TOP VOL. ,. J'KINKVILLK, CROOK COUNTY, OKKGON, THURSDAY, OCTOP.KK 20, 1M. NO. n. TEMPLETON tiKAI.fc'KS IN Drugs and Chemicals. Putont Modlcinoa and Tollot Articles Wlnoi and I.i.hi.iib fur iiimllriU imrixmmi only. l'liyuiiin. pura-Tlp-lion fiui'ftilly iiiuiiHmmlrd. A. H. LIPPMAN & CO. I rr; ill. Urf'il itmA 11 F U R N I T U R K House Furnishing Goods Between Portland and Salt Lake City. h.A ONC KSTIHK II AI.rill.ciCK 'lUIlK AMI HA1.K The Pittsburg Visible Typewriter H. L. DUNN, Agent, bund ron ca tai. Htvi: FIVE DAYS 81200. IN PURSMH Undi'i' t he luaimonicnt of tlio Prinrvillr Jockey Club. I'rincvillo Orison. 0doi'(TtT.2s. :io.:u. FIRST DAY. I Half mill) dnoh, fur null h how ' iitTiied in Crouk county, fur n f7.")HI l'time of Half mile u fur n puiM of id ri peat, flee fur nil if ITiDUO SICCOND DAY. Three cighl of n tnilo tho-h, fren fur nil furn purae of 1100 0(1 Half jiiilo and repent lmndienp race, fieo for all. purxo IfJoOD Half milo dtthh for two year tddn for n purcn of 75 00 TIIIHD DAY. Threti iUiirtr of n mi In d.tnh, free 0 all race, an entrance feu of U-n P'T-eent will '"' i'l'"fH- All entrled tnual ho hi on or befnro right oVIock tlio evening heft.re the rnoon. l..nIlraoli,,atleatlU'nl,orSeH.,uu.t tnfr nnd three Mart; hut the Ch,hre,erv,.ath right to hold n lew munl .'r than hvo to n.t. r. J reducing the purao in proportion to tlio nnuilier of horsea enteic.l. rcino Count Jockey Hub ruled to govern all nice. Win. Wni.wrii.Fii. IVNidcnt. Vi lloi.HKH, Secretary & SON- NKVoTKII TO TIIK MANl'KAC uf Kl.'rt.NITl'llli. fct'C, 'J HIMI'LF, CONSTRUCTION (iOiin M ANIFoLDKIl VISir.l.K IVKITINti VKHV DlRAIil.K F.AY ACTION iilt 8ir)c H'.root, Portland Ororfou !'i:i ri.hi tTS - OF RACES. 8P-200. for nil for n pnrKunf sf'.'uiOO v,,v,.tv race ; walk mile, trot J mile, inn J mile; fur Crook county ImrM'ii only . I'uixo VOl UTIl" DAY. Tit i en milo Indian i 'Hint. re fco. Not I oatnit. l'tirne FIFTH DAY. $7.Vli0 iore nice. No .in t lit ii eight $ 10 IK) ('i)iiHiliiliou raoe, tivo ei ghln of a milo fur a mum! of $100(10 if ,'iil DO, given for hum hit Only one lenni from I'liueville itl- jlowod toenter. Oilier tennis muM I lM)mii from the nutxido. (lllllell IlllCClll'Jf. Serviced will bo lulil u follo.vii : IIAPTIHTH I'riiicvilht preaching the second and fourth Sundays. Subbiith school every Sunday ul 2 p. in. I'raycr meeting every WedncH dny evening nt 8 o'clock. Haystack preaching every third hui day. lieiid j ri'iicliiiig every firct Sun- day, Key. 1 nplet pastor, residence liiplih( purnonago I'riueville. Ore. I'HKMIYTRIIIAN I'linevilh; preaching the fust and Ihiid S n u il . Sabbath school every Sunday morning ut 10 b. in. I'niyer ineriiiij; every WeducH dny evening l 8 o'clock. Rev K. 1,. Alter Rei-id ence ut McFiiilnnd, hotid. M. K. ( muni. I'liiieville preaching the second j and fourth Sunday at 1 la. rn. mid every Sunday (vetting at H ) 'cluck. Siibhuth school every Sunday at 10 n. in. Kpwnrlli league every Sunday (. von i it 31 tit 7. p. in. I'ruyer meeting every Thursday evening nt 8 o'clock. Willow Creek preaching first Sunday in each month at 11 a. in. C'lnypiidl preaching third Sunday in each moil t h nt 1 1 a. in. Howard preaching the Saturday evening preceeding the third Su lay in each month. He v. II. C. Clark pastor, rettidence M. E. par nonage, I'rinevilm Oregon. Chrintiun Kudeavor meets at the Union church every Sunday even ing at i p. in. E. O. HYDE, M. D.. Phvslclan and Sureeon, PIUNEVIU.E. OliEOON. alia iiunilly ilti'tnli'J, Jny ml night J. H. ROSN3ERC, M. D., PHINCVILI.K. OKEUON. Office flr.l iluur liorlh of Tfmpleton A Bon't priig Mini, orrit it itorK.4 mu u a. no 4 n.i?io r C. W. BARNES, ATrollSKV AT LAW AMI NOTAKY rt'BMC PKINBVILLE. OKEQON. umooun tte.l Third Klrrsl. Il.r RtlkHtl l IU. EDWARIW BELKNAP tV COWARDS Physicians and Surgeons PKINKVILLE. OilKaON. Oiric. I. AJnniioii A Wlnnvk C'o't. Pru( HUr. M. R. BICCS, Attorney at Law and notary. Main atre.l. rrtnovllli', C)roa;on. Offlrt iui ilrrtt lrlln to Court llotin. A. D. MORRISON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SUREGON Prinevlllo. OrwRon Otfyff Next 0Hir ti A.lniniton lrunSttir. t'Hll- pruttipt Is- uttriuK'! to. C. A. t l.INK. PKNTIST, I'lllNKVII.I.R, OHKllOK. W. A. BELL, Attorncy-nt-Ltiw NOTARY PUBLIC. Om, o cm Btrect lexllut In Court Hoita.. IUINKV1I.I.K, OKKt'ON. M. E. BRINK, ATTOKSKY AND ( Ul NSKI.OIt AT LAW A Btroot, BetwoBn Flrat and Sooond riUNEVILLB, ORICQON. J L McCDM.OCH, Abstractor of Titles riinevilh', Oregon. RHEUMATISM fM HELIEF IN 4 MINUTES rCXi n.).. KhttUIUIltlKlll. Hlltftllt, IhiiM, skin Dl"i-nnr I it. 1 1 1 . ihronti', It-iiir lllir. WMMO t'ltM'lt llltlU'tt (Hln-f n imI Hull, twtli iiih y tlt-)i.'lnt. Itnl "i'ljr. ttiwutlt U." h. w Um m rifttmet'm Plymouth Rock Khmuntmiio uii tstlu'(Ti-iit Uhfiimatti' ri.ii-.imt ..f lluHoil.1. Ut Hitttiontli'l!lfKH tnir It. Dih'Mhv li. ftOv l l''t( Strrit, oft1 v.,.. .-.oi l h.'lu lrntattiLr r m - a. .11. .4 11TII1UIM inr y TO TO I 'ifTsv; LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF JOE MEEK II V 1 Its FUANCF.H FUI.I.KK VICTOR. EARLY DAYS In addition to nil thefe, wasjly blighted, as hid hiMoiijn his n sin ill coinnnny belonging recorded. The disappointment and to Cept. Stuart, an English-1 los wire!) Romir vil'e suffered hiii n of noliln family, who wan traveling in the far weal only to grnlify his own love (if wild ad venture, iind uduiiralii)-' of all thai U grand and uiagiiificant in nature Willi bin) wit an uilint named Miller, and Kveral servants; Imt he UKiially travidi d in company with one or another of the lur com panic; thus enjuyirg their pro tectiiin, und at the raiue lime g lid ing a knowledge of the habits of mountain life. The rendizvoup, at this lime, funiiih(d hi in a Hrikii g example ofioine of the wnya of iiioiiiitain uieu, leai-t to I lit i r honorable fame ; and we fear wo must confers that our fiicnd Joe Meek, who had been galhering li;urel on a valiant hunt er and trapper during the three or four years of hia apprenticctbiji, naaalko becoming fitted, by fre-: try, and lilted himeeiffora pilot, tjuent practice, to graduate in ronie On leaving Hear Uiver, w here of the vices of camp life, especially the hunters took (he precaut;on lo the one of conviviality during: lay in a etore ofdried meat, the rendezvous Had he not given hia j company packed (low n on the weft pertiiiacion, we should not perhap.a ; eide of Salt I.a,ke, and found them havefuid w hat he says of himself, , elves in the Sail Lake desert, that he was at mch times often, where their store, ineufl'u iently very "powerful drunk." ! large, oin became reduced to al- During the indulgence these ex-j rr-ost nothing. Here was experi ences, w hile at this rendezvous, , enced again the 6ufTbrings to w hich there occurred one of lhoe inci- Meek had once before been subject dents of w ildernefH life which make , the blood creep with horror. I Twelve of the men were bitten bv a mud wolf, which hung itbout the J Bonneville, "neither tree, nor herb camp for two or tbres nights. Two i age, nor spring, nor pool, nor run of these were seized with madnees ning stream ; nothing but parched in camp, sometime nfierwards, and j wastes of sand, where horse and ran off into the mountains, w here rider were in danger of perishing." they perched. One was attacked ; Many an emigrant has since con- by the paroxysm while on a hunt; ; firmed th truth of this account, when, throwing himself off Lis It could not bo expected that horiie, ho struggled and foamed fit; men would continue oi in such a the mouth, gnashing his teeth, and country, in that direction which of haiking like a wolf. Yet ho ro-jfered no change for the better tained consciousness enough to Discerning at last a snowy range to wnrn away his companions, wlu , the northwest, they traveled in that hastened in search of assistance ; J direction ; pinched with famine, but w hen they returned he was no and with tongues swollen out of w here to be found. It was thought : their mouths with thirst. They that he was seen a day or two rfter- J came at last to a small stream, in- wards, but no one could come up with him, und of couise, he too, pt r- j ished. Another died on his jour ney to St. I.ouis; and several died at different times within the next two years. At iho time, however, immedi- ately following the vii-it of the wolf : to camp, Captain Stuart was ad- moiiiehing Meek on the folly of his ways, telling him that the wolf j might ensily have bitten him, he was so drunk. "It would have killed him, sure, if it hadn't cured bint!" said i Meek, alluding to the belief that alcohol is a remedy for the poison of hydrophobia. When sobriety returned, and wink was once more lo be resumed, Meek returned with three or four associates lo the Salt Lake country, to trap on the numeroas streams that llowr down from the mountains i to tho oast of Salt Luke. Ha had not heoti long in this region when he fell in on Hear River with n company of Honneviilo's men, one hundred and eighteen in number, under Jo Walker, who had been sent lo explore the great Salt Lake, and the adjacent country ; to make charts, keep a journal, and, in short, mako a thorough discovery of all that region. Great expecta tions wero cherished by tlio Cap tain concerning this favoiito expo dition, which were, however, utter- BEST OP ALL WHISKIES. iftanjUutii (Eluh. FDR S.V1.K HENDERSON IN OH KG ON. trom it. gave a tinge of prjuuneto hia delineations of the tmpper'r character. It waa tiue that rhey did not exphire Silt like; and lliot they niido a long ami ex penaivc journey, collcctii g but fow peltriea. It ii true alno, thnt ll.ey caromed in tru rnoiiritaiii 1. while ainoiig the Cahfori.iiinii ; lull J that iho expedition waa unrofil able was due chirlly to the didirul lies attending the exploration of a ne country, a large portion of which was doerl and mountait But let ua not anticipate. When Meek and hia companions fell in with Ja Walker and bin company, they resolved to accomj f.ny the expedition ; for it was "a feather in a maii'a cap," and mado hia crv ice doubly valuable to have he come acquainted with a new coun ed in the Digger country, which,1 in fact, bounded this desert on the northwest. "There was," eays j to which both men and animals plunged to quench their raging Uiirdt. The instinct of a mule on lh?se desert journeys is something wonderful. We have heard it re lated by other beside the inoun- tain-men, that they will detect the neighborhood of water long before their riders have discovered a sign ; and selling up a gallops, when be foro they could hardly walk, will dash into the water up to their neekn, drinking tho life saving moisture through every pore of the ekii), while they prudently refrain from swallowing much of it. Il one of a company has bten oil' on a hunt for water, and on finding it haslet his mule drink, when here turns to camp, thn other animal will gather about it, and sm;ll' its breath, and even its body, 1 etray- ing the livelier t intert Ft and invy. It is easv to imagine that in the case of Jo Walker's company. not only the animals but the men were eager to i-tei p themselves in the reviving waters of the first stream which they found on tho border of this weary desert. It proved to be a tributary of Mary's or Ogden's River, along which the company pursued their way, trapping as they went, and living upon the llejh of tho beaver They had now entered upon the same country inhabited by Digger ONLY BY & POLLARD. THEOLD Absolutely Pure THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE: Indiaris, in which Milton Sublette's ' nevil'e was not an experienced In brigade l ad so nearly perished ; dian fighter. His views of their with famine the previous year. It character were much governed by was unexplored, and natives were; his knowledge of the Flatheads as curious about the movements of their white visitor?, as Indiana al - ways are on the f.rst appearance of civilized me.i. They hung about the camps, of- j ferine no i (fences by dav, but con - triving to do a great Heal of thiev- ing during the night-time. Each j d,ty, for several days, their i.uui- j berg - inctear-ed, until the army which (lugged the trappers by day, and filched from them ul night, '.timbered neir'y a thousand. Tliey had no guns; but carried clubs, and some bo;vs and arrows. The trappers at length became un easy at this accumulation of force, even thcugh they had no fire arms, for was it no', this very style of pto p!e, armed with clubs, that attack ed Smith's party on the I'mpqua, and killed all hut four? "We must kill a lot of them boys," said Jo Walker. "It will never do to let that crowd get into camp." Accordingly, as the In dians crowded round at a ford of Mary's River, always a Lvorite time of attack with the savages. Walker gave the order lo lire, And whole company poured a volley in to the jostling crowd. Th e fleet whs tenihle. Seventy-five Diggers bit the dust; while the others. seized with terror and horror at this new and instantaneous mode of death, fled bowling away, the trappers pursuing them until satis fied that they wtrj Uo much fiiglitened to return. This seemed to Captain Bonneville, when he came to hear of it, lik an unneces sary ai d ferocious act. But Bon- jfcV-iyw House is one of the duties tli.it a weak woman looks ' f M-ti forsv.ird to with ilreail. As u rule, ,i:ie fenosss null &uc must pay for the over-strain with days or weeks of womanly sutTering. Ir. Tierce's favorite Pre scription makes -weak women strong and sick women well. It cures ttie womanly jliseasea which u tisl ermine the general health. It establishes regu larity, dries weakening drains, heals inflammation ulceration, ami cure female weak ne.is. took two NmM itf vour lfitvonte I'tfscrmliou ' ati'l tvso Of the CoMfil M-tlicnl Diws-erV anil ' t?l ine vctl."writ Mr. Dun McKciu. in l-ms-ay Mi lira. Cw llrrti-n C.. Kov: S.-OIU. " I h:ijl utrnue tu-iiblc. also pain ill the m.loiliKl ricu.l-1,-he. After taki.is vourtiMHliems- I ra cnre.1. You mav pahtwh this or u -it in any ss-.iy 'vcnl thmk t".-H, I cannot H;.tt lss luglily ol or. Pieivc aiul lus meaiciue.' "Favorite Prescription" lias the testt tnonv of thousands of women to its complete cure of womanly diseases. l)o not accept an unknown und unproved substitute i" 'ts pla- l'RKit. I'r. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser is sent free on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stamps fur the Uwk in paper covers, or tt stamps for the cloth bound volume. Address Dr. R.V, I'iersM, Buffalo, N. Y. I I I 1 m EH RELIABLE i and Nez Perces; aaJ also by the ! immunity from barm he enjoyed j among the fchoshonies on tbo Snake River, where the Hudson's Bay Company had brought them 1 into subjection, and where even j tiro men mighe travel in safety at the lime of hia residence in that j country. Waiker'g compifiy continued cn j down to the-jnain or Humboldt River, trapping as they went, both for the furs, and for something to eat; and expecting to Hnd that the river whose course they were fol lowing through these barren plains, would lead them to seme more im portant river, or to force large lake or inland sea. This was a coun try entirely unknown, even to the adventurous traders and trappers of the fur companies, who avoided il because it was out of buffalo range; and because tho borders of it, along which they sometimes -kirted, were found to be wanting in water-courses in which beaver might be looked for. Walker' company therefore, now determined to prosecute their explorations un . they came to some new and profitable beaver grounds. But after a long march through an inhospitable country they came -it last to where the Humboldt sinks itself in a great swampy lake, in the midst ofde9erts and sage orush. Hera was the end of their ;rcut expectations. To the we6t of -hem, however, and not far off", rose the lofty summits of tho Sier ra Nevada range, some of whose peaks were covered with eternal -nows. Since they had already nade an unprofitable business' of '.heir expedition, and failed in its irincipal aim, that of exploring salt Lake, they resolved upon erossing lbs mountains into Cali fornia, ni d fe 'king newk fields of adventure on the wettern Bide of the Nevada mountains,, t s Accordingly, although it was al ready late in the autumn, the party pushed on toward the west, until they came to Pyramid Like, another of those swampy lakes which are frequently met with near the eastern base of these Sier ras. Into this (lowed a streuai similar to tho Humboldt, which came from the south, and, they be lieved, hrd its rise in the moun tains. As it was important to find' a frood pass, they look their course along this stream, which they nam ed Trucker's Biver, and continued alone it to its head-waters in the Sierras. And now began tho arduous labor of orossing an unknown range . of lofty mountains. Mountaineers as they were, they found it a dilli cult undertaking, and one attend ed with considerable peril. For a period of more than three weeks they were struggling with Ihete dangers'; hunting paths for their mules and horses, traveling around canyons thousands of feet deep. (To be eoulinued.)