Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1893-1895 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 7, 1893)
( 1 t,MMjr,,vJjiw. , V." IWSfW7 mumu ..lftUHUlXiim.)j,UMaWMMllmllljul J&vTSKiitGr OAli'lAL JOtTltNAXODAT, AUGUST 7, 10S8. - i' ' t i ' i 'i ii 5gagggBg in I ! t f ? P V. 1 M PUBLIHUKD DAILT, KXCEPT HOWDAY, BTTH Capital Journal Publishing Company, I'.wlOfflc Block Oomaierctal Btrwt. IIOFER BROTHERS, - - Editor. lMllr, b carrier, per month,. Itallr, br mall, rr Tr, Weekly, S paje,peryear 0.S) 300 - ua A PUBMC DL'fY- Without Inquiring uto the cause of tho present- "boom" times, there Is an Imperative duty resting upon all per sons In a; public position to do all In their power to restore prosperity and uphold the largest possible volume of money In circulation. What la the sltaatlon7 On all hands the number of unemployed is Increas ing. Factories are closing. Rillroads are lavimz off th'Mistnds If there la not an Immediate en tuge for the better and no one expects that, us aoou os har vest la over, one half if the laboring men In the Uglted tnU-s will be Idle. People who have any bank deposits, and now depend on wagm In vain, are slowly drawing out their balances for the necessities of life. The money la paid to the merchants of the towns and tbey send it East to pay their bills. Unless something Is done to put money In circulation aud employ labor, bank ruptcy atarea the business man in tbe face and banks not as rich as Crceius must inevitable close. It is the duty of city, state and coun ty oflldals to meet the emergency and sustain public credit as far &s possible. If roads or bridges are to be built it should be ordered done at this week's term of court. Tbe city of rJaletn la doing tbe right thing in push ing street Improvements and its city hall. The cou nties should do the same. Tbe credit of both should be freely used if necessary and all tbe employment glyen to labor that la possible. 'Now la tbe time to push public work. Labor and material are cheap. When good times return, when labor Is em ployed, and all kinds of business is flourishing, those In charge of public works might be Indifferent, but In the present crisis it is a publio duty to give laboring men a chance. Then the bus iness men and the banks will have a chance also. It is clearly a wrongful policy for the state of Oregon to suspend air Its build ing operations at the present time. To do so is to increase the financial strin gency that ia paralyzing industry, commercoand banking. The county au thorities at the present time have no right to hold back tho money wrung from tho people by taxation and ap propriated by the legislature for neces sary public improvements. The various state boards In charge of the eastern Oregon Insane asylum, the Agricultural college, tho reform school and other charitable and reformatory institutions have all called a halt aud seem to be watting for something to happen. What can happen? All that they could have done this year they can do. The taxes are paid by tbe peo ple. There are no more to collect in 1693. Tho taxes aro in Ihe hands of the county treasurers. Why are they not paid to the state treasury? What right have any officials to hold them back? If they havo paid tbem, what right have tho sta'o boards to with bold them from application to publio works whero they are ordered applied by law? It Is said that Multnomah county bis not paid because some of her funds aro locked up in suspeuded banks; it is said the Agricultural College money was put in a fulled bank;. It la said counties aro not paying as they should. All such talk Is unbecoming to a state government. The question might be asked havo we a stato government? Have we no oue to enforce the obliga tions duo the state? (,'au tlid counties do as they please ubout paying over the statu funds? Aro we to have no pro tection at the hands of stato officials against rotten bauka aud straw bouds? Tho people are begtunlngtoaskls there no obligations upon anyouo but the tax payer to pay? It looks that way. Tho various stutu boards In chargo of the state bulldlugs have no right to hold back until Cleveland and his con gress settle tho tariff aud stiver ques tions. The people who pay the taxes have a right to demand that they go ahead and use tho credit of the state if necessary to push needed publio works. Tho state has a score or more of young criminals who ought to be lu the reform school. That ought to be finished at once. A hundred young men aud wo men are waiting to enroll their names for a higher education at tbe Farmers' College and that mlsplaoed money should be at once recovered from tbe Bhlpley bondsmen or let tho state know that hereafter no bouds will be exacted or enforced lu Oregou, This is uot tbe time to halt for a great state that has no debt. Warrants cau esrtsJuly be floated, if not in Oregon then lu other etatts. If banks are holding tto money they ought ut least be willing to let the people have the use of half of It while tbey use the other half. If MTiltnomah county will end up 1160,000, perhaps they can keep (l other until Ihe :ext taxes aro due Hood's Cures Mr. Jennie Cunningham, "I Could Eat Nothlrig bnt Terjr light food, withotrt haying terrible distress la sir stomach. Before I had taken ona bottle of Hood's I nr that It was doing mo good. I continued to crow better while taking fire bottles, and Now I Can Eat Anything and mj health Is Terr much better than for years." ifxsJBtvtx Cvxxvtanw, South New CasUe, Me. Be sore to get Hood's Sarsaparilla HOOO'8 PlLLS curs ConsttpaUtn. 25o World's Fair, Chicago. CalnmetATCinia and 29th Street. aHlTFt m m Flreproofj Ul roomc; new Flr Greundi: Loth on eTerr floor. LUWGROFte? Amftrie&n and EnroDesn n! . m . . . :. .. lor circular. iinvuin lamiiy sod paid. It is clearly the duty of state boards to act energetically, to force tbe coun ties and tbe delinquent bondsmen to pay up and start tbe wheels of industry and relieve depression as fares possible. It is no time to shut down. The peo ple have paid their money and have a right to ask that it be expended. Bo good a state rights Democrat as Gov ernor Pennoyer should call time on all the state institution boards that he is chairman of and assert all the power and authority of the state to tho end that labor may be employed. The money can be collected. Tbe money can be paid In tbe next thirty days if ever. The publio works should go ahead. It Is a wrongful policy to trifle with these matters and hold back tbe taxes, most of whioh were paid betwee. three and six months ago by the people of Oregon. SUflULSTKD CUjIHKNT. There are not so many bankers with other people's money at the seaside as usual. The Journal began to urge tbe authorities two years ago to 11 x up tbe "tin soldier" bridge. It bos been at it ever since. But county courts are about as fur from tbe reach of public sentiment as anything could be. A second-class city superintendent of Salem schools would probably nut In terfere very much with tbe real work of the schools. Tho good work of a good force of teachers would goon. But if tbe office can bo filled by soma of the persons who have applied, it ought to be abolished. Some Democrats who hurrahed for Cleveland and a return of prosperity ought to take pity on that man who uses our "want columns" to advertise u house for rent "on Democratio boom terms." We would recommend him to Grover himself, but ho never made half so rash promises as did his friends. .$100 Howard, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreadful disease thatBClouce has been able to cure In all its stages and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive euro now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional aiseuse, requires a con stitutional treatment. Hull's Catarrh Cure istakeu Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tue system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, aud giving the patient strength by building up tbe constitution, and assisting nature iu doiug Its work. The proprietors have an much faith In Its curative powers, that thoy oiler Ono Hundred Dollars for any case that (t falls to cure, tieud for list of testimonials. Address, P. J. Chouey & Co., To ledo, O. S-3old by druggists, 75o. DOWN QO THE RA.TESI The Union Pacific now leads with re duced rates to eastern poluts, and their through car arrangements, magnific ently equipped Pullman and Tourist sleepers, free recllnlug chair car aud fast lime, make It tho best time to trav el. Two trains leave from Portland dally at 8:45 a. in. aud 7:30 p. m. The rates are now within reach of all, aud everybody should take advantage of thorn to visit the world's fair eud their friends lu the east, Bend fur rates and schedules of trains, aud do uot purchase tickets until after consulting Boise & llarker, agents, Balem, Or. V. II, Hobmiukt, Aas't Oen'lRass. Ageut, TJ. P., Portland, Or. DR.GUNN'H nmorxD LIVER PILLS AMILDMYSIC ONE PILL FOB A DOE. fork noal of U bwU wtk dt. U - - kak M utks It MCvlww Can K, AAllJft. ThM. Mill. .......l.. k.l ... ...TT' nM Kills Buntvlw 14.knt.lU fcuaAlM. Thtjr ul illd) .ih.. VL. ,. ffrx J Bold by BwksU A VanBlype, JllBliiiifeiK A MILLIONAIRE'S WHIM. H Is About to Ilnlld a False Horn Perfectly Fireproof. Ralph Brisbane Nonesuch, who ia re puted to have made a fortune of $23, 000,000 in South African diamond mines, baa purchased a 500 acre tract in the Temcscal district, near San Francisco, where he wdl erect a novel residence a palace, in fact upon which $1,500,000 will be expended aside from tho finish ing. This is to be a- structure built al most entirely of steel and glass. The building is to bo about 230 long by about 100 feet wide. At one end it will be surmounted by a tower 115 feet high; at the other end by a similar tow er, bnt of less size and height. A striking feature will be the sides bo- low the cornice, which slope to the ground with a enrvo at an angle of about 45 degrees. In the sloping sides are to be set huge oval windows 12 feet long and made to conform to tho lines of the sides of tho wall. The roof will be a huge gable extending the entire length of tho building and terminating in another gablo at right angles, in which are placed immenso stained glass windows, one of which will be 50 feet long and 80 feet wide. Not a foot of lumber or wood in any shape is to be used in the building. The materials will bo iron, steel, aluminium, brass, bronzo, platinum, silver, concrete, cement and stone. And the only stone used will be sculptured marble in the stairways and the main frieze, and onyx and decorative marble in the bathrooms, the stairs and a few other places. Then the foundations will be of steel and con crete. Tbe floors will be of concrete, brass and aluminium, the walls of steel, and the roof of steel, brass and copper. Tho inside walls will be some of oxidized sheet iron, some brass, covered with a preparation that protects the burnish of tho metal t some copper, some nickel and so on to correspond with tho decorations of tho room. The ceilings will be arched and re lieved here and there with great brass medallions. Tbe partition walls will be composed of metal grilles extending from floor to ceiling, arranged in vari ous designs, forming a vast network through which the visitor can see from tbe grand stairway at one end to the great ballroom at the opposite end. Rich tapestries will ordinarily cover the metal grilles and divide the interior into 14 apartments, eight of which will be cham bers and consist each of a suite of four J rooms a sleeping room, dressing room, bathroom and study. All the heating, lighting, ventilation and cooking will be done by electricity. Tho servants' quarters, tho kitchen, tho machinery and the laundry will all be in the basement. The wntcrwheel and dy namos win Deiocatea at the loot of the hill a considerable distance from the building. The sole entrance to the base ment from without will be at the foot of tbe hill through a tunnel, so that no one from within or about the house will see the approach or entrance of servant, gro cer, butcher or delivery wagon of any kind. The structure itself will be surround ed by a broad walk, and outside of the walk will be an artificial lake surround ing the building and forming a moat to be crossed by a movable drawbridge, thus placing the house practically upon an island. This lake will be fed by wa ter from artesian wells already in opera tion and pumped up by powerful pumps. The waters of tho lake will also serve to rim the dynamos that furnish light, heat and power for use in tho building. American Contractor. Comment on Dr. Depew and the Railroads, Dr. Depew and the magnates will find that their protended concession fn rail rood rates to tho fair will not catch the people; seo if they don't. The American peoplo aro not to be treated like a herd of immigrants and crowded into excur sion trains minus sleeping cars and lia- bio to be Bldo-tracked for hours at half a dozen flag stations on tho sand plains. Tho 10 day limit, too that is a positive insult. 8ilver tongned Dr. Depew has dictated to tha reporters a lot of enco miums for his plan aud expects the pub lio to swallow tho stone he is giving them in the" belief thut it la bread. The greed and the consummate cheek of some of theso railroad managers are matched only by their shortsightedness. The ex- position will contiuue to feel the effects, and, tho railroads too. Springfield (Mass.) Homestead. Went For Uogs and Got Bear. John Dingmon and William Bowler of Grant's Pass had a lively time with two large black bears ou Murphy creeks few weeks ago. They .wore out hnntlncr for somo hogs and were separated by eoino distance. When Mr.'Bowler saw ids game, it was olosa to him, so he shot It dead, but Mr. Dinguuin, who was also close to his bear, did uot make a fatal shot, only wounding old bruin, who im mediately proceeded to take the gun himself. Mr. B, kept on shooting the boar as he neared him and finally killed It when it was but a few feet away. The two nunters came across the bears al most at the samo time. Portland Ore- gonian. Carried Money lu Her llaurtkerchlet. It is said that a roll of bills containing $2,050 was accidentally dropped by a woman from a oar window ou the Bos ton and Maine railroad just after leav lug Portsmouth, N. H., Thursday even lug, The money was rolled In a hand kerchief, and as she pulled it from her pocket she said that the bills went out of tbe window. The woman was frantio ; over her loss, hut could not leave tho J train until it reached North Hampton, t as the oonduotor refused to stop between stations. She got off the car at North Hampton and stated that she was going to wane oacx to Portsmouth, a distanc of nine miles. Boston Transcript, T&e Human Electrical Forces! How They Control the Organs of the Body. Th eteetrieal force of the human body, u tho nerro fluid may be termed, li an ope cUUj attractive department of science, as It exerts so marked an Influence on the health of the organs of the body Net-re force U produced oy the brain and conveyed by means of the nerres to the various organs of tbe body, tbussupplrlng the latter with the viiauiT necessary vo in sure their health. The pneumogaatric nerve, a shown here, mar be said to be tbe most Important of the entire nerve sys tem, as it supplies the heart lungs, stomach, bowels, etc., with the nerve force necessary to keep them active and healthy. As wlU be seen by the cut the long nerve descending from the base of the brain and tennlnatln-lntho bow els U the pneumogas trie, while the numerous lit tle branches supply the Heart, lunzs and atom' ach with necessary vi tality, wnen the brain becomes In any way dis ordered by Irritability or exhaustion, the nerve force which it supplies ia lessened, and tho or gans receiving the ul minuneasuDDi it are con- .kened. cenpratlv seqaently weakened. Physicians genera!!: the Importance of this ays In recoirnlxe. fact, bat treat the Q-gaBltselflnsteadof tho cause of the trouble xne nojeu specialist, Franklin Allies, M. U., IiUB., has given the greater part of bis life to the study of this subject, and the principal discoveries concerning 11 are due to hL e Torts. Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine, the unri valed brain and nerve food. Is prepared on the Srlnclnle that all nervous and many other Ifflcnltlea originate from disorders of the nervecenters. Its wonderful success lncurlng these disorders is testified to by thousands In every part of the land. Restorative Nervine cures sleeplessness, nervous prostration, dizziness, hysteria, sex ual debility. 8t Vitus dance, epilepsy, etc It Is free from opiate or dangerous drugs. It Is sold on atxwltlve guarantee by all drug gUUL or sent direct by the Dr. MUes Medical po., Elkhart, Ind.,oq receipt of price, fl per bottle, six bottles forts, express prepaid. gold by D. J. Fry, druggist, Salem Babycried Mother sighed, . Doctor prescribed : Castoris TODAY'S MALKETS. Prices Current by Telegraph Local and Portland Quotations. Salem, August 7, 4 p. m. Office Daily Capital Journal. Quota tions for day and up to hour of going to press were as follews: 8ALKU PRODUCE MARKET, yaurr. Peas S to 10 cents a gallon. Raspberries red 6t cte., black 4. Blackberries wild 60cts. a gallon; tame 10 eta. a box. BUTCHER STOCK. Veals dressed 4 eta. Hogs dressed 6 J to 0. Live cattle 2 to 2L Sheep alive J1.60 to $2.00. Bprlog lambs 51 50 to ?2.00. MILL PRICES. Salem Milling Co. quetes: Flour In wholesale lota $3.20. Betail $3.60. Bran $17 bulk, $18 sacked. Shorts $10 and $20. Chop feed $19 and $20. WHEAT. 62 cents. IiaY AND GRAIN. Oats 40 to 45 cents. Hay Baled, new $S to $12: old $10 to $14. Wild In bulk, $6 to $8. Barley No demand except for feed. 60 cents. FARM PRODUCTS. Apples $1.60 a bushel. Wool Best, 10c. Hops Small saler5J to 17c. -Ecga Cosh, 18 cents. Butter Best dairy, 25: fancy creamery, 30. Cheeso-12 to 15 cts. Farm smoked meats Bacon 12; nama, ia; snouiuers, id. Potatoes new. 60o. Oulons 1 to 2 cents. Beeswax 34c, Caraway seed, 18c. Anlso seed, 20b. Ginseng, $1.40. IIIDES AND PELTS. Green, 2 cfs; dry, 4 oU; sheep pelts, 75 cts to $1.25. No quotations on fun. LIVE POULTRY. Chickens 7 to 10 cts; broilers 10fol2J; ducks, 12; turkeys, slow sale, choice, 10 cts; geese slow. PORTLAND QUOTATIONS, drain, Feed, eto. Flour Standard. $3.40; Walla Walla, $3.40; graham, $3.00; superfine, $2.60 per barrel. Oats Vhlte,45o per bushel, groy, 42c; rolled, In bags, $8 256.69; barrels, $0.600.75; cases. $3 75. Hay Beat, $1617 per ton; common, $1013. V' Wool valley, 10 to 12c. Mlllstufls Bran. $17.00; shorts, $21; ground barley, $2624; chop feed, $18 per ton; whole feed, barley, 8085 per cental; middling, $232S pertou; brew ing barley, 0005o per cental: chicken wheat. $1.221.24 per cental, Hops 10 to 18c. DAIRY PRODUCE, Butter Oregon fancy qreamery,22J 25e; fancy dairy, 17J20o; fair to good, 1610o; common, 121o per pound; Cali fornia, 3514c per roll. Cheese Oregon, 12J; Eastern twins, lCo; Young American, 16o per per pound; California flats, 14c, bugs Oregon, 18o per dozen. largo, ouu turkey, live, 12Jo; dressed, 15o, per tb. BAN FRANCISCO MARKET. Woel: Oregon Eastern choice, 12& 15c; do Inferior, 0llo; do valley, 14 10a. Hops 1018ic. Potatoes New Erly Rose, 50cS0; 60o00 per cental, bauka, . 00J.OO per cental. Onlone 7585o per cental for red, and $1.001 !X) for sllversklns. HarIoy..Fed,6031S2Joper cental for good Quality aud 83jc for choice; brewing, 00l.iO per cental. Oats-Anilltig. $M3I 62: fauov fed ' milling, ctt-wtajjioiiancviefa fall to Poultry Chlckens.eld.l5.u0: hro lam. t2003.0u; ducks, old, f4.60 : young. lioewuu: geese. JS.011 liWsasiissur JMiiiP , RKsr WANTED A LICENSE. And Thought Ho Was Kntltlrd to It Any way. Mr. Jacob Sassafras of Hooppole dis trict had answered all the preceding questions to the satisfaction of the clerk of vital statistics, and then that gentle man said: "Now, what is the lady's name? "Can't you leavo that blank?" asked the candidate for matrimony. "Certainly not." "Have to put the girl's name right in there, do youl" "Of course. Mr. Sassafras rubbed his chin thought fully and then ebserved: "You kin make me ont two licenses ono for Miss Jernsha Higgins an the oth er for Miss Amanda Abbott." "You are not going to marry them both, are youf asked the clerk. "Of course not, but you see Jernsha mightn't have mo. That's the reason I wanted the girl's name left blank." "Haven't you asked her yet?" "No. Is that the regular way?" "That is the invariable rule. I never knew of a man coming hero for a mar riage license until the lady in the case had been consulted." . . "Waal, that isn't my way. Ye see I hadn't popped to Jernsha yet, but I thought it would bo a good way to git the license an show it to her an say, Jernsha, don't you think your nama would look vell on this document?" Don't you think that would be a good way to propose?' "Possibly, but I can't issue a license under these conditions." "Not for JerushaJ" "No." "Nor for Amanda?" "No." "Nor with the name left blank?" "No." "Well, I swowl Ef Tve got to go back to Hooppole district and ask one o' them girls to marry me without a license to help me, Pm of eard I'll never get mar- !-S II neo. And Mr. Sassafras left the office with a big sigh. Brooklyn Life. An Amendment. Some years ago in a very rural district a farmer had a cow for sale. Now, as there was no weekly paper to advertise In, it was the custom of the vicar to give such notices ont to his congregation on Sundays. So the fanner thought ho would go to the vicar and get him to ad vertiss the cow in church. "Yes," says the vicar, "but you don't come tp my church." And they struck thev bargain that the vicar should advertise the cow and the man in return should go to church. Now, unfortunately, the man was very deaf, and on the Sunday following, when the vicar gave out the banns of marriage between Joseph So-and-so and Sarah So- and-so a rather unusual incident, for they seldom had a wedding the farmer took it for granted that the vicar was giving out particulars of his cow and shouted eut: "You may as well say, whilo you aro about It, that she la a most gentle crea ture, entirely free from vice and a great eater." London Tit-Bits. It Was All night. Editor So Mr. Skyzo of Podunk has stopped his paper? Assistant Yes. He says it's full of trash, and he doesn't want it. Editor Has he paid for it? Assistant Yes, one year in advance. Editor All right, grant the gentle man's request. It is the aim of The Weekly Regulator to suit everybody. Arkansaw Traveler. A Good Way. Mrs. Hocksey My Danny wnz a-goln to moke a -hothouse, and ho went and asked Stubby, the carpenter, tho easiest way to do it. Mrs. Dineen Phwat did ho say? Mrs, Hocksey He told him to give tha baby a box of matches to play with. Raymond's Monthly, Unsurpassed. Billings (who has been to tho fair, to Jennings, who is going) The biggest thing I ever Baw; biggest buildings, big gest beauty, biggest assortment, and stopped at a hotel 60 big that I rang the bell on Friday night, and it took until Tuesday morning for tho boy to reach my room. Life. Actually. The Wife (sorrowfully) Well, getting good beef at a butcher's has become a perfect lottery. Tho Husband Yes. Gambling for high steaks. Truth. Ml. Sad- Past," Ted told me hub night that I was. tho only girl ha had ever loved." 'Bah, bo proposed toua three months agor "Now I knowwhsthe meant when ho said there were 6ome unpleasant inci dents in his past." Chicago Inter Ocean. Besult Uy DUhr. Teacher If a woman buy a, pound of 40 cent coffee and a pound of SO cent coffee, how much does she pay? .uoyiwno ha been working 1 om UJ sftgssj - - 1 HEALTHY ss5.- sasssssTijr hHbbbbbSS0SsbbbbbbbbbbbH Give a three months old baby io to ia THE NEW WILLAMETTE STABLES Completed and ready to wait on customers. Horse boarded by, day or week at reasonable prices. We keep a fell Use offTticfc,- Draya and ExDress to meet-a I demand. Also keep the Jlasst StalUois la Into oty. for tervl8 10 Barn and residence 2 block sooth of poetofflce. RYAN & COT CIvBAN. If you would be clean and havo your clothes done up in the neatest and dressiest manner, take them to the SALEM STEAM LAUNDRY where all work is done by white labor and in the most prompt mouuci- GUI! CLEARANG I From now until further notice we will sell our entire stock of Consisting of men and boy's etc. Are all AT ALL NEW GOODS. A. We have no old -shelf-worn stock .and make this extraordinary inducement to our patrons FOR CASH. We must reduce our stock never before offered. Come in atd examine our large and selected stock. We will please you in quality of goods and pneo SHOW COMMENCES TODAY. ADMtSSION FKEK bMMISOR NO. 257 COMMERCIAL STREET. Wood taken in exchange for clothing. OREGON STATE Monmouth, Oregon. AMnVmM."10010' the Northwest Stroog Professions! j Tchew. Cour8e8' nd weU wnlmd Model School for PrwUcal Training Normal, Advanced Normal, BuclneM, Hu!c, and Art DcptrtaMU, Btautiful and heattU location -Light ExpsnH-N Sabtoi. TheNormal han enlnvwt a mimA ..u j.i . . - w..lilnp ..ifJ.tfiMSty8WmPrr,B"uPPllt'.Btl the course of study rark ana strengthened.. Tbe-graduates are 1b desswad to All bboA bcsIUobs. THE DIPLOMA ENTITLES THE HOLDER to teach In any county In the Bute without farther eaasBlHaUoBs. TSSXS AVD XXPZsfUM. Tuition .Normal, 0.36 per tnn of tea weeks; Bub-Normal 5 00 per tem ten weeka; Business I8.S5 per terra. Board at Normal dining ball fl ?f t II " m irom ooc per wees: (unrurntabed), to fl.M and fl.85 furms- Board and lodging In private faraillea M 60 to W.00 per week. Tuition, bo lodging and books less than 160 per ysar. Conservatory of rauslo. Thorot courses areoitered in Vocal and InMnmenUl MbsIc TuIUod. 10 per tens twenty lessons. Monmouth is eaallv srrsisniMr fmm the HUte Capital, sixty miles south of -. mw ii m CHILDREN Arc a great blessing. All children will be perfectly rugged and healthy if raised on the GUI BORDER EAGLE BRiMD Condensed Milk, for it is the most nourishing, rich and natural food for infants that can be found. Re member the Eagle brand. Your Grocer and Druggist sell H. parts watrr to one of Kajle condensed milk. UUJ - .UiNJ!aj J. UJLiMSTJflU, Liberty Street fin D in Ul goods COST clothing, hats, caps, underwear, marked down. of goods and such bareains were HGRMflL SCHOOL it &. .r t.. at.i. u.ir miles ftf Portland. Cetale. cheerfully Jaddrees P. L. CAHMtfCLL. Pre, or . fcj. MHKDD, See1 of FscbH.