Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1893-1895, August 14, 1893, DAILY EDITION, Image 3

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THE HSSMSEGOJldN.
DR. TALMAGE 8PEAK3 OF
BOLD CHALLENGE.
PAUL'S
The SubUjftiT Tragedy of Calvary The Les
noni.of plirUt'sDeatb, and Itesurrectlon.
Ills Interijef(in Fori Us The Coimola
tlonorCliltHiljly. Bro0klp Ag 1$. Ilqv. Dr. Tul
pinge (today .clioso fori hisi subject "A
Bold Challjgetho (ext being Romans
viii, 84; "VbVi3liothiitvoiideniiieth? It
is Christ that, 'dtecr, yearathrithat is
risen oainrwho Is event at jthe right
band of pod, who hlso maket1 iiitercesJ
siou foe us."
"This Is tfyj last sermon I 'shall ever
preach ' sajdj Christmas Evas on the
18tU of Juno 18S8t Thrce.days after
ward haexpired I do, not lpiow what
hi tejt wasf but I kn$w thpt no man
could choose a' better theme though ho
knew it was the last time he should ever
preaoh than the subject found in this
text,
Paul flung this challenge of the text
to the feet of all ecclesiastical and civil
authority. He feared neither swords nor
lions, earth nor hell. Diocletianslewun
counted thousands under his administra
tion, and the worldhaabeen full of per
secution, but all the persecutors of the
world conld not affright, Paul. Was it
because he was physically strong? Oh,
no
I suppose he was very much weakr
encd by exposure and maltreatment.
Was it because he was lacking in sensi
tiveness? No. You find the most deli
cate shades of feeling playing in and outi
his letters and sermons. Some of lus,
communications burst into tears. What
was it that lifted Paul into this triumph-i
i a.k mi 1.1 1-i. f .. Cf .. I .... i
ant moour xue iiiuugiit ui u onviuui;
dead, a Saviour risen, a Saviour exalted,
a Saviour interceding.
All tho world has sung the praise ofj
Princess Alice. One child having died,
of a contagious disease, she was in thq
room where another was dying, and thd
court, physician said to her, "You must
not breathe the breath of this child, or
you yourself will die." But Beeing the
child mourning because of the death of
her brother, tho mother stooped down
and in sympathy kissed the little ouei
caught tho disease and perished. All the
world sang tho .heroism and. the self
sacrifice of Princess Alice, but I havo to
tell you that when our race was dying
the Lord Jesus stooped down and gave
us tho kiss of his overlasting love, and
perished that wo might live. "It is
Christ that died."
Can you tell mo how tender hearted
Paul could find anything to rejoice at in
tho horrible death sceno of 'Calvary? Wo
weep at funerals; we are sympathetic
when we see a stranger die; when a mur
derer steps upon the scaffold we pray for
his departing spirit, and how could Paul
the great hearted Paul find anything
to be pleased with at the funeral of a
God? Besides that Christ had only re
cently died, and the sorrow was fresh in
the memory of the world, and how in
the fresh memory of a Saviour's death
could Paul be exultant?
DELTVEItANCE BV DEATH.
It was because Paul saw in that death
his own deliverance and the deliverance
of a race from still worse disaster. He
eaw tho gap into which tho raco must
plunge, and he saw the bleeding hands
of Christ close it, Tho glittering steel
on the top of the executioner' spear in
his bight lanaiea into a wrcu w mp
men: heavenward. The persecutors saw
over the cross five words written in He
brew, Greek and Latin, but Paul eaw
over tho cross of Christ only one word
"expiationl" He heard in tho dying
groan of Christ his own groan of oternal
torture taken by another. Paul said to
himself, "Had it not been that Christ
volunteered in my behalf, those would
have been my mauled hands and feet,
my gashed side, my crimson temples."
Men of great physical endurance havo
sometimes carried very heavy burdens -r
800 pounds, 400 pounds an! they have
still said: "My strength is not yet tested.
Put on more weight." But after awhile
they were compelled to cry eut: "Stop!
I can carry no more." But the burden
of Christ was illimitable. First, there
was hia own burden of hunger and thirst
and bereavement and a thousand out
rages that have beon heaped upon him,
and on top of that burden were the sor
rows of hia poor old mother, and on the
ton of those bnrdens the crimes of the
ruffians who were oxecuting him.
"Stop!" you cry. "It is enough. Christ
can bear no more." And Christ says,
"Roll on moro burdens; roll on me tbe
the sins of this entire nation, and after
that roll on mo tho sins of tho inhabited
earth, and then roll on me the sins of
the 4,000 years past, so far as those
sins have been forgiven." And the
angels of God, seeing the awful pressure,
cry: "Stop! Ho can bear no more."
And the blood rushing to the nostril and
lip seems to cry eut: "Enough! He can
endure no more." But Christ Bays: "Bell
on a greater burden, roll on thVataa of
tho next 1,000 years, roll on me 'the
sins of all tho succeeding ages, roll on
me tbe agonies of hell, ages on ages, tho
furnaces and the prison bouses and , the,
tortures." That is what the Bible mean
when it says, "Ho bore our sins and
carried our sorrows."
"Now," says Paul, "I am free. That
suffering purchased my deliverance. God
sever collects a debt twice. I hTO a ro-
ceint In fall. If God is
satised wttu
me, inen wnat oo au -". bower where God's children take a sies
ZLZLZIZ ta. afternoon n,P. to wake up In
a w t .1 .1. -11 1L. iLaAiiia n AA4Vt
,...-, , . ------ -r-
force. Do your worst against my ouL
i defy you- X aaro you. i cuaweugo
you. Who is ho that conaemneinr
Christ that died." Oh, what a strong
argument that puts lu the hand of every
Christian man! Somo day all the past
sins of bis life come down on him in a
fiery troop, and they pound away at tho
gate of his soul, and they say: "We
have come for ynur arrest. Any one of
us could overcome you. We are 10,000
strong. Surrenderr And you open ths
door, aad atagltf hanckd asd aloae yea
rafcead-afalMt ifct tree. To'Ma
this divUn waa late AU mitUU You1
catter, thosoj Bins aa quick as you can
think It.
"It is Christ-that died." Why, then,
bring tip to tts the sins of onr past life?
Vhat have yo to do.witn those obsolete
things? Yon know how hard it is for a
wrecker to bring up anything that is lost
near the shore of the se.t, but suppose
something be lost half way between
Liverpool and New York. It cannot be
found; it cannot be fetched up. "Now,"
says God, "your sins have been cast into
the depths of the sea." Mid-Atlantic! All
tho mncbinory ever fashioned in foun
dries' of daikness and launched from the
doors of eternal death, working for 10.
000 years, cannot bring up one of our
sins forgiven and forgotten and sunken
into tho depths of the sea. When n sin
is pardoned, it is gone. It is gone out of
the books; it is gone out of the memory;
it is gone out of existence. "Their sins
and their iniquities will I remember no
more."
Tlin SUBLIME TRAGEDY.
From other tragedies men havo come
away exhausted and nervous and sleep
less, but there is one tragedy that soothes
and calms and saves. Calvary was the
stfge on which it was enacted, the cur
tain of the night falling at midnoonwas
the drop Bcene, the thunder of falling
rocks tbe orchestra, angels in the gal-1
lcries.anddqvils.in the pit tho spectators,;
tho tragedy, a. crucifixion. "It is Christ
that died." Ob, triumphant thought!
If you go through the picture gal
leries of Versailles, you will find a great
change these; I said to a. friend who
bad been through those galleries, "Are
they as they were before the French
war?" and I was told there was a great
.change there; that all that multitudeof
pictures which represented Napoleonio
triumphs had been taken away, and in
the frames were other pictures repre
sentative of Germanic success and vic
tory. Oh, that all tho scenes of satanic
triumph in our world might be blotted
out, and thai the whole world might be
a picture gallery representing the tri
umphant JesusJ Down with tho mon
archy of transgression! Up with the
monarchy of our King! Hail! Jesus,
hail!
But I must give. you, tho second cause
of Paul's exhilaration. If Christ had
staid in that crave, we never would
have notten out of it. The grave would
have been dark and dismal as the coir-
ciereerio during tho reign of terror,
where the carts came, up only to take
thenrictilns outto the. scaffold I do not
wonder that tho ancients tried by em
balmment of the bod jvto resist the dis
solution of death.
The graw is the darkest, deepest,
ghastliest chasm that was ever opened
it there be no light from the resurrec
tion throne streaming into it, but Christ
Btaid in the. tomb all Friday nigh$ and
all Saturday, all Saturday night and a
part of Sunday mprning. He staid) so
long in the tomb that ho might fit it for
us when we go there. He tarried two
whole nights in the, grave, so that he saw
how important it was to have plenty of
light, and he has-flooded it with his own
glory.
THERESnHRECTION.
It is early Sunday jmorning, and wf
start Tip to find the gravoof Christ. We
find the morning sun gilding the dew,
and thq shrubs are sweet as-tbe foot
crushes them. What a beautiful place
to be buried in! Wopder they did not
treat Christ, aB,wel when ho was alive
as they do now that ho is dead. Give
the military salute to the soldiers who
stand iruardinfr tho dead. But hark to
the crash-an earthquakej Tho soldier
fall back as though they were dead, .and
the stone at the door of Christ's tomb
spins down the hill, flung by tho arm of
an angel. Come forth, O Jesus, from the
darkness into the sunlightl Como forth
and breathe the perfumopf Joseph's gar
den. .
nhiHst comes forth radiant, ana as no
steps out of the excavation of the rock I have specialties, and one man succeed,
lookdown into the excavation, and in better in patent cases, another lu irtsuri
the distance I see others coming handuance cases, another id criminal cases;
in hand and troop after troop, and I find another in land cases, another in will
it is a long procession of the precious cases, and his success generally depends
dead Among them are our own loved upon his sticking to that specialty. I
ones-father, mother, brother, sister, havo to toll you that Christ can do many
companion, children, coming up out of things, but it seems to raathathUsper
the wcavatlon of tho rock until the last ciaUy is to take the Dad case of the sin.
one has stepped out into the light, and I ner and plead it before God until lit. geU
am bewildered, and I cannot understand eternal acquittal. Oh, wo must baye
the scno until I see Christ wave his blm for our advocate,
handiver fheadyanclng procession from But what plea can h. maW Somer
thexock nd hear biw ry; "I auv the times an attorney in courtwill plead thfc
resuSionand the life Ho who be- innocence of the prisoner. That won"
lieveth in me, though he were dead, yet be inappropriate for us. W are aU
shlhellve." And then I notice that guilty! guilty! Unclfirtt unclean,!
thelong dirge of the world's woo sud- Christ, our advocate, will not plead our
denly stops at the archangelio shout of innocence. Sometimes tho attorney
"Come forth!" court tries to prove an aUbi. He says:
Oh, my friends, if Christ had not bro- "ThU prisoner was not at tho seen JSIe
ken out of the grave you. and I would was In smoother place at the time.!
never come outof it! It would have Such a plea will not ;do in our case. The
own another case of Charlotte Corday Lord found us in all , mv sin and In the
attempting to slay a tyrant, herself slain, yery place of our iniquity. It isimpos
ItwouWvbbwnanothercaseofJobn Bible to prove an alibi.. Borne times ah
W.7 . in i the. slaves, attorney will plead the, insanity of the
urif" """" 1,, i n.-.u
LTSiKiaSSS.lid Death the
irwnn i naTH uctu icbw
victor The black flag would have float-
eTonklHhevesand mausoleums of
thodead.andUeUnvouldhaveconquered
thsforces of -heaven -and captured tne
nrnptmoiUN, noHiw u .-.
coma to coronation m ww pw U1
eayenand it would have been devils
on ths throne and sons of God In the
doBgeon.
DEATH IS A SIESTA.
Not no! no! When that stone was
rolled from tho door of Christ's grave, it
was hurkd-with such a force that it
embed in all the grave doefs -of Chris
tendom, and now the tomb Is only a
mjghty invigoranon. "unnsi is risen."
J a he Umbg of
r, w - u .. . ,,,. ..
j -"- - - - - - .
1 frv KUJ ftw ,HHU
place. Christ's sufferm ts enuea; n
Workisono. Tlje durkest Friday aft,
Sn of tbo woWa bbtory become.
thflbrichtestSumlayinorninBof itsrea
uSonSy. So Oood Friday of bit,
nrrenorioj. io wvj
rioua tranufpnnatlpn and resurrection.
et memonw ucww "- -- -
T jnourolnc faints, dry every tear
For your Oeyartwt Lerd.
Behold ge place. H,hHliepJ.
The tomb l aU unbarred,
Tbagaleeor death. wertcWwaiasis.
The Ird U rU-B Uresate.
I give yon the third canso of Paul's ex
hilaration. Wo honor the right hand
more than we do the left. If in accident
or battle wo must low one hand, let it
bo tho loft. The left hand being nearer
tho heart, we may not do much of tho
violent work of life with that hand with'
............ ...v .... "
out physical danger, but ho who has tho
right arm in full play has tho mightiest
of all earthly weapons. In all ages and
in all languages tbe right liana is tne
or. Hiram sat at tho right hand of Solo
mon. Thon we have tbe term, "He U n
right hand man." Lafayette was Wash
ington's right hand man. Marshal Ney
was Napoleon's right hand man. And
now you have tho meaning of Paul when
he speaks of Christ who is at tho right
hand of God.
That moans ho is the first guest of
heaven. He has a right" to sit there.
Tho hero of the universe! Count his
wounds; two in the feet, two in tho
hands, one in the side fivo wounds. Oh,
you havo counted wrong. These are not
half tho wounds Look at tho severer
wounds in tho temples. Each thorn an
excruciation.
CHRIST'S -WOUNDS.
If a hero comes back from battle, and
he take off his hat or rolls up his sleevo
and showa you tne Bear or a wounu goi-
ten at Ball's Bluff or at Soutnf juoua
tain, you stand in admiration at his hero?
ism and patriotism, but if Christ should
make conspicuous the fivowounds gotten
on Calvary that Waterloo of all tho
ages ho would display only a small part
of his wounds. Wounded all Viver, let
him sit at tho right hand of God. H"r
has a right to sit there. By the request
of Qod the Father and tho unanimous
suffrage of all) heaver let him sit thero.
Ii the grapdj review when the redeemed
pass by in cohortsiof splendor they will
look at him and shout "Victory!"
The oldest inhabitant of heaven never
saw a grander day than tho one when
Christ took his place on the right hand
of-God. Hosanna! With lips of clay I
ma7 not appropriately utter it', but let
tho martyrs under the altar thr6w tho
cry to tho elders before the throne, and
they can toss it to tho choir on tho Bea
of glass until all heaven shall lift it
son on point of scepter, and Bomo on
string of harp, and some on the tip of the
green branches. Hosanna! hosanna!
A fourth cause of Paul's exhilaratien:
After a clergyman had preached a ser
mon in regard to. tho glories of heaven
and the splendors of the scene an aged
woman said, "If all that is to go on in
heaven, I don't know what will Decpme
of my poor head." Oh, my frierfdsf there
will be so many things going on in heav
en I have sometimes wondered if the
Lord would not forgot you and nisi'
Perhaps Paul said sometimes! "I'wont
der God does not forget me down here
in Antioch, and in the prison, and in the
shipwreck. There are so many sailors,
so many wayfarers, so many prisoners;
so many heartbroken' men," says Pault
"nerhaDs God may foraetme,' And then
Lam so vile a sinner. How-1 whipped
those Christians! With what yengoance
I mounted that cavalry horse.and dashed
up to Damascus! Oh, it will take a
mighty attorney to plead my cause and
get me free." But just at that moment
thero cams in upon Paul's soul some
thing mightior than the1 surges that
dashed his ship into Melita, Bwifter than
tho horse he rode to Damascus, It was
the swift rind overwhelming -thoughtiof
Christ's intercession.
Myfrionds,!we musthaye au advocate!
A poor lawyer) is worsoi tboni no lawyer
at all. We must havo ono who is obi?
successfully to present, our cause befor?
God. Where is he? Who is be? There
is only one advocate in all tho universe
that can plead our cause in tho last judgr
ment, that can plead our causo before
God in the great tribunal.
CUKIST AS AN ADVOCATE.
Sometimes in earthly 'courts attorneys
Anr Rnil Kftv ha is irresDonsible on
ivw -. rf --
that account. That plea will never do
in our case, we sinneq agarose ugu,,
against knowledge, against XU kU.
of ourj owr , fences, w.awwa-
we wo uu.uH. ,.-., ,,
' ",Q. ,, nr te,nal deliverance
will bo Christ's own martyrdom. Ho
will say: "Look at all theso wounds, By
all these sufferings I demand thOTescue
of this man from sin and death and hell.
Constable, knock off the shackles-r-let
tho prisoner goiree." "Who U he that
condemned? It U Christ that died, yea,
rather that U risen again, who is even
at tho right hand of God, who also
makath intercession for us."
But why all this gladness on tho faces
of these sons and daughters of the Lord
Aiiiiit I know what you aro think;
tntv rt
n " " . Jtivir
A Bavlour aeaa; a paviuui iii
tvjowaiu, -.. ."7"-"S
"WUt," say you, U all that for iaeT
All.alll Never let na how jwco
plaining about anythlnR ogala. who
four pardoned sin behind yoo, and, a
inrMuia Christ nkadinir aboro y?u,
--77 "r.r: t. ' k,.7.. n how
can you bo 4enxmdent about anything?
COMB NTO THE KiMQPQ-
'Pu'' aaya anm nyuj Jn Jbf u$kmpe,
"all that Is Terr good and vary; rwlo
thoss who ars iuAU ta Idag&m, tml
sriri m. ifiuiiuui ucaiGU iviv jw. -t
- - 1 -!- 9 WW
f W
how abmit'thosfc of Tis-wbo Hrd outsider'
Then I say, Coino into tho kingdom,
como out of -thfl prison house into the
glorious sunlight of God's mercy and
pinion, and conio now.
It was in tho last days of the reign of
terror mo year nu iinnurais nnu
, thousand had perished under tho French
terrdr tlio yea 1703 Hnndrcds and
guillotine. France groaned with the
tyrannies of. Robespierre and the Jaco
bin club. Tho last group oi sufferers
had bad their locks shorn by Monc!iolte
in
tho prison barber, so that tho neck might
be baro to tho keen knife of the guillo
' tine.
The carts came up to tho prison, tho
poor wretches wero plncod in tho carts
and driven otf toward tho scaffold, but
I whilo they wero going toward the scaffold
I there was an outcry in the street, nnd
then the fehock of firearms, and then the
cry: "Robespierre has fallen! Down
with the Jacoblusl Let France bo freot"
But tho armed soldiers rode In upon
these rescuers, so that tho poor wretches
in tho carts wero taken on to the scaffold
and hbrribly died.
But that very night these monsters bf
persecution Were'seieed, and Robespiorre
perished under tho very guillotine that
he had reared for others, all France clap
ping their hands with joy as his head,
rolled into, tho executioner's basket.
Then; the axesiofr the excited' populaco
Wre heard pounding against the gates
of ,tho prlsoiT,' and the poor prisoners
walked-Sut fred. 'My friends, sin is tho
woret-of 'all Robesplorres, lb is the ty
rant of' tyrants. It has built a prison
house, for our goal. It plots our, death,
It, has shorn na, for the sacrifice; but,
blessed be God, this morning wo hear
the axes of God's gracious doliveranco
pounding against the door of our prison.
Deliverance has come'. Light breaks
through all tho- wards of the prison;
Revolution! Revolution! "Whoro sin
abounded grace does much moro
abound; that whereas sin reigned unto
death oven so grace, may reign unto
eternal life through Jesus Christ our'
Lord." Glorious truth! ASavioufdead;'
a Saviour risen; a Saviour exalted; a
Saviour interceding!
DUonMluk Theolopr.
Mn Kennedy of the Auditorium tells
tbe following stery:
"You know," said be, "how tho big stone,
pillars on the veranda above virtuallyl
divido into communicating departments.
Theso warm, nights many of the guests!
sit out there.very latei I went up there)
the other night after I got through to gotl
cool, and supposed that everybody had)
gone inside, but presently, on the other)
side of 'the pillari If heard n man and a!
woman. talkingt I didn't' intend to.be n
listener, but I didn't fool like running!
away 'and so could not help hearing
what they said. They wero discussing
spiritualism and the future state.1 The;
man saidi 'I do not beliovo in tho pop-t
ular idea of spirits in heaven, I believtf
that we merely become resolved again
into the lump of tho essence of life, whafcj
ever that is, without1 any distinction ona
from tho other, or anychanco of reoog-t
nitlon. I do not beliovo We retain' ouri
physical outlines, or in fact havo anyj
fdontity or personality aft6r death,'
"'Then, denr,' she said, 'you and X
won't go to such a placei will wo, Bweotf
heart?
"Thero wasn't another sound for a,
half hour," continued Mr, Kennedy;
"then she eaid; 'DearYH's getting late.!
Kis's mo good night againand gd home.
Thero was silence for another'half hour;
and then lio went home. That's tho kind;
of spirit in which to discuss th'wlogy."-'
Chicago Inter Ocean.
A flrtt I'lnno (ktr
Bv tho deiith of Mrj Henry-Broad wood J
ho head of the well known firm of plajaol
forte manufacturers, tho country loses
one who, by his inventlvo power and
business capacity, did much to revolu'
tionize the trade with which he was as.
sociated.. To his initiative was du the
adoption in this country of tho iron!
framed pianos now universally usedf
which were founded on an Amerioan idea)
In 1840 be finished the first piano over
mado here'with a complete iron frame)
and it was as a consequence of this inv
yention that he added tho trichord arr
rangement of strings' in order to auge
ment the tone.
The advantages of tho trichord wcr
at once seen, and it wm adopted by other
makers, but it was many years beforf
the'iron framo became equally popular!
Indeed its advantages were appreciated
to a larger extent in Germany than ia
this country, and being almost entirely
used in the German pianos sent here it
ha, been regarded by many as a Germaa
invention. It was Mr, Brosdwood, too,
who introduced the pianette into 'this
country. London Globe.
$100 Seward, $100.
Tbe readers of thlo paper will be
pleased to learn that there Ih at .least
one dreadful (lineage tbataelence baa
been able to cure In all its stages and
that la catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure la
the only positive cure now known to
thfr medical fraternity, Catarrb'belog
a constitutional dlseuso, rctciiilrea a coa
stltutioual treatment. Hull's Catarrh
('lire ) taken internally, actlbe directly
unon tbe blood and mucous surfaces of
the avstem. thereby destroylnK tbe
foundation of tbe disease, and giving
tbe patient strength by building up the
constitution, and assisting nature In
dointrlts work. Tbe proprietors have
an mooh faltb In its curative- powers,
that they offer One Hundred Dollars
for any cae that It falls to cure. Bend
for list of testimonials.
Address. F. J. Cbssey k. Co., To
ledo, O. jafiTSold by drugglsta, 76c,
WORLITt FAW, OHrCAGO-
. ' Calumet AnooeudMbSiiotf.
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Oor, Mth and Chemeketa BtreeU
Screen
Geo. Fendrich,
CASH MARKET
Best meat and" fre"deUVtry.
136 Mate Street.
J. L.
PROFESSIONAL AND DU8INES8 CARDS.
P. H. D'AItoY,
OKO.OjBlNalAMi
TV ASW AINQIIAM, Wnn, JU LaTr.
4-a, ? i. " '.".""-.'r.v.,.i:
onuiD the supreme and olroult courts of he
ufafn. 3 11
RPt B0I3E. Attornty at law, Halem.'Ore
. Rom omce 37t Uomroerelal, street,
T1LMON FORD( Attorney at law. Balem,
-i,. ml., nn alnlnt In luttin block '
...cwa vr...w A "'"" " -- '--
H.
J. maaKlUAttoiney at, lawalem. Ore--
eon. omta over Uusb's bani.
T J.81IAW.M.W.UUNT. hUAWAHUNB
t) . Attorneys nt law. OfflfO over Capital,
National bank, Balem, Oregon.
JOHN A, OAIWONV Attorney at law1, Tooms,
3 and 4, Hush bunk bulldlur, Balem.Or.
rON HAH A HOtiMEri, AtlbrneyS at law.
D' omculn'UiUh'DiooK, dciwi
gourt, on Commercial street.
State and!
m B. POGUE,
l-YJ. wrltest
lloe but' one In
.Salem, Oreson.
TELLA HHEUMAN.-
tne au
coramerclat Bienoernphy;
motif n. ura:
ook.
UrBt-clacR worlc llal
es reasonauie.
It A.DAVI8.LateiPiistGraduattfot Hew
York, etvee special attention to tbe dlst
es of womi
men ana cnuureu, uuao,
throat
Ikinc'j.klilneyti, skin diseases and
umce at rexldenoe, lol Htate street. (
tlonlrrom 9 to 'i a. m. and 3 to 5 p m.
urtreryj
CdniUlto.
7-1 -flm
t r j f rif i VT a MtUt fTl tl ETTM'
Office iUorommerclal ttrceuii tCldrldgd ttlotikt
ivBiuenoo no juumviviihi ruccm
O. 11ROWNB, M. D., Physician and wur
, ceoi Offlje, Murpny blojk; residence,
ommcrclal street.
DU.T O HMITH, DentKt. 91 Btate street
Bulem,OreKon,( KlnUhed dntl opera
llonn of every description. Painless opera
11UUBH VfJWiai.j'.
Bit CLARA M. DAV1080N, graduate of
Woman' WediciU OUege, pMnnfji
vania Olllce. llHsh-Hreyman III' ck, Haleni
J 'II I
r COlUKKTil, DENTWfj,8ALEM.,OUK.
J , En. Office hours Trrtm 8 a m to 6 p. tu,
rymple's store, corner Court and Commerclui
street.
WD.PUan, Arcnlledt. plan,' specincal
. tlons andj uperlntenrtMH for yll
classes ol buildings. Offlce !O0 Commercial
street, up stairs.
TitnTKfrrioN ixinrtk! no. 2 A.O. U. W,
Jh MeUlo their ,nU Jn Htate Insurance
bu.iding.everyweanyn
J, A. 8KLWOODtReoorder,
SALT LAKE,
DENVER,
OMAHA; KANSAS' CITY; irt
CHICAGO, ST. LOUIS
AMD At.L
EASTERN CITIES.
3
1 DAYS to
3 CHICAGO
UthoOulcketolcgod
Quicker to Omaha, and Kan
sas City,
Pullman snd Tourist Sleepei, free Reclin
ing Chair Can, Dining Qiri.
or rate and aeaeral lnXormatlon call oa
oraadrtM,
W. H. HORLBORT, At, O. r. A.
aw WasainitonfcH..
HnttrttMn. Onrnni
SYPHILIS!
A New Remedy
rfflS7n ifc.4od. wJ a .amik
Uat uil- liu u a4 " " If " "
Zi'iuTsuiiouurtutrvif- list's
TUTnaJr ill can yen to V days wake! .
Addnu
H0f FAT CHEHK5AL CO.,
TO
nerd fupWJaWloa boot o tccldent. bni the remit of dentlOa C
Knowledge of Mi dleof thbijndijlp led to tbedlMof-
tatreit teeing "aooitOT'CoptilOiBellbsrmiaermtanorofli.1 It tt
cool Taj W ?f 52' jl iUnsuUrtlrj f,
wnn viti,H,iifu(.j( wm nrwiMrHWMi .
L..UL. J Ih. fu laJl.tUa IMKllMK Ww
ROOT HA1K OROWER
CO.,
Ave
1rk,
Dbors
J. U. URPILY.-
-Brick- a'
A.ND" yomiirtoJ-"
Morloy & Winstanloy.
Bhbp 218 Hleh street. '
NORTKTBiaJS.-
ASHBY.
TaKfe' If J"
BVBNINa JOURNAL,
Only 3 cents a day delivered u
your door. '
Meal Market,
SOit.CnnimeVOlal I & brent.
Good, meats. Prompt delivery.
l)atiaMcKillpf
Stett food Saw
Leave .orders nt BAlem Im
provement CO., 068tto street.
JOAN- C. MARTIN.
Horseshoeing,
BLAOKSMITH!INa.'
Bteto Btreeti
- -
J. H. HAAS,
THE VATOHMAEBE,
215X Commtreltl St Stltni, OrgM.
(Next door to Klein's.)!
Specialty o.BpectacIes, and repJrlnj Clocks.
Smith Premier Typewriter
Bold on easy payments. For itentJ
W. I. STALEY, Agent, Salem,
U.N.IIWUPKK.Gon't Agent, lOIRThlrd Bt.
Portland. Bend foroataloirne.
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 SHOE NdfWf.
DoyMmrthem7 Whi noxt In mi trjf a pV.
BeetlntHaworW.
5.M
.0&
94.0D
(i
3:51
42.80"
2.29
2.ii)
rMuwc:
2.pa
ropt BBY
t2.00
1.75
SS
If yotiwwt glint DRESS 8H0& m trt the UU
tWlM, don't piy $6 fo f8, try wy $3, $ 3.50, $4.00 or
$5 Shot, Tby fit muiI to cuitom Riide tnd looV tod
wur u we!!, If Toil with to economize In your footwwuj,
it 10 by purchaifng W, L. DoglM 8heei, Nmo wB
pries itimped m Ui bottom.look for It wim you buy J
W.X. VQvhtlAB. Brockton, Mrf. SolJb
Kkaussb Bros.
HOWARD,
The House MoVeri
451 Marios Street.
HiuitbebM(.facllltle(lormovlus and roll
ing house. Leave orders at Oray llros., or
address Hafou, Oretton,
Frw Tefikal or Ulerkr Paiate e
Northern Pacific Railroad
Is tbS line tojUke
To nil Points East and Ml
ri lathmiinln ear route. It runs throatb
vestibule trains; every day In tbe year to
St' PAUL AND CHICAGO
(No change of cars.)
Oompeeea of dlnlnscars unsurpassed,
Pullman drawing room sleepers
Of latest equipment
TOURIST
Sleeping Cars.
Best that can be coHatrupted and ia whteb
aocommodatUru ar loth tree and, fur
nished for holtWrs of flrst and aeooad-tla!
UckoU.aodi
EL1JO tfVt DAY COACHE8.
Aoontlnuots Sin concerting wittt all
lines. attordin d'tct aed uninterrupted
servloe.
Pullman sit tons can lies,
cured in 4vn any scent of
the road.
Through JlcseU to and from alt MnU
in America, Krt gland and Kurope pau be,
pnrehasedatany tlcksl omoe olbls com.
rul'l Information iuenimr.rieirttmf
of train routes andotber astaui iwrouuws
oaarplicatiyn.
Asaietant General Pawenter Am, Mo,
m Klnt atreet, ear, Waialafwa; PorW
lad,Ofa
BaHSMItcidM
BHiL m
iiiiiiiiiiiW; MikiBa,
KLnM.tt.ijfllH
b JLj
rvn riau.i.i.MaMBrm
wUDM aBBBdajB
aTV iiiiiiiiiiiiWn"Br '
ITr
Electric Lights
On Wctcr System.
TO CONSUMERS :
Tbeitolem Light nnd Tower fompnny at
croat oxpetno Gave equipped tbetr Klertno
Light plant with them i rnodtrn dppriratns
una rnonotrrihle to ofler the pnbllo a belter
Unlit lhnrt any iy'em and at a rate lower
than, any city on tbe coaji.
Arc nnd Incandescent light
lug. Electric Motors for all
tHfrposcs where Hwcr is r
quired.
He I letipeicaubs trlred for as manv lights
as deMrod and, the mnannters juy (or only
saoo. llithtg" nrn.nied.
This belnn reentered
cy nn uioctna Meter.
Office
179 Commercial St.
F?esl
NeWs-
Pfa&ers-
Fruits-
nnd Candies. ,
J. I BENNETT k SON.
P. O. Bloolc.
T. W. TH0RNBURG,
The Upholsterer,
Remodels, recovers ftndrfpnlnif
npbolatered furniture. Flrst-l
elaas work. CbemokeUt street,!
Balem1 Htate InsurouBe blook. i
FOR SALE.
On eMy termn and cheap. A 70 acre orchard
on Bunny B'.de Nn -n. smllessouth
of Balem.
MWt-dw
aoriir llART.
The' Yaquina Route.
01 PACIC It K
And Oreenn Tlovelopmont company'rsteAta.
ililp; lino. ,Z23 miles BUorier, w nours u
Ipie than ny any other" route, Irst cli
Ulp!
I mo
a
lose
U rough
paeaDngar nnd Irelsbt
Ror nnd freight lln rrom
joints In the Vlll"Jelt
iml'an Kranrlico.
lln' from
t'ortlaud and a
valley to and from
TlUlK BOUEDULE, (Except Sunday.)
t,v Albany 100 p m I Lv Oorva11ls,l!l p H
r YaqulnaB-0 p m Lv YBqulna.ft4S a m
Lv Corvnlll". 10:H6am Ar Albany 11:10a in
O. AC. trains connect at Aibauysnd Oor
The above trains connect t YMiulna with
the Oregon Develnpment Co.' line of steUB
era between, Yaquina nnd Han FrancUoo. , .
N. 11. passeuKtn rrom t'oruaua ana hi
Vlilsmelte valley points can piakp close poa
ipftlnn with ths trains ofthe Yaoulua Route
it'AlbarkyorOorvalllo'and trdesllnedtaSa
ITranclsco. should arrange to arrive at Yoqulnu
the evening benirndatear sailing: .
Vastenger nnd KtrlKht Kates always the
lowest For Information apply to Jteturt,
UULMANCo Freight and Ticket Agents
iOQand 203 Kront eirect, I'ortUnd, Or., or
CCilOOUK, Ac'tUeu'l Ft. di'PaiW. Agt
Or.PacltlcH.it IV).. Oorvallls, Or,
V. II. 1IABWKLL, Jr., Of by KrelKht a&d
Pass At. Ore DoteIopment,Oo.,
iwt Montgomery K 1
East arid South
via
THE SHASTA ROUTE
of the
Southern Pacific CompahV.
OAurouHiA rxntias tjuim-kum An.T
TWJCtU PoaTLAHOANDS.1T.
Bouth.
I Xirtbl
5-ffifcffi
Portlund.
Balem
Ar.
Lv.
Lv.
7;W a. m
Mtha
7:00 p. Bi
LV.
10-13 a.m.
Ar.
Han Fran.
Above trulim stop only at following-stations
iiponly
J, Kajit I1
lorth of Itoeetmre. Koal Portland Oraroa City.
Voodburn, Haleui, Albnuy Tangent, Sbodds,
tlalseyuarrlsbur, J uuctlonCity, Irving and
IUMKIIUR'1 HAlI, DAILY,
tao a. in. I Lv.
11:17 a. m I Lv.
MO p. m. Ar.
' AltMkor -Local,
Portland Ar. I i-M p. m,
Balem Lv. I 1:40 p. m,
Itoeeburg Lv. 7.-00 a. as
Uttlly ' Kxeept ' ausar.
5 1 p. ni.
EvT
LVJ
Ar.
l'urUanof"
Ar.
Lv.
LT,
ISSSl
salem
7:t , m.
Albany
iua.ai.
UlnlMg Cnrn oh OgtieB Keute
PDLLMAN BDFFET SLBBPM
AWD
Second Class Sleeping Cars
Attached to all through train.
Wide Diviski, Betweei Vtod
IATLVtKXCl-r BOMBAY).
Tortiand"
OorvallU.
AT.
Lv.
SWp.m,
UP p. as.
iifcl5n.m. Ar.
At Albany and CorvallU ooansot
trains arOrriton Pttnino Railroad.
KlU
EXfHISUMTUAIN (DAILY gatMOWHAV'
4:401
p, iu. (Lv.
p. m. I Ar.
YirrrraBir
MeMlnnvllte
Ar.
Lv.
7d61
SifSa.sa
TIIR9UGU TICUKTS
To alt eolnt In tbe Palrn
4tes. Canada
and Huron ran he obtained at
W tVWJR& sss'Js
AseaL sMtai.
Irom W. W. aKlNNK. Asa. "aisai.
riP. lUHiKiin, Airi.n.riiiiiirM.Ai'i
tt. KOKtlLVK. Hnnaowr
WttIN CENTRAL LINES.
(Ktrtiw PkIIc R. R, C-, (.)
LATENT TJME CAR0,
Two Trwwif h TralM Daily,
Iftipui
IWWaW
1 45UIU
(LStpm
7:16l)io
l. Mlun.,8
Hti"aui.a
iita
I.A.ljWmd,
fhVeol
i7Jpm
7Umb
iecmfl
Tlrketisold and
I Mmh etsaS 'thwaa
to all points lu the
llnu roBetfoa
UataalaaNwtaa:aia. '
for tail laiwinaMMt aaaty t vmr aswnat
urfi&sss
N.-4aM SslSMR
aaSa&sa SjSlMBi
11XS 7SS
e.C3.Mfga
o
ti
Oil
I
1
II