• OBIGON ; UM kind old pur Hd'dMi rthare runa. SSSSSSSssr- Tkm Panos Hook Ina, tea old «Irina, Wim Ma u ow T look! u d f u * borico, Aad B d o i Stella, « t u hU • Ute»” and "thlna." K r i « tetera « la gras« arrtr wska «Uh a « u t i U i «to u r dar, «od that Ut« loa« «ara pataad a n p —Mia M. A. Klddar. A CHANCE WOBD< Myra Sydney waa sitting in the win dow of bar little parlor watching the alow rising of a storm over the opposite aky. Even city streets have their oppor- tnnitiea. This street in whioh Miss Syd ney dwelt waa in the outskirts of a sob Z r/ urb, where building plots were still generously measured. It ran along the rid«« « af f a slope, and Mias Sydney's h«e>® > i<a4 the further advantage of opposite a group of ««cant lots beyOnoNIhioh, above thPtOofS ..rijcluic neys ou E*e lower streets, a ltae ui blue « «p a o* Jbsd she many u a iu .a oi'w h irji*« eoow » salt , some nature« tier- are both «M stores. UMapenionSlUo aialj cuni|<|j*auoi; ,u 1‘*« obangeful aspoots <n nstuta.’ Myra was one of theae. Slio would not tiave i t changed her little house \vifb its wide view for any other, however magnificat, whose boundaries were bnok walls alone; . „ . and sky, and sun, and hill made for tbe leisure moments of her busy life a per- gmtual and unwearying feast. ' , g The room in which Miss Sydney sat - expressed its owner, as rooms will, whether meant to do so or not. Ia no respect of size or shape did it differ from No. 11 on one side, or No. IS on the oth er, yet its aspect was anything rather than oommonplaoe. The prevailing tint on the wall and floor was s soft olive, which made a background for brighter- oolored things; for the old Indian shuwl, which did duty as a portiere; for a couple of deep-bued eastern rugs; for pictures of various kinds and values,and a sprink ling of brie a brae, odd ratber than val uable, but bo oboaen aa to bo in thorongb harmony with ita surroundings. Everything hud a use. No pitfalls yawned for unwary guests in the shape of minute tables, Queen Anne or other wise, lsden with trumpery biscuit or Sevres, and ready to upset with a touch. A oonple of short, old-fashioned Bofss flanked the flre-plaoe on either aide, two or three easy-ohaira, and a firm set, low table, laden with books and periodicals, oompleted a sort of oircle, where ten or a dozen persons oonld gronp themselves aronnd the blaze. Miss Sydney herself, slight, vivid, and very simply dressed, but without an ungraceful point or fold, was in aooordanoe with her room. The olook struck seven. The black elond had crept to the zenith, and now a strong gust of wind swept from beneath it, bringing on its wings the first drop of rain. Mrs. Sydney rose and shot tbo window. At that moment tba door bell í « , Many. aujÇutfwsra 1rptoh<>4 s-ioiufaa.rrtiDs^pju,^^ frcHpts^erlru! " " “ f It's t two girls with a parcel. Miss Myra,” said Esther, tbe parlor maid. * They’d like to speak with you, they say.-’ Miss Sydney went out into her little entry. The girls, about the same age, wore of the nmdistakablesbop-girl type. “ You are from Snow A Asher's, I thiuk?” she said in her oourteons voice. "Yea'm. Mr. Snow said he wasn't sure whioh of the nnder-wsists it was that you took, ao he sent both kinds, and will you try ’em on, please?” . “ Certainly. Are you to wait for them?” “ Yee'm.” Miss Sydney made what haste she could, but before she returned the rain was falling in torrents. “ You must wait till it slackens,” she said. "Yon'U be very wet if you don’t. Have you far to go?” “ She hae,” replied one of the girls, with an embarrassed giggle. “ I’m pretty near by, and tbe horse-ear runs just in front of the door. But Cary has to walk quite a long way, and her shoes is thin, too. She'd better wait, I guess, bnt I must go, anyway.” Miss Sydney glanced at the shoes— cheap, paper-soled boots, with a dusty velvet bow sewed on the toe of eaoli, a n i she, too, oonoluded that by all means, “ Cary” mast wait. “ Come in here," she said, leading the way into tbe parlor. Esther had now lighted the lamp. A little Are sparkled on the hearth. Myra drew an easy ehalr close to it. “ Sit down and have a thorough warming,” she said. “ It's a chilly evening.” ••Yee’m.” Tbe girl tbrnst the velvet bowed shoos whioh gapped for look of buttons, ont to the Are, and, half from embarrassment, held np a hand to shade her faoe. It waa n small hand, with an ambiguous red gem on the forefinger. The nsile were all bitten to the quiok, Mies Sydney r I The face shaded by the band was not nnpretty. The brown eyea bad a straight forward, honest glance, the month waa rather sweet, there was that delicacy of modeling, jnst bordering on fragility, whioh givea to theearly youth of so many American women a fleeting charm, it waa a faoe whioh softly-banded hair and a low knot would suit; bat with tbe bad teste af her class “ Cary” had adopted the stole of eoiffnre whioh become her least. All the front hair wee an unkempt tangle of “ bang.” At tbo book wee a mass of jate switches, braided end surmounted with i gilt eemb, aad on tbe lop of the ' l l straw bat lined 3 ted with a bed rag 's tail. Tba drees, of eheaD k I blue also, and waa frilled I into a senoatnre of the ore- A ruffle of soiled lace the girl's nook, beneath r a not over-clean muslin tie, | m m H la shat of yallow metal— ■ eliaked round tbe I the puffed and , » «hubby petticoat of gray mther Mias in' half the them, and half iadigne- tb iok of without “ Yes,” admitted lha girl, in rather an through thin ylges of stood. Cary fol in time, these are problems of daily, of nnwilling tone. “ Bnt the only ouu I've lowed .her to the window. Her cheeks hourly oocurrenoe in tbe West End. The got is purple, and it look# horrid with were It deep red, but there waa a frank whole of modern life, whether la the tho cen this blue." Noting dissent in ber com aud grateful look in her eyea as sue centers of pleasure, or ter a of business ia domiua panion’» faoe, aha added; “ Wepoor girls •aid: “ 1 mast be going now, ma'am. You've ted by the desire to do too much, can't have n wrap for every dress, like been ever ao kind to let me stuy. I apd the consequent necessity of doing it rich ladies do.” “ No,” said Mias Sydney, gently, “ I ■han't forget it, and—I guess you’re about with precipitation. It ia a horrible babit — a detrimental habit; we hail almost know it. I never attempt to have a diff right.” “ I wonder if I said the right thing, or said a vulgar babit. The whole world is erent wrap for each dreaa I wear. I can bavo done the least good?” queried Miss in a conspiracy to double, to treble tbe not afford it.” "Cary” stared. “ How queer!” she Sydney, as abe watched ber guest de pace. And what is gained by it? Loss of temper, deterioration of manners, in began, then ohanged it to “ But you and part. us are quite different ma'am.” It waa soma weeks before she had oc jn rj to digestiou, increase of nervons There was something wistful in the casion again to visit Snow A Asher's, diseases—these are the natural and in faoe whioh touobed Myra Sydney. “ It and she bail half forgotten the little iuoi- evitable results of that high pressure to will be time wasted, I dare say,’’ she dant, when one day, entering the shop which we nearly all expose ourselves and said to herself, “ still I should like, just in quest of something, her attention was subject each other. Who is made hap for onoe, to argue the dress question attracted by a face wbieh beamed with pier by it, who wiser, who even richer? with a girl like this. She is one of a ' sodden smiles at the sight of her. It Everything ia relative in this world, and great class, and, poor things, they are so | waa indeed Cary, but such a different if everybody gallops nobody is better off dreadfully foolish and ignorant.’ ’ She Cary from the draggled vision of tbe wet than if everybody walked. But who will made no immediate reply to her com evening! She still wore tbe blue dress, conseut to alter it? It would requiro a panion, but rose and rang the bell. but the flounces bail been ripped off, and universal consensus, and this is not at “ I am going to give you a cop of tea,’’ the front was hidden by a black silk tainable.—Loudon Standard. she said. “ Hark, how it rains! You apron. The tangle of hair was smoothed nan't go yet, aud you will be less likely like ordinary waves; a white oollar with Discovery of Lithographic Stone. to take cold when yon go, if you start a knot of bine ribbon was round her well warmed. B»><des. I want to have ueuk; one of the objectionable rings bad An important and valuable diaoovery you stay. I should like to have a little disappeared, and so bail the yellow has recently been made by a well known talk over this question of dress, whioh is locket. So ohauged and so much pret California artist. He waa ont on a so interesting to all of us women.” She tier waa tbe little maiden that Miss Syd sketching tour in Kern county, near Te- smiled brigbtiy at her guest, who, aa if ney scarcely knew her, till blush and hachapi Pass, and becoming absorbed dazzled, watched the eutranoe of the smile pointed her ont. by tbe wild uml magnificent soenery, be tray with its babbling kettle, its plates She w. ited on her customer with as wandered on from bill to hill, from peak of thin bread and butter, aud crisp, siduity, and nuder cover of a box of to peak, until tie found himself com dainty ca tea; watched Myra measure the rutiles they exchanged confidences. Did pletely lost. His artistio eye was at tea, warm the pot of gey Japanese ware, Miss Sydney think she looked better? tracted by a bold, white cliff of rook anil when the brew was ready, HU the Sbe was so glad. Tbe girls had standing ont boldly and sharply against thin-lipped cups, and drop in sugar aud laughed at her at first, but not so the blue sky. He made a sketch of it cream. much now, and her room mate, Ellen •ml decided to take a nearer view. On “ How nicel” she said, with a sigh of Morris, had got heruelf an apron like oloser examination it proved to be com satisfaction. Her heart opened under hers. Miss Sydney left the shop with a posed of a stone with whioh be was quite tbe new unw-nted kindues»aud comfort, pleasod amusement at her heart. She familiar, and bad often had occasion to aud Miss Sydney had little difficulty iu meant to go often, to keep a little hold use in tbe pursuit of bis calling. This learning what she wished to koow. on Cary, bnt cirenmstances took hor off stone is only found, so far as known, in Cary Thomas was the girl's name. She to Florida soon afterward, and it was late the celebrated quarries of Solenbofen in had lived “ at home" till two years ago. in April when she returned. Batavia, not far from Munich. Did she like the city? Yes, she liked it “ That girl from Sue w k Asher's was He tested it with his knife and found well enough, but it was uot macli like here to see you about a week ago, it to have tile requisite hardness, of the home to board. She aud another girl ma’am,” said Esther the evening after same color and fineness, in fact a genu th*t worked at Snow & Asher's had a her arrival. “ I told her yon was ex ine lithographic stone for which France room toirctl.sr ont Farewell street. pected Tuesday, aud she said she wonld had offered so large a reward to anyone They bail pretty goe>l times wheu they come again to day, for sho wanted to wtifi would discover a substitute. He at were uot too full of work, but iu the speak to you particnlor, and she was go once.recognizod the value of his find— busy Season tije.v stayed So late at tbe ing away. There she is, now.” thero beiug but one other known quarry store that they didn't waiit anything Cary indeed it was, with a steady, in the world of this peculiar stone. He when they got home, except to go manly-looking yonug fellow by her side. came to the conclusion that though he straight to bed. Thy got- seven dollars " I t ’s Mark, Miss Sydney,” she said,by hail lost himself he had found a valuable A «an ij'WO wiieu there was extra way of lotteductiou. Later, when Mark mine. work to do! Lad walked over to the window to see He selected pieces of the several varie ‘ 'Can yon lay UJ> anything ent of that?” the view, she explained further in a ties and soon found his way to camp. rapid undertone; “ lie came down two askt'd Miss Sydney. t ■ He came to San Francieoo, thoroughly “ No, ma'am, not a urntpnt least { inouCLy ago, while you were awa.v, tested the stone and found it tbe genuine don’t. There are some gu Is in t|ic store I nn' .iui, 1 came out to tell you, but you article, aud then returned to his quirry that do, but they've got sick friends to ' was go n e, h im —■ d¡¿J after to morrow I’m and located the lnnd in conformity with | g o in g hack with him to Gilteioton. I the laws of the United States. On bis save for.” “ Now," said Miss Sydney, having . sold him he mast ?>ripg me cut to-night, return he brought slabs wbicb have been thus felt her way, “ to go hack to i*c f :—for 1 couldn't leave here without »UJ- tested by cumpeteot men. Both the jacket question. As I told you. I can't fcg good bye to yon.” atofie impressions (lithrographs) and “ You ura going to bo marrieflf" at all afford to have oue for ever, dress." sketches oaB fce seen at the ofli;- 3 o{ J. A. “ Yes,” —with a happy look—"t o mor “ Can’t you, ma’am; and what do yon Uoliiuson, 609 Montgomery street. The row morning. And oh, Miss Sydney, writer of this article, thinking it a find do then?” “ I buy oue jacket whioh will do with what dy you think Mark says? Hu says of great economic importance, consulted if he'd found me looking like the rest of proper authorities and ascertain'd that everything I wear.” “ But that isn't a suit,” said Cary, the girls at the Btoro, with false hair, and the yearly consumption of this stone in jewelry and all that, he’d never in the San Francisoo alone (at fiom seven to doubtfully. “ No; but is it absolutely necessary world have asked me at all. And I did sixty cents per pound, the price regulated l'o k just that, you know. It was what by the size of the slab), was about Iwo that everything should be a suit?" “ The girls at our Btnre think so much vou said that rainy night that made me thousand dollars, and that tbe Soleuho- of suits,” she said in a puzzled tone of change, and except for that nothing fen quarry produced annually on an av self-defense. would hare happened that has, and l erage 13,000 cubic yards of lithrogrnphio “ I know some |ieople haveu fancy for shouldn’t be tho girl that I am.” sione, at a cost of 31,000,000, which sells them, and they are very pretty some “ Bread on the waters,” though Myra, for 810,000,000 Elisee Beclus, our au times. But dou't you see that they must as u little later she watched the lovers thority, The importation and consump oost a great deal of money, and that walk down the Btreet. “ Such a little tion of the United States for the year working jieoule, you and myself for iu- crumb, and snoli wide waters, yet it has 1830 was an average of 13\ tons per day. stunce, ought to manage more care come back! How impossible it seems, or A protective tariff would protect this would Beem, tf one did uot iiuve to be home industry, should the find prove of fully ?” lieve that what wn call chanoc and ac as much importance as it appears to be. “ So you work, ma'am?” “ To be sure I lo. You look sur cidents are Qod’s opportnuities by This quarry is extensive enough to prised. Ah, you thiuk that because I which He allows us to lend a helping more than supply tbe United States and bave a little home of my own, and Live hand in His work, not qnite understand add another important link to our indus in a pretty room, I must be a tine lady ing what we do, bnt knowing that trial resources. with nothing to do. That’s a mistake of guided by Him the smallest things end yonrs. I work Dearly as many hours as sometimes in great results.” The Romance of a Pardon. you do, and eurn the greater part of my own income, and I have to consult The Habit of Hurrying. James MoDougall, who was sentenced economy to keep my home and make it to imprisonment in the Aubnrn, N. Y., A medic d contemporary publishes prison for ten years in Oetober, 1877, pluasuul, and uuioug the things whioh I some sensible, and yet, we fear, oppor for burglary in tbe first degree, has been can't afford to have are suits.” “ I wish you would tell me how yon tune observations on what it calls the pardoned. Tbe governor gives tbe fol “ habit of harry” in modern business lowing excellent reasons for bis action: do, ma'um." Tbe modern man of business “ I will, though 1 am not in tbe habit life. “ The wife of the oonvict left him and of talking quite so freely about my af dresses in a hurry; he breakfasts in a for some time he could cot disoover her fairs, but I'll tell you because it may hurry; ho is in a liuny to catch histruin; whereabouts. He learned that she was give you an idea of bow to manage bet he is in a hurry to get out of it. It is living with unother man, ostensibly as a ter for yonrself. In tho first place I with hurry that he proceeds to his office, domestic, but, as it now seems to be keep to two or three colors. I have a in a hurry that he ruadB his letters, that conceded, actually in a very different re black gown or two, and an olive brown, he answers them, that he passes his day, lotion. The husband’s repeated requests and this yellowish green that you see, and that he returns to the station to that she'Bhould return toiiim aud restore and some lighter ones, white or pale yel catch his homeward-bound train. All his ohild, which she had taken with her, low. Now, with any of these the same this precipitation, this constant, daily, and his efforts in that direction were re bonnet will do. Ths one I am wearing perpetual being in a hurry is altogether sented by the man with whom she was now is black, with a little jet and pale gratuitous, aud that it is the mero result living. The crime of whioh the prisouer yellow, and it does peifectly well with ot a bail habit. Business men cannot was oonvioted consisted in his bursting all my dresses, and so does my bluok afford not to seem to be in a burry. If into tbe bouse where bis wife had taken cashmere jaeket, and my parasol aud one of them were to walk at a leisurely up her abode, in tbe nigbt, apparently gloves, which aro yellow also. Don't and deliberate pace to bia morning train, with the idea of reclaiming her and his you see that there is an economy in this, and saunter through the duy at the same child. He was confronted by tuo rusu and if I had a purple dress, aud a blue rate, people would conclude that bo had who had alienated his wife and was bar one and a brown, l should want a dif either very little business to transact, or boring ber and was shot by him and ferent bonnet for each, and different that he was remiss and lethargic in nearly killed. As soon as be had suffi transacting it. Hence, he begins by as ciently recovered of his wounds to up- gloves and a different parasol?” “ Why, yes, it docs seem so,” said Cary, suming a necessity for haste when pear in court he was convicted of bur drawing a long breath. “ I'd like to do none really exista; and, by degrees, glary in the first degree and sentenced to something different myself, bnt I don’t habit becomes a second nature. That prison for ten years. I Nearly six years of there is a good deal of truth in all this his term of imprisonment having expired suppose I’d know how----- ” “ Would yon mind if I told you what nobody who has observantly watched had but little difficulty in agreeing with modern ways of life would dream of de the judge who sentenced him and the I think?" asked Mvrs, gently. nying. Butin truth the habit of bustle, attorney who prosecuted the indictment, “ No'rn, I'd thank von.” “ It seems to me that the chief trouble which is so marked a characteristic of that he should be released.” with girls who work in stores, is that up by i they care more for what they call being tions over whioh men have little or no The Superstition About Thirteen. ‘alyliah’ than for being either neat or oontrol. In the case of men of business prett. A young girl oan look her best in there are necessarily certain days of the A menu shaped like a coffin lid and a a simple dreis, if it is well put on and be year—“ mail” days, for instance, or "b al wine list in tho Bemblance of a ooffin coming." ancing" days— wheu there really does ex rested beside the piste of each guest at “ That’s what mother used to say, and ist a greater pressure of work than at last night's dinner of the Thirteen olub. Mark, he always liked me bestiu a white other times. In those cases a “ push" Jndge David McAdam, of the city court, bib apron. To ba sure, be never saw me has to lie made, and everybody con responded to the toast, "The Thirteen in city clothes----- " cerned in getting the work done com Club aud its Anti-Superstitions.” “ I'm “ Is Mark your brother?” asked Myra, municates his own feverishness to his not going to say anything funny,” began then abe smiled at ber own stupidity, for neighbors. But snob is the constitution his honor, “ but I shall consider tbe sub ■nah a deep flush as mantled in Cary’s of the human frame, snch the mechan ject of superstition in a serious light obeek is seldom evoked by tbe mention ism of the human temperament, that (here he glanced at his waning taper) of a brother. what is done frequently has a tendency and in wht.t I shall say no offense is “ No'rn, be's jnst a—friend. His folks to establish itself as a something that is meant to any one present. The super and mine live opposite." always done. It even becomes a pleas stition concerning the number thirteen "In (lilmanton, and is he a farmer?" ure to some men at last, as well as a ne is absurd and contrary to religion. I “ Hie father farms, and Mark works cessity, to do things quickly. More have a wife and eleven children; must I for him, bnt bis time is out in the spring over, on the supposition that a man of kill one of them every time I eat or else end then be oalonlatea to set up for him business lives in the conntry, or in a call in my mother-in-lawor the plumber? self.” semi rural suburb—which is the case If fourteen people sit down to dine all “ Does he ever oome to tbe city?” with tbe majority—it is only natural that mnst live the year out, or the force of "N o, not onoe eiooe I was here, lint he should linger among his household theobjectiou to thirteen is broken. Will he speaks some of coming down along gods till the last possible minute. It is any reputable doctor oertify that bis vic towards spring, and that’s one reason I so much pleasanter to go round to tbe tims died of too muoh thirteen? Away like to look aa stylish as I can, so a not btable to see how the azdeas are getting with the vulgar superstition! There to be different from tho rest when Mark on, to count the ooming rosebuds, to were thirteen cars on the pa-senger com es.’ linger on the dewy gravel path than to be train at the Spnyten Dnyvil disaster, yet " I think in his plane I should prefer in the noisy, dirty, steaming city. Then who held that fact accountable for tbe yon to be different,” said Miss Sydney, suddenly the watch is taken ont of the catastrophe? Every judge is president decidedly. “ Now,Cary, don't be offend pocket to see what time it is, aud in or of a thirteen olub when there it a jury ed, bnt wbet yon girls eim et is to look der to catch the city train he “ mnst before him.—N. Y. World. like tbe ladies who come to tbe shop, make a ran for it." Tbe day beguu in — — ——— ' # - — isn’t it?—'stylish,' as yon wonld say?” in that fashion probably is continued in The " Ellen M. Gifford Sheltering “ Yes, I snppoae it is," admitted Cary. that fashion. The train arrives at the Home for Animala” is soon to be built in “ Weil, then, I must tell you the plain tilace of departure five, ten, litteen min the Brighton district of Boston. The truth; you utterly fail in yonr attempt. utes late. The traveler begins to fidget lady whose name it will bear gave $'10,000 No one wonld mistake a girl, dressed aa and worry. He lias an appointment, for this humane purpose. A bonse will von are at this moment, for a lady; no and he fears he will be late for it. Pos lie open on the first of Jnly to serve till body I—bnt,” dian irding the deep flash sibly he it. Thereby everything is I the permanent home is reedy. Small on her compenii i ' j cheeks, “ if I went thrown out of gear, and for the rest of dogs will be boarded for seventy-five into a shop, and ■* there a young lady the day he ia in the plight of Macanlay's cents a week, cats for fifty and birds for aa pretty and aa delicately made es you Duke of Newcastle, whom the historian thirty five. Poor pnsaies belonging to are, Cary, with hair aa smooth aa satin, described aa losing half an hour in the families that shut up the house and go and a aimple gown that fitted morning and spending all the rest of the away for vacation need not be turned exactly, and a oollar and cuffs I day in a fntile attempt to oatoh it up. into the street to live or die, any more. as wni’e as enow, and perhaps It ia easy enough to see bow if ia that the If papa and mamma forget to provide a black silk apron or a white one, and “ habit ot burry” ia set np, bnt much for her when pecking the trunks, the with Beat shoes and nioe stockings, If I more difficult to perceive bow the setting children will say, “ Kitty moat be taken aaw a girl dressed like that, with noth np ot it ie to be avoided under tbs con to tbe Sheltering Honae.”—Watchman. iag costly, nothing that any girl nannot ditions of modern life, or how, when have, bnt everything fresh, and neat, onoe set np. it is to be remedied. There The Lee association of Mobile, Ala., ia and pretty, I should say to myself, is, however, this oomfort whioh men of making an earnest endeavor to obtain ‘There is s shop girl with the trne in business and tbe working bees of society ■nfficient fnnds for tbe erection of a suit stincts of a lady.’ Ami, Cary—don’t may take to themselves, that moderu life able monument or atatne to the memory think me impertinent—if Mark came to very often aeema to spare tbe drones no at the late Admiral Raphael Homines, town and saw a girl Ilka i n t among tba leas. Certainly during the height of the whose r. mains lie buried in that city. It' •twwd of an tidy, overdressed ones at London season ao persons aeqnire habits baa already raised for the purpose Baow A Asher's, I think the contrast of harry More completely than people of $333.33. to which has boon added a snb- WMM strike M b aa 11 woald me agree- fashion, ia order to ooesame all the arription of $100 by a gentleman from aaoaat o f “ enjoyment” that ia placed et Oteagow, Scotland. The monumental Eydaey passed, M r frightened their disposal they mast perpetually he committee of the Association has ad » r own daring Cary looked steadily in e hurry. How to be in the Row—in dressed a circular to the people of the > the Are without h -caking. The rain time; how to be beek for lea ch eon—In oonatry, from which it ia {earned that a Md. Mvrapases ,i threw bask time; how to drew for diaavr—ia time; sum of not leu than $10,000 or $1$ 000 , reveal g the w is tr a d ila « how to reaeh the thsster or the opera— will be required for the work ia hand. I AM NOW PREPARED DALLAS PHARMACY. To say to my customers that I have one of the B. M. SMITH, MOST COMPLETE FALL A Succeitor lo J . X. H YDE. C o r . Main & Mill Sts., WINTER STOCKS Dallas, Oregon. H aving purchased tho w ell-kn ow n ooruer D rug Store, I have replaced the old stock with a new and OF GOODS 4 That ha» been placed on the m arket of Dallas. C O M P L E T E A S S O R T M E N T ----- O F ----- Y o u w ill find all the staple good s constantly on hand, and at prices Drugs, Chemicals, Patent Medicines, leaving very sm all margins for profit. TOILET ARTICLES, Etc., Etc. Y o u w ill find ou r stock o f B oots and Shoes com plete in quantity and quality, and at prices defyin g com petition. - ■O '■ — A lso, a full Assortm ent o f Better goods and low er P A IN T S, prices than can be had elsew here, T H E BOSS BO O T B E IN G A SPE C IA L T Y . O ILS, B R U S H E S , A nd everything portnining to a F IR S T -C L A S S D R U G STORE. It is a con ced ed faot that ou r Clothing and Furnishing G oods are cheaper than ever offered before in this market, and w e on ly soil the beet. X have also secured the services o f a com petent aud experienced P H A R M A C IST from the East, w ho w ill be found at the Store at a ll hours, D A Y O R N IG H T . O R E G O N C IT Y C L O T H IN G A S P E C IA L T Y . Dress G oods, Velveteens, Silks and Satins, Laces and R ibbon s, L a dies’ F an cy CoUarettes and Fichus, K id and Cashmere G loves, and all m anner o f F an cy G oods w ill be fou nd especially cheap bargains. Our goods are up in tho latest styles in this departm ent, and w e shall en W e m ak e a Specialty o f filling Prescriptions aud F am ily R ecipes with the best o f Drugs, aud ut reasonable rates. deavor to keep them so. A N D D O N 'T F O R G E T T H E E M B R O ID ERY. Y o u wiU be astonished at the prices being so low , after prioing goods G IV E elsewhere. IT S -A. 0 - A _ I j X j ! In an ad. it is not possible to name all the goods in stook, p u t you H. W . LY O N S. will find nearly everyth in g that is usually kept in a general store. LYONS 4 SULLIVAN, Please give us an opportu nity to show our goods and name prioes to you w hen you desire to mako purchases. Successor to W . C. Brown- DALLAS, POLK COUNTY, OR. STILL AT THE HEAD!! W e have for sale on easy terms, farms of all sizes from forty acres upward. Also, GOVERNMENT AND RAILROAD LAND, TIMBER LANDS, STOCK RANCHES, TOWN PROPERTY, SAW MILLS, ETC., ETC., ETC. J. D. LEE, TEE PIONEER OF Low Prices £ Good Goods, Parties wishing to Bny or Sell should call and see us. 1ST ALL Is still at his old stand, in Large Stock of the M ost Attractive Goods and Novelties, D E A L E R S IN D ry Goods, C loth in g, H a ts, C aps, Boots an d Sh.oes, A f u l l lin e o f F u rn itth in y G oode an d Staple G r o c e r ies w h ich w e a r e p r e p a r e d to sell A T T H E V E R Y L O W E S T RATES. Ottoman and Brocaded Silks and Ribbons, Ser vian Suitings, English Checked Worsted, Satin Damasse, Armures, Moires |) Ottoman Cash meres, Fancy and Staple All Kinds of Farm Produce taken in Exchange for Goods. JOHNSON, LUNN & CO., G O O D S ,- = $ 15,000 STO CK HARDWARE, GROCERIES & CROCKERY. To our line of LADIES’ DRESS GOODS, BOOTS, SHOES, and GENTLEMEN’S CLOTHING we call your special attention. “ B E D R O C K P R IC E S .” - G O O D S! Those wishing to purchase will do well to call upon us before making their selections. Basket Fired Natural Leaf Tea. - OF To be Slaughtered in the next Ninety Days, as wc desire? t£ Retire _ from Business. 4 Poster’s Kid Gloves, Sailer Lewin Co.’s Philadelphia Pine Shoes, Giant Steam Boots, and m y own brand Main Street, C om m ercial Street, Salem Closing Out Sale! A full line of M en’s and Boys’ Clothing, Boots and Shoes of all grades, I' !» - S U L L I V A N , JOHNSON, LUNN & CO., Consisting o f - T & Office on Main Street, two doors North of Post Office. With an unusually I will continue my regular importations o f INQUIRIES CONCERNING LAND PROMPTLY ANSWERED. L Y O N S THE W HITE BRICK, ™ D R Y _ REAL ESTATE AGENTS, M . M . ELLIS, Red Brick, Main 8t., Dallas, Or. C. P. S U L L IV A N . N. B.—Those indebted to us MUST SETTLE DALLAS, OREGON. ^ before the 15th o f November. J fe l J. N. SMITH. * BETTMAN & ROSENBLATT, GEO. E. GOOD. S M IT H & G O O D , M ain St., D allas, Oregon. (Successors to E. S. Hubbell.) Druggists^ Apothecaries, J A S P E R R. M IL L E R , Moore's Block, Commercial St., Salem, Or. DRUGGIST & APOTHECARY, (.IF fC A ’M O R TO t t m O B <* M I L L k R ) Always on hand, a full line of DKCAI.F.I* IN Pure and Fresh Diugs, DZVC7CS, C H E M IC A L S , P E R T U M E R Y , TOZXJET A R T IC L E S , Perfumery, and everything usually found in a first- class Retail Drug Store. P r e s c r i p t i o n s C a r e f u l ly C o m p o u n d e d b y e x p e r ie n e s d <rwi|In«. Stationary, Toilet A rticles, Xto., Bto. ' A L W A Y S O K H A K D A F IN E L IK E O F ; MEERSCHAUM PIPES, CIGARS, TOBACCO. El$. | M ill Street, D allas, O regon.