ROMANCE. Before than diest I shall die, For in my heart I bear, Bleeding to death, the cruel iteel Thy hand hath planted there. Before thou diest I shall die, But faithful still shall be, For seated at the gate of death. My soul will wait for thee. Day after day, year after year, Until thy lite be past. And at that portal thou shall knock Where all must knock at last I Then, when the earth Is lying soft On thee thy lips and eyes, When plnnged in death's baptismal stream Washed pure, thou shall rise. There, where the tumult of mankind Is heard and and seen no more Gene, Use the wind that raised the wave, The tpent ware on the shore. There, where to live is not to die, To lore is not to fear We shall know all; for we shall speak a ii that wa anaka not here! Richard Henry Stoddard, in The Manhattan. HOW THE KIStt CAME. ; "Baby, the king is coming." Over and over again the mother whispers the words to the atom of humanity lying nnnn her breast: iovfully. ffladly, with lips that have grown fixed, and drawn, and white with a surcease of joyous snflech. Not lonsr ago. as men count veara. thev had known smiles, and gay, girlish laughter.but it is truly said," We count time by . heart throbs;" and the Tath between ' that time and now has been a steep and thorny one. Hers was a peculiarly happy girlhood She was an only child, with every wish crratifled. and an adoring circle of friends to whom her word was law. What wonder that having reigned queen of hearts so long, the love and home that Kingsley Hapgood offered her came but as added loyalty and territory? She did not think or mean it so. It is not by arbitrary rule that women "aueen"it over their little social circles, here in republican America. As Judge Allen's daughter, the position was al ready won : and it was held by winsome grace, womanly tact, and supreme self- poise. I know that according to all time hon ored trecedents the wedding should be the grand climax after trials, tribula tions, and misunderstandings innumera ble. I sometimes wonder how the aver age short-story writer dares reveal to us the denth. length and breadth of fos tered ill-temper and angularities of dis position ; alternating from the slough of despond to the seventh heaven of bliss, with a celerity fearful to contemplate; and then leaving us wide eyed and in credulous at the church door, with the questionable assurance that from hence forth they "lived in peace, and died in Greece." as we used to end the dear old fairy tales when we were children. Fairy tales came into my life some time before my geographical era, and to my childish imagination this was represent ed as a large kettle somewhat resembling the one in which my mother fried the delectable doughnuts into which all good and happy fairies went when they died. With all due respect for the import ance and necessity of the engaged period, the step out from its idyllic dream-life leads over the threshold into a country vastly differing from the luxurious land of Ureece. i5eyond tne portal lies a wider sphere of action, beset with many a snare, and often leading directly into that kettle of boiling "grease my child ish thought depicted. If my story seems to be oommenced at the wrong end,!have natiAnca. kind reader. I niav be able to show yon only the broken, tangled ends of the threads, but somewhere from the beginning, they all lie straight in God's sight. ' I believe most young people enter upon this broader field of duties feeling it to be, not the simple "joining of commercial interests," as I heard one vnnncr man anv Vint. TO-it.h a t.rnA HAn&A rif its sanctity and obligations. These two of whom I write went out from under her father's roof, in faith be lieving that their strong resolves and exaltation of spirit would endure through many a year of weal and woe. As she was queen, so he in very truth was king. not alone in the attributes of his nature, bat also bv the name his mother gave him her own maiden name dropping the last syllable. Proud was the wife of the command ing presence of her "liege," and in mu tual love and admiration the first few months passed quickly. Into this Eden crept by slow degrees tne serpent 01 dis cord. Trifles light as air some small neglect a careless word the flash of overcharged domestic atmosphere. These were followed by reproaches, and the keen resentment of royalty against aught but unquestioned obedience. What need to rehearse too minutely the drama we see enacted about us every day? It is a sad ojd story, common but never so common as to lose its tragical pathos for those who watched the glad some launching of the ship, as it sailed out of the harbor home, to meet with storm and shipwreck oa the rocks of pride and that high spirit which will never confess a fault, or admit an error of judgment. It forgets, as we do some times, that the true height nearest to heaven is reached by lowliest pathos of humility and self-sacrifioe. Scarcely toree years have gone. The first was flooded with sunshine, but later on, stormy passions had so shut away the blessed sun that it was no strange or new thing for him to leave her in anger. There were occasional rifts,- bnt nothing propagates like grievances, and there was - 1! 1 1 . ? . . . 1 uo Boua iounaauon oi mutual ior clear ance to rest upon. Each was tearing away by petty aggravations the sheet anchor of affection that once and truly they had deemed sufficient for all coming time. Should some young ardent soul, just plumed for flight into this new world of union, chance to read these words, do not mistake me. . Love is indeed the cen tral figure. Marriage without it is a desert waste worse, a howling wilder ness, sure death to all our noblest pow ers and purposes. "Bear and forbear," are two lions that must guard the gate way. Firm Christian principles and (altough a woman says it) the power so few of us possess, of silence. Not the sullen silence that refuses speech, while diffusing displeasure and "Yankee spunk" from every pore. Not the silence of the wife beaten and abused by a brutal husband. God only knmr3 the myriads of these in wretched h uss, where the fiend of intemperance rideirampant.who never speak, and who go down to silent graves in voiceless misery, I donofc speak to these, but to those who, with the average man (our brothers, born too of woman, with the same impulsive natures as our own) would Keep the love and early freshness of their homes unsullied. Dear girls, in your hand 3 are the homes of the future. Remember that to bear is better than to repent, but if the quick, impatient word be uttered, "Let not the sun go down upon your wrath." These frequent domestic quarrels jar- ing with increasing force against a na ture like King Hapgood's, could end but in one way. The loss of self-respect, at tendant upon the knowledge of growing irritability, became unendurable. His business trips became more frequent and oi longer aurauon. uoe ungui autumn day comes the news that he has gone' abroad. Every one goes in these days. It passes without comment. xnis is u j ordinary case oi ill-treatment ana deser tion for the divorce courts. None but the wife knows of the letter stating that the house, and a liberal annual allow ance, are left at her disposal, and closing with the cruel words: ".fast events, oi which it is useless to speak further, have convinced me thajb our marriage was a mistake, which only time and separation can make tolerable. There seems to be no occasion for ostensibly breaking the tie that binds us in name alone. It will be virtually broken by my departure for Europe at an early date." Not one short syllable of regret or com fort can she find as in her stunned, half- crazed condition she reads it again and again. She has told him often that she was miserable, and wished herself back in her father's house. In a blind fit of rage she wished that they bad never met, and his cold, sar castic reply. "Here we meet on mutual ground, madam," had only lashed the waves to greater fnry. But in her wild est, most passionate moment she had never dreamed of this these hideous words that mocked her, thrusting the thing she wished for in her face. "A gauntlet with a gut in't." The ample provision was an added bit terness. Bather would she leave all, and seek her father's house, or beg her bread from door to door, than take a penny of it. but for one thing. The thing he did not know that she had longed to tell him, but angry, sharp-edged words had thrust it back, and bow into the shame and misery of a divided house was coming the new life, that should have crowned and blessed the whole. Her first wild, woman's impulse was to follow him. and at his feet pour out the whole, and beg him to come back. "Only time and separation can make tolerable." There was no love in the words. He would not come, and if he did, each word and act would be a lordly concession. That she could not endure, and it would be but a repetition of the old grievances. No echo of ber sorrow reached him She did not call him back. .Lethean balm sought in the whirpool of social gayety would have developed the hard, defiant side of her nature, capable of much for good or evil. God did not mean it so. His arms were round about her. and in those lonely hours of en forced quiet that followed, there came a clear vision of opportunities wronged and neglected. The love that had been crowded out and trampled upon came back in tidal waves, beating down the barrierB, "crushing the serpent's head," in those days of pain and weakness after the baby came. Then one little message went across the sea. "Jving, dear, for give; we want you, Baby and I." His was a Blow, white anger that burns long and deep; but he, too, hd found much time and food for reflection. Men tally comparing many a famous foreign beauty with his queenly wife, lie found none fairer than the woman he had left so cruelly. Scenes grow clearer viewed from a distance. Oil paintings and our lives have that in common. But she had accepted the situation without a word, no doubt glad of the release, and he was not the man to retract. So he quieted his conscience in its moments oi uneasy- ness. There was something lacking in the beautiful places he visited, however. Recollections of expeditions glayly planned in those first halcyon days,when there was not quite monev enough to go, but it was "so nice to talk about," would intrude upon bis pleasure trips in a manner quite unforseen when he had Battel away. The hard crust of pride and anger became worn a little by the constant recurrence of such painful thoughts. "King, dear, forgive; wo want you, baby and I." Not long or learned, but nice with the wisdom love teaches. "Forgive 1" what was there to forgive? Had not the wrong been his all his? A father! and all these weary months he who had vowed to cherish and protect her had left her therein doubt.and pain, loneliness, to bear alone 1 People gaged, thinking the man insane who dashed past them in the streets, 8 a his thoughts, like winged arrows, urged him on. Childish, fitful April has just glided over the threshold to maiden May, and the baby life, coming with the early breath of spring freshness, seems like some shrinking anemone, across which the breeze from a belated snowbank blows, with death in its chill touch. There is a strange, haunting look in her dark eyes, mirroring dark despairing moods of the mother's, to those who read between the lines. Some babies come into the world to stay. Dear little red, screaming mites, doubling up their tiny fists, they assert their rights at the top of their lungs, evincing their determination to live and thrive, in defiance of death and doctors. This is not one of these. She seems too frail for mortal touch, and the mother watches over ber darling's slumbers, half fearing that the angels who must miss her so have borne their sister home and left her desolate. Who, after a winter of doubt and dis couragement, has not looked forward to approaching spring with strange, new hope? Who has not felt sure some rare gift waits behind this marvellous unfold ing of nature's lavish treasures? Bless ings uncounted during the dark, sealed days, now show us new faces, and we find within our grasp, mayhap, the very key for which we sighed so long through wintry storms, and knew it not till Mother Nature, with her magic touch, threw wide her door, and we beheld in the transfigured light our own flowers blooming, and the fountains of our heat ts unsealed. "Spring poets" revel, and the editors alone are sorrowful and heavy laden. A soiled foreign letter reaches the quiet room across the ocean.. Dearer a thousand times its words than ever 'had been word or thought before, and the fullness of joy is whisperedjto the baby. "Baby, baby, sweet, the king is coming! With June will come all summer bloom. Hark! hear the soft, low whispers of the wind, with hints of summer's sultry breath in their soft touch. The trees are whispering of the coming glory old, old as creation, yet ever to be wrought anew. A thousand ships sail out on sunny seas, and one will bear the king. Baby, the king, our king is coming! ' And then the mother-heart is wrung with apprehension lest the deep, sad eyes shall close forever before the king can come. He comes at last, and with clasped hands they stand together by the cradle. Gsntly the mother lifts her in her arms and softly cries "Baby our king has eome." Mystic and deep with unfath- omaoie mystery are tne eyes that open i thus to greet the father. Slowly the white Hda are uplifted, and In their grave and tender depths they read bright oroDhecies. Serene and sweet are they. I lit by no gleam of wonder at the coming in of royalty. Long ago in orient lands knelt kings to worship "Ooe who In a manger lay, let migaliest was of all." And to each babe is given some living spark of that divine ruling power to lead us all, king, court and vassal, t J pure worship of Christ childness in every dawning infant soul God sends us. Bright with the coming glory of the an gel-land, there shines the first glad look of earth-life. Gaze long and deep, for now the lids are slowly, slowly falling. Angels are beckoning, and with one low sigh the soul has gone to meet that higher king and universal Father who hath tru ly said, "A little child shall lead them." Holier and purer than love of any liv ing child is this fond memory that binds their hearts the closer. I see, years hence, aroand their hearthstone clus tered sons and daughters. Trial and loss have touched and chastened them to gether. Bad pascions allowed and fostered are not easily curbed or eradicated, but be tween them , these two, can come no breach wider than that little grave. The little child, whose mission was so great, will ever live, as Christ himself has lived crucified by sin, yet living still in souls purified and uplifted; in ministry to Him, in sacrifice and abnegation, which alone can bring us out of troubled seas to His safe harbor peace and rest beyond. Boston Woman's Journal. In a Sleeper. One of the most difficult things in this world, nexUto swimming the whirlpool of Niagara, is to get into the upper berth of a sleeping car, says the traveling man of Texas Sif tings. It is a dangerous feat, as well as embarrassing. The up per berth of a sleeping car is as unpopu lar as a green watermelon. The time worn saying that nothing comes by chance is a misnomer. In attempting to storm the battlements of an upper berth it is a grave chance if you ever succeed in forcing an entrance. Upper berths are very good openings for gynasts and sailors. They afford rare opportunities lor them to show oil. it is a moving and Enacting sight to see the fat and habitually dignified head of a famih laboriously aoquire possession of an up per berth. The trouble usually begins by the old gentleman expostulating with the conductor for putting him so high up, and he begs that gilt-edged official to try and make a trade with some small sized man who can easily climb up the side of the car and crawl inside with little or no .difficulty. The commanding offi cer oi the quarter decK says he will see what be can do about it, and then he wanders off into the blue regions of the smoking car and shakes dice with the train boy for a cigar. Meanwhile the fat man waits and perspires and fumes and curaes all the officials of the road, from the president down to the section bosses. When the conductor saunters leisurely back, he tells the fat man that nothiog can be done; no one, he says, will ex change a lower birth Xor an upper no, not even if the fat man will give some thing to not. That is just the way in this world, as soon as anybody wants anything it im mediately becomes valuable. Then the dignified fat man glares at the other pas sengers and waits until they have all re tired before he tries to get up into his berth. There are several different ways of forcing an entrance into an upper berth You can aire the porter for' two bits to give yon a leg up, but this method is naDie to attract attention and excite un generous and sarcastic remarks. The dignified fat man has a regular circus. First, swinging himself by the curtain bar, he tries to go in feet first, but he can't let go the rail without tumbling back again into the aisle. The porter helps him out of this fix, and the fat man tries a new deal. This time he steps on the ear of a sleeping beauty in the lower berth, and the sleeping beauty knocks the pins out from under him and the fat man retires to the wash room to bathe his nose and abuse monopolies and the ac commodations of the traveling hotel. Then he gets the porter to bring a camp-stool; he gets upon it, catches hold of the brass rod above, and is about to spring for the berth, when the camp stool doubles up, and in his efforts to save himself from coming down with a "dull thud" he wildly grabs the bell cord, and stops the train, and the con ductor comes in and uses language to him, and the passengers all wak up and use more language, and the dignified passenger even wishes he were dead or that he had more clothes on. Finally he manages to crawl into the upper berth; and h9 boils over . with malicious thoughts for the bankruptcy of the rial road company. It is a full hour before he relapses into slumber and then the horrible suspicion flashes across him that the berth may become loosened in some .way from the catch, and spring up against the ceiling of the oar and smother him. He sleeps no more till daylight and then he has to jump out and dress hurriedly, for the train is run ning into the city. The boy in the sleeping car usually travels with his mother, a pale, care worn woman who is going somewhere to meet her husband. He keeps his mother in a condition of mental dislress all the time. Ho tampers with the window hurts his ringers and howls; he swings between the seats and falls on the back of his head. He disappears, and when his mother is about to faint, believing that he has fallen off the train, he is dis covered riding on the brake on the rear platform. When rescued and back to his mother he yells Vgain. The boy in the sleeping car does not know how to modulate his voice. He talks in a loud key. This is sometimes very embarrassing when the train stops embarrassing to the other passengers but not to the boy. If you ever trav eled you have met this boy, havn't you? and he has asked you what various arti cles of your wearing apparel cost you, and he has made disinterested attempts to entertain you by showing you his bruised thumb, and you have seen him in the wash room gorging himself with ice water and tormenting the porter with questions regarding the distance to the next station, and you have seen him in the smoking compartmentimparting fam ily secrets to a drummer. Certainly you have seen him and you have heard him, and you have felt him when he climbed over your feet and dropped some of his greasy lunch on your trous , ers, and you have wished that he was your boy for just three minutes, that you might teach him manners; and you have thought you would like to do it with a shawl strap with a large buckle at the end Of it, haven't you? A good - stretch on the longitudinal cushioned '. seats of the caboose of a freight train is many points ahead of the best upper berth ever invented for a pal ace sleeping car, and we don't care who knows it, ! FEHIMSE ITEMS. Miss Winslow. the new American beauty in London, is from Cleveland as wen as Her rival, Miss Chamberlain. Miss Snsan E. Dickinson, a sister of Anna Dickinson, is one of the best jour nalistic contributors of the day. Louisa B. Stephens is the first woman to become president of a bank. She suc ceeds oer husband in the first national bank of Marion, Iowa. Rose Bonheur, although she dresses in male attire while at work, does not ad vise otbers of her sex to do so. "It doesn't pay to be eccentric," she says. Mrs. Lydia Smith, who for twenty years was housekeeper for Thaddeus Stevens, is still hale and hearty, and lives near the old house in Lancacter, Pennsylvania. L&dy Gay Paget, who was married re cently to Lord Windsor, a young noble man with the comfortable inoome of 80,000 sterling a year, was accompanied on her bridal tour by u white cat. On the occasion of the marriage of Miss Knight, the daughter of the lord mayor of London, to Mr. Aitkens, the other day, tho eight bridesmaids wore dresses of white brocaded silks aoorned with wreaths of Virginia creeper. Large wedding receptions are going out of fashion, and small family gather ings with a breakfast will be the oorrect thing to a large extent during the coming season. When the bridal couple come back from their .honeymoon, then they hold their reception. Susan Anthony says there are one thousand women practicing medicine in England, and that, so far as she has Deen aDie to learn, "they mil as large a proportion of their patients, and receive as exorbitant fees for so doing, as male practitioners." The infant born to the Chinese minis ter in Washington during the summer, being a girl, has not been allowed to leave the house but once since its birth. It is carried into the yard ao joining tl e legation, but gets no fresh air in any other way. Her little feet are already being bandaged to keep them small. Safe Washing of Windows. Every lady will welcome the new pat ent window-washer, which Mrs. James rf Philadelphia has invented and is now perfecting, and which promises to be the desired invention for cleaning the outer sashes of windows without sitting out on the sill, at imminent risk of falling backward into the street. It con sists of a long, slender handle of wood and metal, hollow, which is so curved as to bring a square of rubber directly against an outer pane of glass. A sponge is fastened by a rubber band to this square. The curved handle and the readily attached sponge, which, with the firm corners of the ru bber are to do the cleansing, constitute the real merit of the invention, as they really are only like the bent and lengthened arm of the window washer herself. An attachment is made to the upper section of the holder of a rubber sryinge tube, an end of which is to be dipped into a bucket or basin, and by a touch will supply to the sponge all the water that is needed for the window cleaning, so that it need no be drawn in again to tho room until the worn is complete, me inventor is, we understand, about having the entire im plement made in papier mache, which is extremely light, and can be made into a tube as well as into a wash bann. in her first completed model the handle was of ash, a hard wood being necessary to make the tubing required; and for window washers who like a stout imple ment tms does very well, livery ounce that is taken off a brush handle, however. is of importance to some people, so that in either form window washing ought to be safely and quickly accomplished by this means. A chamois cloth or any polisher can be fastened upon the rub ber back m the same way as the sponge is. The Household takes especial satis faction in noting this invention, as the inventor says it was a hint in its col umns that first directed her to plan the article. Mrs. James, at least, has given an answer to the question, "Why do not women invent?" The contrivances for saving trouble in household work are not all perfected. There is plenty of room for talent yet. j THE POKTLAJIB JBITSI.VESS COLLEGE. A recent visit to this eohool In its new quarters on Second and YtmliiU street, has added materi ally to our present goott oplaion of the facilities here nfforded for obtaining a practical education. The college occu leg four large, well I'ghted tnd thoroughly ventilated rooms, as well luruisbed throughout as the text we have ever een: the tanking department is supplied with counter deks. standing desks, a. large tale and other fix tures properly belonging to such an iniitutiou. These rooms. Uken altogether, are tal i to be the best Arranged and finest finished for special educational purposes of any to be found on the coast. The attendance W large, and is steadily increas ing. Many of the students come from a distance of three or four hundred mi'es. Most of them pay their own way while attending. About one-half the entire egihty consists of persons of mature years, among them being seveial married men and women. Tne branches taught are suh as are needed to Hi one for a business career; such branches as should be thoroughly understood by every young man and w imaa in the land. Former students oi the school speak of it in almou extravagant terms of praise. Welhearttly endorse it, and re commend it to the fivorable consideration of any one d- sirou j of obtaining a business education. Sir. E's Beuson. The majority of my business acquaintanc s have worked hard, and taken but little comfort all their lives, and but few Have gotten rich. Now. I cannot see the difference whether you leave your wealth even if you get it, and the chances are decidedly agaiust you in bonds or real estate, or in cash from life insurance policies. I have a good business and am as desirous of making money as any body; but I intend to live well, and really do not car? to leave any thin; over my 150(00 in liie insurance. It is all upon the long term endowment plan, payable to me at 65. I can easily take care of the premiums and, with the greater por: ion of the 0Unoe of my income, I intend to educate and etj?y myself. gpatify my higUer facuit'e. and have my iraUy do the same. Nothing is too good for any of us. If I live I am deb at 65: should I die I die rich anyway. I might stiDt myself a 1 my life and then rtio poor, leaving them umareJ Jor. should I fail in busi ness I have a pro rata amount of paid-up insurance with annual cash divide nds. With my life insurance. I have solved the greatest problem of life how to be ua'y happy. i I. G. Davidson, Portland, Oregon, enlarges more pictures than any other photographer in (he state. Send orders direct to him as he has do canvassing agents. Pictures finished in any desired style, India ink, water colors, oil or crayon. ' DON'T BUT BOSS BOOTS UNLESS YOU WANT THE BEST. SEE THAT OUR N1ME IS ON EVERY PAIR. AKIN. SELLING & CO. Agents wanted in every town m Oregon ana Washington to 6ell the new improved NO. SEVJSN American Sewlnsr Machine. John B. Gar rison General Agent. 167 Third meet, Portland. Oregon. Roaring cataracts ot honest applause, foaming oceans of fun, and the best 6how of the season now being held at the Elite theatre, Portland, Oiegon. Regular pri es 25 and 50 cents Frank G. Abel!, the best of Oregon artist , is al ways prepared to make pnotcgrsphs in tho highest style of the srt.at his gallery, 167 Hm street , Port land. Call at his art rooms when in the city. Take Win. Ffunder's Oregon Blood Purifier. Garrison rejiairs all kind of sewing machines. U S BUOSP ILLS. I PortlaM Business Directory. O. S. P. tU-Sew Merles . 4. SHOW CASKS. DIXOX, UKRSftTKIX fe CO., Front atad stark snow cases oi uu Kinas ou nana or niaae to order, at San Francisco price a. , STAIR nCILDEBS. BISHOP fc SMITH, 8. W. eot. Front aad e. stair rails, balusters ana posts furusnea to order. Country orders promptly attended to. HOTELS. THE IVTFH.IVA.TlO. AL., roraer Third and l ne oest one aoaar a day nous on the coast. Passenga a and bausase conveyed to ana from all trains and boats free. IS. lewiston, proprietor. A8SAYEB8. W. O. JGNKE k CO., Xo 5 Washington mu Analysis of ores, metuls, coals, etc. una assay for gold and silver, $:i; 4 assays, fid. Orders by mall promptly attended to. MUSIC HOUSE. D. W. PRENTICE, 107 Flrt Street-Leading music dealer. Planos,organs, sheet musio and every thing in the inuic line. X. Y. JEWELRY CO. C A. OOVE, Manager. 107 Flirt Street DKmonds, watches and Jewelry. The Kockford liuilrtKid watcu. Country orders solicited. SKAL KNt)BAVBs. C Ii. VET V, No. S3 Oak Street Seal engrav er, manufacturer or notary and lodge seals, brass and steel stamps, steel letters, &c; rubber stamps and stencils. HARDWARE. OOODNOUOIf, SMITH fe COLEMAK, No. oa Necosid importers ana dealers in builders' Hardware, mechanir-s' tools, cutlery, farming tools and marbleized slate mantels Country orders so licited. noons sash and hlixds. F. E- It EACH fe CO. lOil Front SU-Dealers in Paints. Oiu and Glass, Doors, Windows and BlidsSeiirltorHeJLt MARBLE nUBKs. MERGES as VOSPEB, 4T Stark. Monuments, Tombs, Headstones, etc., furnished in Itilau and American marble. Countiy orders filled promptly, iseud for prices and d signs. St'RVRTfORH. COOPER as UAMII.TO.V, Civil Engineers and surveyors, nooin h, first JNationai santc Duiiaing, Portland, Or. Ail kinds of surveying and drafting done In any part of the rou"try-lllM,M , M HARER1ES. EMPIRE IIAKEISY 42 Washington. Voss Fulir, Props, iliuinfactnrers of Pilot bread, Soda, llcnic, Bntter, Boston, Hiigsir ami ."Shoe Fly crackers. Orders from the trtlle solicited and promptly at tended to, '1rroVElr. O. P. K. ESI XEmY,- Attorney and Counselor at ftvv Rowm H Uekum'a bnlldinv. Legal businep. pertaining to Letters Patent for inventions, before the Pittojit Office or In the Court-, a specialty. XTJ8T RECEIVED AT GARBiSOX'S SEWING Machine store, 167 Third street. Portland, Ore gon, ua cases of Household Hewing Machines. Dur ing two and one half years' use in Oregon the House hold has fonnd its way to the front. Its superior merits are now well known to the public Agents wantedto sell in every town in Orciror. FAIRBANKS' STANDARD SCALES FOR WAREHOUSE, STORE AND FARM USE. GRAIN AND STORK TRUCKS. Write for Jrlee 14tt L. II. PARKER, Agent, 86 North Front Street, Portland, Oregon. Northern Pacific B. It. Co, LAND DEPARTMENT (Western District.) This eompany offers for sale abont fonr mCHe FETITTL.E XA.lVr9 IN ' Washington Territory and Idaho, At low rates for cash, or on EASY TIME TERMS. OITE-PIPTH ZDO balance In fonr annual payments, with Interest at T percent. Apply to PAUL SCJHUIZE. Genn Lund Ave. rRTLAND. OREGON. OREGON B100D PURIFIER. EYE & EAR INFIRMARY SANITARIUM, OR HOME FOR THE SICK Macadam Road, bet. Porter and Wood Htm. 'South .Portland, Or. Pr. Pllklngton, late Professor of Eye A Ear Diseases mine Medical .Department ot wuiameue university hits erected a line builrng. on a beautiful elevation lit the south oart of the city, and to prepared to accomo date natieuta surTerinK from all diseases of the EYE, EA R or THROAT. A lso will pay special attention to peroons laboring under Chronic Nervous affections, an. i to niHptmes peculiar to women, ana receive a umi ted number of cased ex pectlmt confinement. The intention in to provide a Home for such cases wttn an tne oest nygienic agencies commnea witn in bent medical skill to be had in the metropolis. Fpr any amount of references and circular, address UK. tl. J9. riLH.lAUiVN Cor. 1st and Washington Sta. Portland, Or, I GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES. PATENT SMOKE &VENTILATING CHIMNEYS, mm TERRA C0TTA CHIMNEY PIPE &T0P3 ETC mm 2 Fnll Set of Teeth for $10. : Ile.t Set, 91S. rpEETH FILLED AT LOW RATES; SATLSFAO JL tion guaranteed (ias administered. Iental grad nates. PREIIN IJHO., Portland, Orecoo. oom 54, Union Block. Stark street entrance- W. B. MAJIYE, Civil Engineer, Surveyor & Draughtsman. A LT. KINDS OF KNGINEERINO EXECUTED SX. in the state of Oregon and Idaho, Washington aud Montana territories. Room No. 13, over Flrt National Bank, PORTLAND OREUON. (I Sides' Snre Cure for GatarrH" I TQUfD OR DRV, PRICE fl 00; "ATMOSPHERIC jj jnstifnaiorn," price aon. . ury (jure ami inMiuna tora mailed on re-ipt n' p w?, with full direction fo Uim,etc. K.U. hKII'MOUKA Drugijl-n 151 Fir street. r-'iM"'. ' wu wr m i. ii'r: L. i J;LD31Aa & CO., Importers and Wholesale Dealers In Wooden and Willow Ware, And Manufacturers of Brooms and Brushes, Ko. 125 Front street, Portland, Or- Skates ! Pock & Snyder American Club, Harney & Derry Iron and Wood Top Skatos,- Rush and Piston Roller Rink Skates. ALSO CUEAP SIDEWALK BOUC8B SKATEI, Send for Catalogue to THOMPSON, DoIIAltT & CO., - - Portland, Or. , IMPORTERS OF Hardware, Iron and Steel, Wairon Material, Cumberland Coal, Blacksmith and ' Waffonmaier Tools. oyRevlsed Prices s'nee completion of Northern Pacific Railroad. i I. F. POWlSRS, FCBNTTUBE MANUFACTURER, The Uuveat and moat ecmpIeSe a..ortnemt mt city, emulating of Parlor,aUUrarm DlnJngand Vh arnetnre, AJmo a large and w31 selected stoeKor Cnarpets, 011 Cloths, Curtains, Upholstery, Wall Paper and Bedding:. 8CHOPL BE8R8 A SPC1ALTT. . Intending purchaser wlH conBult their Interest by Inspecting my stock before purchasing N0S. 185, 188 AND 190 FIRST ST. AND 184 SECOND ST., PORTLAND, OR. factory on WjsAer St., bet. I w If rIs l?a SS FIRST STKEKT. PORTLAND. OS , V Wliolessilo and Bctail Dealers in . TEAS. COFFEES, SPICES, BAKING POWDERS, EXTRACTS, &c. , As we are the onlv house of the kind 'n Oregon, parties from the country would do wfll to avail themselves of the opportnnfty t buy at Wan Frasnisco prices. We guarantee satisfaction. Ordcps by mail promptly find. Wend for prices. J. J,. WHEELER & CO,. Tea, CoH&e . and Spice Merchants. , ISTABLiaHEO 185. WIJLJLIAM BECK & SON WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN GUNS, PISTOLS, CUTLERY AND SKATES. Skates. Boxing Gloves, Masks. Barney Ss Kerry' lee Hoatea, JUaiey'a to4le numnvw 165 and 167 Second SC, - - - 167 Third St., IOKTLANX, 031EGOX. JOHN B. GARRISON, Propr. AH tht leading Sewing Machines, Oil. tH-dle, Attachments and ftenu liie Parta for salts All kinds of Sewlnjr Machine Impaired aud Warranted. GENERAL AGENT n " PORTLAND BUSINESS COLLEGE,- N. Ei. Cor. Second and Yamhili Sts., PORTLAND. - - OREGON. A. P. ARMSTRONG, J. A. Wt'sco, Principal. Penman and Secretary Designed for Ihe BasUess Education of Both. Sexes. Admitted on any week day of the year. ' -PEHWOHKr-- Of all kinds executed to order at reasonable rates. Satisfaction guaranteed. " Tho College " Journal," containine information of tho course of study, rates of tuition, time to enter, etc., and cuts of plain and ornamental pen inanship, tree. Sledge, tyavh QOficCcsaCc Ozughh Omenta oi eaoivij 3tpi.itaij flle&cUtea, did. 92 and 94 chctit twe4 Cot. Stdtflf ePcitCand, Gvegcn. CHEAPEST H FOR AMEEICAN WATCHES. Elgin, SprMTgfleId or WaTtham TTatch, la onnee. Silver Caa.... v-..?J OO la 8 onncs Sliver Casein. , 1 .K la 4 onnee Mtlver Ca .. ,... IT SO I aaeaa baajauas, nad oaarante aeae Gea alias . Aanerteaa Mnvexaanta ao Imitation. r Also full stock of JEWELKT, CW)CK8.nd 8PCna.CX.K. 4 Goods sentHx O I." to any part oftha country. dfOlIX JL. BFCK, ' fateh maker and Jeweler, 149 Front St. 'opposite the ltaajoafl), " Portland. Oregon. - P. VV. I)EABBURN & C0. Manufacturers and Dealers la DOORS, WINDOWS, ' BLINDS, GLASS, 107 Front Street, Portland, Or. ESTIMATES FUKXianEB. E. S. Larsen & Xo.f WUOLKHAIjIS OHOCillW .hippinoE. S. LI & CO. P. Produce and Commision Senanta. Denier 1b Trapical aad Domwffc Profit Nut etc, CcmlsnmentJi of country produce saHrltsd. Xm 111 At 114 rroa Street Portland, Or. ' W r.-ju jiZ-.. imm m.nn i r n ii i in ! mi i rw umiwr in r n thi -minima iS. & O. GUMP & CO., MANUFACTUREBS OP , Pictnre Frames. Mouldings, Mirror?, Aft v tiood, .c, t Third Atreet (A!"worUi Hlok UUTI.AKD.OIt.' "USE ROSS P 1 LLS. Skates ! o;.J.:; ' median, and low.prleed fnrnitare la thi ber Seta both of JBuotera ad Bay own mm Moatwoamery oad Harrlaoa. Foil, Indiaa Clubs. Bells. - fekaies. Peek e Sajder'a Aatomurlc (Skate. Aiir aaaiea. . . . Portland, Oregon; aaaananeraaaaaaaaBanaaaBaaaaaari T I F. S. AKIN, BKN. BELLINB, II. E. DofU'H nxrjr no otiieh. See that Oar Same is ou Every Pair. AKLV, HI.LIXO A CO., Portland. Oregon. 33 n. XXBSTXJ37'S ! Ti! greatest ilDWl. 3 ...-- m iiTizorator. (Ppp&osptat!), T221C !gt lie BlOGili! Foot (er tus ml 'Another Great Victory in HedicaJ Science i Worth L!'ilficns to lis Imn Fusily I - CILLERY, BEET AND IRON la acknowledged by all Physicians to fc (be Greatest Medical Compound yet diseoYered. Is a never falling Tor for Kearatala aad AierTana Deblllly. . H. P. GREGORY & CO., So. 5 RoKli Front St., between A and K, Portland. Oreffoa. AND HAWS, - Woodworking Machinery, - Slram Knglaes and Kolicra, ftl miner Machinery Belt I as?, Pnektns and Uoa Flom-MIU . Machinery, Water Wheels Ktc. etc. ' FRANK WOOL6EY, Portland. J. N. KX0WI.E3 San Frarieiaco, J. K. KKOWL.ES, Shipping & Commission Merchant. CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED. WOOL A SPECIALTY IlagH. Madnnery, Farm lir ptemeiit1! nd all kinds o Hupplles uroi&hod ou siort notice. Office: 107 FRONT STREET, Portland, Oregon. Ttefirnoe: First Kationa Bank. BUSINESS EDUCATION I GO TO THE Northwest eoraer second and Salmon Sts. W. a JAMES, Principal. F. K. CHAMBERS, Beef The C C. Journal new edition), giving full Inform-' tiou.seutKZJB. Address JAMES A CHAM BEES, Portland. Or. F. O. Box SSL USE ROUE PILLS. I ,jB)4afawu m.: I B. 33. 33. iiii ifrifTi " ! 1 i . I,, i