Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Evening capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1888-1893 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1891)
OT-SSrr is " npnBp--gf. VKwr!" "T" "fw """-H iitfj rl2!ILIIlt!?tf'fI!aM' gMBiiiaiMtrtiaiiiiii "liiitf"''1:? STRONG S Is the Place to Superior get Now York let?" Cream SoJa. MEALS FOR 25 CENTS. Choice FruitsJ-Tolaccod, etc. Wkstacott& Irwin. A'PWVEKPOLSEIttlON. Breached by Dn. talmage SUNDAY, OCT. 4, ON TVliat Wore Voa Mnde I'litJ-An Impor tBlit Question Ashed ami Anmtrrff1 To Thin Knd Wits I Horn" Jolm '! 37. tlio TxU HuoOKliTN. Oct 4. A most fnijw give scone l that wltncs.cd In i' Urooklyn Talmrnnclc, when ntth .- itiK of thi' luorniug sorvlrto mvcii Um. rand persona on tlie lunln floor. In t twognllprfesatid tlioiidjoiiiliiff rcx:i'. nnd sing tlio Doxolojry. This iiifinn i. In addition to tilts ponwrpRiitional .i: lug. Profpssor Henry Byro Hrowtie rn dcrcd frou theorem. "Tlionio mid Vn rlnttons In A." by Krntnur. Dr. T.i' mage's text was taken from John x iii 87. "To tills end was I born." After Pilate had suicided, traditioi. says that his body was thrown into tin Tibi'r, and Mich utornis ensued on and about that river that hi body unx taken out and thrown into tlio Itlione. mid similar disturbances "swept that river and ita battkn. Then the body was taken out and rctnovod to Lau unnne. and put In n deeper pool, which Immediately became the center of siui ilar atmospheric and aqueous disturb (trices. Thougli theto aro fanciful and false traditions, they how tho nxecra tlon with which the world looked upon Pilate. It was before this man. when he was In full life and power, that Chrl"t was arraigned as In a court of oyer and terminer. Pilate wild to his prisoner. "Art thou a king, thon?" and Jesus answered. "To this end was 1 born." "Sure enough, although all earth and hell arose to keep him down. Ho Is today empalaced, enthroned and coronated king of earth and king of heaven. "To this end was I born.' That Is what liucaiim for. and that was what he accomplished. By the time u child readies ten years of ago tho parents begin to discover that child's destiny; but by tho time ho or she reaches fifteen years of ago tho question Is on the child's lips? "What am I to bo i What am I going to bo? What was I mado for?" It Is a sensible and righteous question, and tho youth ought to keep on asking it until It is so fully nnswerod that' tho young man or tho young woman can say with as much truth u Its author, though on a less onxuislvo scale. "To this end was I bora." ! There is too much dlvlno skill shown In tlio physical, mental and moral con stitution of tho ordinary human bolng to suppose that ho was constructed without any dlvino purpose. If you take mo out on somo vast plain and show mo n pillared templo surmounted by a donio llko St. Peter's, and having n floor of precious stones, and arches that must hnvo taxed tho brain of tho greatest draftsman to design, and walls scrolled and niched and panoled and wainscoted and painted, and 1 should ask you what this building was put up for, and you answered, "For nothing at all." how could I bellove you. And It Is Impossible for mo to bollove that any ordinary human being, who has hi Ills muscular, uorvous and cere bral organisation more wonders than Christopher Wren lifted in 8U Paul's orPhldliwovorolilsoIud on tho Acropolis, and built In such a way that it shall last long after 8t. Paul's cathedral is as much a ruin as tho Parthenon that hucIi a buliiir was constructed for no purpose and to oxecuto no mission and -without any dlvlno Intention toward souio end. Tho object of this Miriiion Is to help you to Hud out what you are Hindu for. and holp you llnd your sphore, and assist you Into that condl tlon where you win say with certainty and emphasis and enthusiasm and triumph, "To this end was J born." WHAT VOn Wtl.l. NOT IIAVK TO AN SWKIt KOIt. First, 1 discharge you from ull re sponsibility for most of your environ incuts. You are not responsible for your parentage or grand parentage. You are not reioiislble for any of tho cranks that may have livod In your ancestral line, and who a hun dred years before you were born may have lived a stylo of life that more or loss affects you today. You are uot rospoiislblo for tho fact that your tomperamont Is sangulno or mol unchollo or bilious or lymphatlo or nervous. Neither are you responsible for tho place of your nativity, whether among tho granito hills of Now Kng land, or tho cotton plantations of Lou isiana, or on tho banks of tho Ciydo, or tho Dnieper, or tho Shannon, or tho Selno. Neither are you respouslblo for tho rojJfftoti taught In your fntliorii hesfto or tho Irrollglon. Do not bother yourself about what you cannot holp, or about circumstances that you did not decree. Tako tilings an thoy are ond dooldo tho question o that you shall bo abla safely to say, "To this end was I born." How will you deeldo lit Hy direct ap plication to tht only Uolng in tho uni verse who Is competent to toll you tho Lord Almighty. Do you know tho niton whv ho U tlio ouly one who ivu lie can sw evuryuimg tulIrH Hocauso between your cradlo and ypur grave, -jlmupu tlio cravo bo eighty years oil. ----: '. . . . .i ..- 1...1 i - -.--.. ...----, Hd benlclw that no is inoouiy w c.,jmbIo of hearing everything, who cm coo wtat has been happening for the last Hvw hundred years in your juHHMtaU Hue, nnd for thouMUids of yom lr batik to Adum, and there Li uni mu oerfcon 111 .111 IlliU HIKWtnU who can take' nil things that pertain to you Into consideration Is God. nnd he is tho one you can ask. Lifo Is so short we have no time to experiment with occupations and professions. Tho reason wo have so many dead failures Is that parents decide for children what they shall do. or chil dren themselves, wrought on by some whim or fancy, decide for themselves without any imploration of divine guidance. So we have now in pul piM men making sermons who ought to be lu blacksmith shops making plow share, and wo have In tho law those who instead of ruining the cases of their clients ought to bo pounding shoe lasts, and doctors who aro the worst hindrances to their patients' convales cence, and artists trying to paint land scapes who ought to bo whitowashing board fences, whllo there aro others making bricks who ought to le romod ellng constitutions, or shoving planes who ought to bo transforming Iitera tures. ASK QOD ADOUT IT. Ask God about what worldly bus! nes you shall undertake until you are so positive you can In earnestness smite your hand on your plow handle, or your carpenter's bench, or your Mack (.tone's "Commentaries." or your modi cal dictionary, or your Dr. Dick's "Didatic Theology," saying, "For this end I was born." There are chil dren who early develop natural afllnl ties for certain styles of work. When the father of the astronomer Forbes wah irotnjr to London ho asked his chil dren what present he should bring each ono of them. Tho boy who was to bo an astronomer cried out, "Bring mo a telescope I" And there are children whom you tlnd all by themselves drawing on their slates or on naper. shins and houses or birds, and you know they ure to be draftsmen or artists of some kind. And you find others ciphering out dlfll cult problems with rare Interest and success, and you know thoy are to bo mathematicians. And others making wheels and strange contrivances, and you know they ure going to be machin ists And others aro found experiment ing with hoe and plow and sickle, and yon know thoy will be farmers. And others are always swapping Jackknives or balls or bats and making something by the bargain, and thoy' are going to bo merchants. When Abbo do Rnnco had so ndvnnccd In studying Greok that ho could trnnslnte Anncrooii at twclvo years of ago, there was no doubt left i that ho was Intended for a scholar. Hut In almost every lad there comes a tlnlo when ho docs not know what no was mado for, and his parents do not know, and it Is a crisis that God only can decide. Then there aro those born for somo especial work, und their fitness does not dovelop until qulto lato. When Philip Doddrldgo, whoso sermons and books hnvo harvested uncounted souls for glory, began to study tho ministry, Dr. Calamy, ono of tho wisest nnd best men, advised hint to turn his thoughts to somo other work. Iwmio Burrow, thoominont clergyman and. Christian Hci?ntist-hls books standiu-d now thougli ho has been dead over two hun dred years was tho dlshcnrtoumont of his father, who used to say that If It pleased God to tako any of his children away ho hoped It would bo his son Isaac. So somo of those who hnvo boon characterized for tliolr stupidity in boyhood or girlhood havo turnod out tho mightiest benefactors or bono faotrosses of tho human raoo. Theso things being so, am I not right lu saying that In many cases God only knows what Is tho most appropriate thing for you to do, and ho is tho ono to ask. And let all parents, and all schools, and nil universities, and all colleges rccogulzo this, and a largo number of thoso who spoilt their best years lu stumbling about among busi nesses and occupations, now trying tills and now trying that, and falling In all, would bo nblo to go ahoad with a delhilto, decided and tremondous purposo, saying, "To this end was I born." WHAT YOU WKHK MAWK KOH. But my subject now mounts into tho momentous Lot mo Bay that you are mado for usofuluess and hoavon. 1 Judge this from tho way you are built You go Into a shop whore there Is only ono wheel turning, and that by a work man's foot on h treadle, and you say to yourself, "Hero is something good being done, yet on a small scale;" but If you go Into a factory covorlng many acres, and you find thousands of bands pull lug on thousands of wheels, and shut tles flying, and the whole bccuo be wildering with activities, driven by water or steam or oleoma owor, you conclude that the factory was put up to do great work and on a vast scale. Now, I look at you, and If I should find that you had only ono faculty of body, only oue luusolo, only ono nerve If you could boo but could not hear, or could hear and not soo, If jou had tho um of only one foot or one hand, and, as to your higher nature, If you had only one mental faculty, and you hud memory but no Judgment, or Judgment but no will, and If you had a soul with ouly ouo capacity, I would say not much is expected of you. Hut stand up, 0 man, and let mo look you tquarvly In tho fnce. Lyes capable of seeing everything. Ban llauai What lies Sod n right to demand of you? God Is the greatest of economists In the universe, nnd he makes nothing uselessly, and for what purposo did he build your body, mind nnd soul as thoy ore built? Thore are only two beings In tho uni verse who can answer tliat question. The angels do not know. Tho schools do not know. Your kindred cannot ccrtnlnly know. God knows and you ought to know A factory running at an expense of 300.00 a year and turning out goods worth seventy cents a year would not be such nn Incon gruity as you. O man, with such semi infinite equipment doing nothing or next to nothing In tho way of useful ness. "What shall I do?" you ask. My brethren, my sisters, do not a3k me. Ask God. There's some path of Chris tian usefulness ojx'ti It may be a rough path oritmay boa smooth path, a long path or a short patii. It may bo on a mount of conspicuity or In a valley un observed, but it is n patii on which you can start with sucii faith and such sat isfaction and such certainty that you crv out in tho face oi eartn ana nfflTqjVstnrihg Customer-What Store is this? Merchant This Goods' Store. Customer Well, is r. Eastern Mr, Eastern Goods, can hell and heaven. "To this end was 1 born." Do not wait for extraordinary quali fications. Philip the Conqueror gained his greateit victories seated on a mule, and if you wait for some caparisoned Bucephalus to ride into the conflict you will never get Into the world wide fight at all. Samson slew the Lord's enemies with tho Jawbone of tho stupidest beast created. Shnmgar slew six hundred of the Lord's eni'inies with un ox goad. Under God, spittle cured the blind man's eyes in the New Testament story. Tako all tho faculty yon have and bay: "O Lord! Hero Is what 1 have, show mo tho field and back mo up by om- Anywhere, anyhow. capable of grasping everything Mind with more wheel than any factory ever turned, more power than Corliss1 liglue ever moved. A soul that will oit)lvo all the universe except heaven, Jina of Ujthouwuid years but ha wmu ' w Wpuld outlive all heaven if the life low affected your character, and won of otj,er immortals were a moment old AdM Hlnuwlf will wmetlme turn fhort 0j ti, 0(ennii. Now, what tun iUiyourdlfpplt.lc. Tlw otjlf iWiijt jj wpria tyM to jt oi yoal nipotcnt power. any thno for God.' WOUDS OV SALVATION. Two men riding on horseback came to a trough to water the horses. While tho horses were drinking, one of tlio men said to tho other a few words about tho value of tho soul, and then thoy rodo away, and in opposite direc tions. But the words uttered were tho salvation of tho ono to whom thoy were uttered, nnd ho became tho Itev. Mr. Cliuiuplon, one of tho most distin guished missionaries In heathen lands, for years wondering who did for him tho Christian kindness, and not finding out until. In a bundlo of books tent him to Africa, ho found the biography of Bralnerd Taylor and n picture of him, and tho missionary recognUed tho faco In that book as tho man who, at tho wntorimr troucli for hore. had said tho thing that wived his mu1. What opportunities you hnvo had In tho past. What opportunities you havo now. What opportuntios you will havo In tho days to come. Put on your hat, O woman, this afternoon, ni.d go in and comfort that young mother who lost her babo last summer. Put on your hat, O man, and go over and seo that merchant who was compelled yesterday to mako an assignment and tell him of tho over lasting riches remaining for all thoso who servo tho Lord. Can you sing? Go nnd sing for that man who cannot got well. an yon will fiolp him into heaven. Let It bo your brain, your tongue, your eyes, your ears, your heart, your lungs, your hands, your foot, your body, your mind, your soul, your llfo, your death, your thno, your eternity for God, feeling lu your soul "To this end was I born." It may bo helpful to somo If I recite my own oxporlonco In this regard. 1 started for tho law without asking any dlvlno direction. I consulted my own tastos. 1 liked lawyora and courtrooms and Judges and Juries, and 1 reveled In hearing tho Frellnghuysons and tho Bradloys of tho Now Jersey bar, and as assistant of tho county clork, at sixteen years of ago, I searched titles natural lied foreigners, recorded deeds, re ceived tho confession of Judgments, sworo witnesses and juries and grand Juries. But after awhile I felt a call to tho Gospel ministry and entered It, and I felt bonio satisfaction in tho work. But ono bumuior, when I was resting at Sharon Springs, and while seated In tho park ot that village, I said to my bolf, "If 1 havo an especial work to do In the world I ought to Hud It out now," and with that determination 1 prayed as 1 had nover before prayed, and got tho dlvlno direction and wrote It down In my memorandum look, and I saw my llfo work then as plainly as I see It now. Oh, do not bo satisfied with general directions. Got speclllo directions. Do not shoot at random. Tako aim ami lire. Concentrate. Na poleon's suecoss In battle oamo from his theory of breaking through tho enemy's ranks at ono point, not trying to meet tho whole lino of tho enemy's force by a similar forro. Ouo reason why ho lost Waterloo was because ho did not work his usual theory and spread his force out over a wide ranco. Oh, Christian man, on, Christian woman, break through soiuo whoro. Not a gonoral engagement for God, but a particular engagement, and made lu auswer to prayer. If there aro sixteen hundred million people In tho world, then there are sixteen hundred million different missions to fnlHIl, dif ferent styles ot work to do, different orbits In which to revolve, and It you do not get the dlvlno direction there are at hiwt fifteen hundred and ninety nine million poilllitlw that you will make a inUtwke, On your kuees be fore God get tho matter ttottled, sothat you can Unnly say, "To this end was I born." THK CUMACTRHtO COXatDttKATJON. And now I come to the c'Ju.'acterla consideration. A near as 1 caa tell, you vim buUt tqt happy eternity, ill the disasters' which have happened to your nature to bo overcome by the blood of the Lamb If you will heartily accept that Christly arrangement. We are all rejoiced at tlio Increase in hu man longovity. People live, as near as I can observe, about ten years longer Mm tlmv iwfid to. The modern doc tors do not bleed their patients on all occasions ns did tho former doctors. In thoso times, if a man had fever they bled him, if ho had consumption they bled him. if lie had rheumatism they bled him, and If they could not make out exactly what was tho matter they bled him. Olden time phlebotomy was death's coadjutor. All this has changed. From the way I see people skipping about at eighty vnars of nee I conclude that lifo insur ance companies will have to change their table of risks and charge a man no more premium at seventy .than they used to do who he wan sixty, and no more premium at luty man wnen ne was forty By the advancement of medical science and the wider acquaint ance with the laws of hc.ilih, nnd tho fact that people know better how to t.-iko pare of themselves, human life is prolonged. But do you realize what, ! after all, Is tho brevity of our earthly state? In the times when people lived soven und eight bundled years, tho patriarcli Jacob Laid that his years were few Looking at the life of the youngest person in this assembly, nnd supposing ho lived to be a nomigenurian, how short the time and wm,u gone, while banked up in front of us- is an eternity i one's so vast that arithmetic li'is not figures enough to express its ler $th or breadth or depth or height For a happy eter nity you were born irdess you run voursolf mnunst flic dlv ue intentions. you may take this coat back. I shall patronize our own Home IViill arid get mv suit at tb 'WOOLEN MILL STORE, 299 Commercial Street, Salem. .I II I I . r . j n ! am told they sell as good a suit tor $14 as you can sell for of Eastern make. j,ui'j.i'-in urn m ii i in i-rrrTmrTrTr-'-T """,'"""' Asiatic barbarism and Vienna was es neciallv besicsed. The klnpr and hb court had Ced, and nothing could savo j the city from being overwhelmed unless the king of Poland, John Sobieski, to I whom they had sent for help, should with his army como down for tho relief, and from every roof au i tower tho in-; habitants of Vienna watched and waited and hoped until, on tho morning of September 11, tho rising sun threw an unusual and unparal leled brilliancy. It was the reflection on tho swords and shields and hel mets of John Sobieski and his army coining down over tho hills to tho res cue, and that day not only Vienna, but Europe, was saved. And seo you not, oh, ye souls besieged with sin and sor row, that light breaks iu, tlio swords, and the shields, and tho helmets of divine rescue bathed in the rising snn of heavenly deliverance? Let every thing else go rather than let heaven go. What a strange thing it must bo to feel self born to an earthly crown, but you havo been born for a throne pn which you may reign after tho last monarch of all tho earth shall havo gone to dust. I Invito ?ou to start now for your tako the title deeds to your everlasting in heritance. Through an impassioned prayer tako heaven and all of Its rap tures. What a poor farthing Is all that this world can offer you compared with pardon hero and life immortal beyond tho stars, unless this sido of them there be a place largo enough and beautiful enough and grand enough for nil tho ransomed. Wherever it be, in what world, whether near by or far away, in tills or some other constellation, hail home of light and love and blessedness I Through tho atoning mercy of Christ. may wo all get there I "German Svruif If. standing In your presence, my eye own coronation, to come in nnd should fall upon the feoblett soul here as that soul will nppe.ir when tho . world lets it up. and heaven entrances it, 1 suppose I would bo so overpowered that I should drop down as ono dead. You have examined tho family Bible and eiplored the family records, and you may havo daguerreotypes of somo of the kindred of previous generations, you have had photographs taken of what you were in boyhood or girlhood, and what you were ten years later, and it is very interesting to any ono to be able to look back upon pictures of what ho was ten or twenty or thirty years ago; but have you ever had a picture taken of what you may bo and what you will bo if you seok after God and feel tho Spirit's regenerating power? Where shall I plant tho camera to tako the picture? I plant it on this platr form. I direct it toward you. Sit still or stand still whllo I take tho picture. A WOXDKHKirii picrtmit. It shall bo an instantaneous picture. There I I havo it. It Is dono. You can seo tho picture lu its imperfect btato and get bomo idea of what it will bo when thoroughly developed. There is your resurrected body, so brilliant that tho noonday Min is a patch of mid night compared with It. There Is your soul, so pure that all tho forces of di abolism could not fepot It with an Im perfection. There is your being, so mighty and so swift that flight from heaven to Mercury or Mars or Jupiter and back again to heaven would not weary you, and a world on each shoul der would not crush you. An oyo that bhall never shod a tear. An energy that bhall never feel a fatigue. A brow that shall never throb w ith pain. Yon are young again, thougli you died of decrepitude. You aro well again, though you coughed or shivered your self Into tho tomb. Y'our everyday as toeiates are tho apostles and prophets and martyrs and most ealted souls, mosoullno and feminine, of all tho cen turies. Tho archangel lo you uo em barrassment. God himself your proa sent and everlasting Joy That is an Instantaneous picture of what you may bo, and what I am sure somo of you will bo. If you realize that it Is an im orfect picture my apology is what tho njiostlo John said, "It doth not yet ap pear what wo shall be," "To this end was I born." If I did not think so I would be overwhelmed with molan- choly. Tlio world does very well for a llttlo whllo eighty or a hundred or a hun dred and fifty year--und I think that human longevity may yet bo improved up to that prolongation, for now there Is so little room between our cradlo and our grave wo cannot accomplish much. But who would want to dwell in this world for all eternity ? Some think this oarth will dually bo turned Into a heaven. Perhaps It may, but It would have to undergo radical repairs, and through eliminations and evolutions mid revolutions nnd trtiibformatious iutlnlto to mako It desirable for eternal residence. All the east winds would have to be come wvt winds, and ull tho winters changed to springtides, and tho volca noes extinguished, and tho oceaui chained to thoir beds, aui the epidem ics forbidden entrance, and tho world so Used up that 1 think it would take more to repair this old world than tu mako au entirely now oue. But I must Miy I do not care where heaven Is ii we can ouly gut there, w bother a garden Ued America or an ompar.idiMKl Eu rope, or a world, oentml to tho whole iifitirok fl tlite am) wna f Knmi ' If each ono ot us could say that, we would go with faces shining ami hopes exhllaraut amid earth's worst uilsfor tunes and trlnls. Only a little whllo and .then tho rapture. Only a llttlo while and then the reunion. Ouly a little whllo and thon the transfigura tion, uxsb KrKHVTinxa vow iikavkm. In the Seventeenth century all Eu rope km thrnd with tt fave vl The majority of well-read phys icians now believe that Consump tion is a germ disease. In other words, instead of being in the con stitution itself it is caused by innu merable small creatures living in the lungs having no business there and eating them away as caterpillars do the leaves of trees. A Gorm The phlegm that is coughed up is those Disease. parts of the lungs which have beeu gnawed off and destroyed. These little bacilli, as the germs are called, are too small to be seen with the naked eye, but they are very much alive just the same, aud enter the body in our food, in the air .we breathe, and through the pores of the skin. Thence they get into the blood and finally arrive at the lungs where they fasten and increase with frightful rapidity. Then German Syrup comes in, loosens them, kills them, expells them, heals the places they leave, and so nourish and soothe that, in a short time consump tives become germ-proof and well. Strawberries and Grapes. Twenty vnrletlcsofench for sjlo. Mxuunl of culture nud descriptive .itftlngue of plants or eltlieror tlicse. tesi nr ah inoin miltN. suitable for tuts cllniute, rent on np plication to K. IIUKKH, Ka'om, Oregon. JNHUHANCK Company. Klre and. Marine. O. W. 11EKI.KU. Asent . Hnlem. Oreiron "brick and tile. Korllntt-clHsu hand mndi BO to brink and tile, MURPHY & DBSART. Ijuro supply on baud. Nrarf.ilr grouud, Salem, TX 1JALED HAY! of We have hsvy stock of extm quality hy at the lowest price. T. BURROWS, Nn KS Cnmmeralal FU, Hateni BUTLER'S BOOK. 1.00" Pages. 200 Original Enf ravings, Elegant BtmUns, Published in 3 Languages, Popular Prices, FIRST EDITION 100,000 COPIES. The cnty Authentic Work by GEN. BEXJ. P. BUTLER. Rxilu.lv territory -nl liberal terms g wn l t liable Hgerit. AQSiimvmiy ap. P'tnU Hin lor ten Itory with j'J for rrojpeo tu. THE J. DEWING CO., San Franc'sco, - Cal. cr era b -t c i. era ? rt- s U CD d- " k I r d i llj CD 1 O A O O (J) O o 9p sf 0 "O P) GO r 1 ASTOMSBER.S!! Keep your eye on this space and profit by the state ments we will make about cut prices. Ben Forstner &,Co aMeMLaamimmiw r i im.'w.mjm-i',Bn imiiCATlONAI.. utto 1 -THE- V KiOltJ mi'v OLDEST, LARGEST, Least Expensive K 'i Teacher of music. Piano nnd tim Can be been at Conservatory u! tninie er lib uuiuv, in ulu aiieyi. I -AND- MUSIC ! MISS ALZIRA CIIANDlk Teacher of Piano and Orpun. it)5 Cuttiigestrtttl MOST HOME-LIKE Institution of leurnlnu In the northwest. i."(i ptiuicnts tu 1837, -iM in ISM an Increase ol nearly ?0 per cent In four j earw. Graduates btudcuta la Art, Business, Classical, Law, Literary, Medical, and Musical, i'knrinnceullcal, RUenliIoaud theological courses. FORMAL COUKSE. Graduate iiom tho Normal Couise have all ttiB.idvar'iiH of giaduuUM. from the .jtate rni m.il tenooib. Jtet'cr ficlllttiR for teaching next year than eor before. i'irsl to. Begins Sept. 7, 1891. For cntologue, with full information uddreus KKV OKO. WHITTAKEll, U. U. l'res. fi 23 llw balcm, Oregon. Portland University OPUN'S SEPTEMBER 14th. Htautlful and healthlul Bite near the city Uxueuse as itabonaule as any other Insti tution uf learning on the coast. Omsk-ill, hlteiury, t-clent!llc, Theological, l'ienaru orv.nirmaland Busiuefes courses. Mti- Jents of all guides lccelved, direful over sight anil direction glen to all studen k. i.ad.es' boarding hall under expeiiencid i iinn iedi.n, Professors of excellent kcIioI-uri-hlp and much experience employed, r'or Information address, U.C.STEATTON.D.D., Portland, or T1J0S.VANBC0Y,D.D., Dean of College, Port land University, Portland, Oregon .TKdwti Y us-'v v, - , , - -coztfGf .-at. m, Or.-gou. . I. otiiloj , President, v I , mi ..utroug, Manager. 25 ii sine s s, S Ii o r t h tt n d, 'rjpcwrltlny, l'oiuinv.uishlp, English lup.irtmeats. atudeuts admitted utaiiy tin e. Catalogue free. Now Location. The J. V. Hoot h real est to nffloe l 'Iwi moved over Junes t lleiiiurdl, :se limb LK1I1K UIOCK. iheNewBfacksmfhs SPRAGUEciHlLGtKS, Succssors to John Holm, ur. Cwmuer. rial nud uiicuhkpiu direct, nuit-iti. Uurw snocingubpecmiiy. imr GEO. C. WILL, ol Will ;i!ros., Albany and Conallit. Pianos, Orams and Sewing Machines. 8KWINO MACHINES nnd OKOASS REPAIRED A.ND CLEAN BD At Your Homes Agents fot Northwest IntmrauceCo. To doors norm nri'osi twice, iiietn,ur. jn dies and uew parts for all sowing Nachloa a-o-u uw $500 Reward! V K will pay the uboo rfward for dj case of 11 er complaint. dhitmla. Hit headache, indigestion, constipation or cm tlveuess we cannot cine wltw wevt'e tt ellBbleLiqer Pills, when the dhetioui wt tilctle complied with. They aro purelr vegetabl, and never fall to gte ratkb uon. sugar noatea. iirge boxes, rnntin. ug au puis 3 cents, utware oi counifl' feltii and ir tuitions The crenulne irrt I Metered ouly by Till; JOHN U. WRt Co. Chicago 111. hold by ueo K. Hood, Druggist, .uhjui. strfet.Knlem Or. E. THE STA'iE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE. Opens Soot. Sih, 1891. C0bT.SE OF STUDY arranged expressly to i tit tho noedi oi the farming aud .Me ohuuUiii interest ol the stale. Large, comodious nnd well-ventilated outldmgfi. The College is located in a cul tivated ard Christian community, and one ofthe healthiest In the Stute. MILITARY TKAININO. Expenses ntti not txctti I50 for the Entire Session Two or more Kreo Scholarships from ti.trij uiuuiy 81 1!. L. y. Wrlio for Catalogue to AUNULD, Pres., Coi valhs, Or C. CEOSS, and State St. and Court St.-The bestra" delivered to all part of thecitv. MONEY! To Loan on Real Estate Security. Agency Pacific States Sarinjrs, Loan Building Co. FEAR & HAMILTON, SALEM. - - - , ?re?i; boom II, flush Bank blotk. 5 12a' m D.C.SHERMAN, O, H, Pension and Claim FfcJ!;!' Uox ML Salora, Oregon. Deputy Cobbij Clert' Vrite for blanks. V INSURE IN YOUR HOME COMPAW "The State." Assets Over 350,000 Dollars. GEO. M. BEKLEB, UV APg tH4n.ni.,i..nfni. MaMnn rnunu - T UU "J t-XIUl BgCllHfi i-w ueo wtin ne lompniiy. unty. -:- Salem Boat House ' float office foot of Trade street. He nnd hunting boats. lUtteslo. CHAB. H. McCLANE, PW fi I 0 uuiiMjrvaiury ui 11 WILLAMETTE UMYERS1TY. iThe best organized Music 8cnool ou the North Wtst coast. One hundred audfltly inuslo students the past school year. IWi and latest met hods ot Instruction. Con tea lor Piano, Voice, Violin, Organ, 11 ir inony, Couuterpolnt, and inuslcMl compo sition In all the higher forms lilploim granted on complttiou of course. Hex. term begins .Monday, bepieruber 7th. bend for t&Uiloiue or address ,.... . .. Z. M.PAltVIN, 7.TnUw Miuicall)irector,alem Or MISS O. BALLOU'S "KINDERGARTEN. t hrUt'uu church parlor, corner High and Outer i reels. di Instruct children itner the bl modern methods. Hours from Wo. tu. tu Uo'clotk. Visitors luited. rroo mnAimimAv aquauit- JllOO lHVJIiMUI,-teor the Ure den ( oubervutory of id usle itienuany.) Wl'l ou bur looms. 6 and 7. llauk build- log. the lt f September. Will tench vo. oat and Instrument. I mu!c, lso Oermau rnd French. J U .. tl.nA- Teacher ol Violin, Guitar, BanJ" Un and urgan. rune iui Commercial street, Btato. Health is" Wealth - 1 1 saffi !A-r WJLr,,irwR.r J&x&x?tU3JXf JJSH --xrviasri tiTHrATMtKT-.-i r-r.T. -nd Prsa Trettnenl, a gnaiantw d l,,,.SfnfJ leria.Iiiii.f.lnviJtslons.ii,trt,wi Neur.klii. Uciulache.Nnof oimertby the us of alcoh 1 w Waketullns. U ta Wpr- , jj ingot the bmtnwsulUug w iu. J lpVdli.if 10 mMry, rD, of IS!a mnturS nld-e. hannne. ! rt eauied hy ocr-eiertlo "9 'ritoeDt.'JS boxoouiaiu.mcinontht, 6y box or ix boxe. ;'? oreptld on receipt of price. vra WEGOABANTEE BIX clvedby as fr .ix ufa with UtX we "ifod'tM r ujt.-. i-sul oj.iv hy on r ta,Qt bfmitet Jimnni rtmiMirtiiWtteiri muAaaMimakMiiut ?