ROSEBURG REVIEW
FRIDAY, JULY
1887.
THE USEFUL TRAVELER'S TREE.
It Fornlsliet Refreshment of Many Kinds
to People of Madagascar.
A European traveler, on his way from
the coast of Madagascar to the capital,
Tanarivo, in the interior, had emptied, his
water flask and was suffering from
thirst. He asked one of the natives of
his oart7 when he should be able to ob-
tain water. "Any fame you
the native, smiling. The European saw
no sign of springs of water; but the na
tives conducted him to a group of tall,
palm like trees standing in a cluster on
the edge of the forest, with straight
trunks and bright green, broad leaves,
growing from the opposite 6ides of the
stalk, and making the tree appear like a
great fan. The white man gazed admir
ingly at the tree. "You think it is a fine
tree," said the native, "but I will show
you what it is good for."
He pierced the root of one of the leaf
stems, at a point where it joined the tree,
with his spear, whereupon a stream of
clear water spurted out, which the
European caught in his water can and
found cool, fresh and excellent to
drink.
The party having satisfied their thirst
and taken a supply, the native who had
spoken went on:
"This tree, which is good for us in
more ways than one, we call the travel
er's tree."
"But where does tha water come from
that the tree contains?" asked the white
man. " Is it taken up from the soil?"
"Oh, no," Baid the native. "The
leaves drink in the rain that falls on
them, and when it has passed all through
them it becomes very pure and sweet. '
"And are there many of these trees on
the island?"
"There are so many that sometimes
one 6ees no other trees for a mile, and
Tery often we take no provision or water
when we travel, because we know that
we shall find the traveler's tree."
"And you say there are other things
lhat they are good for?"
The native answered by asking another
question.
"Do you remember," he said, "the
village that we passed through this morn
ing, with its wooden huts roofed over
with leaves? Those huts were made of
nothing but the traveler's tree. The
wood splits easily. but makes tough
planks for floors, and the walls of the
houses are made of bark.
"With the branches we make the
rafters, and the leaves cover the roof.
But this is not all that the good tree does.
We are coming soon to a village whose
people I know, and I will show you
more."
The native was eager in his haste to
show to the traveler what the tree had in
store for him, and the European, for his
part, felt no little' curiosity. They ar
rived soon at the village, and the guide
conducted the traveler to the hut of a
friend, who received them very hospit
ably and soon spread a meal for them.
First he placed upon a sort of a table a
spread made of some vegetable substance,
very light and pretty; then he set before
his guests two drinking vessels of a ma
terial which the white man did not rec
ognize, and then he gave them two uten
sils, which, although rude in shape,
served in the stead of knife and fork.
In the midst of the table he placed a
large bowl, filled with cream of very ap
petizing appearance. In another vessel
there was a quantity of oil, with ahnouds
floating upon it.
"Before we begin," said the guide, "I
must tell you what I promised. Every
thing that there is upon this table comes
from the traveler's tree. You see this
table cloth? It is made of the fibers of
the leaves of the tree.
"These drinking cups, these plates,
these knives are made of the wood or the
bark of the tree. -What you take to be
the cream is a dish made of the seeds of
the tree, pounded up with meal and
mixed with a kind of milk drawn from
the trunk of the tree.
"What you think are almonds are lit
tle cakia made of these seeds, and the oil
is pressed from the skin or shuck of the
seed. As for the water you aro about to
drink, you know that already. And we
get not only these things, but some of the
people of Madagascar have made a kind
of cloth that they wear out of the fiber of
the wood." Youth's Companion.
Paper and Its Uses.
There is apparently no limit to tho uses
to which paper will eventually be put.
In the past week I have seen in various
places about town paper car wheels,
pails, peach baskets, ink bottles, hats,
chair seats, kitchen utensils, picture
frames and a lot of so-called paper statu
ary. Paper handkerchiefs and napkins
from Japan are used as dinner novelties
in polite society. I read in an evening
paper that a paper bodied buggy lias been
built out west. The cocoanut tree, whose
universal utility was once a proverb,
must take a back seat. What between
the variety of material paper can be made
out of and the variety of service it can be
made to yield, it will soon contest the
title of the eighth wonder of the world.
Alfred Trumble in New York News.
A Curious Statement.
The Pail Mall Gazette makes the curi
ous statement that the melody known as
"Home, Sweet Home," can be found,
note for note, in Curzon's "Monasteries
of the Levant," published in 1848. Cur
zon was secretary to Lord Stratford de
Redcliffe when he was British minister at
Constantinople, and the air is set down in
the book named as an ancient Arabic love
song. Now, Sir Henry Bishop's music of
"Home, Sweet Home," as set to John
Howard Payne's words, was published
before 182 2, and a riddle is thus presented
which the reader may solve for himself.
It may be that "Home, Sweet Home,"
has had as many authors as "Beautiful
Snow." Globe-Democrat.
Too Much Alcohol.
The chemist of the Massachusetts state
board of health has recently analyzed a
large number of so-called temperance
drinks, and has found that all of them
contain alcohol, one of them containing
m much as 44.3 per cent., and a very
large proportion more than 20 per cent.
Slow to Reform.
Buskin once said that any interference
which tends to reform and protect tho
health of the masses is viewed by them
as unwarranted interference with their
rested right to inevitable disease and
death.
Records in Purple Ink.
During Gen. Grant's term as president
one of his cabinet officers discovered that
the records of an important branch Of
one of the departments liad been for two
years written in purple ink. He at once
issued an order forbidding its use in the
department, purchased a new set of
looks, into which two years' records
were copied, and thus saved what in a
few years would otherwise have been
lost. It is one of the problems of chem
istry to find something which will make
permanent the beautiful aniline colors,
but thus far all efforts have failed. It is
growing more and more the custom to
have deeds, contracts and valuable docu
ments printed on a typewriter in anilino
ink. This is a great mistake, because in
ft few years they are sure to be obliter
ated. Th ArgocsnSi
The Man Who Tanghs.
. "I remember," said an old physician
of Baltimore, lately, "that I traveled in
1838 in a stage coach across the Alleghany
mountains, from Cumberland to the Ohio
river. In the coach were two friends,
young men and lawyers, who were going J
out to settle in western Pennsylvania.
"We became well accraainted in the
lone leisurely journey. Both of my fel
low travelers were men of ability and
culture; both had good breeding and
kindly disposition. But their tempera
ments were widely different.
"C- never joked, and rarely smiled.
If a laughable story was told he listened
silently, thought over it an hour, and then
began to argue against its probability. If
the morning was cloudy he was sure of a
storm before night; if the harness broke
he was positive we would be detained all
day; if the coachman drove fast he knew
the man was drunk, and that our necks
would be broken.
"M , on the contrary, was a merry,
light hearted fellow, fullof anecdote and
quick repartee. The weather was always
delightful for luni, tire meals delicious,
his companions tho finest company in the
world. He saw every point in the land
scape, every fine outline in the trees or
tmt in the fields. He was like a bee,
gathering a drop of honey here, another
there. His comrade never knew that !
there was honev to gather. When they
left us, I said, 'There goes one man to
success, the other to defeat.'
"I visited lately the city in which they
settled, land asked their history, being
anxious to know whether my prophecy
kad been correct. M is still living,
a leading iurist. a man of great and
benignant influence. C was dead.
'Worried himself into the grave,' said an
old man who remembered him.
Youth's Companion.
The "Devil's Code" at Stockholm.
The royal library at Stockholm con
tains a remarkable literary curiosity,
called the devil's code, winch is said to
be the largest manuscript in the world.
Every letter of this gigantic piece of work
is as beautuullv lonned as if it were
minutely and carefully drawn, and it
seems almost impossible that it should
have been done by a single human being.
The devil's code was brought to Sweden
from Prague after the thirty years' war,
and The Deutsche Hausfrauen Zeitung
tells the following storv of its origin:
A poor monk, who had leen condemned
to death, was told that his sentence would
be commuted if he were able to copy the
whole of the code in a single night. Ke-
lying on the impossibility of the task, his
judges furnished him with the original,
pen and ink, and left him in his well
barred prison. A drowning man catc
at a straw to wive himself, and the un
fortunate monk began to try his last im
possible task with the vain hope of ae
complishnig it. Before lccig, however, he
saw that he could not save his life by his
own weak exertions. Afraid of a cruel
and certain death, and perhaps doubting
the promise of a better life hereafter, he
invoked the aid of the prince of darkness,
promising to surrender his soul if he
werei assisted in his task. Tho dark
spirit appeared as soon as he was called,
concluded the contract, sat down like
any copying clerk, and the next morning
the devil's Code was finished. Boston
Transcript.
Survived1 Seventy-tiro Sovereigns.
German papers call to mind that Kaiser
Wilhelm in his ninety years has survived
no fewer than seventy-two sovereigns who
were his contemporaries, viz., fifty-two
kings or queens, eight cmjicrors, six
sultans, and six popes. Of these three
were kings of Prussia, Frederick William
II, Frederick William III, Frwlerick
William IV; two were kings of Hanover,
two kings of Wurtemburg, four kings of
Bavaria, three kings of Saxony, one king
of Westphalia (Jerome Bonaparte), one
king of Greece, one king of the Belgians,
three kings of Holland, three kings of
England, three kings of France, five
kings of Sweden, four kings of Denmark,
three (or four) sovereigns of Portugal,
five! sovereigns of Spain, five kings of
Sardinia, six kings of Naples, two em
perors of Austria (one of whom was the
last i of tho foryier line of German em
perors), two emperors of France, four
czars of Russia. He has also survived
twenty-one presidents of the United
States. Boston Transcrrpt.
Slaking Artificial 'Whetstones.
A foreign scientific paper gives the fol
lowing method of making artificial whet
stones: Gelatine of good quality is dis
solved in its own weight of water, the I
operation being conducted in a dark room.
To the solution 1 1-2 per cent, of bichro
mate of potash is added, which has been
previously dissolved in a little water. A
quantity of very fine emeiy, equal to
nine times the weight of the gelatine, is
intimately mixed with the gelatine solu
tioni Pulverized flint may be substituted
for emery. The mass is molded into any
desired shape, ana is then consolidated by
heavy pressure, it is aneu by exposure
to strong sunlight for several hours.
Chicago Times.
Not Iteceived with Confidence.
A Hungarian Gypsy band, which
played on several occasions before the
czar of Russia, was not received with
that frank confidence which does so
much to make life pleasant. On each
occasion their musical instruments were
carefully examined by the police before
each concert. The first examination
lasted two days, during which time the
complicated instruments were taken to
pieces, and at each concert each musician
played with a policeman stationed behind
his back. Public Opinion.
Protection Against Fire.
The virtue of lime wash as a protection
against fire is emphasized by The Ameri
can Analyst. In i ranee it is common to
thickly coat with whitewash the beams,
joists and the under side of floorings.
Wliile this precaution will not prevent
the spread of a fire once under great
headway, it is a guard against the prime
ignition that often leads to dire result
Clucago Times.
Velvet Worker.
In the case against the New England
firm charged with importing velvet work
ers under contract, a witness, in describ
ing the nature of the work, incidentally
said that for every 100 yards of velveteen
a woman cuts and finishes she walks, by
actual measurement, 119 miles. Clucago
Ucxald.
TtitLiug the Toll-Keeper.
A Scctch fawner rode up to a toll bar,
and finding the gate open he wheeled his
horse round about just as he passed
through, and shouted for the toll-keeper.
who wa3 invisible: "Hey! I'm 6ayia'
fat's the damage tae git through yer gate
wi' a horse?" "A sliillin'," shouted the
toll-keeper, making his appearance. "No
sliillin' d'ye git frae me. I'll awa' hamc
again." And, wheeling his horse for tho
second time,, he rode oif in the direction
he wished to go, chuckling at the trick
he had performed upon the toll-keeper.-
Exchange.
Kobins iu Italy.
In Italy robins may be seen hanging up
for sale in the poulterers' shops with all
the other little feathered -victims. The
only bird which is looked upon as in any
way sacred in Italy is, so far as we know,
the swallow, which is dedicated to the
Madonna.
Dr. Davenport, state analyst, has ex
amined twenty advertised cures for tho
opium habit and found that all but one
contained opium.
Cure :-,f-
prins umorr,
CrouV&,
Ciatvc&i
Pcmtinai'ici .
bottle taken according to directions
vil! 7Vc bsttar results than a gallon of
-pciiila, or any of (fie co-called Blood
with which the market is glutted.
'";:, price $t.QQ per bottle-
&500 RSWARD -.'
- r v'J for cry caso of Rheumatism
' : frf.i'ja's Rpaaerff, properly ad
, rji.'z it rtliava. '
The Red Corner
Keeps Constantly on hand the
Finest Cigars, Tobacco
NUTS,
TOYS, : '
NOTIONS,
and
i Everything usually kept in a FIRST-
CLASS Notion and Candy Stoic.
G. A. TAYLOE
Will sell by the motto
"LIVE AND LET LIVE"
Call and Examine our Stock
-.Before-
PURCHASING ELSEWHERE.
i
After Forty rears
i 1 experience ?
ZZrV I ' 1 preparation of
ce in tue
n o more
Hundred
Thousand applications for patent ia
the United Slates and Foreirn conn,
tifes. the publishers of the Scientifls
Askerioan continue to act as solicitors
la AhtAin n&tMttjt in Pftn as In
Girmur. &nd All othn eanntriea. Their extMli-
enoe ia aaeoaaled and their laoilitlee an oaaar
pessed. Drawings and specifications prepared and filed
la the Patent Offloe on short notice. Terms verj
reasonable. K o charge for examination of m oasis
Or drawings. ' Adrice by mail free. .
Patents obtstnedthrooghMnnniOo.are noticed
Inthe SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, whioh has
the largest circulation and is the most Influential
newspaper of it kind published in the world.
The adrantagM Of gooh notice arery patentee
understands.
This large and splendidly illustrated newspaper
to published WEEKLY at $3.00 a year, and ia
admitted to be the best paper devoted to ecienoe.
mechanics, inventions, engineering works, and
other departments of industrial progress, pub
lished in any country. It contains the names of
all patentees and title of every invention patented
each week. Try it four months for one dollar.
Sold by all newsdealers.
If von havaj an invention to patent Write ta
V.oua Co., publishers of Scientifls Amsriosa,
Bel Broadway, new York. 5.
Jpndbook about pateaU mailed frse,
T II. O'M ALLEY,
J . Propiietor of the
ROSEBURG MARBLE WORKS.
Aud Dealer iu
TOOMBSTONES, TABLETS, ETC.
Shop Kcarof Hogan'sStire.
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ANTON LAI"
Watch-Maker Jeweler and Optician.
DEALER IX
WATCHES, CLOCKS,
JEWELRY. SPECTACLES AND
OAKLAND I I ; OREGON.
OPTICAL GOODS a SPECIALTY.
ALL WORK WARRANTED
V
I n 1 If li i:-r
Ifir
..ittYTE BROV
entist ol large exiri- - -aT-TIST5 f
ence, aud widely known XJSMi 11 I
uidbkii noneraoie man, -
SStt 2 - I
withstand tho actions 6f fcdTjfr' r
thDCTaorf' ' - r mz (
J. A. Cardwell, Agent, -
Just Read ! This!
-o-
You know what good goods uve?
'You know what
You want to save
p i i
mi)
To the public
In order to
TYI
It
payment arising from the set
tlement of our latej trouble, we
will offer, during the next 30
days, without
our splendid stock of goods at
Prices LOWER thkn You Can
Get m San Francisco. Come
and price the goods & prove it.
May 13, 1887, GARO BROS,
TO
IS XOT A CATC II
IS A GEXUIXE
IS AX OPIJX
I
DEV0RE & ELLIOTT
Successors to PAGE $ DIM 31 ICR
DEALERS IN
DRUGS, PAINTS, OILS,
. GLASS, JEWELRY, WATCHES,
PUTTY, j COMBS, EIC, ETC
a expect to do :i strictly ca.slii lmsiness, and will ciideAvor to make il to
the interest of all lo Jcal with us. j ' Wo aUo invite :i conliuuation of tl:c pat
ronage of all former patrons, and solicit now ones.
r8T GIVK US A CALL.
GEO, M. PRIOR Win. FERG USON, j
Camas Valley. Camas Valley,
JWo.a.-IT'OsL 3Jsa Bauson Valley :
SAW Miim
LUMBER OF EVERY DESCRIPTION CONSTANTLY- UN HAND
and furnished on short Notice and at tW LOWEST GOING PRICES.
RUSfIC AND FLOORING A SPEOIOLTY.
Eiirnislicd in any Dimensions, to Order j
Address, PRIOR FERGUSON, Camas Valley, Douglas County.
Or to, F P. McDEVITT, Rost-burg. :
All Kinds Of Fancy Groceries,
Stationary j Photograph and
Perfumery, J Autograph Albums
Crockery and j Stand, Hand, and
Queens Ware, Hanging Lamps
TABLE CUTLERY AND SILVER WARE, and TEN THOUSAND
OTHER THINGS TO NUMEROUS TO MENTION
Call And See Me At The
Post Office Stand.
BUTTER AND EGGS BOUGHT.
SMoore Uveitis-
FARBIIIXtG 1MPLEME WTS-
The Empire Steel Frame Folding Binder can Le folded in a moment to pass
through a ten foot gate, the only binder that can lo raited or lowered bodily
whilw the machine is in motion. Tie Studebakcr Steel Skein wagon, the
Bissel Chilled plow, the Acme Pulverizing harrow, in fact a full line of agri-
culture goods.
MRS-E. F- HOTCHKISS
FINE MILLINERY
AND ..1 I
3NTEAT DRESSMAKING j ; ;'
ROSEBURG OREGON. i
WILL FUltSISU TOU THE BEST AND FINEST
Oonds in the market. Ladies Wear, Laces,
Ruchiiiss, Uusiery and Jcwch y. i i
The dressmaking department is in skillful
hands, and under the immediate supervision
of Mrs. Hokhkiss.
CALL AND SEE. NEAR THE DEPOT
V U.
iV
-AX D
I
GlNUMi: STAT U A Ity
awarded
"SK
esigjsand
- GOLD MEDAL
AT
WORLD'S FAIR,
NRW OliLKAXa,
1 S 8 -A - 5
rif
Jacksonville, Oregon
a bargain is?
lots of money?
!
Kati
Ui :
generally.
meet the first
reserve, all of
HI
II
F. P. McDEVITT,
Rosel'urg.
sasaBSSjBsssssiwsiaMiBMMSMasssMMnii .
L D. CARLE, Agent.
JOSEPH SHINDLEIl.
P R O P MET 0 It
-Of The
CITY BAKERY
AND
KEEPS CONSTANTLY ON HAND A
full stock of Bread, Cakes, I'ies, Plain
and Fancy Crackers, etc. Also a fine selection
of French and American Candies and Choc
late Goods
Samuel Marks, Asuer Mauks
S. MARKS & Co.
DEALERS IN
illl
ML II10I4I1I
HAVE CONSTANTLY ON HAND
Cli)T, Buy goods, Gwiup
Crockery, Glassware,
Provisions, Cigars,
Boots and Shoes.
Wool and Produce of every Descrip
tion Bought
AND THE VERY HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID FOR THEM.
SIAXlItW &; CO - Rosebiirtf, Or.
Makes The Very Best Lumber.
ROUGH pcrM
RUSTIC per M
FLOORING per M .
...
Sam Camekon Manager.
Situated 15 miles from Rosolmrg on North Umpfjuu. Good toads in Summer.
HITCH. UP! .
But before you do that come 'round to
W. Cr. WOODWARD'S
AND
Buy a New Set of Harness
OR A SADDLE
One of the Bigge6t and Best Stock of Goods ever BrougLt to Town. I
use nothing but the best leather, and have got
EVERYTHING IN THIS LINE. DON'T FAIL TO CALL ON ME
IP. Cr. Woodward Hoseburg.
-SUCCESSOR TO
Aliaham
!i WB
DEALERS IN
GENERAL MERCHANDISE,
Kosebura;, Oregon.
. lias on hand constantly a
General Merchandise and will
and patrons, as well as new ones, who m co ntideration olthe
scarcity of money and ttie present depression in business, will
study their own interests by calling on h;in and examining
Before purchasing else where I do not claim to sell goods
at cost, or less than cost, but will assure all who patronize me
that thoy will get their goods
At The Lowest Living Profit.
Produce Of All Kinds Taken At Market Price,
Sol. Abraham.
M. JOSEPHSON.
nw f on
Kcejs a full line of Dress Goods of eveiy variety and Shade.
A full line of Silks. j "
A full line of Satins, Brocades and Velvets.
A full line of Fancy Dress Goods.
A full line of Hosiery.
A lull line of Clothing.
0
50
A
ft
03
0
b
A full line of Furnishing Goods.
A full Hue of Hats and Caps, Boots and Shoes.
A full line of Staple and Fancy Groceries and Tobaccos
A full line of Crockery and Glassware.
And last, but not least, a full line of Ostrich Plumes and Tips, with all
kinds of Ladies Hat Trimmings and Hat Shapes of Utest pattern.
COMB A2JX SBB 32-
M JOSEPHSON.
WELL HERE WE ARE AGAIN
man. nsnsiOTJD hbus
The largest I lard ware house in Oregon ia now prepared lo recieve you with open arms. We
can offer you "Uijj Bargains" In
Champion Steel Mowers
The best in the world-Light Reapers, steel Harvesters & Binders.
The Champion Steel Binder is a "daisy" Look at it and weep you
mossbacks of ether machines To see is to buy.
We Defy the world to produce its equal,
Superior Stoves and Kangcs-Firebacks warranted for 15
years-Cant be beat.
Lansing Steel Skein Wagons -Look at them and tell us what you
think of them. White, New Homo and Domestic Sewing Ma
chines. Everybody knows them. . ,
Plows, Cultivators, Aulttnan Taylor threshers, Hardware of every description.
Tinware till you can't rest If it isa't cheap enough we will give it to you.
Dont forget that we can sell you cheaper than any one in ihe State Ocly
$14. Write for prices. We Lave a Store, Cellar and warehouse full of goods
and we mnst sell. If you want bargains come and see us. If you nan't come
wnte and we will save you some money.
SBEK1DAX BROS.
......... 8.00
16.00
eicoo.
El
41
large and complete assortment, ol
be pleased to see his old friends
OA
0
Ui
CD
o
I 0.
SH SI011
UANY LAMP CHIHIIETS AH
ofiered for sale represented
aa good as tc3 l'amOTxa
And like all Counterfeits iaefctka
Remarkable LASTING Qualities
or inE gexhxe.
ASK TTTTS
PEflBLW
ind Insist ytTOX THIS
Exact
ABEL
on Each
ciinno
PatOct. SO , 1SS3.
The PEARL TOP is
Manufactured OML Y by
PITTSBURGH. PA.
O. cto 3FI- "Parls.s,
A Full Line of
Staple a'Qd Fancy Groceries,
Table and Pocket Cutleet,
Glassware. Crockery
Queens-ware, Etc.
Goods Deli veh-d any where in th
City Hinits, Fret; of Charge.
BARKER & WILLIS,
DEALERS IN
GROCERIES,
PROVISIONS, NOTIONS, CROCK
ERY, GLASSWARE, TOBACCO,
CIGARS, ETC. ETC.
CANND FRUITS
A SPECIALTY.
Produce bought and the highest cash
price paid.
ROSEBURG OREGON.
New Stage Line.
ROSEBURG TO CAMAS VALLEY
Leaves Roseburg, Mondays, Wednes
diys, Fridays, and returns Tuesdays,
lhursdays, and Saturdays. Time of
having both terminal points 6 oxlcuk
a m. and arrives at each point at 6
o clock p. M.
Robt, T. McCi'llocu,
: Prop.
EUROPEAN ILAX.
"jSMOXO IIOTEL,
First Class In Every Particular,
COKSKK Fku.XT A.NB MnCRIBOX STS
TOHTLAND, : OllEGOK
. . Thomas Gi ikeak, Proprietor.
LAFGENBERG'S
BsQt and ghee Store,
Jackson Strcet,OpnosHe Ilost Office, .
BoseLnrg, Oregon. -
KEEPS ON HAND THE LARGEST AM) BEST
assortment ut Eastern and Sbji Franeisco and
other makes of BOOTS, SHOES, GAITEBS, SLIP
PEBS and everything in the Boot aud Shoe line, and
SELLS CHEAP FOR CASH.
Boots aud Shoes Made to Order, aud Perfect
Fit Guaranteed.
I use the Best of Leather and Warrant all
my work.
Repairing Neatly Done, on Short Notice,
Also a full stock of TOYS, NOTIONS
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS and
VIOLIN STRINGS.
LOUIS LAffaEfifBE HQ.
FU11NI7 URE PA LA CP,
UNCLE JOHN GiLDERSLEEVE
Has the finest stock of furniture couth 'of Portland
which he sells as cheap as it can be bought .
in he State. The new fancied
JJO UBL E BED L 0 UXGE.
AXD
PATENT CORNICES.
Also has on hand a full assortment of beds and bl
ding, chalre, taUcg
BUREAUS AND COMMODES,
And all kinds of Childrens Chairs, etc.
J. GILDERSLEEVE.
Roseburg Flouring Mills
RAST & CRITESER.
This mill ia turning out
CHOICE? FLOUR,
and
will see that you are satisfied.
Get your' biscuit flour at the
Roseburg Mills
The highest market price paid for
wheat.
Sugar PineMill
Is now running on ifull time and has
250,000 feet of logs ready for sawin'
SEND IN YOUR ORDERS AT 0NCE.
If you want good first class lumber
of all kinds, come to ihe Sugar Pine
Mill 12 miles west of Roselmrg on tho
Coos Bay road.
ILJL TOP
BUT TIIEIT ,-" :' ;
km TOYS
them V JJ
viiux