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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1900)
...UNDERWEAR... Nun that t-olil weather in upiroaehini:. tin Ba eswity of buying heavier underwear will MM lnyni to assert itself Naturally you will wan! to K" where you ran get the Ivest grade (or the leait money; anil everylxulv known that The Magnet is the place An assortment unexcelled ami prii i- rut to the bottom; MM quick MM profit small. A dinner fur a "jold watch nivcn Wit'.i every dollar purchase, THE MAGNET CASH STORE Clements &. Wilson. Court and Cottonwood increase 01 price ci nsu nipt ion was was forcel d wn, eloMd ami htm- MUftUAl "1 HHII.lt 1. 10UU. , Jf, J, ,,, ,,rkin.m . re thrown (Ml of " " ' tfflplO) RMM1 Btt( WB let. -re NATIONAL iiEMlH'kATH TICKET i-1"-"-" Proda i thi. result, John W, Wales tetiiiil he I ire valorem. This 0 ureal that becked. The t.rn-e WfSMl plants wero roa MUBUDiirr, William J. Bryan. Of NKIIKA.4K.V. niK VICE PRESIDENT. Adlai E. Stevenson. OF ILLINOIS. f()R PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS, IV M 1'IERi'E. of Imslllls. 1EL1. MTI AIU. .it Multnomah J. WIIITTAKKR ol Benton K. KRONER, ol Multnomah The star of Bryan grows brighter and brighter. He may b' the next president of the 1'niteil States, anil l.e deserves to be for the light he has maile against overwhelming t ilds piled up against him by concentrated wealth. Klectrieity has Iteen put to a new use. In Ireland it has been used suc cessfully for ridding Hie stato crop of the dreaded potato blight which threatened the food supply of that country. Not only did the mvsteriou? ' current rid the crop of the blight but the yields were increase" I by it. Among the triumphs of the I'aris ex- , position not the least was the Interna tional Medical congress, witli THOU doctors from all parts of the world in attendance. A most interesting dis cussion occurred on the iniliscnm- inate use ol all manner of nerve and digestive stimulants, in which it was shown that many of the remedies in common use were mure deadly than the diseases for which they are taken. Hiito Lopez, the representative in Kurois- of the Filipino., who is now mi his way t this country, in a letter to Governor Theodore Koosevelt, of New York, declares that his countrymen will light to the death for their free dom and indeeiiilence, but that if Mr. liryan is elected they would "throw their arms into tin- sea,' - a--, in. I are they that their right to liberty would be recogniled by the Aincii.an government under his direction. It does seem that the way to a quick and honorable peace, after a year and a half of murderous and costly war that brings the American iople ih near, r the subjugation of the islands than we were at the lieginmng. lie- in the di rection of the defeat of McKinlcy for re-election. In the event of McKin ley's re-election the war will continue indefinitely. The people that fought two centuries against the rule of ( . 1 1 r . will tight on and on against the rule of Spain's successor. The- days there is a tendency to build up a great standing army under a government of the people. It is a demonstrable fact that standing armies have always been ami nlway mnst he fatal to free institutions. To realise the otter incompatibility of militarism and republicanism we have but to look at France. When we recall the first 1 reneh republic scattering the combined forces of l.oros through the valor of its volunteer armies, how pitiful is the actacle of the third republic cowering in abject fear of its own standing army. incapable of weilding any influence abroad, and im potent even to do justice at home. The experience of our own country proves thai a citizen soldiery is invinciiu, against foreign aggression or domestic insurrection, while all history shows that a mercenary soldiery has never Ismh so formidable to any country as tie- one which supports it. A standing army in the long run has always be come helpless against foieigu foes, but it ha. always remained of deadly efficiency against domestic lil-cMiee. Mark Manna is quoted as declaring in a soeeeh in t.liKugu thai there was not a trust in the l ulled Mate. The New York World cites that the Ameri can Steel Wire company of New Jersey was formed January It, 1KHM. It in clude all the wire, wire-rod and wire nail mills of the country, its capital is 190,000,000, at least tfO.OOO.OOO of wiiicfi is water, it is practically a monopoly. This trust, it will be ob served, manufacture.- fencing lur farm ers ami nails, com modi ties in daily use. Its predecessor, which was an Illinois trust, bore the same name. It was formed in April, IH'Jb. At that lime nails were selling at 11.47 per keg. In December, llilBJ, the price bad risen to 1)3.53. In the sunn; pafiad the industrial commission, November 14, IS'.si, that five plants had been closed. The trust raised wages very slightly in some of its department-, hut its predecessor trut had so lowered them thai thev were less in IIM than wages for the same work in the in dividual mill- composing the combina tion had bssJU in M0 Not only wen prices raised and pay reduced, hut foreign consumers obtained the gmsls of the trust for less than was charged the domestic consumer. Mr. Dates testified to this. An a matter of fact, the foreigner bought American nails for one-half the price paid by the American mechanic. In IHMU Canadians bought American barbed wire for iin cents a bundled pounds less than Americans paid, and plain wire lor 111 a ton less There are trust-, ami the existing tariff is largely responsible for those that prey most sip cessfully upon the people. A MONSTROUS CONSPIRACY. The United States Investor of Huston, Sen York. Philadelphia and Sun Krun cisco cannot he -u-pecied oi deiuocratii leanings. Its sympathies are wholly reptlhl lean and its interest lie- with the so-called conservative element which has money to invest in safe channels. What it has to -a . then, of one of the Mckinley bits of class tg isiatiou cannot he dl-counted mi the score of partv bias. The United States Investor is one of the severest critics of the Mckinley refunding scheme, of which tin- presi dent boasts in his letter of acceptance. I lie investor calls the mea-iire a monstrous conspiracy" and it declares that "it probably signifies the MM) political ilcbauchmciil ever witnessed in this country.' It says that the law "was oliviouslv devised to promote private interest-" and it venture- the opinion that should its instigators ever become known and if they should get their deserts, "their name- yy.md be covered with obloquy." "For M more barefaced attempt to promote private interests at the expense of the public good, in defiance of every dictate of sound sense and I morals. . i- ever witnessed.' n tin- s lew of the l ulled States Investor. s . The Investor waul- smne one held up to reprobation, and since Mckinley 0Knly endorses the "monstrous con spiracy ' ami (unit- to its aicomplisti ment as mie ol the achievement- of his administratiou. it seems that the presi dent is the one to Is- so held Up. He had the power to thwart it if he had chosen, but lie gave it his cm mirage ment uud bus since lost no opportunity to extol its merit. Yet the i vast tot make- it dear that the scheme was one entirely for private gain and tli.it it was carried out in defiance of -mind sense and gissl morals. ... The Investor denounces the refunding scheme not alone upon moral hut upon economic grounds. "There is the monstrous evil of erietualing a debt that can easily be paid," it says, "and then there is the evil of )iur pet Hating a Inihk-nole circulation hand on so false a principle as the present. " Hut it ignores ihe.c features and addresses itself In h consideration of what it calls "the very crying evil "namely, unlimited inflation. The Investor ilself doubts whether Hie bank-note expan sion will Ik- anything like what some feared, but it savs that the promoters of the law believed that the refunding clause would lead to the wildest infla tion and It savs their scheme was evidently based upon this calcula tion. "There could Is no doubt in their minds," il olweryco, "that the result would be such an enlargement of the amount ol money in existence as would eventually wreck the indus tries ol the country. With such a prospect in view, the pers-trators of this iniquity went calmjy on their way and by cajolery or otherwise brought congress and tiie p rly leaders in line with their policy.' Yel this "monstrous conspiracy" of the people who scared th country with the raw head and the Moody Isjne of a "30.ceiit" dollar in IHWi, is tie- special joy and pride of the great AiDauce Agent of Prosperity and Uepuhlicau Kaih-maker. He gives no hint of any (oar ol cheap dollars in extolling the virtues of this scheme of unlimited inlialiun. TWO PICTURES rHUM LIFE. Ill front of bis tepee on a reservation in Anona nils an old Apache Indian. Un bis head, once decked with eagle feathers, he wears a cowboy hat. The native nakedness of his back, once decorated with war-paint, is covered with an old army blanket. His sinewy legs have submitted to the ignominy of trousers. The old Aache sits and smokes and dreams of the warpath, of the murder ous (oray upon while settlers, of the scalp dance, of the "strenuous life" of his eariv days before lie became a ward of the hated white man. To him the reservation is a prison, peace is a punishment. The baleful llahl of M Ml A. ev.1 tensitv of his savage nature the veneer ol civiliratlmi imposed Upon him. ... Dashing over the prairies and hitstl I ing through the cities of the plains is a white ma n, a descendant of the pea. Its fill and pious Dutchmen who settled Manhattan island. He was educated at our oldest university. He i the gov ernor of our grealesf state. He is a 'worshipper at the shrine of a religion 1 hearing the name of One whose advent into the world was heralded hv tin angelic song. "Peace on earth, food will towaM men "' ... Yet this consummate fruit of three hundred years of freedom and culture, stumping for himself as a candidate for the second highest O0SJ ill the gifl of the nation, emits a succession of speeches which nothing so accurately describes as Wall Whitman's line: "I sound my barbaric yawp over the roofs in' the world "' He constantly holds up the tighter as the highest type of mail. He glorifies war. He celebrates himsell as a Hough Kider. He fraternities effusively with cow-boys and yells to a OPTO tlllj of border rilllians with "g'ins" in their Im'IIh and knives in their boots that "all men who are not men" that is, fighters "are women"' Here are two pictures from life. Which is the more pitiable the veneer of civilization of the Apache or the survival of barbarism in Koosc-veil'.'-New Vork World. A MORAL TO THIS STORY. F.veryone knows that no single I.kit needs arguments he is forever loaded w ith them and milling to hand them out. Nor din's any single taxer need an excuse for offering hi- views. We ali know about the sudden death, the clergyman asking someone to say a kind word for the corpse, and the old man who arose llnnlly to say that us no one seemed to know the corpse, be would like to make a few remarks on the single tax. We have made clear our knowledge that single taxers need neither argu ments nor anecdotes, to help them along . Hut "to him that hath shall Ih given. " Here's a storv from F.nglaiul. short, and worth listening to. If von have heard it before, do not snv so. There is un use ill hurting our feelings. A very big English pea-ant. six or seven feet high, four or four and a half i oroici. yy.i- ioiiiii i ne. airi -.- -i no- velvety grass in the domain of a small ' fc; earl, known to antioiiity and to readers 1 of Kipling as a "belted earl. " ; . - I Hot give the belted earl s fool- t- i-h draw l, so to . fair, yye'll lean in ; g the peasant's dialect. Said the earl, haughtily: i Ej "What do you mean ny trespass i..- r- on my land. How dare voti walk on my agj jr.i-- ! MM the i -a .i 1 1 1 not too humbly: "I've got no grass of my own. I cannot jump oft the earth, and as long as I stav here I have got to be all the lime on some one's land. How can I help it?" I he iieasant scratched his head thev always do in stories and nluvs. ami asked : "I know this is your land. If si t where did you get it from'."' -aid the belted earl : "I got it from ni ancester- " Where did your ancestors get it." "Thev got it'bv lighting f,,r it." I'p cheered the big peasant he MM a collier, by the wav : "All right, then I'll tight you lor it, the same as your ancestors did " Hut the belted earl said the peasant was rude and called a game keeper If there is tint a gixsl single tux moral in that story we err in judg mentHearsts' Chicago American An Astonishing But True Story My home is 0 Sidney. Ohio. I have been nearer death " than an Othtf hvinc person , the World and yvan TOM a'n can tell others. I look n severe cold uud MgHMUM it, l fc-ew wwi time, and at the end of tyvo years 1 bad run into consumption. I coughed terribly, lost Naah, cotM not sleep, and became so dreadfully weak tnat I had 10 tuke to btH, In the following cghtecn months I pradua'ly readied the last stage of c BMtnptkm, No less UmUI seven pliy-uciaus IraOilod me and all fciivc iiu- up saviflg I yy .is in curable. I yvasabs hi'i !y help os . Tftwwboiei'attvi II WOI I IhOfUM vc out irlrtg f.ir me. luc day i i :ier ned sisrer nine . m b-dsi le. on i aid I Ii.vl but n oov isT i v labott the ncv . Tb I : IUUI 1 'ittJC to ltd M 0 tva I yy into 1 1 tir io The Best Ever Brewed. PILSNER BEER. M bsssMs. I'ssl Ml!. a.. T, ' L Made from filtered wafer. Ileeom- - BMMMlod by physicians. V O0 eun drink all you waul ol it and hot have the hcmlm-he or gel ili.y. s: . in ..,..,, , , sfj Tears 'oiled doyvn their cheeks us they d w , had d la cd 1 VM m the last stage, ami no l i i , -., , I.e. but before K"'"K to the cruel : at ' i rv jju.t lo,UJVn7, "1 i to I 111! I l -. '. i , . . .. t ci. ..,. Ill, e i . he. oven loyy-n oi uihmj . il - hat I would auraly die before I got mv r.v tin wish. u carnaire was titteil up I a i carried an I slowly driven Brown o conn ; dtbanaltva. Throuph the mercy ot t ro i- at ..in ' to o ' nic il ici ne said to oc a consumption cure, loot it won worth trying. Hut as a drowning person iw i 1 1 trard tola medicine. I was better after taking two doses it moft of ll rnedl Ini and I took H. improving nil tne ran iwsj I1 .s sn sua ... of this nonar. and the medicine that cured me was . -. s Batfliib Kcmc.lv (or Conanupiioo, v word here printeU is ::m a s". I declare before Hod anil man that Th s r -narkalile lesHnmni il.nn Ills in Ills iwn ol Msrs m ll nooaer or v.o., pmpr stars o Dr. AeVi-r s I eli-iirntea i:ngnn Ks-iiw v. is rawsn ht u; o,...,. -- , i-tiii--il ilrtnrirlslsef Si-lni-v. l)!:i i I t, !iii 1 1 in lv il a . I my 11 fuudi-'l :u i.- I Ulturr. sn.l.l I I -..in li l:lln h a fCOMA zcio. Kn.sr a rl'lv fieirsn Ih.li r irmiin'T ",',V'TT' . ,ii - i ,i . nijiU.' In Ktwi.iiilis.isl .a.".. mu .U. KMIII.KTN, OHK. "You'd Better Hurry" i E And select a gissl healer from the car of stoves just received. We haye Tight Healers from 14.011 up, BUM the load Air coul 3 I 3 a Schullz Browing Co. Oregon Lumber M ,...S!.I I,S... I uniher, l.ath. Shiimle. BuHalnN Pa pur, i nr H p r. Mouldlogts J'iijKcis. Lime :md Cetni-iit. Bliek and Sand, Sah and IKirs. Benwn 1)imh.s& Windou.s, 1 em Gotta Pipe. Borie & Light, Prop's Alia St., opp, Court Hiiuhc. j im LvKlpun,, i Mixed train lesvTiwlrr-Lj Utr full hilHrnun,,,,,,,, .... . -.- 'tfr- I - iii-t.i rsssfe fl Take the.. air-tight, put up on line third suvi short notice. HKi I in bud. Stoves 3 OregonShortLineRailroad Taylor, the Hardware Han 721 Main Street 3 iiinth.i.h.Wi4i.u...iaii.iaiii4iiiiia.hi.aUiaiiau.i.ailv UNION MUTUAL AID SOCIETY (Ini-orper.lt-il uiiif.r Un Home Office, nf Oregon) Portland, Oreuon. For Men and Women Between the Ages of 16 and 65 Years. If liok unci antbls to uttond to your btuinew would $15.U0 j-r week pleast mi. liy paving $4.00 you can gift thin for six weekl, 90.00 FOR 94.00 I 'B R YEAR TIIK PIHKI'T KOI'KK TO Montaoa, Utah) 4 olorado and ad Eastern Points' iiiye. fkaksj ol iw f.vnrltt' roaten. .1. the UNION l-A' IKIC F..1 Mall Um, or the RIO QUAMDI M t nli Lines, No Chanoe of Cars aa un rtrHaal VMrasjr ttttHli tfct liw m Um Weit." Kiiil-il Wltb I If Ml MnnUiird Sleepers F:lne New OrfJtMTI Irurlat Sleepuri Supt;rh l.lr rar -Hultet tarb pleudli' IMritrrn mcala a la carte ' 1 1 "c KrclinliiK Chair Cars Conilurtahlc Coaches and Smokers iintire 1 rain Completely Veatlnuled hut liTtiier inltirniNtiiiu .iiply In K I ' WAMHI.KY, Afssjl 0 K A N. I'u.. I'uuillutun, Or. J I RAWOi v. K. (.'OMAN, I r.v. PsSS. Agl. Ocu'l Again 142 Trued St.. Portland. Oregon. For accident your tl.'i.UO Hr week coiiimences nes it conimences after you are u lueml er :iu il u nuid your lieneficiary at one-. il mice, for Pof death lmi.il Mi. 9 NORTHERN PACIFIG Mr. W. II. Street, the Hpecial KapfssjaaUlivi of ba S.s-i, tv, is now ill your city, at Stunlield'h residence, MB Main street, ami yyill answer all MqOIFMWi and receive yniir ailication Jlr. L, U. Frazier, agent of the Pacific Espn aincatioii- ,r ins Hi sr comiuny yyill re, eiye SUNNY WOMEN. Who has not known the woman whose disiMMitmii is descrilied hy tha' one wortl "sunny f Tliere s always ,i Uun'. lutk iny on her lij Her cheek.-, are ever ready to dimple in sin I Its Her house hold influence is as brihtenmjr and stimulating as the sunshine. Nothing call he cruder than to have thi. sunshine blottc.: out hy disease. Mill tliib is a common cruelty. The petHMJ wile who was the sunshine of the home bassjajKM Its iliadow hvery vouuk wife should km.vy tin yaiut-of I)r. Hierce s Havonlt Pre.i nplion in the protection and pres ervation o! the health. It promotes regularity, dries the drains which eniee ble body and uiiud, and cures infl.unin.. tion, ulceration and female weakness. It nourishes the nervous system and irive. to the- bed) the balance uud buoy ancy of perfect health. It is a ilhctly temperance medicine. ''I esu say that Ma medicine cured me." wnte. Mrt M.ud Fr.rec of atouuvltle Psir-fi.1-1 Co OMo, nl hail MiAVred .buul twelve ye.r. from femslc wckacs sad 1 hail sIuumI efven il-.i thotking there was oo cure for mc Then I he.nl alstui In Pierce', mrdtciae anC thought 1 would try it. sad can say that .even bottle. of eour t.voritr PrrM-riptii-rti ' ni.de mt wrll I am uow aide io do my own houstwotk I look shout twelve lollies in all of Ltt Ptetce'. turlKiiiti. T,,L taaM ol the 'Golden MedK.I Duciivery 1 ' K.vurtie PreschplkMi ' and aosue ol the ' 1'leautnt Wllris ' " lr. l'irrce's 1'cllcts cure constipation. Its no Use to Ask SPECIAL He Read Every ! lay i. Get Your Gun... Grouse Season iii- An jr. IMellty of hliell- at H. J. Stillinaii's Corner Webb sun Main ftl IF YOU WAMI A fisj livery rig call mi 11-. If you yyant a can Might Of diy Itt u.s klloW . We'll be tl-r. ..French Restaurant. THE HJkOw TO t AT. Where you esu net Kiuielliin- BOOJX (Jus Uil-ontaine, I'ruprletor. Farmers Custom Mill I red W alter-, Proprietor. Kl.y IN l.'HAIO. Proprietor Depot Stable ;.p.cny, Itti barrel, a day Klourtiiehaug.l for wheat. Hear, miu hask Mssmms) k.v.i, .m-. iii h.uil. slwnrs KUNS PullmtUI SlecpiOK Jti-s. i.iruant DininR Canv i mii ist Bleeping (jus iVt, I'AITL ttlNREAPOLIH OULUTB I iRCrO U It AND KoltKl lOROOKrJTOM WINNEPKU HKLENA and y BVTttl. THROUGH TiCKlis To OHIOAQf WAHHINUTON PHILAPELPUIA N I- W VORK BOitTOK and all pOUlil llanl and South. ihreugh (lakeM io huaa su.i cnin.. vi laioiii- si,-1 Ni,ru.n, pM!ue tUcatusinp o aul A ne ii. mi TIME SOIKDULB. TrMl" leavoa I eli.lielon ilslly exeepl Huudsy Washington & Columbia Rivet Railway For OhiOMO. St. Pasl la . Has City, ,Ht, Jw.OmC All Points East and Portlind and polcts on the Sound. .t"." m vm heparin talll XMplSa8SiTaia.. Vni liilornmiiiiti rw mn.Uii.iii- lai'.ouaraiMnsi 8. B i:Ai.nKl:iiKAl).(i.r.A ' Walla Walla. Wutt IG Also Whlll'Ml .1tlft SCULITZ MILWAtSU Bl El In hollies barrels, Call up ij- ; Telephone I'U. 0 H. KOPITTKi PHYSICIANS. ror nitlli. r ihIhi illation lime e.tila. lu.ps su.l le k ;- - nl: r ,vtu. W . Adaius I'euille. kon. Ureyou. or a Ii t il Alll.ToN. Illlr.l ami M irriaou HU.. I'orllaud. Ore. 'rrTTTTT j" ft" i a ' 1500 Bucks for Sale POSSlBLY "- , ,,,,, HUr. ..f ll... ami Wl-il They are fuU'Uooded l.'ambou llt-ls Polled Delaine MtrilMMk T. t-y ir larkfl matured and carefully nele. t-d bu ks fthttl -men should see them l.efoie making contract! Conveyance tuini8hed Irce to innp.-r t (hit bftlld of thurougiilMed. VddlM CHAS. CUNNINGHAM, Pciulk'toii, Ore. Who won the cuke, for you know THE DOMESTIC LAUNDRY won. W price oi uaroeo wire rose Iroui fl.UT anger ami ol ilesi air burns in Ms to 4.13 our hundred pounils. The ouadv uyew as he calls hiliial f "a wo .Inlv U auaalia ami ass Uk ...i "laii" becauw be can n. nuer rani ' ' ' . - and bglu and kill rang Iroui about 10 toUi,er cent The Apache bates with all tb.- in.4 The whole city of I Vi . I n- thu jud(e and they all pro nounced the work of thu Duawatiii : Laundry to bo the lieat that can Is j produced by skilled labor ami iin I proveal machinery . Leave your laundry with them, "tuu'll be pleased." J. F. RobinMM, Prop. Teiqtta 60 Uil.. n . a IIU ?AICK, I l i i SI If N't 1 ySSBfSmm A Koamlnu and aPjsBgWl lMy S """I (' lib Is Veil are uo! Hilar, of i,M- ..st tunc and -upcrh Scr ice Now offurtjO by tho S PlCT0V rS' ,i" ,. ,"r -'l'eular ad- '"le .pal foliV.ud.o.'L""""' '" 2 -Dail FastTraintotbeEast 2 If you usniioi Hke the morning Irsln 'ei via ii. .jVumUg ir.iu, both .re lowly e,ulppil OUR SPECIALTIES: Faat Time, Through Service, Pull man Palace ttloeperu, Pullman Tourlat Sleepers. Pullman Dluera, i-mriiry (t.afei Car and Frse Re clining Chair Cara. ir'.'n""'",.,"' MM "v'1 Sf tUualis, Chicago, -snaai i ,i, st. u,m,, .Now ulk Boai.m uu oia.r sastara Tli ksu K.-.f .is H.ili j,kc city and Iwnver. inir'itl" ""' bltoreal le u.e Ihe HVKKLANI) '' A"UVu""i.t.U;0Ore.. Ueuer.l Agtiut, US Thlnl Hi., I'orll.ud, Oru. ni4 i" i i I UNDW i ak vlU puts, on ahely.is. wall., or for wrapping purposss. olil utiv.j,papura in larg. buudiua of oue huudr.il at Tint B.Jr,.... eaon ai-iuesuls a buuuio tou "rsgou OKItuo"A, OWICI, Heudle HO ll i iiVgirklNI lull asvuig. Usui oulMlsg Mat I Ui ii. , I lo I' m TUkar- ,. ,, , , . l v i- i n nvrii II p . y-i . y I ' r. i ai. - "il l Sir. i Snll.llisl Hank. OW SISBH a. m. ; I to 3 p. tn. .... ,, i uuitii ovvh'li OVUl ; ti-l.-niioiii H.M.UARKIBUI.M. II. le I'hv.uiau au'l Kuriass. 1 Hmliliug nit k I'KKiiY. orricijll ImlliliiK uplil.- r'1.'" iillii . I t any ami nuai. DHNTISIi. K. a, VAIIOHAJI, OIVBst In Juil.i Hun.uug. i a. u hutik,'Tm 'rI Savuig- Bank iimis U. A. MANN I'l N Uoo Block ,. KB cws'i! AHCH iTfl'Tb AND MHH T. r. HOWAKD. Al pellUleleleul, SI ISU. lot i.uii.."..- HtKiiii I 7, Judil liUlldlUI BANKS AND tul. I allllLMl. Newspapers i.Lii.lllS nuais,.- ud Lslr.pklciraaiaas ,rr; .iraiuit... Will hi,:.. I- ,WS5l(l miLTun ; i - a ....to a I TDK l'hNI.I.Km; wjBJ ..-,..ll. ..ei. oregou. oerrr-a uspiui '"XiiJi5a , 1 1 u.iiiii. "I1"-. umi ' "" . ''I'TMiswaM leo preM'i.u' i:k" iruKuu m r " . ikaaut u -: MrArthur, Tim I U I i I VI t " ' . . .. . jV i f TIIK I AKMl l.--vi hi ineita.-iT-M aw il . ..ainv if ll Ml1 - " ..is Km Hull- i''',il,'V,.7i3a eolleoi. - ""' "-,jnrr. -i r-rocLawi. 'ZZtL BAaVaUr-rer ....itiuiu."- iu it.. '"iv;;,i5i. t0, tl di.itn-i "I ''"rSuMsa f "la Ike wall.' oTWllisa- rupl . ....iaual a"L.el To Un- ' . i ikt t"rz. Hens. '"rz?''tf5mt ,, iii.ite i i. i, 5, li.rlii.-'-'" .nil w ilia hu.iuwa II Nolice Ik llelols'i A U.MH duly llt-,1 MI.-. 0". -.V-"a ,v oltl.e 111 TT itrewl, Hi "if ' , M fWs ill, oie,"" . uJjs. MSr( - , , ii.y jiw" za tnr: on iiu- I r it 1 1 li ' ,UI " , i 'XVhU-iMJ.jjWgj eiii"-,-:.at KZ.m a 4 ii ur Sifksa'-.:! go '''.SSaaai ujajj ' )' i m