Image provided by: St. Helens Public Library; St. Helens, OR
About The Columbian. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 1880-1886 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1883)
t " - A MOUNTAIN BRIDAL. X ni a Urn on the mountain side. M 1st r and chill, a Over the bill, .. Oyer and under the pine-woods wide, Heard I th wandering wind MoaulEff. m one who could never nna pUc where he nlgbt abide. 1 was alone In my bollow glen; Pnnaei'a red gleam Tbe moon's pallid beam The cry of the beast from his unknown den They haunted the lonesome wood, Only to deepen Its solitude? Was I alive, lore, then? Once, In a darkling dream. I heard O. to know where! Something that sang to me. thrilled la me, stirred Adte taati anew not uiiur, . A rlprle of melody, dim and divine; A far-off, familiar word. Once, in a noonday trance, I saw A glimmer of white, A wonder of llgbt. A radianoe of crystal without a flaw. Shining through moss and feru. Glint Ing and hiding, with many a tarn. Yet coming, by some sweet law; Coming to me. O. my brooklet brldt.! , Tea "it was thou Part of me now Coming, with grace of a sunbeam, to glide Tntn hit soars shadow deep: naked ry their laughter irom alotb. and from . sleep. Thee l mut follow, my gnid I Mine, O, my blessing, my mountain-born! out of tbegieu, Down among men, Wlnsomelj leading me forih, like the mora, " Hmtmi on thr mnsical lio. Krefch from the wells where the holy stars dip, Bousing me up from seii-corn. fetill at our tryst on the mountain-aide Something we seep Hidden too deep Xver to whisper through earth so wide; Love that we dimly know : lea Tea the woild freber wherever we go, One In our life, O. my bride! Congregationalism OLD TALE. "Connecticut remarked a college professor, "is more mral to-daj, than it was a century ago." At first such an as sertion seems to border on the ridicu lous, but studying more closely the causes that lead to such a conclusion, ire see, gradually, what surprises us in no little degree, concentration of force and business enterprise in the large cit ies, emigration to the farming lands of the west, and a consequent depopulation and abandonment of the interior Tillages and settlements of the state. Striking out a little, off the beaten track, this condition is exemplified . Very few young people are seen making their homes in the remote districts; the poor impoverished iarms are' left to the care of the old folks, an old man patch ing up a f enc6 here and there, a plot of lima beans waiting for the sons that are tall enough to gather them, the corn patch very slowly stripped, seem signifi cantly to say, 'there are only two for . breakfast, dinner and supper, the long weeks through." All IS M IIUUSt U COAX liU AUUJL UpUU ll-t) deserted orchards, with the red apples crimsoning the green grass beneath; '.meadows filled with the beautiful but destroying white weed, as it is to look upon the skeletons of the once, largely populated mining camps of Nevada and California, which John Muir speaks so characteristically of, as the "dead cit ies." . Here, however, the skeletons of vvjbat once was, are wrapped 'about -with a veil, at once so beautiful and useful in a picturesque sense, that tne "passing-! away' impression is modified after the ' first sharp recognition of its existence. Traveling from New York to New Haven, we see a little of the power , of tne magnet, wnicn draws so strongly from the country. The manufacturing interests are immense, and impresses strangers so curiously, being so different to the wheat and vine-gruwing industries of the west. Near every stream and sound inlet, the great dark buildings loom, and at early morning and noon, the tide of human beings pours in md out. . - We pass rapidly from the dark, smoky atmosphere of the cities to the pretty suburbs. We glide, as if by magic, through wood after wood, the old trees gorgeous in crimson, "russet and gold.' The chestnuts and hickory nuts are bare - jy ripe, due boys are in tne topmost branches, and when with long pent-up and then with well-directed force the telling shake is given, the precious Erizes drop with muffled thuds into the rown crisp leaves. And then for the scramble 1 As we stop, occasionally, at a switch station, the conductor, in a leisure mo ment, and perhaps an enthusiastic trav eler or two. jump off the car. and hunt in the grass for the dry burrs, with tbe half revealed fruit, while the -occupants Ct the cozy cushioned seats, watch with amusement from the car windowsand quietly realize that ' tnere will not be enough to "go round." Arriving in New Haven, we soon dis cover, that for us Yale College holds the greatest interest, and that we are not alone in considering it the nucleus, or' center point of attraction'. Driving un der its arched elms, a few minutes be fore recitations, one is arrested by the sound of the tramp of many feet upon the pavement. A enormous procession of open books seem to come marching down the sidewalk, a consideration and "notice of their owners being a second thought. ' Standing on New Haven green, and surveying the various edifices that form tbe college square, ratifies the good im pression obtained by examining any old wood out of the more venerable build ings, and the later photographs and en gravings of the more modern structmes. Interesting as these various stone and brick walls are, for old association's ' sake, of far greater interest is the Iran sient world that occupies them, always existing yet never the same a commu nity of many interest, yet united pur i pose. ' It was only last year that the dilapi dated stone steps weie removed from the front of "Old South Middle," worn al most through by the foot steps of the boys of a century. - The "old brick row," well preserved as . it has been, 6hows little signs of age. In the interior, the dark narrow passages strike one as gloomy, and tne low ceil ings give a cramped appearance to the rooms, which is almost counterbalanced by the coziness engendered by such a style of architecture, and heightened by the warm colored draperies which adorn the windows and doors. In fact, it eeeixu difficult to realiza that the most vener able of the buildings, "Old South Mid dle,", was erected in 1750, and tho old chapel, now used for ae - -emio purposes j only, in 1763. Farnhan and Darfee face College and Elm sir-.;!; these aro ! newer edifices, like an exquisitely set gem, unites these two buildings at the junction of the two streets. The library, museum, school of design, and various laboratories dot the various streets facing the campu?, while the theological department.Marquand chapel and Sheffield Scientific School are much further south of the main buildings. . As the hours of recitation draw to a cloee, the quiet of the scene changes. Students come strolling out on the green in little clusters, and then separate into twos and threes, and disappear along the wide avenue of. elms, the branches lac inar and interlacing each other, in a gor- creouslv autumn tinted fantasy, as bril liant as it is short lived, while the frost, as if iealous of the beauty it has created. waits with its tarnishing hand to fling over tbe woods its November mantle of modrninc purple and brown. ; ' In conversation with one of the oldest professors of Yale, he remarked that it m a a a "1 . . J I 1 was one oz ine greatest desires ox me col lege to have representatives from the various and most widely separated states in the union. To come in contact witn men possessing, often necessarily, views diametrically opposite to his own, broad ens the man and generates a spirit of toleration, which is one of the most im portant anticipated results of a college career. The majority of the student's apartments are very pretty, and a; num ber of them exauisitsly furnished. One on the fourth floor of one of the build ings, where the gable windows break the squareness of tne rooms, especially at tracted our attention. Tne walls were painted a deep cream tint; with a dull mulberry dado a rug toned to the tints of the wail, but heightened in color with brilliant dashes of crimson, orange and dark blue, so blended with one another that there was no harshness in effect, covered the center of the room, while the , wooden floor at the edges was stained a deep brown. Partierres of drees of wine- tint, bor dered with chamois tinted plush, draped the doors of the sleeping rooms,-which otened out on opoosite sides of the study like wings. Oil paintings adorned the walls. A pair of antlers and a deer's head ornamented odd corners ol. tne room, a fox skin rug thrown before the lounge, a cleverly executed sketch in oil on an easel, in the dim corner of which could be recognized a California artist's name, besides a pencil drawing of Liati mer's, with creek willows delicately out; lined on the banks of the Kuseian river, proved that a western collegian had something to do with the beautifying of the room. A few minutes later the chums entered. Maine and California. Maine had the draperies woven in his father's mills, in some of the lonely fastnesses of the New England hills, while California contrib uted the.trophies of tne hunt and the delicate work of brush and pencil, from the city far beyond tbe western plains "It is as serious an aiiair, remarked a student thoughtfully, one morning, "to choose a chum as it is to 6elect a wife; you can t get rid of each other you must agree, or disagree, as it may ; hap pen, for four years. This is one of the first disciplines that college offers. It takes a certain amount of forbearance, and a tolerance of individual peculiar! ties to live in harmony with each other so long a time in such circumscribed limits. .; Uat it is a world ot you to, not so ar cadian perhaps, as in the days of Cronus, before I'andora opened the sealed casket, but one of knowledge of good and evil. more satisfactory on the whole, as Hope figures conspicuously as tbe guardian angel. rhe professors are not the walking embodiments of abstract ideas that one is prepared to imagine. Under the crusty and often snarp exterior, tnere exists a sympathy and a fondness for the young collegiates which they consider a relig ious duty to conceal. The warm bond of friendship which unites classmates and college friends is something rarely if ever broken. ; Occasionally death step3 in and severs it, as in the case of one" of the most popular and best beloved ; sen lors a few days ago. As no lay very low in hi room knots of anxiom comrades held watch on the campus for tidings the loner night through. In the coldest gray of the morning, before daybreak. his chum staggered down the steps of the dormitory, and burying his face in his hands, cried loudly, "Boys, it is all over with poor Tom." There ' was not a dry eye in- tbe little chapel in the afternoon ' when President Porter conducted tho memorial services, and as the boys took their last mute parting with their comrade, his last words (to his chum, as he regained con sciousness for a few minutes), seemed present with them; "Dave, turn Tom over; Tom's tired." He then passed peacefully away, without a struggle or a sigh. The college germans, promenades and athletics are a wholesome break in the otherwise dull and trying routine of the student's life. Much as college athletics have been ruthlessly criticised and : con demned by many throughout the conn try, there really seems nothing existing that can take their place. They serve a purpose in preserving a tone of health throughout these institutions which would be wofully lacking if they were abandoned. TLe question still remains to be agitated, and very powerfully, too, by the most advanced minds of the pres ent advanced century, whether tne cram miner system, in its infancy in our com mon schools, and in its full de elopment to a most direful extent in our most important and largest colleges, is not a barbarism of "modern civilization." Disciples of custom, as collegians are in the question of their own education, it is amusing to note the popular prejU' dices of the majority of women. To look at a college girl, exclaimed a popu lar senior, "gives me malaria. "Which accounts for the chronic invalidism of Yale," retorted a classrrate sarcastically, who had a pretty cousin at Vassar. Be this as it may, the society beauty's career is not always an unshadowed one, as the "higher, educated young ladies may imagine. ...... i An incident of this hd the run of the college papers, and as it concerns a Cali fornia ptudent has naturally a place here. He invited a New Haven telle out skating, and not being ro proficient in that art as his eastern brethren, slipped on tbe treacherous ice and dragged his fair partner with him. His sharp skate, just skipped her face, and no more. ;"Do you know, Mr. ," she said soberly, ''if your ekate had disfigured me? you would have had to marry me." j'.'O, horrors! no, replied the youth emphati cally, in the excitement of the moment, "I would notl" Cor. S. F. Bulletin, Oct. 20th. . i EricsMm Y Dc&lrt j e - What looked like a long black box. tapering at both endn, with a lead-col ored box ou top of it ami a bluet snu'ktf stuck running op through the middle, lay at a New York wharf. It was Capt. John Ericsson's torpedo boat Destroyer, which, tbe inventor thinks, will destroy vessels that are impregnable to shot thrown against their sides. In her gun, which pointed out at the bow, about ight feet below the surface of the water, was a long steel cylinder. This was tho projectile which in war would be ; sn p plied with a torpedo at the conical- shaped tip, to explode on strising the side of a ship and blow her to pieces. in tbe experiments a net win be low ered into the sea to serve as a target and fired at distances of from 300 to 500 feet. On the bow of the little craft, which was almost submerged, wero two wooden floats to support the net in the water. Tbe projectiles are hollow and made so that they will float. The tendency to rise is so carefully adjusted as not to in terfere with the flight under the water or to destroy the aim. They are expected to come to the surface about 700 feet from the vessel, and they will pursue a perfectly horizontal course for 500 feet at least. They will travel the first 800 feet in three seconds or a little less. They weigh 1500 pounds each. In the experiments there will be no occasion to use tbe torpedoes. : The object will be to test the distanoe, of. flight and the ac curacy of aim. The experiments hitherto have been conducted in still water, and the firing off Sandy Hook will be the first deep sea practice, w - Tbe .Destroyer has attained a speed of seventeen knots an hour, and her fullest capacity has not been reached. Although her null proper is almost entirely under water, she is seaworthy, for everything can ue oattenea down and no water can get into her. Blowers ventilate the boat perfectly. All her working apparatus is below water and it would be next to lm possible to disable her in an engagement. If the iron house built on top of her and her smoke-stack were Knocked off en tirely it would make no difference. She would be as serviceable as ever.' A steel plate eighteen inches thick is set in front of the pilot's position to deflect balls if they should etrike there. The pilot is entirely surrounded by iron-work, and looks out through a small hole on a level witb his eyes to get his bearings. He can touch off the gun when he gets in exact range and immediately back off to safety. There is a dummy plug at the opening in tbe boat wbere tbe proiectile goes out. This is shot away with the projectile, and a valve closes over the hole to keep out the water. Only enough water to fill the gun can get in anyway, and this can be quickly pumped out by a steam siphon. so there is no danger from this source. There is no room to spare on the boat. but sufficient for the uses reauired. The ueslroyer is tbe only craft tbat shoots a torpedo under water. N. Y. Times. Daniel Webster's Brother Zeke. "Did Webster consider any of his brothers and sisters as possessed of ability?" "Oh, yes. His eldest brother. Ezek- iel,he thought, was a great man, and when he made the speech again st Hayne of South Carolina, which made him the popular hero of the whole union, Web ster said : 'now l wished that poor .bzekiel had lived till after this speech. I know he would have been so gratified.' Tbe fact was that Ezekiel sacrificed him- sell to let Aan go to college, no more than one of the boys oould go, and Ezekiel said: 'Dan likes college, and let him stay there. The old man finally sent ce&e to college, and he became a good deal of a lawyer. He had to teach a school in Boston to pay his expenses, and among his pupils were Edward Everett and George Ticknor. The Web ster boys had a hard time in their youth through the poverty of their parents." " VV bich of these boys was the strong- er minded?" 'Dan had impudence, but the people in New Hampshire who knew them both say tnat he was not as capable as his brother Ezekiel. Z9ke was a sensitive fellow, with a real, sincere, true mind. Dan was a splendid fellow, but tricky. When he was 49 years old Zeke Webster ftll dead in the midst of an argument in the court house at Concord. He had the tbe heart disease. Dan was a hunter, a fisherman, a Bohemian, and, as you often see in some families, he probably rose by bantering Ills big brother. In other words, Zeke Webster's shrieking qualities forced Aan oil. "Tliera are a good many anecdotes about Dan Webster, treasured up in Portsmouth, N. H. One of the best qualities Webster had at the Portsmouth bar was his audacity, which he mixed with a good deal of dignity and defer ence, ne had maae a specialty, of public speaking, and poke with his whole tem perament, and with a good deal of acting power. The jadires were particularly straok with his fine bearing, his gravity, and sometimes with his wit, The first case he tried was for the tres pass of one man's horse on another's pasture, field. Webster on- this little case began his argument with his eyes on the floor, as if he had committed some part of his speech to memory. He kept moving his feet, too, but his voice rolled out so strong and fine that it filled the whole house, and when he saw that he was heard and listened to, he began to throw his head back and open his eyes, and his countenance shone. The people were tramping into tbe court room, and Webster continued to speak. and the old judges were very much im pressed indeed." iid not Mr. Webster owe a good deal to his appearance ?" Oh. ves. He was a larca man clrvnA to six feet high, with raven black hair, deep, dark, intrepid eye, and he could shake his head and hair like a lion. He generally looked as if he had nothing to w T-i i v. Ir- orATtr Vn r n a i$ Via m-n 1s3 ni tremendously. He owed a great deal to bis appearance and to his voice. These advantages enabled him to think in trepidly. He soon got to see tbat the moment he chose to speak he would be listened to, so. he took his own. time about it, and therefore his thoughts en larged like the volume of his voico. People said that Zeke Webster was the best lawyer, but tbat he couldn t vpeak like Dan. Indeed, Zeke appeared to be afraid of Dan, and never rope to his good proportions till Dan went down to Mas sachusetts. Cin. Enquirer. An Aui't Brain. Well may Darwin speak of the brain of. an ant as one of the most wondrous particks of matter in tbe world. We are apt to think that it is impossible for so minute a piece of matt teroposr as tbe necessary complexity required for the discharge of such elaborate function. The microscope will no - doubt tshow some details in the ant's brain, but these fall hopelessly short of revealing the re finement which the ant's brain must really hava. The microscope is not ade quate to show us tbe texture of matter. It l-as been one of the grtat disoverie of modern limes to enable us to form some nniflrtrio;il estimate of the exqni-site delicacy of the fabric which we know as inert m'attrr. Water, or air, or iron may ! jje ui via ea nnu &ui-oiviaeJ, Oct the pro cess cannot be carried on indefinitely. There is a well dsfiued limit. We ate even able to make some approximation to tho number of molecules in a given mass cf matter. Sir W. Thomson has estimated that the number of atoms in a cubic inch of air is to be expressed by the figure 3, followed by no fewer than twenty ciphers. The brain of the ant doubtless contains more atoms than an equal volume of air; but even if we suppose them to be the same, and if we take the size of an ant's brain to be a little globe one thousandth of an inch in diameter, we are able to form some estimate of the. number of atoms it must contain The number is to be expressed by writing down 6, and fol lowing it br eleven ciphers. We can imaffinft the atoms, grouped in so many various ways that even the complexity of me ant s brain may oe mtemyiuju wuou we have so many units to deal with. An illustration will nrobablv make the ar gument clearer. Take a million and a half of little black marks, put them in a certain order, and we have a wondrous result Darwin's "Descent of Man. This book merely consists of about 1, 500,000 letters, placed one after the other in a certain order. Whatever be the complexity of the ant's brain, it is still hard to believe that it could not bo fully desonbed in 400.0UU volumes, eaou as large aa Darwin's work. Yet the num ber of molecules in the ant's brain is at least 400.000 times as creat as the num ber of letters in the memorable volume in question. f Longman's Magazine. Ancient Jamestown. - Changes in the James river have made an island of Jamestown, completely separating it from the mainland, and about all that remains of tbe first Eng lish settlement of Virginia is the dis mantled tower of the old church. It wad here that Pocahontas embraced the Christian f aith',"and was baptized by the name of Rebecca. The fount used on that occasion now stands in the. -chancel of Christ church, Williamsburg. Here alsoPocahontas was married in 1613 to John Rolf. 'A low brick wall encloses the ground occupied by the ruined tower and foundation of the church; and tomb stones, some broken and scattered, some leaning against the wall, and all with in scriptions nearly if not quite illegible, have long since ceased to indicate where lies the dust of those who bore their names. Two hundred yards below the ruins and one hundred . from the river bank-is the stately old mansion built by John Ambler oyer a hundred years ago. It is the only residence on the island, is in fln preservation, and occupied by Col. H. D. B. Clay, formerly of New xork, who owns Jamestown, which con sists of 1700 acres, and is between two and three ' miles in length and three- quarters of a mile in width. N: Y. Sun. Methodical . Hangmen. Mar wood , the English hangman, used to Boothe bis victims by whispering words of encour agement to them. "Come on. now," he WAn Iri oav IrinHls I An r. h n ic vnn and it will all be over in a minute. It vv v as v 4MUU1J a r v u u vuf OT.'II Kn nil Tn.t In... it " A wen anown sheriff in Arkansas is equally as kind, some time ago he en tered tbe cell of a man who was to be hanged the following dav, and said: "That little affair of onrs comes off to morrow, you know, and I hope that you will be quite ready for the performance. Hold yourself pretty stiff when the cap is drawn. Then you will go down straight and won't dangle. It's very un comfortable to dangle, and you will find tbe stiff method preferable." Six lovely achoolaa'ams were out row ing on the placid Monongabela last even ing. A bad man on shore, who was a bad boy a few years ago, instead of tak ing off his hat as the boat went by, sim ply remarked, "Behold tho whaling fleet." Mr. It costs me Sif 00 per jtar tompcort ray familr. To make thti support rare after my disease. I bare taken aoo.uuu in lite insurance. Tney ougbt to make six per eeot Interest on that amount of money, which would aive tem the needed $30no per annum. My premiums are now lm than II 100 per year, ana aecreaf ids: ana dt oue or more par menu during life, aa tie r-ae may fce, 1 fecu'e W aonaam for my lamuy. lor an unlimited time. I raunot cee how duty acd inrestnieiit can oe more nappuy Dienaea. DON'T BUY BOSS BOOTS UNLESS YOU WANT THE BEST. SEE THAT OUT. NAME IS ON EVERY PAIR. AKIN. SELLING & CO. lmh wan toil m erery mwu iu Oregon ana Wstiingrton to aell the new improved NO. SBVKN American ewiv Machine. John B. Gar. ricon General Agent. 167 TMrd btreet, Fortl&cd. Oregon. - ' Roaring cataracts ot honest onolausc. foaming oceans of fun, and the best show of the season now being held at tbe Elite theatre, Portland, Oregon. Regular pri'.es 25 and 50 conts. Frank G. A bell, the beat ot Okk u ar'1t- is al. ways prepared to mtke paotocrxphs in the highest style of the art. at his gallery, 1C7 iri stive', i'ort- land. Call at his art ruomj when in tno city. Take ffm. Plunder's Oregon DIood PuriCer. Garrison repairs all kind of sewing inarhirea. U. fi. t. (U-Sew Merle Ne. XO. show easKs. AIXO.V, BKRSSTKIX CO., Fruut and stark-snow canes or all kinos on luud or mxle to order, at San .Francisco pi lot a. THE I SiTKKJf A.T1 USAL, Ctorner Third and K. Tne best one dollar any bouse on the coaitu- Fasseugs s mna Diufue conveyed to and from ail trauia aoa boats tree. is. Lwlnton, proprietor. ' MUftlO MOUSK. D. W. raENTICE, lOT Pint Street-Leading mniuc aeaier. nai)on,orgun, sneet music ana every thing In the mnio line. It. Y. JKWEl.Br CQ. G A. BOVE, Alanncer, lOT Flat Street I'iatnondH, watches and Jewelry. The Hack ford Kai'roiMt watch, uonntry ordera solicited. , . BEAL.OBAVKU. V. H. r BTi, IV. us Uak street seal engrav er, manufacturer or notary and lodge seals, brass audsieel stamps, steel tetters, tc; rubber stamps ami Kiencirs. 1UROWABE. 0U.OlT01f. SMITH eft COI.KM.4K. n. H "c4d Importers and a -alem in iju.Klt rs' Hardware, mevuauuar tool, cutlery, f.irmli a- tools and niarotelzed alute mantels Country orders so licited. UAIIBI.i: OBK If ERESe VONPKIS, 4T Start. Monnmer.ls, j uludm, Metuiftcouea, etc., luramaeu in 11.11 an ana American marbie. Oonntiy orders tilled promptly. freuU for prkx-s and U signs. Kv PI RE MA K ERTf Wasbimrtou. Vost A l"u.r. Froiia. Manufacturers of Pilot orparl. Nudx Orders front the trade boiiJited ami promptly al ti4l to. newc. Mutter. Huston. Hucnr ana rnoe riv cmcr. ATTt W V RYU. O. J. K lANKn Y. Aitori'ev um OounHe;or at '..v (loom A llr.bam', bHllrllnr. Lenii UUKlne. oe. isiiiiitiir t letter latent fur luvenuo'ia. beiura "fjif 'MlKv nr I'l tw I urrs. TlXHrlH'tf. JUT UKCErVKll A r OAItRIHOX'H KAVING Machine ntor. Ir7 Piilrd street. Portland. Ore. Kim, WJ ca.v (.1 Hnii.vLu tl wiiifi Machines. Dur- v " two and on Jvuf yrs' ose Jn trem the If o-r.e-l.ol-t has forced its wny to the front. lis snprl-r n erlts are covt w.-H known to the pubih:. Akoii'.s wanted to sell lo evere twn m firesrnn. H. & G. GUMP & CO.; M.VNl'FA.tTUREr.8 OF . Picture 'Frame Mouldlnjf, Mirror?, Art Uoofl, JBie 9 Third street (Alaaworth JBloek), OttTllsLWD.OK. 2 Poruautt Bus Directorr raniYirttr o I .... . rr unucii i I. ' .4 f 5 . i.i,w. j -m- MPS Mliaii'icJ S3 f FAIRBANKS' ' 'I STANDARD SCAIiES roa . - I -WAREHOUSE, STORE AND FARM USE. OBAOr AJVD tTOBl TBVOKA j Writ for Prfe Uati I L. H. PABXEE, Agent, m Krlh Tres atreet,' rortlmaJ. Ortm- TTi f7J If3 1 r1 aiesiri Extract), i - 3 3 3 tt! wca&iM laffltlT! AWD (Pppiospirj), a Tsule loi lis EiOQi, 1&2 . rocifor lis Bnix i 'Anotlior Great Victory in IXedletJ Soteno 1 I'l WortS Kiliions to iU E-nsia-FaSHyi CELERY, BEEF AND UION Is acknowledged by all Pliyslclaiw to : bi the Greatest Medical Cempeuii yet discovered. j la m never f-lllntr ore rr IVenfalala auid Werveus leblllly. - CHEAPEST HOUSE FOB ' I i AMERICAN WATCHES. Elgin, Sprlugfleld or Waltham Watch, lm S onaee Sliver CSe 413 In a woee Silver Oiita. ., ,. t& SO - la 41 outee Silver Co. . IT &0 I mean basl nou, and nsnuitee these OeanlB - AoMricsa Movemeats mn Intltatlen. Also fall stock of j I JEWU1KT1 CLOCKS and 8PCCTACXJB9. Goods sent "C O T)." to any part of the country. JOOJr A. IlKCH. ! YrUhaker and Jeweler 149 Front St, (opposite the Kanond), Portland. Orcron. 1 J FRANK WOOLSEY, J. N. KNOWXES Ban Francisco Portland. Shipping & Commission Merchant. CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED. ! WOOL A SPECIALTY lUurs. Machinery, Farm ltrplements and all kladii o . eapiuiesiunusneu on snort Douce. Offlt: 107 FK0XT STEE Portland, Oregon. Reference: First Natlona Bank. fttattfib 1851. $Ccdi 4 (Bo. cfmpcttincj QOficCzsaCz Qiugghh fffwio SxUctcU, tE,(t, Stc.-, &X J 9Tcx 92 and 94 cFictit tzU4 Cot.. StatU cPoztCandf Ozcgcn. GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES, if PATENT SMOKE &VENTILATING CHIMNEYS, TERRA C0TTA CHIMNEY PIPE&TOPS ETCfl 7t mm Fall Set of Teeth for $10. Beat Set, S1SJ fTlEETH FILLED AT LOW RATES; ATTSFAt -a. tton gtiaranieea, Uas administered. Heiital grad nates. ruiDirrv linos., Portland. Oregon. oom 54, union Block, stark street entrance "oFles1 Sire Cure for Gatarrji' J1QCTID OR DRY, PRICK fl 00; "ATMOSPHERIC! -i IiiRiiJUators," price SOc. Dry Cure and Insoflla tors mailed ou rwetpt or price, with full tirection tor ime.etc . , SKIDMORK fc Co., Druiriflstji 11 First niet. Honiara, w. irWtle Aeeits for tUfl CINCHONA BUUB 1 (.Hc iu nta Kfffctive Hemedy fjr IMpso nia (Hlceplcssues.-). No Greater Success has I e in and bo coiiTiu'cftilJ Try.itYctV W CO. - juilil JL ! i TtTTTT t is. racinc USE HOSE PILLS. J ' Kf ofa. f"!'.'J:: , il ""7l-'.--i - '- .Trr CHAS: KOI1N & 107 Tklrd St-, PORTLAND, OREGON. JOHN B. GARRISOri,Propr. All the Tjeadlnjr Sewing- Machines, OIL. Ntt-dle, Attachment and Cienu- lue Part f or aalc All kinds of Sewlnpr Machines Repaired anl Warranted. CSENKKAI. AGENT FOR PORTLAND BUSINESS COLLEGE, N. E. Cor. Second and Yamhill Sis., FORTLAHD. - OREGOU, A. P. Akmstrono, J. A. Wtsco, Principal. Penman and SccrcUry Dispel for lis Easiness Education of Eotli Saxea. Admitted on any week day of the year. pehtWORKks- .-. .- Of all kinds executed lo order at reasonable rates.' Satisfaction pnarantced. f " The Cbllego "Joiirnul, containing tnfortnaUon of the torse of stuiiv, rate of tuilin, time to cntirr, etc., and cuts of plain nnd ornaincoUl cn ni.in.Hhip, tree. F. W. DEAKBOUN & CO. Mauufactnrers and Dealers In DOORS, WIHDOVS, BUIIDS, GLASS, Front Street, Portland, Or. 107 USE ROSE PILLS, Skajbes ! Peck & Snyder American CI nil. Harney & Berrj Iron AUsO C11KA.P SIDEWALK. KOLLEU IHATEk. Send for Catalogue to THOMPSON, DeliART & CO., iacposTJcss or iiaiunmri iivu nuu iicvi, 1 1 ok uu iikaici iu. vnui wi ivuu uiftiy uiai.sniunu urn Wagoomaier Tools. - . W2TReTteed Prices since completion of Northtm Pacific Railroad. ' r .... I. F. POWERS, FURNITURE MANUFACTURER, Tbe targHt and stoat eotaplete aaortaeat of Sao, BMXllaBi aad I.w.i1tt4 farmltaro la lbs. etty, Ponlllna of Parlor, Kl ttrary, lHaiag and (ubr Mots, Item of l'.an sa mjr oara wna nractnrew A.lao a la ore and well selected stock of tnarpetg, Oil Clolli, Curtains, Upholstery, Wall Taper and Bedding. acnooL bfskji a. aprxiALTT. IotendlDf pnrchars will cnnsnlt their lcterents by liwpectiiwr tay stock berr! pnrchrtnc KOS. 185, 183 AND 190 FIRST ST. AND 184 SECOND ST., PORTLAND, OK. Paelorr on "Water St.. be, tt ontcomerr and tarrtsoa. U9 FIBST RXlXEXrr. "Wlioletilo n.ul TEAS. COFFEES, SPICES, BUKIIHT POVDERS, EXTRACTS, ic As we are the on'v house of the kind !n Orepon, rarth-s from the country would do wrll to avail tnemstlvvs of the opportunity to huy at ran KranclHCO prtoe. W gnarantee nalisfuction. Orders by mall promptly tilled, iend for prices. Tea, CoUe and Oploa EJcrchnnta . irAULlSIIKD as. WILLIAM JiECK & SON WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALKH IX GUNS, PISTOLS, CUTLERY AND SKATES. States, Box lug GIotcs, Ma.sks. Ion abates, t-aiy'a Holler jnaaaaiiaa 1 and eond St., - - M -. JT aW. j. I narvi . Poruviiui IJiirk) and Califuniia Grape lir (tlie'aTcdhot hillt), U fotnn ofH'alarlil recojtled, nnd nothing ever introduced giTlng such .unqualified S.itLsfactIo:io' For sale hy Dropglsts and Wine Merchants. LMEFcDING & CO., Agents for Iho Pacific Coast, San Francisco, Col Sole Agents Tor tho Northwestern Coast. 44 Front St., Portlund, Or, F. t. Axtn, 1 " BUTJiD OTH. See that Our Kame la on Etcit V&ir, Portliuid. Orvn. BUSINESS EBUCATJ0: ! XortaweM aomer Second and Snlraon 8 in, W. a JTAMfcS, Principal. y.aaUMB03,K Tbe C C. Journal (new 3tlon), Kivlns full ir.toiLi.ba tun. seiitraaa. a.qj JAMK dt CHAVBEM, PorUaud. Or. i O. iiux tlX L. FELD3IAKN & CO., ' Importers and Wholesale Dealers In AYooden ami WUlow Warcj . And Manufacturers of Brooma and Xiru.ulxout Ko. I2 Tront atraet, PorUaad, Oc USE ROGE PILLO. and Wood Top Skates, Hash and Pislon Holler Rink M:utc. Portland, Or., POKTLANn. OB , . Hetnil DonlorH In Foils Indian Clubs, Ik-I Is. fkatea, Hecfe b 8ajdera Aatomatle k.le ssaner aaawa. - - - - - Portlaad. Orrttoa. fitly. A most delklitrul Tonic, and Uiscc?, Djspepsla antl Infioni- CK) TO THX Skates !