HI ggttfclB Conaffis feitt. FRIDA I MORNING, MAY 11, 1SS3 RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. The Holiness tent was pitched at San Iiego recently. The Catholic Church of Phenix, A. T., has received a very fine organ. An effort is being marie to establish a Baptist Church at Dillon, M. T. A Methodist Episcopal Church is to be built at Sun River, M. T., this summer. Two churches are being simultaneously erected in Anaheim; a Spanish and a Ger man Church. Rev. Dr. M. M. OJidson of San Francisco organized a Unite 1 Presbyterian Church at Los Angeles on Thursday. The annual Episcopal Conference for Ore gon will take place in Salem from the 7th to the 10th of June next. A minister is on the way out from New York to take ch.-.rse of the Presbyterian Church at Boise City, I. T. At Corralitos the Trusters have decide! to proceed at once to fit up the hall which lias been donated for church purposes. Edward Kimball, the church-debt ex tinguisher, attended the session jf the State Sunday School Association at Los Angeles. The Tacoroa W. T., Ledger says thst St. Luke's Episcopal Church will be, when completed, the handsomest building of the kind on Pnget Sound. The Unitarians of San Diego are building a new church. The congregation is a mere handful of people, yet they are erecting a ( house of worship. The corner -stone for the new Episcopal Church at Los Angeles, is to be laid about the middle of next month. The coutract has been let for the building. Among the graduates of the Presbyterian Theological Seminary of the Pacific on last Thursday evening was Thomas B. Stewart of the United Prc.-b terian Church. A movement has been organized for the establishment of a Methodist female college in Danville. Yx Mrs. Beecher Stowe is building a church near Jacksonville, Fla., "a church with a bell in it" to remiud her of "'Auld Lang Syne." Archbishop Feehan is expected to o to Borne within a short time to arrange the preliminaries for the establishment "of a Catholic university in the large and flourish ing archdiocese of Chicago. The Theological Faculty of Yale College has voted to use the revised version of the New Testament at moruing players, and other devotional exercises, believing it bet ter than any otiier English version. Rev. Mr. Prout, editor of fhe Virginia City, M. T., religious paper, says: "Edit ing this paper is like trying to swing a very large cat in a very small garret without hurting the garret." The General Assembly of the United Presbyterian Church of North America will bold its twenty-fifth annual session in Pitts bug, Pa., commencing the second Wed nesday in May. The Congregational Church Society of Los Angeles have ordered a pipe orgau to he built for their new church, at a cost of .$2, 500, the machinery to be in place during the month of July next. On the morning of the Rev. Father Cleary's departure for Ireland on a six months' leave of absence, he was presented with a purse of .i00 on behalf of his admir ing friends in Petalmna. Rev. C. D. Barrows h.is been invited to deliver the annual address before the "Chris tian Fraternity," at Dartmouth College, his Alma Mater, on .Sabbath evening, June 24th. He has accepted fhe invitation. A friend visiting St. Louis has received for the Los Angeles church a fine Bible do nated by Dr. Post's Sunday school, and a beautiful communion set, including table linen of the finest kind from some unknown donor. Rev. and Mrs. Richard Wylie have re turned to their home in Napa, after their two years' sojourn abroad, in the enjoyment of excellent health. Mr. Wylie resumes immediately the tsbjuge of the Presbyterian Church in that city. Dr. Marvin of the First Congregational Church of Portland, Or., will deliver the Baccalaureate sermon, and Dr. Nesbit, of the Baptist Church of Salem, Or., the com mencement address at the Commencement of the Willamette University. Salem Statesman. William Brown, who was a Ruling Elder in the United Presbyterian Church since the organization of that body twenty -five years ago by the union of the Associate and Associate Reformed Churches, was buried from the United Presbyterian Church in San Francisco last Tuesday. The United Presbyterian Presbytery of San Francisco, at its recent session, granted the petition for the organization of the Sec ond Church of that city, to be situated at the Mission. Steps have leen takeu for the erection of a chaoel. It is understood that, Rev. T.. B; Stewart will be called to the pastorage of the new church, and that he will accept. Father G. S. Collins, O. S. D., died at St. Thomas' Church, Zanesville, Ohio, aged thirty. He was a member of the Dominican Order for thirteen years, and was ordained by Bishop Corrigan, at Newark N- J.t in 1875. The membership of the Catholic Church at Roanoke, Va., has increased within a few months from 50 to L75. The congregation propose the immediate erection of a church, built of stone, with a seating capacity of 400 or 500. It is said that Rev. Dr. James Freeman Clarke, the distinguished Unitarian min ister and author, has prepared a condensed Bible for use in the home, the school, and the church, and that it will soon be issued by a New York publisher. In the beginning of this centnry there were but fifty languages into which the Bible had made it3 way in 3,300 years. Since 1880 it has enriched, in all, three hundred, with 15,000,000 copies. According to the declaration of Rev George F, Pentecost, the noted evangelist, that in the great cities, of chnrohes where the talent, wealth, culture, leisure, and the opportunity to do revival work abound, there the number of conversions is in an inverse ratio to the facilities. This is attribu ted to the over-feeding of the churches. Rev. Thomas Scully, of Cambridgeport Mass., proposes to found a new religious order, and will proceed to Rome next Sep temlier for the purpose of obtaining, the Papal approval of such an organization. He and his curate, Father J. F. Munday, are to form the nucleus of the new order, which is to devote itself mainly to teaching. The Roman Catholics cf Spain number 18.000,000, and have 4,000 magnificent churches. The well-known evangelist, Hammond, has gone to Bermuda to conduct meetings for a month. His last labor at Newark, N. J., resulted in many conversions. The Foreign Mission Committe of the Free Church of Scotland has been memorial ized to set apart and ordain as evangelists the medijal missionaries it sends to foreign parts. A Norwegian missionary in Zululand re ports that he has baptized twenty adiilt Zulus since the war, and that thirty others are in a hopeful condition. Day and night schools are in full operation. The estimated value of the lands, build ings, chapels, printing-presses, etc., held by the Board of Foreign Missions of the Pres byterian Church for the use of its missions in heathen lands, is S777.SOO. On Sunday, the 21st of March, the Bishop of Portsmouth administered the Sacrament of Confirmation at Saviour's, Freshwater Isle of Wight. The event was noteworthy, as being the first Confirmation in Fresh water since the Reformation. At present Australia counts sixteen bishops, 400 priests, 800 churches, 640 re ligious or scholastic institutions, and 600, 000 Catholic laity. All this may be said to lie growth of forty years, for when Queen Victoria ascended the throne the Catholics in Australia could be almost counted on one's fingers. The American Baptist Missionary Union has 181 missionaries in its Asiatic fields, 663 ordained and unordcined native preachers, 5S7 churches, and 46,017 members. The first Karen convert baptized by Judgon led Qual, to Christ, and Quala baptized more than 2,000 converts in less than three years. SCIENTIFIC MISCELLANY. Written expressly for the Gazette by a celebrated E astern Scientist. A novel industry is being developed in Germany. It appears that for some time Krupp, of the great iron works at Essen, has been making a regular business of pro ducing and selling liquified carbonic acid. The gas is condensed and liquified under a pressure of about 12,000 pounds to the square inch, and is coming into extensive use for various purposes, one of its principal applications being the compression of steel castings. In Berlin the lire engines are each supplied with a large vessel contain ing the condensed gas, which is allowed to flow into the engines on arrival at a fire, and by its expansion in returning to its normal state pumps water upon the flames until a sufficient steam pressure is obtained to do the work. Doubtless the most effective plan of avoid ing injury from tobacco is to avoid using that substance; but those who consider "the need" an indispensable luxury may be in terested in the statement of Mons. Armand that the injurious effects of nicotine can be counteracted or destroyed by moistening the tobacco leaves when in course of pre paration with a strong infusion of water cresses. In the treatment of certain skin affec tions, Prof. Kapose of Vienna places the patient on a bed where the body is immersed in water and allows him to remain for fifty or a hundred days. A French medical journal pronounces the3e long baths very success'ul. Previous to the sixteenth century men knew that the rubbing of certain substances gave them the property of attracting and and then repellin? light bodies, and that formed the world's stock of electrical knowledge. Mons. Fourmant has proven that pork containing trichinae may still be dangerous after having been kept in salt for fifteen months. From results obtained with various ferti lizing substances Prof. At'water has drawn the following conclusions: Corn needs little nitrogen besides what it can draw from nat ural sources, while its yield is largely in creased under the influence of mineral fer tilizers the most effective being those in which the chief component is phosphoric acid or potash, according to the soil and the season. Potatoes respond uniformly to all the fertilizing ingredients; and they are less able than corn to gather from natural sour ces. The same appears to be true for turnips. Not enough experiments have been made with other crops to justify conclusions con cerning them. Practically the largest aver age yield for all crops is secured by the use of fertilizers containing all the essential ele. ments of plant food. Used alone, nitrate of soda is rarely useful, sulphate of lime fre quently, inurate of potash very often, and the superphosphates generally. Soils vary in their capacity for conveying food to crops, and careful observation and experiment are necessary to determine tne needs oi a par ticular soil. Mons. Seidlitz has noticed a disease pecu liar to the people of a certain locality on the the northern slope of the Caucasus. The diseise is of a hysterical character, and the men and women affected bark like dogs. The natives consider it as the result of be witching, in which a plant known as the "barking grass" is used by the bewitchers. A British surgeon in the Indian service recommends that quinine be taken in strong coffee as the disagreeable bitter taste is thus concealed. The usual method of determining the tem perature of a room by a thermometer hung upon the wall gives very uncertain results, as Mons. Gaston Tissandier has shown that a room's apparent temperature may vary many degrees according to the position of the thermometer. The upper part of a room is much warmer than the lower, and win. dows and doors have a very marked effect upon the temperature of the air in their vicinity. As a means of accurately obtain ing the temperature, Mons. Tissandier sug gests that the thermometer be held at the height of a man for about two minutes at several different points, the average of these observations to be takeu as the real tem perature. At a recent meeting of the Paris Biologic al Society, Mons. Dubois illustrated the value of chloroform as an embalming agent by exhibitiug the body of a dog which had been perfectly preserved for three weeks by the introduction of chloroform into the stomach immediately after death. Considering its extent America ismuch better watered than Europe and Africa. The tropics of the eastern hemisphere have an annual rainfall of about 77 inches, while tropical South America has 155 inches. The rainfall of the eastern United States is from 40 to 50 inches yearly, but west of the Miss issippi to the Sierra Nevada it is mostly from 12 to 16 inches. In Great Britain the average is 35 inches; in France from 20 to 21; in Central Germany and Russia farther away from the coast it is only from 15 to 20 inches; but in the region of the Alps it is mostly from 35 to 50 inches. At a recent meeting of the New York Sugar Association, at Genoa, President Williams said of the sorg hum sugar industry in the North: "We are going to make a syrup that is superior to that of New Orleans. Men arc experimenting all the time to perfect the process of manufacture. I expeot in my day to see glucose driven from our homes by a better and purer article." A correspondent of the Fruit Re corder, who had planted cabbages where the bills of corn had missed, discovered that they bad not been visited by the worms, lie therefore, advises persons in sections where the cabbage worms are destructive, to plant their cabbage in the fields sur rounded by corn. The plant flies fly low and consequently are disturbed, it not shut out by the stalks and blades of the corn, and the cabbages escape their visitation and the con sequent crop of green worms. There are 407 students of all grades in Cornell University at the present time. The library of the University now contains 43,000 volumes, be sides 14,000 phamphlets. At the beginning of the next academic year (September 18, 1883) the trustees of the University will open a course in electrical science, embracing studies in the theory of electricity, the con struction and testing of telegraph lines, cables and instruments, the method of electrical measurement, electrical lighting and the electrical transmission of powei. The Horse. We have received a quantity of treaties on the horse, which we propose to give away to every subscriber paying in advance, if requested, whether personally, or by mail; if by mail send 3 cent stamp to pre pay postage. This book is well worth the price of the paper 2.50 to any person having horses. TheAmerican Cultivator has the following to say of the treatise: ' 'Kendall's Treatise on the horse is a book of about 90 pages, with paper covers, fully illustrated, and containing an "Index of and the best treatment of each; a table giv ing all the principal drugs used for the horse, with the ordinary dose, effects and antidote when a poison, a table with an en graving of the horse's teeth at different ages, with rules for telling the age of the horse; a valuable collection of receipts, and much other valuable information. In pre paring copy for this book it was the aim of the author to make it as plain as possible for the non-professional readers, and give them information which is of the greatest importance to horsemen, and yet avoiding all technical terms as much as possible, and also condensing the book as much as pos sible without eaving out the real essential information in treating each subject. Every farmer or horse-owner should own one of these little books. For Sale. For a long time there has been in the Gazette office an over abundant supply of type and printing material sufficient in many things to furnish a bountiful supply to run about two such offices.. We have concluded to offer for sale all of our surplus material which we do not need. Among other things are the following: About 100 lbs. of long primer, 16J lbs. long primer talic, including upper and lower cases, 27 lbs. of another kind of long primer, 26 lbs. bourgeois, about 50 lbs. brevier upper and lower cases and italic, about 100 lbs of minion including italic and upper and lower cases, about 50 fonts of job, ad vertising and poster type of all kinds and sizes, 30 lbs. of 12 em leads and other sizes of leads and slugs, two or three cabinets, col um rules, dashes, and many other things too numerous to mention. Any person wishing to assort up or start anew, we can furnish them many things they need on reasonable terms. If parties desiring any thing in the line of printing material wil drop us a postal card we will take pleasure in telling them whether we have what they want. KM. XI' 69 afaassl Mw wui Be mailea free to ff applicants, mod to ou- JkSSS? ye JritliOTrt ordering: it It contains doacnpUons and valuable directions for planttngr IB .&mmj Vegetable and FloWSeeda; Ttf TPi Tree,efc. Invaluable to all. espec MS" Urdenera Sen.i for It ! D. M.FERRY & CO. DlTJKMT MlOt SOCIETIES. A. F. AND A. M. CorvaHis Lodge, No. U, A. F. and A. M., meets on Wednesday evening, on or preceding full moon. JOHN KEESEE, W. M. Rocky Lodge; No. 75, A. F. and A. M., meets on Wednesday eveuinjf after full moon. S. E. BELKNAP, W. M. R. A. M. ... Ferfrason Chapter, No. 6, R. A. M., meets Thurs day evei uisr on or preceding full moon. WALLACE BALDWIN, H. P. K. OF P. Valley Lodge No. 11, K. of P., meets every Men dav evening ' V. B HYDE, C. C. W. P. READY, K. R. S. I. O. O. F. Barnum Lodge, No. 7, I. O. O. F.. meets every Tuesday evening. T. C. ALEXANDER, N. O. A. O. U. W. Friendship Lodge, No. 14, A. O. U. W., meets first and third Thursdays in each month. B. J. HAWTHORN. M. W. CHURCH DIRECTOHY. BAPTIST CHURCH SERVICES. Preaching every second and fourth Sabbath in ench month at the College Chapel, by the Rev. F. P. Davidson. Services begin at 11 A. M., and 6:30 r. M. All are in vited. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Regular services every Sabljath morning and evening. Sunday Shool at the close of the morning serv ice. Prayer meetina Thursday evening at 7 o'clock. Public cor dially invited. H. P. DUNNING.. Pastor. EVANGELICAL CHURCH Services regularly ev ery Sabbath moming and evening, unless otherwise announced. Suuday school at 3 P. M. each Sabbath. Prayer meeting every' Thursday at 7 r. m. The publi cordially invited Rev. J. Cowersox, Pastor. M. E. CHURCH There will be public services at the M. E. Church every Sabbath at 11 o'clock i i the morning. Sabbath school at 3 o'clock each Sabbath. Prayer meeting Wednesday' evening at 7 o'jlock. If. E. CHURCH SOUTH Services every Sabbath at 11 a. M. and 7 p. m. , at the college chapci. Sunday school at 9:30 a. M. Prayer meeting Friday evening at 7 o'clock. Public cordialiy invited. J. R. N. BELL, Pastor. Try Pfnnder's n Blood Purifier Gft per day at home. Samples worth So free Q WV Address Stinson & Co.. rortland.Me. as week in your owntown. Terms and $f outat free, Address H. Hallctt & Co. , Portland Me 83 Fanners and others desiring" a genteel, lucrative agency business, by which $f to $20 a day can be earned, send address at once, on postal, to II. C. Wilkinson & Co., 100 and li)7 Fulton Street New York. FOR SALE GOGD BUSINESS. Undivided interest in a saw mill run by water power, a good planer and seven ucrcs of land vs& in coansstloa with the mil1. Power sufficient to run all A the year, situated handy to nrnrket and within about 7 miles ol CorvaHis with an excellent good road to and from it. Terms easy. Inquire of M. S. Woodcock at Gazette office. No Minerals Purely Vegetable. NATURE'S REMEDIES THE BEST. mm iwiKirwMiiaiiaiawa PLUNDER'S CURES Malaria, Biliousness, Dyspepsia, Head ache, Pains in the Back, Neuralgia, and all those Diseases arising from the functions of the Stomach being deranged from weakness or excesses. I SOLD EVERYWHERE. 20:12m-3 TRY IT C. W. PHILBRICK, GENERAL Contractor and Bridge Builder, AT CorvaHis, Oregon. Will attend promptly to all work tinder his charge. 19-27yl EH s g i PATENTS We continue to act as Solicitors for Patents, Caveats, Trade Marks, Copyrights, etc, tor the linited States, Canada, Cuba, England, France, Germany, etc. We have had thirty-five years' experience. Patents obtained through us are noticed In the Scr tsnnc American. This large and splendid illus trated weekly paper,$3.20ayear,shows the Progress of Science, is very interesting, and has an enormous circulation. Address MUNN & CO., Patent Solici tors, Pub's, of Scientific American, 2tsl B'wayv . New York. Hand book about Patents free. ri Our Spring and Bummer t : qq iina made jrrice-a-oai. a-.. i ; kits appearance lmprovett land enlarged. Over 200 paces. Over B.uuu - rvwaina auota- ff T LIULlUlia. , i j A illustrations OS tions, aescripuvira r " nearly all articles in general use from Adam and Eve to Sitting. Bull and Mr Landry. It costs us 25 cents for every iowTmail-nearlv $50 ,000 per annum It makes our hair red to think of it. W .hould have the cost of RP The book is full of Drains. Send, for it, and MONTOpMaYmRgCO. THAT HACKING COUGH can be so quickly cured bv Shiloh's cure. We guarantee it. Sold by Thof. Graham. WILL YOU SUFFER with Dyjpeps'a alld LiTr comp rint? Shiloh's Vitilistr is quarnleeU to cure, you. For sale by T. Granaoi. SLEEPLESS NIGHTS, made miserable by that terrible cough. Shiloh's cure is ready for you. Sold by. T. Graham. CATARRH CURED, health and sweet breath fe . i c., ! . u PmhmIv Price AO cents. urea dv oiiuuii a ... Ln. . ........ - , atal. injector free. Sold at T. Graham's, Corvalh FRAZER Axle Grease. Best in the world. Get the genuine. Ev ery package has onr trade-mark and is mark ed Frazer's. SOLD EVERYWHERE. 50y PATENTS: Obtained, and all business in theU. S. Patent Office, or in the Courts attended to for MODERATE FEES. We are opposite the U. S Patent Office, engaged in PATENT BUSINESS EXCLUSIVELY, and can ob tain patents in less time than those remote from WASHINGTON. When model or drawing is sent we advise as to patentability free of charge; and we make NO CHARGE UNLESS WE OBTAIN PATENT. We refer, here, to the Post Master, the Supt. of the Monev Order Div. , and to officials of the U. S. Patent Office. For circular, advice, terms, and reference to actual clients in your own state and county, address, O. A. SNOW & Co., 19.8 Opposite Patent Office, Washington, D. C A Gommon-SeDse Remedy SALIGTLIGA. No more Rheumatism, Cout or Neuralgia. Immediate Relief Warranted. Ferment Cure Guaranteed. Five years established and never known to fail iu a single case, acute or chronic. Refer to all prominent physicians and druggists for the standing of Salicylica. SBCHET ! THE ONLY DISSOLVER OF THE POIS ONOUS URIC ACID WHICH EXISTS IN THE BLOOD OF RHEUMATIC AND GOUTY PATIENTS. SAIjICYIjICA is known as a common-sense remedy, bee. .use it strikes directly at the cause of Rheumatism, Gout and Neuralgia, while so many so called specifics and supposed panaceas only treat locally aie effects. It has been conceded by eminent scientists that outward applications, such as rubbing" with oils, ointments, liniments and soothing lotions will 'not eradicate these diseases which are the result of the poisoning of the blood with Uric Acid. SALICYLIC A works with marvelous effects on this acid, and so remove the disorder. It is now ex clusively used by all celebrated physicians of Amer ica and Europe. Hig-hest medical academy of Paris reports 95 per cent cures in three days that SALICYLICA is a certain cure for RHEU MATISM, GOUT and NEURALGIA. The moat in tense pains are subdued almost instantly.. Give it a trial. Relief guaranteed or money re. funded. Thousands of testimonials ssnt ou application. $1 a Soz. SiXiBcxes for $5. Sent by mail on receipt of money. ASK. YOUR DRUGGIST FOR IT. But do not be deluded, into taking, imita tions or substitutes, or something recom mended as "just as good!,: Insist on the genuine with.the name of Washburne ll Co. on each box, which is guaranteed chemically pure under our signature, an indispensible requisite to insure success in the treatment. Tako no other, or send to us. WASEBUBH & CO., Proprietors, 287 Brcuhrey. cor. Eoiie St.. (20-19yl) HEW T022. 7 KErffiLUst KEMliLL'S SPAVIN CERE. The most successful remedy ever discovered, as it certain in its effects and docs not blister. Head ioof below. Kendall's Spavin Cure. Hamilton, Mo., June 14th. B.J. Kendall & Co., Gents : This is to certify that I have used Kendall's Spavin Cure and have found it to be all it is recommended to be and in fact more too; 1 have removed by using the above : Callous, Bone Spavins, King-bones, Splints, and can cheerfully testify and recommend it to be- the best thine: for anv bonv substance I have ever used and I have tried many as I have made that my study for years. Respectfully yours, P. V. CRIST. .11. V Oneonta, New York, Jan. 6th. Early last summer Messrs. B. J. Kendall & Co., of Enosburgh Falls, Vt., made a contract with the pub lishers of the Press for a half column advertisement for one year setting forth the merits of Kendall's Spavin Cure. At the same time we secured from the firm a quantity of books, entitled Dr. Kendall's Treatise on the horse and his Diseases, which wc are giving to advance paying subscribers to the Press as a premium. About the time the advertisement first appeared in this paper Mr. P. G. Schermerhorn, who resides near Colliers had a spavined horse. He read the ad vertisement and concluded to test the efficacy of the remedy, although his friends laughed at his cred ulity. He bought a bottle of Kendall's Spavin Cure and commenced nsingit on the horse in accordance with the directions, and he informed us th s week that it effected such a complete cure that an expert horseman, who examined the animal recently could find no trace of the spavin or the place where it had been located. Mr. Schermerhorn has since secured a copy of Kendall's Treatise on the Horse and his Dis eases, which he prizes very highly and would be loth to part with at any price, provided he could not obtain another copy. So much for advertising el iable articles. READ PROOF. OF WONDERFUL CURES Fremont, Ohio, Jan. 2&th. Dr. B. J. Kkndall & Co. , Gents : I think it my duty to render you my thanks for benefits and profits which I have derived from your invaluable and far famed Spavin Cure. JHy cousin and 1 naxl a valuable stallion, worth S4900 which had a very bad spavin and was pronounced by four eminent veterinary surgeons, beyond any cure, and that the horse was doneforever. As a last resort I advised my cousin to trv a bottle of Kendall's Spavin Cure. It had a masrical effect, the third bottle cured it and the . I ,, I1 :. . . ... i:,,t k .1... norse IS as v. pu ao cvci . arc. Kim vi uuiiiuuiKu, viic eminent veterinary surgeon was an uncle of mine, and X take great interest iu assisting bis profession. Yours truly, J Amis A. Wilson, Civil Engineer. Kendall's Spavin Cure ON HUMAN FLESH. West Enosburgh, Vt. Feb. 15th, 1881. Dr. B. J. Kendall &Co., Gents : Several months ago 1 injured my knee joint which caused an en liircrement to irow the size of a large walnut and caused me very severe pain all the time for four or five weeks, when I Degan to use aenuau s spavin Cure with the most satisfactory results. It has en tirely removed the enlargement and stopped the lameness and pain. 1 have long known It to be ex cellent for horses but new I know it to be the best liniment for human flesh that I am acquainted with. Yours truly, T. P. Lawrence. Kendall's Spavin Cure Is sure in its effects, mild in its action as it does not blister, yet it is penetrating and powerful to reach every deep seated pun or remove any bony growth or other enlargeniRs, such as spavins, splints curbs, calous, sprains, swellings and any Jameness and en largements of the joints or limbs, or for rheumatism in man and for any purpose for which a liniment is used for man or beast. It is now known to be the best liniment for man ever used, acting mild and yet certain in its effects. Send address for Illustrated Circular which we think gives positive proof of its virtues. No remedy has ever met with such unqualified success to our knowledge, for beast as well as man. Price 81 per bottle, or six bottles for $5. All Druggists have it or can get it for you, or it will be sent to any address on receipt of price by the pro prietors. Dr. B. i. Kesdall Co., Enosburgh Falls, Vt. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. For lame back, side or chest use Shiloh's Porous Plaster. Price 25 cents. Bold by T. Graham. SHILOH'S COUGH and consumption care is sold by us on a guarantee. It cures consumption. Sold by Graham. SHILOH'S VJTILIZER iswhatjou need for con sumption, loss of appetite, dizziness and ail symptoms of dyspepsia.. Price ID and 75c a bottle, s Graham s i I, kl.I. ! CBOUF, HUUn.W wuun ana mwiiwiiw. mediatelolT rieved. by Sh vloh's cure. .Sold T Graham LI f & l Are now located in their new store in Crawford & Farra's brick block; with an immense stock of Qry (jjoops; Clothing; Hats; Caps, BOOTS AND SHOES,llP- Ladies Dolmans Cloaks, Ulsters, Furnishing Goods, and a fine display of new patterns in Staple and ORES FA&SCY GOODS! CORSETS, KNIT HOODS AND SACQUES, TRIMMINGS, CLOVS, &C. Qgjrsj Rudy Made Clothing, Qvercuts and FURNISHING GOODS. GROCERIES, TOBACCOS AND CIGARS, These Goods are offered to the public at prices lower than can possibly be found in the citv. Remember the Place, in Crawford & Farra's New Brick Block CORVALLIS, OR. C. H. Whitney & Co. 19:14yl CEO. H. HENKLE. ZEB. H. DAVIS. HENKLE & DAVIS, Dealers m) General) MebchIndIsTi (InCrawford & Farra's New Brick.) CORVALLIS, - OREGON 20-llyl Woodcock & Baldwin, Dealers in Shelf and Heavy HARDWARE Stoves and Tinware. Zinc Stove Pipe, Cranite ware Etc., Etc., Etc. r5fiiis3 Latest Improved. STOVES J Best in the Market LARGE, NEW AND SPLENDID ASSORTMENT. JUST RECEIVED E Prices as low as any house in the State. A.11 Goods Warranted just as Represented. We Employ none but And guarantee- satisfaction in all Job Work. If you want something in oar line don't fail to come and examine our goods and prices. WOODCOCK & BALDWIN. THE BEST WAGON ON WHEELS IB MANUFACTUBBD BY FISH BROS. & CO., RACINE, WIS., WE MAKE BVEBY VABIETY 69 Farm, Freight and Spring Wagons, And by confiniDg onrselvea strictly to one else, of work; by employing none bo t the Sost of WORKHEX, ueing nothing bat FIRST-CLASS IMPKOVr.D MACHINERY nd the VtKY BEST of SKLKCTED TUIBiSB, and by a THOROUGH KNOWLEDGE of the busroeM, we bar ft tnstlv earned the reputation of isa&ius atannfmctnrere have abolished the warranty, bat Agents may, on their own responsibility, gfre the following warranty with each wagon, if so agreed: We Hereby Warrant the FISH BROS. WAGON No .-to be well made in every partte- nlar and o good material, and that the strength of the same is sufaclent for all worK with M usage. Shonld any breakage occur within one year from this dato by reason of defective material or workmanship, repairs for the same will be furnished at place of sale, free of charge, or the) price of said repairs, as per agent's price list will be paid in cash by the purchaser producing a mnDle at the broken or defective parts an evidence. . Knowing w. can suit you, we solicit patronage f rpm evewcton of the United States. ariftH RROI. Ac CO..