Botaotkalf aoptoMMBttohrelatttMi tttUhIMi ton iHtaUA WUkthefet nonUac m gaaiaa Vwb m Tto pleawt to ih to the tool porab dear WMla yon smoke, b -reclined at joor ea Lookinfoo o'er your beautiful neatlow of Ttot to aad fro to the breeie; BotaotojaiMMpleaMBt to itort witk yea eeyibe Car tb boidIbc caa nUle o'er Am hwd. Ami work tUl your elotbe are completely vet tbrooftaf Aad blister ahall eorer your haed. In keeping a dairy there's surely delicM, And It peak of contentment aad plenty,' To see a large (table well filled with eaotea oowa, Bay numbering from flftoes to twenty; Andyet it seems hard when youTa worked from the dawa - Till too sna disappear trom yoor debt, To thlok of tbe sow yon bare yet got to milk Before yon retire for the alfht. But, tho task fairly orer, yoa eh oar Bp one more, And Joyfully seek yoor repose. To dream of the eream-pota with luxury filled And th milk-pan la numberless rows; But tbe sweet dream Is brokea whoa early next day You're politely requested to ehura. And for three weary hours, with strength ebb ing fast, . Tho crank you despondingly turn. But in raising young pigs there is truly a eharm When they sell at tbe present high or lee; And of all the young slock whleh a fanner can raise There's nothing that looks half so alee. Bow cheerful on feels ss hs leaves them at night, Tbe encouraging lot of eleven. But his Joy slightly wanes when he goes out next day - Ana 01 lire ones can count only seven. 1 But no one disputes that the farmer is blessed With true Independence and labor. Whose food don't depend on the whims of maa kind, Like that of his mercantile neighbor. For God In Bis mercy looks down from above And paternally gives him his bread. Provided he works eighteen hours every day And devotes only six to bis bed, New England Homestead. M'PHERSON'S WIDOW. The Successful Consummation a Friendly Mission. of "In short, say you've appointed your self Mentor over me at once, and be done with it-hang- it!" Lakely glared at his companion. Bristed, immovable, went on smoking. A silence, fraught with explosive pos sibilities, ensued. Finally Bristed arose. He was somewhat the elder of the two, and he was saturnine and dark. "What are yon going to do?" he de manded. "If you think I'm going to say" "Then yon go to tbe dickens by the shortest cut you can find!" was Bristed's ultimatum. j The next day Mrs. Lakely tearfully pressed him into an interview. "I assure yoa that I have done my lest to dissuade Horace," Bristed said. "Oh, it is too dreadful!" moaned Lake ly's mother, wringing her hands. "You have always been such good friends- room-mates and all and young men will often listen to an older comrade's ad vice and remonstrance, where a moth er's, a sister's, are quite thrown away. Do nse your influence, my dear Mr. Bristed, with my poor, benighted boy! Oh, it is too shocking that he should be thinking, for one instant even, of such a marriage!" "I appreciate your position, yon may be sure, my dear madam. It is a very trying one," murmured Bristed sympa thetically. "And it is so horrible, too, that there hould be a question of bringing such a person into the family when there is a young girl," continued Mrs. Lakely, putting her handkerchief to her faded, pretty, ladylike little face. Mrs. Lakely felt that this allusion to her daughter was a master-stroke of di plomacy. "Certainly, I can appreciate your feelings here more than ever," cried Bristed, warmly. And a ray of comfort pierced through Mrs. Lakely's dolorous mists as it came over her that a man (of Hurlburt Brist ed's "seriousness") never expressed himself so clearly unless he wished def inite inferences to be drawn. Then nor attention deflected from her daughter's interests to the more imminent perils of her son, and she sighed again. Thus urged, Bristed returned to the charge. - "In the name of Heaven, Lakely, don't make such a fool of yourself," he began, in the tone of a more tolerant persuasiveness. "A fool of myself! By George! I think I've a good deal of patience to stand what I've stood from you for tbe last month, Bristed! If a fellow didn't feel sore about throwing over an old friend, by George " "All right, I understand your point of view," said Bristed. placidly. "It isn't agreeable to have warnings dinned into your ears when you want to rush head long into the biggest folly of your life. But it's tbe friend's part to sound the Warning, all the same, whether it's agreeable or not. You might think of your mother and sister a little in this matter, too." "What tbe deuce have they, or have you, or has any one, for the matter of that, to say against Mrs. McPherson, Bristed?" cried Lakely, starting up and confronting his friend, with his boyish features aflusb and a kindling light in his bine eyes. "You say she's a little odder than In "Not a little; a good deal She's older than 1 am must be," interrupted Bristed. "Well, and even if she were. What of it? What are a few years one way or the other?" "A great deal when the few ye&rs are fa the wrong side. But that isn't the worst feature. Yon needn't force me into saying things you wouldn't care to hear. But you know as well as I do that McPherson's widow has been talked bout. Oh! unjustly, if you care to have it so! I'm not going into that tuestion. But the old fellow didn't in spire the greatest respect himself, and, at all events, a good many things were said of his pretty wite. Why, my dear fellow," continued Bristed, reasonably, and with the kindly influence in his One voice and the softened expression in his strong features which had always had so much power over Horace Lake ly's impulsively youthful temperament, "it's a preposterous thing,, you losing your head and letting yourself in for til i a cni-f tV TUl. i. ' wife for yon" "You don't know her! Yon haven't even seen her," eielajped. Lakely. artHsaty. iuTavwtwa setters. Miinewktr. an the ansa ways knows wtssaa of thai sort of caliber; They're arj laUnrestiaff to meet; very stimulating; very aauaiaf; very fascinating. They have tarn thou sand site. While their spell is o a man he thinks them any thief they choose to be thought. He believes any thing every thing. Afterward be has n Awakening: and it is very well for him if he hasn't to discover that he has bound himself, hand and foot, while he was under the charm. Flirt with an ad venturess for really, yon know, a Mo Pherson can scarcely be called any thing else flirt with an adventuress as much as yon like, my dear boy, if you feel sure enough of yourself; bat be very careful to stop a long way off of matrimony. That's what a wise man does, my boy." Poor Lakely, with his elbows on his knees, and his hands supporting his head, aat staring at the figures of the carpet "Confound it! yon always had wisdom enough to fit out an army, Bristed," he growled. "It's no effort for you to keep out of scrapes. You couldn't get into one if you tried. You're so deucedly old-blood ed." When it dawned npon Mrs. Lakely that her son might unexpectedly be on the point of listening to reason, the poor lady's joy burst forth in touching gratitude to Horace's friend. But it was short-lived joy. At the end of a fortnight she came to Bristed, pale with agitation, and communicated the dire intelligence that Mrs. McPherson had appeared in person on the scene; that ahe was following Horace up. "I suppose she feels that the boy has been slipping from her odious person!" exclaimed Mrs. Lakely, waxing bitter In her righteous indignation. "It is too shocking, the vulgar for wardmess of such people. I do not fancy that she really cares for Horace, you know. It is his money that is what she wants to secure. She knows the boy has just come into his grandfather's property. And she is poor; they say, though she lives with an appearance of luxury, that she is absolutely impecunious. Her husband, it would seem, left her noth ing whatever." "I imagine there is no doubt about that," said Bristed. And then Mrs. Lakely came to her point Would Mr. Bristed go to this "person" and try to convince her that the family strenuously objected to ' the proposed marriage, and that every thing would be done to bring it to naaght? Would he try to persuade her to give Horace up, to relinquish her hold of a young fellow a mere boy much her junior, who ought not to be thinking as yet of matrimony under any circum stances? Would he appeal to her good feeling, if she had any? Would he "My dear Mrs. Lakely, anv thin? to oblige you, but I don't know "Oh, don't say so," interrupted the poor lady. "I have such confidence in your ability to straighten matters out for us." Adayortwo later this conversation resulted in a visit from Bristed to the hotel where Mrs. McPherson was tem porarily registered. It was not in this young man's nature to look forward with much relish to the interview. He felt that he had before him something extremely distasteful. It is even possible that he was inclined to take some credit to himself when he reflected upon the trouble he was at to oblige his friend's family and to keep tne Doy himself from a piece of folly he sholild spent the rest of his life in regret ting. But in another way he accounted himself repaid for any thing he might do, even before it was done. For noth ing could be sweeter or fairer or more oharming than Cecilia Lakely, Horace's young sister. She was a mere school girl, to be sure, but Hurlburt Bristed admired the type. An ingenious young girl was to him the most delightful thing in nature. And he smiled often as he took himself to Mrs. McPherson's hotel in remembrance of certain warm, shy glances which had fallen from those dove-like eyes these latter times since he had been exerting himself so much In her brother's behalf. In helping Horace he was really wooing in the surest way, if indirectly, the elusive Dower of this young creature's love. He was still thinking of Cecilia as he sat waiting for Mrs. McPherson to ap pear. . He was, indeed, so much en grossed in his reveries that he looked up only when the lady he had come to see stood close in front of him. She had entered softly by a door at the side of him. As he rose a little confusedly she covered him suddenly with a won derful smile. It was the perfection of a smile. It was brilliant, it was appealing, it was arch, it was even a little sad. The young widow it was impossible not to think of her as younger than she was stoofl there an instant and then sunk in a chair opposite her visitor. She begged him to resume bis seat. She seemed to wait, still with that unusual, that almost harmonious smile, for him to begin. From her presence, at once assured and unobtrusive, animated and leposeful, from her delicate toilet, there emanated an aroma, as it were, which flattered all the senses. "I believe you are Horace Lakely's frreat friend," said this gracious Creat ure, in a well-modulated voice. If the modulations were somewhat artificial, If it were possible to surmise that the natural tones of the voice did not al ways betray the same refinement of culture, it so happened that Hulbert Bristed (albeit he bad the reputation oi noticing every thing) did not observe the fact. The next day Mrs. Lakely awaited Bristed's promised visit with eager im patience. Cecilia, looking very lovely in a white dress (Bristed had once re marked that she should always wear white it was becoming to her), was sit ting with her mother, and shot an ex pressive glance at the door when it opened. "Well. Mr. Bristed, well," demanded Mrs. Lakely, "have you good news for me? Will she go away and leave my boy in peace?" Cecilia, who had risen and remained standing, in a certain hesitancy, left the room. "I don't know that I can tell yon any thing very definite, my dear madam," observed Bristed some what slowly. "Oh, what do you mean? I hope the wretched person does not refuse to loosen her hold of Horace?" cried Mrs. Lahely. "No, no. It is not that not at alL Beassure yourself. Only " Bristed in terrupted himself. He began again: "I imagine she will, as you express it, loosen her hold of Horace. Yes but I wished to ask you ahem!"' If it had been possible to fancr such a thing of the self-assured, graceful, lofty oristeu, airs, iaxeiy would navs fan cied thst be looked embarrassed, gh " Eeve yo amy eWUlte Mam tar nppariaf that Hi. MePharsoa iwaily talented to Marry Horace?" "Easily intended to marry hlar echoed Mrs. Lakely. "Why, nothing eooid he more evident! I thought we were agreed on that point, Mr. Bristed." "On Horaee'a Intra mat nvlflna ta. marry Mrs. IfcPnersoa yes," emend- xt ens tea. "But j do not I ass not sure" . "Do you mean." interjected the poor lady, holding herself very straight her mien, in its outraged niatstrnal nrM becoming almost majestic, "that Mrs. aacrnerson is playing fast and loose with my son? That she would reject him at tbe last moment?" That Horace Lakel should marry such a person as McPherson's widow was horrible enough. But that being so inclined, Mrs. Lakely's darling, her eldest born, her handsome, privileged son, should be subjected to the indignity of a refusal from such a source, surely that was almost more terrible stilL "Oh, my dear Mrs. Lakely, please do not imagine I would insinuate such a thing," exclaimed Bristed, rather lamely. He was tugging at his mustache, and Mrs. Lakely was obliged to acknowledge that he was certainly i'.l at ease. "I hope you will let me know what progress you make," she insisted, feel ing vaguely helpless. "I will, of course," said Bristed, get ting to his feet. He seemed relieved in some way that the interview should be at an end. He departed with so much precipitancy that he forgot to leave his respects for Cecelia. Altogether Mrs. Lakely could not make it out She sighed, and concluded that men were very queer. She heard indirectly once or twice during the an. suing few weeks that Hurlburt Bristed uau rjeen seen witn Mrs. Mcfnerson, who still remained in town. According to the combined entreaties of the entire family, Horace Lakely had finally consented to flee the temptress who had pursued him, and he was away from home. "If I ever live down this feeling," the young man wrote at about this time to his friend, "I shall have you, I suppose, to thank for having urged me back into the path of wisdom. But I can tell you it is hard desperately hard staying away and listening to advice. I can't forget her, Bristed! You're such a cool. reasonable fellow yourself that you won t be able to understand that my whole life seems to have bound itself about this woman." There was a tone throughout the let ter which testified that Horace Lakely was Still a pood deal of a hnv It. somewhat of a consolation for Hurlburt Bristed to think that it was so. At least it made it somewhat-, auio, f him to write, in answer to that letter, a short time later: "I think it right without further da- lay, to convey to you a piece of news wnicn may proDably surprise you. I don't know that any explanation would simplify matters. Mrs. McPherson and I aVe to be married next month." Bweet-SmnliiiiK Imiuxtry of Zanzibar and I'emba Island. The roan who goes out between acts and comes back with a clove between his teeth should be interested in know ing where his disinfectant comes from. Zanzibar and the neighboring island of Pemba furnish the world with the bulk of the supply, about 13,000,000 pounds a year. Consul Pratt in a report just received at the State Department says the clove treo was first introduced into Zanzibar by Sultan Seyed Said bin Sul tan, about the year 1830, since which time its cultivation has gradually ex tended, until it U now the chief in dustry of the islands. The industry received a check in 1872, the date of the- great hurricane. At least nine-tenths of the trees were de stroyed at that time, so the larger part of those now standing are of new growth. A peculiarity of the clove tree is that every part is aromatic, but the great est strength is found in the bud, which is the "clove" of commerce. The finest quality of cloves are dark lirnwn in color, with full, perfect heads, free from moisture. In the cultivation of the clove the first thing to be done is the starting of the shoot The seeds are planted is trenches, and are kept well watered un til after sprouting. In the course ol forty days the shoots appear above ground. They are carefully watered and looked after for the space of twe years, when they should be about three feet in height They are then trans planted, being set about thirty feet apart and kept watered till they be come well rooted. From this time on the young trees require only ordinary care, though the best results are ob tained when the ground about the trees is well worked over and kept free from weeds. The growth of the tree is very slow, and five or six years are required for it to come into bearing, at which time it is about the size of an ordinary pear tree, and is usually very shapely. It if a pretty sight to see a young plantation just coming into bearing. The leaves, of various shades of green tinged with red, serve to set off the clusters of dull red clove buds. As soon as the buds are fully formed and assume this reddish color the har vesting commences, and is prosecuted for fully six months at intervals, since the buds do not form simultaneously, but at odd times throughout the period. The limbs of the tree being very brittle, a peculiar four-sided ladder is brought into requisition, and the harvestine proceeds apace. As fast as collected the buds are spread out in the sun, until they assume a brownish color, when they are put in the store-bouse and are ready for mar ket A 10-year-old plantation should pro duce an average of 20 pounds of cloves to a tree. Trees of 20 years frequently produce upward of 100 pounds each, worth 10 cer& a pound. The Sultan derives no inconsiderable portion of his revenue from this source, the duty levied placing to the Snltau'i credit for the present year nearly, if not quite, $400,000. Beside the clove buds, the stems art also gathered, and form an article oi commerce, commanding about one-fifth of the price of cloves and having about the same percentage of strength. Tc this circumstance is due the fact that ground clove can frequently be pur- j price than whole cloves. j For the past 15 years the cultivation j of cloves has been the chief occupation of the Arab planters, and bad always netted good returns. It seems proba ble that it will continue to be a profita ; ble crop, since the consumption of the article appears to keep pace with the ! insriuble increase of production. - U3AR5 K1PUNO. A Vwa Watwa awe the Itea Literary rad. Imagine a man born la Bombay, of parents in whose veins runs the blood of more than one people, born and pass ing the first Ave years of his Ufe in that strange, warm land; then taken back to the parental roof-tree in old England that he might know something of the sweet ehildbood and healthy boyhood peon liar to this sheltered island; and again at the age of sixteen returning of his own free will to the tropical country which gave him birth, and for seven Ions: years doing the hardest kind of journalistic work working from dawn to eve, year in and year out with the thermometer frequently way up in the hundreds, no substitute even of the poorest possible in a territory where lournalists are not to be obtained on short notice for either love or money, with fever looking him grimly in the eye, cholera slaying those nearest and dearest to him, and in his own heart al ways that tumult of aspiration and de spair which is ever tbe lot of the highly gifted the only genuine consolation lying in the hard labor which later on was destined to bear ripe fruit but which at tbe moment in that deadly climate strained the vitality to its last possible limit Imagine a man who has led this kind of a life, having but little society for nearly a decade beyond the rough-and-ready representatives of the army and the natives, with whom he ' has slum bered and fought sorrowed and made merry, watched and broken bread, until they are to him as brothers imagine all this and see if you can not understand whyitisthatat this moment the writings of Budyard Kipling are astonishing two worlds. Without a previous knowledge of the soil whence has sprung all these marvelous blossoms of a human intel lect it is quite natural that the firstques tion should be whether this .precocity but presages an ultimate fiasco, or work stronger than any this century has yet known. Lionized as a young man can be only in society which constantly craves a new sensation for its dulled appetite, courted with a persistency which most prove more flattering than wholesome at the age of twenty-four, it will not be at all surprising if Mr. Kipling has startled the world this year only to fall by the way in the end. But may the gods be kind and avert suoh a catastrophe! and, indeed, as I Contemplated the modest menage near the Thames, with the desk and chair and the pen, which evidently saw long and daily service, I felt that after all, genius would rise superior to society. A oharming little study that is with tho green of Victoria Embankment directly beneath the windows, the glistening waters of the ship-burdened river but a stone's throw away, and suoh coziness and cheer within. Walls hung with army pictures reproduced by Detaille, a dozen well-used pipes of varying sorts and sizes occupying a case just above a most inviting sleepy hollowi chair, a couch covered with a tiger-skin, which even in death is not free from menace and alarm, a great black cat thoroughly alive and happy and much petted by her fond master; the little tea-table, from which an ascetic repast is snatched when inspiration comes thick and fast ab, it was all very fascinating! And the lord of this little realm, how shall I describe him it is so natural to describe a woman, so difficult to repro duce the personality of a man; woman lends herself with ease to any kind of portraiture, while it always seems to me that man instinctively rebels against it Yet I would I could convey to you some impression of that small, lithe, graceful figure; of a countenance which even at the age of twenty-four is begin ning to tell the tale of persistent and severe labor, and a climate which must eat the very heart out of a man, a chin cleft in twain, but strong and promi nent telling of many a battle fought and conquered, and many a battle yet to come; nostrils which expand with every emotion like those of blooded horses quivering for the race; a com plexion pale from study and also from the great heat borne unremittingly for so many years, and fine gray eyes, whose widely dilating pupils behind the constantly-worn eye-glasses fill one with a vague alarm, as of some misfortune lying in wait for their future sight Helen Bartlett Bridgman, in Brooklyn Record-Union. REGARDING OLD AGE. Dr. Holmes Welcomes It as a Season of Peace and Kujoyment. I was a little over twenty years old when I wrote the lines which some of you may have met with, for they have been often reprinted: I The mossy marbles rest On tbe lips that he has prest ' j'- In their bloom. And tbe names be loved to hear Have been carved for many a year On the tomb. The world was a garden to me then; tt is a churchyard now. "I thought you were one of those who looked upon old age cheerfully, and welcomed it as a season of peace and contented enjoyment." I am one of those who so regard it. Those are not bitter or scalding tears that fall from my eyes upon the "mossy marbles." The young who left my side early in my life's journey are still with me in the unchanged freshness and beauty of youth. Those who have long kept company with me live on after their seeming departure, were it only by the mere force of habit; their images are all around me. as if every surface had been a sensitive film that photo graphed them; their voices echo about me, as if they had been recorded on those unforgetting . cylinders which bring back to us the tones and accents that have imprinted them, as the ex tinct animals left their tracks on the hardened sands. The melancholy of old age has a divine tenderness in it which only the, sad experiences of life can lend a human soul. But there Is a lower level that of tranquil content, ment and easy acquiscence in the con ditions in which we find ourselves; a lower level, in which old age trudges patiently when it is not using its wings. I say its wings, for no period of life is so imaginative as that which looks to younger people the most prosaic. The atmosphere of memory is one in which imagination flies igore easily and feels itafllf mnro at. hnma than In .V. ; " vuu ... rag KUlUUOr ether of youthful anticipation. Olivet "Fellow-citizens," thundered the im passioned orator, bringing his fist hard down on the table, "what I ask again, Is our country coming to? And echo an swers 'Whatr " "Pardon me, sir," in terposed a mild-looking man in the audience, rising to his feet "did I un derstand your question to be: 'What is our country coming toT " "Yes, sir." "And you say echo answers What?" "That is what I said, sir." "Then there's something wrong with the acous tics of this building," said the mild looking man, shaking hit head in a per plexed way and siting dow again, SJMfr7JSfr1 ogrmphers of both sexes, attribute their success to a course at the Portland BuitU ness College. Portland. Oregon, or the Canital Rtmlnnoa niiZT e.i Oregon. Both are under the management bah Departments. Write to either for joint C. IY1. ELKINS & CO., -DEALERS IX- Stovesjinware & Hardware, PUMPS, PIPE, ETC., Bunnell's Old Stand, - Prinevffle, Or. Agents for the celebrated Meyer's and California Pumps and Halladav Wind wTrranted ing repamng general job work done on short notice and Oregon Land Company, -WITH Home Office at Salem, Or., IS THE STATE INSURANCE BUILDING, AND Branch Offices at Portland, Astoria and Albany Has for sale a large list of grain, stock and frnit farms ; also citv and suburban property. Send for pamphlet, map and price list. " CHARLES M. ELKINS, AGENT FOR THE Studebaker .Wagon .and . Fan v Machinery, - Opposite Brick Store, Prineville, Oregon. -ALSO DOES WAGON WORK and BLACKSMITHING On short uotice and in first-class workmanship. Horseshoeing and plow work a O. G. !lV-A.TiXTSrGr, DEALER IN AND MANUFACTURER OF All Kinds of Building Material, LUMBER DRESSED AND ROUGH. SPLENDID LINE OF Furniture, Bedroom Sets, Lounges, Chairs, Mirrors, Etc. Lumber accounts collectable H. A. BELKNAP & SONS, Successors to J. W. HOWARD -DEALERS IN- DRUGS AND CHEMICALS, East Side of Main Street, Prineville, Or. Standard Patent Medicines, Paints, Oils and Varnishes, Dye Stuffs and Soaps, i Toilet Articles and Perfumery, Hair and Tooth Brushes, Bird Seed and Cages. A general variety of Druggists' Sundries, Stationery, Books, Cigars, Tobacco and Pure Wines and Liquors for medical use. TEMPLETOIM & SON, 'WHOLESALE ANL RETAIL Druggists, Prineville, Oregon. DEALERS IN Perfumery, Hair and Tooth Brushes, Patent Medicines, Toilet and Shaving Soaps, Fancy Goods, Glass, Putty, Paints, Oils, Etc. Also a Fine Line of Gold and Silver Watches and Jewelry. pouikleda'tl'l hoiIrT18 promptIy fiIled- rhyan"' prescriptions carefully com- First National Bank -OF- PRINEVILLE, OREGON. Transacts a General Banking Business. President Vice President.... Cashier Hf.sry Hahn M. HK'HRi. T. M. Baldwin Accounts kept subject to check. Sells exchange on Po tland. fan Francisco and New Yurk. Intwist al lowed on timerfeposits. Collections receife l'rompt attention. AH B001 S: .CO., -DEATERS IN Fancy Japanese -AND- CHINESE SILKS. ALSO Fine ChinaTeaSets and Ornamental Work Simple rooms at fary Honse. POSTOFFIGE 7 STORE, A. C. Palmer, Proprietor. --A FULL STOCK OF THE Best Brands of Tobacco and Cigars, Notions, Stationery, Pencils, Inks and Pens. FRESH CANDIES AND NUTS. til ;gmU ne and flrrt chu. Subscription takes for all ixwapapars awl periodical. THAT CAW BR rrmRD FTfreTDaw , the kind that pays. Scores of young dusukss men, ana Una- of A. P. Armstrong, have same coaneaof CaUlogne and specimcna of pim.n.i, ITS ALL KINDS OF- monthly. PRINEVHIiE MEAT MARKET. P. B. HOWARD, Proprietor. ALL KINDS OF- FRESH MEATS. Butter and Eggs of Best Quality. Vegetables in . Their Season. Sausage and Corn Beef Constant ly on Hand. Highest market price paid for Bntter, Egg. and Farm rro-juoe. DEW DROP SflbOOll. Dave S. Rowan, Proprietor. (Successor to Fred Gor let). -FULL STOCK OF- Choicest Brands of Wines, Liquors and Cigars COSSTAKTLY 05 HAHD. Fifteen-Ball Pool and Billiard Tables in Good Repair. e?rtble dub rooms (or print lamat. LINN V. WOODS' GALOON, Mala Street, PrlaeriUe, Or. -KBEF8 OK HAXO TBI CHOICEST- Wines, Liquors S Cirs V FANCY MIXED nniNifs Prepared by an experienced barkeeper. A fine Billiard Table and Elegant CM Rooms For the accommodation of tnutnmera. Rn M.l attention to filling orders by snail. ED N. WHITE, mala Street, PrlacTtlle, Or., -PROPRIETOR OF TBI Popular Resort for All WHO WISH - - - A . (Jiiar, v ta7-i A Nice Befreaalaar Drlak, ' A CJante mt Billtaraaj, mr A Social Vatae' at Carte. CLUB ftOOJWS m GflfJIES. Come early, late and often. DOONG'S RESTAURANT -IN THE CARY HOUSE, Prlaevllle, Oregon. AH D00NG, Proprietor. The reRtaurmnt is flratliuu in - .u. ..j l. . , . . . . . J iamvvt ISM sUD tMes always upplied with the be the market affords. of- ...... ft. u mj uk, preparation aua sgiTing -I BALL I SUPPERS t AND I PRIVATE DINNERS. Meals serred at all hours, day or night. New Meat Market, PRINEVILLE, OB. SAM C. CLINE, Proprietor. CHOICF RFFF. button, Veal aad Pork CONSTANTLY ON HAND. THE HIGHEST PRICE IN CASH -PAID FOR All Kinds of Country Produce -OR Sold at a Liberal Commission. We solicit a share of your patronage SAM C. CLINE. LIVERY AND FEED STABLE, (Hamilton's Old Stable), Itlaln Street, Prineville, Or. CHRIS COHRS, Proprietors. ' f . . - First-Class Rigs, Buggies or Hacks, for Hire by tbe Dai or Week. Special utention Riven stock left In idt ca ?. valuable animals. CUIUS COHRS. t me imjx maim iur ButDiiiiK BiaiuoriB una oiner POINDEXTEITS RESTAURANT, NEXT DOOR TO SHELLABARIEK'S, Prln Til e, Or. P. B. POIIDEXTER, Proprietor. Tbe Table Supplied with AH tbe Delicacies Tbat Can be Had In tbe Market. White Cc:ks and White Waiters. No Chine ookfi. MfHil BapvsmI at all hmiH Private rooms for special m aid. Firfft ClaM ftlettnlriiT anarlmi-nt. ln i with the restaurant. DAVIS BROS., -DKAUSB8 W- : GROCERIES, Piwlsions and Canned Goods. Store Oppoelto Salomon's Shop. W Mil OBVT for Clan, anil nffltr th. aa.T