i l ThePiaindealer... 1 V I t i .,.. j Printing READABLE, RELIABLE, REPUBLICAN, n NOTE HEADS, LETTER r.tAl f, BILL KiAOA ENVELOPES, ETC. I Na better Geld tbu Southern Ore (a; better medium through which t Advertise. Executed hort notice at price PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY. contlttcnt with gawd work. IJtlJli J, Vol. XXX. THE CHICAGO OF 1825 VILLAGE WHICH PRESENTED NO "THRILLING PROSPECTS." The Ooautry Thereabout Offered Few Fea ana There Was KotbioK Worthy f EnJocr A r.rpurt That Failed Com. jiletely aa a. rnrpUeey. The Chicago of ironrly 3 years ago lid. nut present rii inviting appearance. TPfX. party of Keating atnd Lang left I'-jn Wayne in May to discover the ttnrce of the St. Peter's river. The ap kirur Ji to Chicago is thus described in the account published in 1S25: ' ' We Trere near the southern extremity ef the lake. The view toward the north tr5 boundless, the eye meeting nothing but the vast expanse of water which spread like a sea, its- surface at that time as 'calm and unruffled as though it were a sheet of ice. "Our path led us over the scene of the bloody massacre which occurred in 1812, when -the garrison of Chicago was de stroyed tr the Pottawatomies. No traces are now to be seen of the massacre, , "On the afternoon of June 5 we reach ed Fort Dearborn (Chicago). Fort Dear bora is ou the south bank, near the mouth of the Chicago river. The post at Chicago was abandoned a few months f f er the party visited it Its establish t J lisi been found necessary to intimi cl x ,e xWThil tribes of Indians wl biiHnhaUt.Jhiapart of thecoun trv. . vi r . "'We v :re iaiuch. disappointed at the r rpanaice of Chicago and its vicinity. We found in it nothing to justify the great eulogium lavished upon it by Mr. Bchookraft, a late traveler. "The best comment upon his descrip tion of the climate and the soil w the fact that, with the most active vigilanc? on the part of the officers, it was imr sible for Uie garrison, consisting ti to 90 men, to subsist on the grain raised in the country. "The appearance of the country near Chicago offers but few features. There is too much uniformity in the scenery. The extensive water prospect is a waste uncheckered by islands and unenlivened by spreading canvas. "The village, presents no thrilling prospects, as notwithstanding its antiq uity it consists of but few huts, inhab ited by miserable race of men, scarcely'' equal io the Indians; from whom they aroceended. Their log 6 bark nouses low, filthy and disgustiajr, display ii cot the least trace of eonif art. . ' "Chicago is perhaps one of the oldest uieinents in the Indian countjy. r It usuane,. derived from the Pottawatomie, ln Grange, signifies either 'skunk' or ViMMikm.'. Mention is made af tho j'-aeo-as having been visited inKTl by rot, wbo '-foand 'Chiegou to nt n r -idence f a powerful chief. C J J iliamis. - - " " " r ; " '"As a place of, business it offers no i ,4a?rie&t to the settler, far the whole s.rji siVfamount of trade on the lake did cot exceed the cargoes of five schooners, even wbea the garrison received its sup plies from Mackinaw. ,"It is not impossible that at some dis tait day, when the banks of the Illinois t hall have been covered with a dense population and when the low prairies which extend between that river and FortTCayne shall have acquired a popu late proportionate to the produce which t hey can yield, Chicago may become one of the points in direct communication, between the northern lakes and the Mis RssirpL". . ... ...... '. . ' The Indians were chiefly Pottawato tcies, but intermixed with Ottowas and CLippewas. Among many charges r puust these Indians there is none more horrible than the charge of cannibalism. His has been denied, but it has been ac knowledged by the Indians themselves, and it has been uniformly admitted by the interpreters and traders who have lemsr resided with them. ' . ''It is a eonuaon superstition with the: : he thai tastes of the body of a bra ti: saeires a part of his valor, end if 1-3 tii.st of his heart, which by them coulidered aa the seat of all courage, the share of .bravery which ar rives from it is -still greater. "Captain Wells is still mentioned as the bravest white man with whom they ever met He had almost become one of tieir number and had united himself to a descendant of Little Turtle. ."At the commencement of hostilities between the British and Americans, he elded with his own' countrymen, while the Indians of this vicinity all passed into. the British service. Well was killed. After the action his body was divided, and bis heart was shared, as be ing the most certain spell for courage, and part of it was sent to the various tribes in alliance with the Pottawato mies, while they themselves feasted up on the rest 'Chicago Times-Herald. a cw Thing Xm Books. It has been suggested that the con trast between the black and white of a printed page would be less trying to the eye if the latter could simultaneously rest oa a bit of color. Accordingly a Boston publisher is getting out books that bare margins of azure, yellow or green. 'Boston Letter. - Bordea Jnrore Beanioa. Ten of the 12 jurors who acquitted Lizzie Borden of the murder of her fa ther and stepmother in Jane, 1803, held their second annual dinner and social reunion in Fall River on Wednesday. Imparts that peculiar lightness, sweetness, awi vbr noticed in the finest cake, short cake, biscuit, rolls, crusts, etc., which ex pert pastry cooks declare is .unobtainable by the use of any other leavening agent. Made from pure, grape cream of tartar. ' ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK. THE SACRED CODFISH ; The Proposal to Take It not or the 8tate hotiae In Boatoa Create a Sensation. The Worcester Gazette says:' Charles Francis Adams recounts "Tho Story of the Cod" in the Springfield Re publican. In 1783 John Adams secured from Great Britain' an eminent diplo matic victory after a wearisome contest the right of fishery and ou March 17, 17S4, John Rowe, n Boston member, asked and received permission to hang the historic codfish on the wall of the chamber of representatives in the state house. Thirty years later another war with Gre& Britain occurred. John Quincy Adams was called on this time as a diplomat, and he,-too, saved the codfish once more from British encroach ments. The statehonse cod, which the sacrilegious are now threatening to store in the garret, is emblematic of com merce, war and diplomacy and tells of Massachusetts victories in all three fields. After the peace of 17S3 John Adams quartered tho codfish in his coat of arms, and it is there now. This must have been the origin of the phrase "cod fish aristocracy," once in common use. It was com maul j spoken in derision, but tho pride of the Adamses in the cod fish would seem entirely worthy. Ou this subject the New fork Sun re marks: There is a prond and beautiful build ing in Boston, fiulfiuch did it It is a Parthenon surmounted by a gilded gas house, and to those who love it it is the to pre id e architectural achievement of the world. Cvcu tho limited or preju diced persons who deny its charm can not forget the joy of its associations To go to Boston, to view that dome with an eager eye and to perspire with tho pulchritudo of it and tho deeper thought that one doesn't have to live iu Boston is not the least of pleasures in a world that persons of fair digestion regard with a certain amount of attach ment As a matter of fact, the dome is a hollow fraud. Mr Bulfinch, who has bad the distinction of having an emi nently parochial street named after him, was not lucky enough to have his do signs carried out, andSthe statehonse, with its feeling Dutch nSaie, is not all that it might have been. But it has merits. There is or was in it the sacred codfish, a palladium that fell from heav en plash into tho Frog pond in the days When Boston was an eminent sea port , This codfish was almost human and quite superhuman. It could wink. It had learned to say cultyur and liter ature and lef tenant, besides the other things that are said in Boston. There was a silver bathtub in which it used to tipple when the Boston nine got a game. It used to leap into the air when ever Governor . Greenhalge appeared with blue knit thinking cap on. It was sprinkled with champagne whenever the Ancient and Honorable Artillery com pany had a- feast All the thinkers in the legislature revered it It would wag its tail at a good thing and drop dead whenever a bore was up. They have been "fixing up" the state house. Evidently some idiot is in charge. The sacred codfish is not to be included among the treasures of the re stored statehonse. The Law and Order people say it drinks too much. The A P A. says it has a Hibernian counte nance. All the same, it was the best in the state. It was the meet venerable in station there, except Harvard- college and George Harden of Lowell. It it gone. It has been torn down. It is niL So falls the codfish aristocracy. So fades a glory unmistakable. NO FEED, NO TOOT. Why tbo Maria Baad Did 2Tot Play at . ertaia BoUdaj BeeaeUoa. Mrs. Calvin Brice has, vulgarly speak ing, "put her foot in it," and not the dazzling Trilby foot, which subjugated all who saw it, but the foot which rich people are popularly supposed to reserve far the necks of their inferiors. Mra Brice, litp Mrs. Tymmyns, of humorou memory, sent out cards for a New Tear's reception to be held at her Wash ington residence. Her "social secre tary" was sent to secure the Marino band for the occasion. Bnt the Marine band had played at Mrs. Brice 's last year, and after its bard work and enchanting strains was not even asked if it would have a glass of punch or a cup of tea The Marine band has a tenacions mem-, ory . Professor Fanciulli bowed to the so cial envoy of Mrs. Brice and asked if 'after five hours of music will the mu sicians have some sapper? The social envoy replied, -I woulJ as soon ask the cooU at to supper as the band." So Professor Fanciulli said the members of the .Manue band were not cooks, bnt musicians of the nation. The commandant waved Ins baton, and the social secretary retiretl in confnsion! Washington Gossip in New York Ad vertiser " - Aa Oral Will TrobaUML . A nuncupative will, the first filed in Pittsburg in 13 years, was accepted on Wednesday by the register. James ft res nan was injured on the railroad on Dec 18 last and died a short time after on the oDerating table at the West Pennr hospital , Before he died he stated to those around him that he wished his property to go to his younger children John, James and Mary excluding his nlilocc rViiM TrwtcansA the latter was old enough to take care of himself. He also! left 200 to the Bev. Thomas Bailey fcr masses. Philadelphia Ledger. KANSAS CITY GHOSTS FAMOUS SPOOKS OF THE TOWN ON THE BIG MUDDY. The Original Cheat It Front a Cas of Fratricide How the Santa Fe Spook Wa Laid-now a Man With the "Jim Jam." Stlrrod Fp a Jail Fall of Criminal. It may bo 'true that conscieuco makes towards of us all, but with tho ignorant md superstitious conscience is not n cir cumstance when compared to a vivid imagination. The greatest cowurd on earth is tho person. who sees in every dark shadow, in each desert etl house and around every dismal building tho rest less spirit of some departed siuner whoso crimes will not allow him to enter heaven, who is doomed to wander around this earth until Gabriel's trumpet is sounded, who must hover near the scene of his former misdeeds until the last day. Tho place by popular consent most adapted to ghost wanderings and the place most fruitful iu tho production of tho bona fide article is naturally tho graveyard. The drearier, gloomier and more mournful the aspect of tho grave yard the more ghosts. But tho real be liever in spooks and spirits docs not deem it necessary to go among the tombs and graves of the dead to find a spirit Ghosts are numerous. They can be found in all sections of the country. There is not a villflgo uir a deserted country house nor a railroad bridge but has its ghost But tho ghoe-ts are not all sonfined to the conn try by any means. There have been several in Kansas City that have gained extensive notoriety on account of their mauv visitations, J and the part of' tho city in which they are wont to disport themselves are still eyed with suspicion and looked upon sskanco by the inhabitants of Belvidere Hollow, Hick's Hollow and other por tions, of the city thickly settled by the descendants of Ham. ' The oldest, the crisu:il ghost that is mot vividly in the memory of tho su perstitious and is most often tho topio of grewsome whispers among the people mentionod," walked tho levee between Main street and Broadway 12 years ago. One winter's night, tho story gis, a man was bring in wait' for aa enemy on the levee. In his hand be clutched a ponderous double barreled shotgun loaded with nails and sings. Ho saw a aian walking down the levee. In tho dim, flickering light 1ms thought he rec ognized his enemy. He raised his grin, fired and hurried away. The next d:ry he read in the papers that his brother's body had been found on the levee, hor- I ribly mangled and t vn. Tho murderer winced, but kept his secret. Thru the dead brother's ghost began to walk. Ev ery night, at the same hour of the shooting, it could be seen cu tlvy lovec Each time it would walk straight to tho spot where tho body had fallen. Then the ghost would fall, go through a death struggle and disappear. It kept this np for years, and there are those who say it docs it still The second healthy, well developed ghost disported itself in the ruins cf tho old Santa Fc Stage Coach coinivaiy's of fice at Second and Main rrrtcts iu I?60. So generally known did it become that often large crowds would congregate and await tho appearance of the nocturnal visitor. Early one evening a young man who wished to investigate a little went j into the ruins. When he emerged from them an hour later, he found a large crowd standing on the opposite side cf 1 the 6trect, near the jail, watching for ghosts, tjome qne in the crowd, thinking that tho young man had been playing ghost, threw a brick at tho investigator, striking him on the head. He fell sense less with a gaping wound in his head. The Santa Fo ghost hm .not been seen since. In 1667 there was a story afloat tliat at 13 o'clock each night a ghostly cable, train glided down the incline between Walnut and Main streets and disappear ed into space. In the grip car, guiding the train, was the ghost of a gripman who had died a short time before, after having been insane for some time, the result of grief over the fact that bis train had run down and killed a pedestrian. Crowds congregated at tho junction nightly to see the strange sight. For the mos-t part they went away disappointed," although there was plenty who deckired thoy had 6een "it." Another story, m which a ghost was never seen, but which smacked strongly of spooks. Was the Conway murder on East Eighteenth street, between Oak and Locust, in 1883. Mrs. Conway, a young woman, and her little girl were beaten to death with a coupling pin. Tho mur derer or murderers were never caught Suspicion pointed toward two men, but there was no evidence. Both of Uicni afterward died horrible deaths '-ouo of the glanders ami tho other of cancer. Tho ghost of the victims never walked openly, but that section of the city was given a wide berth by the true believ ers for many mouths afterward. Laat, but net least, were the-ghosts of Clark and Jones, the men hung for mur dering Mmc Wright in 1803. These ghosts materialized iu the jails ouc at Independence and one in Kansas City. Tho scare lasted for some weeks, and the negro prisoners were tlirown into a stato of terror by any strange sounds. One night, when the jail was in a state of comparative quiet, a drunken pris oner, who had" just been brought in, had an attack of "jimjams." By some strange coincidence he was placed in the cell once occupied by Clark, and the prisoners soon located the groaning of the umortuiiate man. ilio negroes, not knowing that the cell was occupied, sup posed that the noise was made by a de parted spirit, and all started to howling with the "ghQst,' ThQ,effect was some thing that can be imagined better than it can bo described, iiiiieo the Clark ghost left the jail Kansas City has been bereft of spirits, and' Belvidere Hollow is breathing more easily than it has for years. Kansas City Times. . Writing- With iloth Banda. A curious and so far as we aro aware hitherto unpublished fact about the ex- fcremier is narrated by Mr. Lancelot strong in The Woman at Homo. In the course of a vivid description or flir. Gladstone's manner of conducting his correspondence iu the hou&j he says, "He would take the blotter and begin to write, often with an inditing pen in one hand and a corrective pencil in tho other. " We are reminded of a recently published satirical cartoon ni which Mascagui is represented as busily com posing operas with both hands and both foet. . . . ROSEBURG, OREGON LITERARY MEN AND THE PIPE. Many of Then Deeeet the Weed, While Other Find Solace la It. The following from Edmund Yates' "Recollectiona" appeared in a Loudon periodical: "Mr. Gladstone 'detests' to bacco ; Mr. Matthew Arnold 'abuses it; Mr. Rukiu luites the man who 'pollutes the pure air of the morning with cigar smoke. ' But are we not con soled for the abstinence of these great men by tho devotion of others of emi nence? Thackeray onco declared that he did not despair to see a 'bishop lolling out of the Atheneum with a cheroot in his month, or, at any rate, a pipe stuck in his shovel hat ' But if we have not a 6moking bishop, wo have a smoking poet laureate (alluding to the Lite Lord Ten nyson), familiar with tobaccos, Latakia, Connecticut leaf, Periqne, Lone Jack, Michigan, Killicinick, Highlander or any of the English brands. "How did he take tho gentle weed? At his foet was a box of whito clay pipea Filling one of these, he smoked until it was empty, broke it in twain and threw tho fragments into a box prepared for their reception. Then he took another pipe from its straw or wooden inelo sure, filled it and destroyed it, as before. For years Professor Huxley, like Charles Lamb, toiled after tobacco 'as some men after virtue. ' At a certain debate on 6nioking ho told the 6tory of his early struggles in a way which utterly put the fffltitotiacconists to confusion. " 'For 40 years of my life," he said, 'tobacco had been a deadly poison to me. Lord cheers from the an ti tobac conists. In my youth, as a medical student, I tried to smoke. . In vain ! At every fresh attempt my insidious foe stretched mo prostrate on the floor. Re peated cheers. I entered the navy. Again I tried to smoke and again met with defeat. I hated tobacco. I could al most have lent my support to any insti tution that had for its object the putting of tobacco smokers to deat h. Vociferous cheering. " 'A few years ago I was in Brittany with some friends. We went to an inn. They began to smoke. They looked very happy, and outside it was very wet and dismal I thought I would try a cigar. Murmurs. I did so. Great expecta tions. I smoked that cigar it was de licious. Groans. From that moment I was a changed man, and I now feel that smoking in moderation is a comfortable and Lmdablc practice and is productive of good. Dimay and confusion of the antitobact-ouihts. Roars of laughter from the smokers. " "There is no more harm iu a pi than there is in a cup of tex Yon may poi ki yourself by drinking too much green tea or kill yourself by eating too many beefsteaks. For lr.y r.-.-u parr. I consider that tobacco iu moderation is a sweet ener and equalizer cf the temper.' (Total rent of the ant itobaoeonists and com plete triumph of tlie smokers. ' A Cnriraa Fart. " The Popular Science News calls atten tion to a mot ron:;irk.ible account of the posiritHi of certain pluieh us located in "Gullivers Travels" This book, writ ten somewhere about 1T2C, contains the following words: "They spend the greater part of their livs in deserving the celestial KxUws which tiiey do by tho assistance vt gLiros fur cxrelling ours ia,gixxlness. They have likewise discovered two lesser stars, or satellites, which revolve ultont Mars, whereof tho inucrmoet is ditiuit from the center of the primary planet exactly tliree of his diameters and the outermost five. The former revolves in the space of 10 hours, and the latter in 21, 'J. so that the squares cf their periodical times are very near in the same proportion with the cubes of their distance from the center of Mars." Ouo hundred and fiftv years lefore it was known that Mars had a satellite, when the theory that it had nie would have been met with ridicule, or at least difliolief, the anthrr of this remarkable book described the exact number of satel lites that Mars possessed, told their loca tion and unusual speed: also a jieculiar ity in the relation of the speed to tho central orb, a peculiarity based upon no principles with which astronomers are familiar. A careful study cf -the state ments made by many writers of marked ability will almost inevitably lead ns to the conclusion that certain inu'r-'nativs minds have tho gift of prophecy, or, at all events, there may be flashes of divi nation possible unsuspected by the writ ers themselves. Meala In the Dark Agra. Few references con lie found as to the manner in which a meal was served and eaten during tho dark ages. As near as we can learn, the soup was put iu a big bowl with ears, called, a "porringer." There was seldom n spoon for each per son. Thoso who had spoons dipped them into tho porringer, and the liquid was carried directly to each month. Those who were without spoons drank their soup from the porringer, holding it by one of the cars, or else borrowed a spoon of their neighbor. The meats were placed in a large ves sel ri tho center of the table. Each per son present at tho meal picked out with his fingers sncli bits as ho desired. One or two knivesTuiswered for half a dozen guests. , Those who were without knife borrowed from those who had one. As a rule, the guests at table used their own knives. There is no evidence that nap kius were supplied to guests at this pe riod. At any rate, no mention is made of hem. Lippincott's. ' 44 Actions of the Just Smell Sweet,'' The fragrance of life is vigor and strength, neither of which can be found in a. per son whose blood is impure, and whose everfy breath speaks of internal troubles. Hood's Sarsaparilla purifies, vitalizes and enriches the blood, gives a good appetite and makes the weak strong. Run Down " My husbtnd was run down in health and all tired out. Those excellent medicines, Hood's Pills tnd Sars DArilU. buHt him up aain." Mrs. H. U Afowrv, Tovndd, P. Hixxl't Till ih liver !)!; tit nan-lrrltatlm and MONDAY. NOVEMBER 27, 3- S&4S&rl0-rliS&4Str& 1 F. BARKER & CO. laaaw V Mtmd - -i adr .... -w V... Flake; Oats. '-a VeaawW nm V am H) MITCHELL' T T "V II . J . 1. law? lw 1 iuW M M awT. ik Vl CHnn SHOE Shoes, if. correctly fitted. We are prepared to show the most complete line cf Shoes ever shown in our store, having succeeded iu reaching the best and largest Shoe Fac tories in the cast. We should like to have a chauce to make you acquainted with our stock and prices as we feel assured that both will please you. V0LLENBER6 BROS. There is a Quality aoout our Drugs Which secures ouy in small quantities, ana ouy irequeutry, therefore we always have a Fresh Stock of Full Standard Streagth Drugs. Our aim is for Quality, and we hit the mark The merits of our prescription Department have built up a large trade iu this line. A. C. MARSTERS & CO. Prescriptions com- ponnded Day and Night. SEIREOORG... Name it? Why, have it I ice cy GROCERIES Teas and Coffees Flour and Feed. Fine fresh gocds at reason able, prices. Give me a trial order. 51 Staple and Fancyi Qroceries. z We have a complete line of j FRESHjiGROCERIES, TABLE DELICACIES, . TOBACCO AND CIGARS, J CONFECTIONERIES, FRESH AND TROPICAL FRUITS, 3 VEGETABLES, ETC., Which will please you in both quality and i; Price. Give.usaCall. $ KRUSE & SHAMBROOK. 2 We To let you know that we Staple and Fancy GrOce8 Our stock is being constantly replenished and enlarged, hence our goods are always fresh and new. COUPONS holder to a selection from porcelain china. A chance nothing. Come and see. prices at m ,809. J wrt 'wi 'J 0 WAGONS T 1N T - W V I U ctvi c COflFORT. Cau be combined iu the same pair of permanent patronage. WeS rv , r.f.; .i.c LrUggIbl. spell it backwards and you fresh stock of Staple and Fan constantly oil hand. Fine a specialty. Canned goods, MS. A. C. KIDD. pay for this.... u have a fine selection of given with every cash purchase which entitles our handsome decorated to get something nice for l$Verything at the lowest ZIGLEirS GROCERY. A Complete line of El now oq hand. DEY GOODS. Ladies Dress Goods, Kibbon, Trim tilings, Laces, Etc., Etc., Also a fine line of of the best qaaJty and latest style. Staple and Fancy GEOCEEIES. ood, Willow, and Glassware, Crockerr, Cordage, Etc., also oa hand and at prices to salt the times. An np-to date line of CUIHWWG. H. C. STANTON. EAST AND SOUTH Via THE SHASTA ROUTE "' OFTHK Southern Pad lie Co. tipr atralaatoaT Portlaaa daily. 7 uup. a. : S !" 4. . Lt. - Portland - Ar. j liUr.i. Lv. IlitCMF. . Lt. - Rceeburg Ar. - Hma Frac Hma FrmcciK Lt. I 'r. e. 5.00 P. M. Lr. Ogden Lt. i:5 A. M. P. M. ! Lr Denver Lt. I " 0U A. M. CIO A.M. Lt. Omafca Lt. I i:f P. M. :lP. N. Lv. t tucago Lt. T:i A. M. T oa A. SI. Lv. Ixm Aafefca i J P. M. S:ii P. M. Lr, El I'aso Lv. u) P. M. IS P. M. Lv. Fort Worth Lv. : A. M. 7:i5A, y. Lr. Kew Orlcaci Lt i Sf.J. DtaUatl Car Observation Car. Pullman 6rt clai and ton rift en atuebed to all traiua. Htaaata Kxpreaa Da II jr. !:&. M. I Lt. - PorUaad - Ar. 7:liA. . p. .ILr. Ksaeuarf - Lr. ! !)- 7:. r. M. j at. - Pa Krancineo - Lt. 7 1 r. M . Corralli U:1 Daily (Except Saudaj). 7 . M. I Lt. It 11 h . a. ( Ar. CorrmiHe - Lt, JSP. At Albany an3 Corrallia connect vita trsraa i CorraUi a Xaatera railroad. Independence Ftmeuget Dally (except uudaj) tMt. a. r. u. t to p. x. Lt. - Portland - Ar. Ar. HcHjriTiUe Lt. Lr. Indepemtcpce Lr. :A. I -. i K. KOKHLKR. C H. SIARKKAll. Manager. tl. F. a Paa. Ae-i t- . PORTLANT nRIfiOS. Dlrwt conoo-tton at San FraarlM-o with tearnahip lines for Hawaii. Japan, Cbica, The Pbullppina and Autraha. For throac h ticket and rates call on or mA. tnm L. B. SiOOBE Agent or V. V. LoNDOU, AOKTGUrg. DEivrani '-Scenic Uae ef the Werta" The Favorite Transcontinental Koote Between the Northwest snd all Points East. Choice of Two Routes Through the Fstnoos Rocky Mountain Scenery And Four Rou'.es East of Pueblo sod Denver. Alt Passengers granted a day slop-over in tbe Mormon Capital or anywhere be tween Ogden and Denver. PereooaDy conducted Tourist Excursion three days a week to Omaha, Kansas City, St. Louis, Chicago and the East. For Tickets and any Information tte- gardiog Rates, Routes, etc., or for De Bcriptire Advertising Matter, call on Agent&Iot Oregon Railway & Navigation Lo., Oregon fcuort Line or Southern Pacific Companies. S.K HOOPER, General Paoa &Tike Agent, lenvfr,Col. U C. MCUOU General Aited, 251 Wash. f-C Potland Or. Roseburg P. O. Hours. Week. days. 6:30 a. in. to 8 p. m. Sun days and holidays, ti.'M lo !:0U a. ni. and 6:30 lo7:30p. m. STAOS KOCTkS. .Uosehurg to MarahSeld Departs ev ery day at t a. m. ; arrives every morn in?. Koseburg to Myrtle Point. Departs every day at 0 a. in ; arrives every morning. Roeeburgto Mill wool Departs ejer day except 8undaHt "a.m.; arrive everv day except Sundays at 4:4." p. it). Roeebnrg to Peel Departs Idaily, (ex cept Sundav) at 7 a. m ; ariives daily, (evcept Sunday 1 at 3 p. u Roehnrg to Lurley Departs Tues days and KriditvH at 1 p. m.; arrives Tuesdays and Friday s at 11 :30 a. iu. It yen Buffer f -oru lenderuees tr full ness mi the right side, pains under shoulder hUde, coustipalion, bilioueDeeo, sick headache and fetd dill,)'hcavy and sleepv your iivr is torpid androngested. DeWitt's Little Early Riseis ail) core you promptly, pleasantly and perma nently by removing the congestion and causing the bile ducts to open a6d flow naturally, tiiky akk od pills. . A. t MARSTF.R.H A CO. BO 1 No. 94. GENERAL DIRECTORY itats or osaeos. 0.8.8en.tora -?r2'l Gongreatmeu Oovernor- Secretary of Htate.-. tTboa. B. Toacua i a. a. Mooar I. T km r. I. iniaaar state I reurer... v. a. Maere J. H. Aekrmea 8upt. Pub. Inttruction Bute Printer. ... Attorney General W. H. lrr .U.K. N. Black bar r. A. Moor Supreme Judge.. !r. A. Ml 5. E. K.8. Pi WoiTenss SSCOBU JVOUiUL DlftBlCV, JttAze J.W. Hmt?ea Prosecutins Atwruej Gio. M. Brea o. - Laan omi a. aoaseraa. t.!Wlr Hetirr Btk aKiMer j. I. Brioce P. a. WtJTHCE BUEXV. Otaerrer.. vovetAt coomr. Senator A. . tU4 RcpreenlaUTe - )w. W. Wllaoa (J. W. Ceaa Tlerk I.r. Oailrr herlir. v K L. Bleplwaa rreaaurer u. W. Dlinmich Sehool r-nperintendent H. B. GilWe Joe. Lynee )M.D. TaraiMa ' r Ja. Byroa UMarTblel .lr. E. V. Hoawer OnntT Jule Conunladonen.- ironer Sheep Inapector .Tkaa. aaaHa rsactncT opricBa.. Juat'cea .h. w atrra -J. r. raer Htatiea.. C1TT O. fei.t,n. Mayor . A f Umntm Pw.tmier w. a. Cm corRctuixjr. Ul Ward.. )F P Bnraa C. w. parka t. W.Bma w. R. im 1 rtrlrfa - - tnd Ward.. Jrd Wanl. 4tb Ward. . (W.J. laoaVr K.w. Woolley Recorder r u. v, Worn. -lr. Ml Weal Treaurer sfanbal .ben. "ay r. W. IMIlara citv rwtartt BxaTiKu. ttw 1 . .n. m. .n x-AHn., . I .1 .1 . i n . . m-'l. the lint UiuhI.. in h o'clock p. m. cocar aaastoaa. The Circuit (Tmirt r.r rv..it.. - - . WWQ. UWWW.V I Ml. three tl mm a t..r . i,.nn.. Tk J u day in March, the 4ia iiondar U Jane, a ad ta " ""-"-7 j. . namiiiM el Roaebure )iule. Geo. at Browa,ol aebata. proateuuni atun uey. . the lt Monday of January, March. May. Jaf - mra sua onTemoer, Jo. Ljoaav cf Drain, jndse; M. Vt. Thompaua at cotlr M TU. I . . H.-nu. .1 r T T t . . ' jtm. m. wiaaHBBaMa. Pmbate t'Mirt i. it - - - . Lyons, lodce. - . . Profeaaloaal Car da. QOM3IODORE ?. " JACKtfOX, ." Attorney aivl Coansvllur at Law. Mining Law and Water Rights made at-iaxiaJty. " Marau-rs Bid. KUS-IBCkG, fl lCO.w 3M I'M EA OLE, M P.O. 8 DENTIST. nOfficc in the little btiek oppoaiie ekxaai Roseburg, Or. QEKOGK M. BaOW. Attorney-at-Law, Court B'Huv Uoa Slain. BAB. RIDDLE, Attorney at Law, Oflictr fti CVurt ItoUK - " tin Attr. EOSEICIIO- Mtunv W. BENSON, Attorney-at-Law.. Eooms 1 and 1 Review Building. ROSEBCRG, OEEGOU R. WILLIS, - Attorney and Counselor at Law, Wmptaetiearaaataoaaaitetaba. Ot a Mr-t.r BaUd.ng. Daaarl-araatOa. Attorney at Law, iooau 1 a i. Manuen Bld, R06EBUEW, OM. aTjSj-Btttinew before the V. S. Land OBk-a anal Bimuccaaeaaapecialty. wntcaaai La ReoeiTer O. 8. Und Oalea. JA. UrcilANAN, Notary Public. . Attorney-at-Law. Collections a Specialty. Romn 3 . Martitera BoUJiait. KOeEBl'BG.O. V W IlWNEs. DEiNTIST, Renew Building, telephone No. -t. ROiEBl KU, OEJGOH jQR.GEO.E. HOUCK, Physcian & Surgeon: : Office P.t Oflitv Bid. 1'lH'De, Main si KOBURj UBtbOS. SacJety neeUaa. R' OSKBORG DIVISION KO , B, OF Ul meeoi every aeooua and lourva saadaj. vv M)MEN-S RKIJKr CtlltPS Ka UL MEETS am inn i.im ni.ia.y. ta m t mnaik. TKSO IXWT. M. O. A. B., Mr ITS TBS anu . hi m'ru I nMM..Bv. a. th, at 1 p. m. ALPHA I.OIKJK. N. 4T." K OF P., MEETS every WeitiwwLt evrninf at Odd rVna Hall. Vlvlimv Ki.iuhn, In ennd taadtaa. WP T AITKKI LOIxtlt, . r. A. M. RXBrLA u alt-t b WMtmwdaT a rh mcntt-. H t.K" K L. I A8K0TT W. SL- S.T. IrWKTT. --v. DOSKBrR:t'lleTKh.Nt.. O. r ..WT1 'he tirsl m tlunl Thnrw.T f eara) n :b. I.IBBIE IOSHOW. W J. . M.tt'DK RAST. rV-'T. XIODKRS WWDMEN OP A.MKRIOA. TKIT i,A on Mr t ami till d toeai.y of vach month !n the old Masonic ha 1. II. W. MlU-aa. V..C. It. I.. M VK.-TKK. Clerk. OODMEN F THK WORLD. Oak Cm n KoM-bnrr vrvry 1st, :ird and 6td Moada ;v, tiuis. Vi-hitiK uvighbor alwavi weleoma O. P. Cwmow, C. C v V.t; Losix'K,' lork. , pHll.ETAKIAN LOJUE. NO. , 1. O. O. F. 1 m.-v. -..it'inl.T ivvril( of each week at thflrhul! In Odd rPlow Temple at Rose bur. Mowlior.. ir oroVr n enod atandlnc arelnriv M l tl,-i.. B XV. STBAWitj. N. - N. T. JkwktT. Si-t 'y. 1). S. WrT. . Ktii. Stc. L P.t. ELKS. ROt-KBl KG LOlHiK. NO. JS . hl! their rvKUlar ronimunuauons at thai I O. O. t'i hall ou Mii.i-J and fourth Thuradtr it each mnitli. All nir-mbrre requested tj-' U'ud rwi.:lrlv. ami all visiting brother c tially invited toattvml . V DOUGLAS WAITS. S. R. IRA . R1DDLK. Seoretarr. rjOBEBURG LODtJK. NO. 1. A. O. r. . meet the aerand and tourtb Mondar f eoh mouth1 t7:. p. at. at Otld F.tlnw h- ' Member of the order iu good itaadlns ar it. lted to attend. ' D.8.W; V lata . Riutr'i," Rt- ii te t. A ."ar-n?-1 A