The GOUT. VOL. II. UNION, OREGON, SATURDAY, JANUARY i), 1886. NO, 28. THE OREGON SCOUT. An Independent weekly Jounml, Issued ovo y Stiturdny by JONES & CHANCEY, Publishers and Proprietors. J. K. .TONES, I. Kdltor. ) j U. ClIANCEY, '( roreinmi. HaTES OK SfllSCIlirTIOK: Onocopy, one yenr SI 0 Six months 1 00 ' " Three months 75 Invarinlily cnMi in ailvnnco. If by nny ctmnce subscriptions aro not pnld till end ot year, two dollars will be charged. Kates of advertising mado known on appli cation. Correspondence from all parts of the county follclted. Addres all cominunlcntlons to A. K.Jones, Kdltor Oregon out. Union, dr. Luiliic Directory. G it and Itosnn Vai.lky I.odoi:. No. M. A. P. nnd A. M. Meets on the second and fourth batunlays or eauh inouth. O. I Unix, W. M. C. n. Davis, Secrotary. Union I.okok. Xo. 83. 1. 0. O. r Kcjrulnr meetlriKSon l'rldny evenings of each week at their hall In Union. All brethren In Kood etandlnjf are Invited to attend, lly order of the lodve. S. W. Lo.sa, N. Q. G. A. Thompson, Secy. Churcli Directory. M. E. Cnrncii Ulvino service ever v Sunday nt 11 a. m and" p. in. Sunday school at U p. in. I'rnyer mcctliiK' every Tliur.-day evening ut0:o0. Hkv. A.NDimso.N, Pastor. I'liESiiYTKniAN Citt'ltcit Hetftilar church Fervlces every Sabbath morning and evening I'rnyor meetlntr tuch week on Wednesday evening. Sabbath fchool every Sabbath at 10 a. in.' Itev. II. Vkhxo.n Hick, Pastor. St. John's Enproiut, Cnuncti Service every Sunday nt 11 o'clock a. m. , Huv. W. H. Powull, Hector. County Oftlccrs. Judge A. C. Craig Sherltf A. I,. Saunders Clerk 11. F. Wilson Treasurer A. F. Henson School Superintendent J. L. Hlndmnn Surveyor E. Slmonis Coroner K. H. Lewis COMMISSIONERS. Geo. Ackles J no. Stanley State Senator L. 1J. Hlnehart hi:i'(Esi:ntatives. r. T. Dick E. E. Taylor City Oillcer. Mayor D. U. Hoes COU.NCII.MEN. S. A. Pursol W. D. rteidleman J.S. F.lllott Willis Sklir .1. II. Eaton O. A. Thompson Hecordcr J. II. Thomson Marshal J. A.Uenney Treasurer J. D. Carroll Street Commissioner L. Eaton Departure of Train);. Heeulnr east bound trains leave ut!):!50n. m. West bound trains leave at 4:20 p. m. IMtOVISSSIOXAIi. J. It CK1TES, AT'fi'OSe'EY AT J.AXV. Collecting and probate practlco specialties Oflicc, two doors south of Postoflice, Union, Oregon. It. EAKIX, Attorney at Law aod Notary Public. Oflleo, ono door south of J. XI. Eatou's storo T'nion, Oregon. I. N. CROMWELL, M. U., Physician and Surgeon Olllce, one door south ot J. H. Eaton's store, Union, Oregon. A. E. SCOTT, M. D., Has normnnently located nt North I'owdor, wnerelio will nnswer all calls. T. II CRAWFORD, ATTOKXKV AT I,AW, Union, .... Oregon. D. Y. K. DEEIUNG, E'liysician ntitl Kiarfjcon, Union, Oregon. OfJlco, Mnln Etrcot, next door to Jonos Dros.' variety storo. HcBldenco, Main streot, second house south ot rourt houso. Chronic diseasoi a specialty. Atlorney and Counsellor at Law, UK! OX, OllEGOX. Heal Eetnte, Law and Probato Prastlco will receive special uttentlon. Oltico on A streot, rear of State Laud Oftief. . II. F. BURLEIGH, Attorney nt H.aw, Elcnl I'.umtc jiml CoIIcellUfv Afjcnt. Land Office Business a Specialty. Onico at Alder, Union Co.. Orejon. JfjtfC MAIiriETY, J W. SHELTOr SHELTON & HARDEST!, ATTOICNBJVS AT LAW. Will prottlee in Union. Rkr. Ornnt, 5roult niti Supreme Courts o! th United Mining and Corporatfon bushier tt epe lenity, , . Tho Terror. A burly form a thick neck face cov ered wilh bristles hands covered with hair a voice like the bellow of a bull a natural swagger to his gait eyes liko a mad dog's mouth no cleaner than n hog's a blustering, roaring, malicious brute. Such was the Terror. A mile from the little town ho halted his horse and braced his courage with half a pint of whisk'. It was a lluid which would have killed a dog; he smacked his lips over it. He pulled out his revolvers and saw that they were loaded and in order. He drew his bowie-knife from its sheath and tried the keen edge. He was going to capture the town and run it. This thick-necked human brute, this swaggering, drunken, boasting, light ing beast, proposed to intimidate, over awe, shoot, slay and kill. The people had never seen him; he would show him self ofl". Some of them had never heard of him; ho would see that they remembered his namo and the data of his visit. In the town men were at work on the streets in shops. Women sat in their doors or passed to and fro. From the open windows of the school house came the voices of the children as les sons were recited. It was an hour of peace. "Yi! Yi! Yi! Shoot! Crack! Hang!" The Terror had struck tho town. In live minutes he had captured it. Two men lay dead in front of the store an other at the door of the blacksmith shop two more were groaning with griev ous wounds. "Whoop! waugh! Come out, yc skulks! I'm the only and original Ter ror! Hundreds imitate me no one equals my style! Who owns this bloody town? Whar hav ycr bghtin men hut way? Whoop! lleven't ye got a wo man in this town who can aim a gun? Waugh! ye sot of babies!" There was a woman. Her husband was the first man shot, and her eyes were upon him-as he fell. She did not scream out nor faint away. Her face turned whiter than chalk she gasped for breath two or three times, and then her teeth shut hard. Tho sewing fell from her hand, and she rose up, walk ed into the bedroom, and was back in a moment with a rille. Kneeling down at the window sbc pushed the barrel over the sill, aimed straight at the Ter ror's head, and pulled the trigger. "Whoop! Waugh! They call me the Terror! Come out and see me and shake " lie threw up his arms as tho rille cracked, and lurched out of the saddle to the ground, the bullet raking his skull. Three or four men ran to him at once, and finding that ho was wound ed and stunned they tied him stout and fast. "Say, men," he called as his senses came back, "what docs this mean! Come, untie me! I was only in fun, you know. I'm the best hearted fellow in tho world; wouldn't harm a chick en." "You must die!" It was the voice of the woman who had fired tho shot, and she still hold the rille in her hand. Twenty feet away was tho lifeless body of her husband. She did not even look at it. "You don't mean it!"gasped tho Ter ror. "You wouldn't murder me for my little joke!" "Get arope!" The voice of the woman had the ring of steel in it and her eyes had such a stony, mcrciloss look that men retreat ed a step. A rope was brought. "For God's sake! don t raurdor mo! whined tho Terror. "Oh! you won't you can't you don't dare to! I'm sor ry I took your town won't never do such a thing again! Say! you may have my horse and shooters!" The woman madea noose with her own hands, "Throw tho free end over that limb!" jhe commanded. "Oh! have niorcy! I'm an. innocent man. This woman is crazy keep hsr away!" With her own hands she placed the noose over his head, and then stepped back and said: "Every ono tako hold!" "Oh! vou musn't! I'm a bad man! I want time- to renent! I can't die this-" "Pull him up!" Twenty strong arms walked away with tho rope, and the Terror was pull ed. Ho kicked struggled whirled 'round and 'round and died tho death of a dog. Not until all was ovor did tho wo .van's stony gaze leave his faco. Whon tho bodr hung limb and lifoloss she turned uway, walked ovor to that of hor husband, and sinking down busido it alio mourned and wept and could not bo comforted. Sho was a woman again. Half a mile below town is a head board lvsida the highwav: On it i3 en- craved: : "run TEnnoit" '. : "Humbled to the Dust by a Woman." : And vou have the story just as they told it to me. Detroit Free Frees. PlayfXil Duties of a Journalist. Tho following picture (the last half of it, that is) of the light and pleasing sit uation offered to a citv editor on a pro vincial daily is not only graphic and moving, but frigidly truthful, as tho editor can attest, having been a mother himself: The genial editor of tho has been in this city for two days try ing to engage a city editor for his pa per, u lie sole quaiiucaiion no requires is sobriety. 1 hero was a time when ho required brains, but that time is past. Ho only looks for an editor who can look upon tho cup that cheers and like wise inebriates, and yet be in condition to hustle for news and write it up when he gets it. According to him, there is something peculiarly intoxicating either in employment on tho or in city beer. For the last two years the has been edited by a procession of in ebriates passing through tho oflicc. Man after man was tried with no suc cess. no new man wouiil taKe noiu ai noon, get his instructions and laj'of tho land, and no more would be seen of him until he camo in at 3 a. m. the next day, gloriously oblivious of everything. This is Mr. 's side of the question, but a journalist who has just returned from a short sojourn upon his paper tells a different tale. Ho says that ho landed there a fow months ago, and was engaged as city editor. Ho asked what time the staff reported for duty, and found to his horror that ho was tho staff, and that he was required to get up each day tho bagatelle of something like sixteen to twenty-four columns of matter. "You will report," said Mr. , "at 7.30 to-morrow morning. The Amalgamated Society of Raggagc- Smashers holds its annual convention. It will last till noon. Cut it short. Don't make more than three columns of it. At noon the Methodist ministers hold a meeting in the First Methodist church. Do 'em up in about a column. You know how to do board of trade and the markets, of course tho usual amount. Then at !5 o clock tako a run around tho hotels, and bring in acotiplo of columns of interviews and I ho per sonals. There's a meeting of mer chants at 's Opera House at fi, and the police stations and hospitals will have to be covered. Dash off a column of pungent editorial squibs for tho fourth page, and drop into the theatres at night. When you get back at 11 o'clock you can set up tho markets and read proof till press time. Tako a hand :it the press and mako yourself useful folding papers. Tho circulator will give you a route to deliver in tho river dis trict. That will keep you busy till 7." "Rut," said the new editor, "I won't have anything to do for a whole half- hour." "Lemme see," said tho proprietor. "That's so. Well, you can wash rollers during that time," Chicugo News. Lesson of a Dream. John Wesley was once troubled in re gard to the disposition of the various sects, and tho chances of each in refer ence to future happiness or punishment. A dream, ono night, transported him, in its uncertain wanderings, to tho gates of hell. "Aro there any Roman Catholics here?" asked tho thoughtful Wesley. "Yes," was the reply. "Any Episcopalians?" "Yes." "Any Presbyterians?" "Yes." "Any Congregationalists?" "Yes," again was the answer. "Any Raptists?" "Yes." "Any Methodists?" by way of a clincher, asked tho pious Wesley. "Yes," to his groat indignation, was an swered. In tho mystic way of dreams, a sud den transition and ho stood boforo tho gates of heaven. Improving his oppor tunity, ho again inquired: "Aro lliero any Roman Catholics hero?" "No," was replied. "Any Episcopalians?" "No." "Any Presbyterians?" "No." "Any Congregationalists?" "No." "Any RaptihU?" "No." "Any Methodists?" "No." "Well then," ho asked, lost in won der, "who aro thoy inside?!' "Clirii ('aw.'" was tho jubilant answer. -lecttd. Ineffective. "Why don't j-ou try tho cold water euro for your rheumatism?" "Cowld wathor, is it? Arrah, man, yor foolin' wid me. Didn't I tttmblo into the cowld rivor last summer, an' wasn't I nearly dhrownod in tho cowld wathor, as yo call it, an' wasn't I hang In' upsido down on a matohook for an hour, bosido boin' rowlodon barrels, an' divil a bit o' good did it do mo!" Puck. Wo aro Bgnin to tbo front with tho finest nssortmont of DRUGGISTS' SUNDRIES and CHRISTMAS GOODS ovor scon in tho Vnlloy. Evory porson buying ONE DOLLAR'S worth of Goods from us during tho month of Deoombor will ro coivo o ohanco in tho following boautiful and valuablo pro3onts : 1st Pie 2il 3fl 1 1 ti 4tll " 511 " leemliain Cigar Holr. Phirali Album, Bronze 7111 " Mae it it tt Large Scran-Book. These Prizes will be drawn for on DECEMBER 31st, at SEVEN O'CLOCK. Wo havo an elegant stock of Christmas Cards, Celluloid Goods, Choice Perfumery, Dolls and Toys, Scrap Books, Photo Albums, Autograph Albums, Cups and Saucers. Our slock Is too Inrgo to mention everything, hut come nnd sco for yourselves"! irande And Everybody is invited RISTMAS PRESENTS Rare Chance for Holiday Shoppers. CI For every dollar's worth of goods which will give them 1st Prize, Slept Decorated Tea Set, 44 pieces. 2d Prize. Large Piiotoirraiili Aim. 3d Prize. Velvet fall Poctet. ' 4tli Prize. Splendid Oil Paiifc size 24x30 incte. 5th Prize. Decorated Toilet Set. 6th Prize. Lane Parlor Lamp. ) 7tli Prize. Heavy Silver Hated Pickle Disli. 8th Prize. Walnut Paper Holder. 9th Prize. Silver Plated Vase. lOthPrize. Large Scrap Album. DO HOT MISS THIS OLPORTUNiTY TO GET A VALUABLE ARTICLE FOR NOTHING. UfrihltH our immciiHO uBsortmoiifc o! Holiday CJooda, wo hoop constnntly on hand tho Choicest Family Groceries, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Variety and Fancy Goods, Watches, Clocks and Jewelry. JONES BROS., Cor. Main and C Sts.5 Union. La Grande, Mi Celluloid Dressiri-case. Mw Silver-Platefl UU BasM. Lai Wax Doll, over i foot Hi. Cigar StanQ. W Msd Bum in Holflor. Roude Drug r HEADQ to call and examino their complete READ OUR OFFER : bought of us during the month of December, our patrons will receive a ticket a chance to secure any or all of the following beautiful presents: OE EEL 30, kl 1 O'CLOCK, Store, Props., Oregon. RTERS and elegant assortment of