I 2tw : HERS. i. I!? One year..... 3 OC Si r monthe. ........ 1 50 Three months. . . . . .... . . . ; , . . 1 DC J"Adverti8iiir rates furnished on appli cation to this oSlce. Kates rrasonalde. . We rib prepared to do job work of all kinds wit'li dispatch, on reasonable terms l. 1 , 1 . , -' "" 1 SDTRO TUNNEL". On the evening of the th insi,-a quarter before eleven o'clock, the last big blast with cartridges of giant pow der broke away the narrow strip of rock which separated the Sutro tunnel from the deep level of the savage mine, and befitting the occasion, Mr. Sutro was himself the first person to pass through from the tunnel inco the mine, and thence up the shaft to the surface. It was a gigantic undertaking, and f rom the breaking of the ground, October 19, 1869 the anniversary of the surren der of Obrnwallis to "Washington, at XT t. ' . L it. . . . iM ... ii. x orivLuwu, py-me-way unin jiow, wio vast enterprise has been urged forward under difficulties which all the time developed the indomitable spirit and prodigious resources of its projector in ; overcoming obstacles that would have appalled almost any. other man. f He ; had something ? moret unyielding than nature to meet and conquer the pow erful antagonism ' of immense wealth "combined in solid and obdurate, mass to oppose him which neither diamond drills could penetrate nor giant powdef blast from before him. But he ; lias won .the brave battle j by pluck and push aided by that chief essential, gold coin. He has driven . lua . tunnel through about 20,000 feet of base rock from Sutro, in Carson Yalley, the en trance point, to the shaft of the Savage, which opens near the peak of Mount Davidson. The total cost of the work is estimated at nearly four millions of dollars. ;Hayi&g now tapped the Corn stock, Mr, Sutro. will doubtless work northward to intersect! the bonanza mines, and search the utmost ore limit in that direction. Whether he will also penetrate . south toj through: and beyond the Chollar-Potosi, is the prob lem only himself or his successors, can or will probably solve. The paramount questions of the present, jnow that" his tunnel has struck the opening to the great mining shafts, are : i What will he do with it? and, how Vilj it pay ? As it stands, however, it is the prodigy of mining and engineering enterprises, and has made the name of itsjprojectoi con spicuous, if not famous. If it shall realize his prophesies jand hopes, he need not fear of lack of either fame or fortune. And, in any event, he has demonstrated his ability lo subdue na ture and overcome the power of gold to oppose and defeat him. II The effect of the tunnel upon the stock market will be an interesting and material mat ter for dealers as well as share-holders, directors and managers to take into account. I . ; Warning to American G iiils.--01ive;Logan relates that an American girl went over to Paris wih her brother the other day, and the instant she was left alone, with her companion in the carriage, a middle-aged Frenchman insulted her. She toM j her brother when he returned, and there was a fear ful outburst The Frenchman gave itim his card, and said he was deeply sorry, and said he would abide by the decision of the other as io the conse quences torensue for his jmistake, but certainly he never suspected that mademoiselle was a lady, as she was painted ! The brother appealed to the best authorities in Paris in these mat ters, to learn what the code was under tliese circumstances, and all the men of the J ockey Chab., told him that if his sistera eyelashes: were blackened and her cheeks roughed, ho could have no redress, as these-, practices! were never followed by "une-demoiselle de monde." .- : ( - 1 m.mm ' i 1 -. ' ' The Affable jMan.--A mother and babe were among the many passengers waiting at a Western depot recently. Shft hail tli child careful ! vrrannml nn and this fact attracted the! attention of a big fellow with a three-story overcoat, and a rusty satchel in his hand. Sit ting down beside her, he remarked: w "vjoiu weamer ior. sucn iinue people, isn't itr She faintlv nodded. "Does he seem to feel it much!" con tinued the man. She shook her head. , "Is he a healthy childTf he asked, seemingly greatlv inteiestetl "He was up to it a few rnjoments ago," she snapped out, "but Fin afraid he has smelled whiskey so much around here, that he'll have the . delirium tremens bofcre night!" j The man got right up land walked out of the room, and was afterwards seen buying cloves. j A JrAINFUL UASE. In with the Madras famine a is reported from Bellary. pine years was convicted The- J udgo said that the connection painful case IA child aged of murder. 'child's little sister, the deceased girl, was at : the point of death from lack of nourish- mcnt and the mother was prostrated by fever and unable to feed it. At last, distracted by its crying, the unfortu tnate woman put the child into the arms of the accused, who, bf the mother's directions, took it out and ihrew it into a weiL ine J uago rccommenaed pardon: , a A schoolgirl in Ann j Arborjtook her lovers , as . a ., theme fr an essay, which she read on commenbement day, much to the astonishment of the assem bly. She gave the names of the lovers. and minutely desciibed tjheir vailed manner of courtship. PLTIASANT II cstne years since we reecwc:'i i , ,tat how in twentv years Un man to marie a comfortable fortune. He had a wife of taste, enterprise .and industry. lie would buy a farm which had been run down "by neglect and . slovenliness-chouse unpainted, fences broken down and the front yard a hog range. He could always buy cheap, as such owners were always in debt and had to sell. He would then repair it by painting and other small but important Jteins. But he said his main dependence wa3 on his wife. She - would soon, have the old garden brilliant with flowers, while she would improvise cheap rustic porches or piazzas, and have them laugh ing with the sweet - vines. Then . the place would be sold for . nearly double the price of purchase six months pre vious. Then he would buy again, thus buying and selling continually. We do not, however, introduce these things to be followed in all respects, but to il lustrate the increased value attached to a farm adorned by a little taste and in dnstry. But that is not all. There is real enjoyment in having the home in which one is to ljve and die adorned in a manner - which no gorgeous : uphol- stering nor gilded mouldings sustain ing cosily lace can compete with. The dark-green ivy-leaves and vines, which can "be taught to twine about walls, pictures and windows, add refinement and comfort and contentment to any home. And yet how cheap :.' these priceless companion ornaments,: to which Solomon in all" his glory could not compare! Plant flowers and train the vines if you would have the world envy you in your home, and seek to obtain it by which you can command, but which will ever perpetuate its beauty. How few there are who reallv appreciate- the materialized smiles of God unless they can buy them with money. A Fettered Female. A man whose every look proved how hungry and penniless he was, halted before an eating stand at the Central Market to let his month water for a while. The woman called out: "Come be jogging along! You won't get any food here unless you have the cash." "My dear woman," he confidentially began, "I am not hungry; I just left the breakfast table, after the heartiest meal I ever ate. ; I was not looking at your beauti ful meats, your lovely cakes or your rich and uicy pies, but at yourself." "What you looking at me fori" "I was wondering," he said "if you were any relation to Lady Clare, of England. You" have the same brown eyes, same beautiful hair, same sweet accent." "1 never knew her," replied the woman, as her face began to clear up. "Didn't, eh? Well, I never saw two faces nearer alike in their sweet expression. I wish I had your portrait painted on ivory I really wTsh I had " She handed him half a pie and a peice of meat, as he sauntered off, she began hunting around for a peice of broken mirror. r A Quiet Little Woman The Eu reka Sentinel tells how a lady (they are all ladies in Eureka), upon peing insul ted by some, coal-burners, proceeded: She simply let fly with her right duke, countered on the nearest one's ear, and sent him to grass in the most approved style. The second came in for a stinger in the eye, and the third, completely intimidated, beat a retreat around the corner. Then the barkeeper sung out, "take your partners for a waltz," and she vacated the gory field, and was soon f whirling in the "mazy" with an admirer, to whom she confidentially remarked: "I'm one of the quietest little women that ever slung a hoof in Eureka; but when I'm riled, I'm bad and; don't you forget it." He promised not to. - Short But Heavy At Grand Lake, New Brunswick, there lives an old man who will be 98 years of age on the 10th of next October, named Michael Mc Geary,, who reads the " newspapers readily, even when printed in the smallest, type, and whose great-great-grand.daughter, a washer-woman, who waits upon him, is but three feet, lack ing an eight of an inch, in height. He has a great-granddaughter, who does not live with him, who is just three feet tall, but whose great weight of 292 pounds renders her incapable of doing any ; work, and pi-events her from standing on her feet more than fifteen minutes at a time. N. Y. Star. . George TuoarsoN, an Englishman, started from Grindelwald, in Switzer land, intending to ascend the Faulhorn without & guide. Taking the path over the Holzmatzteitf and besoming giddy, he got into such a position in the Knie brecher that he dared neither advance nor retreat. Here he remained five days and six nights, subsisting on such herbs and roots as. he could gather. At last,, growing desperate, he contrived to slide down the mountain on his back, and crawled to a cottage near the Abuss Alp, where he got food and shelter. A man who has. the-habit of giving way to depression is on the road to ruin. When trouble comes upon him, instead of arousing his energies to combat it, he weakens, andhis faculties grow dull and his judgement becomes obscured and he sinks in the- skmght of despair. And if anybody pulls him safe on solid ground, he stands there dejected and discouraged, and is pretty sure to waste the means of help which have been giv en him. During the recent windstorm of a rotary character, in Australia, a farm of sixty acres, containing wheat, , was lifted up and carried seven miles away, falling upon another, wheat-field! The owner of the wind ; tossed fam has brought suit against the gentleman in whose field 'was set down, for the value of the wheat, and the lucky man refuses to compromise with him. Won derfullt SiLENT.-s-Harrison county, Tex., boasts of a man of 20 who never spoke a word to anybody in. his life except his mother and sister. SO - HAVE I." ' X practical joker, and a pru dent man withal, had gone to a cafe and ordered a three mas- (ed schooner of beer, when a friend appeared at the door and beckoned him to go out for a moment. The intended drinks er is afraid that in his absence some one might get away with the hpiud, when- a k happy idea struckj him, and he wraps a scrap Of paper around the han dle ofj the " mug ' .and thus inscribed: "I have spit in this." With a light heart he hastens to the door, communicates with, with his friend and returns to find written in another ha;d beneath his own: "So .have I !" The validity of wedlock under cer tain circ u instances, without a marriage ceremony, has leen affirmed anew by J udge Ashman of Philadelphia. The suit wa4 alout the $40,000 that John Simon, dying intestate, had left. For thirty-fejur years before his death he had cohabited with a. woman without having 'been married to her, but she had always passed as his wife, and she and her jchildren demanded a share of the property. The children by a for mer wif contested the claim, but have lost their case. Wisconsin has just passed aj law legalizing the marriage of . i .1 . i. : t any man anu :Woman wuo suujuy agree to live together as husband and wife. A fetupid-lortking old mule, attched to a milk wagon stood in a shed in Cambridge the other da', ea ing oats out of a grain-box A bad by stole up atid threw a handfu of torpedoes in among the; gr lin. The next mouthtul the hungry beast took was follow ed by an explosion that set mm upon - ii3 hind legs. Ilia exit trom tlfe i?hed was so sudden that nothing but a harness buckle or two was lett to tell the tale of the dire calamity. -Boston Qlobo. Yonkers had a Fourth of Julv Ora tor who baid : "And while the heart of ourn.tion continues to throb, while the hollyhock of liberty dissimulates its fragrance over the area of our domain, while th( s gratitude cf the tons of soil I mean sons of toil recalls the heroism of those who bought and fled excuse me, I should have said fought and bled for us, so long will we treasure 'the noble heresy bequeathed to us by our bat-riotio posterity." Prometheu3 chained to the rock occupied an enviabte post tioncompared with the Congress man wljo. is compelled to remain in Washington while some rival is stealing his district away from him. A resident of Lo& Anceles now gathering ripe tomatoes from a twenty-foot ladder. The vine, which is ' twenty-five feet high, has been trained op the sunny side of the house, and shows- blossoms and fruit in every shade of growth. A Novelty. The, latest Parisian novelty i stockings with an ace of hearts oij the instep. EASTERII HARDWARE, -ISDLFPINCfc HUBS, ; RIMS, SPOKES, AXLES, ETS. ADDRESS E. J. NORTHRUP &; CO. PORTLAND, OREGON. Si.IOKEDr.IEAT, FOR THE H0LLIDATS SMOKED HAMS,B ACON AND Freshly cured and of FINE QUALITY. The undt reigned would esy to the citi- zona of Roseburg tu&t he has jost eared the finest Jot of Hame, Bacon and Beef ever offered to this market; and that no one will fail to pure ihae tk& eaxne when once they examine it , Prices i than ever. JCOCBITZER OppOS'' ' Bca Ik's STaloou,' opposite M etropolitaa Hotel, Rosebnrg BEATH, Prof rietor. GEO. THE FINEST OF LIQUORS & CIGAR3 WI XL'S, Always on hand, and io con section -with he saloon will be found a rrrn.KSpr billiard noon mAJSD : s TE IN-P IN ALLEY, Where botli health these m parting fame siay be iodnlfed u. SUBSCRIBE FOH Tt QLaSTBB Hill THB OULT PJLPER C02fTAlKTHO SPECIAL Disilatclics by Tegrapli JB BT TXJt THK BEST ONLY $2.50 PER ANNUM NEATLY EXECUTED, ONTIIE MOST REASONABLE TEEMS, LARGEST CIRCOLAT I0 ft- .:. 1 Y m; r - - - B iJmA i fiii w"- inr nriiiiiii "mi mmr I 3 . , fr i ' i We nc the If. ir J ki lie .. - ... : Elwood ISeliBinoer Haryeser. The 5i:n 1art, fi 13 i,i i H a 1 t't B.iV T.ia Lv. ' Vr&li M chine yet known. N Sprin-r .r "Tr't'rs" toBiw-k or it out. The only Binder that can be conshlei d "PEiti'E ." l" Th Bnuu-ruio bin t a;l ill tirain tlw .U.ic!itimcani;aW Ev ry Farmer can cut and Bind Lis Harvest mo.' biro4:imn.is' n-cary HAWLSY, DJD . & Co. P at laud, Oregon. i. HE II AS THE LAKGEST rars mm Gia Candies and i Notions ever brought to kosetsuugjaxd he will not bk i UNDERSOLD. w B Tit? t API r fPY Keps constan-tly oa lrand a general ussorttni-nt cf EXTBA FINE GKBOCEBIES, t , Wood, Willov and iGlatsare, ' ' : ' ' - -- . , - '-':.- ; .' . " : .:r ' ' . . - - ', . -: - . ; . -, '. . "; . '. .,' ; . ' - r -; . , . -. , . " " - ; , . OBOOKBRT AND! CORDAGE .A FULL Such as are Tots & Fmm Mbtmles To please both Sole Agent tor ! Pacific Threshing j Machine Go. Includinjy the FLT02T SZZ-F0LS S-Buy8 and sells Legal Tenders, furnishes Checks on Portland, and procures Drafts oa San Francisco it sums to suit all require meuts. j , E. J. P LGE. M. D. I OFFICE In Pag & Smith's Drug Store OAKLAND, OREGON. Given to all Diseases of Females. Dr. Pa has had a large experience in the trsatment of the diseases peculiar to few males, and feels assured: that be can give satisfaction in tho Uianagtrnient. of thtse troubles. .- palls to any part of the country will re prompt aueiticvi D; ill b i n fj ... s r . i ; A'D BEST STOCK OF r tv STOCK DF. required. old aqd young. the celebrated well known ' . S0BSE-FOWSB. DEPOT . IIOTE , OAKLAND, OREGON, ;. .r - ... .-. .-. .. .. - v ,.r-; RICHAPiD THOMAS, rrop. millS' HOTEL HAS BEEN ESTAC A listed for a number of years, and has become jvery popular- with the tn filing 'ublit.. !Fifft-clas- SLEEPING ACCOMMODATIONS A t J thJ Table supplied with the best ll marfet-t aftoTds. Hotel at the depc "Mho Railroad. 1 1 t f v. ; W sr. ? r- : v ' : II n Rl H B 1 fi S (i ka 1 f " : Z i 7 Ki , MAiIONY'3 SALOON,; 'srtt t lit I silntdTtjt't, C Ilia J AS. MA HON KY, Pririetor THIS KINKJST OF IV LUES, lQRi)&3--:4r CIO A S. la UonlhS county, ad the b-4 BILLlAliD TABLE IN THE STAT Kept, in proper repair. y S2TTart if 1 raveling on the railroad tviM fitui this place vt-ry handy to vi&it du ir. the $ijp:nj! oi' th traia Rt thn Oaki b4 lit jH.t, (!iv tue a call." M if JAS; MA1IONE1 . iff . Lu C? A. AL JU. Uji f , Opposite .Abrahani & Brow n, Oakland, Ogf ....UK Kit Ijr." .. S loves and Tiiiwaxo AliD FA3S8 'in I?lE:.-nTS. ' Keeps always nn hand a Ancfls always reaily tv se'l foods lor cask at prices 5ttt ail will hepat'.sSedf. QtJirK iALES AKD READI BETUBKS Is my mottp.Now is the tijue for your W 3 t C V " IT- V ll Cm Itfcto JJooia tScorj BOOKS, BOC. ' ' . AXI) mm ST&TQ'33n3Z Constantly on hand a full and. coir p!et eioclt of .. - SCHOOL B00H For Common and Graded KchooTs; WRITING PAPER, PENS, INK, P? CIL Also the nsost popular and LATEST BJOIIi O? T.Ii TIM And Boofes in sets of all the Topolar uthors r:.;'.V ': -j . i . - Song Books, SSect Mcsl "Th Latest" Ifyrnn Bcqp, bibles imT:;::zv:z, Daily and Weekly I t w ?j i ;-?'3 MAGAZINES, PICK-PJALIS And all the Noreltks , Will farnisU any Paper ct ZZi.z.r.z& Club rates, and any book net Irx c-z? c.zS.i we will send and pit on slior' nr-iL':-, We have the nlst asi tst err-cU ii goods in Soutnern C reoa Who will help us to proeioia iatentsts of this community, Oall aud see our stock. ' 34tf ; du. j. oor r.urr. HAS TAKEN ROOLIS OVT.T1 TIT" V. York Cash Store, wl, ere ha vl'.l I . f prepared to Fill, Ciein ar.1 IZttrt :i '1 ; 1. Nerves destroyed, at d Pffi":.! v i!, I without pain. le v ill ir;. a f.;l cr;, tial setts. .II worl; doae l.i a Tcr':: : : , ; like manner, asd at reasocaV.a rs.:ts. : - ,