Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1893-1895, February 07, 1894, DAILY EDITION, Image 3

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A VJSIOX Ol' HEAVEN.
REV. DR. TALMAGE'S ELOQUENT SER
MON AT THE TABERNACLE.
II Dreanis n Marvelous Drenm of IT hitch
anil Describes What He Saw There The
Saints IVhoAroOreat In HeavenNames
Not In tho Directory.
BnooKLVN, Fob. 4. In tho Brooklyn
Tabeninclo this forenoon the hymns, the
Bcrlptu.ro lesson nnd tho prayers, as well
ns tho sonnon, wero about tho fntnro
world moro than about this world.
Rev. Dr. Talmngo took for his subject
'A Vision of Heaven," tho text being
Ezekiel i, 1, "Now it came to pass as
1 was among tho captives by tho river
of Cliebar that the heavens wero oponod
and I saw visions of God."
Expatriated and in far exile on tho
banks of tho river Chobar, an oflluent
of tho Euphrates, sat Ezekiel. It was
lliero he had an immortal dream, and it
js given to us in tho Holy Scriptures.
He dreamed of Tyro and Egypt. Ho
dreamed of Christ and the coming
heaven. This exilo seated by that river
Chebar had a moro wonderful dream
tlmn you or I evei have had or over will
hare seated on tho banks of tho Hudson
or Alabama or Oregon or Thames or Ti
ber or D.inubo.
But we all bavo had memorable
dreams, some of them when wo were
half asleep and half awake, so that wo
did not know whether they wero born
of shadow or sunlight, whothor they
wero thoughts let loose and disarranged
as in slumber, or tho imagination of
faculties awake.
Such a dream I had this morning. It
was about half past 0, and tho day was
breaking. It was a dream of God, a
di earn of heaven. Ezekiel had his dream
on the banks of tho Chebar; I had my
dream not far from tho banks of the
Hudson. Tho most of tho stories of
heaven wero written many centuries
ago, and they tell us how tho place
looked then, or how it will look cen
turies ahead. Would you not like to
know how it looks now? That is what
1 am going to tell you. I was there this
morning. I have just got back. How
1 got into that city of tho sun I know
not. Which of tho 12 gates I entered is
to mo uncertain. But my first rem em -branco
of tho scene is that I stood on
one of tho main avenues, looking this
way and that, lost in raptures, and the
air so full of music and redolence and
laughter and light that I knew not
which street to take, when an angel of
God accosted mo and offered to show
ino tho objects of greatest interest, and
to conduct mo from street to street, and
from mansion to mansion, and from tom
plo to temple, and from wall to wall. 1
said to tho angel, "How long hast thou
been in heaven?" and the answer came,
'Thirty-two years according to tho
earthly calendar."
Thero was a secret about this angel's
name that was not given me, but fiom
tho tenderness nnd sweetness and affec
tion and interest taken in my walk
through heaven, and moro than all in
tho fact of 82 years' residence, the num
ber of years sinco sho ascended, I think
it was my mother. Old ago and decrep
itude and tho tired look were all gone,
but I think it was she. You see, I was
only on a visit to the city nnd had not
jet taken up residence, and I could
know only in janrt.
THE piTDRCU VH HEAVEN.
1 looked in for a Jew moments at tho
great temple. Our brilliant and lovely
Scotch essayist, Mr. Drummond, says
thero is nochbjrch In heaven, but ho did
not look forfit on -the right street.
St. John was right whpn jn his Patmos
ic vision, recorded in tho third chapter
of Rovelation, ho speaks of "tho temple
of my God. " I saw it this morning, the
largest church I evtr saw, as big as all
tho churches and cathedrals of tho earth
put together, and it was thronged. Oh,
what a multitudol I had novor seen so
many people together. All tho audiences
of all tho churches of all tho oarth put
together would make a poor attendanco
compared with that assemblage. Thero
was a fashion in nttiro and headdress
that immediately took my attention.
Tho fashion was white. All in white,
save ope. And tho headdress was a J
garland of roso nnd lily and mignon
ette, mingled with green leaves culled
from tho royal gardens nnd bound to
gether with bands of gold.
And I saw soiuo young men with a
ring on tho finger of tho right hand and
said to my accompanying angel, "Why
those rings on tho fingers of tho right
hands?" and 1 wus told that thoso who
wore them wero prodigal sons nnd once
fed bwine In tho wilderness nnd lived
on husks, bnt they came homo, and tho
rejoicing father said, "Put a ring on
his band."
But I said thero was one exception to
this fashiou of whito pervading all the
auditorium and clear up through all tho
galleries. It was tho attiro of tho ono
who presided in thnt immense temple
the chiefest, tho mightiest, tho loveliest
perbon in all tho place. His cheeks
seemed to be flushed with influite beau
ty, and bin forehead was a morning sky,
and his lips woro eloquenco omnipotent.
But his attire was of deep colors. They
suggested the carnage through which ho
bad passed, nnd I said to my attonding
angel, "What ia that crimson robo that
he wears?" nnd I was told, "They aro
dyed garments from Bozrab,"und "Ho
trod the wiuo press alone."
Soon after I entered this temple they
wgan to chant tho celestial litany. It
was unlike anything I had ever beard
'or sweetness or power, and I have beard
the most of the great organs nnd tho
"lost of the great oratorios. I said to
ny uu'ouipanyiug angel, "Who is that
jaadiug yonder with the harp?" nnd
the answer was, " David!" And I said,
Who is that Bounding that trumpet?"
"Nl theunswer was, "Gabiiel!" And I
jl. Who is that at tho organ?" and
ne answer was, "Hcndell" And tho
SMfe rolled on till it camo to a doxol-
SS extolling Phrlyt Mtneolf u-liannll
the worsbJpera, lower clown and higher I
IIiY Alt..- . ,
-n Mjuusaacj gRUerjw W WU, in
denly dropped on their knees nnd chant
ed. "Worthy is tho Lamb that was
slain." Under tho overpowering har
mony I fell back. I said: "Lot us go.
This is too much for mortal ears, lean
not bear the ovorwholming symphony."
But I noticed as I was about to turn
away that on tho steps of tho altar was
something lilto tho lachyrmal, or tear
bottlo, ns I had bpch it in tho earthly
museums, tho lachrymals.or tear bottles,
into which tho orientals used to weep
uicir gneis ami set tnem away as sacred.
J3ut this lnchyrmnl, or tear bottle, in
Vtead of earthenware, as thoso tho ori
entals used, was lustrous and fiery with
many splendors, and it was towering
and of great capacity. And I said to my
attending angel, "What is that great
lachrymal, or tear bottlo, standing on
tho stop of tho altar?" and tho angel
said: "Why, don't you know? That is
tho bottlo to which David, tho psalmist,
referred in this fifty-sixth psalm whon
ho said, 'Put thou my teais into thy
bottle.' It is full of tears troin earth
tears of repentance, tears of bereave
mont, tears of joy, tears of many cen
turies." And then I saw how sacred to
tho sympathetic God nro earthly sor
rows. As I was coming out of tho templo I
saw all along tho pictured walls thero
weio shelves, and golden vials wero
being set up on all thoso shelves. And
I said: "Why tho setting up of thoso
vials at this time? They beem just now
to havo been filled," aud tho attending
angel said, "Tho week of prayer all
around tho earth has just closed, and
more supplications havo been mado than
havo bt.cn.maue for a long while, and
theso new vials, newly set up, aro
what tho Biblo speaks of as "golden
vials full of odors, which aro tho
piayers of saints." And I said to tho
accompanying angel, "Can it be possi
ble that tho prayers of earth aiowoithy
of being kept in such hcavonly shape?"
Why," said tho angel, "thero is noth
ing thnt so moves heaven as tho prayers
of earth, and they aro set up in sight of
theso infinite multitudes, and, moro
than all, in the sight of Christ, and ho
cannot forget them, and they aro beforo
him world without end."
THE QKKAT CHRISTIAN SEEN.
Then wo camo out, and as tho temple
is always open and some worship at ono
hour aud others at other hours wo
passed down the street amid tho throngs
coming to and going from tho gi eat tem
ple. And wo passed ale ;; t'irough a
stroet called Martyr place, and wo met
thero, or saw sitting at tho windows,
the bouls of thoso who on eaith went
through fire and blood and under sword
and rack. Wo saw John Wyclif, whose
ashes wero by decree of tho coun
cil of Constance thiown into tho river,
and Rogeis. who bathed his hands in
tho fire as though it had been water,
and Bishop Hooper and McKail and
Latimer aud Ridley and Polycarp,
whom -tho flumes refused to destroy as
they bent outward till a spear did tho
work, and somo of the Albigenses and
Huguenots and consecrated Quakers
who wero slain for their leligiou. They
had on them many bears, but thoir sears
woro illumined, nnd they had on thoir
faces a look of especial triumph.
Then wo passed along Song row, and
wo met some of tho old gospel singers.
"That is Isaac Watts." said my attend
ant. As wo camo up to him, ho asked
mo if the churches on earth wero still
singing tho hymns ho composed at tho
honso of Lord and Lady Abnoy, to
whom ho paid a visit of 30 years, and I
told him that many of tho churches
opened their Sabbath morning services
with his old hymn, " Welcomo, Sweet
Day of Rest," and celebrated their gos
pel triumphs with his hymn, "Salva
tion, Oh, tho Joyful Song!" and often
roused their devotions by his hymn,
"Come. Wo That Lovo tho Loid."
While we wero talking ho intioduced
mo to another of tho song writers and
said, "This is Charles Wesley, who be
longed on earth to a different church
from mine, but wo nro all now mem
bers of thesamo chuich, tho tomplo of
God and tho Lamb." And 1 told
Charles Wesley that almost every Sab
bath wo sang ono of his old hymns," Arm
of tho Lord, Awakel" or, "Coma, Lot
Us Join Our Friends Abovot" or, "Lovo
Divine. All Lovo Excelling." And
while wo wero talking on that street
called Song row Kirk White, the con
sumptive collego student, now everlast
ingly well, camo up, nnd we talked over
his old Christmas hymn, "When Mar
shaled on tho Nightly Pliin." And
William Cowper camo up, now entiroly
recovered from his religious melancholy
and not looking as if ho had ever in de
mentia attempted suicide, and wo talked
over tho wide oarthly celebrity and
heavenly powor of his old hymns,
"When I Can Read My Titlo Clear,"
and "There Is a Fountain Filled With
Blood."
And thero wo met George W. Be
thuno of wondrous Brooklyn pustorate,
nml r tnbl him of bow his comforting
hymn had bon snng at oliaeqnies all
around tho world "it is ot ueum iu
Die." And Toplady came up and asked
ubout whether the chuich was still mak
iug usoof his old hymn, "Rock of Ages,
Cloft For Mo. "And we met alto on Song
nn Knmtnn nnd Hastincs and Mont
gomery and Horatio Bonar, and wo
heard floating irom winnow iu iuuu.v
matches of tho old hymns which they
startod on earth and started never to die.
'Tint "sHvsnmo of mv bearers, "did
yon seo an) thing of our friends in
heaven?" Oh, yon, I did. "Did you see
my children there?" says somo one,
"and are thero any marks of their last
sickness still upon them?" I did seo
them, but there was no pa nor, nououKu,
no fever, no languor, about them. They
aro all woll and rnddy nnd songful and
bounding with Vernal mirth. They told
. t iva their love to yon; that they
thought of you hour by hour, and that
when they couiu no tweuwm .v.
i..,..ni ninvernnnds tbev came down,
and hovered over jou, and Ud yonr
cheek, and filll your dream with thoir
glad facts, and thnt tbey would be at
the gate to greet yi-u jv
to be with them forever.
"But," say other voices, uw j
qui i ' ' '"" 'I
seo our gloiitled friends?" Yes, 1 saw
them, and they aro well in tho land
across which no pneumonias or palsies
or dropsies or typhoids ever sweep. Tho
aioma blows over from orchards with
trees bearing 13 mauner of fruits, nnd
gardens compared with which Chats
worth is n desert. Tho climate is a
mingling of nn earthly June nnd Octo
ber tho balm of tho ono nnd tho tonio
of tho other. Tho social lifo in that
realm where they aro is superb and por
foct. No controversies or joalousica or
hates, but love, universal love, ever
lasting lovo. And tbey told mo to telt
you not to weep for them, for their hap
piness knows no bound, and it is only a
question of time when you shall reign
with them in tho sarao palaco and join
with them in tho samo exploration of
planets and tho same tour of worlds.
But youder in this assembly is an up
turned face that seems to ask how about
tho ages of those in heaven. "Do my
departed children remain children, or
havo they lost their childish vivacityl
Do my departed parents remain aged,
or havo they lost tho venerable out of
their natme?" Well, from what I saw
I think childhood has advanced to full
maturity of faculty, retaining all the
resilience of childhood, and that tho
aged had retreated to midlife, freed
horn all decadence, but still retaining
tho charm of tho venerable. In other
words, it was fully developed and com
plete life of all souls, whether young or
old.
CHANGED CONDITIONS.
Somo one says, "Will you tell us
what most impressed you in heaven?" I
will. 1 was most impressed with the re
versal of earthly conditions. I know, of
course, that thero would bo differences
of attire and residenco in heaven, for
Paul had declared long ago that souls
would then differ "as ono star differed
from nnother, " ns Mars from Mercury,
as Saturn from Jupiter. But nt every
step in my dream in heaven I was amazed
to see that somo who wero expected to bo
high in heaven were low down, and
somo who wero expected to bo low down
wero high up. You thought, for in
stance, that those born of pious parent
age, and of naturally good disposition,
anl of brilliant faculties, and of all
styles of attractiveness will movo in the
highest rango of celestial splendor and
pomp. No, no. I found tho highest
thiones. the brightest coronets, tho rich
est mansions, were occupied by thoso
who had reprobate father or bad mother,
and who inherited tho twisted natures of
10 generations of miscreants, nnd who
had compressed in their body all de
praved appetites and all evil pro
pensities, but they laid hold of God's
aim, they cried for especial mercy, they
conquered sovon devils within nnd sev
enty devils without and wero washed in
tho blood of tho Lamb, and by so ranch
as thoir contest was terrific and awful
and prolix their victory was consum
mate and resplendent, and they havo
taken places immeasurably higher than
thoso of good parentage, who could hard
ly holp being good, because they had 10
generations of preceding piety to aid
them. Tho stops by which many havo
mounted to the highest places in heaven
wore mado out of tho cradles of a cor
rupt parentage. When I saw that, I
said to my attending angel: "That is
fair; that is right. The harder tho
struggle tho moro glorious tho reward."
Then I pointed to ono of tho most col
onnaded and grandly domed residences
in all the city and said, "Who lives
there?" and the answer, was, "The widow
who gave two mites." "And who lives
there?" and tho answer was, "Tho poni
tent thief to whom Christ said, 'This day
shalt thou bo with mo in paradise.'"
"And who lives there?" I said, and tho
answer was, "ino nana Deggar wno
prayed, 'Lord, that my eyes may bo
opened.' "
NAMES NOT IN THE DIRECTORY.
Somo of thoso professors of religion
who wero famous on earth Tasked about,
but no ono could tell mo anything con
cerning thom. Their names were not
even in the city directory of tho New
Jerusalem. Tho fact is that I suspected
somo of them had not got there at all.
Many who had ten talents woro living
on the back streets of heaven, while
many with one talent had residences
fronting on tho King's park, and a back
lawn sloping to tho river clear as crys
tal, and tho highest nobility of heaven
wero guests at their table, and often the
whito horse of him who "hath tho moon
undor his feet" champed its bit at their
doorway. Infinite capsizo of earthly
conditions! All social life in heaven
graded according to earthly struggle and
usefulness as proportioned to talents
givonl
As I walked through those streets I ap
preciated for tho first time what Paul
said to Timothy, "If wo suffer, we shall
aUo reign with hiin." It surprised mo
beyond description that all tho great of
heaven were great sufferers. "Not all?"
Yos. all. Moses, him of tho Red Bea, a
great sufferer. David, him of Absalom's
unfihal behavior, and Ahithophel's be
trayal, and a nation's dethronement, a
great sufferer. Ezekiel, him of tho cap
tivity, who hud tho droam on the banks
of the Chebar, a great sufferer. Paul,
him of tho diseased eyes, and tho Medi
terranean shipwreck, and tho Mars Hill
derision, nnd the Mamertlne endungeon
inent, and the whipped back, and tho
headman's ax on the road to Ostia, a
threat sufferer.
Yea, all the apostles after lives of Buf
fering died by violence, beaten to death
with fuller's club, or dragged to death by
inoba, or from tho thrust of a sword, or
bj exposure on a barren island, or by
decapitation. All the high up in heaven
great sufferers, and women more than
men, FehciUa and St. Cecelia and Bt
Agues aud St. Agatha and St. Lucia and
women never heard of outside their own
neighborhood, queens of the needle, and
the broom, and the scrubbing brush., and
thowashtnb.and the dairy, rewarded ao
oording to how well they did their work,
whether to set a tea table or govern a
nation, whether empreas or milkmaid.
I could not get over it, aa in my
dream I saw all thU, and that aome of
ti,. moat unknown of earth were the
moat famous In heaven and that many
who seemed tbo greateat fallar Of
BWti
earth vnre the greatest successes of
heaven. And ns wo passed along ono of
tho grandest boulevards of heaven thero
approached ua a group of persons so
radiant in countenance and apparel Iliad
to shade my eyes with both hands be
cause I could not enduro the luster, nnd
I said, "Angel, do tell mo who they are?"
and tho answer was, "Theso aro they
who camo out of great tribulation and
had their robes washed and made white
in the blood of tho Lamb!"
EQUALIZED AT LAST.
My walk through the city explained a
thousand thing3 on earth that had been
to me inexplicable. When I saw up there
tho superior delight and tho superior
heaven of many who had on earth hnd
it hard with cancers nnd bankruptcies
and persecutions nnd trials of all sorts,
I said, "God has equalized it all at lost;
excess of enchantment in heaven has
more than mado up for tho deficits on
earth."
"But," said I to my angelic escort, "I
must go now. It is Sabbath morning on
earth, and I must preach today and bo
in my pulpit by half past 10 o'clock.
Goodby," I said to tho attending angel.
"Thanks for what you havo shown mo.
I know I havo seen only in part, but I
hop to return ngnin, through tho aton
ing mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Goodby."
Then I passed on.nmid chariots of sal
vation, and along by conquerors' thrones,
nnd amid pillared majesties, and by win
dows of agate, and under arches that had
been hoisted for returned victors. And
as I camo toward tho walls with the
gates, the walls flashed upon me with
emeralds and sapphires and chrysoprases
and amethysts, until I trembled under
the glory, and then I heard a bolt bIiovo,
and a latch lift, and a gato swing, and
they wero all of pearl, and I passed out
loaded with raptures, and down by
worlds lower and lower, and lower still,
until I camo within sight of tho city of
my earthly residence, and until through
the window of my earthly homo tho buii
poured so strong upon my pillow that
my eyelids felt it, and in bewilderment
as to where I was nnd what I had seen 1
awoke.
Reflection tho First Tho superiority of
our heaven to nil other heaveus. Tho
Scandinavian heaven: Tho departed nro
in everlasting battlo, except as restored
after being cut to pieces; they drink wine
out of the skulls of their enemies. Tho
Moslem heaven as described by tho Ko Ke
ran: "Thero shall be houris with largo
black eyes likes pearls hidden in their
shells." The Slav's heaven: After death
the soul hovers six weeks about the body,
and then climbs nsteep mountain, on tho
top of which is paradise. The Tasma
nian's heaven: A spear is placed by tho
dead, that thoy may havo bomething to
fight with, and after awhilo they go into
a long chase for game of all sorts. Tho
Tahitian'a heaven: The departed aro eat
en up of tho gods. Tho native African
heaven: A land of shadows, and in speak
ing of the departed thoy say all is done
forever. Tho American aborigine's heav
en: Happy hunting grounds, to which
tho soul goes on a bridgo of snako. The
philosopher's heaven; Made out of a
thick fog or an inflnito don't know.
But hearken, and behold our heaven,
which, though mostly described by fig
ures of speech in tho Biblo and by para
ble of a dream in this discourso, has for
its chief characteristics separation from
all that is vile; absenco from all that can
discomfort; presence of all that can gratn
lato. No mountains to climb; no chasms
to bridge; no night to illumine; no tears
to wipe. Scandinavian heaven, Slav's
heaven, Tasmanlan heaven, Tahitian
heaven, African heaven, aborigines'
heaven, scattered into tameness and dis
gust by a glimpse of St. John's heaven,
of Paul's heaven, of Christ's heaven, of
your heaven, of my heavenl
THE SILVER OP TEARS.
Reflection tho Second You had better
tako patiently and cheerfully all pangs,
affronts, hardships, persecutions nnd tri
als of earth, since, if rightly borne, they
insure heavenly payments of ecstasy.
Every twinge of physical distress, every
4ie told about you, every earthly subtrac
tion, if meekly borno, will be heavenly
addition. If you want to amount to any
thing in heaven and to move in its best
society, you must be "perfected through
suffering." Tho only earthly currency
worth anything ut tho gato of heaven is
tho silver of tears. At tho top of all
heaven sits tho greatest sufforer, Christ
of tho Bethlehem caravansary and of
Pilate's oyer aud terminer, nnd of the
Calvarean assassination.
What lie endured, oh. w lio can tell.
To sa e our touts from death and hull?
Oh, yo of tho broken heart, and tho dis
appointed ambition, nnd tho shattered
.fortuno, aniTtho blighted life, tako com
fort from what I saw in my Sabbath
morning dreamt
Reflection the Third and Last How
desirablo that wo all get there! Start this
moment with prayer and penitence and
faith in Christ, who came from heaven
to earth to take us from earth to heavou.
Last summer, a j ear ago, I preached
one Sabbath afternoon in Ilydo Park,
London, ton great multitude that no man
could number. But I heard nothing
from it until a few weeks ago, when
Rev. Mr. Cook, u ho for 92 yrs has pre
sided over that Hyile Park on Uloor meet
ing, told me that hut winter, going
through a hospital in London, he saw a
dying man whose face brightened as he
told him that his heart was changed that
afternoon under my sermon in Hyde
Park, and all was bright now at liis de
parture from earth to heaven.
Why may not tho Lord bless this' as
well aa that? Heaven as I dreamed about
it, and aa I read about it, is so benign a
realm you cannot any of you afford to
miss it. Oh, will it not bo transcendont
ly glorious after tho struggle of this lifo
is over to stand in that eternal safety?
Samuel Rutbrford, though they riotous
ly burned his books and unjustly arrest
ed him for treason, wrote of that celes
tial spectacle:
Tho Klni: there In liU Uaatr.
Wlthuut a veil, 1 toes;
It were a well Qt Journey.
Thouxh aetea deaths lay between.
The Lamb with his fulr aray
lxth oa Mount Zlon stand,
And glorr, glorf dwslUtfi
JaftMjyuiMl'aUna.
TODAY'S MARKETS.
Prices Current by Telegraph Local
and Portland Quotations.
Salem, Jauuary JM, 4 p. in. Offlco
Daily Capital Journal. Quota
tions for day and up to hour of going to
press wero as follews:
H.VLEil I'KODUCE MA11K.ET,
rnuiT.
Apples 30o to 60o. a bushel.
BUTCIIKK STOCK.
Veals dre39ed 5 cts.
Hogs dressed 5.
Live cattle 2 to 8.
Sbcep alive 1.60$2.
MILL PRICES.
Salem Milling Co. quetes: Flour
iu wholesale lots (2.60. Retail $3.00.
Bran $14 bulk, $15 sacked. Buorts $15
10 J. Chop feed $10 and $17.
WHEAT.
41 cents per bushel.
JIAY AND GRAIN.
Oats new 2530c.
Hav Baled, uew $8 to $10: old $10 to
12. Wild in bulk, $G to $8.
FARM PRODUCTS.
Wool Best, 10c
Hops bmall s.ile, 17 to 18o.
Esrgs Cash, 15.
iSButter Best dairy, 2o30; fancy
creamery 92o,
Cheehe 12 to 15 cts.
Farm smoked meats Bacon 10;
hams, 12; shoulders, 8.
Potatoes 2o80o.
Oulons 2 couts.
Carrots, $(J 00 per ton.
Reeswax 84c. Caraway seed, 18c.
Alike setd, SOc. Ginseng, $1.40.
LIVE poultrv,
Poultry IIeti8,78e; roosters, fi0c,
ducks, 8 10; turkeys, slow sale, choice,
10c; giebetito 7c.
PORTLAND QUOTATIONS.
(U'liln, I'oimI, etc.
Flour Standard, $2.75; Walla Walla,
$.1.00; graham, $2.40; superiluo, $2.25
per oarcl.
Oata Isew wliite,34operbu.,grey132o;
rolled, in bags, $G.250.50; barrels,
$6.757.00; cases, $3 75.
Hay Best, $1012 per tou.
Wool valley, 10 lie.
Millstufl's Bran, $10.00; Bhorta, $10;
ground barley, $18; chop feed, $15
per ton; whole feed, barley, 70 cts. per
cental; middling, $2328 por ton;
chicken wheat. 051.15 por cental.
Hops -New 10 to 10.
lllcies green, salted, 00 lba. 3o, un
der 00 lbs., 23 ; sheep pelts, 1000o.
DAIRY PRODUCE.
Butter Oregon fancy creamery, 80
32Jp;fancy dairy, 2527lc; fair to good,
2022Jo; common, 10 to 17jc per lb.
t'neeso Oregon, 1013; Young
American, 1215eper pound; California
14c: Swiss imp., 3032;Doin., 1018.
EggH Oregon, 1415o per dozen.
Eastern 15
Poultry Nominal; ohickous, mixed,
$3 003.50 per dozen; duck8,$4.505.00
geese, $8. turkeys, live, 10c;
dressed 12o
Beef Topiteere,2J3cper pound; fair
togood steers, 22Jo; Np 1 cows, 2o; fair
cows, lo; dressed beof, $4 005 50per
Mutton Best sheep, $2:50; choice
ewes, $2:2-'.
Hogs Choice, heavy, $i 004 25;
medium, $-1 00 1 50; light aud feeders,
$3 00 1 00; dressed, $0 507.
SAN FRANCISCO MARKET.
"Woel: Oregon Eastern choice. 10(31
12c; do inferior, 79c; do .valley, 12
ISo.
Hops 15 to 18o.
Potatoes Erly Rose, 4045. Rur
bauks, 85 40c.
uats Mining, $i.i5(g)i..22j
Emily, Quickly,
Permanently Rectored.
WEAKNESS,
NERVOUSNESS,
DEBILITY,
ami all the train of lis
from early crrorsor later
ixcttifs, the results of
overwork, slufcness,
worry.etc rullttrenglli,
devilopinent and tone
gU en lo erery organ nnd
union of the body,
dlrripli .naturattnethoUs.
Immelatnlinuroreinent
rcrn. rnlliirolmpoMlbla,
2 01) references. Hook-,
oxplanntlon and proofs
mallod (eealed) free.
ERIE MEDICAL CO.
DUFFALO. N. Y.
HOUSE Painting, Decorating,
1 Hard Wood Finishing,
Can glvo good referenced. Kxtlmates furnish.
cd. Adlrcn, (Jeo. hschstrulti. Halem. Ileal.
don co on Pulrni Motor Hxlhvay, North Salem
Leave ordornatdtelner A liluisers, 11-M'
W. A. Cum ilk,
I'nwtUant.
J. U. ALllKitT,
Canliler.
(11 imuviKi
OK SA.L12M.
'I'mrina 'tan ftnarul banking ImslneNS.
J mjrt, attenlt n pnttl to collwrtiuii. J-oans
niKcle. Kivtiuuii bought and nuld on the
1 vak vvr.
j ... , i.Hrai ui iu. ...fit.
J.M. Maktik,
W A I'traiCK,
J, li. Ai.nisitr,
Directors.
K. 11 I KOIMIN,
W. W. UAKtlS,
II. V. MArniBWi,
GUMS
ONION
SYRUP
FOR COUGHS
COLDS
AND CROUP.
GRANDMOTHER'S ADVICE
In riior fsnilr f alas blldrsa. ny only
mm4 far Oombs, Colds and Croup wm onion
rrvp Ills juiiusdeotlrs to-dr llafurty
MH uo Wow a; grandchildren tako Dr.
(lava's Oaloa Syrup, wfaleta Is slrssdr propsrsd
and nor plssssat to tno Usts. Mold mrrvlwra.
Xif betel la osata, Taka ao sataUtal fcw Ik
Hold L, iUkett A VanHlyp.
HAVE
YOU
GOT
PILES
IHa nLU known
DlrkJuL niiiaii iu
0 or TWllftvWO
ytaXBATOlKKTO
M. BO-SJW-X0-S PILE REMEDY,
wait aaw dwoMlr aa una aMsuUd
aaxsrfcstwsira. c1MwWnaaffotln
sanTSrVSosu ko, nuUiUlplft, V.
Bold by liaskett & Van Blype,
OF fflffl
vJran!tn'linailitf
n i i
I (iniinl
UUill
vcr ??,
wv4f" ftH tvSZ'j
-rZS)TJ
Wear
gttlUWJVf
B
ALD
Is it dry or in a heated condition ? If these arc somo of i
your symptoms De
Skookum Root Hair Grower I
H vrhntvou need. Its nroduetlnn UnnliinarrMAnl hnittiAM.til(Afal4.iinj i
wenrch. knowledge of
j. v.. uu.t j ucdi mi'iiu -oKuuKum "cuuwuiis nenuer minerals nor oils. It i
tsnotnD)o,butatfellghtfullrcooltnK and refreshing Tonic Ur stimulating
the follicles, ft itopi falling hair, cunt dandruff and arena hair on bald
Ki" Kep, tho scalp dean, noatthy. and froo from trrltatlns eruptions, by i
SJSiHJ .ut .r0,k"? SKm Boap' ItdostroysiKzrojrtlo intectuukieh ted on I
If yourdrurmlit cannot
nrvTWUd. on reoelntof twice,
I I'l. jui . v .v. v.vw,
i.'..-. !., .inn' '
THU SKOOKUn
T K&rtXAr 3 Ho,,,u
TltABE MAttC
From Terminal or Interior Points the.
inn Kiiiiiinn
muiittiiivu
I Icthe line to take
To all Points East and South.
It Is the dining oar ronte. it runs through
vestibule trains, every day in tho year to
ST. PAUL AND
(No change of ears.)
Composed of dlnlngcars nnnurpassod,
Pnllman drawing room sleepers
oFlatest equipment
TOURIST
Sleeping Cars,
Bent thnt can be constructed and in which
acoommodatKins aro both tree and fur
nished for holders or first and Kecond-cloan
tiokets.andl
ELEGANT DAY COACHES.
A.oontlnuotn line oonnootlng with all
Hues, atlordlni direct ncd uninterrupted
service.
Pullman aleper fwrvat Ions can bene
cured in advkuoe ttiroaga any agent of
tho road.
Through tloketn to and from all point
In America, England and Europe can be
purchased at any ticket ofllco of tills com
pany.
Full Information concerning rates, time
of tralnn.roulesandother details furnished
on f.pnllcatlon to any agent or
A. D. OHATtLTON,
Assistant General i'assontor Agent No,
121 First street, cor. Wathlngton; Port
land, Oregon
BitAW & Downing, ARenta.
East and South
-VIA-
THE SHASTA. ROUTE
of the
Southern Pacific Company.
CALIFOKNIA. KXl'JUCSS TUAIN KUN DAILY UK
TWKKN PORTLAND ANI O.K.
Houth.
" North.
o 15 ii. in.
U.tU p. ni.
10.45 a.m.
1'ortlaud
Hiiloin
Han Krnn.
Ar.
I.v.
l.v.
Kl iv. lu
5.tlt a, in
7:X) p. m
Ar.
Above tralntt Hton at nil stations from
Portland to Albany lnclusho; also at Tangent
Hhedd, liulsey, llarrlshitrg. Junction filly,
irvmg, i.ugeno ana nn stations irom uoxeuurg
to Ashland inclusive
KOHKlllMlOMAlIj DAILY,
B.30 a. iu.
11:17 a. in
i:50 p. in.
liV, Portland Ar. I 4.ixj p. in.
hv, Balom lv, I 1H0 p. in.
Ar. Itoseburg i,v. 7.00 a. in
Iiniiig m3 on Ogdun Itoutc
PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPERS
AND
Second Class Sleeping Cars-
Attached to all through trains.
lYest Side Division, Between Portland
and Cervallis:
11AILY (KXOKPT HDNDAY).
7:tKJ a. m. i.v.
l'AIS p. m. Ar.
Portland
forvallls
Ar. liwS p, m.
Ly. 1:W p. m.
At Albany and CorvallU connect
trains of Orxgou Pacific tlullnmd.
with
ICXI'HKHMTKAIN (IM1LY MHUKI-rHIJNIlAV
4.-W p. in. I liV. Portlaud Ar. I K a. t
7'i p. m. I Ar. McMlnnvllle hv. I 6-fQo.m
THitouuii THj.urr
To all points In the Kimtern hiatus, Canada
and Europe ran be obtained at lowest rates
Irom W. W. HICINNKU, Agent, Halem.
K.P. llOUKIW, ASHt. U. K. uud Pawi. Ag'i
11. KO IS HI. Kit, Manaanr
OREGON PACIFIC RAILROAD CO
CHAB. CLARK, Receiver.
SBIOIITLLVE tu CALIFORNIA
OCEAN STEAMER SAILINGS.
& B. DKb NOltTU.
lieavesHan Kruucuco, Jau.6th.
'.eaves Varjulua, Jan, 7th.
HPKCIALj UKTKi 'JO MIIMYINTKlt FAIH.
Kor JrcdKht and pauenger ratM apply to any
agent or jiawor cf this oompauy.
J li. JIITIJHHI.I,, 4 tip., Agents,
Olllie New ilolrnaa Ituxk Hiiloin.
WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES
(Nerthsrn Pitlde R. R. Co,, Letts.)
LATEST TIMEI CARD.
Daily Through Tralni.
lat'.pm
liUpta
eVSSpoil
7ll6piU
4.06pm
7 IJpni
I00fa
lMlnn a
BitOmn
rUwum
ll.tOun
8 lfi.nn
4;lpin
SUiOpUX
I HtPaul a
I Duluth.. a
I . Astiiaud. a
7.16am
Uhleagn.. 1
S.iOpm
10.40pm
The wlsennstn CntrI li n h run two fast
trains dsllr txAwtmntl Paul. MlaneipolU and
t'hloajo M lwaukMaad all polaw In WUwn
alo; Making eotintttilon In 'UIMg4i with alt
line ruualag east and south
Tlektrfiauld and iMicgityn obeokad through
toallpulHUlu the UmwuHtjM and Canada.
C1imm eiutteeUoii mad In Chicago with all
train giMtig rbul and Mouth.
Kor lull information apply to yur nearest
UektMilor JAJ. O. PONM,
UanTPo-u.ajidTkt.Ast., Milwaukee, WU.i
" p: ft!
-. i " I f 1 VI
ADS!
v
Wlint i t5lf rnnillttnn nt vnn9 In .m,,. ..!.. A-.. ".
liarsh, brittle? Does it split nt the ends? Has it a n.'
lifeless appearance? Does It fall out when combed or S
I-inic!tfrl V Is It- full nt lnn.l....ff Q r-,- .,.. t ti-ur st,
warned in tinto oryou will become bald.
tho diseases of tho hair and scalp led to the dlscor. sr
supplyyoucend direct tons, and w will forrror-1
" " ...., ,-. - ,
urawnr. ai unrur tmttiA a rn.um Rnni mi.
ROOT HAIR GROWER CO..
Fml ATonno, Jm York. tf. V. 5
R3 m1H I St B HE
4X
02
cnSfSS
TO
SALT LAKE, DENVER,
OMAHA, KANSAS CITY,
CHICAGO, ST. LOUIS
tANDALi;
EASTERN CITIES!
1 DAYS to!
'2 CHICAGO
OUrS Q"'0 to Chicago and
ITniii'Q Quicker to Omaha and Kan
mm sas City.
Through Pullman and Tourist Sleepers, Fre
Reclining Chair Cars, Dining Cars.
torratca and eoneral Information call an
or address,
w. . nuiiLnorvr, Att, o. p. a
UM Wnahtnston fit., Uor.3d
Vorttanh. t)UOOIi
The CHICAGO,
MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL
RAILWAY.
Travelers "tnuUe n note on I."
This Great Railway System Connects
at
ST. PAUL and OMAHA'
With all transcontinental lines, nlvIng
direct nnd twlft communica
tion ;to all
KABT1SKN ana BODTIIKUN POINTS.
AND 18 TUB
:::0NLY LINE:::
runulug
ICIeitrlo JJcliUd nnd Htcnm IUntcd
Vestlbuled trains of elegant Hleeplng-,
l'nrlor, Dining nnd HuUti;
Cars, with
Free Jteallnhig Chairs,
jMukluK its Borvlco re oud to none In the
world,
Tleltcts nre on salo at all promlutnt railroad
tlckU olllocs. , . -,
Kor fnrtlier.lnformatlonMlt the nearnst rail
road ouent, or address
C.J. EDDY, General Agt.
J. W. CASEY, Trav. PassAgf.
PORTLAND, Ore on.
.. . ! ,...l .1111 ! 1 I-... . .1 .1- . H.l.l.
Geo. Foudnch, Proprietor,
CASH MARKET.
Heat moat aud Irvu delivery.
13G State Street.
.1. K. MURPHY,
BBICK---:4lND -:- TILE
NnilTir HAl.tM.
SMITH BROS.,
CONTRACTORS & J?LABTEUERB
Uuivcordeni BtUittlo-l'arklmrstblock.room
fi,i!alf in. ur miii.
'. HOWARD,
The House Mover.
151 .llarlon Street.
Has ttietXHitrittilllle iorinovluK int ral
I UK Iioumw, lAave orders ftl Uray llros., or
add rxw HhIMh, utninu.
Thoroughbred roultry for Sale.
1 lime. Ui Aliavlu? nrtrU Uiorauinbred
nouwrxrwwu4J frlw tutdjrtai,ay
lur uHimsi,. mBMr u i7,Mpj;'
OHtntmi Auai, wic wjuuiuMU uuifv.
ftnoiHl witti ubriru coekrl, ytrnnt,
ftHVwMWli rewrtU. 1 to S uiontbi old,
U ilruhmaT&, fAW -rulntf, Hnd li
cUltvr, K. H9?r
ft- r- '
iJiroMii
Witts
i
-
I
r
iXS!i"rn f.
yKy4j(kT,r4