OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 14,1901 r g SPECIAL BARGAINS FOR MONTH OF JUNE FR ONT CUMT mue ibilocm: STORE Regular i?c Percale, per yard. . Light Colored Calico, per yard .. ...... Indigo Blue Oil Calico, per yard Curtain Scrim, per yard ,' Bunt ng, white or colors ... .". ....... Cotton Batting, extra quality, per pound The Celebrated Dr. Warner's Corset . ............ 50c up 20-incn bteel Kod Umbrella .. . . .: roe , ioc 4c Sc SC up Sc I2C Notions Pins per paper. .... . . . . , . . , Safety Pins, per paper. Hair Pins, per box .;. . ... . Finishing Braid, bunch .... . . . . ... Darning Cotton, 2 balls for ; Embroidery Silk, 6 spools . ..,'.;; .... i . .: ....... . White Tape, 2 rolls Silk Finish Crochet Cotton, spool ...... Sheet Wadding, 2 sheets. y.Seyring Machine OIL ice size bottle..;.......... ' .if' Vaseline; bottle... t . .... ... ..... r;White;Metai.Tea:i.;Spoons. ..... .... .6 for ;;j White Metal TableJSpoons ; . ; ...... . . ... 6 for AjurrUnum Thimble.' . . . . ....................... Liquid Shoe Dressing .... ; , r. . . ; . ; . . . . s. . . " """ ":'".''..'' t.l'in !;',;.. :. " IC Sc i 5c :5c Sc 5c Sc 5c 5C' . Sc 15c 25c Sc 7c We have a big quantity of Ladies' Shirt Waists and Skirts which we are offering at a Big Reduction i 'b ' We carry the ) Lewis Wear Resisted and These shoes are, well known and once you use them will call for them again . We are making a special cut on shoes We are agents for the celebrated Standard Patterns, Call and get fash ; ion sheet, free , ; ' .n;::;1.-? We carry .the celebrated Gilbert ; Linings. Men's Suspenders, full length, from.". . ... Men's Balbriggan Underwear per suit . ...... Men's White Handkerchiefs.'.' ... ..... Men's Blue or lied 1 andkerchiefs. , . .-. Men's Heavy Working Gloves, from . ; ; . Mens Working Shirts, from;. .". ... ... 1 .Y.'f,c to Men's Fancy Dress-Shirts':; . . . .... . . ..35c to Men's Black Saline Shirts.;,;,;...;......... Men's Heavy Black Duck Shirts, .i;.; .......... Straw Hats. . . . . . . ........ . ioc up 50c Sc 5c 25c up . Soc . 75c 45c 60c 5cup I ft Groceries T . H . -x X.. " . luuidiuc.. ,,J.,.vr,. -3 cans 25c Corn...:;.V,V......:'..:.,.;..v.V,.?.3 cans 25c Oysters 4 .......... ., . . . . . cans 35c iffi?owderii i V ..l'.';3 pounds i 15c Corn Meal , 10 pounds . 20c Bulk Extracts: . . . j?. . iper oz. ' 5c ..Cprn,Starch.'w.',".'i . ....V..M.v..por pound c Roast Coffee pound ioc up - Scouring Soap.. ......,..,..,,m,.4W..-St.. - -jc . Good' Syrup, in wooder pail, per pail . . . . , . 0 , , , t gJC "Our MotherV Sta'rch.'same as Celluloid, with pound more to package fioo We always have .on hand at large -stock "of Mason ''Fruit Jars, Caps and Rubbers. ii J j,u, j , i , r.. i vl , - 1 7" ! Millinery ' ' . In our Millinery department we ; are offering special : inducemerfts. ' "'V j -..v..; , " '1 fc,rV Sailor Hats '. V..'.:.; '....'V.w JScup ' '! Trimmed Hats ..f;,'?..','.r.,..i..,V.........$i coup : 4 Remember; that we pay highest market prices for Farm Produce, Shingles. Etc. IN HIS: STEPS. "What Would Jesus Do?" Bj 0HAELE3 M. SHELDON. , ( lOopyriftf-'! and publiahed In book form bf ik ii uoe tarnishing Oo. ol CUloago. CHAPTER VIL . Rt that fotloweth m ihall not walk la dark- ' The body of Loreen lay in state at the Page mansion on the avenne. It was Sunday morning, and the clear, sweet air, just beginning to breathe over the city the perfume of opening blossoms in the woods and fields, swept over the casket from ' one of the open windows at the end of the grand halL The church bells were ringing, and the people on the avenue going by to serv ice turned curious, inquiring looks up at the great house and went on, talking of the recent events which had so strangely entered into and made history in the city. v At the First church Henry Maxwell bearing on hia face marks of the scene he had been through the night before, confronted an immense congregation and spoke of it with a passion and a power that came so naturally out of the profound experiences of the day be fore that his people felt for him some thing of the old feeling of pride they once had in his dramatic delivery. Only this was a different attitude, and all through his impassioned appeal this morning there was a note of sadness and rebuke and stern condemnation that made many of the members pale with self accusation or with inward anger. For Raymond had awakened that morning to the fact that the city had gone for license, after alL The rumor at the Rectangle that the second and third wards had gone no license proved to be falsa It was true that the victory was won by a very meager majority, but the result wa the same as if it had been overwhelming. Raymond had voted to continue another year the sa loon. The Christians of Raymond stood condemned by the result More than a hundred Christians, professing disciples, had failed to go to the polls, and many more than that number had voted with the whisky men. If all the church members of Raymond had voted against the saloon,- it would today be outlawed instead of crowned king of the munici pality. That bad been the fact in Ray mond for year. The saloon ruled. No one denied that. What would Jesus dot And the woman who had been brutal ly struck down by the very Uund that had assisted so ear ti)- tJ wtiri bi eartblvmiu wU. , . .r,'.' Vr' a . i. . tiiiiig more than the logical sequence or the- whole horrible system of license that for another year the saloon that receivm! hnr no often andjxmvDassed her degradation, from wnose very spot tus weapon bad reen nnrled tbat struck ner dead, :-. would by the law which the Christian people of Raymond voted to support open its doors, perhaps tomor row, and damn with earthly and eternal destruction a hundred Loreens before the year had drawn to its bloody close? : All this, with a voice that rang and trembkd and broke in sobs of anguish for the result, did Henry Maxwell pow out upon his people that Sunday morn IngV and men' and women wept as he spoke. Donald Marsh sat there, his usual erect, - handsome, firm,' bright, self confident bearing all gone, hia head bowed upon his breast, the great tears rolling down his cheeks, unmind ful of the fact that never before had he shown outward emotion in a public service. - Edward Norman near by sat, with his clear cut, keen face erect, but his lip trembled and he clutched the end of the pew with a feeling of emotion that struck deep into his knowledge of the truth as Maxwell spoke of it. No man had given or suffered more to in fluence public opinion that last week than Norman. The thought that the Christian conscience had been aroused too late or too feebly lay with a weight of accusation npon the heart of the editor. What if he had begun to do as Jesus would long ago? Who could tell what might hava been accomplished by this time? And up in the chon Rachel Winslow, with her face bowed on the railing of the oak screen, gave way to a feeling she had not yet al lowed to master her, but it so unfitted her for her part that when Henry Max well finished and she tried to sing the closing solo after the prayer her voice broke,' and for the first time in her life she was obliged to sit down sobbing and unable to go on. Over the church in the silence that followed this strange scene, sobs and the noise of weeping arose. When had the First church yielded to euch a bap tism of tears ? What hi become of its regular, precise, cold, conventional or der of service, undisturbed by any vul gar emotion and unmoved by any fool ish excitement? But the people had lately had their deepest convictions touched. They had been living so long on their surface feelings that they had almost forgotten the deeper wells of life. Now that they had broken to the surface the people were convinced of the meaning of their discinleshib. lngs Had Deen characterized by distinct impulses or impressions. Today the en tire force of the gathering seemed to be directed to this one large purpose. It was a meeting full of broken prayers, of contrition, confession, of strong yearning for new and better city life, and all through it ran the one general cry for deliverance from the saloon and its awful cone. But if the First church was deeply stirred br the. events of the week goao the Kectangle also telt moved, turongiy in Its own way. The death of . Loreen was not in itself so remarkable a fact It was her recent acquaintance with the people from the city that lifted her into special prominence and surrounded ber death with more than ordinary im portance. Every one in the Rectangle knew that Loreen was at this moment .lying in the Page mansion up on the avenue. 1 Exaggerated reports of the magnificence of the casket had already furnished material for eager gossip. The Rectangle was excited to know the details of the funeraL .'Would, it be' public? What did Miss Page intend to do? The Rectangle had never before mingled even in this distantly personal manner with the aristocracy on the boulevard. The opportunities for doing so were not frequent. Gray and his wife were besieged by inquiries as to what Loreen' s friends and acquaint ances were expected to do in paying their last respects to her, for her ac quaintance was large, and many of the recent converts were among her friends. So that is how it happened Monday afternoon at the tent that the funeral service of Loreen was held before an immense audience that choked the tent and overflowed beyond all previous bounds. Gray had gone to Virginia, and after talking it over with her and Henry Maxwell the arrangements had been made. . "I am and always have been opposed to large public funerals," said Gray, whose complete, wholesome simplicity of character was one of its great sources of strength, "but the cry of the poor creatures who knew Loreen is so earnest that I do not know how to refuse their desire to see her and pay her poor body some last little honor. What do yon think, Mr. Maxwell? I will be guided by your judgment in the matter I am sure that whatever you and Miss Page think is best will be right. " "I feel as yon do," replied Mr. Max well. "Under most circumstances I have a great distaste for what seems like display at such times, but this seems different The people at the Rec tangle will not come here to a service I think the most Christian thing will be to let them have the service at the tent Do you think so, Virginia?" "Yes," said Virginia sadly. "Poor soul! Ido not know but that some time I shall know she gave her life for mine. We certainly cannot and will not use the occasion for vulgar display. Let her friends be allowed the gratification of their wishea. I see no harm in it " bo tne arrangements ware maoe wnn some difficulty for the service at the tent and Virginia, with her uncle and Rollin, accompanied by Henry Max well, Rachel, President Marsh and the quartet from the First church, went down and witnessed one of the strange scenes of their Uvea It happened that that afternoon a noted newspaper cor respondent was passing through Ray mond on hs way to an editorial con vention in a neighboring city. He heard of the contemplated service at the teat and was present that arWnoon. U"! description of it was written in up;. i io style that caught the attention o: very many readers the next day. V fragment of his account belongs to th!:i part of the history of Raymond: . , "There wa very unique and rn i nsual funeral service held here tiiia'.il ' ernoon at the tent of .an evangelist ; Rev. John Gray, down in the slum dis trict known as the Rectangle.. .The oc-' casion was caused by the . killing of a woman during an election riot last Sat-; urday night. It seems she had been re- i cently converted during the evangelist's meetings and was killed while return-, ing from one of the meetings in com-: pany with other converts and some of her friends.' She was a common street' drunkard, and yet the services at the! tent were as imp. ssive as any I ever witnessed in a metropolitan church over the most distinguished citizen. "In the first place, a most exquisite anthem was sung by a trained choir. It struck me, of course, being a stranger to the place, with considerable astonish ment to hear voices like those one nat urally expects to hear only in great j churches or concerts at such a meeting as this, but the most remarkable part of the music was a solo sung by a strik ingly beautiful young woman, a Miss Winslow, who, if I remember rightly, is the youn singer who was sought for by Crandal, the manager of National Opera, and who for some reason. refused to accept his offer to go cn the stage. She had a most wonderful manner in .singing, and everybody was weeping before she had sung a dozen words. That, of cor.rse, ia not so strange an effect to be produced at a funeral sorv lce, but tne voice itseir Avas one or ten thousand. I understand Miss Winslow sings in the First church and could probably commund almost any salary as a public Binder, fche will probably be heard from soon. Such a voice could win its way anywhere. "The service, aside from the singing, was peculiar. Tho evangelist, a man of apparently very simple, unassuming style, spoke a few words, and he was followed hy a fine looking man, the Rev. Henry Maxwell, pastor of the First church of Raymond. Mr. Maxwell gjioke of the fact that tho dead woman had been fully prepared to go, but he spoke in a peculiarly sensitive manner of the effect of the liquor business on the lives of men and women like this one. Raymond, of course, being a rail road town and the center of the great packing interests for this region, Is full of saloons. I caught from the minister's remarks that ha had only recently changed his views in regard to license. He certainly mado a very striking and yet it was in no soma an inappropriate address for a funeral. "Then followed what was perhaps the queer part of this strange service. The women in the tent, at least a large part of them up near the coffin, began to sing in a soft, tearful way, 'I was a wandering sheep. "Then, while the singing was going on, one row or women stood up- walked slowly past the casket, and as they went by each one placed a flower of some kind on it Then they sat down, and another row filed past, leaving their flowers. All the time the singing continued softly, like rain on a tent cover when the wind is gentle. It was one of the simplest and at, the same time one of the most impressive sights J ever witnessed.' The sides of the tent Were up, and hundreds of people who could not get in stood outside, all as still as death,' with wonderful sadness and solemnity for such rough looking people. , There must have been a hun dred of these womon, and I was told many of thorn had boen converted at the meetings just recently.; I cannot de scribe the etfect (,f that flinging. Not a man saiv? a i.o i all women's voices, and po soft firi'l y 1 10 diinct that the effect wbh KturtLn-?. "The sorv'ce c! sod with another solo by Minn YT .n !iw. vim sang 'There were nliwiy I ; ;und then the evnri-rnfet n ;rf;l "t'tc i ull to bow their heads v.-hila h i r-tayea. ' I was obliged, in order to cat'.Ii t::y train, to leave during tho pr.i'-rr. utnl I lie last view I caught of thj t.c.'no 11s tho train went by the Khopj wiis u eijht of the great crowd por'.riii'r out of the tent and forming in open ranks while the coffin was tame out by uix of the women. It is a long timo since I have seen such a picture in this unpoeticul republic. " If Loreen 's funeral impressed a pass ing stranger like this, it is not difficult to imagine the profound feelings of those who had been so intimately con nected with her lifo and death. Noth ing had ever entered the Rectangle that had moved it so deeply as Loreen's body in that coffin, and the Holy Spirit seemed to bless with special power the use of this senseless clay, for that night at the meeting he swopt more than a score of lost souls, mostly women, into the fold of the Good Shepherd. It should be said here that Henry Maxwell's statement concerning the opening of the saloon from whose win dow Loreen had been killed proved nearly exactly true. It was formally closed Monday and Tuesday while the authorities arrested, the nroprietor, I'ontimitu) on papa 10 Saved Two From Death. "Oui little daughter had an almost fa tal attactol whooping cough and Dron bhitis" writes Mrs. W.K. Haviland, of Armonk, N. Y. " but, when all othef remedies failed ,we saved her life with Dr. King's New Discovery. Our niece, who bad Consumption in an advanced stage, also used this wonderful medicine and to-day she is perfectly well,' Des- Eente throat and lung diseases yield to t. King's New Discovery as to no other medicine on earth. Infallible for Cough 4 ii. I Colds. 60c and 1.00 bottles guar-ai.I.-.i ly George. A. Harding. Trial bot tles tree, a " " THE HOME GOLD CURE. " An Iugentoua Treatment br which , Drunkards are Being-Cured Oa'ly -" In.Hplte of Themaelveav No Moxlona Dotei. No Weakening of the Nervea. A Plraaant and feature Dure for the Liquor Habit. ; j , It is now generally known and under stood that Drunkenness is a disease and not . weakness. A body filled with poi son, and nerves completely shattered by periodical or constant use of intoxicating liquors, requires an antidote capable of neutralizing and eradicating this poison, and destroying the craving (or intoxk cants. Sufferers may now cure them selves at home without publicity or loss of time from business by this wonderlul "HOME GOLD CURE" which has been perfected after many years of close study n n A i mr.nl ....... 4 I I I. i mi ' . . . mm iieaiuitiiv ui ineunaies. xne lauh fnl use according to directions of this wonderful discovery is positively guar anteed to cure the most obstinate case, no matter how hard ,;a drinker. Our records show the marvelous transforma tion of thousands of Drunkards into so ber, industrious and upright men WIVES CURE YOUR HUSBANDS! CHILDREN CURE YOUR FATH. EUS 1 1 Thin remedy is no sense a . nos trum but Is a specilio for this disease only, and U so skilltully devised and pre pared that it is thoroughly soluble and pleasant to the taste, so that it ran be given in a cup of tea or coffee without the knowledge of the person taking it. Thousands of Drunkards have cured themselves with this priceless remedy, and as many more have been cured and made temperate men bv having- the "CURE" udminfatnrarl t.u lnln (,;...!. and relatives without their knowledge in coiiee or tea, ana believe today that they discontinued drinking of their own freewill. DO NOT Will rk.h. deluded by apparent and misleading "improvement.'1 Drive out the disease at once and for all time. The "Home GOLD CURE" is sold at the extremely Inw r.e.!nA 9 t 1 . t I l J I wnvo ui vuo isui.tir, uiui placing in reach Of eVftrvh,v a t.rpotmonr mnt-a f- fectiial than others costing $26 to $50. r uii iiiiRuuuiie accompany eacn package. Special advice by skilled physicians when requested without extra charge. Sent prepaid to any part of the world on receipt of One Dollar. Addrens Dept. Efifll. KDWIV H P.lli'9i,nnuDiuv -. - - m ew a- V VaTj 4 ail J. 2330 and ?332 Market Street, PhikdeU puis, aii correspondence strictly coon cential. , Cycling has its up and downs. After the downs, use Banner Salve it you're cut or bruised. It heals the hurt quick ly. Take no substitutes. Obarman Ira D. Reckard, Duncombe. Is,, writ es: " My little boy scalded his leg from the kuee to the ankle. I used Banner Salve immediately and in three meek'e time it was almost entirely healed. I want to recommend it to everv familv aud advise them to keep Banner Salve o nana, as it is a sure remedy lor scalds o any sores. " Charman & Co,, ; William Woodard, of Decatur, la., writes: "I was troubled with kidney disease, for several years and four one dollar size bottles of Eoley' Kidney Cure cured me. I would recommend it to anyone who has kidney trouble. Char man &Co. , , , a.