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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1893-1895 | View Entire Issue (March 28, 1894)
f -y-rL?'?? TJIJi JtiiiO UlUi Ji.UTJ.UNi 'etTL' U.wlu be llf siPrual beaut! i pcation. , At certain seasons it is cus tomary in all lauds to strew flowers nvpr REV DR. TALMAGE PREACHES UPON the mounds of the departed It "ay "EASTER IN GREENWOOD." Imvo heen suggested by the fact that j Christ's tomb was in n garden. And The flrcnt Tnixrtincio Thronged Tiie rui- wllcn J ea' garden I do not mean a gar- pit Almost Hidden With Flowers The Usual Itcmitlfiil anil Unique Sermon. Ilronkl) n's rained Cemetery. Brooklyn, March 25. The Easter (services in tho Tnbernaclo today were attended by immense audiences. Beau tiful floral decorations almost hid the j.ulpit f : 0111 view, and the great organ gave forth its most rapturous strains in honor of tho day. In tho forenoon Rev. Dr Tnlmairo delivered nn nlnnnnnf: s-. mnn on "linster in Greenwood," the test being taken from Genesis xsiii, 17, 18, "And tho field of Hebron, which was in JIachpelah, which was before Mamre, the field, and the cavo which was there' in, and all the trees that were in the field that were in all the borders round about, wero made sure unto Abraham." Here is the first cemetery overlaid out. JIachpelah was its name. It wasan arbo rescent beauty, where the wound of death was bandaged with foliage. Abra ham, a rich man, not being able to bribe tho king of terrors, proposes here, as far as possible, to cover up the ravages. Ho had no doubt previously noticed this rerion. and now that Sarah, his wife, had died that remarkable person who, at 00 ?pear' ms la9t (lr0P of blood hiul coagu years of age, had born to her the son Med. And then see how appropriate Isaac, and who now. nfW hn i,n,i leached 127 years, had expired Abra ham i3 negotiating for a family plot for her last slumber. Ephron owned this real estate, and after, in mock sympathy for Abraham, refusing to take anything for it, now sticks on a big price 100 shekels of sil ver. Tho cemetery lot is paid for, and the transfer made in the presence of wit nesses in a publio place, for there were no deeds and no halls of record in those early times. Then in a cavern of lime stone rock Abraham put Sarah, and a few years after hiniBelf followed, and then Isaao and Rebekah, and then Jacob nnd Leah. Embowered, picturesque and memorable Machpelahl That "God's acre" dedicated by Abraham has been the mother of innumerable mortuary ob servances. The necropolis of every civi lized land has vied with its metropolis. BEAUTIFUL CITIES OF TIIE DEAD. Tho most beautiful hills of Europe out side the great cities are covered with obelisk and funeral vase and arched gateways and columns and parterres in honor of tho inhumated. The Appian way of Rome was bordered by sepulchral commemorations. For this purpose Pisa has its arcades of marble sculptured into excellent bas-reliefs and the features of dear faces that have vanished. Genoa has its terraces cut Into tombs, and Con stantinople covers with Cyprus the silent habitations, and Paris has its Pere la Chaise, on whose heights rest Balzac and David and Marshal Ney and Cu vier and La Place and Moliere and a mighty group of warriors and poets and painters and musicians. In all foreign nations utmost genius on all sides is ex pended in the work of intermont, mum mification nnd incineration. Our own country consents to be second to none in reBpect to the lifeless body. Every city and town and neighborhood of any intelligence or virtue has not many miles away its sacred iuclosure, where affection has engaged .sculptor's chisel and florist's spado and artificer in metals. Our own city has shown its religion as well as its art in the manner which it holds the memory of those who havo passed forever away by its Cypress Hills, and its Evergreens, nnd its Calvary and Holy Cross nnd Friends' cemeteries. All the world knows of our Green wood, with now about 270,000 inhabit ants sleeping among the hills that over look the sea, and by lakes embosomed in an Eden of flowers, our American "West minster abbey, an Acropolis of mortuary architecture, a Pantheon of mighty ones nscended, elegies in stone, Iliads in mar ble, whole generations in peace waiting for other generations to join them. No dormitory of breathless sleepers in all the world has so many mighty dead. THE MIGHTY SLKEFEItS. Among tho preachers of the gospel, Bethune nnd Thomas Do Witt and Bish op Janes and Tyng and Abeel, the mis sionary, and Beecher and Buddington, and McClintock and Inskip, nnd Bangs and Chapin, and Noah Schenck and Sam uel Hans6n Cox. Among musicians, the renowned Gottschalk and the holy Thom as Hastings. Among philanthropists, Peter Cooper and Isaao T. Hopper, and Lucretia Mott and Isabella Graham, and Henry Bergh, the apostle of mercy to the brute creation. Among the litterati, the Carys Alice nnd Phoebe James K. Paulding and John G. Saxe. Among journalists, Bennett and Raymond and Greeley. Among scientists, Orinsby Mitchell, warrior as well as astronomer and lovingly called by his soldiers "Old Stars;" Professor Proctor and the Dra perssplendid men, as I well know, one of them my teacher, the other my class mate. Among inventors Elias Howe, who through the sewing machine did more to alleviate tho toils' of womanhood than any man that ever lived, and Professor Morse, who gave ns magnetio telegraphy, the former doing his work with the needle, the latter with the thunderbolt. Among physicians and surgeons Joseph O, Hutchinson and Marion Sims and Dr. Valentine Mott, with the following epi taph, which he ordered cnt in honor of Christian religien: "My implicit faith ,m,i ),. . in ' ..mi.ci . . who is the resurrection and toT life understand. Mysteries? Oh, yes. But among nettles and mullein stalks and Amen and Amen." This is our Amerl- no more about the resurrection of your , thistles and slabs aslant, they shall arise can Macbpelah, as sacred to us as the body than about it present existence. I with, a glory that shall flush the win Machpelah in Canaan, of which Jaob I TO W0RU' ' dow9 of hjillae churc b. . ind by the uttered that pastoral poem in one verso": I will explain to yon the last mystery bell tower that used to call them to wot "There they buried Abraham and Sa-' of the resurrection and make it as plain ship, and above the old spire beside rah, his wife; there they buried Isaao to you as that two and two make four which their prayers formerly ascended, and Rebekah. his wife, and there I buried if you will tell me bow your mind, which What triumphal procession never dd Leah." . is entirely independent of -your body, can for a street, what an oratorio never did TOE family of flowers. ant dpon your body 6o that at your will for an academy, what an orator never At this Easter service I ask and an- your eyes open, or your foot walks, or did for a brilliant auditory, what obe swer what may seem a novel quaatioa, your hand is extended. So I And notb. lUk never did for a king, resurrection but it will be found, before I net inr in th Bible BUtement concerning morn will do for all the oemeUriee. through, a practical aud useful and tre mendous question, What will resurrec tion day do for tho cemeteries? First, I tro, ucii ui nieso luumues. mo Jato frosts of spring and the early frosts of autumn are so near each other that thero are only a few months of flowers in tho field. All the flowers we see todav had to bo rettcd and coajted and put under shelter, - l"' WUU1U "i nave Diooiued at all They are the children of Ihe conservato ries. But nt this season and through tliomostof the year tho Holy Land is all ablush with floral opulence. You find all tho roval f.innlv of flow- u";ro pomo um vou supposed liidtg- enous to tllB far north, and others indig- en0U3 to tlls far south the daisy and nJ"ncintn crocus and anemone, tulip and wuter luJ". geranium and ranunculus, mignnetto and sweet marjoram. In tho college at Beirut you may see Dr. Post's collection of about 1,800 kinds of Holy Land flowers, while among trees are tho Oaks of frozen climes, and tho tamarisk of tho tropics, walnut and wil low, ivy and hawthorn, ash and elder, pine and "ycamc-re. If such floral and botanical beauties are tho wild growths of the fleld tllluk of what a garden must bo in Palestine! And in such a garden Jesus Christ slept after, on tho soldier's tllat " ur cemeteries should be floral ized and tree shaded. In Juno Green wood is Brooklyn's garden. THE RESURRECTION iDEA. "Well, then," you say, "how can you make out that the resurrection day will beautify the cemeteries? Will it not leave them a plowed up ground? On that day there will bo an earthquake, and will not this split tho polished Aber deen granite as well as the plain slab that can afford but two words 'Our Mary' or 'Our Charley? " Well, I will tell you how resurrection day will beau tify all tho cemoteries. It will be by bringing up tho faces that were to us once, and In our memories are to us now, more beautiful than any calla lily, and the forms that are to us more grace ful than any willow by the waters. Can you think of anything moro beautiful than tho reappearance of those from whom wo have been parted? I do not care which way the tree falls in the blast of the judgment hurricane, or if the plowshare that day shall turn under the last rose leaf and the last china aster, if out of the broken sod shall come tho bod ies of our loved ones not damaged, but irradiated. The idea of the resurrection gets easier to understand as I hear tho phonograph unroll somo voice that talked into it a year ago, just before our friend's decease. You touch the lever, and then come forth the very tones, the very song of the per Bon that breathed into it once, but is now departed. If a roan can do that, cannot Almighty God, without half try ing, return the voice of your departed? And if he can return the voice, why not the lips, and the tongue, and the throat that fashioned the voice? And if the lips, and the tongue, and the throat, why not the brain that suggested tho words? And if tho brain, why not the nerves, of which the brain is the headquarters? And if ho can return the nerves, why not the muscles, which are less ingenious? And if the muscles, why not the bones, that aro less wonderful? And if tho voice, and the brain, nnd tho muscles, and the boues, why not tho entire bod'? If man can do tho phonograph, God can do the resurrection. A WONDERFUL FACT. Will it bo the same body that in tho last day shall be reanimated? Yes, but infinitely improved. Our bodies change every seven yenrs, and yet in one sense it is tho same body. On my wrist and the second finger of my right hand there is a scar. I made that at 12 years of age, when, disgusted at tho presence of two warts, I took a redhot iron and burned them off and burned them out. Since then my body has changed at least a half dozen times, but those scars prove it is the same body." We never lose our identity. If God can and does sometimes rebuild a man' five, fcix, ten times in this world, is it mysterious that ho can rebuild him once more and that in the resurrection? If he can (lo it 10 times, I think he can do it 11 times. Then look at tho 17 year locusts. For J7 years gone, at tho end of 17 years they appear, and by rubbing the hind leg against the wing make that rattle at which all tho husbandmen and vine dressers tremble as tho insectilo host takes up the march of devastation. Res urrection every 17 years a wonderful fact I Another consideration makes the idea of resurrection easier. God made Adam, ne was not fashioned after any model. There bad never been a human organism, and so thero was nothing to copy. At the first attempt God made a perfect man, He made him out of the dust of tho earth. If out of ordinary dust of the earth and without a model God could make a perfect man, surely out of the extraordinary dust of mortal body and with millions of models God can make each one of us a perfect being in the res urrection. Surely the last undertaking would not be greater than the first. See tho gospel algebra. Ordinary dust minus a model equals a perfect man. ' Extraor dinary dust and plus a model equals a resurrection body. Mysteries about it? Oh. ves. That is one reason why I be , iii,i An thinM onlv as far as I can t 14. :t lt would not do mucn oi a uou th rtirrition that Btamsu-siae for a iuti nsuiiwiiuM c-- - moment. All doubts clear from ray resurrection our nNHirmuuu. """" mind. I y that the cemeteriw, bow bia, onretrrwapnoJaUtbe nlou XS3se ever beautiful now, will be mot oboatuU ful when the bodies of our loved onet como up in the morning of the resume- t,0i'- , They will como in improved condition. xney win como up rested. Tho most of uiem lay uown at tho last very tired, now ouen you havo heard them say, "I am so tired I" Tho fact is, it is a tired world. If I should gp through this au dience and go round the world, I could not find a person in any stylo of life ig norant of the eensation of fatigue. I do not believe there are 60 persons in this audience who are not tired. Your head is tired, or your back is tired, or your foot is tired, or your brain is tin d, or your nerves are tired. Long journey ing or business application or bereave ment or sickness has put on you heavy weights. So the vast majority of thoso who went out of this world went out fa tigued. About the poorest place to rest in is this world. Its atmosphere, itssur-1 roundiugs and even its hilarities aro ex-' hausting. So God stops our earthly life and mercifully closes the eyes, and more especially gives quiescence to tho lung and heart, that havo not had 10 minutes' rest from the first respiration and the first beat. If n drummer boy wero compelled in tho army to beat his drum for 24 hours without stopping, his officer would bo court martialed for cruelty. If the drum- ; mer boy should be commanded to beat his drum for a week without ceasing, day and night, ho would die in attempt- ( ingit. But under your vestment -is a1 poor heart that began its drumbeat for t the march of life SO or 40 or 60 or 80 ' years ago, and it has had no furlough by ! day or night, aud whether in conscious ' or comatose state it went right on, for if it had stopped seven seconds your life would havo closed. And your heart will keep going until some time after your , spirit has flown, for tho auscultator Bays that after the last expiration of lung and the last throb of pulse, and after the spirit is released, the heart keeps on beat ing for a time. What a mercy, then, it is that the grave is tho placo where that wondrous machinery of ventricle and ar tery can halt! DUST OF THE EARTH. Under the healthful chemistry of tho soil all the wear and tear of nerve nnd muscle and bone will bo subtracted, and that bath of good fresh clean soil will wash off the last ache, nnd then 6omo of the same style of dust out of which tho body of Adam was constructed may be infused into the resurrection body. How can the bodies of the human race, which havo had no replenishment from the dust since the time of Adam in paradise, get any recuperation from the storehouse from which he was constrncted'withont our going back into the dust? That orig inal life giving material having been added to the body as it once was, and all the defects left behind, what a body will be tho resurrection bodyl And will not hundreds of thousands of such appearing above the Gowanus heights make Green wood more beautiful than any June morning after a shower? The dust of the earth being the original material for the fashioning of the first human being, we have to go back to tho samo placo to get a perfect body. Factories are apt to. bo rough places, and thoso who toil in them have their garments grimy and their hands smutch ed. But who cares for that when they turn out for'us beautiful musicnl instru ments or exquisito upholstery? What though the grave is a rough place it is a resurrection body manufactory, and from it shall como the radiant nnd re splendent forms of our friends on tho brightest morning the world over saw. You put into a factory cotton, and it comes out apparel. You put into a fac tory lumber and lead, and they como out pianos and organs. And so into the fac tory of the grave you put in pneumonias and consumptions, and they como out health. You put in groans, and they como out halleluiahs. For us, on the final day, the most attractive places will not bo the parks, or the gaidens, or the palaces, but the cemeteries. THE TERFECT BODY. We are not told iu what season that day will come. If it should bo winter, those who come up will be moro lustrous than tho snow that covered them. If in the autumn, those who como up will be more gorgeous than tho woods after the frosts had penciled them. If in thospring, tho bloom on which they tread will be dull compared with tho rubicund of their cheeks. Oh, the perfect resurrec tion body! Almost everybody has some defectivo spot in his physical constitu- tion a dull ear, o- a dim eye, or a rheu matic foot, or a neuralgic brow, or a twisted muscle, or a weak side, or an in flamed tonsil, or somo point nt which the east wind or a 6eason of overwork as saults him. But tho resurrection body shall be without one weak spot, and all that the doctors and nurses and apothecaries of earth wjll thereafter have to do will be to rest without interruption after the broken nights of their earthly existence. Not only will that day be the beautiflca tion of well kept cemeteries, but some of the graveyards that have been neg lected and been the pasture ground for cattle and rooting places for swine will for the first timo havo attractiveness given thero. It was a shamo that in that place un grateful generations planted no trees, and twisted no garlands, and sculptured no marble for their Christian ancestry. But on the day of which I speak the res urrected shall make the place of their feet L'lorions. From under the shadow of the church, where they slumbered TWs JJaster wis ns wuu uwuto .i m ..- -o-at 3C j dead, in assured, for ha was "the first fruits of them that slept." Renan says j he did not rise, but GSO witnesses, CO of them Christ's enemies, say ho did rise, ' for they saw him after ho had risen. If ho did not rise, how did GO armed soldiers let him get away? Surely GO livinir sol diers ought to bo able to keep one dead man. Blessed be God I Ho did get away. ran RECOGNITIONS. After his resurrection Mary Magda lene saw him. Cleopns saw him. Ten disciples in an upper room nt Jerusalem saw him. On a mouutaiu tho 11 saw him. Five hundred nt once saw him. Professor Ernest Renan, who did not see him, will excuse us for taking tho testimony of tho 5S0 who did see him. Yes, yes, ho got nwny. And that makes mo suro that our departed loved ones and we ourselves shall get away. Freed himself from the shackles of clod, ho is not going to leave us and ours iu the lurch. There will bo no doorknob on the in side of our family sepulcher, for wo can not como out of ourselves, but thero is a doorknob on the outside, and that Jesus shall lay hold of, and, opening, will say: "Good morning! Yon haVo slept long enough t Arisel Arise!" And then what flutter of wings, and what flashing of rekindled eyes, nnd what gladsome rush ing across tho family lot, with cries ef: "Father, is that you?" "Mother, is that you?" "My darling, is that you?" "How you nil have changedl The cough gono, the croup gone, tho consumption gone, the paralysis gono, the weariness gono. Come, let us ascend together! The older ones first, tho younger ones nextl Quick, now, get into line! Tho skyward pro cession has already started! Steer now by that embankment of cloud for the nearest gate!" And, bb we ascend, on one Bide the earth gets smnller uutil it is no larger than n mountain, nnd smaller until it is no larger than a palace, and smaller un til it is no larger than n ship, nnd small er until it is no larger than a wheel, nnd smnller until it is no larger thannspeck. FAREWELL AM) HAIL. Farewell, dissolving earth! But on the other side, as wo rise, heaven at first appears no larger than your hand. And nearer it looks liko a chariot, and nearer it looks like a throno, nnd nearer it looks' I liko a star, and nearer it looks liko a sun, ' and nearer it looks liko a universe. Hail, ' scepters that 6hall always wavo! Hail, anthoma that shall always roll! Hail, 1 companionships never again to part! I That is what resurrection day will do ' for all tho cemeteries and graveyards ' from tho Mnchpelah that was opened by Father Abraham m Hebron to tho Mach pelah yesterday consecrated. And that makes Lady Huntington's immortal rhythm most apposite: When thou, my righteous Judge, shalt como To tako thy ransomed people homo, Shall I among them stand? Shall such a w orthlcss w orm ns I, Who sometimes am afraid to die. Bo found at thy right hand? Among thy Balnts let mo bo found, Whenr'er th' archangel's trump shall sound, To see thy Bmlllng face. Then loudest of tho throng I'll sing While heaven's resounding arches ring With shouts of sovereign grace. WuHliIng the Hands. Washing tho hands in water to which ammonia has been added is a very com mon recoinmendatiou. This would be well enough, perhaps, if tho supplemen tary processes wero correctly given, but tho direction is simply for putting a lit tle of this substance into tho water in which the hands are washed. Somebody follows theso directions and finds tho hands rough and disugreeablo almost be yond endurance. Somo day tho victim of this, foolish practice makes up her mind thatmaybo ammonia doesn't agree with hor and forthwith discontinues its use. The fact is that ammonia is absolutely unfit for tho toilet unlebs its effects aro carefully removed by somo suitable agent. It is strongly alkaline and de stroys tho natural oil on nnd near tho surface of tho skin, leaving it rough, crackly and with a decided tendoncy to chap and wrinkle. After tho uso of soap of nny sort or any alkallno preparation tho hands should be thoroughly washed in clean water and rubbed with somo soothing compound, such as glycerin and rosewater, a bit of diluted honey, almond oil or some like substance. This restores tho softness of tho akin and pre vents chapping. GoodHousekeeping. Easily. Quickly, PermintnllrRettored. WEAKNESS, flEFJVOUSHEGS, DEDILITY, and all the train of rrlli I ruin mil orruniir Iir (X04-MM, tbe rMulu ot cvernuik, ll Liiux, errv,H Fullttmigth, U' w ' pnieut ami tone RUT lueei7'.re!iaiid p ril.,n of tU Ujflr. Hm) natural mHhniTc. ImmdIalliiiurYeuiefit x en. Pullurr ImixiulMt. 2 '"J rfreikca nook, explanation and proof malted (Mated) fra. ERIE MEDICAL CO. BUFFALO, H " E. JT. WAITKIMtLNTING CO., BOOK AND JOB PRINTERS -AN Legal Blank Fiibllahcrs. Haiti's New Urtk,over lb bank.Oom'l street HOUSE Painting, Decorating, 1 1 Hard Wood Finishing, Can five good rfreoM. KattiaatM furaUh k. Addrau, Jeo. Kacltatru'b. ifatlKi. Hal denea on rlalem .Motor lUllwujr. Worth SahHfl Leave order t Mrfiwr A IlkiMtar. !&) FOR SALE OR TRADE. One O-room ad otm Vfoow wttw is Oak f iit. Ajlflltbul witfe Itfll IMMaA lotri. Will ltd mid anpamwly or totmUfr. 4i tUMM0r goodbariTiln Apply to W K. 80IUJmt.eor bm iwn and C'heuivketa UtU, HI lm vJiMncfflniirugl H ALU I A mmn What Is the condition of yours? Is your ltnlr dry, J liarsh, brittle? Doc it split at tho ends? Has It a lifeless appearance? Docs It fall out when combed or JS brushed ? Is It full of dandruff? Docs your scalp Itch ? 5 Is It dry or in a heated condition ? If these are somo of your symptomsbc warned in time or you will become bald. V SkookumRoot Hair Grower g Is whatyounwd. ItproJuctlonUnotanaldont,butthennnHof aclnllflo i research. Knnwledra of tho fttaeaiea of the balr ami acalD led to the dl&cor. i cry ot bow to treat them. is not a Dye, out a aellghtrunr the follicles, (t itopt falling . nr Keep tho ecalp clean, healthy, and frco from Irritating ernpUoni, by thouo ot Siookum slin Soap. It destroy! canulHo insectt, uMcK Ittd on ana dtttrov the hair. ,. It four druggist cannot luprly you (end direct to tu, and we will forward J nnnalj. on rpcelut of erica. Grower. ILW oar bottle 1 1 1 or 3.00. Boat). Sou. D per jar i 8 tor $2.90. THE SKOOrOJn TltADC MARC T unn,h Get tho Best Lock Box Ed. C. 7i i 'i 'i ' f y ii i THE NEW WILLAMETTE STABLES Completed and ready to wait on euslomerg. Wo keep n full lino of Truokn, DrasH and Exprvgs to meet all (luminals. Burn and residence 2 block south of postofllce. RYAN & CO. S. W. THOMPSON & Co., Always Keep on hand a large stock of loose and unmounted Diamonds, Rubies, (Sfipphircs and imported Opals. 2 21 Commercial Street. Vicks' Seeds :d Four Grand POPPIES CaiitnliM Hi liflirrn lpcrl)tlniK that ilcKcrllic, not inlslenil ; illuitratloim that lnolrucl, nut rxtKEf rto The cover IscliarniliiRlnliarmonlounlilrnil. Ins of wiitrr color irlnU In f rwn ami white, with n Rohl background, a amini of Ix-duly, Shlrlov. Brilliant, iunp, 32 nacrcflof NovcltlranrlntMl urs. All the leading noveltlrn and the best of theold varieties. Thcue hard timet von ronnnt Over 1000 PUnti For 30 Cm. See Vlck's rio ral Oulde. Biiom 10 run any nan. COOIW where you will niHAHUKH. ll Is not uecemary to adver tise that Villi's smls crow, this In known tin world over, ami also that verv little Rtient for riroierseeil will save uro- 'y --itv cer'sonddiictur'nhllls. ManyconcedeVlck's H-3 Floral Oulde the handsomest rntalocue for "v3 Floral Oulde the handsomest catalogue for HOI. If you loven flneirardeii eend address now, with 10 cents. which may Led dactKt from Bret order, OiTfUO CiiUrrliu for roUM's, Vlrua' Unci nut Jllmivpoliif. M'liuy truvr, mry "53? JAMES ;00O$$QOO040O$CJ$OG' "" ' ' " """ rrorx TO SALT LAKE . DENVER. OMAHA, KANSASZCITY, CHICAGO, ST. LOUIS ' 'AND ALT. EASTERN CITIES! 3 i DAYS to 2 CHICAGO HOW'S 0u'c'(el5 Chicago 'and KoiirS Qd'c'cer 0miJna and Kan" Tbfough Pullman and Tourist Sleepers. Free HwJInlng Chair Can, Dining Cart, rtMlM ajsd KMMsnil Information call on or tadr, W, II. HUHUmriT, A!, . r.A m VVaiklD-tou .. VorM fojiTLAtfD, OKSOO. ' inTXuril.m h"m itijirr JZZ&Ji WV.WWWWWw "8kookum"contalQt neither mlncralinorolla. It i cooling ana reiretmnc ionic liy ttimuiauna hair, evrta dandruff and grout hair on bald ROOT HAIR GROWER CO.. 2 Vlfth Avxnnn. New York. V. Y. sr ir? a ms. c? i s B I Crfi JIt Forest drove Poultry lards. Established in 1877. EGGS FOR HATCHING FROM THE VERY BEST VARIETIES. Slock Finer than Ever, but Prices Samo as Usual nnd then you will bo satisfied. Send Tor Catalogue. Address J. M. GARRISOM, 335, " Forest Grove, Or. Cross c Wholesale a lid Retail Dealer in Frcsli, Suit and Smoked Meats ot a lHiiuls 95 Court and 110 State Streets. Contain the Germ of Life. Keats. FAILURE VIRTUALLY IMPOSSIBLE. Vick's Floral Guide, 1894, Th rionter Citilojn of VtgeUMu and riowtrl. fixll) 1.3 In., nllll DmTtm TelloTf Alone Union Nerd, (1.00 lr pound. xorr.LTiES. llrsnclilnir Aster, Hibiscus, Nantct, Dahlia, Kllitl Vlclc, Double Anemone, Charmer I'ea, Ncrr Potatoes. In BnlflertnLcnL nny inini.ni' receive IM'I.Ij 11 is not uecemary to olver reris ltow, this Is known the the hnrvent imvs. A I'loiirisu, mer I'rmiuro Aiiiiiuiuiiiir. VICK'S SONS East and South -VIA- THE SHASTA ROUTE -. ot thr- Southern Pacific Company. OALirollHIA IXl'lltHS TKA1W HON DAILY IIP TVVKKN roHTLANl) ANDH. If, Hl Ulll. Murtli. u:l& p. in. y.iy p. m. 10 tf a.m. i.v. Portluiitl Ar, I S! 1..V. I 6:i Uv.l 7 h:'JJ u. iu w Lv. Kolem 1. b:A) it, in 7,-OU ii. in IT -! At. Hun Krun, Above train atop nt nil Htullons from I'orlluud to Albany Inclusive; also ut Tangent rilieild, llalsey, JlhrrlatHirg, Junction City, Irvlnic. KuKtno and ull hUIIoiis from lUmtburi; to Aallluiul Inclithlve. UOHKllUltO MAll. DAILY, iuaT a. in. I l.v. 11:17 a. in l.v, ;US p. in, I Ar. Portland rialein Itoaenurg Ar. I 4:30 p. in, J.v. I 1:40 p. io, Lv. 70 t. in i Dining Cars on Ogdcu Route PULLMAN BDFFOT SLBBPfiBS AHD Second Class Sluoplng Cars Attached to all through trains, .Vest Side Din, Between Portland and Cemllis: DAILY (UCin BtTWDAY). f'sw k. iii. l."v orUaud ' A?. I 6 p. i lifclft p. rn. Ar. VrvallU I.v, lyj p. in. At Albany and (Jorvalll connect wllti tifclnaofOregnn IVMno Itatlrnad. ktx f a KM THA IX i n 1 1, r KiraiTiiumjiV 4i p. iu. 7(86 p. in. I'orlluud MeMlpnvllla Ar. I art6 At. I.y. I HO a. in THROUGH TICKETS To all polnu In tha Kaattru Mates, Canada und Hurope can tx oblalntxl at lowet rut lesll iron. it. T. snuinsii, akii. pusw. JS.r. IIOUKIUJ. AHl,U,r,UllirHi U. JtUKUliKU, alaOABW -itmm W,W&. -i i I'nOFESaitWAli AND nOSlNESS CAKDS. P. II. D'AKOY. GKO. 0. 11INGUAM. TYAUGY BINGHAM, Attorney at Law, XJ Itooms 1, 2 und U, U'Arcy llulldlng, 141 binto street. Bpcclnl attention lcn to bust new) In the supreme and clicult court or the BtAtO. '1 11 mlLMON i-OKI), Attorney at law, Balem, JL Oregon, ullluo up mlr& lu 1'nttou block. H J. lllQUKll, Attorney m law,Balem, Oro tun UnVe over jiubIi'r bnutc. JJ.SHAW.M.W.HUM 811AW4UUNT . AttornejR at law. Ofllco over Capital .National bunk, Bnlom, Oregon JOHN A. OAltlON, Attorney nt law, rooms 8 and 4, Hush bank building, Haleni.Or. 11. K. UON11AM. W.H. HOLMES. BON HAM A HOLMES, Attorneya at law. Ofllce In llusli block, between fltaloand ourt, on (Vminiprolnl Mrevt. JOHN liAVMK, AlTOKNlfiY-AT-lAW. i olleo Ions nuuli uud promptly remitted. Muipliy block, cor. Htuto and Commercial HtrwlH rtiilem, Oregon. D-IMf. CjTKl.L HUEKMAN. Typewriting nnd Q commercial Mcuoginpliy. Onlce, room 11, Oray block. The beat of work done atrea. Bona tile into. 12-20 TT7"O.KN1UHTON-Archltect and auperln- T leuaeui, uuice, rooms J ana a isusu- Uruymun block. IMH-U Q O. HKOWNE, 41. 1)., Physician and Bur Q, geou, OlUce, Murphy blook; residence, 45, Commercial Btreet. ; TB.T.O. SMITH, Dentist, B2 BUito street XJ Balem, Oregon. Finished Uoutal opera, uons or every descrlpllou. 1'aluless opera, tlonsn specialty. The CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY. Travelers "inakela note on t." This Great Railway iSystem Connects ST. PAUL and OMAHA Xfl With all transcontinental Hues, giving clliccL and twlft comiiuililca tlon to all 3 IlSAbTKItN mm SOU1IIUHN l'OINTS. AND IS T1IK, :::0NLY LINE::: , ruiiulug j Klectrlo Lighted fniiil ; Bteuiu Heated Vostlbuled trains of elegant Sleeping, I'arlor, Dining aud lluUct Curs, with Free Keclinlny CItatrs, Making IU sorvlco second to iiono In the world. 1 Tlckotsire on sale at all prominent railroad ticket oIllcc'H. For further lnlormutlon ask the nearest rail road ngcut, or addrcbH C.J. EDDY, General Agt. J. W. CASEY, Trav. Pass Agt. PORTLAND, Oregon. From Terminal or Interior Points tho ill lnjtlie.llno to taho To all Points East and South. It Is the dining oar route, ltruns through vestibule trains, every day In the year io ST. PAUL AND CHICAGO ;(No change of cars.) Composed ordlnlngcars unRtiipassod, l'ullmau drawing room sleepers 01 latest equipment TOURIST Sleeping Cars. Dost that can be constructed and In which nccommodatUns are both frco and fur Dished for holderu ofllrst and second-class tlckeu,aud ELEGANT DAY COACHES. AcouMnuocB lino connestlng with all linos, aftordliig direct and uninterrupted service. l'ullmau slierer rwf-viMons can be sc oured In adverce UirocgU any agent of the road. Through ttohcts to and from all points lu America, Kugluud and Kurope cull be puraltased ut any ticket ofllco of this com pany. full Information concerning rates, time of traliiH, routes aud other details furnished on Application to any urent or A. D. CHARLTON, Assistant Ueneral l'assunger Agent, No, Ul First street, cor. Washington; Vort- land,Oregon Biiaw & Downino, ARenta. THE WILLAMETTE, balem, oimoom ItalcH, $SJ.50 to $5.00 por Day The best hotel between Portland and Han Francisco. First-class In all Its appointments. IU tables are served with the Choicest Fruits Grown In tho Willamette Valley. AJ.WAGNERfProp1 nhoumatfami . m. LumbagOy Solatlca, Klcfnoy ComplnlntSu Lamo book, c Dn. SAHDEH'S TRIO BELT With eiectraMnanetlo SUSPCNSOny latest l'llr ll lMprtsfl I Will ear wlllrfnit m-Hctn all . rskw noultlnirfrcm wr-iAiJtua o( wua wrts ii Mrrm t MM , " or UldlA. cHuo, sa orrvous nuui, r. .U...L Isnffu4r, . iaIiiU. Uuwr Itik. hunUi, Huibv. l f ' ir nl III lllh, He, TUls fkrl rl..fnjtlli.m. buliurv. Ilvar 'aal..Llsd.lr Im, si) ttuUl- . i, ... It, TUU. tUlrh- 'k i 4.UUM luuslrlll.runr or w fafflt kiVsiu vmewtssllbf U dlwtu4 er tw. luou. mmOs tfr bit vsimI by II. U mtffd IuthUojs slur sj) hW(m1m f JV1. Ad. . fit Umuml iif tMIUHMHHlH iwssul mnrr Mlr ut. Uur rrrl Imftumt J-UilUIC ItWMMIir. tS) rtU Uu f vffsml i ikmi. ruts liksll (.lis. UmIU s4 flstru Wmllt t7iiT0 U i U iiUrs t4u4trlWt,iracAlt,toAlUJ.fUi,tt4 OAUOeti BLbOTRIO CO., Wol J 78 ytrsH.tr.es. l'OUTiVJLMli OltB. IttmoveU totor.ThlrU una Wsuhlutlou ttl, 1'ortland, Or, - s vAWyyi k r ' s i x "ttv. ELEC 'ks V. ited .o, a i r u -vr