Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1893-1895 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1893)
' ' L ELOQUENT SERMON BY THE GREAT BROOKLYN PREACHER. A Beply to the Query, "What la the ChurchT" It Should no a Great, Prac tical, Homely, Omnipotent Help The Dullness of Worship. Brooklyn, Oct. 15. Tho character of tho hymnB given out by Rev. Dr. Tal mage in the Brooklyn Tabernacle this forenoon called for thotinnsual power of congregational singing. Organ and cornet and tho voices of tho thousands of worshipers mado the placo resound with runaiCf Tho subject was "Helpful Churches," the text' being Psalms xs, 2, "Send theo help from tho sanctuary." If you should ask CO men what the church is, they would give you CO differ ent answers. One man would say, "It is a convention of hypocrites." Another, "It is an assembly of people who feel them halves a great deal better than others," Another, "It is noplace for gossip, where wolvm-ine dispositions devour each oth er." f Another, "It is a place for (he cul tivation or superstition and' cant." An other, "It is nn arsenal where theologians go to get pikes and muskets and shot." Another, "It is an art gallery, wheromen go to admire grand arches, and exquisite fiSScO, and musical warble, and the Dantesquo in gloomy imagery." An other man would say: "It is tho best place on earth except my own homo. If I forget thee, 0 Jerusalem I let my right hand forget her cunning." Now, my friends, whatever tho church is, my text tells you what it ought to bo agieat. practical, homely, omnipotent help. "Send thee help from the sanctu ary." Tho pew ought to yield restfulness to the body. The color of the upholstery ought to yield pleasure to tho eye. The entire service ought to yield strength for tho moil and struggle of everyday life. Tho Sabbath ought to bo harnessed to all the six days of the week, drawing them in the right direction. The church ought to be a magnet, visibly and mightily affecting all the homes of the worshipers. Every man gets roughly jostled, gets abused, gets cut, gets in sulted, gets slighted, gets exasperated. By the time tho Sabbath conies he has an accumulation of six days of annoy ance, and thai is a starveling church seivice which has not strength enough to take that accumulated annoyauce and hurl it into perdition. The businessman sits down in church headachey from tho week's engagements. Perhaps he wishes he had tarried at homo on the lounge with the newspapers and the slippers. That man wants to bo cooled off and graciously diverted. Tho first wave of tho religious service ought to dash clear over the hurricane decks and leave him dripping with holy and glad 'and heav tnly emotion. "Send thee help from tho sanctuary." SABBATH BONGS. In tho first place, sanctuary help ought to come from tho music. A woman dy ing in England persisted in singing to the last moment. The attendants tried to persuado her to stop, saying it would exhaust her and mako her disease worse. Sho answered: "I must sing. I am only practicing for tho heavenly choir." Mu sic on earth is a rehearsal for music in heaven. If you and I are going to take part in that great orchestra, it is high time that we wero stringing and thrum ming our harps. They tell us that Thal berg and Gottschalk never would go into a concert until iney nau nrsi in jinvuic rehearsed, although they wero such mas ters of the instrument. And can it be that wo expect to take a part in the great oratorio of heaven, if we do not rehearse here? But I am not speaking of the next world. Sabbath song ought to set all the week to music. Wo want not more har mony, not more artistic expression, but more volume in our church music. Now I am no worshiper of noise, but I believe that if our American churches would, with full heartiness of soul and ful emphasis of voice, sing tho songs of Zion this part of sacred worship would have tenfold more power than It has jiqw. Why not take this part of the sa cred service nnd lift it to where it ought to be? All tho annoyances of life might bo drowned out of that sacred song. Do you tell mo that it is not fashionablo to iug very loudly? Then, I say, away with the fashion. We dam back tho great Mississippi of congregational sing ing and let n few drops of melody tricklo through the dam. I say, take away the dam and let the billows roar on their way to tho oceanic heart of God. Whether it U fashionablo to sing Joudly or not, let us sing with all possible em phasis. We hear a grea.t. deal of tho art of pinging. 'o? musjo ,asyan,entertainment, of inusio as a recreation. It isjiigh time we heard BOinethingof music as a holp a practical belpT, In orderto do this we must only have ft few hymns. New tunes and new hymns every Sunday make poor congregational singing. Fifty hymns are enough for 60 years. Tho Episcopal church prays the same pray ers every Sabbath, and year after year and century after century. For that reason they have the hearty responses. Let us" tako a hint from that fact, and lot us sing the same songs Eibbath after Sabbath. Only in that way can we come to the full force of this exercise. Twen ty thousand years will not wear out the liymns of William Cowper and Charle Wesley and Isaac Watts. Suppose now each person in Una an dien has brought all the annoyances of the last 303 days. Fill this room to 4i, ilin? with Eacred song, and you i ,i,m nnt all those annoyances of the 865 d.n,1yoawou!,dent them ont forever. Organ and cornet are only to marshal the voice. Let be Tolce. fail into ne, and in company and in brigade,, by storm take the db- duracy and rin of the world. If you cannot sing for yourself, sing for others, By trying to give omen. Bw -"? ' -- will bring good cheer to your, own heart. lUkan I rTi-lrtTnTTTr. IICUIUUi - reland- w" T aleged, many year; ago tne peop -- .t.i kA .ft ivAwi fitmilhlnG 'W"VZ vess-elfran on' tho fiver bank and stuck fably Tho J?nomy went oVwn, with laughter a.nd .4-jriSion,.to board the ves sel, when tho vessel gave a braulsido 3ro against tho enemy, and by tho shock was turned luck into tho stream, and all was well. Oh, ye who ure high and dry on tho rocks of melancholy, give a broadsido firoof song against your spiritual ene mies, and by holy rebound you will como out into tho calm waters. If wo want to make onrsclvea happy, wo must make .others happy. "Mythology tells ns of Amphion, who played his lyre un til tho mountains were moved and the walls of Thebes arose, but religion has a mightier story to tell of how Christian song may build whola tomples of eternal joy and lift tho round earth into sympa thy with theskies. I tarried many nights in London, and I used to hear tho bells tho small bolls of tho city striko tho hour of night ono, two. threo, four, and after they were done striking tho hour of night, then the great St. Paul's cathedral would come in to mark tho hours, making all the other sounds seem utterly insignificant as with mighty tongue it announced the hour of the night every stroke an overmastering boom. My friends, it was intended that all the lesser sounds of the world should bo drowned out in tho mighty tongue of congregational song beating against the gates of heaven. Do you know how they mark-tho hours in heaven? Thoy have no clocks, an they have no candles, but a great pendulum of halleluiah swinging across heaven from eternity to eternity. Lft those ref use to sing Who nocr knew our God, But children of tho heavenly king Should speak their jos abroad. nn: DISCOURSE. Again I remark that sanctuary help ought to como from the sermon. Of n thousand people in this or any other audience, how many want sympathetic help? Do yon guess a hundred? Do you guess 000? You have guessed wrong. I will tell you just the proportion. Out of a thousand people in this audience there are just 1,000 who need sympa thotic help. Theso young people want it just as much as the old. The old peo ple sometimes seem to think they have a monopoly of the rheumatism, and the neuralgias, and the headaches, and the physical disorders of tho world. But 1 tell you there are no worse heartaches than aro felt by somo of theo young people. Do you know that much of tho work is done by tho young? Raphael died at 37, Richard III at 33, Gustavus Adolphus died at 88; Innocent III came to his mightiest influence at 87; Cortez con quered Mexico at 80; Don John won Le panto at 25; Grotius was attornoy gen eral at 24, and I have noticed amid all classes of men that somo of tho severest battles and tho toughqst work comes be foro 30. Therefore we must have our sermons and our exhortation in prayer meeting all sympathetic with tho young. And so with these people further on in life. What do these doctors and law yers and merchants and mechanics care about the abstractions of religion? What thoy want is help to bear the whimsical ities of patients, tho browbeating of le gal opponents, the unfairness of cus tomers, who havo plenty of fault finding for every imperfection of handiwork, but no praise for 20 excellences. What does that brain racked, hand blistered man care for Zwingle's "Doctrino of Original Sin," or Augustine's "Anthropology?" You might as well go to a man wno nas the pleurisy and put on his side a plaster made out of Dr. Parr's "Treatise on Medical Jui-'sprudenco." While all of a sermon may not be neip- ful aliko to all if it bo a Christian ser mon preached by a Christian man, th to will be help for every one somewhere We go intq an apothecary store, wo see others being waited on. We no not complain because we do not immediate ly get tho medicine, wo Know our turn will come after awhile. And so, while all parts of a sermon may not bo appro priate to our case, if wo wait prayerfully before the sermon is through wo shall havo the divine prescription. I say to theso young men who come here Sabbath by Sabbath, and who are going to preach the gospel theso theological students I 6ay to them, we want in our sermons not more metaphysics, nor more imagi nation, nor more logic, nor more pro fundity. What we want in our sermons and Christian' exhortations is more sympa thy. When Father Taylor preached in the Sailors' Bethel at Boston, tho jack tars felt that they bad help for their du ties among tho ratlmea and the forecas . wiiKn Richard Weaver preached t ihn niwratives in Oldham, England, all the wonkingmen felt they had more m-nr.fi for the swindles. When Dr. South preached to kings and princes and pnu cesses, all the mighty men and women who heard him felt preparation for their high station. NECESSITY FOR IltAYEB. Again I remark that sanctuary help ought to como through the prayers of nil tho people. The door of the eternal storehouse is hung on pne lunge a gold binge, the hinge of prayer and when the whole audience lay horn oi tnavuuu.,.- 0r u are mere to iui uoj, must come open. There are hero many My bearer, when you have fought people spending their first Sabbath after nr jMt jttlo with rin and, death and Borne great bereavement. What will heU ami they have been routqd Ja the your prayer do for them? How will it confliCt, it will bo a joy worthy of cele- help the tcmb in that man's heart? Here bration. You will fly to the city and are people who have not been iu church cry .-victory!" and drop at the feet of before for 10 years. What will your pray- th9 0reat King. Then the palra branch er do for them by rolling over their soul of the Mrthiy race vrill be planted, to be holy inemorie? . come the outreacbing tree of everlasting Here are people in crises of awful temp tation. They are on we verge oi uen """ "' " , An rnr them this wild blundering or men or bujcjuc, horning in the way of giving thein "Storwtali Will you bo chisfly '" about the fit of the glove that "Hut to vonr forehead while you yon Wi ci,lefly criucai 0f P3 rhetoncof thepMto.'ilitioii JSo. the rnewn i ,hat . u for me," aa at eve ry " " Prayer , a. " - m sin ought to cm W Un and f-wiof ddlvtiancaongM to wanuua IvoirtmrnMU. Inmost or our enures. their trumpets. In meat i we have three prayers the opening prayer, what is called tho "lonj prayer," and tho closiug praj or. ' There aro many people who spend tho first prn ar in arran iu r their apparel after entrance, and spond tho second prayer 'he "long prayer" in wishing it were through, nnd spend the last prayer in preparing to start for hom. Tho most inMgnificnnt part of every reli gions service is tho Eennon. Tho more important parts aro tho 'Scripture les son and the prayer. Tho sermon is only a man talking to a man. The Suiptr.re lesson is God talking to man. Pr.tyor li man talking to God. Oh, if wo under stood the grandeur and tho pathos of this exerciso of prayer, instead of being a dull exercise, wo would imagine that tho roont wa3 full of divino and angelic appearances. But, my friends, tho old style of church will not de tho work. Wo might as well now try to take all the passengers from Now York to Buffalo by etago coach, or all the passengers from Albany to Buffa lo by canalboat, or to do all the battling of the world with bow and arrow, as with tho old style of church to meet the exigencies of this day. Unless the church in our day will adapt itself to the time it will becomo extinct. The people read ing nowspapera and books all tho week, in alert, picturesque ana resonnumg stylo, will havo no patience with Sabbath humdrum. Wo havo no objections to bands and surplice and all tho paraphernalia of clerical life, but these things mako no impression make no more impression on tho great masses of tho peoplo than tho ordinary business suit that you wear in Wall street. A tailor cannot mako n a minister. Somo of tho poorest preach ers wear the best clothes, and many -a backwoodsman has dismounted from the saddlebags and in his linen duster preached a sermon that shook earth and heaven with it Christian eloquence. No new cospel, only tho old gospel in a way suited to tho time. Nonew cburch, but a church to bo the asylum, tuo in spiration, tho practical sympathy and tho eternal help of tho people. ciiuncn noons. But while half of tho doors of the church are to bo set open toward this world the other half of tho doors of tho church must bo set open toward tho next. You and I tarry hero only a brief space. Wo want somobody to teach us how to get out of this life at tho right time and in tho right way. bonio tall out of life, some go stumbling out of life, some go groauing out of life, somo go cursing ont of life. Wo want to go singing, rising, rejoicing, triumphing. Wo want half tho doors of tho church sot in that direction. Wo want half tho prayers that way, half tho sermons that way. Wo want to know how' to get ashore from tho tumult of this world into tho land of evorlasting peace. Wo do not want to stand doubting and sniv eling when wo go away from this world. We want our anticipations aroused to tho highest pitch. Wo want to have tho exhilaration of a dying child in England, tho father tell ing me the story. When ho said to. her, "Is the path narrow?" sho answered: "Tho pathisnarrow. It is so narrow that I cannot walk arm in arm with Christ, so Jesus goes ahead and ho says, 'Mary, follow.' " Through theso church gates set heavenward how many of your friends and mine iiavo goue? Tho last time they wero out of tho house thoy camo to church. Tho earthly pilgrimage ended at the pillar of pnbllo worship, and then they marched out to a bigger and bright er assemblage. Some of them were so old they could not walk without a cane or two crutches. Now they havo eternal juvonescence. Or thoy wero so young they could not walk except as tho mater nal hand guided thorn. Now they bound with the hilarities celestial. Tho last time wo saw them they were wasted wuu malarial or pulmonic dis order, but now they havo no fatigue and no difficulty of respiration in tho pure air of heaven. How I wonder when you and I will cross over! Some of you have had about enough of tho thumping and flailing of this life. A draft froth the fountains of heaven would do you good. Complete release, you could stand very well. If you got on tho other sido and and had permission to cprao back, you would not come. Though you were in vited to come back and join your friends on earth, you would say, "No, let me tarry here until they come. I shall not risk going back. If a man reaches heaven , he had better stay there." Oil, I join hands with you this room ing in that uplifted splendor! When the shore g on aflast. Who will count the billows past? In Freybourg, Switzerland, there is tho trnnk of a tree 400 years old. That tree was nlanttd to commemorate an event. Abont 10 miles from the city the Swiss conquered the Burgundians, and a young man wanted to tako the tidings to the city. He took a tret branch and ran with such ep4 tho 10 miles that when he reached Umcjty wav ing tho tree branch he had only Strength to cry. "Victory!" Pn(l dropped dead. The tree branch tliat ho carried was nianfMl. and it crew to be a great tree, 20 feet in circumference, and tho remains rejoicing. ..... .1... I... ..N I.mM, When ihu un " " And p'lr Kote "'l'M Thr bslrk with wlvUfon tlroo AdJ ttreeu of ihfnlos t'olB? gucccMful Women- WelUville. Alleghany conntyjn west, em New York, ha 40 women agricuUur-UU-all succewiul. One has toc farm. One was a liontemaldi her broth er failed on the old bowestad the bad ra &uto red mont-y; ne uooguno" ww - "laSaM,. BW v ,, 7,. ODDS AND ENDS. Forms for thopropa .atlon of frogs are common ill the" Chesapeako region. A profitable business in London is tho manufacture of sermons for nnintellec tual or lazy clergymen. A stranger in a New York restaurant tho other day created excitement by or doririg"and eating five sirloin steaks. 'Tho lato Frederick L. Ames is said to have'been tho owner of tho largest crys tal m existence. It measures 7 inches in diameter. A machine for making tacks was pat ented in 1800, but not put into practical uso until near thcmiddlo of tho century. Now tho world consumes CO.000,000 tacks a day. There is said to bo no successful rem edy for liandrdff, though experiments have been mlldo for 20 years to find ono. Tho best palliative there is is simply good plain soap and warm water. During tho fiscal year ending Juno 80, 1892, 579,003 immigrants arrived in this country, of whom 2,081 camo in viola tion of law hnd were returned to their homes. Of this number 1,703 wero con tract laborers. Human hair varies in thickness from the two-hundred-and-fiftioth to the six hundredth part of an inch. The coarsest fiber1 of -wool is about ono-flve-hundredtu part of an inch in diameter; the finest on ly tho one-thousand-fivc-hundredth part. Arraugemonts havo beon mado by tlio German military authorities on tho first intimation of wnr to instantly cotivey by rail all tho women and children in such largo towns as Metz and Strasbur, as well as smaller places, into Germany. The Chineso doctor's lot is not wholly a happy ono. Four members of tho Im perial College of Physicians nt Pekin failed recently to mako a proper diag nosis of tho emperor's indisposition, and wero punislied by being fined a year's salary. ' Tho will of Esther Pomeroy, which has been filed for probate nt Springfield, Mass., is a peculiar document. It speci fies with great dotail how each articlo of personal property is bequeathed, and even ftives directions to tho executor' to finish quilting a bed quilt that it may be in good condition to givo to a rolative. Thoro aro yet 1,000,000 acres of gov ernment land in Kansas open to settle ment, not a little of which was tramped ovor by trappers in order to tako chances on getting laud in the Cherokoe strip thnt is no better, and in many places is worse, which thoy had to travel farther to reach and which is vory uncortaln property to its possessor. Georgia' Petrifying Sprint;, Thero is a spring in Brooks county, Ga., which in a very short time converts wood and several other substances into hard rock. Tho peculiar qualities of this Georgia fountain havo been known since early in tho contury, when an old "ba'r hunter" accidentally lost his knifo in tho basin which has been hollowed out of tho granite strata by tho ceaseless bub bling of tho water. A month later tho old trapper again repaired to tho spring and was agreeably surprised to find his favorite knife. The water Had had no effect upon tho bright steel, not oven to tho extent of leaving a speck of rust, but with tho wood of tho knife's handle it was far different. Tho petrifying parti cles with which the water is so highly impregnated had entered oyery pbro and sap tube in tho wood, and what was but a few weeks before a hickory hahdlo of "home make" was now wo thin slabs of solid stone, woodliko in nppearanco, but as hard and unyielding as a chip from a granito bowlder. To this day tho place is known as "old Moore's petrifying spring." St. Louis Ropublic. To Imjirorn I'lnater CU. A plaster cast or bas-relief, however beautiful in form, is inartistic on ac count of the disagreeablo effect of tho dead white plaster. This unsightlincss can bo entirely overcome nnd tho statu ette or group in relief mado to look like a piece of old ivory by rubbing tho sur faco with melted wax mixed with an in finitesimal quantity of raw sienna or limber. If well rubbed after it has been waxed, it will tako on a soft polish, nnd tho crude plaster will bo transformed Into a naterial that is qulto delightful jn texture and color. Casts of Barye't lions when treated in this way aro really superb, and a bit of antiquo frieze may be made to look liko tnnrblo mellowed by age. New York Tribune. Hood's Cures Mr, Jennie Cunningham. "I Could Eat Nothing but tery light too, without havln j UrrlbU dUtreii In my itoiauh. lif ore I had Ukea one bottle of Ilood'i I that It U doln m so"- continued to stow blUr while taking ove bottle, and Now I Can Eat Anything, and mi bltli U very mueu Utter man tor Ttar." JUnJowaCwxwaiuJi.Souta Kw Castle. Me- Ifesutatoget Hoed' anaparlll ' HOOD' PiLLS cure Constipation. SI YOU VirLDlTOMI CTO GOT DR. BO-UX-KO-S PILE REMCOY, borbi uaar.eUiirlwbia4r.tMiM PILES vsssisJisisasu Bold by ukU Van Sfype, AAVIVUWVVWAWVVWSrtw I BALD HEAD Z '." k. a "wr tiav wr What is tho condition of yours? Is your fcafr dry, 3 harsh, brittle? Docs it spilt at the ends? Has It a C lifeless appearance? Does It (all out when combed or $ brushed? Is It full of dandruff? Docs your scalpUtch ? Is it dry or In a heated condition ? If tneso are somo of r your symptoms bo warned In timo or you will become bald 5, SkookumRoot Hair Grower It what roa ntA. Iu production U not anVreidtnt, trat th Moult of Klestlfto v rraearch. KdowImm of th err at how to trettbtm. or now to trent ttitm. r it not a uj, out a oeujutruuy the folllolN, it lont faUina the re hcadt. lvn1Tn im mrn 1n. ana tuo ua tl O" rvin&ld pcrjariorortiw. TH3 5KQ0KUrj TRAnnMAttK 87 Bodta '-vvywytf. y Um T. J. Ki Ti HQU8E PAH?Tf,N&, -Brjck ! PAPER BANGING, Natural Wood Finishing, Cor, 30th and ChemekeUt Btreot, Geo, Fondrich, v CASH MARKET Best meat and free delivery. 13G btate Strebt. ' I!ot to Make Strawberry Banco. Half ti teacupful of Imttor, Ij teacup fnls of mignr nnd u pint of stniwbijrrics inashfd until juicy. Canned berries flirty bo used in.ti'.ul of fresh ones, lieat tliu butter i.iul siiRiir to n cream, tlieii stir in tin mi's nnd tho well bcutcu whito of nn fp'rt'. Chill nnd serve with Hteamod or boiled puddiugs. Uow tu Level a Clock. Test it by tlio door of tbo clock. If this swings open or shuts readily, tho clock Is uuuvun If it stays in any posi tion it is put. tbo clock is lcvcL llur to fillvor Ivnry. Put it ill 11 weak Bolution of nitrate of silver, Iceoping It there until it has turned 11 doop yellow. Thou put it in water nnd sot it in tho sun. In ihrco hgurs it will bo black, but tho black can bo rubbed oil and the surfaco of tho ivory changed to brilliant si Ivor. How tu llrnioe Create Spot, i'roui Ground Ola... Wash well with water that has boon boilod and cooled, with an ounce of soda added for each gallon. l.unn ntul Lunacy, A short tlmo beforo Dr. Charcot died ho said in n letter that somiBciontists bad for more than 50 years ridiculed tho idea that the full of tho moon wim a danger ous tlmo for mad people. Bottor in formed nun aro coining back to thnt old time notion, Mild Dr. Charcot, as the re sult of increased learning on tho subject of oarth tides, similar to the oscillation of sea tides. -t.OWHUUUOylJ u uuou OUUvtTJwuUijO" Hair Death. Innlnntly remove, and forever destroy! ob-1 jeenunauie uair, wneiuer upon tne nana., fnw flrmvnr naclr. without dlinnlnr&tlon . .. t . .."". .- . lor Injury to the moil delicate f kin. It fwoaior nfly yoara the leoret 'ormuiaol Kriiimti. wIImoii. ackuowledifed bvtihval ciuua up 1110 uiKucb uuiuurur .um iuo mom eminent dennatolOKlit ana hair im clalut that ever lived. During 111. private practioHoi a nro-iune among the nouiiity ind arl.tocrucy of .huropa be n-eiorlbed ibliruclie. I'rloe, fl by mnlf, canurely packed, t'orrennoudeuce confidential. Holt eniaior Ainerioa. Aaareai Tile SK00KUM ROOT HAIR GROWER '0.X 'epU IU 67H6mh Kllth Avenue.New Vork inornnrvionfnnr pp. loon ooorxwvn , I'HOFJMaiONAL AND IIUSINKSa OAHDS. F. If. D'AHOV. OEO.O.llI.MOHAM. P Suit AllUS A UUlUIlAPli Aliurunj. KV uw. Ilooma 1. 2 and 3. U'Arcy Huliaing. Ml Late street. Bncelnl attention riven to bull- new In the luprcme and circuit court of the tale. 2 11 111LMON FOHI), Attorney at law, Rulem, . Oregon. Oinco upiloln In l'atton block H J. lllOOKIt. Attorney at la w,Halera, Ore gon, unioe over Uuih'a bank 'X. J.BUAW.M.W.JlUm'. HllAWAHUNT l . Aliorner a i taw. unira over uapiuu atlonai bank, riaiem, uregon. JOHN A.OAll-tON, Attorney at law. room and i, iluab bunk building, Halem.Or, ii. K. ilONHAlf! W. H, HOI-MKH. i-tONIIAM A IIOLMKH. Atlornava at law. O oniceln Jluih block, between Blaleand ourt, on txmmerciai atreeu JOHN 11AVHK. A1TOHNKV.AT.1.AVV, uoneciim. uau.ni.u ininiiiuir rruiiiivu, Mnipby block, tor. Hlate ana Oominerolal ireci raiein, urcgnn. viit tiro. ICNIUHTON-Arrblleet and nurerln- YY lendcot. Onice, Ureyman block. rooms ana n iiusn-MW-tl B. 10C" UE, Hlenographtr and Tje- '00 but one in wrlt4st. Ileite'iulppol tyMwrltlngof- Oregon, over uuan'i nana, -tatem, Oregon. iTKLLA HIIKIIMAN.-Typwrllln O ooinmerclal stenography, room II, O ray 1 1 a ri.i.A. n,iribmxi.A v uwwxikiKK wmu block. lr.t-cla wur aim. iwu. rwuuuauiv. - f-vlt A. IIAVH. Lata 11 Oraduata of Maw U Vork, glvea special alieutlon to the dla nMMofwonun and eblldren, pose, throat, lungi, kldueri, ikln dtraa and surgery, Offloe at ralaene,loKUU street. Con.ulla- Urn t rum 9 10 1 a. m and i to S p. m. VXJim ,1 O. ItllOWNK, M. U.. fhysiclan aud Hur. O, uoa. Ottlre, Murpby Lloik) residence, a. o ntixrctai street. DILT U HSIiril, IMotl.l. Vi Btate strett Bileiu, Or eou. Klulsbcd denUI 0era, ions or tytTT description, fatnltas ,opero 1U1M a specialty. I'UiJH. Archied, flan, sptcldce lions and superlnltiidrno (or ah laun o ol bulla cgs. urnee aj uimmercioi tract, upstairs. i.ihuiil' V .TP-I' A JM Hiinntrr ftirnn No. J3 ,wmol Veterans. U. rt A owe a abar- hall Vi.lllng hioihtr are rornlally Invited M attend Ult . U. liuuw, Uapt. PtliltKt'riU.W UlIHlK HO. t A.U.U. W, MMtaln tblr ball la Hut lasurauot ou..d.ng,.very rg u, w J. A- IKLWOQD. Itaoordsr. TInM ANWlBTHOttNTtl.V. CoUMrvaiory iaitlnstruioeuultuusta. Insiruetorof Preach and Owman at Willatnatte Unlytrsll, Moom-7,JanliaJiiU41f. -l-U, 1 1 Hi tkT bi "flA k P. jf t' ft! tr, ) i dlwim ot-UMMianuttuI scalp lw totha dlioor- t'8fcookum"ooDti stookum " coniwin Conner minetau tttr oil. 1 1 cooling ana rerrfininf Tonic 117 itlmuutlnK hair, curt ttundnur and grow hair on bald no. nyitliauutlnK grow kalr en bald fiMkttti. Mil ffoftfWWItvftallnVAmMfvKi1! ROOT HAIR ROWER. CO,, Finn Aveaao, mw Torn, N, y. MURPHY. fTOSbr and Ufe- Newsr nnd CsmHes- NORTIT BALifcM. Take It J - EVENING JOURNAL, Only 2 oenta a day delivered at 1 ryout doom 1 V Wt ' J. I BENNEtTTSON. r. o. r 91 l HOWARD, The House :Mover.' , 451 Marlon Street. iIaatherboat facilities lor moving and rais ins houses, iicave orders at Uray llroa., or UUUrVO C3UUH WBtUBiy From Termisal or Interior Foists the I Is tho line to take To all Points East vSm Itlsthedlnlugcar routa.'ltrum through -veatlbulo trains; every day In the year o ST. PAUL AD' rH ;(No change of can.) Oompoied of dining cars unsurpassed, luUmAa dmwlBg mom sleepers pfiateat equfrmenl TOURIST Sleeping Cars . Uett that can be constructed and In which accotumodatlani are both tree and tar nlshed for holdera of ftret and-seoond-cltH UckeU,and . , t , , , , ELEGANT DAY CQAqHES. Aoontlnuots Use connecting with all lines, aflordlng dlreetiHiid. uninterrupted service. J Pullman slirpa" ''vptlouscan' be so cured in advi,nt v W'-tli, any agent, ol the road. Through tloketa to and from all polnu In America, Kugland and Europe can 1 be purchased at amy itlokei omoadf tUld cum, pauy. , Full Information concerning rule, time of tralBs,routes and other detol Is furnished on application to any arent or A. D. OliAniiTON. Assistant Genera Psawr Agent. Mo, 121 First street, ear. Wa.Ulngton; l'ert- laaa.OreeoB -. ' " t BlrAW & Downinci, Affent. Hotel Monterey. Newport, - Oregon. Located on the Beach, two miles riot t) of Newport on Cave Cove, a beautiful! sheltered spot, wonderful scenery, e bittlilnif, flue drlveb to Capo FoUlweatb or lighthouse. IIouso now, vootca largi aqd airy. Finest resort for famjllt-s or Invalids. Open all winter. Term moderate by day or week. IntetullBp visitors can drop a postal card to New port andibe'roet by hack.' John Fitzpatkicic, d-2-ra Proprietor, SALT LAKE, DENVER, OMAHA, KANSAS CITY, CHICAGO, ST, I9UIS AMD A LI. EASTERN CITIES 3 I DAYS to 2 CHICAGO Hours lh Q4lcket$tiat!),p 0 and Hours 0uickef l!fc nt Kan' Through Pullman and Tourltt Sle-fen, ftt 'Reclining Chair Car'i, Dln'rig Cars, Vorralaa and gsnsral tohWuutlum oJI m or adareM, -. 1 ,.,,, V. It. HUBLUIMT. At. n Y 3M Wsjaiiigvin aV. O-rJl THE PACIFIC PE(?nVBAP(WLE5TING)MJlKAU BAL.ICM, . - Oregon. frlvale work a specialty, ittaraciMW Mill TO "l -"--..ii t ectriG Liffhts 9 t On Metcv System, TO CONSUMERS i Thafcaifra Light nnd Power Oorajwiny at vrt 'Xwn Cave equipped their Klrclno Light pi" nt with the moot tnodrra urrrlB find R'i unvfbla to oner tho rubllo n bcttr leht thntr nnj yicru and nt a rata lower tbaii nay city on tho cnaat. Arc nnd Incandescent Light Ing. Electric Motors for alt purposes where power Is re quired. rleA ledfreacanbo tlrcd or an roan J-lights aa dfMred mid the ODumr pay for only uoh llithts aro nxl. Thla brine reslnteied VI an !; trio A) e tor. Office , 1 I i.-in n ' t 1 n. iy commercial bt, MEATS. nUNT'liiofliiSalcjaBflltkr, Boyi h6 iina not so'd ont hut lniily nuivid hi h'P to the old stand at Liberty utrett bride". David McKillqi, Steam Wood Saw, Leavel orders at Pal em Im provement Co., 5 Btate street. WM PACIFIC RAILROAD CO K, NV. HADLEY, Rcwlver. LSIOUT LIAfE to CALIFORNIA OCEAN STEAMER SAILINGS- a B. WILLAMETTE VALLEY. Leaves San Pranolsco, Oct. 7th. 17lh and 27 h, Oaves Yaqulun.Oot. 2d, 12th,22d and Nov 571 Ii MATKdAI.WA'VH BAIlBKACfTOHT, For freight nnd passenger rates apply to'aiiy rem orpurser of this rompany .. , , It.K,ULOAtiY,aon'ISupt. OTT. WAlli)! AW. T K. A pV. . -O. M. l'OWKUH, Agent, BA'om Deck. . WISCONSIN CENTRAL . LINES (Northim PjcIc R. R, Co., Lmh.) LATEST TIME CARD. Two Through Trains Dally. iKtRpm l&Hrni 025pm 7:lpm l.Mlnnn MOam a-OOam ll.lOHin SUiiam S.00pm &4Spm oxiopm 7.s6pm apm II.Mpm I ,Ktl'aiil.a I Duluth a I . Ashland, n a(;hlcngol jasBam iwprn 7.0Snm l.iSDm 7.1GAm luxam Tickets sold and baggage checked through utallpolnisln tlse.UimetfHUtes and Canada. Clone connection made In Chicago with all rains going East and Hontb, .Kor lull Information apply to your nearest Uckot agent or r JAS. o. P(iM. lien. 1'om. and Tkt. Ant,, oitlcago, ill East and South via THE SHASTA ROUTE of the Southern Pacific Company. OALirOKMZA XXrRKSa TKAIS-KtW DAILY BOW twkk 'roxriaMD amo s. . 'HouthT nT yorthT" r -if-1 u ih& p. m. ICvT Lv, Ar. lortln3T Bnlem Ran Kran. 7f.' Lv. fcOa-M J.iP.m. 6:1.9 a, m Xr. IS ii.m. LV, t.-ujp. m Above trains stop at all sutlons from 'ortiand to Albany inclusive; also at Tangent thedd, .Italsey, llarrliburg. Junction City, Irving, Kugene and all stations fromKowburg o Ashland Inclusive. luiwanumi ma It, daily. an.n. 1:17 a, m 0 p. HI. Lv. LT. Ar. THjftland Ar.l iM) ,m, rwiem LY. 1:40 p, is. LT. 7,-OOa.JB lloaeburg IMMlMg ara oa Ugdcu Koute PDIXMANB0FFET SLEBPpS AND Second Class Sleeping Cars- Attached to all through train. Vest Side DmsicD, Betweci Mind iuilV- (axcsi-r suhpat). UUU.111. Lv. ' Fortluriu," frvnllls Ar. Lv, 65 p. Ill, (! p. m. ar. At Albany and Oirvallls nouoect Vfltu rains nt Oregon I'aoifloltallroad, aui-KJuwruAiN 1 daily ixoanrwijHUAr t:u p. iu. I Lv. ap.m I Ar Iortfan7i Ar, MuMlnnville Lv "S.-'jAaTm 6-W . m THKtVU TICMKTS To all points lu th Kn.ttru Ktates, Canada ad Kuropo ran be nbtulnrd at lovrt rum irom W. W. MK1MNKK, Agent, Halem. K.IMtOUKUtl. At. II. J,aDdia.Au't. K. KOKliLKK, Wausarr ' W. I DOUGLAS S SHOE aJIfUln ev Ml srW WwcHaV H wa 4 1 fM DMtS WML mh U Uh N8;.eWtr4WM,1M,t4.W,4.00 MHM rtMlf w. u Piufsi mm, mm mm trie ttwH 4 1& Wis, mk r H p W W.a WaBW.it. M.nMisi.MHni. Mafbf ' G7 aBBHf f.Baak ssak el cam p with profWons, bnt tea