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About Evening capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1888-1893 | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1889)
THE CAPITAL ETENEN"G JOURNAL. J an Mli. I'UIIMHHKDDAIIA.KXCKITHUNDAY, BY THE I Capital Journal Publishing Company. (IncorjK) rated.) Kntvinl nt llio ixwtofllcii nt Halern,Or.,aA second clnen mutter. CLARE B.IRVINE, Maniqer. fourth page for terms or subscrlp- Advertisement lo Insure Insertion (for thn sirno diiy) nIioiiIiI bo handed In by I o'clock. , , . lAirrctponilcncc rontnlnliie news of In frest nml lintmrtnneo Ik ib-slred from nil part of the stale. iii iitii'iiiK.uwlll be pnlil lomioiijinmiH communications. ivmnlis ileslrinif the ('AI'ITAI. .lOflt.VAF, served nt their hoimm can Mi-iiru It !' ! tin cnnl request, or oy Hiiro u-n m mm HiM-clmen numbers cent free on npplltn- uiiico, corner Court mid Liberty Streets, A IfoinniiUcSloT.v of Shipwreck, CiiliiivHy mid SiilU'i'ini,'. CAST AMOXti ItAICItAKOL'S SAVAOKS. SATURDAY JULY (I, 1880 MoNi:r uncut for education is put to itH lllll('l COOIIOIIlIC llHC. i. I I-- - liioirr mid power mu the founda- tloll IICCCHHlllcHOf elvlllntlnii. Ki.ccritic lli-lil "'id power will produce mme flmiigi'H In llio int cliniilnil crvantH ami eonvcnlenceH of civlll.od life tluiii him ever been canned by the nut (if imy other method or force whleh him been mibjeetod to num. C'AitiiiAdi: iiiiintilnetiircrH nit prc (llotliiKtlint In tlm not (liHtunt fu turo woollen wheelH will be done away with, mill Hteel wheels Hiib"tl tuteil on neeoiint of the Incie.inliij; Hcarollv of lumber for wheels. Two new words tiro coining into uho "(,'rnphotyie" to dtwillio the liiHtriiinent lined by type wrltoif, mill "typowrlpl" to ileKcrlbo wlmt In wntlHii. Tho abbreviation! mo TR. nml TS8. .hint iih for iiiiniiiHcrlpt we huvo MH. ami MSH. IVK KAT T(M) .1111011 3IKAT, A very nilnlakon opinion oxIhIh liliioiin iih tin to the need of nieiit lo Blvc Htruiij?tli mi opinion Imced on KrotwH'rtt ImioruiiL'o mnl dull olwervii (Ion. The nio.it powerful iuiIiiiuIh llvoon vcjolable8 exclusively. The elephant, river borne and rhinoceros uru puro vcrtar!aiH. Of all iiiiIiii.iIh built for Htrungtli mid Bpeed the hornokinil Ih thu chief, anil when the horwi Ih fed on hay mid barley or out IiIh endurance Ih extraoidl-niirv. i - inual, barley, rlco nml tbu llk certainly bear the palm for HtruiiKtli and enduraiico. The MnnirnlluiiH llvoon tea, barley meal anil butter. They put the butter In their hot tea mid drink It. Often for weekn to ne! her they live on warm water, Into which u little bailey meal Iiiih bern thrown and ntlrreil. TIiIh HUf- il...... jr.- i i-. . . nucn mi iiieaKiiiNt ami hiipper on their pllirIiniiKeM to Thibet over the Himalaya i-uiikch. Mco "Huo'm travelH In Tartary." The Chlnene palankeen bearern live on rice, rare ly KcttniK iih much of It an they do Hire. They trot aloin,' all day under very heavy hurilcnu. Traveler In Syria assure us that thoByrlan porter bear Hie heaviest loniU of all jH-ivons who do a like IiiihIiicm mill that a handful of dried 11(h and n cup of ood water milllco them for a meal under their hardest taxkH. It U not only true as to races (hat tliowi which live most lemnerately on Htniilu vegetable diet are ntrong est mid most enduring, but It Is true as to Individuals In each race. All Imthoiih famous for htiviuith nrnpoed and endurance tiro ivmnrkable j'or thu nlnipllelty of their diet. 1'er haps the most remarkable man In that resHet was Krueni .Mournm, n Norwegian wdlor In the IliltUh navy early m this century, lie ran from Portbiiiouth to Loudon In nine hours, then from London to Liver pool In thirty-two bourn. After the iMittlo of Navarlno In IS27, he left the navy mid Uvmuo a profefvsloiml runner. He ran niveral inatehet mid then Marled from Paris, Place Vendervle at four p. in. June II, 18:11 and enteied the Kremlin at ten a. in. June lUth, a distance of ITt'.O miles In ;i dnyh. Jle always ran. His nolo refreshment was onebl.-cult and an oumv of ntepbeny hyrnp eacluliiy mid two hhoit nl's of llf livn minutes In twenty-four hourx, mid llicnc iwts he tKik oil fivot lean- iiiK HKniH"! " triHior mv,, with his fawiHiveasI with a handkerchief its he idept. In I KM ho went fnun Cileutta to Coiihtantlnople throiiKh AIa, MI5 miles in tiny-nine days. lit Martod (o dbeiver the HprliipTnl -Mie amy n, 1M.1, tnm .Se.la; ran (a JcruMilcni, themv to Culm and up the wwt Hlitiru Into l'ppr Kjrypt. Jler, Just outi-Ido of Hyianj,' he leanetlHKiiliii.1 a mlm tim-htastisual, MIJ. IIOLDKX'S XxVRUATIVB. . "'I""'1y turn him oirfron. among ' them to xtnrvc to death. Their religion is such as might lw exiK!Cted iiinong a injople in their condition. Their place of worship is a rudely constructed building, or hut, about fifty feet long and thirty feet wide. In the center, suspended from the roof, Is a sort of altar, Into which they suppou; their deity comes to hold converge with the priest. Rudely carved images are placed In diflcrent parts of the build ing, and are supposed to personate . their divinity. ' As nearly as could be ascertained by us, they supposed that the object of their worship was of like passions with themclvo, capricious and revengeful. During the time we were with them, they attributed to ins displeasure their want of success j Horace Holden Subjected to I'nlirnnl of SiiffiTlnH Anion;; llio llnilmrous I'clcw Islanders. CIIAITKIt VII. It may now be proper In this place to give sonio account of the place where our unhappy lot was c. isf, and of Its rude and miserable inhabitants. It will be impossible to convey a correct Idea of their ignorance, poverty nd degradation; but some conception may be formed by imagining what the condition tf beings must necessarily be, when wholly separated from the lest of thfir species, stripped of all the re finements of life, and depnved of all nivalis mid oppoitmiltlcs for Im provement. We were now upon the small piece of liiuil culled by the n.ulves Tobee, but known lo navi gators by the name of Lou! North's island, siniatcd between the third mi'l fourth degree of latitude, and in longitude one hundred and thiity-one degiees, twenty minutes east. It Is also known bv the name of Xevil's island mid Johut-ton's Isl.tud; mid It lias been hitherto cousldeied by navigators mid others as uninhabited. This is not surpris ing, as wo were told by thu natives that no white man had ever visited thu place; though It seemed, from the pieces of Iron in lliulrpu-it,Hl()ii, a'ld from other circumstances, that they had had some communication witli the Spaniards ntnl Portuguese in that quarterof the world. Like many oilier islands In those sen", this is surrounded by a coral reef, which is from an eighth to one-half of a milu wide, but outside of the reef the water Is nppaicntly fathom less, the water being as blue as It is in themlddleof the ocean, and the largest vessels may In many places anproaeh within a quarter of a milu of Hie beach. The whole Island rlcs so little above the level of the sea, that the swell often rolls up to a considerable distance Inland. It Is about three-quarters of a milu In length, mid not far from half a mile hi width. There were upon It three in taking llsb as they had done In ' The :Mcf itrmon for tno great n former times, and the llllfrilltfulnehs ' eess of Hootl's Sarsaparllla Is found In thl of their bread-fruit and cocoa trees, i Their religious ceremonies are ' slugular. In the commencement the priest walks round the altar and and fjiur hundred souls, at the time when wo were taken thero; but thu number was considerably diminish ed by famine and dKeiiMo.before we left. The inhabitants are In astute of entire barbarism and Ignorance. The men wear a sort of girdle or belt made of the bark ofa tree. This Is girded round thu lions so as to leave one end to hang loo.o behind, thu other Is brought forwaid and fastened to the belt In front. This Is their only clothing. The females, after arriving at the age of womanhood, wear an apron miiiloof the leaves of a plant, by them called kurremung, split Into tine strips and plaited. This ex tends from tlie loins neatly to the knees. Some few wear rings upon their wrists made of white shells, aim some Hail this kind of orna ment made of turtle-shell. In their ears, which are alwayH bored, they sometimes wear a leaf; and round their necks a necklace made of the shell of the eoeoanut, and a small white shell, called keent shell. Thu children go entirely naked. The complexion of these Islanders Is a lluht copper eo!or;mueh lighter than the Malays, or the IVlew Islandeis; which liwt, however, they resemble In the breadth of their faces, high cheek bones, and broad flattened ! noses. They do not color tlmlr tecth, chewing any tiling, as many of those Islander do; but their tooth are so strong that they can husk a eoeoanut with them Instantly. Their principal food Is the eoeoanut. They occasionally succeed in pro curing llsh, though the suiinlv obtained during our residence there was exceedingly small. ineir nsii nooks my made of Initio shells, ami not well con t rived for the piiriKw; but we could not Induce them to uc our nooks, till they had heated them and altera! their form so that they would not hold the tlsh. They dlil this because they said that Varrls ((bull would Ih angry with them. If they Used our hooks without pnv takes from It a mat, devoted to the purpo-e, which is laid upon the ground. lie then sento himself upon It, and begins to hoot, in the inean tlinethrowlng hine-clf intoa variety of attitudes, for the purpose of call ing down the dlviully Into the altar. At Intervals the eongregntlon sing, but immediately stop when the priest breaks out in bin devotions, by the sldo of the altar Is always placed a large bowl, and six cocoa nuts. After the incantation is gone through uiid the divinity is sup posed to be present, the bowl is turned up and four of the nuts are broken and put in it, two being re served for the exclusive use of a priest by them also called "yarrics". As soon as the nuts are broken, one of tho company begins to shout, and, rushing to the center, seizes the bowl, and drinks of the milk of the nut, generally spilling a greater part of it upon the ground. After this a few pieces arc thrown to tho images, and tho remainder are gen erally eaten' by the priests. This elopes tho ceremony, after which they Indulge in any icereation that chances to please them best. Whilo wu were on tho island sev eral earth-quakes happened, and some of them pretty severe. On those occasions the natives were much terrlllcd; they would not let I heir children speak u word; and they said among themselves. Var- ..t ...l t, I.... l 'n..l.n.. !!. -tri inrvrr-" ii"-i.iaiiiiiim uuu juulu nun were also very much alarmed at thunder and lightning; mid use to sayat such tunes, , Varris tee' tree, ((.iod Is talking). I do not know how they would boullocted' by mi eclipse, as none happened, that ' I noticed, while wo remained there. I will here mention some other things in respect to their customs and usage'!, as they now occur to me. I heir implements of war are spears and clubs; they have no bows and arrows. Their spears are made of tho wood of the eoeoanut (res; the points oi tiielu me set with rows of sharks' teeth; and, being at thu same time very heavy and from ten to twenty feet long, are formidable weapons. Their canoes me made of logs which drift to their island from other placis, theie being no trees on It large enough for that purpose they aro hollowed out with great lanor, ami are of very clumsy work nianshlp; to prevent their overset ting, they are fitted up with outrig geis, like those of tho IVlew Island ers. They kindle their fires, as they Informed me, by rubbing two pieces of wood together, as is common in the islands of the Pacific ocVnn; and liey cook their turtle or other meat, (when they are so foitunato as to haveanyjlas well as their vegetables, by coverlngthoiu with heated stones I i-hould state, however, that dm lug the whole time wo staid among them, lire was always pre irtlcle Itself. It is merit that wins, and th (act that Hood's Sarsaparllla actually a compllsliei what Is claimed for It, Is what has given to this medicine a popularity and alo greater than that of any other sarsapa- Mrit WinQ rIlla or blood pnr'' merit VViriafler before tho public. Hood's Sarsaparllla cures Scrofula, Salt lihciim and all Humors, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Biliousness, overcomes That Tired Feeling, creates an Appetite, strength ins the Xcrvcs, builds up tho Whole System. Hno!' Murn.arllla is soIdbyalldrUf lists. $l;Blxfor$5. Prepared by C. I. Hoorf t L'o.. Apothecaries. Lowell. Mass. The theory of the eclipses is said to havo been known to the Chinese before 120 R. 0. A SCII.M' OK f'AI'EK SAUS UElt LIFE. It was just mi ordinary scrap of writing paper, but it saved her life. She was in the last stages of con sumption, told by physicians that sile was incurable and could live on ly a short time; she weighed less than seventy pounds. On a piece of wrapping paper she read ot Dr. King's New Discovery, and got a sainplo bottle; It helped her. she bought a large bottle, it helped her more, bought another and grew bet ter fust, continued iti use and is now strong, healthy, rosy, plump, weigh ing 110 pounds. For fuller particu lars wild stamp to W. JI. Cole, DriiL'gist, Fort fciiiilth. Trial bottle of this wonderful discovery free at Dan'l .1. Fry's drug store. oar Uridge, Conn., has a horse that, in drinking from brooks, laps up the water like a dog. Iiiicklen's Arnica Salve. The" best salve in tho world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter chapped hands, chilblains, corns mid all skin eruptions, and positively cures piles or no pay icqiiircd. It is guaranteed touive perfect satisfaction, or money pijfiiiultul IMoi-ceiitajiexijox. Tho cattle of the most valuable herd in tho ISTortliwest arc given homeopathic treatment exclusively. If ymi litii n dUeliiirge irom the nose, oIl'.-iislMi or otherwise, p.irtlnl lose of the Minsoof Hiuell, tnloor hearing, nycs vn- ii'riiiirnrwiMK, reel dull or debilitated, pain or procure In tlie Iveait; toko cold ejihily, you ;mny rest ns-itred umt jou havo ca lami, riimitiiiulsof caesniiniiallv. Willi. out iiiiinirctlnjr half of tho above Hymp. loan terminate. In eoiiniupilou and' mil In tho grave. Xo disease N m common, more deceptive, le understood or more mixticccvruUy Heated by physicians. The manuractmcrsof Dr. Bago's Catarrh Item dy have, ,ior many years, tillered u stand ing lewnrd of sWXJ for u case of instil CH tnrrli, no mutter how bad or of how lone standing, which they enmiot cure. Item ed' sold by druggists nt CO cents. Hon. Sol. lllrseh, U.S. .Minister to Turkey, leaves Constantinople on the 17th hist., for Oregon, to remain a brief while, then return (o his post. The Best Residence Localities rn llie citv of Portland and other prosperous towns are those owned by men or corporations who have the disposition and ability to improve them. HIGHLAN AD DITION IS OWNED BY ill I D M! And this Corporation is determined to k ft 1 Most Attractive Addition To tho city of Salem. They have at this time fifteen teams employed and the contemplated improvements have scarcely begun. It is Intended to make tho drive loading from Commercial street through Riverside and High land additions nnd around Highland Park THE FINEST DRIVE IN THE STATE Of Oregon. The line of the Salem Street Railway Company runs through the middle of this addition, and no lots will be more than two blocks distant from the line. Highland Park will in the near future he THE MOST POPULAR RESORT ABOUT THE CITY OF SALEM. - Lots in Highland Adiliton arc High and Dry and Well Located; Most Excellent Drainage The soil is black and rich. From all points a fine view is obtained of the public buildings and our highest mountain peaks. Arrangements are already being made for the location of two churches in this addition, and a nuniberof residences are soon to bo built. Buildings only of the best class will be permitted. Residence lota within tho limits of the city of Salem are worth on an average over $1000. AVe can sell you better Iota in High land addition for one-third of the money, and being directly on the Hue of the street railway they are practi cally not half so far from the public buildings and the business part of the town as the majority of the so called "inside lots." Buy a Lot in Highland Addition for Three Hundred Dollars, And let some.other fellow pay $1000 for au inferior lot not so well located. With the difference of $700 you can build a beautiful cottage, or put It out at a rate of interest that will buy you nearly two thousand streetcar tickets every year. H. P. RANKIN'S Paint Shop see here i JOHN F.STRATTON& SON ami Walker St John RStrottSn's KiUVo,A5.GUtVIOllUStr,nE8't,,e 10(1 ISEWAKl). 1)1100. The mulors of tho JouitN.u, will bo pk'iiM'cl tolo.mi Umt thero U nt least one ilicmled disease Umt selenco has been wblo tocnio In till itsMiigo iiud that Is cutiirrh. Ilnll'itCiitumili I'tiro Is the only positive euro now knou u to thV medical rnilerrJ Culiirrli boliic a constitutional dUeai . iilnwu iiui.iituticmnl treatment. jaW iiiiunn cure Is talcnn Internally, iiciing d. reeny iikin me niixM ami union Mlr faivs of the iteni, thereby doHniMnu the Imimlutloii of tho dUease. mid giving urn putina strength, by building tin tho constitution and asdlstlns nature In doing ll work. The proprietor luvo m much (Ultll 111 IfK fllnitl. n lumnixi tl I ... ,.1...,l .... ...., .,, . . . J. .. --""'-!".-, xii'j oner .-...,,..,, rMm- ,,,,,, ,,, ,(, iiitiiiil, uue iiumirciUMlmratoriiny cm that It so that there wits no neco.NiItv for fi,l.,'l,"l'u.r't s'"'l ar lUi of testimonials. Sold by Driik'EMii.TSc. No. 2.VJJ Commereial St. -0- ifouse nml (irrlni !..!. ill..,. feign writing, Paper hanging and! decoratlnir, Wall tintimr anil knl.l summing executed in the latest style. Experienced Workmen Employed. . Satisfaction Guaranteed. I Call and sec us before you let your work. ' Tf there N anyone in the whole state of Oregon win wants to return to the east he should read tills ad vert Ueinent: kliulllng it in the manner hum mentioned. Like other savage peo ple, they reckon time by moons. 1 could not learn that they ever reck oned by any other period, except, Indeed, when speaking of two or tltico days. They take pride in their hair, and am turtlcularly care ful about It, washing and cUamlug It almost every day. Thov do not color it, however, itx the natives of muuh Islands aio said to do; but they moisten II wiin uic julco pnvod grorxa 6,000.000 ! " mt n Ferry's Seeds M.FKRRT toain kckumltdcfid to b U Largest Seedsmen ii mo wuria i D M.FllullOl'i ' UlaitntwLDelcrlp. tlreiodlMoed SEED ANNUAL Par Inno wintwiMflftjrBH a All armlirnt mrA r Jo l itirt cattomen KgBkD wit&vmim mmmm kVHiifm.'j tjjjjjjjjkv - nrm A Bargain For ." i M JJJ to all applicants, ac lorinait !.. IxrllHt Clllcirr I n?T7 ' "tf nnoa mint l3'?.S.,07Sr.521 la llimc. D. M. FERRY CO., Detroit, Mich. m m mw "1 am tired of living with such a homely woman!" exclaimed Wil liam Hush of Niagara Falls, as he walkedaway from his wife six weeks ago. Tho other day she was left a legacy of f Iti.ooo, ami William hur ried back hometociill her hlsmim.l one, but uho would not let him In. Tho immediate symptoms of I)s pepMa, orlndlgestlon.nro n dlstres-i Mug sense of weight, oppression and ! ;uiuii-.s in mo sioinacii, iicartluiru, Tni I'M 11 11 .1 11 m umuM JOS. AUIKUT, Agenl, INSURANCK V o in P a n r ,' I t Ire and Mn. rlue. Salem, Orvcon -To Exchange for- M from tlie tMCsMiinl, which gives. '"(J. Hatulencv, nauca jmlns in the it a very glassy nnnear. bvvs of aiipiiitc, foul breath, belch-, wlt.wilil.. t i. i- i. . ' '""""""""M uiriui. ir. iionu'V'ri mm ,M,lg then, ,UH,MI,.g to their fash-1 "''-'J '" J lo.,tly so long digSi! ni in iwien uuwu ; myir waist, symptoms. Solil by I. W.Mathews !'!.. .I .....!.. ..r..ilnl.. II.... I.. ... .t . . i . ' tleary trrvl. ,. DR. JORDAN 4 Co.'s MITOI OF IN'ATOMV 751 .Market M.Sun KriiicIpim AilniKslon-icenU, fionnit Irarn hur lo nvni.i dUrtiso. UiiiiMiIlallon nml treatment personally or by loiter, on hivrniaterrhwa ;ri:enltiil vealines, nnd all I dU-asMiof ineu. tseiiit for n ,' Ixiok. Private oniw 211 nu)tallonfnx'. flRl viuumuil , ULV1WJ m Our Guarantee If a dealer receives a frnmPIanI?t' (wh,?h he bcllevea ' be honest) SI1"1'80"11 to. whom be has sold UsJtnfifcfeiS,trlnesi H? ls authorized by hto eUe. 'J,m another string without Dh.a. if!;"nda11 sch ow will be madeid OUHnn ' 'mi18'0'"6."; "."''Out QUlbblo Or wiif,,i:(BeHn.reoi mutation.? Dealers I11 pleas.6 bend lor descriptive cataloeue. Iratf j supplleU at lowest price. ""'"BUC ST. PAUL'S SCHOOL, FOK- Boys and Girls. The school will open on the Stth . of September. Thorough .instruct Hon In the primary and nnv.,nced English Branches. LITIS .IXD EIEMKTS OF. KtSIC -In course.- hSpXllS "formation may bo n, n, REV. K. H. POST, Cor. Chemeketft nnd Htausts. 8-20-tf t "" , ' eV GOOD CHANCE Ion, Sometimes thcymvMi foitun ate as tonhtalunfcn turtlo; live only eii taken during the two vears wo wetxi there. The turtle, I may add, hasHiinethlugof the Nicnsl iihanio- terwlth them. I'liey als-i mNoMiuli Their inodoofwiliitatlon l to clusiP ..... ". .. eaebotborlnthoiriirnis ,m,l i..i. i ....". .lp .M"1. '' "" i wiiiiii iii mw. miii win. I j i.r...it nasm together, as U pmctiivd lnhaviHlth tlie hnudsanil compl", ni:iny olhtr Islands. Wo found nolbni. Soft white hands ami n cli muslwil intruiiieut!of nnv kliuli wali' complexion m boas- gFor Bargains qimntllle of tm..ug them. They .mnethno. W1 SBSiKn&uVSAHf ' eiubllngtho!lv,.r,lp,,,"rooo"slm,s' wouM lug or,rubUHliuiothekln well it leave IN n iiiitiiiuio-Kiiiitr i vi,p iii f...-. ii i .ii . . " "" ' " "i"'. no iivegeiaiiiosoiiiewnaineinUllngtho' t".""""" '"""'" """ ""K or, ruoueu imotne Kin well It leaves Pn,:i,. n.. : . n n ., nUil ro long, m m ih'iuik tried to I vain: hut wbll.. w. ..., u-ni, .7. i Uwl twt nomcthlmr llkr a rudo Krxio.v Mirfiuv. Tho kln raDlllHirtCfrifS I rOYlSlOIlS. hrillk Vif Wftko him, but he wiin dead. It had! they veii uiiMiiifiil lo .mliii-,.. ' ; but wtomild not imdKUuU ,l,MlN ddby I). A. Matiu-ws. ' '' ' ....,.,,- ,-- iin t THOMAS HUIIKOWS, Commarolul ttr,ot, Stm.Or bwutho fimhloii to hire him. aiul'lm.' It. ,lhe.iismsiiiiit.,n.....i,.i.... It; We frvmieutly trtsl 1 t a i . . - - --"""-Mri iiiaicnw wcro noiorioiu (he world , inciiin. of their Mip.Hirt :nnd m aro l'i n wUMIm,mui. 'for lurlleulaniruli at thl onlce. , trtsl t ti..ch Ii jbould lv gvuienilly known that d their nvkw. ml HeUy' D.indelloa Tonlo In- i.Niri: iiiiti iiiv ntsi - . -. - t'ninutiuii 4UUIU in over. Sofitrn known hU iHnverbi tlnulwivlv kent inun ...,., ii .i.w.h. ''l U l It miuuhsI N .ut . w brty amietltemiiUncrvaM ofUm.tmdunuu.iu.. never v ft,,,,,, bm'on , ho vory ZC ,Vm JX& ,, iiH..mon imirviiiioii. v mil miy Olio orthoui; iw HMjiSPmi sst stvm.. "Jieryyuiiu aiinuniinmi will lu-l WM tnU liro, nml derervlng of iiluglim to fall, for want of food, ki v? i. ' '77 " '-".'r . ruHMunv life and rtrwiigth into tho couniry pnvtm- of ,, klndl -,miv. UWiW?ntrorpi1rii5,n1c.p,). ii,i.,iMiw..;i-WMWwtt,? rMafeiAS XVH,U"V '55SSp.,,,v"IM- n- w-W ;WSl,SS , I on tultyuu both In mim m ..i Northern Pacific Railroad. GREAT OVERLAND ROUTE. TWO KASTTItAINSDAir.Y! NO U1IAA-QK OK OARS SHORTEST LInFtO CHICAGO And all jiolnts East via St. PAUL and MINNEAPOLIS. The Northern Pacific railroad U the oniw line running IasenKer trains, Second clS SjffRf fee of charge) LuiriSS. ijfy iSo';.,,lman 1 Sleeping Can! W,'r'Sur',,c,lii?J?the Northern change of car. SoqTi. mUe tanpolU or at. 1-aiU . on b. bellaviBv K!a1!'i:r; !-- front ivj!S5i'riis,1 N' -"tftio-priSfis JohnKin LU, lew Main c llirhm'ond. iaS', Idllffi LS. R-ineauteageand busing &?V WJ&XwR88 rliMsi antt )ullij , .... -..,y Uiipl