ICit h Strike in l aiiaiui. Seattle, Jan. 17. A Bpeoial to the Times from Dawson pays: A tremendously rich strike, the mag nitude of which has never been equaled since Pob Henderson told his wonder ful story of the Klondyke, lias been made 18 miles noith of a point on . Tan- ana Kiver, :00 miles from its source The district is in American territory. Circ! i has been depopulated and a wil trtampede of prospectors from all the punoundina country is in progress. As yet lew have reached the situation. Tim holes that proved the wealth of the count ry were only sunk this winter and the lust man to reach Dawson from She i'is'w o.'Uiitry has just arrived. II is a Japanese, J. Wada, well known in Dawson, where his veracity and hon- 8Siv aro Known as ins cniei irans. 1 i i i , c f,ir the report has not been spread to any ex'ent in Dawson, but the iittU that has been told has created an ex citement that surely means a stampede. iiitgisi oi v aua s report on tne ground is that the district resembles the K'ondike in the physical formation, but has a heavier growt'j of timber. Gold in vvitiely different kinds had been found in eigbt different creeks when Wanda left for Dawson, December 28 The o. initial sti ike was made on Pe dro, a crerk running parallel with Tan ana, about 18 miles from the river This creek is staked for miles. Dan McCarthy, a well known Dawsonite, made the discovery on Gold Stream, a continuation of Pedro, winch has ptoved to be the i ichest so far found. It was 25 cents at 13 feet down and bedrock not yet reached. McCarthy struck pay De cember 24, while sinking his first hole. It panned seven cents. Uu Christmas day he had lfi cents to the pan. Three days Inter he had found 2o cents to the pan. The fcniind became richer all the time as he descended and what he found before reaching bedrock may he still more sensational reading when Vie news is G ally received. There i a war on in Josehine aounty between the miners and the so-called "timber grabbers." A number of locations made in the Grave Creek, one of the ik-hest aiining districts in Souutheru Ore gon, has been protested by mining men on the plea that they were taken up mainly for the purpose of locators getting the minerals the lands contained. At the annual meeting of the Oregon IJopgrowers' Association, Thursday, in Portland, a bill was framed to be presented to the legis lature providing for a hop in spector. 1 he hnd occasion to -brajght Stock and Poultry t l . i . "0 a n p easea to say vat I never used anything for stock that gave half as good sa.ijcaction. I heartily recom mend it to all owners of stock. J. B. BELSHER, St. Louis, Mo Si"-v fock or poultry should not at i.eap stock food any n-.ore than jick jMiions should expect to be c jre: r. y iuoa. nen your stock aid p;i.1trv ar pick give 'them med- i . " ... r 1 . J; i- ne. i nun mem wnnworin- i It 's tV' k food. Unl-iai the bowels an 1 f tir up the torpid liver and the anin u w;.l Le cured, i it I e possi Ut to ci.re it. Ulack-Draurht Stock and Iv. Itry Medicine unloads the bow..-':, and i-tirs up the tort'id liver. cirrs pvtry malady cf ttock if J t?.u-n i". t.r.e. Secure a 2."-cnt can V uf Blacii-DraugLt Stock and Poultry Medicine and it will pav for it?elf ten times ovf-r. Horses work better. Cows rive n.cre milk. Hogs cain flesh. At. J Ixi.s iaymoreeegs. Jtflvgthe rrrobit Ei of making as much blood, l.ofii snd tnercy 3 posiLle out or -', sr-alkst amount of food con- durvid. Buy a can from your dealer. . ftimmtJ Antiquity of Bell Founding. The art of bell founding is undoubted" ly of great antiquity. The Saxons are known to have used bells in their churches, although probably but srnal ones, for the Venerable Bede, writing at the end of the seventh century, alludes to them in terms which seem to show that they were not unfamiliar things, The towers of the Saxon period have belfries of considerable dimensions in most cases, and at Crowland abbey, in South Lincolnshire, there was a famous peal of seven bells many years before the Norman conquest. The monks at that time and for long after were the chief practitioners of the art of bell founding which indeed is one of the many things those well abused men have handed down to us. Their bells were rarely without inscriptions, often in very bad Latin, containing perhaps some obscure joke, tho point of which is quite lost. More often they were of a re ligious nature, sometimes, we fear, not unmixed with a dash of superstition, as when tho bell declares that its sound drives away the demons of the air who caused pestilence and famine, lightning and thunderstorms. As a rule, unfortunately they put no dates on their bells, a defect which has been in 6ome measure overcome by the researches of many enthusiastic campa nologists, but which is likely to keep the early history of bells shrouded in dark ness for a long time to come. Gentle man's Magazine A 'oted London Mission. The other Sunday night at the Char rington mission, which is held in a long, narrow room, double galleried all around, the coughing (from the fog) was more like Fourth of July with conglomerate firecrackers, church bells and cannonad ing than ono would conceive as possible issuing from a merely human assembly. Just a word about this Charrington mission, which is a feature of tho east end. Frederick Charrington belongs to a wealthy fainily of brewers. About 17 years ago he began to do a sort of street missionary work in East London, near his father's brewery. His father threat ened to disinherit him, but finally left him a share, though not p. full share, in the buginess. Once, on being taunted on the street with wearing tho blue rib bon "What does it cost you to wear that ribbon?" he was ablo to reply, "A hundred thousand dollars. He sold out his interest in the brewery to his brothers and built in Milo End road, the prolongation of Whitechapel, the Great Assembly hall, which had been projected but never begun by Keith Falconer. Every Sunday night 3,000 or more people gather at the evangelistic service of tho mission, and its fellowship society, with the constant religious, edu cational and entertainment work center ing at the Great Assembly hall, makes it a power for good in a district which con tains a number of powers for evil. Lon don Cor. Hartford Courant. Remarkable Tenacity of Life. The pious Dr. Shirely Palmer tells a fish 6tory that is calculated to make the members of the St. Louis Hunting and Fishing association (to use a strictly original expression) "turn green with envy." By some hook or crook hook no doubt Mr. rainier came into pos session of a fiuo brace of tench. They were a lively pair of finny beauties when the doctor took them homo with tho idea of slaughtering them for his Sunday din ner. Placing them in a pail of water, he put them into the larder and thought no more about tho matter. That night at midnight he was aroused, so he says, by a groan proceeding from the aforesaid larder. Inspection of the room explained tho mystery. One of tho fish had sprung from the basin or pail and lay gasping upon tho floor, every now and then uttering sounds similar to those which had dis turbed Mr. Palmer. Next day both fish were prepared for dinner, but such was their tenacity of life that both, after hav ing undergone tho process of scaling and evisceration, sprang from tho pan and wriggled about on the floor as though they had but recently been removed from their native element. This is told as a scientific fact, not as a "fish story" or in the way of a joke. St. Louis Republic. The Mralu uu tho llyc. There is no reason whj a muscle or muscles of tho two should not be fagged I ont ju.st as tho muscles elsewhere do. Lot ono bear a weight all day long, does ! ho not attribute Ids consequent head j ache to the heavy burden he has borne: I It seems without elaborate thinking we I could conceive of tho results following j upon prolonged use of the eye. Nature i has dune all sho could to protect and prolong the usefulness of tho eye. No earthly architect ever yet planned a ; structure that would not yield, crumble ; and fall, and tho house human, so ex j quisitely uplifted in curious and mys ; terious ways, falls and returns to dust more rapidly and surely than need be. ! for the reason that we do not realize how much one part is sustained or over- thrown by another. One tiny muscle is ; potent enough to disturb the whole econ j omy, especially if intercurrent diseases ' exist in addition to "eye 6traiu." Phila- delphia Record. - - The sec-rotary of the interior has approved the selection of the Northern Pacific railroad under prant, embracing fiSOl acres in the Oregon City land distaiot, and 12, 1 10 acres in the State of Washington. How g Thin? We offer Oue Hundred Dollars Re ward for any case of Catarrh that can not be oared by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O. We, the nndersigned, have knowD F. J. Oneney for Ihe last 15 years, and be lieve him perfectly honorable in all busi ness transactions and financially able to carry ont Bny obligation made by their firm. West & Trtjax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Waldinq, Kinnan & Makvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internal ly, aoting direotly upon the blood and mncous surfaces of the system. Price. 75o per bottle. Sold by all druggists Testimonials free. Hall's Family Pills are tbe best. Finds Way to Live Long. The startling announcement of a Dis covery that will surely lengthen life is made by editor O. II. Downey, of Churu busco, Iud. "I wish to state," he writes, "that Dr. Kind's New Discovery for Con sumption is the most infallible remedy that I have ever known for Coughs, Colds and Grip. It's invaluable to people with weak lungs. Having this wonderful medicine no one need dread Pneumonia or Consumption. Its relief is instant and cure certain." The Hloonm Drng Co. guarantee every 50d and $1.00 bottle, and give trial bottles free. BUSINESS LOCALS and want ads of all descriptions will hereafter be published in a column by themselves. Itatcs for Loral Ads. Ten cents a line for first insertion and 5 cents a line for each subsequent inser tion. All notices set in brevier type. rocerics. Binns Bros, for fresh groceries. T. II. Howard for fine groceries The finest groceries at Binns Bros. The Gazette has added a new blank to its list Contest Atlldavit. For a cup of coffee tnd a delicate unch drop in at the new short order house, East 6ide of Main street. Howard's grocery store is a very pop ular place for the purchase of supplies for farmers and outfits for outing in the way of extra fine groceries. Almost everything imaginable kept in stock. t's handy where you can get anything you want If you are in a hurry and want a quick meal, stop at the short order house and get the best, next door to Gentry e barber shop. Wanted Hides, pelts, and furs. Highest cash prices paid for coyote skins and other furs. 14 tf. Phil Coiin. HORSES WANTED. The old reliable buoineHH firm, the Seattle Auction and Sale Stables, Inc., which holdn special auctl.m Bales every day and regular weekly auctions every Friday, receive horses, 1 to urn, on consignment and advance all ship ping charges, and sell on commission, or w ill buy your horses outright. If you have any number of horses you w ish to dispose of at the Seattle market price, no matter how far you are from the city, write us full description, and we will let you know what the prices are and how they are selling. All correspondence promptly answered. N. T. Jollill'ee, Manager. M.J. Walker, Auctioneer. 1J12 Western Ave., Seattle, U ash. Flrst to arrive wltn tho telegraphic news The Weekly Oregonian. Independent and reliable The Oregon Ian. The news of holh nsmlspheres in The f visit DR. JORDAN'S orcatT tmstun OF AfiATOMYf I OS I MARKET ST., SAN FRANCISCO. CAU (tHi Blttkul itovulkj ThslarsKt Anatomical Uainn In Ui World. Gratst attraction f ( City. A U'cknfn, or njr contrast ei r.tit!iA,pniiiu vcly rarru ir tti oldt Mpvciiiiiiitoa the PbCi DR. JORDAN-PfiiVATI OiSEAStS Tdi tar a td MMdiv ' Id nir who irt uiTr!mr frtm lh rtlWU of youttlal tndlv I creuoot or ricnmn In maturr rearm, rrarvous ar:4 rhviiul Itrbl Illy. Im. polcnc.T, Li 9lnlio4 to nil ItacomDU- rktiona; kpfrmitKirrliwa, rrotlnlwr. i rli!, Uannrruwa, Ulrrl. rrranmr f I'rlnnllnar. lo. Hy a combination of i rorne'lle, of i .nt curatiTo p o r, th Doctor ' ha o arr.iiiiie'l till tr-tmri.t tliat It will not , only ainrU uutnnliate r, llil. but parmmrent cure. I ho Itoctor doc not claim loiifif.imi miracle, but In M knutvn to be a lulr and pqu:ir I'hyiician ni Hnrcwm, pre-cmkMnt In lrp"r!i;;r-I)raf, of 91cD. fcVFMM.I Ih.m.uHhlT ersdicated from th nli-ni Mi'.iioot ihi- Uicf Jlarrur.i. Truaara fitted br an KtrM-l Nadlvml I cure for Kuplnrr. A quirk and rndioat curt 1 or Pllea. t'ia.nr an! riatalaa.b ur. Jon.-tn special painless matboila. Kt KIIT Hr arnlvlnr tanawlU raealT 0"r ho7U.it opinion 't liikconir'nl"' We wul Uurrrmir a KiAlTlVt CVBM . retry rise ire tui.lrf'iH. t.-ins'ii!atl.,n FHKK an1 ftrlCtTT rrikll, CHAhtKS TEH Y RKASOyABLA Treatment nerwinall t cr br latter. Writ- fir Rook. I'll I I.OMO r SIT OT nAHKUUC MilLin Fkil LA. aOAbi book for men.) Callorwrtta DX JORDAN k CO.. 1081 Mirktl St I. r f f According to recent statistics there are 85,000,000 horses, ot which the Unitrd States is credited with 18,2V 140, which would average five to the square mile enough to mount one quarter of the population. Being an industrial nation and breeding spe cifically for market type-, the bulk of the horses is fast approximating draft ers and ligtyt harness horses, the types in most urgent demand. The nations of continental Europe raise houses priu cipally for military use, and only the surplus find sale in open markets. REMARKABLE CURE OF CROUP. A Little Boy's Life Saved. I have a few words to say regarding Chamberlain's Cougb Remedy, It saved my little boy's life and I feel that I can not praise it enough, I bought a bottle of it from A. E. Steere of Goodwin, S. D., and when I got home with it the poor baby oould hardly breathe. I gave tne med'oiue as directed every ten minutes until he "threw up" and then I thought sure he was going to choke to death. We bad to pull tbe phlegm oat of his mouth in great long otrings. i am pos itive that if I had not got tut bottle of cough medicine, my boy would not be on earth today. Joel Demont, In wood, Iowa. For sale dy Slocum Drng Co. , q.i National Livestock Association. The O. R. &, N. company is making the following low rates for tickets Jo Kansas City, Mo., and return during the meeting of the National Live Stock As sociation which meets on January 13: From Portland, Puget Sound and common points, $00; from Spokane, Pendleton, Lewiston, intermediate and common points, .f 55 ; from Ileppner, $59.80. Limit to commence date of sale and to be continuous passage, 00 days from date of sale. Stop overs will be allowed on return nip within limit, for further information in ) elation to form of tickets, routes, etc., apply to J. M. Kernan, local agent, Ileppner. A Itcmarkublc direr. The (Ja.ktti: has made special ar rangements wilh the Younir People's Weekly, published in Chicago, to fur nish ilds interesting and valuable paper with the Gazktiu, both papers fur $1.(50 The Young People's Weekly is one of the leading story papers of America with 1G pages, nict-ly illustra'ed every week. It is always interesting to the young people. EosggGiroo Field's Views on Ambition and pepsia. Dyf "Dyspepsia," wrote Eupene Field, "often incapacitates a man for endeavor and sometimes extinguishes the fire of ambition." Thouph great despite his complairrt Field suffered from indiges tion all his life. A weak, tired stomach can't digest your food. It needs rest. You can only rest it by the use of a preparation like Kodol, which re lieves it of work by digesting your food. Rest soon rcstoros it to its normal tou. Strengthening, Satisfying, Envigoratlng, Prepared only by E. C. PhWittA Co., Chicago. Tiia $1. boillu coutaian 2 A times tt Wc. g M'exr oif . iSo do BiinrraJicsaitf A A m your merchant. Jj an V-rr A " EXPER.ENCE Trade Marks Designs Copyrights tc. ATiTon pondlnn A skcloh and doscrit't ir.n tii qil'klr amvrtsui ir I'liimn free wliot lior ho invrnti'iti prohnt lT y Hoiit iMo. fi.niniiinira-tioiistri-tW-c.ntt.li-iiti.il. HANDEOOK n Catetils n-nt tk l lP!t Hk'-tn-v for SM'iirmir pitpnt. r.-itpnts taken tliMurh Mann X Co. receive tptruil notice, without chwrge, iu the Scientific Jlmcrican. A bnrdomplT llliiratol wppklr. I ,nrcot rir rulation -f anr .H-ntill'" Journal. Ti-rtns. f i a T..r: f'.iir ni..ntli, U fcoiJ by all TtewtKl.'alor. munNCo.36,Broad New York UrDCb Office. tZ2S F 6U WasbiOKtuti. 1. U fflt - I W I THE PALACE 9 MANUFACTURERS OF FINE CANDIES H. D. Wood & Co OREGON Shout line Union Pacific AND Onlv Line EAST via SflLT BIE aid DEPEB TWO TRAINS DAITTV- Daily TIME SCHEDULES .Hf Departs ., Akkivks Hkppner, Ok. Fast Mail For 8:15 a. m. East and West Fast Mail From East and West 5:15 p. m. Kxpress For 8:15 a, m. East and West Express From East and West 5:15 p. STEAMER LINES. San Francisco Portland Route. Steam sails from Portland 8 p. m. every 5 days. Boat service between Portland, Astoria, Orogon City, Dayton, Salem, Independence, Oorvallis and all Columbia and Willamette Kiver points. SNAKE RIVER ROUTE. Steamers between Kipariaand Lewiston leave Riparia daily at 4:10 a. m., returning leave Lewiston daily, except Monday, at 8:.'!0 a. in. J. M.KE11NAN, Agent, Ileppner. A. L. CRAIG, General Vasseuger Agent, Portland NELSON k FORT SHEPPAHD RED MOUNTAIN RAILWAYS Tne Only All-Knil lluute Without Change of CarH Between Spokane, Kosslftnd Bnd Nelfon. Also between Nelson and Kosslund, daily except nndny : Fienvo. Arrivo. A. M Hpokano fi:40 I'. M. II ill1.) A. M lioHsianil 8:40 H. M. tt:10 A.M Nelson 5:45 P. M. Close eonneet ons at Nelson with steamers for Kaslo, and all Kooteimi Lake jioiuts. PHsnntrer8 f t Kettle Kiver anil HoniHlary r'wk rsonnetit at Marcus with staun dailv. TICK 15 T S TO AND FIIOM A I.I POINTS EAST VIA GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY SIJORT TO LINK sum, Diicra, minneafolis, Chicago And Points East. Through Prtlure and Tourist Sleepera, Pining uml Bullet Smoking Library Cars Daily Trains; Fnst Tiiin: Service ami Scen ery rnt.MUHleil. For Kates, Fohlers anl Full inforniHtion re Kiinling tickets, routes, etc call on or address J. W. Piialos, T. 1. A, II. Dickson, c. T. A ll'l THIRD ST., i'OIULAM). A. B. C. PKSNI.STON', G. W. P. A., 012 Firt-t Avciric, .... SeattU-, Waft) Tie nwesteni Line H truius daily lietu ecn St. Paul and C hicago compi 'isini; Tbe L'.test rn!lrrHu Sk-ept.rs, IVerlebH Ti"'nt; Chth, liibrHry nml DL.'f rvati n Cars, Free UecIiniDg CLuir Cars. 1 he 20('entury Train, "The Northwestern Limited," Kuns every day in the year. Tbe Finest Trnin in tbe World. Electric Lighted Steam Heated 1 o ChifHtfo ly Payliulit. The Radirer state Kx.res. the Finest May Train running l.etwetn .-t l'ni;l an. I hi ai;o via. the Short l ine. Connection from ttie Wet made via. The Northern I'acitic, (ireat N'ortli erri and Canadian Pacific Hy. 1 His is also the 'rest line between Omaha, St Pan! and Miniicaolis. All agents sell ticket, via, "The Northwestern Liue." W. H MEAD. H. I Sl.-I.ER. Gen. Aeent. Ticket Art M Alder 6t.. Portland, Ore.