Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 20, 1886)
EUGENE CITY GUARD. f. 1 CAMPBELL, Proprietor, euoene crry. oreoon. IN THE GRAY DAYS. Evermore nil the Any nro long-, nd tbt cheerless ames are Knit', BcIlelv whikI' T llm hultlinir wind that a.Mtff.t- till, h. nriihir turHV. And the rtriftliiif eiirrenta coins and go like serpents across my tray. Wearily fades the evening dim, drearily weur tim nshl. The (rhimtlf mists, and the hurrvlnir clouds, IIU IIPO UKUI- ........... -. Have blotted III" star from th desolate skies; bave curutiiuxi mum irom m ' HKht Speedlnv alono, mr wave tossed bark en counter no pssslnir mill. Welcmn nu friend nor challenging foe an swers my eauer hall Only tho sobbing. uiiiii et waves and the Hind i uiui'MHiitv wail. Ilopcfiillv mill my mill) are bent, my pilot It fHiiltiessly Irue, lie holds my course in I hough the seas and the mlrrori'd tklca wen- blu, And the Diirt of pence, whi n- the winds are mill, were evermore In view. For over the spray, and the rain, and the cloud, shines the eternal sun; The unrliHtiirlriir stars In the curta'iied dome Mill itli'Hin when the iIhv m (Innc. And the mini a will he kissed from the Iniinh liiK kit- when the portuf rent ib won. II. J. lluni'iu, hi ijruuKin r.'igf.. "LUCKY" BALDWIN. How lie Started In Life Other Millionaires. I Room No. 3.10 nt tho (ialt House is oceiipitul by a nioJiiim-sizod white haired man, who is usimlly uttireil in n plain dark suit, witli a coat of the double broatt!il sack cut. There it nothing llushy about hi in. The limn ii E, J. Baldwin, familiarly known as 'Lucky Ualdwin," tho noted California millionaire. Mr. Baldwin Inn been here for several days attending the fall races with h's string of runner. J l,at night Mr. Ikldwin related to a Courier-Journal representative much of his early experience, how ho roso from poverty to millions, and what dangers and labors ho passed through beforo ho reached wealth. Ho was born near Cincinnati, ()., but in IMS was running a small store in Racine, Wis., endeavoring to tako euro of him golf and a young wife. For four years the fame of the golden California const had traversed all parts of the Knit und tho Mississippi Valley. Stories of how men, one day the pos sessors of nothing, niid the next the owners of formes, went common, and all were believed. In that same year, 1H5.1, Mr. Italdwin sold out his little tore in Kacinc, and he and his wife joined a wagon train to make their perilous way across the plains to the new Khlorado, where fortune bid fair to smile on all. Indians were the great danger to the emigrants, and during the year that Mr. Baldwin cliosu for his joirney lliey wero worse than they had ever been beforo or si nor, although there is much reason to believe that many of the robberies and murders were committed by I lie Mormons disgu sed as Indians. Mr. Baldwin's train was not an exception to the I st of siilleivrs, and he graphic ally related how tho attack was made. "When we came to tho Humboldt Uiver, in Colorado," ho said, "our party separated, about thirty, among whom wero myself and wife, gong to tho north, in order to pass around the wells, or headwaters of tho llumholt Uiver. Wo had left the main port-on of the train for several days and had gone nroinid (he wells, when we camped one evening near a spring of fresh water in a little valley, with a high blull' on one side. The night passed away without trouble, but early the next morning, just after day-light, shots wero lied at us from the blull'. "A parly of Indians had concealed themselves amid the thick shrubbery on lop of the Hill' and were beginning a lively tiro upon our party. Wo had placed our wagons in a kind of a semi circle and, barricading behind them, we returned the lire. Our people were not all well armed, for they had only number of old guns that could not be depended on, nud thus little damage was done on either side. Tho Indians sent part of tite r men around and they came dowu in the valley, opening a lire from our side. Things grew too hot and wo had to tako ll ght. We hitched up our horses and took our course through a kind of canyon that led through tho hills. "The Indians followed us with a veil and soon overtook our wagons. 'I'liev could have killed us. but evi dently thought they had a sure thing and preferred to "sport with us for a w hile. 1 was driving tho wagon, in which lay inv wife, who was ill. Two Indians, each with a cocked revolver, ei.eil hold of tho bridles of my horses and ran along by their side. 1 gave myself up for lost, but tho Indians did not shoot. "Our good fortune saved us. Just t the bead of tho canyon was en camped a largo ox train, embracing a party of about seventy-tive people. They, too, had been attacked by the Indians, but by building a fortification held them at bay. Both our party and tho Indians who wero attacking us ran upon this before we knew it, and the Indians were afraid to pursue us fur ther. ' We at once joined forces with tho other crowd, while tho two parties of Indians did the same. They sur rounded our camp, and crawling around tho tall grass tired upon us whenever a man exposed himself, yet they went not sufllcientlv strong to storm our fortifications. Ve remained in that spot two weeks, when tho In dians linally left us, and wo made the remainder of our way to California un molested. The band that attacked us belonged to the Apacho tribe." Mr. Baldwin's fortune did not come lo him by some sudden streak of luck, as his nickname would indicate, but was accumulated gradually. When he reached ISan Franc sco ho obta nod Jtossess on of a small hotel, but ran it or only two weeks. A friend whom ho bad known in the Kast was inter ested in a Government contract for making brick. Mr. Baldwin obla'ned u sharo in tho venture, although ln knew nothing in tho world about mak ing brick. But I was determined to learn." he said, "for a man can do anything, and I bought a book on tho art of brick making. 1 sat up at night and studied it, mastering tho details." Tho brick-making venture prospered and tho emigrant began to make money, clearing about one thousand live hundred dollars a month on h s contract. From that kind of bus ness ho passed to some other, and turned his hand to almost everything, as he himself has said. Finally he drifted to the stock market and began to make money rapidly. Min ng stocks were the kind ho traded in. and a keen eye for business caused him to rarely lose. "That is the way I made my money." he said, "for I never had any great stroke of luck, like some other men. Tho (hronide gave me mv name of 'Lucky' for sonio successful venture that I had made in stocks. I worked hard and I examined the mines that I bought. I crawled through tunnels and went down shafts and labored for j ears like a slave. "I have made some b;g deals," said Mr. Baldwin. "In 187fi I cleared four and a half millions nt one time out of the Ophir mino nt Virginia City. Ne vada. I had all tho dealers on the coast and the California Bank against mo, but I outw tted them and broke the bank, or rather that was what led to its break. By the way. the hitory of that bank has been rather remark able. It broko in 176 for fourteen millions of dollars, but it paid oil everything und its stock is now worth double the par value. When I had the bank and its friends outw tted I could hav made eighteen millions of dollars. Somebody might ht.ve shot nic, but still I could have done it" In his capacity of millionaire Mr. Baldwin has. of course, rubbed against the other millionaires of tho l'acilic Coast and is intimately acquainted with thorn all. He says that the railroad men arc the richest of the crowd. Maekay mado his fortune out of mines, and ho and Baldwin have crawled through many miles of tunnel togeth er. Mr. Baldwin puts hs wealth at twenty million dollars, and that of Flood and O'Brien at ten million dol lars each. F'air's he estimates at ten million dollars. Tho railroad people go above that Tho estate of Mrs. Mark Hopkins, ho says, is worth over thirty million dollars, and that of Crocker about forty million dollars. Leland Stanford is No worth forty million dollars. San Francisco, Mr. Baldwin estimates to bo the richest city in tho world in proportion to its popu lation. There aro plenty of millionaires there whom one has never heard of. "All that 1 have told you." ho said, "is only a very vague outline of tho real facts. A detailed history of these things would exceed the talo of Aladdin's lamp, and people would not believe what they read, for it would bo like a dream." In his conversation Mr. Baldwin spoke of tho Sprcekles-Do Young shoot ing, and evidently sides with Spreckles, his fellow-millionaire, whom he believes to have done right in shooting the ed itor of the San Francisco Chronicle. The California!) is a devoted admirer of fust hor-ics, and has an immense stud farm north of Los Angeles. Hit was the owner of Moll:e McCarthy when she made tho rare against Ten Broeck, and believes that the I ttle mare would have won had it not la ned the day befiiv the v&w.Luuisciltc Cornier Journal. A Disgusted Doctor. An Americus ((!a.) physician was re cently waked in tho dead of night by a tremendous noise and a bright glare, from which ho thought li s house was on lire. He rushed to his door and found a negro with a tlaming torch, and in a most excited manner the darky said to him : "Hoctor, 'sense me for wak'n' yon, but I'so hen 'possum huntin', ami my dog is snake-bit. I wouldn't take nuthin' fer h in, and l'se come to see if you can't euro him." Tho doctor's sympathy was aroused, and he administered antidotes w hich soon relieved both tho dog and his master. Another physician of the same city was hastily sent for, with tho request "for heaven's sako to como uuick." Ho rushed to the place, and to ids d s gust found that ho had been summoned to administer to a sick dog. Without appearing tho least disconcerted, ho applied a dose of strychnine, remark ing : "Well, sir, I think that will fix your dog." The dog, of course, died, but the doctor returned his bill for live dollars for services, ravmcnt was refused, the physician sued, obtained a verdict and received his pa.wuont. Atlanta Cuwlitiition. A Cruel "Trick. "Humanity" writes as follows to the London newspapers: "There is a jug glery entertainment now being given at some of tho London music halls which distinctly calls for the interference, of tho Society for the rrevention of Cru elty to Animals. The conjurer shows a canary in what purports to bo a cage. Ho makes some rapid movements with his hands, and cage and bird vanish. Apparently the trick is harmless, but how is it done? Simply by killing the bird each time! Tho cage is a contrivance of India rubber, which collapses directly tho con juror removes one hand, instantly crushing the hap less little victim within. Tho cage thus flattened disappears inside the con jurer's coat and is drawn to his arm pit by a well-known conjuror's dodge." At a wedding in Bridgeport Conn., recently, tho groom, a oung man. who appeared nervous from the start, broke into hysterical sobs before the ceremony was over. llnrtjont M. --John Hagerwood and h s son were killed by tho falling of a tree, near Nashville. A faithful dog fought oil the hogs that endeavored to cat the bodies. A aJfilU: A merica n. MERCHANT AND MELON. A Wealthy IIMtonlan's Ktperlenee with Country Constable. One of Boston's richest and most re ipectod retired merchants owns a large country scat in the near suburbs. The other Sunday morning he rose at four o'clock and spent the morning hours in waikingovcr his broad acres. On ill's particular occasion his dress was more indicative of a tramp than of a mil lionaire. He wanted to go to an ad- Joining tiold to pick a fresh melon for ireakfa.it Going out well into the mid dle ho deliberately chose the finest one in the patch and hastened to make h s way out As he jumped over a stone wall and was about to enter tho high way, some one from the rear ru-hed up liko a tornado, and grasping his collar with no gentle hand, exc aimed, wlti c sliak ug the old man with a vigor that made that person tuiuk of his school days: "Ain't yer ashamed of yersclf, yer old tramp, to impose on a respectable man this way. Stealing melons, are ye! Well, you won't steal any more this week, you contemptible old vagrant 1 don't want to hear any of yer guff; I caught yer; that's enough for me." "iheii. w'tli another shako that made his victim's teeth chatter with fea", he made tracks for police headquarters. On tho way the old farmer recovered in a degree liis self-pos esion and vent ured to retuon-tiate with his stalwart companion. , . t "llow daro you attempt siaJh a thing," sputtered the irate vict m as ho was forced over the roiid, regardless of mud or water. "Do yo.i th nk I'd stand it? No, I won't." ho shouted, "l'rctty country this, if a man can't pick a niclou on his own liold. 1 say there, Air. Jones come hen and help mo!" be yelled, as lie was traveling pa-t a neighbor's hotisj at an extra ordinary rate of speed. "Oh, shut up," pulled tho sturdy po liceman, as he tried to forco "h s man"' along at a faster gait "That gag don't work in these parts." Suddenly the "copper's" chin dropped until it seemed to touch his waist-bund. A weary, troubled sort of an oath es caped his lips. Neighbor Jones had responded with aLcrity to his friend's call, and seizing a crowour, came down tlie driveway 1 ke a steam engine. "What's the matter, Samuel? hero's yer going?" he shoutvd. "Ain't going nowhere' s, if yor'll help me. Make that jackass of a constable let. go my collar.' The crowbar and a word of explana tion had tho des red effect. As the crestfallen otlicer turned his course to ward the melou patch ho muttored to himself: "Tho stingy old cusd it was goid enough for hi in." Tho police force is still employed to guard the fruit-laden acres, but that part cular constaolo has rct're I. His health was poor, tho pay small ami the experiences unsatisfactory. Hois now trying to keep a lirst -class grocery. ltolon Ulobe. A SILVER-SHOD HORSE. The Way a Wealthy Woman 11 spnsed of Part of tlr Income. A visitor tothoWest'nghouso stubles In the Ka.st Knd. sees among an array of handsome blooded horses one of pe culiar beauty of color and Carriage. Casual notice is quickened into close inspection when it is noticed that the horse never moves. Ho is dead. Though lifeless, he is, perhaps, the only horse hi America to-day which wears a full set of solid silver shoes. Mrs. George Westinghouse is the leader of tho Kits! Knd fashionable life. Her dresses are the cost lie -t her receptions tho most brilliant and her turnout the finest in tho city. Her husband is said to have settled in income of i'i.'iO.OlHl per year in pin-money upon her. She is h lady of artistic tasto and a year ago she do elded upon a team of croani-colored horses, with Cowing, snowy manes. Such hordes nro as raw as they are beautiful, but Mix Westinghousn, noth ing daunted, set about to procure them. Four agents wero employed, and for months tho country was scoured, and stables and stock-farms were ransacked to lind the sih er-tipped horses. At last the team was turned over to their de lighted mistress. They cost but :!,t)(HI, but tho expense of getting them was enormous. Mrs. Westinghouse, early in the use of her new acquisition, be came concerned as to what she should do if one of them should die. The agents tvho secured the tirst pair were sent out to secure a third, limy were successful, and the three beauties were soon on friendly terms. The strangest part of tho story is perhaps, that w hat Sirs. Westinghouse feared, the death of one of tho original pair, occurred but two weeks after the third had been ac quired. So much hud Mrs. West ng house become attached to the horse that she ordered him sent to Now York to a well-known taxidermist to be stuffed. There ho was treated to silver shoes, find given ns near as possible a look of recognition, so tlut when his mistress enters the stables none appears more glad to see lur than ho. The horse is groomed, blanketed and at t"nded as carefully as if alive. His bed is always made, and his manger is al ways full of h&y.iitUbttryh tor. 1'hil al lihia Xtws.' The South rejoices in a new indus try. The canning of oysters shrimp, etc., bits boeu begun along the gulf coast, and there are already five estab lishments engaged in tho business be tween New Orleans and Mobile. They have all flourished from the start and have rapidly extended their operations, Tho gulf oyster now linds its way into all parts of the South, and has driven the Baltimore oyster out of much of its territory. M. Louis 1'ost. m The Mexjcan Government has re solved on undertaking a geological sur vey of the w hole of Mexico, as far as practicable, and it has appropriated 10,000 for tho preliminary expenses. A survey on an extensive scale can not fail to have au important influence in developing Mexican mineral resources. m m Colonel Frank A. Burr, Washing ton corrosH)ndont of the Philadelphia l ,mt is engaged upon a review of tho military and civil career of General Grant. OF GENERAL INTEREST. Turkey is the only State in Europe that is not Christian. A contrivance bv meana of which the blind can play wnist i new 'n vention. An apple tree at Java, N. Y., pro duced fifty bushels of good fruit this yeur. Buffalo Exircns. -An engineer running a train near Reno killed forty sheep out of a llock of seven hundred. Denver Tribune. In fifteen counties of New York one-half of this ear's potato crop has been destroyed by rot Troy Tim, s. Forest culture in Dakota has led to tho appearance of birds that were never before seen there. Chicago Herald. A mystery as to the cause of the death of" a San Francisco man was solved at the autopsy by tho finding of a lemon seed lodged in his intestines. The pickle crop of th;s country last year was just four pickh-s to every man. woman and child. This year it is short, not more than a picklo apiece. V. Y. Sun. S'berian cats are the newest agonv in pets. A Siberian cat has a cold and searching voice, ami is a valuable ad dit on to the back-yard orchestra. Hartford I'ont. Toronto papers say the growth of that c tv is something wonderful. The census of 1XH0 gave it a population of 8(j.415. Now tho Assessor's returns show 111.800 inhabitants, and this is said to be rather under tho mark. Tho Shah of Persia studies geog raphy from a globe covered with jew els. The seas are made of the finest emeralds, and the different countries are represented by diamonds, rub es, sapphires and other precious stones. In a pack of cards with which two Chinamen had been playing poker at Stockton recently, were found live aces, eight kings, six sixes and so on, showing that the Mongolians understand-tho in tricac es of the game. ban Francisco Call. Anti-vacc:nation'sts rest one of their chief arguments on the fact that calves have tubercular consumption a communicable disease. Lato re searches by Strauss show that the pro portion of tuberculosis in calves does not reach one in one hundred thousand. A'. '. Herald. A Spanish doctor, named F'orino. has calculated that, supposing three hundred cigars are rolled in a day. the movement of the fingers is repeated two hundred and seventy-four thou sand, live hundred times in a year of two hundred working davs. This often causes professional cramp, so-cailed cigar-roller's cramp. They make good coffee in Guatem ala. A traveler says he never drank as good elsewhere. It was s:mply the essence of the berry a dark brown, thin liquor, kept in a close-stoppered decanter. To a spoonful or two of th s liquor is added hot, water from an earthen jug. The decoction is theu in deed worthy of the gods. It was Lum Smith of Philadelphia, whom Colonel Fred D. Grant recently stated had offered !?.i.000 for the bed stead upon which General Grant d ed. Mr. Smith's mother's maiden name was Lum, ami itwas at Mrs. Ann 1. tun's magnificent resdenco that General Grant made his headquarters after the f siege of Vicksburg. I'hiladcliihia Vcs.i. ' Lady (in art store)--"Havo yon any painting that you can guarantee to be a real old master's?" Proprie tor "We have a few, madam, that are well authenticated. What part cu lar study or subject would vou pre fer?" Lad v. (a 'little undeei'dedl. ) "Well cr a bit of Adirondack scenery, I think, or if yon haven't that, N agara Falls in mid-winter would do." lluj falo Courier. A forcible illustration of the weight of the atmosphere was recently given by a lecturer in Loudon, who sa d that the air. which scarcely np pears to bo matter at all, is so enor mous in mass that it really presses with nearly a ton to each square foot, so that the weight of all the buildings in the world' metropolis, for instance, is less than that of tho air above them. Drunken men often meet with mis haps, such as falls, blows or shocks that would kill a sober man. The rea son of this immunity is that tho nerve centers are so much paralyzed in the drunken man as not to be affected by the shock of the fall, which, in a sober man, would have acted upon them so violently as to stop the heart, arrest the circulation and cause instant death. A'oston Hudiet. An example of the extraordinary high prices paid for articles of food during the Revolution is recorded on a leaf bearing tho dale November J7. 1778, from the manifest of the Knglish ship William & Anno, which was cap tured by ono of Paul Jones' cruisers. In United States money the prices read as follows: Flour. 150 a barrel: pork, floO a barrel: peas. sli a bushel; rum, $13 a gallon; butter Sl.Ai a pound. Tho Russians have made Jericho a delightful winter resort, ami the in junction to go thither is no longer dis respectful. The beautiful spot around which cluster some of the most sacred associations of the Christian world, will probably become a fashionable water, ng place if access to it is facilitated by the opening of the proposed railway route between England and India, through Northern Africa from Tangier to Cairo, and thence along the Euphrates Valley and tho Persian Gulf, quick trains cov ering the distauce between London and Bombay in nine days. I'aterson (N. J.) Guardian. The mechanism of the human hand is most perfect The hand of a man or woman, with its wonderful checks, balances and lightning-like pliancy, is of itself enough to crush forever an atheistic thought Its adaptability to use is something which staggers cred ulity, it is that agent of the mind which executes that which the mind conceives, and there seems to be no limit to its executive powers. The slightest mutilation of this agent im pairs its usefulness, because its muscu lar and nervous vitality is weakened. In fact such mutilation as is recom mended, or of any other part of the human organism, is a positive crime. Ar. 1'. Mercury. Latest Piano-l'laying Idea.' IS EVERYBODY DRUNK? Among the many stories Lincoln used to relate was the following : Trudg ing along a lonely roud ono morning on my way to the county seut, Judge overtook me with lii wagon and invited me to a scat. We had not none far before the wagon began to wobble. Said I, "Judge, I think your coachman has taken a drop too much." ... i Putting his head out of the window the Judge shouted,"Why,you infernal scoundrel, you are drunk I" Turning around with great gravity, tho coachman said, "Bedad ! but thats the firs' rightful s'cision your Honors giv'n 'n twel'montl" . If people knew the facts they would be surprised to lcaru how many reel in the streets who never "drink a drop." Tl ... ... 11. a iM.llnn of kluptdpKHnCBS. XIIKJ UIC IUO fll.Kiio v.. -- t ' of drowsy days, of apoplectic tendon- . . , i 1 ; . . i 1 l., n,in cics, wntise dioou is te on mo iv uj,v acid. Some day they will reel no more they will drop dead, just because they haven't the moral courage to defy useless professional attendance, and by use of the wonderful Warner's Safe .-.I! ll... ...linnlit 1.1 tltAUt'U. (jure neutralize mu uiimnu iu.un;. teni, and thus get rid of thediunkencss ; ii,u t,l(wl " meriran Ilural Home. There are three times as many telephones in ihe United Status as in all Europe. "What we learn with pleasure we never lormt.'-Alfred Mercier. The following i. . .... i. ,. ini. "'I nnlit nut hundred in a nwo in .'.... - t ....ll... u.ihtiit : mr-iiivliicr anv benefit. says Mrs. Emily Hhoads, of McBrides, Mich. "I had female complaints, espe cially 'drawing-down,' for ovt six years. Dr. Ii. V. Pierce's 'favorite Prescription did uie more good than any medicine I ever took. 1 advise every sick lady to take it. And so do we. it never disap points its patrons. Druggists sell it. The coal fields of the Powder River country have been burning Biuce 137o HOT SYMPTOMS, BUT THE DISEASE. It would seem to be a truth appreciable by all, and especially by professors of the healing nrf ttiut tn roninvR the difwiuMi. not to alleviate its symptoms, should be the chief aim of medi cation. Yet in hovr many instances ao we boo this truth admitted in theory, Ignored in prac Thn renann that IIoHtclter's Stomach Bit ters is successful in so many cases with which remedies previously tried were inadequate to cope, is attributable to the fact that it is a med icine which reaches and removes tho causes of the various maladies to w hich it is aduutetl. Indigestion, (ever and ague, liver con plaint, gout, rheumatism, disorder of the bowels, urinary alt'octions and other maladies are not palliated merely, but rooted out by it. It goes to the fountain head. It 1b really, not nominally, a rauicai reiiicuy, ami i. cnuuno mc ..wiu with an amount of vigur which is ita beat pro tection agaiust diacaav. John J. Vaill committed suicide at He lena, Montana. For weak lungs, spitting of blood, short ness of breath, consumption, niicht-sweats and all lingering coughs. Dr. Pierce's "Goldeu Medical Discovery" is a sovereign remedy. Superior to coa liver oil. lly drugglits. Nearly 1,000 men are at wcrk on the 0. & C. K. It. betvreeu Ashland and Delia. Old Material is taken on account by Palmer & Hey; remember this fact. You ran secure the best prices aud terms from Palmer & Key. OB. HENLEY'S Celery, Beef and Iron gives food to 'Ihe brain, enri. hew tho blood, aidx digestion, and gives refreshing sleep wheie ober remedies fail. Try it. Palmer & Hey keep the B st Type, Presses and Materials. HUMILIATING ERUPTIONS ITCHING AND BURNING ? TORTURES and kvkry 81'Kciksok Itching. Scaly. Pimply. Inherited, Scrofulous, and ContHgious Diseases of the Hlood, Skin, and Scalp, with Lews of hair, from Infancy to old age, are positively cured by the Cl TICl KA Kkmkiiiks. t'CTici'KA Rksoi.vk.nt, the new blood purifier, cleanses the blood and perspiration of impuri ties and poisonous Wemenu, and removes the CACSK. C'uticuka. the treat Skin Cure, Instantly allays Itchingand iHflammaUon.clears the skin and Scalp, heals Sore, and restores the Hair. Cctjcuha Soap, an exquisite Skin Beautilter, is indispensable in treating Skin Diseases, Haby HutnoiuiSkin lllemiBhes, Chapped and OiiySk'n Sold everywhere. Price: Cuticcra, .Wc.; Kb 80i.vk.nt, f I; Soap, 2Ao. Prepared by the Pot- TKH IIHI'O AND ClIKMICAL Co., UOSTON, MASS. MTSpnd for "How to Cure Skin Diseases." U Hhkumatic, Neuralgic Sclatla, Sudden, Sharp and nervous panis,lii8tantly relieved 1 1 by the Ulticcka Anti-Pain FUitor. 2S& Scrofula of Lungs, I tn now 49 yean old, ami hare nifferea for the laat fifteen year with a luug tmul.lt. I hare went Uioiu andi of dnllani to anr.t the march of tbia dUeaw; but temiiorary relief km all that I obtained. I wan unlit for any manual labor for le.enU yean. A friend tronglr recommended the une of Sniffs Specific (S. 8 H I, claiming that he blmwlf had been greatly benelitted iy ita use iu some lung troubled. I reeoWed to try it. The remits are remarkable. My cough has left me, my strength has returned, and I weigh sixty pounds more than I ever did in my life. It has been three years since I stopped the nw of the medicine, but I hare had no return of the dianssa, and there are no pains or weakness felt in my lungs. 1 do the hardest kind of mechanical work, and feel at well as I eter felt since I wtt a bo. These I know, tre wonderful state menu to make, out I am honest when I say that I owe my existence and health to-day to S. 8 H. 1 would be recreant to the duty I owe to humanity 11 I failed to bea Oils eheerful testimony to the malts of this won aerful medicine. X. J. Uolt. Montimery, Ala. June 25, 1835. 8rift'i Speclflo in entirely vegetable. Trea tise on Blood and kin Diseases mailed free. Thk Swift Spkcikic Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Oa., or 157 V. 23d St,, N. Y. HALL'S PULMONARY BALSAM J. R. CATES A. CO., Proprietors, 17 Bantome 8t. San Fran daw, OtJ. STEIN WAY.tMbler, kaeniah Piaont; BurJet onraae, band instnunmia, Unreel gtock atf Semi MotwaodBooka. Bandtsarrliedat Eaatera rraaa M. GMAT. as Pott Street, &uFmohtik V-4 1. .11 0U6E1(W Tre from Vpiatt; Emetics ami Potn SAFE. SURE. PROMPT. 7- ?.. - aw lltfAl Kftta, T L'" 7 .,7. . tiu.viil m Rll.Tlirm. .k THK iHlnw ".HP. IAN For Pain Cure Rheumatism, NeurikjU; ntummrmm. nnu.w, iwurh, treln llrMln, rt... tU. PKlf K. MK'rV t'K.NTS. IT nill'IKIIKTS A NO IIKAUM TIIV ntiRI.ni A.TIMiKl.aH lO-RAl.TlXIIKa,lk. WANTED JOB PRINTERS tt'k...n i. .11 a nl- niin'til aerliMof Trim !. they see it, and who know what and where to buy. TO IllOSO wnoanuw mniieiiiinu no wouio respecuuuy say uiai mey wu i) uuu uie bATEST JOB f ACES Of all foundries at our house. Also, the best Printers' Machinery on mini no- OLD-STYLE CORDON, PEERLESS, NEW-STYLE CORDON, CLIPPER, BALTIMORE and JEWEL JOB PRESSES Vkvij fin f rA rvil t a hi a ftniflnn (twn sIm 8x12 and 10x15), with throw-off, is the cheapen .. - J 1 -A. 1.-1-1 I In In k Ul,...u aim oval JUU i re lur mu.u iu wo oiuiva JE WE L levek C UTTER Fifteen In use In the Xorthwrst, ALSO I'KKRLiEMM AM VEM Cl'TTEBS. If you want tho best, send your orders to PALMER & REY, 113-114 Front St, Portland, Oregot. "STANDARD" MB -Li SHOT-GUN LOADED BY 25 bLU. mm rpy Mil Ctateliii Ma I , In use by ALL HKOWn HI'OKTHME.V For Sale by the Tri generally. 1 .11 V O II T K II IforiiianandPerclieroiiHors;; Fa.rh.nk and Wlhev ht hnpnrtuHon f i8 hirf ftni I rauce, li is cmiins4;i f tli laivft an i" tlit-miiK. I-renrh Ciwith ami X firm. in, lliev art ff heme and nnt rjiiL'V tn the Mst hlofky ilr.ift lately f it irk r All f fine nain amlluMtitifulfor tuvcorthiv.il t5lKM(ltuwWt.t frni. Three cirriM off mr M Hie iKtnonaaiKi w.iwi Artctiitur.-ii r -ir, one mr ' ovt-r all ur It. an were awarded irciiiiuiin at f ne au' ill mi r-MWiin. W Ml le fctltl on K.wtia1lc trrnw w'tli aitprnvriisetunt We will tell tlK.iwr than Hie i..me dus Ulli-n I-.,,.. ht f,,t attvu.li. r.. r-W n. ll... If Si. r.Trties wishiiiiT wltiw will do well to call itoi Suit St title in I'd tltiin i nnl enniiueour Murk. &4f Send fr Cni.iiiKrue. Ailtln-M, II. T. Fairlb 11. W'H " ' -,.,,, To.. Ol. taaurd Sept. and Man. i each fear. - H58 pa 8xll: nchct,witnoi '3. BOO Illustrations - whole Picture uau7 GIVES Wholeaale PriH ilirrrt tn eontumrr on all pood ' personal or family uae. Tell, now order, and (Ives exact rott of (T,r!j tiling yon dm, eat, drink, wear. have fun with.. Tlirae ISVALIABI UOOK8 contain Information flrf from the market, of the world. will mall a copy FRtiK to any"' dreaa noon receipt of 10 eta. to drft1' expense of malllns. tt us bear fr"! yon. Respectfully, MONTGOMERY WARD & CC, 827 4c te Wabash A.raue, Chlca PETALUMA INCUBATOF Hatchet alt klmtt 1 F! VW ;u The SIM. ''LEST, Chr ..j unit ocxtrr IN It i .-J ,n.u M.l.la. 1 T"lit.t IK t'irttt t'rrtllllin rO .i,... u...,.lr,rlrri-lt' etl Circular FREE. Address Potaluma Incubator Co, I'"''"1 FARMER'S: DAt'CIlTEl M.S. You can have free four boolu, " Short Sr r--i:r .. n fwinfr. Cmcent and a Croat," and a copy of Goldf n b 1 azine, by sending 50 cent, for a year t tuwr the Kanrh, Field tnd Firealdo, the cheap? tural paper in California. Gold km Ka Cun 7" jromery M., San r ranctsco. AY 'ANTKD FIKST-CLASS AGKXT. or woman, in each town. ' snmplca, by return mail, which sell ' . 108 per cent profit, J. H. Harsakd, 1 gomery avenue, 6an Francisco. I n 1 T O I Dp not rub rottr I 11 1 llr.NI lSLS'S refunded. Send 15 cents, silver, to M. nr.L.ij k iu. romerset. Allen. A""i. RUPTURESSl own houct. No Eiperimentt It k i ni?&f:iy-3i3 II II ill TnMril llu rtxacs C Sua, i Sao wot, Dao Pac Mw ver the ' Suit rept on h Fr ,"A tier, i th urr Pleas perse llw" ileuu of so onen bugg,