Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1893-1895, August 21, 1893, DAILY EDITION, Image 3

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    '-ay" Mi"
IT MAKE8 OR MARS THE FORTUNES
OF MANY MEN.
Dr. TalmBfre Discourses on an Extremely
Interesting Subject A Great Woman of
tho Days of Kllaha Christian Fortitude
andJTteslBpatlon.
Buooklyn, Artg. 20. Rev. Dr. Tal
mae phoao for his subject today ono of
BRecifll interest to the gentler gcx, tho
announced topic being "A Great Wom
an. ' and the text JI Kings ivii8,-;Aiiil
It fell on a day that JSlisha passed toShn
nera, where was a great woman."
Tho hotel of our time had .no counter
part in any entertainineut of olden time.
Tho vast .majority of travelers must
then bo entertained at private abodo.
Htoe cornet Elisha, a servant of tho
Lord, on a divino inisbion, and he must
fimfislioltjer.' A balcony overlooking the
valley of Esdriplon is offered him in a
piivato house, and it is especially fur
nished for his occupancy a chair to sit
on, a table from which to eat, a candle
stick by which to read and a bed on
.which to slumber tho whole establish
ment belonging to a great and good wo
man. Her husband it, seems, was a godly
man, but ho was entirely overshadowed
by his wife's excellencies, just as now
you sometimes find in a household tho
wife tho center of dignity and influence
and power, not by any arrogance or pre
sumption, but by superior intellect and
force of moral nature wielding domestic
affairs and at tho same time supervising
all financial and business affairs, the
wife's hand on tho shuttle, on tho banking-house,
on tho worldly business. You
seo hundreds of men who are successful
only because there is a reason at home
why they are successful.
If a man marry a good, honest soul, he
makes his fortune. If ho marry a fool,
tho Lord help him! The wife may be
the silent partner in the firm, thero may
bo only masculine voices down on ex
change, but thero of tentimo comes from
the home circle a potential and elevating
influence
A SUPERIOR WOMAN.
This woman of my text was tho su
perior of her husband. He, as far as I
can understand, was what wo often seo
in our day a man of large fortune and
only a modicum of brain, intensely quiet,
sitting a long while in the same place
without moving band or foot-if ypn
say "yes," responding "yes;" if you say
"no," responding "no" inane, eyes half
shut, mouth wide open, maintaining his
position in society only becauso he has a
large patrimony. But his wife, my text
says, was a great woman.
Her name has not come down to us.
She belonged to that collection of people
who need no name to distinguish them.
What would title of duchess or princess
or queen what would escutcheon or
gleaming diadem be to this woman of
my text, who, by her intelligence and
her behavior, challenges the admiration
of all ages? Long after the brilliant
women of the court of Louis XV have
been forgotten, and tho brilliant women
of tho court of Spain have been forgot
ten, and the brilliant women who sat on
mighty thrones have been forgotten.
8ouio grandfather will put on his spec
tacles, and holding tho book the other
side the light read to his grandchildren
the story of this great woman of Shu
nem who was so kind and courteous and
Christian to tho good prophet Elisha.
Yes, she was a great woman.
In the first place, she was great in her
hospitalities. Uncivilized and barbarous
nations honor this virtue. Jupiter had
tho surname of tho hospitable, and he
was said especially to avenge tbo wrongs
of strangers. Homer extolled it in his
verse. The Arabs are punctilious upon
this subject, and among some of their
tribes it is not until the ninth day of
tarrying that the occupant has a right to
ask his guest, "Who and whence art
thou?" If this virtue is so honored even
among barbarians, how ought it to be
honored among those of us who believe
in tho Bible, which commands us to use
hospitality one toward another withqut
grudging?
Of course I do not mean under this
cover to give any idea that I approve of
that vagrant class who go around from
placo to place ranging their whole life
time perhaps under tbo auspices of
somo benevolent or philanthropic socle
ty, quartering themselves on Christian
families, with a great pilo of trunks in
the hall and carpetbag portentous of
tarrying. Thero is many a country par
sonago that looks out week by week
upon the ominous arrival of wagon with
creaking wheel and lank horse and di
lapidated driver, come under tho aus
pices of some charitable institution to
spend a few weeks uud canvass the
neighborhood. Let no such religious
tramps take advantage of this beautiful
virtue of Christian hospitality. a ;
GRACES OP U09FITALrrV.
Not so much the sumptuousness of
your diet and the regality of your abode
will impress the friend' or the stronger
that steps across your threshold as the
warmth of yonr greeting, the informal
ity of your reception, the reiteration by
grasp and by look and by a thousand
attentions, insignificant attentions, of
your earnestness of welcome. There
will be high appreciation of your wel
come, although you have nothing but
the brazen candlestick and the plain
.chair to offer Elisha when he comes to
Bhnnem.
Host beautiful is this grace of hospital
ity when shown in the house of God. I
am thankful that I am pastor of a church
vrhera strnneera are always welcome.
and there is not a state in the Union in
which I have not beard the affability of
the usher of our church complimented.
But I have entered churches where there
was no hospitality. A gtranger would
stand in tho vestibule for awhile and
then make pilgrimage up the long aisle.
No door opened to him until, flushed
and excited and embarrassed, be started
backagain, and coming to some half filled
pew-witb apologetio air entered it, while
pew-mtr apoiogeuo air eniereu u, vwuo - - --- , . , M iamuy vwm " "J"" . ' Cil
the occupoiu jdaredon Mm with a look "Mr, TAimage. TJJJJ JS , tber, J, O.Lord, I JJ y cUI-5?bteb-m6dtottytWeU,UImot,Iy(m
W about to fm ti JOTOW - ..,
. ,!. .. .. NwA,..wr-'V.fl..1at1 t1
must." Away with such nccursed in
decency from tho house of Godl Let
every church that would maintain largo
Christian iufiuenco in community cul
ture Sabbath by Sabbath this beautiful
graco of Christian hospitality.
A good man traveling in the far west,
in the wilderness, was overtaken by
night and storm, and ho put in at a
cabin. He saw firearms olong tho beams
of the cabin, and he felt alarmed. He
did'not know but that he had fallen into
a den of thieves. He sat thero greatly
perturbed. After awhilo tho man of
tho house camo home with a gun on his
shoulder and set it down in a corner.
Tho stranger was still moro alarmed.
After awhile the man of the houso
whispered with his wife, and the stran
ger thought his destruction was being
planned.
Then tho man. of tho houso came for
ward and said to the stranger: "Stran
ger, we are a rough and rudo people out
here, and we work hard for a living. We
make our living by hunting, and when
we come to tho nightfall we are tired,
and we are apt to go to bed early, and
before retiring wo are always in the hab
it? of reading a chapter from the word
of God and making a prayer. If you
don't like such things, if you will just
step outside tho door until we get
through I'll fie greatly obliged to you."
Of .course tho stranger tarried in the
, and, the old hunter took hold of
room,
the horns of the altar and brought down
the blessing of God upon his household
and upon the stranger within their gates.
Rude but glorious Christian hospitality It
WELCOME GODB MESSENGER.
Again, this woman in my text was
great in her kindness toward God's mes- J
senger. Elisha may have been a stran-'
ger in that household, but as she found
out he had cOmo on a divino mission he
was cordially welcome. Wo have a
great many books in our day about the
hardships of ministers and tho trials of
Christian ministers'. I wish somebody
would write a book about the joys of
thi Christian minister about tho sym
pathies all around him, about the kind-.
nesses, about the genial considerations
of him.
Does sorrow come to our home and is
thero a shadow on the cradle, there are
hundreds of hands to help, and many
who weary not through the long night
watching, and hundreds of prayers go
ing up that God would restore tho sick.
Is there a burning, brimming cup of ca
lamity placed on tho pastor's table, are
there not many' to help him to drink of
that cup and who will not be comforted
because ho is stricken? Oh, for some
body to write a book about the rewards
of the Christian minister about his sur
roundings of Christian sympathy!
This woman of tho text was only a
type of thousands of men and women
who come down from tho mansion and
from tho cot to do kindness to the Lord's
servants. I suppose the men of Shunem
had to pay the bills, but it was the large
hearted Christian sympathies of the
women of Shunem that looked after the
Lord's messenger!
Again, this woman in the text was
great in her behavior under trouble.
Her only son had died on her lap. A
very bright light went out in that house
hold. The sacred writer puts it very
tersely when ho says, "He eat on her
the writer goes on to say that she ex
knees until noon, and then hodied." Yet
claimed, "It is well!" Great in prosper
ity, this woman was great in trouble.
THE SAHARA OP SORROW.
Where are the feet that have not been
blistered on tho hot sands of this great
Sahara? Where are the shoulders that
have not been bent under the burden of
gneff Where is tno snip sauing over
glassy sea that has not after awhile been
caught in a cyclone? Wherp is the gar
den of oarthjy comfort but trouble hath
hitched upjts fiery and panting team and
gone through it with burning plowshare
of disaster? Under the pelting of ages
of suffering tho great heart of the world
has burst with woe.
Navigators tell us about thoriver3, and
the Amazon and tho Danubo and the
Mississippi have been explored, but who
can tell the depth or length of tho great
river of sorrow made up of tears and
blood rolling through all lands and all
ages, bearing the wreck of families and
of communities and of empires foam-t
ing, writhing, boiling with tho agonies
of 6,WXJ years? Etna and Cotopaxi and
Vesuvius havo been described, but who
has ever sketched tho volcano of suffer
ing retching up from its depths the lava
and the scoria and pouring them down
the sides to whelm thonations? Oh, .if I
could gather all tho heartstrings, the
broken heartstrings, iuto a harp I would
play on it a dirgo such as was never
Bounded.
Mycologists tell us of Gorgon and
Centaur and Titan, and geologists tell us
of extinct species of monsters, but great
er than Gordon or megatherium, and
not belonging to the realm of fable, aud
not of an extinct species, is a monster
with iron jaw and iron hoofs walking
across tho nations, and history and po
etry and sculpture, in their attempt to
sketch it and describe it, have seemed to
sweat great dro- of blood.
CHRISTIAN rOETITUDE.
' But, thank God, tboro are those who
can conquer as this woman of the text
conquered and say; "Itlswelll Though
ray property be gone, though ray chil
dren be gone, though my boma bo broken
up, though my health bo sacrificed, it is
well, it la well!" "There Is no storm on
the sea but Christ is ready to tise in the
hinder part of the ship-and hush it.
There is no darkness bat the constella
tions of God's eternal love can illumine
it. and though tho winter comes out of
tho northern sky you have sometime
teen the northern sky all ablaze with
auroras that seem to Bays "Come np this
wav. Un this way are thrones of light,
and seas of sappliire, and the splendor of
an eternal ucuvcu. w. -y -v.
Wo mrt J'k e sulpi. By tempest be toted
On perilous Ami. t P""1,01.1- ?k .,,.
Though tatan eurace the wind and the tide.
The proraheawure us the Lord will provide.
I beard an echo of my text in a very
dark hour, when my father lay dying,
i 1 l.n..n PAtnA r . WAV "
and the old country minuter aaiu wmu.
iCT3ffJSX( CAJWTAIi tfOimKiAX, MQXt&J&,
death?" He replied and it was tho last
thing ho ever said "I feel well; I feel
very well; all is well," liftirg his hand
In a benediction, a spc-chiess benedic
tion, which I pray God may go down
through all the generations. It is well!
Of courso it was well.
Again, this woman of my toxt was
great in her application to domestic du
ties. Every pictnro is a home picture,
whether sho is entertaining an Elisha, or
whether sho is giving careful attention
to her sick boy, or whether she is appeal
ing for the restoration of her property
every pictnro in her caso is a homo pic
ture. Those are not disciples of this
Shunemite woman who, going out to at
tend to outside charities, neglect tho duty
"of home tho duty of wife, of mother, of
daughter. No faithfulness in public ben
efaction can ever atouo for domestic neg
ligence. Thero has been many a mother who
by iudefatigablo toil has reared a large
family of children, equipping them for
the duties of life with good manners and
large intelligence and Christian princi
ple, starting them out, who has done
more for tho world than many another
woman whoso name has sounded through
all the lands and through ail centuries.
I remember when Kossuth was in this
country thero wore soma ladles who goi
reputation, honorableireputaion, bytpre
senting him very gracefully with' bou-
quets of flowers on publio occaslons.-but
wma was uu lui umuttfuu )M '""
work of tho plain Hungarian mother
who gave to truth and .civilization ,and
tho cause of universal liberty a .Kossuth?
Yes, this woman of my text was great in
her simplicity.
HUMILITY.
When tho prophet wanted to reward her
for her hospitality by asking Bomo pref
erment from the king, what did4 she
say? She declined it. Sho said: "I dwell
among my own people," as much as to
say: "I am satisfied with my lot. -All I
want is my family and my friends arpund
me. I dwell among my own people." Oh,
what a rebuke to the strife for precedence
in all ages!
I How many thpre are who want to get
great architecture and homes furnished
' with all art, all painting, all statuary,
who have not enough taste to distinguish
between gothio and byzantine, and who
could not tell a figure in plaster of paris
from Palmer's "White Captive," and
would not know a boy's penciling from
Bierstadt's "Yqsemite" men whq buy
large libraries by the square foot, buying
these libraries when they havo hardly
enough education to pick out thBiday of
tho almanac! Oh, how many there are
striving to havo things as well as their
neighbors, or better than thplr neigh
bors, and in the struggle vast fortunes
are exhausted and business firms thrown
into bankruptcy, and inen of reputed
honesty rush into astounding forgeries.
i Of course I say nothing against lefine
ment or culture. Splendor of abodo,
sumptuousness of diet, lavishness in art,
neatness in apparel thero is nothing
against thomJn the BlblQ or out of the
Bible. God does not want us to prefer
mud hovel to English cottage, or un
tanned sheepskin to French broadcloth,
or husks to pineapple, or the clumsiness
of a boor to the manners of a gentleman.
God, who strung the beach with tinted
shell and tho grass of the field with the
dews of the night and hath exquisitely
tinged morning cloud and robin red
breast, wants ns to keep our eye open Xo
all beautiful sights, and our ear open to
all beautiful cadences, and our heart
open to all elovating sentiments. But
what I want to impress upon you is that
you ought not to inventory the luxuries
nf lira do orrtnnir rlio fnlianAncamoa nnri
ou on bt not to deprecint0 this woman
f the wh0( when offored jjy
preferment) responded, "I dwell among
my own people."
WOMAN'8 DEBT TO CHRISTIANITY.
Yea, this woman of tho text was great
in her piety, faith in God, and, s)ie was
not oshamod to talk about it before idol
aters. All, woman will never appreciate
what she owes to Christianity until she
knpws and sees the degradation of her
sex undor paganism and Mohammedan
ism. Her very birth considered a mis
fortune. Sold like cattle in tho sham
bles. Slavo of all work, and at last her
body fuel for thofuneraLpyroof her hus
band. AboYO the shriek of tho fire worship
ers in India and above the rumbling of
the juggernauts I hoar the million
voiced groan of wronged, insulted, bro
ken hearted, downtrodden woman. Her
tears have fallen in tho Nilo and Tigris
and tho La Plata and on the steppes of
of Tartary. She has been dishonored in
Turkish garden and Persian palace and
Spanish Alhambra. Her little ones
have been sacrificed in tho Ganges.
There is not a groan, or a dungeon, or un
island, or a mountain, or a river, or
sea but could tell a story of tho outrages
heaped upon her.
But, thanks to God, this glorious Chris
tianity comes forth, and all tho chains of
this vassalage are snapped, and she rises
np from ignominy to exalted sphere and
becomes tbo affectionate daughter, the
gentle wife, the houorod mother, tbq
useful Christian. Oh, if Christianity lias
done so much for woman, surely woman
will become its most ardent advocate
and its sublimest exemplification!
When I come to speak of womanly in
fluence, my mind always wanders off to
one model the aged ono who, 27 years
ago, we put away for the resurrection.
About 87 years ago, and jnit before their
marriage day, my father and mother
stood up in the old meeting houBeat
Somerville, N. J., and took upon thorn
th vows of the Christian. Through a
long life of vicissitude she lived harm
ipg-iy and usefully and came to hetend
jn peace. No child of want ever cama
to her door and was turned empty away,
. jj0 one jn sorrow came to her but was
comforted. No one asked her tho way
( to be saved but she jointed him to tho
crow, xi pen tne anget ui me ww w
neighbor's dwelling, she was there to re
joice at tbestarting of another immortal
spirit. When tho angel of death came to
a neighbor'B dwelling, eho was there to
robe the departed for the burial.
We lad often beard her, when leading
. .. : . ii .-. ,A M
family prayers in the abwnce or my
-Wt
wfKl&Um WlwWMM
dren Wealth or lionor, but I do ask that
they all may be the subjocts Of thy com
fortius Kraool" Her It children brought
into tho kingdom of God, she had but
ono moro wish, and that was that sho
might seo her long absent missionary
son, and when tho ship from China an
chored in New York harbor and tho long
absent ono passed over tho threshold of
his paternal homo sho said, "Now, Lord,
letyest thou thy servant depart in peace,
for mino pyes havo soen thy salvation."
Tho prayer was soon answered.
It was aii autumnal day when wo gath
ered from afar and found only tho house
from which the eoul had fled forever.
Sho looked very natural, the hands very
much as when they wero employed in
kindness for her children. Whatever else
wo forgot, wo novor forgot tho look of
mother's hands. As wo stood thero by
tho casket wo could not help but soy,
"Don't she look beautiful?" It was a
cloudless day when, with lieavy hearts,
wo carried her out to tho last resting
place. Tho withered leaves crumbled
under hoof and wheel as we passed, and
tho sun shone on the Raritan river until
it looked like fire; but more calm and
beautiful and radiant was the setting
sun of that aged pilgrim's life. No moro
toil, no moro tears, no moro sickness, no
more death. Dear mother! Beautiful
mqthert
Sweet Is tho slumber beneath the sod,
While the pare spirit rests with God.
J need npt go back and show you 2Jeq
obia or Semiramis pr Isabella, or ovpn
the wopaan pf the text as wonders of
womanly excellence or greafnes3 when
I in this moment, point to your own pic
ture gallery of memory, and show ypu
tho ono face that you remember so woll,
apd arouse all your holy rpminiscences,
apd start ypu in new consecration to
God by tho pronunciation of, tW tender,
beautiful, glorious word, "Mother, moth
erl" Sir. Robert Cieck For a Cent.
A few da.ys ago r ptory was published,
of a check for 4 cents drawn on a Now
York national bank and posted as a curi
osity in the office of a hpavy broker in
Wall street. T. P. Roberts of this city
has a draft which as a curiosity out
ranks tho 4 cent check and is on a par
with tho famous Bank of England note,
for a penny.
From 1880 to 1888 Mr. Roberts was
postmaster at Hazen, N. D.,'and on Jan,
1, 1891, in settlement of his final account
with tho authorities at Washington, o
received ,a draft on the postmaster at
Chicago for 1 cent and signed an impos
ing formal-receipt, which was sent back
to Washington. Tho draft was in tho
usual form, and tho paper on which ty
was engraved must have boon worh
nearly tys face value. Checkmarks uppn
it showed that it' had passed through
many hands, nd ,)t boro tho signatures
of those high ip authority.
A careful computation shows that the
issuing of that draft for 1 cent cost the
postofuco.dopartmQnt in time and woges
at leofltJjM. ' Mr. Robeits has been of
fered $20 for it as a curiosity, but says
ho won't part with it for several times
that sum. Somo time after he got
tho draft Mr. Roberts received a notifi
cation from Washington that unless it
was presented within six months it
would not be paid without renewal, but
ho never has been reduced to such finan
cial straits that ho was compelled to
havo it cashed.
So it will remain outstanding, to bn
carried on and on in the books of the
departmqnt, causing profanity among
tho clerks who are making up the bal
ances and jnqqiring cpmments by now
sets of officials who como into office with
tho changes of government. Mr. Rob
erta, will .continue to be a creditor of tho
federal government in the sura pf 1 cent.
Posp Robos Moon.
A Frlvnto Hoof (tardea.
Those who find tho city hot, dusty and
Intolerable havo probably never spent an
afternoon or evening amid the many
"roof gardpus" that are really tho sum
mer quarters of nunierous Bostonjans.
Ono pf theao gardens was recently visited
when tho rays of tho western eun wero
the longest. Thero, under a wide spread
ing awning the hammocks swung, and
steamer chajra wjtb head nnd foot rests
were most invitingly scattered abpnt.
There was a little table covered with
novels, and stacks of papers wero weight
ed down with souvenir stones that told
stories about Block island, Noya Bcotia,
Montana and Colorado, Another lltflo
table was well suppliod with delicious
drinks and dainty edibles. Around the
edge of thlsaerial abodo boxes of flowers
bloomed in profusipn.
There were quantities of sweet peas of
every hue, and tho qhimnoy was covered
with a trellis of scarlet runners. Bache
lor's buttons gayly flirted with tho mod
est pausies. Thero wero gorgeous nas
turtiums and a long box of mountain
ferns; also u clump of morning glories
that had climbed skyward to tho top of
tho trellis. But it is at evening that tho
roof garden s pleasantest, especially
when lighted by the moon and when dis
tance lends enchantment to the numer
ous street bands, Boston Courier.
Itoard on Mlululypl Kteniners.
Thp grat Isshisijipi, steamers wliich
need to run us 'far as New Orleans and
the accommodation, on board, which was
simply magnificent, had ceated to ply
when the war, Wftke out, but pn pumer
ous occasions I fffnn able to avail myself
of tho elegant comforts to bo found on
board a river steamer. Tho iaroon
board the American steamers I always
found plentiful in quantity and tolera
ble in quality; still it must be admitted
that there were many stock jokes cur
rent as to tho nieugerncss of the pro
visions supplied by the steamship com
pany to their guwts, and uraong these
was a story about Baraum, who, de
manding once a beefcteak at supper, had
handed over his shoulder by the negro
waiter a piece of rather thin and cer
tainly overgrilled flesh, which he de
scribed as resembling In form and color
an Etldop's ear. 'That's what I mean,"
quoth the great .showman; "bring ma
loroe." He professed to regard tbo
Ethlop's ear as only a sample of the
tteakt&at HM to. opme, G, A, Sal I
London Telegraffa,
ATG-T78T 2t,18M.
BALD
WJmt Is 4'ip rendition
harsh, brhllc? Dot
lifeless nppcarar'cc t Docs it fall out when combed or
brushed ? Is It full of, dandruff? Does your scalp Itch ? ,
Is it dry or In a lieatcd conditidn ? If these an) somo of
yoursymptori!tboVarnedhiVmoojyou,wHlb5Com8ald. J
SKookiiinEoot Hair Grower j
Sw))
SI
IsvhntrotiiiiwL III
research. Knowledge ot tl
err ot how to treat tbcm, "Skooknm "contains neitbsr minerals
IsnotaDre.DatndellsnttnlircdnliiurAnd refreshing Tenia. Br
the rpUlclcv it ttopt falling
Sir Keen the icalp clMB.hcaUhr. imd free from lrrltatlnsrupt!otis,lir
t no ujo of SlooJhim akin ioap. It destroy! pareunia iucl, which tea o
and dmtroi the hair. T
If your druxcUt cannot rapplr TOU tend direct to ns, and we will forward
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W'W
THE SKOOKUn
Tnr. JtABJE
." JttaMmd.
wm7f
T.gJ. KRISS.
HOUSE PAINTING,
PAPER HANGING,
Natural Wood Finishing,
Cor, 90th and Ohemeieta Street,
Geo. Fondrich,
CASH MARKET
Beat meat and free delivery.
136 Ma,to Street.
!l',",f. '11 I 1 , I I
VWY E88IQNAI4 AU D BUSINESS OABDS.
P. H. B'AKCY.
OBO. a. BINGHAM.
TVAIiaY & BINO.HAM. Attorneys at iw,
U Booms 1, 3 and , B'Aroy Building, Ui
State street. Special attention given to busl
new in the supreme, and clrcuAt courta o. t ue
state. "
R
l. B0I9E, Atlornty at law, Salem, Ore
iron. Office CTt Uommprolal street.
TTLMON FORD, Attorney at law, Falern,
Oregon. Offlco up sUlrs n PtU) P(ocft
a
.T. HinriKli. Alliinev at law.Halera. Ore-,
, gon. omce over uusn's pana
T J.BHAW.M.W..HUNT.. 8AWUUNT
l . Attorneys .at law. Offlco over Capital
National bank, Halom, Oregon.
JOHN A. OAIHON, Attorney at law. rooms
Sand 4, Bush bank buildltwttalem.Or,
B. f. BONHAM. W. H. II01A1E8
BQNltAM & ROUMICH. Attorneys at law
Office In Bush block, beU'ecu 'Btate ami
pourt, on Commercial Street.
B. FOCJUE. Htenoeranher and Tipe
, wrUt Best eoulpped typewriting of-
oe but one in Oregon, uver uusu-b Dana,
Balem, Oregon. .
QTEUiA HU.ERMAN.-Typeyrltlne; and
O commercial stenography, mom 11, Gray
block. Urst-clam work. Rates reasonable.
DR. A. DAVId, Late lst Graduate of New
Ynrb dIvm aneninl attention to the dls
eases of women and children, nose, throat,
lungs, itdneys, sbln dtsrases and surgery.
Office at residence, lolHtate Street. Consulta-
won from wvo l a, m. nnu 10 a p. uj. -i-uj
4. MO IT,
piivrtinrxN ANnetmriKON.
Offlce 8I0 Commercial street.ln Eldrldge block,
Residence 470 commercial Bireci.
C? O. BROWNE, M. D., Physician and Hup
O. 6?ob. Offlco, Murpby blouk; residence,
45, Oommfrclat street.
ER.T.O. HMITU, DentUt. V2 State street
Biilom, Oregon. Finished dental opera,
is of every description, rainless opera
tions a specialty.
DU OLiARA M. DA.VIDBON, graduate of
Woman' Medical College, of l'cnnsyl-
vania vjjuco, uuii)-ure;imu jmuuk, nuicw,
si
CORlKKni, DKNTWr, HALKM, ORB
, gon. Offlce hours from Sam to S p. in
F . gon. Offlce hours from nam to o p. in
rymple's store, corner Court and Commercial
streets.
WD. I'UQH, Architect, plans, speclflca.
. ttons and superintendence lor all
ciawes ot buildings, Olllca H0 Commercial
street, up stairs.
PROTECTION LOJXJE NO. 3 A. O. U. W.
Meets In tbolr hall In Htata Insurance
building, every Wednesday evening.
A. W.DENNia, M. W.
J. A. SELWOPD. Recorder.
DR. GUNN'S
ONION
SYRUP
F0M COUGHS
tBLBS
AND CROUP.
GRANDMOTHER'S ADVICE
la rallies' a family of nine atalldraa. ur only
ramadr for Oonslu. Colas and Groap wii onion
Trap. II UlMtaa to-day It wa forty
Stars mo. How my craodaalldraa tak Pr,
ana's Onion Syrop, wfcuh la already prapsrad
and n PUounl fo taatMta, i4rrwbr.
Larsa boltlM 00 aiats. TakanoauDaUluUforlt.
Bold by Bavkett & VnnHlypo.
SYPHILIS!
A New Remedy
A Uu SeaeMo pttitlrt ami pvmamnt llmlnIfa
ef aD pouon froa i!m Hcod, ami s raatorallon of hcaluir
ricor l tb tluuat u btana to tuSatrt tot ttx txtt lima
In s ranted? which fcw Uo uidarfoiag tha moat aavwo
prirala aiptrimanu for am naM Uvm yr. It haa not
r Iai)d, and h will net fafi, It ll aTruo Kcwclfte
far Snhillilc potwa an) all Uod dtmw.. Do you U
Until! lftWuUwicuUMandprooffM. Sb
aniag your tnum wklunwwry ttA othar poiuoa.
TaiartoMdywUl curs you u))o 10 00 days without faB.
W aawoiato S) oar 9 rotund tb aaosMy.
A&bwt
MOFFAT CHEMICAL CO.,
170 Vint stratt reOTUKat, OS.
DR. GUNN'S
mwwvxfi
LIVER
PILLS
A MIL! PHYSIC
ONE PILL FOR A DOSE.
A but amant of tfes taw ate aaab day, la immiry
m aaajia. ? awa puia tuf ply waaa uu Ht
lafcatomalti
aaa iiniuui, vura Jaaaaaana. anami
and alaar tfca CaJila fcatur U
Ma
! ayaa
lataa
aaaaaaiica. Tfcey aat aalldly, awa crlpa aar
taaaa aa otstr pill da. t Manau yeu of ataatr
laarila aaalt aaaaaua f ta. a (uH boa Ma, cla
Bold by MT 4, VaaRyp.
"w T?
k flBsB 1 V VlW VjLay
p
L03 iJ aw
OAS 2l
ssynai niiiaiHaiMwixiaagaeafTMinngiiririitimiMi
11
JLe 4 i
of yours? Is 3our hair dry,
snllt rlt the enda? tins it n -
it
Ion If not so occMont, but the result of relent Ida '
flltranttl of tho hfllr Anil ccaln led tA tlisilUravt I
sicooKnm "contains neitnr ml nersit nor oils.
It I
ialr, cure dundrvjf ant grows 1
sttmulatlnir ,
hair on laid
ROOT HAIR GROWER CO.,
87 Honth Tilth AvenBe, Kerr Yorli, N. V.
Screen Doors
AIJD JOnUINQ.
Morley & Winstanley.
Shop 316 nigh street.
J. E. MUItPHY. .
iek afld'Tile-
inoimi saiam.
J. L.ASHBY.
Take JCt
HVPNQ JOURffAL,
Only 3 cents a day delivered at
your d,oor, '
Meat Market,
BQS.Commerolal Street.
Good mnajU, Prompt delivery.
1)(1 HcKillep,
JOHN .C. MARTIN,
Horseshoeing,
Leave order at Salem Im
provement Co.. 05 8tte street.
7
Stato Street, - -
J. H. HAAS,
THE WATOHMAK.EB,
2H CoijBisreJtl St . St'm, Oregon,
(Next door to Klein's.)1
Specialty of Spectacles, and repairing Hlooks.
Watohiw and Jewolrr ,rr
Smith Premier Typewriter.
Sold on easy payments. For Rent.
W. I. STALEY, Agent, Salem.
H.N.I!URrKE,ClonM Agent, lOltl'tilrd BU
I'ortlnnd. Bend forlcatnlogne.
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 SHOE noTVik,
Do yes mt tham7 Whti next In need try a pk..
mtz jn ins wnq
5.0D
43.06
4.0
,2.Si5
3.5B
2.50
2.28
2.0B
fMUBJCC
$2.00
1.7
ran boys
41.75
2.00
I
If yeuwint sfln DRESS SHOE, mids Inths Utstt
ilylM, don't pay $0 to $8, try my $3, $3.50, $4.00 or
$5 Shoe, Thty M equal to cuitom mads nd look arid
wttr u will. If you Wish to sconomlfo In your footwtsr,
do to by purchasing W L. Douglai Shoes. Nam tM
pries lUmptd on the bottom, look for It when you buy
W. t. VOVatJLB, Brockton, Haas. Sold by
Khaubsb linos.
HOWARD,
The House Mover.
451 Marlon Street.
Has the best facilities tor moving- and rata
Injf bouses. Lieave orders at Uray Ilros., or
aa areas raiem, vrpjun.
From Termini! or loltrio.' Points (ho
Is the line to;take
To all Points East and South,
It Is the dining car rente. Itruns ttirongb
restlbale trains; every day Intlieyeartu
ST. PAUL AND CHICAGO
(No change of cars.)
Composed of dining cars unsuraaased,
inUman drawing room sleeper
OFlatrst equipment
TOURIST
Sleeping Cars.
Best that can be constructed and tn which
acoommodatluru are both tree and fur.
alshed for holders ot first and iteond-caaa
ckets,asd
ELEGANT DAY CX)ACHKS.
Aoontlnnots line eonafljtlng; with all
lines. aBordlui direct and luiluterruptod
Mrvloo.
l'ulluian slier a nzrr lions can be so
oared ta adTC vi flT - any aeut of
thoroad.
In AmerVa, Ualand and Kurorw ran
TBTOUca ucxeis 10 ana irora m inunis
AnaaAna. Knaland and Kuropo ran be
paroaasedatauy Uokot ot ouhl onm.
parw
tea 11 v
ITuU Infonnatlon enneerntnr rata, tlmf
oflralnf,roaiteaudotlirdtaIUfufnlib4
0,,vUm.pnyoa1!0of.
AulsUnt Uaneral emtai,t AifQt, Mo,
IM Vint street, aw. WaWn;l'PtV
assMi1"
stmv t,
K.ssHskJ
for ilhfi MBLufk.
n 1 AKStLjMic
- - - "
"'- " "
-Electric Lights
On Meter System.
TO CONSUMERS :
Tho Bolem Light and Power Company at
great ezpente Cave equipped their leetrM
Llgbt plant with them Ml modern apparatos
and are now able 10 ofler the publio a better
light than -any ayntem. and fit a rats lorrcr
than any city on the coast.
Arc and Incandescent, Light
tag. Electric JKetfcrs ir H
purposes where pwor is re
quired. Bo'ldeuccicanbn wired for as many lights
As desired arid tho oouHumera pay for only
such llehta ns are need. This being registered
by an Electric Meter. Office
179 Commercial St.
Freshr
News-Paoers-r
Fruits-
and Candies.
J. L BENNETT k SON.g
P. O. Blofalc
T. W. TH0RNBURG,
The Upholsterer,
Remodels, recovers and repairs
BTjAOKBMITHTOO. upholstered fnrnltnre. First-
1 class wotlL. Ghenieketa street,
Balem state insurance bicefc.
FOE SALE.
On easy terms and cheap. A 10 acre orchard
on Bunny Bide Nn. ono. 8 miles south
of Salem.
MO-m-dw JOHN 11AIIT.
Deutscher Advocat.
P0ST0FFICE BLOCK, - - SALEM, CR.
Admitted to practice In all toe courta. "J
Special attention given to German speak
nir
lats oOlcea.
ik puuine nuu uiiBinens at
the countv and
. UOKEB, tjoUry I'ubllc,
The Yaquina Route,
GfflC B. fi.
iiid Oregon Ilovelopment company's steam
hip lino. 223 miles shorter, in hours leas
.Imn than liy any other route. First claes
hrough panHoncer and freight line from
Portland and all lolnta In the Willamette
valley to and fromllan Francisco.
T1MK BOUKDULK, (Eicopt Bunday.)
f.v Albany.l:00 p m I Lv OorvnUIl:40 p m
Kr Yaanlnafi:KO p m Lv Yaquina .M a m
Uv Corvallls.lOiSQ am Ar Albany 11:10a ns
O. A O. trains connect at Albany and Cor
vallls.
The above trains connect at Yaquina with
the Orreon Development Co.' line of team
era between Yaquina and Ban Francisco.
M. II I'ossengers from Portland and all
Willamette valley points ran make close oon
nt-ctlon with the trams of the Yuquina Koute
it Albany or OorvallU und If destined to Ban
(Francisco should arrnn t to arrive at Yaquina
the evening befcrn datoof sailing.
I'Dtu'eagor and Pielght Kutia nlwayrtha
nwmt For Information apply to Messrs.
UUL.MAN AUo., Krtlght and Ticket AgeaU
MO and 202 Front street, Portland, Or., or
O U. HOUUK. Ao'tOeu'l Ft. A Pom. Agt
Or. Pacino H. 11 Oo . OorvaUls, Or.
C, II, HAHWKLL, Jr., Oen'l Freight and
rass. Ag. ure twToiopraon. uo.,
X04 Montgomery Bt
East and South
-VIA-
THE SHASTA ROUTE
of the
Southern Pacific Company.
PAuroitNM. jexriiEaa train kuk sait.y bk-
TWBIJ I-OUT1.AWD AMD B. V,
"Houtll.
I rtnrtli.
u la pi ra.
ihUJp.nt.
10:15 a.m.
I.v. Jfortlaud Ar.
tiV. Balem IjV.
Ar. Han Fran. Lv.
8:'ia. in
S:a.Bt
7:00 p.
Above trulna stop at all stations north of
Albany.
""" KOBKHUUOMAlr. PA11.V,
&30 a.m.TLvi Portland
11:17 a, in I Lv. halem
"iM p. ra. I Ar. Itoseburs
ArTT
Lr.'j
1.B0 p. UU
l;0p..
7.-00a. w
'Dining ar oh OgdcH Ront
PULLMAN BDKFET SLEBPERS
AND .
Second Class Sleeping Car
Attached to all through trains.
MM WimUmi FiHtui
uri (kraSi.:
PAILY-(KXCKJ-T SUJtBAIf).
.1 J
"Portland
norvallls
Ar,
Lv,
'. 0-Jip.lM.
'. I U0p.m.
Ufcia p. m. Ar,
At Albany and Oorvallts eonaaot
with
train of Oregon Partite Railroad.
KXrUKMMTUAIM (PAII.'r KKUKIfTaUrlUAY
4.o p. m. TEv. Tbrflan ArTTiiii mi
7:24 p. in. I Ar. MnMtnnvlU Lv. I MOi,
rsKSI a9afeTTa"iaat rwivaiar SJf'VJ'ail
To all points la tbo Kaatorn tUU. fJauada
and Kuiop" can be ototelned a krwest rata)
from w, W. MKlNMstig Antt, Haloca.
r KJ'.KOOKJ!. AMUH..JdPas,Ac't
K, XOKHLKK. Hassoar
WISCONSIN CENTRAL UW.
(Kortharn Ple R. R. C., la)
LATEST TIME CARD,
Two Through TrI IWJjr,
,i'ti,.imiiri.'iTi ' wja,.i,ii.g-fajra"- -
Iit5pill SaSpm lMtHB-S V.40MI Mb)
lAi'.piu 7:pm I riruLa. WMasn ap
vuttutu toni L.i)iotiia il.iOKMi ri
1 iSptn 7.06pm I , Aabbusd. a Mtmm AJH
7.iatn 10-fam a-.CIilaso.l Mstyaa U.etj
1 ,, .i.iiii. 1 11 Ti j "11, i,.m j- ".
Ttrkettsold and Ihmish efefctkatl thrausi.
to all points in the UaTTaJlslalM aad Uaaiifa
UwA oaaeuo sum iOUmto wi 1ft
trains sola Kast and Mattlk.
KorlulllnftjrmsAiiMi awpiy to your nw I
W,PaM,w4TaU,AV,0Utrirj