"jbimmuimi insanity."
Tho wretched nitinlcror who, boing
lobcr, nncl in tho morning hour, with
delibornto malice, boat "to death his
ivifo's sister by striking her upon tho
head with a hammer not onco and
.n passion, but coolly and continuous'
ly until ho had accomplished his fatal
work is now m prlsoif, dumb and
jullon in his cowardly apprehension
d donth upon tho gallows Wo say
to him: "Cheor up and bo of stout
heart, bravo woman-klilor. Ho not
despair of acquittal. Do not dospond.
Things look dark just now. Tho
sorpso is but just cotlincd, and tho
gravo nowly sodded whoro your vic
tim lies moldoring. In u short timo
tho warm rains will fall, tho sun will
ihino, tho grass will grow, tho wail
3f tho wako will dio out, and, save in
ono or twobruisod hearts, tho inomory
Df tho lovod ono will fado away and
dio will bo forgotton. You havo sent
hor all too sudden to moot hur judgo
inont, hor sins unconfossod, and thoro
!oro unforgiveu her precious soul
.mporilcd, lost, bouauso at hor last
moments her bruised brain could not
jomprohond the dying consolations.
L'ou must bido your timo until your
victim is onianclpatcd from purgntor
al discomforts by tho masses pur
shascd for her soul's roposoj then
pour friends, relatives, boon conipnn
.ons and co-religionists will feel at
liberty to movo hoavon and earth for
four release. In tho meantime, theshor
11" will permit your friends to supply
fou witli such comforts as your moans
:an all'ord a private room, with prU
vnlo tablo, 'your plpo nnd niitsr.' If
vour admirers do notorgani.o a syndi
2ato for your defense, and raise a fund
:o employ counsel and pay costs, the
!ourt will assign boiiio eloquent and
gifted young lawyer, who will movu
aeavon and oartli for your acquittal,
tlo will poll tho Grand Jury, and tho
jhnncos arc oven thai it will appear
hat Homo one or more of tho inquest
ivoro unduly prejudiced in your case,
uid tho indictinuiit will bo sot aside
ind another jury empaneled, which
will indict you, and perhaps for a loss
jH'onoo than murder. When your
,riul coinos on ho will move as many
tdjouruments as human iiigonuily can
11 vent. Ho will bo engaged in other
.inportant trials, and, when tho hist
oossiblo hopo of an adjournment has
50110 by, his elork will appear in court
.villi tho cortilleato of his physician
.hut ho is ill and unablo to proceed
ivitli tho trial. In the meantimo your
.'rionds will bo diligent, remove tho
witnesses and induce thorn to think
tnoro sympathetically and kindly of
fou. Tho plea will bo 'emotional in
mnity,' and you will bo surprised at
tho testimony given of your peculiar
mental condition. Learned physicians
will testify 111 words of astounding
31'uditloii that at tho inoniont you were
boating out tho brains of your sistor-in-law
you wore irresponsible and un
jonscious of your acts, it will be
proven by incontestable ovidenco that
from your boyhood you had boon sub
ject to just suoli mental emotions as
characterized you at this time. You
will probably suocood in socurlng one
or nioro trial jurors who will not
agree, for tho jury will lie ehoson from
tho iirnorant and stupid class, who do
not road, or from dundor-hoads who,
having road, havo formed or express
ed no opinion as to your guilt or
innocence; and while the lawyers are
playing this solemn farce over the 0111
minolingof a jury, some adroit, selieni
ing rascal will procure himself to bo
aceopted as a juror, who is willing to
sell his verdict for a price. On
the second trial- perhaps on the first
you will bo found 'guilty,' and sen
tenced to death upon the gallows. An
appeal will be taken to tho Supremo
Court, and it will be certain to (lis
cover sonio error wh'ch will entitle
you to a now trial. If you havo
mono', you will secure about three
now trials; and you may look forward
for one or two years to a well-fed, fat,
and idle enjoyment of prison life. Tho
chances are favorable to your ultimate
acquittal; but if tho .Supremo Court,
should do you justice, it will ultimate
ly nlllrin the decree of tho court below,
and sentence you to strangulation by
hemp. When this occurs, you will bo
Btibioot to greater attention than over.
A class of sympathetic women will
spring up around you will visit your
cell send Uowors to adorn it; you
will be supplied with fruit and tho
choicest luxuries of tho tablo; your
friends, men and women, people you
never know before, never hoard of
will enlist in your behalf; tho Govern
or will bo besieged fo commute your
sentence from death to lmpr soumont
for lito; tho Sisters of Moroy or tho
Ladies of tho Sacred Heart, with a
priest or two If you are a Romanist--or
a Kcoro of females of tho soft-heart-od
Protestant kind, with a weak-head-ml
preacher, if you are not a Roman
Catholic will bo profoundly solieitl
ous for your soul's salvation. They
will hang about the jail, and pray
with you, and stutl" you witli good
victuals, and dress you In good
clothes, and send you religious books
and rosaries, and fasten up chrumos
of dying saints in your cell; and, If
you are unmarried, some one of the
old Protestant widows or advancing
maidens will insist upon marrying
you. The newspapers will be tilled
with communications in your behalf.
WI10H the lust curd is dealt, and no
cliatico Is found to rescuo you from
tho gallows, and you fool fully con
vinced in your own mind that you aro
past hopes of pardon, or commutation
of sontunce, and tho death-guard is
Bottowaloh you, and Jju hear the
sound of the carpenter's hummer in
tho yard you will then bo converted,
and llnd Jusus; yon will forgive your
enemies, including your dead sister-in-law;
you will renounce the world, aud
turn your attention to tho saving of
your precious aoul; you will thou bo
ja l.naitit r.n will miifiiut vmll ulliu
fl.IUJ'j'J. -w .1... '"'" J
and reeolvo absolution; you will be
compared to ma pouitoui iniei upon
Iho cross, aud you will bo certain of
irolng at onoo to Abraham's bosom.
You will bo possessed of blisful visions
of a happy immortality, with goldou
harps aud goldou stools, where through
eternity you can busk In the sunlight
of God's proscnoo b rodoomod, re
generated, disenthralled, huppy spirit.
You will make a speech upon tho
gallows; you will glytt tho young mon
Die bitK t yetir experience; you
will UU Uhmm to bownre of becoming
addicted to tho uso of hammors, lest
in a moment of unconquerable emo
tion thoy should uso them upon tho
head of somo unprotected female: and,
as you 'swing oil',' tho women will cry,
tho priest will make tho sign of tho
cross, and, happy dog, you will outer
upon your celestial joys." San I' rati'
cisco ArgonatU.
AUTOOUAPII AUTOPSIES.
A Professor Who FretemU to Decipher Char
acteristic! from Slgnntnrcs.
"Autopsies hold on autographs, foca
modorato," is a small and neat oflico
near Union square
A somi-paralytic man got out of his
carrlago in front of the ollico, hobbled
up tho front stops, nnd rang tho boll
v'olontly. An assistant autograph
surgoon camo to tho door, and, with a
bow, showed tho paralytic old gontlo
man up to tho main ollico, admit
ting a Journal roportor at tho samo
timo.
Tho professor was holding an autop
sy on a complicated and puzzling au
tograph 111 an ndjoiuiiiing room. Ho
loft tlio autograph on tho tablo only
half cut up, and val!:cd in. Ho was a
small nnd thin near-sighted man, with
a roniarkably largo head, and his hair
was gray.
"Do you dissect autographs?" askod
tho half-paralyzed man.
"I make that a spooial pursuit," ro
pliod tho gray professor. "1 have hold
autopsies on tho autographs of some
of tho greatest mon in tho country.
Give mo a man's autograph and 1 can
tell you his mental character."
"Well," said tho cu-toinor, "hero
is tho autograph of Presidont Clovo
land. What would you say of itP"
Tho professor turned the autograph
upsido down, sideways, looked at it
lirst witli ono oyo and then tho other,
and then witli both eyes, and through
a glass and under a microscope, and
made four or live mental calculations
and then said: "President Cleveland's
autograph shows that ho is a person
of gontlo nnd rollned nature, who lacks
iirninoss and aggressiveness. Ho is
too easily led and would do anything
to oblige his party supporters. Hois
so generous that ho would give away
an ollico to the lirst man who asked
for it. Ho HOoniH to bo a very nervous
man."
"What do 3ou think of Secretnry
Evurts' autograph?"
"It is tho handwriting of a man of
powerful and inlloxiblo will. It shows
a man somewhat piilogmatio aud
stolid, who is not easily moved. 1
should tako it to bo tho autograph of
an athlete or of a two hundred and
fifty pounder,"
"lloro is tiio-autograph of Hubert
O. Thompson."
"A quick and norvous porson,
evidently. A man who can not keep
still. Wiry and sinewy. Doesn't care
for monoy or political power. Is load
of music. Plays base-ball and cricket
well. Has a small appetite aud eats
little. Should take more rest and
nourishment."
"Sympathetic temperament. Should
adopt tho banting system. Honest as
tho day Is long. Could bo trusted
with any amount of money. Likely
to client himself to avoid cheating
others. Could bo put in solo charge
of the bonanza mines and wouldn't
steal a speck of silver. Would make
a good comptroller of New York or
an excel lent secretary of the treasury."
"Well, what do you think of tiiis
autograph," asked the paralytic man.
"Do you think the man who wrote it
could" bo trusted?"
The professor took a little bit of
paper with a name scrawled on it,
looked at it. and Said:
"1 should say he couldn't bo trust
ed. That was written by a man who
would commit forgery, rob banks,
swindle widows, steal from tho blind.
If lie were the cashier of a bank there
wolildu't be auvthiug left in a few
days but tho chairs."
"Hold on," said the old paralytic;
"I wrote that. That is my signature.
1 havo boon a bank cashier for twenty
years, executor for half a dozen es
tates, ami the treasurer of a base ball
club and a silver mine, and 1 novel
robbed anyone yet."
"Ah, 1 supposed it was the auto
graph of some clerk whom you sus
peeled of embezzling some money.
Come to look at it more closely, it
duos look like tho autograph of nil hon
est man, an honest and truthful man.
1 should say that the man who wrote
that would rather cut oil' his right
hand than make a dishonest penny."
As tho old gentleman entered his
carriage ho muttered something that
had the sound of 'humbug." Kctv
1'orh Jo umul.
Tho Pigtail as 11 llraui Regulator.
With a population of 1100,000,000
Clilna lias not a siuglo insane asylum.
This fact does not prove Unit there
aro no lunatics among tho Chinese,
but It shows that (hey are not
sullleieutly numerous to mako an asy
lum necessary.
To what do the Chinese owo thoir
exemption from brain diseaseP Vari
ous explanations are given. It is said
that the Mongolian enoys mental re
pose. He does not tret aud worry.
As his religion has been established
for thousands of years ho lets it alone.
Ho euros nothing about politics. There
is no competition to stimulate' him.
All tho business of life is regulated by
the (iovornmont.
Doubtless all thoso thiv-rs aro con
ducive to mental sanity, lt the China
man's equipoise is probably due to his
pigtail more than anything olso. It
takes good judgment aud a nice sense
of proportion to make aud keep in or
der a llrst-elass pigtail. It must hang
evenly from tho middle of the head
between tho shoulders. It aoU as a
sort of balance weight. Somo mental
concentration is required to keep a
pigtail in order, and self-love, pride
aud methodical habits aro all Involred
in it. This may seem a trltlo, but tho
human mind is controlled by trlllos.
Our Chinese friends perhaps buildc-d
wiser than thoy know when they lirst
twisted thoir pigtails. Atlanta Von
stiltttton.
.Captain llurtoti, tue traveler, speak ll
modem luiiRUauo.
In KnsUtuI one uuu In OTcrjr S,OC0 Uk a
uclriril'y c utc
TKETH IN 1.0 VK AND WAR.
lecaycit Molars ns n Cure for External Scn
tlmentnllly A Vonnc Man's Heroic
Hescue of Ills Twenty-foliar Sot.
Thoro is, perhaps, no profession, tin
oss it is journalism, says The Boston
Ulobc, inoro suggestive of physical
nlsory than dentistry. Even tho
ucntion of surgery jars loss harshly
m tho car; a fact due, no doubt, to a
sortain vagueness It possossos, from
ts practice not boing'conlinod to any
no portion of tho human frame. This
is not, as will bo scon, tho caso with
lontlstry. What man can listen to
laics of dentistry without n shuddor.
Ro will listen with comparative com
laconcy to a graphic account of tho
ixtraction of a tumor, and yot havo
.old chills run down his buck at tho
nero mention of a tooth-pulling. Toll
1 story soniothing liko tho following
mil soo what cfloct it will havo upon
lim:
"You know Brown. Well ho's had
1 torriblo timo with his tooth. His
lentist told him ho must havo thrco
iiolars, two incisors, and four bicus-
ids extracted ami iivo others lillod.
L'ho dentist was a littlo hard up, you
)eo, and know that Rrown had money.
iVoll, in extracting ono of tho molars
10 broko Brown's jaw and slightly
racturcd his alveolus, thereby forcing
uo of tho incisors through the chcok
ono! Brown bore this with com
nondablo fortitude; but that wasn't
ill. In cutting away a canino for fili
ng tho dentist encountcrod a livo
md active norvo, which ho had sup
losed dead, and when tho cold steel
itruck it Brown went crazy, and it
00k four men to hold him." If, at
his juncture, your hearer docs not
urn pule, grit his teeth, and utter
,01110 exclamation of pity, ho has no
dtyin his soul. Indeed, ft may well
o said: "A touch of tootliacho makes
,ho wholo world kin."
It is a woll-ostablisliod fact that
oeth woro extracted and dental opor
itions performed by means of iustru
nonts long before tho Christian era
sco works of Hippocrates and Aris
otlc,) and it is worthy of noto that
:ler:iclulus of Tarontuni, Horsphilus,
mil Ernsistrutus woro recorded as
lental operators as early as UOO B. C.
Jut it is in tho works of Colsns, who
lourishcd about 100 B. C, that the
irst explicit directions for extracting
cotli appear. It may bo well to state
it this point a painful fact not gener
illy known: George Washington
voro false teeth! John Greenwood,
vho was at tho battles of Bunker Hill
ind Trenton, and subsoquontly prac
.iced donistry, constructed several sots
or him, one of which is, or was quite
ocently, in possession of Dr. John Al-
on, ot isow lorK. it is aiso voucuou
I .n.l mil I. ...!!. t l,n I !! fl-n.., .
vood for many years woro Goorgo's
ust natural tooth as a watcli-oharm!
ihades of history! that a tooth of tho
father of His Country should danglo
it the fob of an itinerant tooth-puller!
t docs not make it any tho less start
ing to remombor that that very tootli
issistod George in pronouncing those
lover-to-be-torgotton words: "1 can
lot toll a lie, father; I did it with my
ittlo hatchet." Tho thought is preg
lunt witli sentiment.
Boforo the custom of manufacturing
colli from porcelain became general
luinan teeth were held 111 highest os
fmation for supplying dolioionoies.
Iho oldest method of keeping thorn in
llaee was to tie thorn witli ligatures of
old or silver wire, silk, unbleached
hread, sou-grass, or silkworm gut. As
ato as 1781 AL lo Alayour, a dentist,
idvortisod in a Philadelphia paper to
my 5i guineas oacli for sound teeth, to
10 obtained from "persons disposed to
ell their front tooth, or an1 ot them."
Imagine what; complications might ro
ult from such a custom. Jones,
Jrowii, Smith, ami Robinson are
loighbors. Jones is rich, his ncigli
tors poor. Ho trades 011 their nocos
ities, gets a corner in tooth, aud
miles uomplnoioully at tho world
villi four Brown molars, livo Smith
neissors, and throe Robinson bieus
lids! it will easily be seen that some
liing of tills kind might cause much
eoliug in a community. But what a
ich legacy a man might leave if ho
liod early in life. It is easy to imag
110 hearing a remark liko tins: "Brown
lid not leave mueh except his teetii;
nit they woro in good, marketable
loudltioii. His wile got!: the molars,
mil the others are divided among his
hreo children." Or soniothing liko
his: "There's young Robinson. Three
oars ago ho had us lino a sot of teetii
,s any young man 111 town, and now
10's gumming it. Took to gambling,
011 know, and thoy went ono after
ho othor." Or, "Smith took to drink,
.ml now ho hus't a tooth in his head."
Wo would mention, casually, to
myotic desirous of adopting this lino
ild custom, that we know of a good
ot of tooth that can be obtained at tho
ild rate, and we might do a littlo bet
or than that if called for this week.
In this connection a truo incident
nny not be out of place. In n well
mown liotol in tho western part of
ho state thoro boarded last summer a
'oungman who wasaillioted with false
eetli. One evening ho started up
talis, carrying a lighted kerosene
amp, and while passing through ono
if the enterics ft 11 111 bled and fell and
cattoring tho blazing contents on the
loor. To make mutters still worso his
oeth oame out aud foil in tho blazing
orosono. At this juncture a door op
mod near by and a bewitching young
ady appoared. Tho unhappy youth
vafted not to relloot, but siezing his
colli, covered a thoy woro with hlaz
tig keroseue, clapped thorn into his
......1.f nun L-,wnva wlmt In QiifV.tt.
IIUIIIIII .1U uuu imu n 11 ....... mi. . u
id, but ho made no sound. And vet
teoplo talk about tho young Spanish
toy who stole a wolf, concealed it tin
ier his uiautlo, aud let It eat his hoart
mt rather than divulge his guilt!
The forceps is probably tho oldest
ooth extracting instrument known, n
luidon forceps having beou placed in
lie temple of Auollo at Dolphos, by
Sraslstratus, 300 B. 0. It was not
natirially difl'eront from tho forceps
if the prcsout day, though it has from
imo to time undergone many changes.
Vhat was known as a turnkey was largo
y used in tho early part of tho present
:ontiiry. It had a handle like a eork
crew, and worked on the principal of
1 lever, in using it 11 dentist placed
-lis patient ou tho door and took his or
Uoi head, us tho caso iull)t bo,
between his knees. Imagine tho dig
nilicd Geo. go stretched to a supine po
sition on tho lloor, while Dr. Green
wood wrestled with his few remaining
molars! The subject is not often touch
ed upon by historians, but it is quite
possible that George displayed as much
true heroism on this occasion as ho did
at any other time of Ids lifo.
Somo of tho nioro primitivo meth
ods of extracting teotli uro worthy 0
mention. Ono was to attach 0110 end
of a stout string to the offending tooth,
tho othor end to the handlo of a half
opened door, and then suddonly closo
tho door. Tho samo objoct was somo
times attained by fastoning tho string
to a window-sill, nnd then jumping out
of tho window. How high a window
should bo from tho ground to perform
this operation satisfactorily is not
stated, though this is a question of but
littlo moment to a man sufl'ciing with
a raging toothache. Early in tho pres
ent century dentists traveled from
town to town.providod witli a turnkey,
a scrapor, ami somo k nil of dentifrice.
Tho luttor commonly contained acids,
which not only removed tho tartar
from tooth, but destroyed their enamel.
As ono of Boston's most prominent
dentists expressed it: "To uso such a
preparation is liko sotting a barn nfiro
to kill tho rats." In destroying ox
poscd nerves a hot iron was used in
place of stcptics. A small ncrvo in tho
car, connected with a network of
norvos, extending to tho median line,
was sometimos destroyed with a hot
iron to prevent toothache. In other
words, tho burning of that littlo ncrvo
precluded tho possibility of tootliacho
on ono side of tho face. This was not
a general custom, though tho opera
tion is known to havo been quito fre
quently performed in Massachusetts.
Superstitions in regard to teetii
were numerous. It was a common
belief that if a man had an oyo-tootii
extracted ho would lose tho eyesight
on that side. It was also said that if a
human tooth was swallowed by an
animal, as, for example, a cat, tho
loser of tho tootli would havo a cat's
tooth grow in tho pluoo of tho lo3t ono.
11 was deemed best, therefore in
order to preoludo such a possibility,
to bury any tooth that camo out.
Dentistry has mado rapid strides with
in tho past few years, and the use of
nmcsthctics has robbed it of many of
its terrors. Tho tooth occupy a very
important position in lifo far moro
than many miagino and ncgloet of
them causes trouble in many ways.
It is ovon quito possible that many
cases of matrimonial infelicity could
bo traced directly to neglected or de
cayed tooth, for as a loading poot re
marked, "It would 800111 as if bad teetii
must nocessarily destroy all sentimen
tal relations."
Biddy and Her Cow.
Lord Palmorston, though a pugna
cious prime minister, whoso foreign
policy was hectoring to Europe, was
gonial and humane as a man. As a
landlord, ho acted as ho did in debate,
upon the give and tako principle. A
striking illustration of his kindness is
given in the following anecdote,
which also brings out somo of tho
characteristics of the Irish peasantry:
Lord Palmorston visited his Irish os
tate, and ono morning, with a friend,
walked many miles over it in search
of game. Thoy had, however, littlo
sport, and bocumo tired and hungry.
Jn the distance Lord Palmorston saw a
cabin, to which lie mado his way, in
company with his friend and a keeper,
and found the tenement occupied by
an old woman and her pig. His
lordship asked if she hud anything to
oat.
"God bless your honor' Surotlioro's
praties aud eggs at your sorvieo," was
tho reply. And wliflo the old woman,
without further ado, commenced wash
ing tho potatoes and putting ilium in
tlio pot. his lordship told her he would
return in half anil hour. When ho did
so the old woman had prepared him u
substantial meal of potatoes and fresh
eggs.
Lord Palmorston drow from tlio
old woman that t-ho hud boon many
yours a widow, and worked haul
for a livelihood, but feared, when
iter strength failed hor, that sho
must go to tho workhouse; but sho
added:
"If my husband had taken loss
whisky and kept tho money to buy a
cow, 1 would havo got tho agent to let
1110 havo tho bit of waste land in tlio
corner, and I'd havo boon as happy
as a queen. But thero's no holp
ing It your honor. It's a poor,
lono woman I'll be, and nobody will
care whether poor Biddy is alivo or
dead."
"Suppiso I woro to speak to Lord
Palnieiston ?" suggested tlio visitor.
"Oil, faith, your honor, it's not tlio
like of you that Lord Palinerston talks
to," said Biddy. "Isn't it himself
that lias dinner with the Queen, and
tolls her what she has to do; aud don't
ho toll the house of lords and tho par
liament and all ou 'em what thoy
havo to do? Sure it's not yourself
that will got widiu a mile of him.
Tako tho country all over, and ho is
tho biggest man in it; ito's equal lo
the Pimioo of Wulos, aud perhaps L
yant him."
"Well," ropl'ed his lordship, "I am
going to Loudon, and I'll try to seo
him, because you aro a deserving croa
ture. So 1 shall not g.ve you any
thing for your hospitality, but louvo
Lord Palmorston to reward you."
"Luok go wid you!" Mifd Biddy,
"It's tho good-niauing gontlomau you
aro, but it's not tho Lord Palmors'ton
that you'll see."
His lordship shook tho old woman
by tho hand and departed. In a few
days the agent sent down a lino cow,
and gave Biddy ten acres of land, free
of rent, for hor lifetime.
Tbo old woman's delight know no
bounds, and whou told that the per
son she had scon and shaken hands
with was Lord Palmorston himself,
hor gratification was positively great
er than In tho acquisition of the
land ami tho cow. Midland Magazine.
For Rheumatism.
A certain cure for rheumatism it
herein promulgated: Tako a pint of
pigeon's milk, put in a hog's horn,
stir with a cut's feather, sot 11
ou a cake of ice until it boils, and thee
unnlv luteriiallv. on the outs do, ev
ery livo iii'uute4, and you will get r
go'od ulht'i rest Aufitr-ai llfftty.
THE
Union Milling Co.'s
TAKES THE LEAD
Whererjr II his been tiled,
For Sale by all tlio Loading Mcnlcm
Everywhere.
Geo. Wiuoiit,
President.
W. T. WiiKiirr,
Cushier.
or
UNION,
OREGON.
Docs a General Banking Business. Buys
and sells exchange, and discounts com
mercial paper.
Collections carefully attended to, and
promptly reported.
COMMERCIAL-
Livery aid Feed
Opposite Cexthnxiai. Hotel,.
JOHN S. ELIOTT, ruoruiETOR.
Ilnving furnished this old nnd popular
hostelry with ample room, plenty of feed,
?ood hostlers and new busies, is better
prepnred than ever to accommodate cus
tomers. My terms nro reasonable.
GOVE TApEiY.
Adam Choss.ma.v, PiiopniUTon.
Has now on hand and for sale the best of
HARNESS, LADIGO,
UPPER and
LACK LEATHER.
SHEEP SKINS, ETC.
roieTLAivw iiebci:s
Paid for Hides and Pelts.
WALLA WALLA
Corner Main and A StrcctH, Union.
E. MILLER, - - - Proprietor.
Keeps always on hand the finest brands ol
WINES,
LIQUORS,
and CIGARS.
Tlio very best Lngor and Bock Beer in
the market, at 125 cunts u quart. Beer and
lunch 2.T cents.
A fiuo billiard table for tho accommoda
tion of customers. Drop in and bo socia
ble. RAILROAD
FEED AND LIYBRY STABLE
Near the Court House.
A. F. Benson, - - Pkoimiietoii.
Union, Oregon,
Fino turnout and first-class rigs for tho
accommodation of tlio public cciioi-ally.
Conveyances for commercial men a spe
cialty. "The accommodations tor feed cannot
be excelled in tlio valley. Terms reasonable.
BLUE MOUNTAIN
Main Street, Union, Oregon.
IIexiiv Stiukeu, - - Phopiuetoii.
jr-flrOrders from any part of tlio valley
will receive prompt attention. I liuvo on
hand somo very lino ROCK 15EEH. Drop
In and sample it.
NORTH POWDER
Restaurant.
PONY STEVENS. PROP.
Tho traveling public will please tnfco no
tice that, in addition to my saloon in
North Powder. I havo opened a first-class
RESTAURANT, nnd respectfully solicit a
liaro ot tho public patronage. Tlio tables
Mill always lie supplied witli llio
REST THE MARKET AFFORDS,
and no paitiH will bo spared to mako my
patrons comfortable.
Call on me, eat, drink nnd bo happy.
Tongorial Rooms
Two doors south of Jones llros.' store,
Union, Oregon.
J. M. Johnson, - Piioi'iuetou
Hair cutting, shaving nnd shampooing
done neatly ana in tnu best style.
CITY v MAT v MARKET
Main Street, Union, Oregon.
RoiIl.NS it llKNSO.V, PltOPItlETOItS,
Keop constantly on hand
REEF, PORK. VEAL, MUTTON, SAU
SAGE, HAMS, LARD, ETC.
IAL v
Union, Oregon.
Das. F. Mooiik,
Phopiuetoii.
A well storked liar in connection -with
the houe, and none but the best brands
of liui ors and cigars kept,
LA HUE SAMPLE ROOMS for the ac
couituodutiou of commercial traveler.
IIOWLAND & LLO"ft),
v
Manufacturers of
FURNITURE,
Main Street, Union, Ore.
Keen constantly on hand a large supply
of Parlor and Red Room sets, Redding,
Desks, Ofilce Furniture, etc.
Upliolntcrlns Done In the Ilct Style
Lounges, Mattresses, nnd all kinds of
Furniture made to order.
PATRONAGE SOLICITED.
PHOTOGRAPH GALLEEI!
Corner Alain and C Streets, Union.
All kinds of photographic work done in a
superior manner, and according
to the latest and most
approved methods.
Views o resiflencas taKen on appli-
C&tiOD,
ZEffAll Tfork warranted to give satisfac
tion. JONES HRO'S, Props.
MAS ON
&
HAAILIN
Organs
Pianos
Uncxecllcil
"T-. enn Bnvo From $50 to SKO on tho
JL OU purcluico of an Instrument, by
bujiup through
W.T. WKIGIIT, Agent. Union, Ogc
Buy the llaywai'd
Fire Extinguisher.
Everybody should havo them. Men,
women or children can nso them. Thou
sands of dollars worth of property saved
every day. They don't freeze, nre not in
jurious to flesh or fabric, and arc always
ready. You cannot afford to be without
them.
G. J. Uecht, Gen. Agent, 124 Market St.,
San Francisco, Cnl. Cook it Dwight, Agts.,
La Grande, Oregon.
D. 15. 11EES,
Notary Public
-AND-
Conveyancer.
OFFICE State Land Ollico building,
Union, Union County, Oregon.
SMOKE OUR
Rest Havana Filled
5 Five Cent Cigar. 5
Jones Bros., agents, Union.
E. GOLLINSKY & CO.
SMOKE THE
"E
71
KEY WEST Imported Havana Cigar.
NONE BETTER.
Corner of Main and 15 streets, Union.
-Dealers in-
GAXXED GOODS,
VARIETY AND FANCY GOODS,
TOBACCO
AND
ClOAIiS
GENTS' F11HNISIIING GOODS.
WATCHES,
CLOCKS,
and JEWELRY,
Glnsswnre, Musical Instruments, TicturS
Frames and Pictures, Moulding,
Rird Cage., Raby Cr
riages, etc.,
Candies and Nuts,
Stationary, School Rooks, Periodical,
Novels, etc, of every description.
ALL KINDS OF FRESH FRUITS
Always ou hand.
We keep constantly on hand everythinf
usually kept iu a first class vuriety store.
' ssuOrdera from any part of the country
will be promptly attBdtrd to.
JONES BRO S,