a ship is nowadays lucky
if it be rewarded by even one small one
-o iuc icivaru oi a wnole seasons
struggle with arctic fog and ice. A
parallel might be drawn between the
pursuit of the arctic leviathan and the
African behemoth, the elephant. Mod
ern improvements in weapons of de
struction have so thinned both their
tribes that, as objects of profit, they
have almost ceased to be worth the
seeking.
COSTERS' ENGLISH.
At Least It Is Supposed to Be 12ng-llshf
Dut It Doesn't Look Like It.
English costers have a language of
their own. There is nothing very re
markable about it, its chief character
istic being a palpable kind of back
spelling, says Tit-Bits.
Jh money matters a coster will speak
of a halfpenny as a "natch," while
"gen" is a shilling; but "teaieh-guy"
is eight shillings. "Couter" means a
sovereign, "net-gem" .passes for half a
sovereign, half a crown being given the
somewhat unpronounceable term,
"flatchynork." '
A curious method of expressing multi
ples is shown by "erth-ewif-gens,"
meaning 15 shillings. "A doogheno"
means "a good market;" "dabheno," a
bad one. "A regular trosseno" stands
ior "a regular bad one."
"Yes" and "no" are represented by
"no" and "say." "Tumble to your bar
rikin" expresses "understand you."
"Flash it" signifies "show it." "Cross
chap" means a thief. "Showf uls" is an
equivalent for bad money.
"Do the tightner" -a very expressive
term, the derivation 'of which is not
difficult to understand means "go to
dinner." "Nommus" stands for "be
off," and "tol" is ashare.'
Spain and the Carllst Cause. '
Before 1833 Spain was one of the
great powers. Between 1833 and 1876
there were actually 33 rebellions,
changes of government and coups
d'etat. Since 1833 Spain has declined in
the scale of nations, and now ranks as
little more than a third-rate power. A
glorious tribute, indeed, to the wisdom
of interfering with the settled succes
sion. In order to understand, the pres
ent condition of Spain, we have only to
read the daily papers. On the one hand,
in Madrid, we see a titular sovereign
struggling ineffectually with an empty
treasury to stave off bankruptcy, mak
ing futile attempts with a discredited
army to subdue his rebellious colonies,
and relying upon martial law to crush
civil anarchy, which, be it remembered,
is ever the result of bad government,
incompetent and tyrannical police, and
especially of corrupt finance and of tax
ation pressing too heavily on the class
least able to bear it. On the other hand,
in Venice, we see the king waiting un
til tne moment shall arrive for him to
alee his finnl PRRnv r envA wn
try from the distress with which the
queen regent has proved herself unable
ia cope. Fortnightly Review.
THE JACK
RABBITS OF TEXAS
Not Commonly Used as
Food.
ia Article oi
"The big rabbits or hares that hang in
front of Washington Testaurants are
not the jackrabbits or 'mule ears' that
abound on the Texas prairies," said Mr.
C. O. Kerns, of the Lone Star state, re
ports the Washington Post. "The sort
that we have and that are common all
through the southwest are of a brown
color, identical with their small 'cotton
tail' brethren that abound in Virginia
and Maryland, and that are numerous
all through the old southern states.
These imported hares with white bellies
come from Canada, where all wild ani
mals turn white in winter to match the
snowclad earth, and they are not nearly
as large as our Texas jackrabbits, nor
do they have the enormously big ears
that distinguish the Texas family. I
should say that ours will get over the
ground twice as fast as their Canadian
cousins. A greyhound is" the only ani
mal, in fact, that can overtake a mule
ear. An ordinary dog never forgets him
self so fap as to chase one for even the
distance of a city block. It would be a
rank waste of canine energy to do so.
The jackrabbit is regarded at home
more as an ornament to the landscape
than anything else. Hungry men fa
camp who have run out of ordinary
grub will occasionallv kill them to tnr
I the pangs of hunger, and they are said
to De really fine eating, but thev are
not regarded as fit .for the menu of the
average Texas family."
NOVEL TREATMENT.
Russians Take an Ant Mi.
The
Care Rheumatism.
The Eussian peasants, more especial
ly those residing in the neighborhood
of Moscow, have a peculiar and original
method of treating themselves for that
bane of manSind, rheumatism. Many
cures, even in very bad cases, are, it
is claimed, effected by making the pa
tient take ant baths, says an exchange.
The manner of preparinc these hatha
is as follows: An anthill is sought, and
when found, a sack is filled with nut.
ants' esres. and if it. hp rnnc'iio
sary, a certain quantity of the earth
w ' v-. uctCB"
I wnicn
comnoses tl,o T.ill T, i
; then closed hermetically and carried to
osedhermetin;; ::.;;:
ine come of the sufferer. A warm bath
is already prepared here, and the sack
is plunged bodily into the hot water.
Soon this latter begins to give off a pe
culiar pungent odor, characteristic of
formic acid. The bath is now ready for
the patient's immersion. The action of
the bath on the skin is one of intense
irrigation, and the result seems to be a
drawing out of the evil, and the con
sequent disappearance of the rheumatic
Pains;
It is advisable for anyone wh mn-
be tempted to try this remedy to be
careful not to remain' too long in the
ant bath, as the consequences might be
a total disorganization of the skin,
which would peel off, due to the violent
action of the acid.
. .
IN THE NATURAL GAS DISTRICT.
A Very I'nattrnotl v? Place Where
Many Accidents Occur.
Passing through a. gas-belt one will
see near the roadside, in a farm lot, a
mud-bespattered, weather-beaten der
rick, with the apparently rickety ac
companiment of crude appliances made
familiar years ago ia the oil regions
a small reversing engine, a rusty loco
motive boiler, usually without a stack
nni leaking at every seam; the Don-
aerous wooden walkinn-
wiiiMug ueum siowiv '
oscillating night and dav. stormimr onlv
to give place to the use of the bull wheel
when the drill is raised and the sand
pump is lowered, or a newly-dressed bit
is put in service. Crude as the rig and 1
..ii ! . . r i
i 1 uciaiis may Beem at nrsi (r :mrp
every part is soon seen to have its use,
and the journey of the bit from the
surface to the unknown, and perhaps
barren, depths, is always accompanied
by interesting and ever-varying devel
opments, says Cassier's Magazine.
At night the measured beat and clat
ter of the rig in the dim light of a few
flickering torches of gas. piped from
some neighboring well; the trembling
derrick, its lofty top lost in the dark
ness; the driller carefully manipulat
ing the temper screw after each stroke,
controlling the bit at the end of a rope
perhaps half a mile below the surface,
all form a weird sight. Accidents are
frequent, and the slighlst carelessness
may result in dropping the tools, the
recovery of which requires ' patience
and often great ingenuity.
!' Cattle Ttlllzed for Smusg-llng-.
"Some of the shrewdest tricks ever
. . " " '
played are by the smugglers of opium,"
said H. A. Fanning, of Seattle. "A very
unique smuggling scheme was unearthed-a
few years ago by the United
States secret service officers in Nni-th !
Dakota. It was noticed that an un- I
usually large number of cattle were be
ing driven across the line to the North
Dakota markets, and the secret service
men planned an investigation. For
some time their work was in vain, and
tney had about given up hope of dis-
covenng any unlawful operations, when
an accident revealed the fact. tVmt. v.o
nostrils of the cattle were stuffed with
opium wrapped carefully in tin foiL
In this way each steer was worth twice
its normal value. Hundreds upon hun
dreds of animals had been driven across
the border with their nostrils loaded
with opium, and it was estimated that
the smugglers had cleaned up a profit
of $25,000 before the discovery was
niaue. jjut tne emuggZers were sly
and they escaped and were never cap
tured." St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
: : - : : : -
RiCH STRIKES YEARS AGO.
Nevada City District Equaled Some of
the Klondike Ileal on Records.
The city papers are publishing ac
countsof the fabulous richness' of the
gravel mines in the Klondike section of
Alaska, and while in some instances the
stories appear to be rather highly col
ored they are not ahead of what hap
pened in different parts of Calif orniain
early days. On September 13, 1850,
says the Nevada" City Transcript, A.
Isoard, who is still a resident of our
city, obtained from one panful of gravel
$912 worth of gold dust and smaU nug
gets. The gravel was taken from dig
gings directly back of Mrs. C. Beck
man's residence on the upper .East
liroad street. From a piece of ground
30 feet square in the same claim Mr.
Isoard and partners took out $164,000.
The old Nebraska, the Manzanita and
the Hirsehman diggings were wonder
fully rich in the early times, as were
many other smaller claims. To obtain
$400 or $500 from a single pan of dirt
was a. common occurrence. Many re
markably rich pockets were found on
Red nill years ago. In one instance two
prospectors found beneath a bowlder
$1,400 worth of solid gold. It was in
one irregular mass, in shape more like
a platter than anything else, the golden
lumps being joined together with fine
wires of gold.
All of these rich strikes were made
near the city, none of them two miles
away. Notwithstanding the
quantity of gold that has been taken
out in this vicinity since 1849 there are
yet untold riches buried here in the
gravel and quartz mines for which Ne
vada City district is noted.
WHISKY SAVED HIS LIFE.
Mississippi Steamboat Man Preserved
His Anatomy Intact.
Charles Gross is a white-headed' ne
gro porter on the steamboat St. PaiuL
oays the St. Louis Republic.
Charlie has some vey pronounced
opinions, which amount to convictions.
One of these is that, while whisky costs
some men their lives, it saved his.
Seven years ago Charlie was norfceir
on the Mascot, a packet boa running
., " . u"aru
? ren Gibing-a prodigious
amount of fire water when a friend of
Uis came into the saloon on t.ii io
where he was enjoying 'himself and
said: "You mus' hur' up, Charlie. Yob
boat's ringin' her bell."
"What 'f ehe is?"
go on the nex' trip,"
"the cam."
said Charlie. "I'll
and he returned to
The Mascot went on her way with
out Charlie, and when, she was opposite
Neligh's Landing she blew up, killing
most of her crew. So Gross is firm in
the belief that an all-ordering Provi
dence gave him that remarkable ca
pacity for fiery fluid in order to save
him from the fate of the sober mem
bers of tli e crow.
He has sworn off since at the emphatic
request of Capt. Burke, but what he has
lost in the way of accomplishments in
the line of "throwing beer into hisself "
has been the cause of anxiety on his
part. He is superstitious about the
"euip that inebriates" and fears that
seme day he will be pundsfhed, as un
graceful friends are likely to be, by the
blowing up of the St. Paul andl all her
sober crew. -
GIANTS OF
PATAGONIA.
The
Tehuelches Average
Coder Six Feet.
But Llttl
The tribes to the east of the Cordil-
i . . . .
.. ul-"c awffonia, Delong to
v .suPe"or
?f D w, Th5
L he3l call themselves-
1"1 T e8Stern g are
tne people whose unusual statura mr
. . .. i
riKfi TO triA tPhlod F am.lT ,1
effect that
the natives of this region !
,lvu i uaja iu me;
were giants, averaging nine or ten feet i
in Height. It is a fact they are the tall
est human beings in the world, the men
ovciamg- uav sngnuy less than six j
feet, while individuals of four to si-r i
inches above that mark are not uncom- i
mon. They, are in reality byjio means 1
savages, but somewhat civilized bar- j
barians. They are almost unacquaint-1
ed with the use of firearms, notwith- i
standing some contact with the whites, '
but they have plenty of horses
and
aogst
Unsurpassed hunters, they capture
the guanaco and the rhea, or South
American ostrich, and from the skins
of these and other animals they make
clothes and coverings for their tents.
They make beautiful "capes" or man
tles, of fur and feathers, which are
highly prized by Europeans and find a
ready market, most of the proceeds
being spent for bad whisky, which is
brought into the country in quantities
by traders. .
The Kaiser's Titles.
In case any of our readers may have
occasion to address the German em
peror, we have modeled on his brother's
speech of yesterday the mode of appeal
ing to his majesty which is most like
ly to elicit a favorable response: "Most
w j-.-.. - " -
Sublime Emperor. All Powerful Kins',
and About-to-be Lord of all the Earth,
inspired
Sender of Telegrams, Serene
Annexcr of Foreign Ports, Beloved Mas
ter, Most Mighty and Illustrious Mon
arch, Anointed and Made in Germanyj
Kuler of All Men, for ever and ever.
Hooray!' Hoo-jolly-ray! Hoo-Billy-
ray!" London Globe. j
-
Cash In our Cheeks.
'i county warrants registered prior
Feb. 1, 1895, will be paid at my
o fice. Interest ceases after Nov. 14,
x8. C. L. Phillips,
County Treaenrer
BLACK-TAILED GRUNTS IN LUCK.
How They Manasred to Get Their
Fill of Shrimps Dally.
The varieties of fishes at the Aqua
rium number more than the tanks
there, so it is necessary to double up
some of them, putting more than one
variety in a tank. One of the tanks
thus stocked contains three moon fish
from Gravesend bay, and four black
tailed or blue-striped,s grunts from the
.Bermudas, says the New York Sun.
One of the regular articles of food
on the Aquarium bill of fare is shrimps;
pretty much all fashes are fond of them,
In summer, when shrimps are plentiful
and easily obtained, they are fed more
or less freely to all; in -winter, when
shrimps are scarce and difficult to ob
tain, they are fed only to such fishes
as need them for their well being, or
that must be pampered along to keep
mem. jz xnis lasi class are the moon
nsn; tney must have shrimps, and
shrimps are fed to them.
ine rnoonnsh are lively and quick,
but the black-tailed grunts in the same
tank are livelier and quicker still. The
grunts, if they couldn't get anything
better, would eat cut-up herring and
pieces of clam, and do well on it; but
they don t eat such coarse food when
they can get shrimps, as they can here.
At feeding time they snap up food in
tended for the moonfish as fast as the
shrimps' are put into the water, giving
ine moonnsn next , to no show at all.
Thus the black-tailed grunts are in
great luck. They get their fill of
shrimps daily, and not until thev are
satisfied do the moonfisbes come in for
their daily meal.
Sea Shells That EinlnA..
a contributor describes th
phenomena of explosive sea shells. He
says: waiiung alone the beach nr. Afn.
bile bay, a young woman, a relative of
the writer, picked up a handful of little
snens, lett by the tide, and among them
were several shells of a small marine
"snail," the largest of which was prob
ably a half inch in diameter and the
smallest some three-eights of an inch.
She dropped them into her pocket and
forgot all about them until several days
afterward, when an unpleasant odor
in her wardrobe attracted her attention
to them. On taking them out of her
pocket some fell on the floor, and in re
covering them she placed her foot on
one. The act was followed by an ex
plosion, quite sharp, and loud enough
to be heard all over the floor on which
her room is. Astonished, she concluded
to try another, and the same result fol
lowed. The shells were then brought to
the writer, who on examination found
the mouth of each firmly closed by a
membrane of greater or less thickness,
formed by the drvino- of th
slime. This had probably occurred
scon after removal from the moisture
of the beach, and the little inhabitants
of the shell dying, the gases of decom
position had quite filled its internal
space. On exerting a little pressure
by squeezing the shell between two
blocks of wood quite a loud explosion
was produced, the fragments of the
shell being thrown several feet. Subse
quently, on trying the experiment, out
of a dozen shells only two failed to ex
plode. National Druggist.
SWEETS IN QUEEN BESS
TIME.
'time
Odd Na:
of Some
Old
Delacacles. x '
. During the Elizabethan period there
grew up in England a great national
liking for sweet things. Not merely
was this seen in the general taste for
sugar cinfiture, but it was manifested
in the general demand for sweet wines,
the rich cherries, the charneco, the
sack, the sugary almond-flavored sack
posset, and other drinks of the same
4J1US.
In drinking, as in eating, the ia-
crease of appetite for sugar grew by
what j t f ed on
wiiui icu un. inougn not a sweet
meat in the strict sense of the term,
"sack-posset" so largely represented
the taste of that time for sweetness and
I flavor that the recipe of Sir Fleetwood
Shepherd, given by Mr. Howard Staun-
ton in tis Shakespeare notes, is worth
looting:, "To make a sack-posset,
Take tw quarts of pure good cream
and a quarter of a pound of the best al-
monds. Stamp them in the cream and
boil with amber and musk therein
Then take a pint of sack in a basin and
set it on a chafing dish till it be blood
warm. Then take the yolks of 12 eggs,
with four of their whites, and beat
them well together; and so put the
eggs into the sack. Then stir all to
gether over the coals till it is as thick
as you would have it. If you now take
some amber and musk and grind the
same quite small with sugar and strew
this on top of your posset, I promise
you that it shall have a most delicate
and pleasant taste." There was an
other mixture of thei same class called
"rambooz," made of eggs, ale, wine and
sugar, w 'weAna,
Tse Washington's Mirror. ' '
A family at Warrenrton, Va., see them
selves diAll-v m n lni-o-o m 1 tt-i
- . litiwi t:
which George Was&insrton used to reow
ularly make his toilet. They have had
it some 35 years, having acquired it at
a sale of the personal effects of Lau
rence "Washington, a great nephew of
the great Washington. N. Y. Times.
Minors In the British Navr.
More than half the infantry recruits
of the British army for the past year
have been under 18 years old. Chicago
Chronicle.
v.i.iote Cough Cure, cures.
rtiM .: whpt It was nvrdc tar.
i ;
PECULIAR CHINESE CUSTOMS.
Tfcs Toulc Are Burled with Pew Fu-
neral Rites. .
. The customs of the Chinese In the
matter of death and burial are certain
ly peculiar. Infants are buried sum
marily without coffins, and the young
are interred with few rites; but the fu
nerals of the aged of both sexes are
elaborate in proportion to the number
of the descendants and to their wealth.
When a childless married man dies, bis
widow may perform all the duties of
a son' toward him, may remain in his
house, and may adopt children to rear
as his heirs, and as worshippers of the
family manes. If his widow purposes
marrying again, a young male relative
may, with the consent of senior mem
bers of the clan, undertake the services
expected from a son, and may inherit
the estate of the deceased. When one
is about to die, he is removed from his
couch to a bench, or to a mat on the
floor, because of a belief that he who
dies in bed will carry the bedstead as
a burden into the other world. He is
washed in a new vessel, in warm water,
in which a bundle of incense sticks is
merged. After the washing the vessel
and the water are thrown away togeth
er. He is then arraj-ed in a full suit
of new clothing, that he may appear
at his best. He breathes his last in
the main room before the largest door
m me nouse, that the departing soul
may easily find its way out into the
air. A sheet of spirit monev Thrown
paper having a patch of gilding on one
sunace; is laid over the upturned face
because it is said that if the eyes are
ieis uncovered tne corpse may count
the row of tiles in the roof, and that
in such case the family should never
1 !13 . . .
uujiu a mure spacious domicile.
WASPS IN THE PULPIT.
Nest of the Fiery Insects Made In the
Minister's Pocket.
A well-known Pittsburgh preacher
tells an amusing incident of his early-
career, when he was servinc a country
cnurcn. -j.fae time was midsummer.
One Sunday morning he was unable to
find his conventional black frock, and
at the last moment his wife persuaded
him to wear an ordinary coat which had
been lying on a porch for several days,
A large family of wasps had taken
shelter in one of the roomy pockets, but
m his hurry to get to the pulpit the
young minister did not have time to ex
amine the contents of the coat.
wnen he arrived at the country
cnapei tne congregation was waiting.
xne services nad already commenced
by singing.- As the aspiriner rjreacher
walked up the aisle a peculiar buzz was
heard coming from the minister's ier-
son. Entering the TJulDit he ben-an Tiia
sermon by reading a passage of Scrin-
ture. Then he started in on his sermon.
He had not gone far with the discourse
until he began to find something de
cidely wrong. It annoyed him. Soon
the sprightly wasps began to crawl out
oi their nest and flew about the min
ister s head. He stood the ordeal aa
long as he could with any decree of
peace of mind. Then the sermon was
brought to a speedy close and with n.
nmg the coat was cast out of a window.
PROFESSIONALS.
W. LUNDELL, B. M-
Teacher of Vocal Culture.
Bight Beading and Harmony.
Studio at Residence, Cor. 6th and Liberty,
Inesgtioa ollcltea THE DALLES, OR.
JJ A. STURDEVANT,
Dentist.
Office over French fc Co.'s Bank
Phone 6, THE DALLES, OREGON
J)AN ROBERTS,
Attorn ey-at-Law.
Collections a Specialty.
3eeond 8treet, THK DALLES, OREGON.
yOLLIE V- O'LEARY,
Art Studio.
Room 3, Chapman Bloctc.
China painting a specialty.
JK- GElSBNUOKFrEK
Physician and Surgeon,
Special attention given to surgery.
Rooms 21 and 22, Tel. 328
Vogt Block
TT'EED.
W.WILSON,
ATTORN EY-AT
V ATTORN EY-AT LAW.
THK HAI.T.FQ rTtvnrKr
Oflice ovei First Nat. Binfc.
B 8 HUNTINGTON H 8 WTLSOX
Hl
UNTINGTON & WIL80N,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
lrll DALLES, OREGON
Office ovr First Nat. Bank.
Branch Office
Oregon Viavi Company,
Room 7, over French's Bank.
Office hours,
2 to 4 p. m-
Charlotte F. Roberts.
Local Manager.
Christmas Flowers.
Mrs. A. C. Stubling has made a
special redaction on palms and bloom
ing plants for Christmas gifts. Have
a eopply of Holly and Mistletoe, and
blooming Hyacinths; also cut flowers,
including carnations and roses.
For Bale or Trade.
One hnndred and sixty acre?, good
fruit and dairy farm in Klickitat county,
two miles from Eufua, for sale or trade
for city property. See Dad Butts.
19-3t
Depart time schedule. Arrive
FOB- FBOMDaLLES. FBOM.
Fast salt Lake, Denver, Ft. Fart
,i iai1 Worth, Omaha, Kan- Mail.
11:50 p.m. sas City, St. Louis, 8:10 a.m.
Chicago and East
Bpokane Walla Walla, Spokane, 8pokane
yer Minneapolis. St Paul Flyer.
5:38 p. m. D u 1 u t h, Milwaukee, 6:50 aT m
Chicago and East.
s p. m. From Portland. 4 p. m
Ocean Steamships.
All Sailing dates subject
to change.
For San Francisco
Nov. 28, Dec. 3, 8. 13.
18, S3, 28, Jan. 2, 7.
EE8lunday Cohimbia Ry. Steamers. ExSunday
. . To Astoria and Way
-w? Kii!iav Willamette River. 4:30 p. m.
Ex.Sunday Oregon City,, Newberg, Exunday
Salem & Way Land's.
Tii7JrE;,r Willamette and Yam- 8:80 p. m.
Sd r5 HI"i,"VERS. Mon.,W.
and Est. Oregon City, Dayton, and Fri.
and Way-Landings.
' j
TutE;,, wJ",M"TrBRlVKB- 4:30p.m.
and dill PrtiaS.d to CoroaUs. Tue.. Thur
and Sat. and Way-Landings. and Bat.
.r0 RipirtoSn. xsr-
Fo! Particulars call on O. R. & N. Co '
agent The TJaUes. or address
W. H. HURLBNRT,
Gen- Fas. Agt, Portland. O
EAST and SOUTH via
The Shasta Route
OP THK
Southern Pacific Cornp'y.
Trains leave and are dne to arrive at Portlau
LEAVE.
OVERLAND EX-l
press, baiem, uose
barg, Ashland, Sac
ramento, Ogden.San
e-
6:00 F. M
rrauciseo, iuoiave.
T -TIB Aniwalam T?l
New Orleans and
tEast
8:S0 A.M.
Koseburg and way t.ta-
UU1IH
!Via Woodburn fori
MuAngel, Silverton,
West Seio, Browns- V
vllle.Sprlngfleld and
Natron J
P. M
-Daily
except
Sundays.
Daily
except
Sundays
17:30 A. M. jCorvallls and way
:50P.M
r a (HSU UUD ....... )
INDEPENDENCE PASSENGER. Express train
Daily (except Sunday).
4;50p. m. (Lv Portland Ar.j 8:25 a. m
7:30 TJ. m. At MAIinnvlll. T vt
8:30 p.m. CAr..Independence..Lv.) 4:60 a! m.
Daily. fDauy, except bunaay.
DINING CARS ON OGDEN ROUTE.
PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPERS
AND SECOND-CLASS 8LEEPING CAR8
Attached to all Through Trains.
dental and Oriental Rnd Pacific mail steamship
iu. .FAxAia auu iiautA. Bailing fiates OH
application.
Kates ana tickets to Eastern points and Eu-
llim II DIM f'U I - . HAVAl TTt IT 1
AUSTRALIA, can be obtained from
-14J.kil.a.4jl), Ticicet Agent.
TV. Mil r 1Mnt-A AM.. 10 A n-i.s a .
u,"8u a iswcfc vuiw, 101 luiru Btreet, woera
u,u5" w vii ihjuiu aii tne .eastern
States, Canada and Europe can be obtained at
J. B. KIRKLAND, Ticket Agent.
Grand Central Station. Fifth and Irving streets
YAMHILL DIVISION.
Passenger Depot, foot of Jeflereon street.
Leave for OSWERO. Ili!v nnmt Bnnd.. .
(and 11 :30 p. m. on Saturday only, and 9:00 a. m
and 3:30 p. m. on Sundays only). Arrive at
Portland oaily at 6:40 and 8:30 a m.: and 1:35.
5:10 p. m. on Sundays only).
fPHVD fnt G H linn waul, r, -
Arrive at Portland, 8:30 a.m.
Leave fnr ATT?T.TH?
dav, Thursday and Saturday it 8:05 p. m. '
Except Sunday. Except Saturday. '
R. KuEKLER, G, H. MARKHAM,
ilauaiier. Asst. G. F. tfc Pass. Axt
Are You Interested?
The O. K. & Ki. Co's Mew Boos:
On the Eesourses of Oregon, Washing
ton and Idaho ia being distributed. Oar
readers are requested to forward the
addresses of their Eastern friends and
acquaintances, and a copy of the work
will be sent them free. This is a mat
ter all ehoald be interested ki. and we
would ask that everyone take an in
terest and forward such addresses to W.
H. HrjRLBUET, General Passenger Agent,
O. E. & N. Co.. Portland.
C. E.
.HAY WARD.
Next door to
Purity Soda Works.
Candies, Nuts,
Soda Water;
Ice Cream Soda,
and Tobacco.
All kinds of Soft Ciders
and Summer Drinks.