JUOJULIfitf HAVJil WLNtfS, Dn. TALMAQE ON THE CUnfttNT R NANCIAL DISTUflBANCS. Bight Mil Wrong Vtv of Money ffiiw Men Ofirn M;tlnKlil)Yrrrl of dinrnclnr In .linking Hint In tin llicli 'rtla Hon lo tint Unfortunate. Cbooklyn. July 10. Itov. Dr. T:tl lnujre lias selected us fii subject for to iny 11 topic of the yreatcat Interest anil I uitlintwv viz, "Comfort For Dusiiwi Men." tho test being Isaiah jcI2, "Speak yo comfortably to Jerusalem." NVlutt an nv.-ful f!x weeks in .commer cial circlesl Tho crashing of banks from San Francisco to New York and from ocean to ocean. Tho complete uncer tainty that has halted nil styles of busi ness for thrco months and tho pressure of the money market for tho last year havo put all bargain makers at their wit's end. Some of tho best men in the land havo faltered men whoso hearts uro enlisted in ovcry good work and whoso hands have blessed every great charity. Tho church of God can afford to ext"inl to them her sympathies and plead before heaven with nil availing prayer. Tho schools such men havo es tablished, tho churches they havo built, Iho asylums and beneficent institutions they havo fostered, will be their eulogy long after their banking institutions aro torgotten. Such men can never fail. They havo their treasures in banks that never break and will bo millionaires forever. The stringency of tho money market, I am glad to bay, begins to relax. May the wisdoui of Almighty God come down upon our notional legislature at their convening next month in Washington and such rcsnlts bo reached as shall re store coniidence and revive trade and multiply prosperities! Yet not cv.ly now in the time of financial disaster, but all through life, our active business people have a strugglo, and I think it will be appropriate and useful for mo to talk about their trials and try to offer some curative prescriptions. OVEHUimDENED BUSINESS MEN. In the first place, I hav.i to remark that a great many of our busiuess men feel ruinous trials and temptations coming to them from small and limited capital in business. It is everywhere understood that it takes now three or four times as much to do busiuess well as once it did. Once a few hundred dollars wero turned into goods tho merchant would be his own store sweeper, his own salesman, his own bookkeeper. He would manage all the affairs himself, and everything would bo ueVprofit. Wonderful changes have come. Costly apparatus, extensive advertising, exorbitant store rents, heavy taxtation, expensive agencies, are only parts of tho demand mado upon our com mercial men, and when they have found themselves in such circumstances with small capital thoy have sometimes been tempted to run against tho rocks of mor al and financial destruction. This temptation of limited capital has ruined men in two ways. Sometimes thoy havo shrunk down under the temp tation. They havo yielded the battlo before tho first shot was fired. At the first hard gun they surrendered. Their knees knocked together at tho fall of the auctioneer's hammer. They blanched at tho financial peril. Thoy did not under stand that thero is such a thing as hero ism in merchandise, and that thero are Waterloos of tho counter, and that a man can fight no braver battlo with the sword than ho can with tho yardstick. Their souls melted in them because sugars were up when they wanted to buy and down when thoy wanted to sell and unsalablo goods wero on tho shelf and bad debts in their ledger. The gloom of their countenances overshad owed even their dry goods and groceries. Despondency, coming from limited capi tal, blasted them. Others have felt it iu n different way. They havo said: "Here I havo been trudging along. I havo been trying to bo honest all these years. I find it is of no use. Now it is make or break." Tho small craft that could have stood tho stream is put out beyond t.lio light house on tho great sea of speculation. Stocks aro tho dice with which he gam bles. IIo .bought foe u few dollars vast tracts of western land. Some man at the east living on a fat homestead meets this gambor of fortune and is persuaded to trade off his estate here for lots in a western city with largo avenues and costly palace and lako steamers smok ing at the wharves and rail trains com ing down with lightning speed from every direction. Thero it is all on pa perl Tho city haB never been built nor tho railroads constructed, but everything points that way, and the thing will be done as sure as you live. And that is tho process by which many have been tempted through limitation of capital into labyrinths from which they could not bo extricated. I would not want to chain honest en terprise. I would not want to block up any of the avenues for honest accumula tion that open before young men. On the contrary. I would like to cheer them on and rejoice when they reach the goal, but when thero are such multitudes of men going to ruin for this life and the life that is to come through wrong no tions of what are lawful spheres of en terprise it is the duty of miuUters of re ligion and the friends of all young men to utter a plain, emphatic, unmistakable protest. These are tho influences that drown men in destruction and perdition. MAK1NQ HASTE TO BE RICH. Again, a great many of our business men are tempted to overanxiety and caro. You know that nearly all com mercial businesses are overdono in this day. Smitten with the love of quick gain, our cities are crowded with men resolved to be rich ut all hazards. They do not care how money comes. Our best merchants are thrown into competition with men of more meaus and less con science, and if an opportunity of accu mulation bo neglected one hour Mme one else picks it up. From January to December the struggle goes on. Night pivea no qaivt to Uwbs towing iu rest- snr? losstioM, nor ton brain that will not stop thinking, Tho.drenrrii nroiinrrowed by Umngiimry loss and flashed with lmngi nnry gains. Even tho Sabbath cannot dam back tho tldo of anxiety, for thl wavoof worldllne? dashes clear ovor tho churches and leaves its foam on Bible and prayer booki. Men who aro living on salaries or by the culturo of tho soil cannot under stand tho. wear and tear of body and mind to which our merchants aro sub jected when thoy do not know but that their livelihood and their business honor aro dependent upon tho uncertainties of the next hour. This excitement of tho brain, this corroding caro of tho heart, this strain of effort that exhausts tho spirit, sends a great many of our best men in midlife to the grave. They find that Wall street does not end at tho East river. It ends at Grecnwoodl Their lifo dashed out against money safes. They go with their storo on their backs. Thoy trudgo liko camels, sweating from Aleppo to Damascus. They mako their life a crucifixion. Standing behind desks and counters, banished from tho fresh air, weighed down by carking cares, thoy aro so many suicides. Oh, I wish 1 could today rub out somo of theso lines of care; that I could lift some of tho burdens from the heart; that I could givo relaxation to somo of theso worn muscles! It is time for you to begin to take it a little easier. Do your best, and then trust God for tho rest. Do not fret. God manages all the affairs of your life, and ho manages them for the best. Con sider the lilies thoy always have robes. Behold tho fowls 1 f the air they always have nests. Tako a long breath. Be think betimes that God did not make you a pack horse. Dig yourselves out from among the hogsheads and the shelves, and in the light of tho holy Sab bath day resolve that you will givo to tho winds your fears, and your fretful ness, and your distresses. You brought nothing into tho world, and it is very certain you can carry nothing out. Hav ing food and raimont, be therewith con tent. Tho merchant camo homo from the store. Thero had been great disaster there. Ho opened the frout door and said in tho midst of his family circle: "1 am ruined. Everything is gone. I am all ruined:'' His wife said, "I am left," and the little child threw up its hands aud said, "Papa, I am here." Tho aged grand mother seated in tho room said, "Then you havo all the promises of God beside, John." And ho burst into tears and said: "God forgivo me that I have been so ungrateful. I find I havo a great many things left. God forgivo me." NEGLECT OP HOME LIFE. Again, I remark that many of our business men are tempted to neglect their homo duties. How often it is that the store and tho homo seem to clash, but -there ought not to bo any collision. It is often tho case that the father is the mere treasurer of tho family, a sort of agent to see that they havo dry goods and groceries. Tho work of family gov ernment ho does not touch. Once or twice in a year ho calls the children up on a Sabbath afternoon when he has a half hour ho does not exactly know what to do with, and in that half hour ho dis ciplines the children and chides them and corrects their faults and gives them a great deal of good advice, and then wonders all the rest of the year that his children do not do better when thoy havo the wonderful advantago of that semiannual castigation. Tho family table, which ought to be tho place for pleasant discussion and cheerfulness, often becomes tho place of perilous expedition. If there be any blessing asked at all, it is cut off at both ends, and with the hand on the carving knife. He counts on his fingers, making estimates in the interstices of the repast. The work done, tho hat goes to the head, and ho starts down tho street, and before tho family has risen from tho table he has bound up another bundle of goods and says to tho customer, "Anything moro I can do for you today, sir?" A man has moro responsibilities than those which aro discharged by putting competent instructors over his children and giving them a drawing master and music teacher. The physical culturo of the child will not bo attended to unless the father looks to it. Ho must some times lose his dignity. He must unlim ber his joints. He must sometimes lead them out to their sports and games. Tho parent who cannot forget the severo du ties of life sometimes to fly tho kite, and trundle the hoop, and chase tho ball, and jump the ropo with his children ought never to hftvo been tempted out of a crusty and unredeemable solitari ness. If you want to keep your children away from places of sin, you can only An it. liv innkimr vour hoino attractive. You may preach sermons and advocate reforms and denounce wickedness, and yet your children will be captivated by ' the glittering saloon of sin unless you can mako your homo a brighter place than any other place on earth to them. Ph, gather all charms into your house! If you can afford it, bring books and pictures and cheerful entertainments to tho household. But, above all, teach those children, not by half an hour twice a year on tho Sabbath day, but day after day, and every day teach them that religion is a great gladness that throws cliains of gold about the neck; that it takes no spring from tho foot, no blitheness from the heart, no sparkle from tho evo. no rinir from thelauuhter. , but tliat "her ways aro ways of pleas antness, ana an iter pains are peace." I sympathize with tho work being done in many of our cities by which beautiful rrvnms are set anart bv our Youmr Men's I Christian associations, and I pray God to prosper them n an inmgs. uui, 1 tell you, there is something back of that and before that. We need more happy, consecrated, cheerful Christian homes in America. THE R1UIIT PSES Or MO.fEV, Again. I remark that a great many of our business men are tempted to put the attainment of money above the value of the souL It Ua grand thing to have plenty of money. The more you get of it the better, if it come honestly and go l usefully. For the lack of It HcJtneei im&tmsQ capital dies without tnodtclno, and hnngor finds Its coffin In the empty bread tray, and nakedness shivers for lack of clothes and fire. When I hear it man In canting tirade against money a Christian man as though it had no posslblo two on earth and ho had no Interest In it, Icotno almost to think that tho heaven that would be appropriate for him would bo an everlasting poorhonsol While, my friends, wo do admit there Is such a thing ns a lawful use of money a profitable uso of money lot us recognize also tho fact that money can Dot satisfy a man's seul: that it cannot glitter in tho dark valley; that it cannot pay our faro across tho Jordan of death: that it cannot unlock thegatoof heaven. Thero aro men in all occupations who seem to act as though thoy thought a pack of bonds and mortgages could bo traded off for a title to heaven and as though gold would bo a lawful tender in that place where it is so common that they mako pavementsout of it. Salvation by Christ is tho only salvation. Treas ures in heaven aro tho only incorrupt ible treasures. Have you ever ciphered out in tho rule of lobs and gain tho sum, "What shall it profit a man if ho gain the whole world and lose his souir However fine your apparel, tho winds of death will flutter it like rags. Homespun and a threadbare coat havo sometimes been the shadow of coming robes mado white in the blood of tho Lamb. The pearl of gieat price is worth moro than any gem you can bring from tho ocean, than Australian or Brazilian mines strung in one carcauct. Seek after God, find his righteousness, and all shall bo well here: all shall be well hereafter. But I must have a word with those who during the present commercial ca lamities havo lost heavily, or perhaps lost all their estato. If a man losoJus property at 30 or 40 years of age, it is only a sharp discipline generally by which later ho comes to larger success. It is all folly for a man to sit down in midlife discouraged. Tho marshals of Napoleon came to their commander and said, "Wo have lost tho battle, aud wo aro being cut to pieces." Napoleon took liis watch from his pocket aud said: "It is only 2 o'clock in the afternoon. You havo lost that battlo, but wo havo time enough to win another. Charge upon the foe!" Though tho meridian of life has passed with you and yon havo been routed in many a conflict, givo not up in discour agement. Thero aro victories yet for you to gain. But sometimes monetary disaster comes to a man when there is something iu his ago or something in his health or something in his surround ings which mako him know well that he will never get up again. In 1857 it was estimated that for many years previous to that time annually there had been 80,000 failures in tho United States. Many of those persons never recovered from tho misfortune. But let mo give a word of comfort in passing. Tho sheriff may sell you out of many things, but thero aro somo things of which ho cannot sell you out. He cannot sell out your health. Ho can not sell out your family. He cannot sell out your Bible. He cannot sell out your God. Ho cannot sell out your, heaven. You have moro than you havo lost. Sons and daughters of God, children of an eternal and all loving Father, mourn not when your property goes. Tho world is yours, uud life is yours, and death is yours, and immortality is yours, and thrones of imperial grandeur aro yours, and rivers of gladness are yours, and shining mansions aro yours, and God is yours. Tho eternal God has sworn it, and every time you doubt it you charge tho King of heaven and earth with perjury. Instead of complaining how hard you have it, go home, tako up your Biblo full of promises, get clown on your knees before God and thank him for what you havo instead of spending so much time in complaining about what you have not. AN AWFUL SHIPWRECK. Some of you remember the shipwreck of tho Central America. This noble steamer had, I think, about COO passen gers aboard. Suddenly the storm came, and the surges trampled tho decks and swung into the hatches, and thero went up a hundred voiced death shriek. The foam on the jaw of tho wave; tho pitch ing of the steamer as though it were leaping a mountain; tho dismal flare of tho signal rockets; tho long cough of tho steam pipes; tho hiss of tho extinguished furnaces; tho walking of God on tho wave! Tho steamer went not down with out a strugglo. As tho passengers stationed themselves in rows to bale out tho vessel, hark to tho thump of tho buckots as men unused to toil, with blistered hands and strained muscle, tug for their lives, Thero is a sail seen against tho sky. The flash of tho distress gun is sounded. Its voico is heard not, for it is choked in tho louder booming of the Bea. A few passengers escajied, but tho steamer gave one great lurch and was gone! So there nre somo men who sail on prosperously in life. All's well, all's well. But at last pome financial disaster comes a euroclydon, Down they go! tho bottom of this com mercial sea strewn with shattered hulks. But becauso your property goes do not let your soul go. Though all else perish, savo that, for I have to tell you of a more stupendous shipwreck than that which I havo just mentioned. God launched this world 8,000 years ago. It has been going on under freight of mountains and immortals, bat one day it will stagger at the cry of fire. Tho timbers of rock will burn, th mountains flame like inasts and the clouds like sails in the judgment hurricane. Then God shall take the passengers off the deck, and from the berths those who have long been asleep in Jesus, and be will set them far beyond the reach of storm and But how many shall go down? That will never be known until it shall be an Bounced one day in heaven the ship wreck of a world J Oh, my dear hearers, whatever you lose, though your houses go, though your hinds go, though all your earthly possessions perish, may God Almighty, through the blood of tho ereTlMting covenant, save all youraouU. JOITRN AL, MONDAT, JVJjY Vtt lSa. " ' f "'" . . ,j..f.tusi. .faint. AMiJ.&iihiffiL JAHE8 R. WIITE, Xtnset? ef Wito! 0elaVrt4 Comely Oo, Premium Bind and Orohertra. Dr. 3tlU XdUal CoH Elkhart, Ind. Too will rem ember tho condition I was In flva rears aro, when 1 was afflicted with a combina tion of diseases, and thought there was ho hclf roii mi. 1 tried all kinds of medicines, end soorca of eminent physicians. My Carres were prostrated, producing dltxlneM, heart trouble and all the ills that male Ufa miserable. 1 commenced to taka DR. MILES' NERVINE and In throe inonthJ was rcitrrcTLY cunt?. In my travel each year, when I aro the thousands of phydoail wrecks, suffering from nermus pros- 'fi ir tnUiouf tnkln? prescriptions from U CI local physicians who nave no knowl- a a - edge of their case, and whose deatn is certain, I feel like colng to them and saying, acrps.'MittB' fitsvlNt ANoaccyniD." In my profession, .- mparx where thero are so many so ffl I JKr LJ fferers from overwork,men,,h' l" tal prostra tion and nerroas exhaustion, brought on by tbs character of the business engaged In, I would recommend THOUSANDS "Ml LCI a a euro euro for all suffering from thesa causes. 4AA IU YVAMC SOLO ON A POSITIVE OUARANTCt. TRY DR. MILLS' PILLS. 50 DOSES 25 CTS. gold by D. J. Fry, clrugKlst, Malum Deutscher Advocat. P0ST0FFICE BL0 K, - - SALEM, OR. Admitted to practice In all tho courts. Special attention given lo German speak ing people and business at the county and state offices. K. HUPKU, Notary l'ubllo. TODAY'S MARKETS. Prices Current by Telegraph Local and Portland Quotations. Salem, July 17, 4 p. m. Office Daily 'Capital Jouhnal. Quota tions for day and up to hour of going to press were as followm BALKlt PRODUCE MARKET. FKUIT. Peas 8 cents a gallon. Gooseberries 15 cts a gallon. R-ispberrlea red and black 4 to 5 cts. Cherries 4 to 6 cts a lb. Continue scarce. 11UTOIIKB STOCK. Veals dressed 4J cts. Hogn 1 reused m to 0. Live cattle 2 lo 2. Sheep alive 41.50 to J2.00. Spring lambs-81.50 to $2.00. MILL PRICES. Salem Milling Co. quetes: Flour In wholesale lots $3.20. Ketall $3.(50. Bran $17 bulk. $18 sacked. Shorts $10 and $20. Chop feed $10 and $20. WIIISAT. 64 cents. HAY AND OIIAIN. Oats 40 to 45 cents. Hav Haled, new $8 to $12; old $10 to $14. "Wild Iu bulk, $0 to $8. Barley No demand except for feed, 60 cent". FARM PRODUCTS. Wool Best, 10c. Hops Small sale, 16 to 17o. Eifgs Cash, 22J cents. Butter Hest dulry, 15 to 20; fancy creamery, 25, Cheese 12 to 15 cts. Farm smoked meats Bacon 12; hams, 13; shoulders, 10. Polutoes new. $1. Onions If to 2 cents. Beeswax 34c. Caraway seed, 18c. Anise seed, 26c. Ginseng, $1.40. HIDES AND PELTS. Green, 2 cts; dry, 4 cts; sheep pelts, 76 cts to $1.25. No quotations on furs. LIVE POULTRY. Chickens 7 to 10 cts; broilers 10rol2j; ducks, 12J; turkeys, slow sale, choice, 10 cts; geese slow. PORTLAND QUOTATIONS. Grain, Kreil, etc. Flour Standard, $3.40; Walla Walla, $3.40; graham, $3.00; superfine, $2.60 per barrel. Oats Vhite,45o per bushel, grey, 42o; rolled. In bags, $fl 25()0.60; barrels, $0 600.75; cases. $3 76. Hay Best, $1617 per lon;coinruon, $10(13. Wool valley, 13 to 14o. Millstufls Bran, $17.00; shorts, $21; ground barley, $2012)24; chop feed, $18 tier ton; whole feed, barley, J5O085 per cental; middling, $2328 per tout brew Ing barle, (XtfP5o per cental; chicken wheat. $1 2JJ(1.21 per cental. Hops-16 to 18o DAIRY PRfiDOCK. Butter-Oregon fauov creamery,22J 26c; fancy dairy, njMaic; fair to good, n16c; common, liijc perpounujcjaii fornla, 85fa,44c per roll. Cheese Oregon, 12; Eastern twins, 16c; Young American, lflo per per pound; California flats. 14c. IjggOrcKon. 20o jier dozen. Poultry C'lilckeus.old,f5.00; broilers, large, $ 3 (hl' (tucks, old, $4.60 0.00; young, $2.60fe)4.00; geese, $8.00 turKeyi, live, iz)c; u reused, 100, per w, SAN FRANCIBOO MARKET, Woel: Oregon 'Eastern choice, 12 16c; do inferior, 9llo; do valley, 14 10c. Hops Kfu 18o. Potatoes New Erly Rose, 60c60: 60c feOO per cental. ban Us, imk! iv per ceuiai. Onions 7685o per cental for red, and $1.00! 20 forllvrklns. Barley -- Fed,M)SU (82Jo'per cental for good a u nl I ty ami 83o fur choice; brewing, OOfl.W) per renial, Oats-.Milling, $l.46l 62; fancy feed tl.46l 62; god to (jiiiWv,$l.al.43: oommoo to fair, tl 10Q1.25; gray 1.80 1 44; black, f 1.10(31.20 per cental. IVJnKlHGSS. HOUSE PAINTING, PAPER HANGING, Natural Wood Finishing, Cor, 90th and Chemeketa Street. Gao. Fondrich, . CASH MARKET Best meat and tree delivery. !3Glbtale Street. FRED A.IERIXON, STONE AND BRICK . CONTRACTOR.! Estimates made on ist.ll kinds ot wor. RosldenoeCor. I8ihnd Belvlew HUBultm. J. L. Meat SOS THE GREAT I Havo you abused tho laws of naturo and Injured your norvous aystem ? Aro you dospondont and melancholy with conlusod Ideas and gloomy thoughts ? ' ' ESPA NO ' will positively euro you. It contains no mineral polflona and la rcraarkablo for awakonlng organic action throughout tho system and nn improvement In ovcry tissue. It produces hotter muscles,- bones, norvca, hair, nails, skin, blood and gives vigorous llfo to tho unfortunate who has exhausted his powers. Prepared in tablet form and packed in boxes convenient to carry in tho pockot. Each box contains 00 doses or enough to last ono month and is worth many timca Us weight In gold. Tho prlco $1.00 per box or u boxoa for $5.00 If ordered at ono time and a guaranteo will bo given that any caso mon tionod abovo that it does not cure, tho money will bo refundod. Aa to our financial standing wo refer to any bank in this city. Sent charges prepaid to any address In "United States or Canada. Put up In plain wrapp6r with no mark to distinguish what it la. Bend for circulars and tcstlmon.ala. Address, 1 Stockton Street SAN FRANCISCO, GAL., U. S. A. An able Brain and Norre Specialist can at any tlmo bo confidentially consulted entirely free of charge,' personally or by mail, at tho abovo address. " 'vv(Vfvy'w'vVViVrf'' TUB NEW WILLAMETTE STABLES Completed aud ready to wait on customers. Horses hoarded by day or week, at reasonable prices. Wo keep a full lino of Trucks, Drays and Expresa to meet all demands. Also keep the finest Stallions in this countv. for ncrvlco. Earn and residence 2 black south of postotllce. RYAN & CO. CLEAN. If you would bo clean and havo your clothes done up in the neatest and dressiest manner, take them to tho SALEM STEAM! LAUNDRY where all work is done by white labor nnd in tho most prompt manner. COLONEL J. OLMSTED, Liberty Street. THE WILLAMETTE, SALEM, OREGON. Kates, $2.50 to $5.00 per Day The bet bolel between Portland and Hon Krunclioo. Klnt-clnu in all IU appointment. IU table are lerved with the Choicest Fi'uita Urown In the Willamette Valley, A. I. WAGNER. Prop. II P. M. CARS. lip. m. Cars leave Hotel and PoHtolIico daily for Asylum, Penitentiary and Cemetery on Capital City Railway. Car leaves 5 a. in., connect lag with Ovcrlaad train, and cars leave lletcl every minutes frem :20 a. hi. te 11 p. m. Tor all points ea tho Uaes excepting Cemetery Car,TakcM el to meet Passenger Trains. SMITH BROS., CONTRACTORS & PLABTERERS. Leaveorder tOotUe-l'rkburtbIock,room 15, Halem, Oregon. MONEY TO LOAN On improved Real KeUte. in amount and Uma I6ulk No delay lo wnelderlnf loan. FEAR k FORD, Koosa 13, Vwb Bank block. lMw Screen Doors and JonniNa. Xorloy & Winstnnloy. Bhop (II Hlato street. J. E.-MURWIY. -Biiick and 'Tile- NORTH BAIifcM. ASH 13V. Take It J .RYBNING JOURNAL, OnljracenUa any delivered at your door. Market, Commerolal Streof. Good meats. Prompt delivery. David McKillop, JOHN C. MARTIN, Horseshoeing. BLACKSMITHNG. ' State Btreot, - - Baleni Leave orders nt Salem Im provement CO., 95 Blale street. Vflki''fe'''V'VV'' it ESPANO" This -wondorful preparation is Purely Vcgotablo : compounded from tho prescription of tho Official Physician to tho Court of Spain. " Espano " recreates Mental and Nervo Power in Mail and Woman. An infalliblo remedy for Nervott9 and General Debility, Nervous Prostration, Creeping Paralysis, "Weakness caused by "Debilitating: bosses, Excesses or Over-Indulgences, In cipient Seftening: of the Brain or Paresis, "Dizziness, oss of Memory, Confused Thoughts and all Brain, Nerve or Sexual Weaknesses. It has no equal in restoring tho Stomach and Brain to its normal condition following tho abuso of Alcoholic Bovorages, or indulgenco in tho Opium, Morphino or Chloral habit. PAN1SH BRAIN AND East and South -VIA- THE SHASTA ROUTE tu Southorn Pacific Company. CAI.irOHNIA KXPJtlOH TBAIH HUM IJAII.T.I1K- -TWKCN 1'OUTI.AMP ASIOS. V, Mouth. jNnrU). Ti.iSu. to 7:00 p. in. 9:18 p. in, H:lfi a.m. i'orlUTnii Halem Hnn Krun. Ar. hv. l.v. I.v. Ar. 6:i!t) a, in 7:00 p. m Above trains Up only at following nutlons north of Itoteburv, Kat l'orlland Oregon City, Woodburn. Uulem, Albany Tangent. HheddV HaUey, Harrlnburg.JunctlonUlty, Irving and Eugene. tUttKllllilCi maIi. iAii , &JU a, m. I i,v. It:17a. mll.v. "tJOO p. m. Ar. 1'ortlaud Halem Itoaeburg Ar, I uu p. m. I.v, ( 1:40 p. m. Lv, 7.-WU. in Albany laical, Dally JUcept buntUy. iaio. ni.TTv. Portion d" ArTTKaUifcriin TJ2 p, in. I Livi enlem Lv. I TM 6. in, 0:00 P.m. I Ar. Albany Lv,l ia.m. Dlniag Cars on Ogdcn Koutu TOLLMAN BUFFET SLBBPBRS A-ND . Second Class Sleeping Cars Attached to all through tralni. West Side DirisioB, Betweea PorlUid id (Mlis: paily- (sxosrr SDMDAY). 7:SUaw, t!v. '"VorUaua life 10 p. iu. I Ar. fSorvallts r, o i, iu. UT. I iMW I'. .11. At Albany and OorvallU connect trains nfOnwon lasilflo lull road. wits KrMau4TKAIM IUaILV K SPKCTHUMII ' "''."io'li.'w.'ll.v, ' Fimlan31ArV j' ftwaTrn 7:06 p.m. I A r. MeMlnnvllle hr. I M a. m TMKOUC.II TICKETS To all point In tbu Fasttra BlalM. Canada and Kuiopo can be obtained at lowest rale trow W.w. bfcCINMKK. Agent, HJi. KP. KOalCKH, AMU (1.- K, ua t'OM, Ag'l IV JCOJCKlJtK, Manser Ffesii- News- Papers-Fruits- nnd Candies. J. L. BENNETT & SON. F. O. Bloolc T. W, TH0RNBURG, The Upholsterer, Btato lusurnnce block. 1R1 REVIVER FOR SALE. On cony term and nhtap. A SO nrre orchard on mimiy H'.aoiNo. one. Hiiuirsaoutli of Ha'cm. f-0-0(.dw JOHN HAHT. Farm for Sale or Trade. On ray terms, four mile cat of Hubllmllv. containing H7 acres' will trade ror property In or near Halem. 11. O. IX) VK, 8-Mw Hubllralty.Or, HORSE TRAINING. Have had 18 year experience tralnlegfor traolc or carriage. Term reukonitble. Can be found at Wettaoott'a stable, or addrea Halem. 0-tt-lm JAME-S KINO. FARM FOR SALE. A II Alio A IN lflo acre with Improvement over half nndrr cultivation, rest pasture and tome good timber. Terms very eaiy. Ad ill cms u. Iu NASH, (W-lm-dw Wheatland, Or. I'HOFEfiSIONAL AND BUSINESS OAHDS. r. . a'AKor. QRO.O.IinCUKAM. B'AKOr & BINOHAM, Attorneys at Law. Itooms 1. a aud 8, li'Arcy Building. Hi le street. Special attention gives to bust, nea In the supreme and circuit courts of the state. ail R.li 1IOIHK. Attorney at law, Halem. Ore- icon. O III co 'Zli Commercial street. mll'MON KOKD, Attorney at law, Falcni, X Oregon. Offlce up stairs In I'atton block. H. J. lliaOKlt, Attorney at lawalem, Ore gon, Olllco over Bush's bank. T J.BHAW.M.W.UUNT. HIIAW4UUNT J . Attorneys at law. Office over Capital National bank, Halem, Oregon. JOHN A. OAII-40N, Attorney at law. mow 11 nnd i, Bush bank building, Bales, Or, II. K. IK) Mil AM. W.H. nOLMEM. BON HAM & HOLMES. Attorneys at. law. OUtcela Bush block, between Btatean i ourt, on Commercial street. K. I'OOUK, Htenographer and Tjp . wrltost Best equipped typewriting of. c but one In Urecon. over klusu'a bask. Sal era, Oregon. TKl.LA HHKHMAN.-Typewriting and commercial slenocranhy. room 11. Oray ook. Mrst-chus work. Itatea reasonable. DVo ease of DAVIrt. ltaTl'ostOraduaUof New ork, gives special attention to the d! f women and children, note, throat. tmign, kidneys, skin diseases and surgery, OlUue at rekldence, lot Utala street. (Xuuultsv lion from 0 to (3 a. m. and 2 to 3 p.m. 7-14tft lungi OIUw Hon I Offio I'll YMIHIAN ANUBIIRQKON. c aiofommerrlal stret,tuKlclrU block. llrsldence 47a uomrooraiai irK. (A BHOWNB. M. D.t V t'byticlaa atl r gton. unice. Murpuy Commercial street. niosaj rwueevee. D llou K.T U. HMITH, Hentut. K kMate sirs Knlem. Oreuon ireiton. nun shed dental uassm. ion of every description. rmaisi irajst tlons a specialty. WH.mail. Archllact, pfauu. ) t . tlons and superintendence far all elustea ot bulldlnics OMce 8M Omni i fal street, up siairs. P. J. LARSEN & CO., Manufacturer ot Wftgotw, Or rlaNi, vte. K.putrlntf u SpuolsUty, -TtlUITEOTION UODOK NO. 3 A. i, u, w I Meets lu their hall In iMai J,A.JeiWOeU.Jerrt Ihl ri i b ',!.