"T WI"tyJ,f NIN j&- VOL. 3. SAJLEM. OHEGOX. FBI DAY, JULY IS, ISflO. KO. 115. CAPITAL I U URN AL H H Holverson's mn'- v r-.v-i l,"-ri" ' ITTTT Ladies read this, it is worth your attention. FOR Trench Wool Clinllios, worth.. irencn ooi Thames wnrtli 2jo Lawns, flgiued, good style?, worth loo ( tittun Challlos worth s it Do 7" Ladies' Emli'd Flouncing, worth -..?3 00 A full lino of fancy Parasols nt -Snv than any other Dealer in the city. Perhaps wo do. We sell ns cheap a any boily cm. All we ad is a fair margin on the gootR Wo buy for cash, and our expenses are ligh', eoii'-cipienily wo can Sell at a. We have our stock now almost com)lctc, although goods aro arriving almost daily. Come in and inspect Our Goods and Prices. Everything Marked iu Plain Figures at ffl 1 1 1 B mi One Phi Hi 257 Commercial Street. WMp i....j.uiL-.i ii . .tmnmiim uuj mi .rrjtmjjumri-, 'J' ivS "" groceries and Produce -Tlie JJes-t Cannetl Goods. Efifoicest Fruits and Souo but First-class Goods Handle. Every article guaranteed a Srescntid. If you would be well Th. OrBn W& State Street, , -Utlar in- Urniture IiiK Commercial Street, SsSlem. - I A I I I ) K N ll "hiut'CaiLJ: tiU ZZSr5& J I LUIll MM t lowtut prW A yettvrt &l jjua yjgSBfeed li.-painngaud cleaning dooe. TlmoulUnt ! Uikriug .- 'iHMMW ii.ii it ilk the city. Of Summer Goods.- . - -ion il 50 Ladies' Einb'd Flouncings worth .?2 60 il Misses Einb'd Flouncing- worth ...1 75 70o Misses Einb'd Flouuci tigs worth ...1 00 23c French Satincs, best quidity, worth !Ki & 40c cost. Also a big drivo in Ribbons at Wo Sell L h ! u tc Low Kigtire. MS, HDD Vegetables in Season., served ialroniu Store, Salem, Oregon. il m il !! mi ! i ' rrtn l)L!RI!il and Carpets, - treon. Special Salk Note carefully these prices and take BIG BARGAINS. almost ono-half their real value. Tome lMigawfWnij mwt -with Offico nt r a i Sip llrpnrnn o (In the Slate Insurance Kulldlugl and branch ofllces iu Portland, Astoria and Albany, Has for alo a largo list of Grain, Stock and Fruit Farms; also City and Suburban Property, The Oregon Land Co. was especially organised for the purpose of buying and sub-dividiug large tracts of land, and lias during the i-at two years bought and Mibdivldcd over 3,200 acres into ?ivfi to Twenty The success of this undertaking Is shown In the fuel that out of 2S0 tracts placed on the market, 225 have been choice land in Fruit, 9 ii Yield a than 1G0 acres of wheat in the Mb-is-Mppi Valley. Wcalo make valuable j improvements in the way of roads, clearing the land, fences etc. W , can sell a small ti act of land fur (Iif -nn. price per acre n yon would have to pay for a larg.' tarm. Send for Pamphlet. and Price List, ii.jMJ tjf . - S. Ii. (JA'ITHKLIN. W. T. KIOD'JX. V. E. CATTHKLLN. CATTERLIN, RIGDON & CO., Real -O- Wc uv Imvo for for sulo on easy E City property. Tho celebrated Ankony tmel, comprising over -1,000 ncros of tho Jlne&t I .vratit fftilf nnfl nncfurn Into? tit (ho r"""l - i... j...-..... ....... ... ....- --.-,, InloHnmll tracts to suit purchumrs. on need not ouy of us. W will send you Ulivot l the owner of any land we Iwve for sale, and you nu mike your own bargain. 156 J. E 9 IVI a n u. f ac t ii re State Street, (iKXERAL STOCK' OF DOMESTIC AND IMI'OKTK!) (iiOAKH Wo make u specialty gite in a call. of Tolmeeo dorrance Bros'. on MUt hlreet, Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Finishing Lumber, Mouldings, die, ! All order proiuHlr ttiuulrl U. I'rlce a low a. tho lowl. Mill on Martin iUea I uiltoa urlhcit of haleiii. Offlwlu IMIIdkt liulldtuv. W. iVI. Sargent, Dealer in ' , Txrii i . VVCllJ 1 ClJt!I , Picture FraaMw, Window Shadt. Hint Toy A Km Lin KtcliiiiK "! IOiirmvin, Oil Painting and ('hum. J'rict tf e vo iowtwi imiiwwtM J. I' -- Ifeakr iu Umbtr, Lath Mid Shingfo, at the old Oorranct Yard, Salem. Kmi aiitmllou given ui rumUh Kiln drted and Muprior PlaMdug Iuuil-ff -IE SECOND MOORli iSfe Deakmi la Kurotlure, X4Wu. (tMoawf, CaiidiMi Mtd Sut. All klifb tgareotiU (ioud mm W i-ouiMUaMOU vtumcK4 4MP - Churchill Sash. Door IInk, Rllmki k MoldUp., Twmliig k Srwll Hal?. -ii.m.t yim.uiot .xu u. .r jji um nil t ah -raiwair.iuptaii ur .Ma .i-..i ,.i kinl Alilrtiiiunt tf.iirii'rm lawngnuwwunaBWt advantage of this opportunity 15 it ISc Cheaper grado Salines worth--20 & 2Go '20c India Liueiiswortlt - !Wc 15 & 0o India Linens worth 30 &80e 10o India Lineii3 worth ...15&lSc while Hie assortment is uood. Land Co, its k rq aro u u - V Aero Parcels. old. We claim tit tt ton aero of Larger Income r a nri H terms tho most ricslrnblo Fmins and j Wllltim.it l vnllov tinci Iwan airvivp.i ' State Street. i. AKER &, SONS, rs of C i ;a n ') i. Qolnm , jaivyiin store Fixtures. When in the city LUM1313R Salem. -- YARD f, . iu . -. . iViU U J Ul 1 Jg, lluby Cut, KxpruMi WagotiK. NoIIouh or all KluiU. WMIMWrlWI JACOBSON , HAND STORE, OS BORN 15 ware, CilaMwan. CtAmn, TnUtcau. tfl Iwud guuia, uuugvt slid mM. i ot. but Mid Lllwrty Hi. &. Manufactuririff Co.. i wmwm fan fflW" "" -.. '--.- THE CAPITAL MMXL HOFER BROTHERS, Editors. TIIH SVMllCATi: IWSlXliSS. All have noticed the tendency of capital in this age to engage In syn dic lies lt this system large quan tities of capital are consolidated for the purpose of mobilizing capital ami monopli.lng certain brandies of comineiee or industry over given areas. The niiwl objectionable of all Is the foreign syndicate, and the number f movements of this kind shows that the business must be a wclUorgauiml and lucrative one. it is a process that can be applied to any branch of cnntieree, any kind of commerce, or speculation, public works or even government contracls. Thci is practically no limit to tho syndicate system. Its sweep include glue factories and literary maga zines, supplying otir drinkers with cocktails and our children with Behoolbooks. Many hundreds of millions of English capital are already profit ably invested in this manner. American syndicate biokcrs aicat work organizing trusts and com bines to sell one branch of commerce after another to the alien capitalists. The following dispatch appeared in the associated press repert: Four Doixiu, Iowa, July HI. To-day an English syndicate bought, through HoM'iihauui Pros., of Chicago, all the elevators owned by the firm of Gregory & Son, one of the iaigcsl grain buying linn of the north wes-t. The elevators are located all through northwestern r Iowa and the linn control a large share of the grain tradeofthai state. The legal complications arising from the prtcuccof the foreign syn dicate are not a few. The dllllculty of leaching foreign capital of this kind for taxation, or of suing it iu our courts of justice, as well as the prejudice of our legislatures against alien ownership of properly, all tends to multiply the possibility of evils from this pernicious system. Tho main object of the syndicates jh to remove the competitive irictloii and thus smoothly iucicnso the prollts of capital, ily reducing cx expenses of operation and manage ment byyiovernl or many rival and competing organisation, the prollts of syndicates can be made to far ex ceed any individual protlls. Tho lessons of the syndicates may in tho ctttfw vJiluable. Tho reaction auniust the syndicate system is already present iu a mild and theoretical form known as na tionalism, or tho dnctriio that great enterprises of certain kinds (mostly at present monopolized by tho syn dic. to) are to bo conducted by the statu for tho benellt of tho people. I'lier.'iVNii via.. in the Foiuni for July Is a most practical ailielo Irom the pen of this whote-anuk'd Heleiitlst. A short sketch of ProfeHHor John Tyudall mny nut lw without Inlerest. This 'emiuoiit (scientist, was born in iro- land Iu 181!0. I In received a coin-inoii-chool etlueatiou, and In 1HII hejolnod tho ( t lull Ordiiauce Survey. Ills ptirpone to come to America huv iug own Ihwaited by his fi lends, lie entujoil the service of a railway ax a elvli piiusiicer. I "'or a year he 'M master of Greenwood college, uod in 1M47 he went to Mai burg, j Germany, where he ipenl three, yeurs under IJiumcn, the oelobi'Mted ! oheuiUt. In 1&1 he went to ISetilii, and w two, jeuru in the luboi-j atoty of Prof. Magnus. HIm j ' wriUng hud already atlrautcd the i atlentiio of thenyleiillfle world, ami I In I8&I lie Wi Hleeleii u tellow oi lli0 Ivoval MH'iety of hiiglitud. I'he hmiiio ytir lie nocuptod the the olmtr of natural ithiloHophy in tho Itoval lunlittitlon of Grct iliitulii.eombiiilng with hl ihilltM tho uiwrliil(iii(lei((!y of the Inmltiitlon, a ixwitloii in which he ucueuded Faraday. Iu 1872 Prof. Tyudall mailu a lecturing tour in Urn I'ultiil Ktatt. where he dullv ered Uw leeture on light. UN writ ing ale very iiiiiiierotiH, Home of the tlZcS'ZuZ aud UUtelent," "ileal ufe a Mtnlw of Motion," Faraday a l)lcoveie," 'mgiiMJiiU of Hlenoe," and "l.cti itonwin Kleetneily." In Kebruar, 1868, Prof. Tyndall had au Nrtlele In llw Koruiu ou "Tiie Hky." The prewal mi ttele U (lie Mtouud In a nerie bey tin luxi mouth by W. II II. Ieky. It reveaU tin-lnflu)iiew thai bad iuo.1 do with giving (lie world auch a noik eliararUrr. inn .iv.,io imi,sw, ! In Ariwriia ami New Alirxluo lie ! the rwwrvatluu of tlieae liidlau, who had their last war with the! United Mi ate about tweuty year! ago. MtiM i lieu tlmy liavw given j Iblt atwalry no lrowbl, bwl bar ' HOlrrd Sucks and iwrda aud have , UooiM rtdi and euMa-rvalive. Tory an Hot ijUarralaouMf aud are aald Ut . ba aa Inteillgeot ukI well-dlrd raea, wbo wave wad all lUe prntm ' pu-allil imilrr tttir eMIUiug luttu voeawof IhkeMiutry'k ntw iudlau p.lie. They Hv iu au ut-f tut way, region and have of lal.- -ar u4 liawn aubjH'd t i!m dVuioral Utag itdtueii" tint rmult trcui Itu.iny tlftr adiuiuUtrmllub lorirtril vt-r Iu the uNlev Ufukrag of ila thlU:iaU- Tli pfMent agviM U a Mr Van- dever, wlio was appointed at tltci close of Mr. Cleveland's ndniltilst ra tion, nnd is cousldcred to hnvo been one of tlio few appointments iu the Indian service under his rule that were made without regard to poli ties. Mr. Vnndevor is an id to bo one of the best qtinllllcd men for liulian agent ever appointed. Ho Is reputed to be scrupulously honest ami care ful in his dealings witli the Indians nnd the government and has uliuoet unlimited influence for good with tlie people under him. 1 Te has sever al times saved blood-shed by pre venting the Indians from taking the law on white men when they have committed crimes amdnst tlie tribe. Mr. Vandever Is said to have the support of tlie Indian Commixaiouer at Washington and it lit to be lioHd the ellbrt to remove him on account of his political "hcrkommen" will not succeed, mile it can bo es tablished that the waids of the government can be better guided and controlled by sonic new man as agent, and that is baldly probable. Tlie gtiverniuent is in honor bound to do its duty in civilixtng the In dians, by giving them sehools,letieh ing them trades and iimttuctlug them in agriculture, and when .a good man is seemed for ill's purpose he should bo retained as long as he is u-eful. dm; or' Tin: rnoiw.uMs. How much prominence shall be given to the sciisittoual iu tho news papers? Tho State Pi ess Associa tion should discuss this question at Its coining meeting. We pick up a country paper and we llud all tho miscellaneous iimtter oil two paos made up of such topic and articks as the follewing: "The Story of a Crime Young Uirls J)ecoed from their Homes by a Villain, etc." "A Cashier Cut liN Throat." "Cold-blooded Murder A Heed committed for llo'iberv.', "A Whole Fondly Clone -Idler-ullv Ihusled to Peiilh." "Antics of a Madman Scire a Pot of Molten Lend, etc." "Revolvers and lta.ors Triumph Four Angry ilellcs force a Itlval to Forswear her Love A Young Man in the Case." These arc only sonic of tho main articles. The page is all 11 lied In with the results of misplaced confi dence, wild cowboys, taiicldes, era, awful deaths, double niur dew, rapes, out nines, ami all the vile caleaory of sallucloits. happenings and nil-deeds the world over. Tho local puue Is treated In the sumo manner. Wo 1110 aware that unless (ho edi tor concedes some to tho demand for tho sensational ho will llud oilier papers that do, taking their place iu the nllectloiiH of Ids readers. The news columns of the great city dailies aro given the w Ideal license iu this matter and to aceittdii ox tent lie must couiH-te whil them to reach aud lutciest Ihe iiiiiimc. Hnt there Is danger that thl is made too prominent in the country pnpci. 'I'lii! dramatic and eutertalniiig fcntuicH of account of crlniiw and sensations aro what makes them ho readable and In so gieal demand. Can wo not employ these arts of prcKCiitutlnu to awaken Interest in Ii Iter tlduusV WWMmMaMtMMaaMaMiajft I'lUJiri'lN nUTTAXKU St'OAIl. The dciuociMtlc ira have severe deuuiiclatioiisof the McKliilcy tar Id' bill beoauat- It propwe to ioI-hj the duty 011 tin plates to a proieo llve point. Tlu plates used in this country now are all made Iu lCng laud, anil other Kuroncau couutrlea. rl(M),()!)0,tMM) worth of tin plates uero iinp'Tltd from KuglMiid alone In the past live iuts sod our coun try drained to Dial extent. The United HlHles Is the greatest tln-oon-HUtiiiug country Iu the world, ills deiuoiiHtraliMl that wo can turn out the Iron and steel sheets us cheaply as any country In the world. The tliiuiiignfthufcH plates In tills oouillry would employ 21,000 people si gmal wages, a labor fund or $10,000,00.1, or $12,000,000, that is now pub I to lirlllsh inaiiufucliners anuiiiilly. The irvM.-ut duty 011 tlu paites Is a revenue duty, which Ut year brought t&JUO.OOO t tlie treasury, but which Is nut high enough to allow tlie plates lo be tinned hi this eutiulry exotpl at actual loss lo the first manufacturers who undertake It. It has been several times tried but could not be got under enough headway to overcome Hhi axistiug raU-s of toiiijarllliou and cheap ocuwu freighu. The aicKluley bill pio Mes lo advsuts Hie duly to a pro tvollve Mlut, liitfrt Ihebloek tin frea or take It front the Auterluau tlu inliioM mimI sat tlie faeuwiw at work supply lu lua Aiuerkain itiarkat with liw product f AiiMrrleau labor. It will advauea Ilia .(tea d tlu teut uorarily, but wbo mm show that wbeu we get vaat plants wtai Ibxbed In this (smutty we shall not ebt-jpan lbs pfoduc aud improve Dm quality, j aa waa doue Iu lb esse of staei rails, aud avery otbar Hat national luduatry upon which a pfute. llvs larifT liaabava laid? IM soiiiu "f tbaaa danMa)lb editors r fuia war aUUrtnant, If I bay can. If the duly on tin platr cannot ba raiitd mi u t sliuiulstc the msiiu-fa-iurr In thlx r inlr, or If III Imwii tlmt proUi niii ib not hsv ih.il Ifr. 1, I-' u I.um-sll Hit-duty iiiiov,d Will th- ifi Mli men favor ibatr Iran, h) io Hoy u4 (avur Ilia frw iur'lu'ii( iba MeKlu Iry bill'.' I)o 1 to y Miiul frve liu and UxmI sugar " I'imao rxpbilii. JUST SAVED IIIJISKIiK. lie stood by tlio open Ilrcplaco To warm his pedals just, When suddenly into ids pocket His hum! ho happened to thrust. A very strange expression Over his features went. Ills little wife ran to him, And asked him what it meant. Ho roared like n tletid incarnate, His tears poured down like rain, As he said ho laughed at ajoeklct He heard that day on tho tn'n. "And what wnstho merry lokclct?" His vv I IV asked, full ol joy. "It was all about an ancient Person iu Illinois. "His ro'ations all ho hated, Ami when ut the door of (loath He called his eldest daughter Under his husky breath. " 'Oli bring 1110 that long red stock ing Out of the chest,' ho said. The daughter brought it to him, Who, weak and almost dead, "Hy one groat ell'ort Hung it into the rosy lhinic , Tlio stocking and twonty thous and Dollara was in tlio same. "Suddenly ho crow better, And hlsielallvesall feci cay, As they seo him chopping and sawing . Wood for a dollar a day." The little wife laughed, delighted, And thought tlie Joke Was good; Hut she'd bo mad as a hatter Oh yes, Indeed, sho would If alio knew ho laughed nt looting Iu 1.1m coat tall'a itinwriuost Recess tho letter she gave hltu Two wi eks ago (n po3t. It, K. Mu.N'tci'rnttcK, In Harper's Weekly. 1 t'Al'ITAh JOUIlNAIi JOTS. lieoaicfiil th.it your sttmniorro sort doesn't prove n summer ro tort. Our real osiute mutt mo nil active and busy showing properly and making sales. In place of reform school the Washington legislature humanely designated that Institution as the "slate Institution for defective youth." It is .now being built nt Vancouver . In response ton very general de mand for a popular edition of Walter IJnsant's well-known novel, All Sorts aud Conditions of Men, Messrs, Harper and Brothers an nounce (ho Iminedlntu Issue of tlmt work as the next addition to their Franklin Square Library. The laud of (ho Multnomah county poor firm near Portland is now worth from fu() to $1000 1111 acre mid there Is a niovo 011 loot to sell tho property and buy clieaper ufll.nvan t0 regret, tliey will do ho laud for tlio county to use for that ! after being duly tiotlllcd." purpose. Tho annui facts mo true' Tho Journal of Kdiication, Iloston, .,1,0111 ti,.. M.nioii ooiinfi- nniir r.n'iii ys: "Teaoheis cannot ho too carc nliout the Million ouiiutj pool "m n,) lml lo uo llll10lie,i oll slnco Ui0 near Salem. very thlnga which nn.ko 11 dlctlou- Itaiii-lii-tlie-Face, tho Sioux chief who Is said to luivo died (ho bullet which killed Uunoinl Custer, Is dying at Standing iiock agunuy, in North Dakota, trom kiiifo wounds luflleied by a Jealous squaw. After killing OusUir, ho stood 011 guard ,... ,....,. , i,..i i, iiviiii it 1 iiiiii ' iiiii m 1 ... ' i--.- mutilation. 1 The iSritlsh government lias uovur granted amnesty to John lioylu O'ltcllly, his cscaiKjfrom a convict's doom hi western Australia having apparently placed him outside (he pale of forglvone-s. Meanwhile j Mr. O'llellly, who Is Torty-slx yours old, pursue the even tenor of his! wuy, d'spbolng in his poems and lectures a sympathy for humanity which prejtidhd of parly, race, or creed can not narrow. The tuition's debt stood la ",7fi0 millions In lHdo In round numbers, 1 bearing interest of 1M millions an nually. It now stands at 021 mil lions, bearing 20 millions Interor.t. Jloie than one-half the debt lias been puld during tlio uist ten years. Tun years hence wo ouii be alMoluta ly free of debt If the nation pleases. This Is Indeed, a "great country." The silver hill to purchase -1) mil lions monthly, with free coinage strieheu out, redeemable Iu oolu with sliver oei Mllonle Issued Hgaluat tlie purchase eqiiul to the oast of tho bullion or sliver eotnsd, Is a safe and liberal hum-lira. This will glvo the nnoiilv abuiidsut and himm! i i tone v Just what ll wants. IUtltlmore j Journal of Oommarce. CowaWsrabls (Mirioslty lias been exetted iu New Vork relljftMis el reins by the arrival of Patbar IgnaliiM, an Knglbli KubuwtaillHU inetik, on au j avKiigaitatui tour 111 mis awuiiry. IlUbaanJ Is aba vat I, aud ha waarx lite garb of the I toman Catholic JfcnedUtlne order, but haeonduels 1.1m iiikatluimrv iwrvloaH vsrv miiuh aaM.dyand Hauiury would. HlTllta-,B 1,? , s v. eih.rwwlth Ilia aarnasiawa of a ' kvunino humsions MHhod . awl sings hyiuiw, aeeum-' Kiu tut iHm aud uiuiouou stiilug I li isalf with a iirttodoan. (TuUKm-fWtik" . ."''l. m Wektli uui'dy au ebaiu. ni Is wail atlucvtatl, and pmuilier. lia bns foundrd a Pr.,iaiant luonaatory In Wuli'i, and l i;ue ling runus nr 11a euiiiiU-tl-in. . t l M ! tiafttra yu start furiUmum shore or mountains don't forgat to order the KVKMSU JiH'MXAI.loyour ntiup TB'R ANCIENT DOiVT AND MODERN BE DUPED. A 8O-0 Ailed "Wotwter'B Una bridged Dictionary" is being offered to tlio public at a very low price. Tho body of tho book, from A to Z, is a cheap reprint, page for page, of the edition of 1817. which waa iu Its day u valuable book, but, In tho pro gress of language for ovor forty years, lias been completely super ceded. It is now reproduced, broken tvpo, errors nnd all, by n photo graphic process, Is printca on cheap paper and illmslly bouiul. It is ad vertised to bo tlio substantial enulv- jnlont of "an eight to tweivo dollar uooK," while in lace 11 is a menu copy of n book which in Its day was retailed for about ?o.OO, and that book was much nuperlor in paper, print, and blndiugto this imitation, and was then tlio best Dictionary of tlio time instead of an antiquated ono. A brief comparison, jingo for tmge, between tho roprlnt and tho latest ami enfarged edition will show the great superiority of tho latter. No houorablo dealer will nllow tlio buyer of such to suppose that ho Is getting tho Webster which to-day Is accepted as the standard and llio '..est. There nvo several of those reprints, dlUcrlng In minor jmrtlculars, hut, don't bo duped, tho body of each is a literal copy of tho 1U7 edition. WHAT TUB PAPERS SAY OF IT. Tho New York Times says: "Only tho-o who aro ltrnornut of the great advances that hnvo been iiindo In dletionarlesaru likely to buy tlil'i reprint at any price. Tlio American Jlcokscllcr of Now York, says: Tho etymologies nro utterly mis leading, and naturady se: for when tho Webster of 1M7 was Nsued Com punitive Philology wob in lis cradle. Tho dellnitioiiB aro Imperfect, re quiring condensation, re. rrnngc ment and additions. The vocabu lary hi defective, somo of tho com monc t words of to-day, ciptdiilly s"lonlllo terms, for which a diction ary it muit often consulted, being entirely anient. In tint one of these three prime requisites of n dictionary Is tho Webster reprlnta trustworthy guide, or, rather it is a misleading one. This 'reprint' Is not Intended for intelligent molt. It Is iiindo especially to bo foisted hy all tho arts of tho boolc c.mve-a.M' onthoiowho have neon precluded from a knowledge of what develop ments lexicography has undergone during the last forty-two years. This Is tho crudest feature 01 this money-making entcrprloe. The MuU'ulo ChrlstLtu Advocate says: "Don't ho duped. Thousands are, or aro likely to be, 'jy the lltu hy, fraudulent advertisements of 'The Original Webster's UnabrldgoJ Dictionary,' which Is ollered for three or lour dollars. If any of our rcders wish to Invest In i itni'i'lniuo u-hli'li Ihoi' will ho llkelv nry valuable In school aro wanting In this old-time renrlnt. Any hlith- school dloiioiiary which can bo pur chased for a dollar and fifty coins is worth inoro for tichool use than this." Many other prominent Journals speak in similar tonus, nnd legiti mate putiiiHiict'H write us 111 strong coiiileiiitiatlon of this attempt to . .1 - foist 1111 otwKiiote Home on the nubile. The latest and the best, which bears our Imprint 011 tlie title pago, hiisovcr 'Mil) pages, with illustra tions on iihiKMt every page. (I. fc C. MmtuiMAN t Co., tiiirlugjlehl. Mass. Supplied ly T. MoF. Pattou, Fa lent. 1 w-d & W hisiiro in Your Home Company! "The State," Wliluh Iiuh fortliu il nix yvan PAID MORE TAXAS. Issued Mote Policies, Rcc&Ivoti More Premiums And Paid More Losset Un,ii ifoirty loviitcil In Oregon or Wuali lasloa thiiu uny other coin imuy. It was the First Company to Pay all Losses in Pull and in Cash tty Ua three ursnt uoiiltHxrutliius of Seattle ICUsiMburtfsiul Hpokaas Kail. oko. m. hi:kli:ii, City AKcnl And Sis)ls) Assnl for Marlon County, utntm fa llm oiaiany'N tmllillnn. SUMMER NORMAL -OF- Jefferson Institute. We "Weeks. Will Until July 21, and end Auifuat 3?, 1U0 lobUy fur TtU'lism' rspamtl on aud rvvHnr, mhm(h nny uuv mil uiieuu. Ail saiaiaon mImmjI lmaa)s will l luuBtit; sfwatM tuillwirllrst. UrtlU uh Intliiltlve. okI 1'unteiples, Theory and Practice, Mothods, Etc. ?issit ws must 11 y iw. JTUr lull laturmauou. udilr4 lh lrln- , ,A, -. dw w .iSSSL, -.-- - --- - -r,i ---r-m . , WEBS EMORY "3 IMoJ wnJlu irl Iiooka Wre4 (a u 1.WU.11 TwIitooouu lr ci J1 fcr;'.! it &$&&&$& K. . IT 1.1U rCMT