...UNDERWEAR... Nnw t lint OOld weather is- Bpproaobinf , the lie Mity of bnytng heavier undentear loon Ix'lfin to nwiPrt itnelf. Nutnrsil ly jron will Wtn to (fo where you can tfet tht bail grade (or the least money ; ami everybody knOWl thai The Maanet is the place An asuortment unexcelled nnT prices rut to the bottoaj I Wlfa quick and pmltft xmul 1 . A dinner (or a g0ld watch given with every dollar purchase. THE MAGNET CASH STORE CUiments &. Wilson. Court and Cottonwood TIU'KSDA Y, BRITEMBBR 'MP VOll I'KMIUENT, William J. Bryan. OK NKIIHA-k . FOK VICK PKKSIDKNT, Adlai E. Stevenson. Of ILLINOIS. FOK l-KKflliKN'riAl. KLKCTOK-, V. M I'IKKec. of I'matlUa. HKI.1. STl'ART, .11 Millliliilii.il. J. WIUTTAKKI.. r Hvnton. K KKONKL. of Multnomah. In hi letter of acceptance V. .1. Hryan voluntarily plediten himself to be a caniliiltite (or hut one presidential term and declares second terms are laniterous to the repuhHc. He will not awk n reiioiiiinatioti whethui he is elect.il or defeated Howard (iraham, the author of that popular noun, the "Two Little (iirls in lllue," is dead, (iraham spent his life writing and ninging songs full of pathos and sentiment, which moistened many an eve ami cheered many a heart, and these songs and melodies live after him. He heled to make tin- world better, but he lot t a w idow and five small children in absolute destitution, which is another story and sad one. According to the latest reort the "advance agent of prosperity'' has never visited the workers in the coal mines of Pennsylvania. He only went to ise those who are in control of the coal trust. Where men an- enabled to grow immensely rich the worker, in the nature of things, must lie the minerer. The man who is both rich ami idle is always on tin- back of labor. The roal barons are idle moat of their time, hut they wear tine linen and live upon the fat of the land llliuoia, like Indiana, is mainly an agricultural state, and is d imitated by its wheal growers, who are prosper -on- and who favor sound money. It has a very large f ireign population. In isuo, of its total population of a.Hiti, 351, the loreign-lwirn numbered MB,. 347 and its natives of foreign parentage lyflfTfMSi or ft.OQ r cent, of the whole. Of its eititens of foreign descent much the largest number were of German origin. They numbensl fiver 800,000. The Irish followed with 31X1,000. The Scandinavians came next with HI, MO. The votes of the Germans and Scandinavians thrown together for one party or the other will control the state. They are Isith against high turiffs and unsound money. Both are said to be opposed to iuiHarialisni. (), Hannas, Korakers ami I .! Ye who run M risk of half-full dinner pails, no matter what government policv, what failure of crops, what shut-down of factories, what cataclysm overtakes us; verily, ye have your re wan 1 ' say- Imi- K Post in his paper, The Public. But little can your capon-lined sensibilities know of the metal of men who ure acquainted with both the full dinner-pail and the empty. Y'our wmls cannot comprehend that they would In- willing to risk (if risk it were) a scantiness ol rations with all the heroism of the men of Valley Korge rather than representa tive government should perish from the fact! of the earth, rather than op pression instead of freedom should be come the thing which the llag symbols. "The dill dinner-pail !" Ijsik at the condescending, oligarchical spirit of it. "The masters grant us rations' Sup srt the masters!" The Pendleton Street Kuir ami Har vest Carnival has advertised Pendleton and Pendleton people far ami wide. o town ol the sue ot IVmlleton ever gave a fair of the magnitude of the one given here. The expense of tin fair in round numbers wus I0,0U0 and the receipts, of course, will be as much, as all bills will be paid. up sise Portland had given a fair which involved an expenditure of H per capita -if its population, as did Pandit ton. It would have lieen the fair of the age, calling for an outlay of $JUU, -000. The I'. ill. will soon give a street fair, but no $10,000 will be spent upon it. Walla Walla, u town claiming to have double the sipulution of Pen dleton, will bold u fruit fair next mouth, but it will not call for any such expenditure. Pendleton has die covered that she can aftord to spend any reasonable amount, ho lung a- tin money is paid to those who -pen, I it i again, but verv little among those who I hrtvn the hoarding and penurious spirit, which prevent- them from con 'trihnting their just proportion of what is due from them to the community. I There are a mighty lew such paOplfl in i Pendleton. Look over the list of con tributors to the street fair fund, sism to he published in the hat Orcgoiiiau. and observe the absence of names that should ! there. In two instances sub- ! scriptioiis were returned bv the com mittee, I ause the amounts were not what had been promised or proportion ate to the subscriptions of others in the same line of business. Hut the business men and property owners wore very liberal, us in the main will be shown when the 11 nance committee publishes a report of the timtiices ot the late lair, wh.ch will occur in a few days. THE SCIENCE OF CHILD STUDY. Once iii a while an educator comes along who is Isild enough to hurl con trary opinions at the advancing van guard of new education. Such a man was lr. Munsterbeig, arousing much indignation ami comment, ami such a man is Junies Champlaiu KerniM, writing about "The Child" in the Atlantic Monthly. Mr. Kernald calls attention to the notion that in all cdQOOtfOOOl litera ture there is no more mischievous ex pression than that of "tin- child.' Once children real live Mesh and bloixl children wen- the objects of care. Now a psychological abstraction invented bv thought moving according to rule ami thereby takes its place in the family circle as "the child." 1-rom the standpoint of the practical asso ciate, parent, relative or teacher of a family of living children, no two are alike. They often difler in disposition and taste as widelv as do vagrants from the far corners of the earth. While, " 'the child' is nit a real being. The Lord never made him. He was not created, but excogitated. He i- like nothing else in heaven or earth. Children have endless variety, 'The child' has no variety except Han as marks the different psychological sects that have manufactured him." ... Matter-of-fact hands dissect the theories back of tin statement that "the child must repnsluce the ex iierience of the race." Why should he'.' If born recently as the heir of the ages, why go back to the laborious ucts o( primeval mind'.' If primeval man hau mythologies, which were in truth his religious beliefs, why comel nine teenth century children to adopt them, especially after all the envy, revenge, cruelty, falsehood and some other un readable things ure cut out of them, leaving them us u rule tlat and point less reading from which the live boy turns in weariness ami distaste'.' Many grown people enjoy Greek, . Itomun, Kgyptiun ami Norse my thologies as presented by the etH and classic authors. They are the pages of romance from a bygone age. lint cut to order for children's edition-, the sparkle is gone they are Mat, stale and unprofitable. Again referring to experiences of the race: "Hupposo we try the theory on the materialistic basis. Our ancestors passed through the stone age. Our children must do the same, since the 'child repeats the ex s-r icllce of the race.' We will take away their knives and forks and sissuis, and uivo Ihem -burp pieces of Mint to cut their viands with. We will furnish them hammers made of rounded ) hides, with which they may pound up corn and wheat and bake the same on hot stones in the back yard to prepare their digestion (or the assimilation of modern bicad and biscuit. 'But if our children are 'heirs of all the ages,' why not, in the name of common sense, let them come straight into their inheritance, without hewing their way through primeval barbarism'.' Who knows that 'the child repeats the experience of the race'." What proof is there ot it? If our children are actually driven through aeons of barbaric development in the first five or eight tender years, prof it; but permit us to he very skeptical of any assumptions that take this preKisterous thing for granted. Perish theories' (iive us facts!" ... .notation has Im-cii made at length to illustrate Mr. Kernuhl's manner of dealing with this generally accepted tl. cry oi new educators. Other views suffer equally, especially the schisd laving sires on "Greek period" and "Unman perns!" as eras ol transition (or "the child." Volatile and lickle Grand spirit manifests itself about the sixth year. Only psychologists know why. Later follows the iullexible, de termined i; iii.n. period. Rafaranaa is made to u loving child proving un ex ception and shuttering the idea thai the rule muy huve been inviolable. Ti is curly hair,. I lad, i, , lit plastic, ductile and malleable, accord ing to theorv, but endowed with the trait adnirad us "liriniio.H when it goes our wuy ami condemned as "obstinacy" when it crosses our in clination, has determination enough to haw -.Tied Human Horutius at the bridge, Miltisdes und his Qrotkl Marathon or Leonidus and his Greeks at Theriuoo due. "Aativity (or the sake of activity." the aimless doing of "tlw child " at S and ti.when he is supposed to be "in capable as vet ol pluuning lor a lu ture and of doing one thing with the distinct purHise of at coinplishing an other," pass under criticism. In onpoollion to this theory, that the child is not interested in things or results for his own suke, but only iu the doing, and that it W neur the age of H that he begins to see the end to lie gained in contradicti ui In something to lie done, Ihe following anecdote is re- Inted A 2-vear-old cherub found a cat sitting on his high chair. He at tempted to pull her off. She objected and retaliated bv scratching his hand, Cherub withdrew to think it over. That high chair had a patent contri vance a handle pulled, and, presto, it was transformed to a low easy chair. Two-ypur-old cherub pussed around a table, came up in the rear of pussy's strategic position, pulled the handle and ignoiuiniously pitched his enemy upon the floor. ... . , Arrows are thrown at the learned in structor who, on the authority of so eminent a philosopher as Comte, brings forward the notion of a fetich. He should be the pet aversion ol little i girls, l-'etich worship is devil worship reverence paid to an incarnate enemy we both abhor and fear. Primitive tribes held fetich worship as an im portant duty. Hence the unfortunate little pilgrim horn in the present, w ith so much of past to undergo before he may enjoy modern improvements must have a fetich. Where is it found in child life? Why, where else bill in tin- doll loved by all girls and some little Isiyg? Do tlinv worship dolls be cause tOOy are afraid of them? Onlf theorists meet with questions from Mr. Kernald, and it is probable he agrees with other thinkers that fore runners of all great reforms were theorists and enthusiasts ami Hint out of their tentative planning grew lilies of practical working, lie awards due appreciation to the practical ob servations of child life made by the gifted woman who wrote "A Studv of a Child,'' and to the exact conclusion" and results reached bv Mr. Shaw in hit investigation. He thinks there is more value in the practical nbotrva- lions of a teacher who has taught vour ufter year fifty or sixty children , from the streets, just as they are caught, than in the closest theory of the most learned professor. ... Mr. I'ernald concludes that life transcends theorv and that true science pro, , , ds from (lie observed fact to the general law. When science has gathered instances enough, it may formulate its general law, though even then the while black bin! the uiinre- dtcalile quantity is likely to apiear and spoil the wisest Induction. " Training of r-'ul children culls out all the various resources of parent or teacher, und is a wonderfully Uplifting and developing process for one who ac cepts it rightlv. But study of 'the child' us an abstraction can be done with a cold heart on unvarying miixim-, amid which the theorist's soul is contitiuullv contracting till you can hear the dry bones ruttle pedogogy, pedagogics, pedagogical, psychology, psychological, appercep tionmuss?" The mistake oi the formulated sys tems is to attempt to treat "tin- child" as an eutitv when God and nature has given us only children. POLITICAL POINTS. Typographical Union No. tl, of New York, takes the lead ol organized labor in boycotling Mckinley and RuQBBelt. It diil gmsl work against Blaine in MM, IJussell Suge of Willi street, suvstbut he is quite sure there is no chance of Mr. Bryan's election. He said he had looked carefully over the ground, und be knew whereof he was talking. Mrs. Helen M . igar, the well known woman orator, ot Indiana, will stump Wyoming, Idaho, Colorado and Utah ugainst MeKinley. Mrs. Gntigur has issued uu open letter lo the women voters depicting particular evils fostered by Mckinley ism and culling iisn the women in the four states where they have the riht of suffrage to exercise it. f Dr. Shilohs o tougn ana lonMimpiion cure Thiel lwvon.1 nuerttlon UM iwmt mi'vrssi nl Lough MeUi rinc ev r known t aolence: a (i-w doMfl Invariably cure the WOfit OatM of ( onuh. Croup nml Btonchltla, while ltd won drrful Mcclll in the cure of ('onMtmntn.n It without n nr nllol in the hist tv of mcdicinr, Mncc Its rttst dlottOtlf f It aaa been tM on n irimrnntfe, n Vf which n otntr mnliclne enn utand. If ynt huve a CottRh, we earnestly nk you to try It In UnitOfl sin ten ami Canada tiV, Mc. ami $1.00. ami In Knffland It, VU. W. and mm, SOLE PROPRIETORS 5 3 "You'd Better Hurry" a And select I good healer from the cur loud ,,f stove- just received, We have Air Tight UeHters from 4.(kt Up, also the coal air-tight. I hie third saved in fuel . Stoves put up on short notice. Upon the most unquestionable au thority it is announced that Arch bishop Ireland, who is now in I'ari-n-sting on his laurels ufter a trium phant reception lit the Vatican, will not support McKinlev this yeur as he did iu IWlMi. .lames .1. Uussell bus sent his res- i.tnilltoit lo VilMlmi lititl 1,, ll,i, deini crutic club und 10 the Horatio .-yiie ir remntany 1 . n-. ami t.a offered bis services us u speaker to the national republican OOnnlUOti li saVH bo dill mil Slloitorl t,r o in I- ami he cannot this yeur. Ilryunsiivs: "I have not given to M one, either verballv or in writing. a promise of a cabinet position, and I shall not, during the campaign, make liny such promises. I have not au thorized umi shall not authorise urn em.', verbally or in writing to promise any cabinet position, or any Other pool tion to any one. If I am elected, I shall lie absolutely free to discharge all duties of the ollice, according to tin- platform as far us the platform goes, und according to my own judg ment. ' ' tc s 2 lical - J HEMRT-SICK. There ire a giea' niuny people who have heart sickness, who have no rhrouic deraii)enit-nt of the heart. When the tuuich is diseased ii mav itTect main oilier organs, und produce ill the evidences ol iliacasrd heart, dis eased liver or kldueys, or diaeuu- in sonic other organ. Tin- inesjiarioMod practitioner treats the wrong disease, ami hence the con st .nit -i ilcmenl of 1i l'icicc s corres pondeuta: "Ixc tor could not hcl llle. iKKtor Pierce's (olden Mc Discovery- cerea diseases of the stotn.uii and or gans ol dlcfctlon and nutrition, It increases the a similalive powers, and purities und enriches the blood. When diseases of organs remote Irom the stomach arc caused by the stomach, the cure of the stomach re sults in the cure of the OttkM dis eases, in heart, lungs, liver, kid neys, etc. Six year .go my stonidCh suit hc.rt troubled me no iius-li I had to tin something, mm the doctor louLd not help mr.H writes Mo a. A. Knapn of si.li Jose. C.lilorilia, Hon yfj. si went to at.li tlrieeMDO .uil ll.il trealiilent for cWnh ol Hit vioiu.cli, .ml wiu bein-i lot uuie time, then u OMM back I then aiad Ur. Pierce's I, olden Medici Discovery and 1'U...- -ui relicts 1 These inrHliciues , I iny alnaesrh 1 do not have the imui and ladigcs. ttuli as 1 did It ia very hant for roe to tell you what I suffered Isrfore I roiiiineuced t.kluu vour valuable mediciur I recommend u to all the suUeicrs whom 1 meet." To cure constipation uia- Dr. I'lcrcc s I'lku.-iol l'ellcls -1A..TT I.LL i V ,11. vi m LEROY. N.Y. TORONTO, CAN ror to hr T.iim.n i!o.. rrrusglrti i t Taylor, the Hardware Man 721 Main Street, a iiuaaiiiiiiiauiiiiiiiiiaiiiaiiiaitaauiiiiiiiiuaiiiUiaiiiiK Hardware Sporting Goods We carry a full Iii f tlx Is-st cutlery on the market, Large line of rille and sliotgut. ammunition. ppeolali on stove and range- W D. Hansford & Co. THE CITY... Livery, I eed and Sale Stables... CHRIS SIMPSON Proprietor Kverytlilnc V-w. V u Hur-es, New Itlgs. Best rigs and teams In the city. Hoarders given Ihe best attention. Service any hour of the night Telephone No. 70. The Best Ever Brewed. PILSNER BEER. Made from lilleri"! water. Kecoin memhsl by physician-. You can drink all you want of it and not have the headache or get diz.y. Schultz Brewing Co. ICE r rriforau-rrrB.s.TTnr UNION MUTUAL AID SOCIETY C (hn orHirili 'I under Hie Iw of Oregon) s ej Homi; Olfioo. Portlnnd. Oroyon. t : 1 WHY YOU SHOULD BE A MEMBER C Deoanee JWO are at any time liable to accident or sickness. S P.ecause loss of time by such disability means loss of nionev. E Bom the Soei. tc p.n - you l-'i.t") wr rteek i f disabled by iiccident or u sickness, C Rsssenta the Soeietv MVI VOU 100.00 ill event of death, less (010001 paid J during. io'knoM 3 E Beoaaae Jait clalmi are paid promptlyi nlthool annoying delays, see to letters oi Iho-e whom have paid. e B Boomm ll is an Oregon Initltutlon, and IU offioen are welt known and ? u raeponiioii DWIMM men. C Itecanse it costs hut fl.ilO a year. lo U . l. IV 11 iitrn.... tl... sli,.o,il l',,, 1 .,t iei, ol tlio Slis.iiilu lu ln-illilsi-,,,1, ii. -i-.o, ,.,....., ... ).. - . r- to . o i,. ta sh f..:.. ......... 1 el L HOW IU otir C1I. Ill snilllll'lll s resuienee, .100 ..lilio ni.n-.-i, .ill w will answer all impiines, and receive your application. II ........ ,.f MB. ..... ..ili..,,k r.. nt, 0,1 Ii-rs 10. 1 I "on, 1 I , I 01 1 uil! have one ot the largest Connclli in the -i.it 3 m iZSLSLSLSULSLSLSLSLSLajLSULSlSLlSlSLSl& SPECIAL Be KeHd Every Day Get Vour Gun... ( 1 muse Season tts'iis Aug. 1. Plenty of shells at U. .1 BtlllfOMl'M Curlier Wi tili ami Ma IF YOU WANT ..French Restaurant.. TIIK I'l.AI'K TO KAT. Where yne 1 an gel siiiiipIIiIuk in ion. no Latontalnc, Proprietor. A good livery rig cull mi us. If you ri I call night or U.iy let ua Know. We'll be there. U.VIM 0KAIU, l'roirk'tor Depot Stable Farmers Custom Mill l:rd Walttfrn, Proprietor. kMMJtHyi 1'"' barrK lay Klmir nxt'lingrl (or wheal. Klmir, Mill Ntdi iuMn.l KitMl, le., alwy mi hinl. 1500 Bucks for Sale Also Wholesale Agent for SC1ILITZ MILWAUKEE NOB in bottles, barrels, or caars Call up Telephone They ure full-blooded Bambooilleti and Polled Hfiaiiit' Merinos. They ate lui-o,!-, wttii mattured and oarefally esleoted buolu, Bhatp raen ihoold tee Ihem imtore mttrlng contructs. Conveyanoc furniehed (Vee to iDipeel tbia band of thoroughbreds. Addiaw CHAS. CUNNINGHAM, PeadletoBi Ore, Pilot Rock. Ort H. KOPITTKE. Oregon Lumber Yard 11 LlSoaae Lunthcr, lath, Shiouleb, BuildiuK 1'uper, Tur Papci". 1 Ml Ki I lit; Picket , Lime aud ( iemea , lirtck and Saud, Sash aud liturs, Screen Ooursjg WiudWM, Terra Cotta Pipe. AMIiKICAN PLAN. $.5.00 per Day and Upwards to-- t Hotel Ihe Pacific Northwest 3 sfTanW TH I PORTLAND 1'UHTI.ANii Borie & Light, Prop's j gjffojm Alta St., opp. Court Houae. University Tuition Free Onlv school ol Mlutv. 11111I Minlnu In the H late. l.l vi UK K.KUMialuw. iniporliiuiiiua tur ..rmiiL- uari n( mii. pHam BW lal I'ulluni.n.. I 'onrMia. 8ctiuol ol Cuiuiu.rve. Kxeellcul looraw In Civil. Hanllury .ml i h.mical kiiKfucrln. lleparliuelils ui AucTulit aud M Ijiu.u Me well fqulppeil Kur , .union .11 - .uil liirluer lulurui.ilun write f flf ll.Jrv' lla.ll On-oon. . A , Hp H V H iWajs. . A j!L ui. I1UIUII U IIUII ISM Kt Mai:. no. I A :1ft 111. No. 2 t:' . ni. Hrik Klv kniie vii r No. h 1:1ft .. m. Mall IIH a. in. HUM iu. :! p. tn Hull I .' - .. u n-llva. .L M.'i'i.risnTT'h Wall,. u.. 'iffiiia ri ftaa 1 1.,, ' "'ii 1(11 anrlvw7,"'.p.. ''' North," t,TH ku.i.. . 'r.nr-iioo ""rs.ni Prtnctw I Bt. 4.,,. J l a. ni. Kx Miimlay I o I ' Im v lti. ni. I v Itlfarla iNilly liKa, m. Columbia II... C si...r" Tn A-I..rl,.n,f'w l.nn.iin,, ' lo IWl '",. ,1 Mllfif trul.. 1 al-vai i. in. ''-''Viu.m,' Kor lull lalrmaatlon ii,M,., "WrSfe K.r Wal.av,Aa,,,,.lvX5r Take the... Washington & Co!unihi;i River RaiKvay Kor Ohlouo B( Peal. H I.I, VJ MCTty, Ht. 1-, OuiaKn All Points East and S I'nrtland mid p r on thr Snuno. Arrives HmUn, Wejaanrjifal m-.I ...l uris.ian; ' o . ,t tt !fll p . Ki.r liilorinaii.n, r.-uanliair ram ui tm.1 run, at loos , ,1 1 -.1.,. mu 1 Vi"'"'4"1' H. H l!A I.OKHIItr A II ,1 '?" t Wnlla Walla, Wuh. OregonShortLine TIIK lllltKCT KOt'M TO Montana, Utah, Oiioradu and all Eastern Puinla liven OhelM 111 iko larortlr ntut turn i-Niiiv i'm ich t.i u.11 n 'jn (iHANliK lotnli Llnaa, No Change of Cars on Hie I'lirliaml 1 iiiia(iHptlal,"tklaMb lue cai. Bqalpgei w m, lilesant Standard Slecpera Pine New Ordinary Tearlit) Hnga Superb Lltirary-HuflttCtn Splendid Diner., mealsalacarti free Ke lining Chair Can Comfortable Coachea and Satokm tintlre 1 rain Completely Vntlbulei Kor lnrllivr laiotaMUei applr r. r. .amji .in. .1 o. It it N.Ua., J. K NAIIKI. W. I C011I. Trav. I'aaa. Aa-t ii :nai 142 Third SI.. Portland. Omti. PHYSItlANS. A Boarding and Oay S hool lur dlrla ftg.Jaaalier 17. Kor circular. aaV I'riuein 1 1. N."K ''-KBUIt'l-W, I'll . D., I'ltKH IUANKKIKiiNi. BABBITT METaI- in 11 Ul bataiaa 11 ............ Hi: w 1. 1 1,. I i iKK'li'K IN I'IM'a I ton H.nua- two a Dilllillaf. DaW baaM '..1 I.' a I., j Mn -1' m TaUabaMfl. k. w. vinckm m i). omaadl ol Kirat Naliniial Bant. OSo. aamllMI M III . 1 'o I 111 UK. 1 j. KM I I II. OKKIOKOVnaW tl.il. 111 iavlofl Hank Telrpa mi .ni 1 ... i 1 JI.H.l.AKI It. I.I' M. P.HOJjtt'WWj ic iMi .iciKii an. 1 aurtaea. o m Unll.hl,. itu. w . k. im:i:i:. "KKI k iL'fl i.uii.inia, opiii Kim nrnaa 'i Offjoa beara, da) n i mam UUNTISTS. L A. VAI'tillAS DKNTI8T. Ill Juilil Hllll.llUK. A. L. HKAT1K. U. V I mKm sin, ma- Him. iiaailmiuiitri K. A. MANN. DKNT18T, II IAjat Uou Block, uvtr r o. mw' AKCItllhi IS AND aUILi- ,.. ., Li..t. . 01. t lii'lHTKaaT A'" l. r. nw 01..-. .Vuji parlaleadi m "' "MXei I Amut lot bull.liuaa lu lb" ellj - Imlil biiiriliuit BANKS AND HOKI" , ' i..u-.i zszi pollu aSchaunv la-, 'i,l poluu --I" . ' ?"Z1, 1. 1 K vIou-uraalilKiii; 1 . J Morru, oaaw wraalou liiui; ' 1-' "..iKm eJerMl ,loeu..li.- eai-liaini' ."-JjM'. ? 1 leuileil le lleiii ' McArlliur, ll I'" ..... . I U' kami'lt. HANKOKI rl2" ... . oii; ,.-Bei win - i.i.ai itataa. raani general uaiikniK , TJTm mSmSm aud telegraiil..' ''""'J rraaelaoo Ne oii '"(Wl UU Iktll"" , nrafAatia' IS triu. Ul Aukeiiy, I'XrmOx''1 Hoe-prealdenl ? UUurnay, i""' ' gM THB KAKMKB'BBAJff i. Oreaou. I m SB im.-iui-M- H i Hull .aeelleul couoiiiu". , u, or.-H"" 'T.u.ol aJ ".il poiiiil'llv allc";' J,i2 , '''''.yJTiSa-ri 1 liiviniiK.o'iii " " , , tuiaiayo -10, iiitncr.: k Jlu;riaBTirJai5f t'roebalcl. vice V""', cLfSS j. b Klllai-re, JXlSTTi U. X. Hart wan M ' tl jaaea draw, J r. KlueoMi t'h',, Tri CALL F0 tOUNTf ,:r.titf ah miiutv wrtrrauU house uttoii i" - ... .. ..l.ll, -Mf OH . -b-.f"ia lru'0,lZ- n Mir aas iu. ;juiret UIU lur 12Si. i Newspapers jgl Mgaae, "nnw, "mrl at nit Kwal, 11 ai TUB a01 ton. Uraaou.