THE VERY BEQINNINQ. laanathlng Alx.nt tha Formation of ThU W.irl.1 aa It "WhlrltHl In Rnaca." In the burning mass tlmt compost! our earth at tirst, there existed copper, lulplinr and all the oilier suUstamx that are on ami in our earth now, only til were in a gaseous state. The cold had not vet hardened them intosoliils. They tell us that this collection of burning material belonged originally to the sun, ami was thrown off troin it in consequence of a natural law, and ent "whirling insuee." lo you un derstand what that won! space" means) This plobo of our is wrap ped up in a huge cloak, some forty niilea thick, called the atmosphere. Beyond this thiek envVlope stretches far away that unknown region called "space. " What are its boundaries, no one can tell us. Whether it holds other worlds than ours we can only guess. But one thing about it is known for certain, which is, that it is very cold. Its temperature is about 200 degs. below zero; so we have need of our thick, warm atmosphere. What effect did this intense cold have upon the mass of fiery gas, sent tpiuuing out through its depths I Just the same effect that the cold mouutain peak Usv upon the vapor of water. ' It oooled tiie gases upon the outside, hardened leiu, and in the course of tiuia ion .. a thin crust. This was God' filat day of creation, and some men think it wis equal to thousands auiL thousands of our years maybe millions because this forming of the crust must have been slow work. jfirst, l:y" patches of gas became aoiid. it these Moated together and wirhapf ucvtHleil in making one crust jninxi all ;ver and a i.t, rumpled -u-ust it waat Then the boiling, seeth ing mass inside broke through, and the work had to be done all over agai n. When the vapor of water was con densed, ruin begun to fall. Then came another struggle, its quickly as the rain fell on the hit crust, it was changed into vapor agaii's and sent up into the air to repeat its work. What a boiling, steaming, hot ball this world must have been! During all this time there were ter rific peals of thunder and Hashes of lightning. Whenever any liquid is changing into a vapor, electricity is produced; and when so vast a quan tity of water was changing into steam, the intensity and frequency of the lightning must havebeeu immeasura bly beyond anything we can imagine. If only we could have been at a safe distance above this steaming world and looked dowii r on it, what a sight we should have seen, and what deafening pealsof thunder we should have beard I Even though the rain was almost immediately changed into vapor, it J must have cooled the earths crust a little, coming directly from the icy realms of sKice. And at last came a day when the cold conquered the heat, and the crust became cool enough for the water to Slav down. It tilled up all the cracks and crannies, and there was so much of it that only a little bit of the earth's crust could peep above its surface. Uf our own continent, only a narrow strip of land, extend ing from what is now Nova Scotia to where the great lakes were to be, and thence westward to the region now called Alaska, remaining above the waters. In the place now occupied by Europe, tin re were many little pululit-s, but no land so extensive as the atrip in the western hemisphere. Thick, dark vapors brooded over the carlli and shut out the light of the sun. And these gloomy vapors, the little pieces of dry, hot crust aud-the surg ing, boiling waters, were the begin nings out of which God was to tnaka our beautiful world, with its pure air, its blue sky and snowy clouds, its dense woods and fertile fields, its hills end valleys, its lakes and rivers. There could have been no life in those days neither plant life nor ani mal life. In the tirst place the crust was too hot; neither animal uor plant ould live on it, nor iu the waters that touched it. In the second place, ani mals and plants cannot live without sunlight; -"nl no sunlight could fierce those masses of heavy vapor. jeresa 0. Crofton iu St. Nicholas. Tr'nHple of Inoculation. Professor E. Ray Lankester, lecturing i institution, said that a considerable num ber of the mt-t fatal diseases in man, oxen and shu-p were due to poisonous matter produced in the blood which was known as bacteria. When this poison got into the system, the duty of the oorpuscles was to go for it. and they prtv ceeded to eat as murli as they could; but sometimes they could not attack it at all. The Itacteria was too much for them, with the result that the bacteria grew, and very souii proved fatal to Um body in which it existed. The corpuscles could, liowever, be edu cated to deid with the bacteria, and the future of preventive medicines would be the educaiion of the white blood cor puscles. The fact that one man, by con stant use, could without injury take a dose of arsenic that would kill six or dinary men was due to the fact that he bad by weakened dooes been educating and training the white corpusck-s. Tliey could be taught to sat and flourish under --ditions which, if not commenced fc.uJually,. ""'- e destructive to them, and that was the principle 2i' kite base of protective inoculation. As a preventive of many fatal diseases inslieep andoxen, inoculation had been remarkably success ful. The corpuscles first received a weak ened breed or disease by inoculation, and thus when a violent attack came they w-ere ready to receive and dispose of it. This education of the corpuscles, it seemed to him, was the explanation of the suc cess of vaccination. They received a weak dose of the poison from the vac cine, and were in that way prepared for a stronger nose in trie way of smallpox. He believed the white corpuscles could be trained to receive the most virulent poisons, and he hoped this training would be carried on so aa to deal with a great number of diseases. New Y'ork Post. Mound I p Ilia Wood UiuiiMa, .Vl'.rn I leg;in steamhonting, along rk in 1S45, the wood bout business was .ig feature of river trallic. At that time there wcr no less than seventy-five boats running that carried nothing but cordwood, and their owners, with few exception, heroine opulent. All of the cordwood then camo from along the banks of the Illinois, upper and lower Mississippi river, and it required a small army of men to handle the business. For many years the receipts did not fall below 00,000 to 70,000 conla annually. When coal came into general use it cur tailed the trallic, and the fact that the river country was denuded of wood far back from the river wound up the wood business, bo that now there are not more than three or four boats engaged in the traffic Globe Democrat Interview, ANTIQUITY OF THE TELEPHONE. Tin l'rlaii ( IkiIiii llnv ITd II lor t,(UXI V .''. 'The principle of the telephone bus been known for 2.0(10 years lit India, was the rather Incredible statement made the other ninM by I'm! Aiueslmry, who has just returned to New York after a two years' sojourn in the bind of Ktriied tilers ami wonderful fakirs. "I do not assert, mark you," continued Mr. Ames bury, "that they use the telephone as we use it, or that they have any system of general conmuiiiicatkm. What I do say is that the high caste people have a method of communicating with each other by vibratory action on a diaphragm, just us we do, but it isconlined entirely to their temples, and its existence has re mained a secret until within a very few years. "I was in a town called Fanj, nlxiut 200 miles from Madras, and while there became acquainted with an Knglisb otll cer named Harrington, w ho was a prime favorite with the natives because on one occasion he had saved a priest from drowning, lie was a very genial, pleas ant fellow, and had that peculiar mag netism alvmit mm mat made ana kept friends everywhere. "It was through Harrington that I was enabled to learn the existence of tele phone communication and to satisfy my elf of its antiquity. "There are two temples in the village about a mile apart. In the interior and on the ground floor of each is a small circular structure which is guarded day and night from the natives as well as from strangers, and is supposed to be the abiding place of the 'governing spirit,' but in reality is the terminus of the tele phone line, which is laid underground from one building to the other. "The superstitious native regarded this little structure with the greatest awe and reverence, because they bail seen demonstrated before their eyes or rather ears the power of this spirit to com municate with the other temple. They were required to make their otfering in one building and make known their wishes and desires. Then immediately repairing to the second temple they would be informed of all they had 6aiil and done, although neither priest had left his poet. This was regarded as a demonstration of the power of the spirit "We were unable to determine the com position of the wire that connected the two buildings. It was some kind of metal, but neither steel, copper nor brass, although it closely resembled the latter. The transmitter was of wood and about the size of the head of a flour barrel, and to establish connection, instead of ring ing a bell, the person wishing to attract attention at the other end stood close to the curious looking thing and shouted, 'Ooev! ooev! ooevl' I "This was answered by a similar shout, which while faint was distinct and could be heard two feet away. "After Harrington and I had gained the confidence of the priests or, rattier, after be bad we were given a carte blanche to do as we pleased, and we talked to each other from one temple to the other for more than an hour, and were enabled to make an incomplete in vestigation. "We learned that the telephone that we saw had been in use for thirty years. Tle priests were vary old men and" they remembered that the hue of communica tion bad been renewed only once during their incumbency. "They showed us the remains of worm eaten transmitters and wooden conduits that must have been hundreds of years old. They claimed that the system bad been in existence since the creation, and laughed at us when we told them that the same principle has only been applied in England and America within the last dozen years. In every part of India and in Buruiuh this system of secret commu nication exists, although hundreds of travelers have never suspected it. I be lieve that it dates back fully 2,000 years." New York Graphic Interview. RuMla'a PolltlrmJ Offender. When a burglar, murderer or other common Hussian felon has been tried, found guilty and sentenced to penal servitude, he is, as a rule, released from the solitary confinement in which he has been held pending trial, is allowed to mingle with ulier prisoners of the same penal grade, and is forwarded without unnecessary delay to Siberia. When, however, a political offender been tried, found guilty and sentenced to penal servitude under the same code of laws, lie is not released from solitary contineui nt, nor sent with reasonable promptness to Siberia, as he would be if he had merely killed his mother with an ax, but is thrown into a bomb proof casemate in w hat is known as the "penal servitude section" of tho Petropavlovnk fortress, rar into one of the smaller cells of a "central convict prison," and there lies in solitude and wretchedness for one, two. three, or even five years, before he finaDy goes in sane or is sent to the convict mines of Kara. George Kennan in The Century. Books I-ubll.hfd iMt Vear. The numlier of books published in this, country last year wa 4,4:17. This is something rntire than 2,000 less than were publLsh-d in WO, the difference resulting from the falling off in copy right books, and the increase in story newspapers and magazines.- The cheap publication system is accountable for a good deal of this, but one is at a loss to know Thorn the nearly 2,000 new publi cations of last year are all to be found. Boston Herald. Ag-e of an old Negro. The old time colored people in the south, those who were fclaves, have no other method of reckoning datesk occur rences, and especially births an mar riages, than to refer them by association to events that happened about the same time, and it is quite common to get from them answers about like the fol ko wing : "How old are you, Aunt Milry?" "WalL chile, I know vou he;rn tell of der fust yartlnpiake in Norf Caliny? wau, i wus a riglit smart size gal den. au couui spin un weave my sen cuts a day for my olo uiissus. Dat's bow olo 1 is." "IIow old are you, Unole Bob?" "liow ole I is? LeraiiMj see, you know der time der stair fell, wefl, dat's der year Misa Mary died, an' ole inassa gib my ole Wnan one of Jdiss Mary's Sunday dresses, an' she waue'd it waitin' on der comp'ny der next year when ole mass3 brought he's Reoun' wife home from Oeorgy an' bress do Lawdl she ur purty. " "But, Uncle Bob, I am no wiser than I was before; you haven't told me how old you are," "Well, when dem tings happen wat I was a tellin' you 'bout, my ol'est gal, Liudy, w as "bout der same age as maasa'a new wife, an' me an' her daddy was chillun together, in Georgy, same time Gin'nl Lafayette came ter '(iosty, an' der sogers all turn out an' beat dir drums and shoot off der big cany una. Oh golly I I spec I'sa nigh outer a huntlred." Youth's Companion, I da rn.QU or S.xU Watar. 'I there much prollt in the aodu water busincsst Well, I should say there is," remarked a druggist. "The li -;iiitv of the business is that the profit is unlimited. Yu can muko 100 per cent, or 1,000, just as easily as not. It depends on your degree, of honesty, ami now you regard the tastes and stomachs of your customers, if you wish to retain theirtrado you will give them a good article, prollt 100 wr cent.; if you eater for transient cus tom vou liiake 1,000 ior cent, That is the difference. "Oh, well, now I don't care to give away many of the secrets of the busi ness but f don't ohjivt to giving the uninitiated a gentle hint. 1 will say that any reliable denier can, for H nickel a glass, give a man real fruit flavors, actual cream and high pressure water, mid still double his money. Such a decoction per glass would cost two and one luiif cents, but 1 will wager that the average soda water that is drunk hero or elsewhere doesn't exist more than a cent, and sometime less than that, "To begin with, a saving is often made in lowering the pressure, and the result is the water doesn't sparkle. It is insipid, and you instinctively feel w hen vou drink it that it lacks some thing. Then the alleged fruit lluvors are made out of cheap ethers and other volatile substances. True, they are not harmful and they can l gu.zled with impunity, but the delicate aroma is not there "and the cost is a trillo. For a dollar a dealer can make a large quantity of these cheap flavors. Cluvir lato is "another article that is easily adulterated. As for the Saratoga wa ters, they are frequeutlv manufactured in the. cellar out of salts." rittsburg Dispatch. I'seil to Kitting Ttmrougtihi-Ytlii. A wealthy rancher of Wyoming territory recently related a story of a rich young Englishman who, while looking about the. west for good in vestments, visited his ranch. lie stayed there a few days, and one after noon as the cowboys were ulxmt to round up a bunch of cow ponies the young man said that lie would enjoy a good ride in the saddle. He said he was used to riding only thorough breds, and ho didn't think they had a horse gxxl enough for hiui. The boys convinced him that tliev had one of the tiuest horses on the plains, uud if lie knew how to rido he was welcome to the animal. He was apparently insulted when questioned about his ability to ride and answered that he could rido any kind of a horse. A sleepy looking bronco j was brought out from the corrals and i saddled. Though he appeared half dead he was the worst bucker in the herd. " 'E's lifeless," said the foreign er, when the ponv was brought to him. The boy saiil the "nag" would wake up after the lirst mile, und the visitor got into tht: saddle. He didn't linger long. The lirst buck jump placed hint on the horse's neck, and after a second he was in the utnns phere. I Its turned a double sonier suu It and landed on the sharp end of a cactus plant. When he picked him self up one of the boys usked what he thought of the thoroughbed now. Tho question made the Englishman turn pale. " 'E's a gisxl W," he an swered, ''but 'e lopes too blooiuiu' 'igh." Chicago Tribune. l)efeiie of the Kinall liny. It is unfortunately tho case that very small boy ' i not in a position financially to become tho owner of a pair of roiler skates. Only th exeep tionai youth enjoys such a possession. Doe one, then, see these lucky tledg lings of manhood skating about over tho asphalt in proud consciousness of their superior means of pleasure and locomotion I Ignite otherwise. One does observe roiler skates in use on every hand, but it is rarely that a sin gle small boy is usiii two of them at once. Almost invariably he is seen sliding along on one skate wi h a suc cession of imp dses conveyed by the other uuskated foot. Now, why should this be so? For what reason is it that the small bov so seldom has more than one skate? Sim ply because he has either lent the other skate toacompaiiion or borrowed from him the one he has on. Thus you will ordinarily see these small Inn s skating in pairs, each with one skate, and so dividing the spurt. Itarely does it ap pear that the owner of a pair of skates uses them both himself instead of sharing tho pleasure with a friend. Who says. then, that tliesma.il boy is a selfish beingi Washington Star. A Mighty lleaat. Few, even among the most thought ful of the gents homo, ever slop to consider the immense size of the great Greenland or Bright whale (Baleiia mysticetus, L.) Nillsou says that it wi I weigh over 100 tons. Just think of it, 220,000 pounds ! At that rate the gigantic creature would outweigh 83 of the largest elephant or a half u thousand grizzly bears. Sliced iu chunks of 1 .000 pounds each, his car cass would load a freight train of 11 cars to its fullest capacity. The whale bone in such a whale would weigh as much as three of thu largest ivor-rcai! horses, and his oil would fill 150 kero sene barrels. St. Louis Republic. Muney Made In Hitrnela. The women inventors of Pennsyl vama are munv, and ttiere is one bright woman who has a barrel hoop ing machine which brings her in $20, 000 a year. This is Mary K. Iteaseley, the original inventor of the machine and the patentee of numerous im nroveinents uimu it. One of the ma chines, it is said, can put iron hoops on 1.200 barrels iu a single day. It is a valuable patent and is largely used by the trade. Uor. INew i or world. The Jaekal and the f.lon. A Jackal met a IJunter in the Forest and at once began to xur out such Vials of Wrath against the Lion that the Hunter was Amazed. "Why I" exclaimed the Jackal, "th Lion is a Liar, Thief, Itoblier, Ghoul and Murderer, and is not Worthy of tb Friendship of the Polecatl" "Did he ever Abuse you or Injur you?" "N'o." "Then Whence this Malignity T "Well ah well, I can't get over It that be was born a Lordly Lion and I Miserable Jackal." Moral That's the key note to nlne- tentlis of the sluo'lurs. Detroit Free Press. A New Lubricating OIL A new lubricant, the use of which I advocated in The Austrian Itailroad Jour nal, is mustard oU. It remains perfectly fluid at the low temperature of 14 degs. Farhenheit, and will keep unchanged for years. Public. Tea t.niiillnr.l In fiiia. Tint iii'imi i.'li.no Is u Imrtl miou hi' fiilum bit i her iisSiuiin iauimntlii' island This landlord lives lib little spendthrll' life in the gay capital, only to Isvonie overwhelmed wlih (let and Ui time ho ummhititi'd liv other lain! nronl lotor. who, in their t nil, riiwtipule, grind lh tenantry ami make way again furiniit'". Thus the landed inintocincv of Oil ronstantlv missimr from ooulem'O to beg gary. A common cxfwwwiiou here ill"" trates the quick slilflinR of f.irtinn hi commerce as we II aaiu lands: "I'adre KulegueiM, hijo eahalloro, nie'.o pordio sero!" ("The father n grocer, the still a gentleman, the grandson a liegnur!") Edgar 1., Wakcinau'a l.ctlcr. Tilt MmiiitiilH of jHlimlru. No scenery is grand on mi empty stomach. I ivmcinlier a distinguished editor in New York asking me one Una' what was the best hotel to go to iu the t'atskills. I rcrommciideu the oW Jlotiu lain bolide Uvinw tt conuiiandtil the liet mviiciv. Iloilier the scenery said be; "I can't live on scenery. Where ran I get the It'- dinner?" 1 thought of that when we were up in the Jamaica mountains tilled lin full of tuiinliueH. The trim rv was grant I almost lieyond description, but we three New Yorkers would gladly have ecliaiigod it nil for ighl of thai half way house where we were to breakfast. -W illiam DijmIuIo iu New York I lines. 2 CrttifOHi-ji nf tho Ilia Jar. A curious ceiiteVary was recently cele brated bv the women of ltiinzluti, In St lesia. It was just 100 years since the man died who censtro -tod a gigantic earthen veswl, w !uf "-;T II kind of counterpart tt the t: ' famed vase, at lloidelherg. The vessel holds thirty bushels of ieus, is three yards high and measures nearlv four j arils across. Chicago Herald. A Hiissiftii legt'iul rvlHtett tlutt when Si Joseph returned from hi rtiglil Into Kgypt lie found Ins hIum's in great want or repair. aud being aware of the excellence of leather work In Ktisnia sen; theiu to KlelT to bv mended, where tliev roinaliiott It la now ivportcd from Kieir that the archbishop of St. Sophia proposes to reole the shoes and then "expose them In the veneration of tha faithful " IIB BIAkCIIED WITH SHERJIAfl TO THE SEA I Tnntirod all the war on fnt, over mountain and throuiftt inontnt. t-urrtiiiir naiffat-k ami gun, ftlept on brush Ih-mi to keen out of the mini, tituirlit eohl. from the eff.s-ta of arhlelt bu frleniia theuirlit be would tievtT recover. Lmtri-rlnir with alow (tnitu!iiitHn for many years, be miw llr. rieree'a ttor)m Mnhi-al Itta tstverv B'lt ertwed In a country newinaier, and be determined to try It. A few tiotlle wurkisl a elmnire: an raotiiba continued um ctm-d him. Always too Independent In auk bis country for H pcniiliiil, be new unya h niHilit none, lie heftt aave hi country, hfi suvtd hlmnelf! t'oimu nipt ion ) Lung-M-riif-uln. r'or m-rofi.-la. 111 Mil Ita myriad fnrnta, thq "l overy " la an uneutialcd remeily. It clcaiim-a trie ayatem of all blood-taint fmm whatever (unite urialna, and cure nil Sklu and Smlp Iiineasea. Halt-rheum, Tetter. Kie ma.und kindred ailment. It la (UttrunU'ed to iM-netlt or cure In all diaemaia lur which it la rcciuntncndi-d. or money iaid for it wiu be reluiided. rWltl by druga-iata. CoprrlKhl. IBM, by Woaura Dla. Via M . DR. SACE'S CATARRH REMEDY run the worst t-tiacH, no matter uf bow louj staudinK. 60 cent, by Urusaana. OTAT SCOTT'S EMULSION CONSUMPTION SCROFULA BRONCHITIS COUCHS COLDS CURES Wasting Ikoanes Wonderfu" Flsh Producer. Many have gained one pounil per day by its use. Scott's Emulsion in not a secret remedy. It contains tho Htimnlut inff properties of tho Ifypophrw phiteu and pure Norwegian Cotl Liver Oil, the potency of both being largely increased. It is used by Physicians all over the world. PALATABLE AS MILK. Sold by all lymgijlut. SCOTT A BOWNf.Ch.mlsts, N.Y. Sf You Have n no(ll, Indliretttion, fr'Ialnlen-, FtitK if fiiHii. "mii ma avwa," Im Iuk rieLit )u mill Uo4 irif's Pills f lioramoily yon anil, Thar Ion up Ilia .k lo.iia.'li and build up lha riHKKiiia; Fiirrtli,. Narrarara from nvi.lnl or pl.yai.-al ovrrwook will rind I-allol Iruiuiliuui. NIraly aua;atr coalaat. koli i:viiitvwiii:Ki:. To euro nilloumien, HU:k Ilijatlnclia, (.'omtl patlon, Malaria, MvrCoBiilalnU, taka the ufc ami rcrlnln remedy, SMITH'S LE BEANS I'aa (lie ft mi. I, Miz (tiillttlp Iteana tntha bullUO TtlfcV AltK TUB MIWT :OKVBlKT. .. . M'"."""l ..r- ml AKmm. Prleo ol either alaa, iMe. par Itottla. scissiriG ATl-ll-IU PANKL HlZt Unlll rnrii t. iiMiii.r. or .i.u..... 1 li VA'.aunTnnaiviiti l.f.SMIIH4C0,nbor,ufiii.t.iitH'', ,101111 MO " rTr-l ffilWnilliifWtaMalB opherf .of h at-xau. bubo t v r m, i Qwlne CollotfO. Hale.... nosa CollWBO. '"'V , ,,, Jeintiit of A 1'. Armstn.1 have same ctiuraes til ntea. ' We'toemle'r hjiilnl Catahfe 1 a,.ccl,uc. of ,.e.iiua,,Hh.p, C. M. ELKINS & CO., IWAI.KKS IN Stovesjinware Hardware, PUMPS, PIPE, ETC., Bunnell's Old Stand, - Prlnevllle, Or. iiiilln. I'hinihliiK. ifpainnit ami tivmn I ui-ui wnrriinleil. Oregon Land Company, W ITH Home Office at Sal jm, Or., IN TIIK STATK tNSl'UANl'i: lll'll.l'INU, ASH Rrnnch Offices at Portland, Astoria and Albany Hum for mile a law hit of umiii, ntock pnHrty. Send lor painphlel mit ami CHARLES rvl. ELKINS, AiiKNT IDU TIIK Sludebaker Wagon v andv Farm v Machinery. Opposite Brick Store, Prlnevllle. OreRon. A I .si i hii:s All. MMs k WACONWORK and BLACKSMITHINC (In Hhort notice and in HrNl-i'lnx workiuaiisltip, IhiMcidioeliiK and plow work s nnvialty. jonnsr ci i t nsmiii to 1 'KAI.I Alih : KIpS : OF : FURNITURE, BEDROOOM SETS, Lounges, Chairs, Mirrors, Etc. AhSO V ALL V KINDS V OF V LUMBER V FOR V SALE. Agent for Willow Crook Saw Mill. H. A. BELKNAP L SONS, lSn. t i-HH.nK to J. W. 1 1 )'A K I J DRUGS AND CHEMICALS. East Side of ltoan Stroot, Prinovillo, Or. Standard Patent Medicines, Paints, Oils and vttrnUi.es, Dye Stuffs and Soaps, Toilet Articles Tooth Brushes, Bird A general variety of I triitruintit' Snn.lriea, l ure V in.'H uimI I.Hinira Im uiiiliral nf. TEMPLETOIM &. SON, WIIOl.l'.S.VI.K Prlnevllle, Oregon. ii:ali:us in Perfuinerj, Hair and Tooth Brushes, Patent Medicines, Toilet and Shaving Soaps, fancy Goods, Glass, Pull;, Paints, Oils, Etc. Also a Fine Line of Gold and All onliTH for kikmIh promptly filled, (Kiiincli'd at all hotirn. First National vlfcink PRINEVILLE. OREGON. Transacts t General Banking Business. I'rclcl.Mit IlKNKV Hum Vli I'real.lent M Un Hal. ' "IiIit T. M, IUmiwin ArcmitiU Imp! iti)Jrrt li rhvek. HrlU nrtnngi I'd tlftnil. rati Kia- rlMM. and tifW VifK. lutormt al litwi.1 on llinilK)lta ('idliictUiiiR rout lv ronipt alU'iitlnn NEW SADDLE SHOP, I'HINKVII.I.K, OU. M. H. Bell, Proprietor. A rtH.I, ANDOOMI'LKTK.hTOI K I If Saddles, Harness, Snaps, Spurs, Bits, Horse Blankets, Anil vnrirtrlliiaf nil? iMtrtnlnlnif ttt that triu a.l k.t I.a Kr)iiirlfiir ihntt im rvaauimltli Urmi mud Inaimrk laullli uiauiimr. POSTOFFICE V STORE. A. C. Palmer, Proprietor, - A NJIX MTOCK OF TIIK- Best Brands of Tobacco and Cigars, Notlous, Stationery, Pencils, Inks md Pens. FRESH CANDIES AND NUTS, ll kikhIi na mil Hrat oIm. all lMWJtipftrft ami iMtlutiitmU, rubaurliitli.il talmll iir TMATOAN lltt t'MI0 KVKHV PAH la the kind that nitvs. IScoivHtil yyouiiK' bimilieKS mill, and hint " .IciUiil'luHik LerlictKllIld steil- a to course at the Portland UU8I uii l- ITS- Hint fruit faiuia nlwi cllv and mibtirbaii puce ni. idee;, r. K IN and Perfumery, Hair and Seed and Cages. Stationery, Hook, ( inrii, Tolaimi mid ANI ItKTAII.- Silver Watches and Jewelry, riiyidriiiiia' iriwr(illoii rar.-liillv idiii PRINEVILLE MEAT MARKET. P. B. HOWARD, Proprietor. ALL KIMHt.K . FRESH. MEATS. Butter and Eggs of Best Quality. Vegetables in Their . Season. Sausage and Corn Beef Constant ly on Hand. DEW DROP SALOOfJ. Dave S. Rowan, Proprietor. Wiiiwanir I.. rnicillii i ,ar. - KtUXNTOCK OK .. Choicest Brands of Wines, Liquors and Cigars I'llNHTANII.Y o IMMi,. FIJteen-Ball Pool and Billiard Tables In Good Repair. Nrnit ami nin.fiirial.la ol.il nn.au fur l.rir.u a.iuni UNNW.WOODS' 8ALOON, Main Nlraati rrlnadlla, Or. KKKI'H ON II A Nil TIIK t llllll'KMT Wines, Liquors & Cigars. FANCY MIXED DRINK8 l'r...ar.-il by all trrlruiwl karkiK'M.r, A flua Billiard Table and Elegant Club Rooms for Ilia ai'iHiiiiiuiHlallon of rua'.itnvr. Hp rial ailriiil.ii iu flllliiK or.lm ! mall. ED N. WHITE, Main Ulrarl, Crlaiat Ilia, Or., lllolHIKTuH t.riil. Popular Resort for All . HOW lull . t Uaaal ligar, Mr. Hi-lraataloa Uf lak, A liaao mt Itllllarala, ar A Mar la I Uaaaa af 1'araa. CLUB R00V!S FOR GAMES. i'niii rarlr, lata anil ultni. I'iMil l Tll- CARV MOUSE, lrlnlllr, ttragaa). AH D00NG. Proprietor. ll.la . I I4)i4tl ailt. Ua tana Ua MaMl( tial-a Ma.l filMt fU U m aV4t0M "4 BALL I SUPPERS AND I PRIVATE DINNERS, New Meat Market I'HIII I II ! UN. SAM C. CLINE, Proprietor. CHOICE BEEF, Mutton, Veal and Pork inNriri v vm iianii THE HIGHEST PRICE IN CASH All Kinds of Country Produce Sold at a Liberal Commission. ft ml it a aJiira or pmt aaumwa AM V CLIN K STABLE, nU.iillliii'll. Stal.lt.), lala kiraal, f rlaatltlr, Or. CHRIS COHRS, Proprietors. First-Class Rifts, Buggies or Hacks, for Hln bj tbi Day or Week. lfiat alr-tiilni. lvan l.a k Irfl In rn ra a llhr ! alalia ti.r il.li n alallli.ua and oll.ar ralliahla altlinala I II lllri t Oil M. 'X RESTAURANT. a NKXT IMMiK Til HIIKI.I.AHAR KII I4, Hrlii ,i , jr. P. B. POIHDEXTER, Proprietor. Tlit Table Supplied with All the Delicacies That Can be Had In the Market. Ue Cooks and While Waiters. Nn chin . a (...It I it. Mi'aii ...rrr-.t at all l...nr. I rivals r.Mim. fr. raMilal in a!. a I . h . iw. V" .' " " lrimruu 111 COIItl Plll.ll wim lliu ri'.laaranl. DAVIS BROS., IIKAI.KIIK IN GROCERIES, Provisions and Canned Goods. lora Oppo.it. Kalom.a'. ,,,. W nail uMi.r f... ..... ...... - iBu..M I., i. auu unr tita aaar immiii ion, iiavim umia. LIVERY AND FEED nUVFUH'TlM.V