A LIBERAL OFFER. e Thousand Dollars to Any Charita . ble Institution, if Cannot bo Done as It Is Stated. Hester, N. F., Union ami Advertiser, Friends of Ex-rresident Arthur are y much disquieted. Of course he is not going to diel lie in the hands of a very particular ytiician. ' . His doctor does not call it Bright's ease! No, it is stomach disorder t he is suffering from now, and cry few hours he takes a cold, and m time to time many other eynip nis are developed. These symptoms it public should know are really sec' lary to Bright's Disease. Mis physicians say that everything t medical skill can do for him is og done. This is not so! iliis case is a prominent one be lse the general is an ex-president; 1 yet there are thousands of farmers ietly dying, in their farm houses, secondary symptoms of Bright's ease, called by every other conceiv 4 name; thousands of workmen, wise dying, leaving helpless fam 1; hundreds of thousands in all Is of life who have sickened, and likewise dying, helpless victims of fences physicians. ighf years ago a very well known .tleman was about to enter upon ie commercial transactions. His ical adviser quietly dropped into office one day and told his conli- aial clerk that he would be dead in he months, and that, he ought to Jo up his business atlairs at once I 3iat man is alive and well to-day, le was given up as incurable with i mime disease that is killing Gen- Arthur! Jur reporter met this gentleman tcrday, and in conversation about ' ; General s case, he said : " ,1 will give $5,000 to any charita- ' is institution in the state ol JNew Vprk, to be designated by the editor of! the New York World, the editor of the Buffalo Newt and W. E. Kis t llmrgh of the Troy Times, if War i ftr's safe cure (taken according to iy directions) which cured me eight ; 9ars ago, cannot cure General Ches " k A. Arthur of Bright's diseaso, Lorn which he is suffering." "ow I want you to understand," 0 inid, " that we do not profess to make new kidneys, but we do know from personal experience and from the experience of many thousands o! similar cases, that we can stop the consumption of the kidneys. Many a man has gone through life with one kidney without inconvenience. Thousands of people have lived a majority of their life with one lung. They did not have a new lung made. We do not make new kidneys, but if 'the kidney is not consumed too 1 much we can stop disease and pro ' Jong life if taken in time." This offer comes from H. H. War er, proprietor of Warner's safe cure, f this city. Mr. Warner also said, " My dear sir, there are governors, senators, presi iKiptial candidates, members of con gress, prominent men and women all over the country whom I personally ' ow have been cured of disease, ich as General Arthur suffers from, 1 our Warner's safe cure, but owing t the circles in which they move ru?y do not care to give public tes rjionial to the fact." -ir. Warner is interested in Gen- Arthur's case because he is per ally acquainted with him and he ; that it is a shame that any man old be allowed to die under the fation of old-fashioned, powerful Bartics, which have no curative ef ii, rather than a modern, conceded Cific for kidney disease, whose ;ih is acknowledged world-wide, 'tilil save him. "If you doubt the efficacy of War ns safe cure," soy the proprietors, 4 your friends and neighbors about . This is asking but little. They i' tell you all you want to know." ' jWe have kept a-standing offer be i the public for four years," says J Warner, "that we will give $5,000 $iy person who can successfully Jute the genuineness, as far as we iw, of the testimonials we publish, I none have done it." J ere General Arthur a poor man, le to be left " in the hands of his Jeician," he would use that great fcdy, as many thousands of others done, and get well. How absurd V for people to say that everythiug can be done is being done for the resident, when the one successful dy in the world that has cured, at can cure a case like his. has -ibeen used by them. Talking tor ne. fir. Featherly," said Bobby at the r table, "what's an average?" "An average?" cs. Pa says you come to see sister i' a week on an average." athcrly wa very much amused, r explaining to Bobby the meaning ie word, he said: I suppose you thought it was some o of a carriage, Bobby?" Jt thought perhaps it might be a bi- but I knew it couldn't be a csr- because ma says you're too mean Hre- yiobby," interrupted his mother, fljyou have another piece of pic?" p". Sun. 1 , A sensational suicide occurred at fi,T&. George Welker, son of the flrictorof the Kane House, picked a revolver and asked how a fellow I who committed suicide and with Remark: uvil. t nlf.R, I'll fchoot e!f, placed the revolver to his head blew his brains out fttUburgk mm news. The Sitka AUukian says the anow In Mme of the mining district of that country is from fifteen to fifty feet deep. That remaHiahle mine, the Minnie Moore, at croaatoitf, Idaho. Thev now nave immense bodies of ore in sight, very high grade. A pocket was recently found by a man named Kipp, near Javhawk, in El Dorado county, Cal., which panned out twenty-two ounces in gold. A sale has just been perfected of Henry's dipririRs near Placerville. It is a gravel mining claim and sold for (iiO,- 000 to a Chineno firm of San Francisco. A rich strike was made in the Inde pendence mine in Elkorn district, Idaho, last week, and the crew has since taken out several thousand dollars worth of fine ore. II. M. Hasbrouck is taking out some rery rich ore from an opening in the Bis marck, at a depth of fifty feet. He has 1 very curious specimen from the place where he is working, consisting of the roots of a plant covered with horn silver. Calico Print. The shaft of the Silver Conner mine, t Eureka, Nev., has been sunk to the 150-foot level and a drift is being sent out 'or the vein. The Silver Conner is the property of four miners who have been declaring dividends monthly of $1,000 jach for the past two years. The Trescott, A. T., Journal Miner of recent date, says: John McDermott,' lessee of the Lynx creek hydraulic works, :ame in town with $1,(500 worth of gold, taken out in a partial clean-up only of a ten days' ran. They have taken out to late over $5,000, and water continues to hold out to run a portion of the time each day. Montana Bar was the richest dii-jrings ever struck in the country; old-timers tell of $200,000 being taken out of 200 feet of the bar and of a six-mule team, hauling nothing but gold, that stuck on Slaughter-house Bar hill and had to be reinforced by ox teams. The miners who worked there in those days believe that (he hasty and careless system of mining in use at that time let many thousand dollars run over the short flumes on Mon tana Bar. Helena Independent. The mines in the newly-discoverad ?old rane, near Hawthorne, Nev., on the Carson and Colorado railroad, are all holding out well and are likely to become permanently valuable properties. When these mines were first struck almost the universal prediction was that the surface richness would reach no great depth. It was for this reason that Daily, the dis coverer of the Lepanto, the first of the series of gold mines in this district, sold for $30,000 what would not now be bought for $250,000. Active work is still in progress on the Helena, and some fine ore is being brought up by Supt. Swan and stored in the capacious ore house of the company. It is probable that this company will yet take hold of and work the Christmas Gift and may secure all the mines in the Helena district that will pay for work ing. And it is hinted that experts for an English syndicate have been looking over this promising group of mines dur ing the week. The district ought to be made to produce largely by somebody. It is too promising to lie idle. The placer excitement which broke ont In Sitka just as we were going to press last week, grew out of the discovery of good gold indications in the gravel in a gulch not far from the beach at James town bay, by Messrs. W. J. Prout and A. A. Starwalt. These gentlemen have gone down sixteen feet and struck a stream of water which temporarily stop ped their work. But they are providing force pumps and will prosecute the work to a full test. The indications continue good, and they say they will find Rie bed rock in spite of the water or " bust." The AUukan. The Baker City Sage Bruthjot the 6th savs of the latest find : Important placer diggings have recently been discovered on Eagle creek, above where the new bridge is built. There are about four hundred prospectors in the vicinity, and they have staked out claims on both sides of the creek as high up as the snow line in the mountains. One enterprising gentleman from Boston has staked out claims for his sisters, his cousins Mid his aunts until he has 320 acres under his control, but the boys are considering tha proposition of jumping about 300 acres of his holdings. They think the gentleman from Boston wants too much. The placers are being worked, as water is plenty, and considerable "dust" is being taken out. Jacksonville Timet : Considerable work is going on in the Gold Hill district .... Prospecting continues in many places, and some excellent discoveries are reported .... Ex-Governor Chad wick has been inspecting his mining interests in the Gold Hill district. ...D. King & Co. have struck excellent drifting dig gings on Jackson creek, which are said to pav $4 per hand daily. . . .The Med ford Reduction works are making a run on ore from the New Discovery mine, which promises well. .. .Bedrock was struck in the Sterling mine a short time since, and everything is progressing sat isfactorily there L. D. Brown has put a quartz mill in the vicinity of Swinden & Co.'s ledge in Rock Point precinct, i which will soon be running in good style. Helena Independent: There are signs of an active season of mineral operations in Red, Lee and Bald mountains, which promise a great increase in the districts mmeUiately tributary to Helena. The Red Mountain Consolidated Tnnnel com pany has penetrated with their tunnel, some seven hundred feet in the side of the mountain, aDd the work is progress ing as rapidly as possible. Mineral has been reached which promises to pene trate a rich ore body soon. The com pany insist that if there is anything in the Red mountain they will certainly find it in their tunnel operations. The Peerless Jennie is in fine shape for work ing, and there are millions in it bevond Question, for there is more than a hun red thousand dollars of ore on the dump. The Caplice-Tate company on Lee mountain have large ore bodies in sight, but are not placing it on the dump, awaiting the completion of the Montana Central to save a second hand ling. Development on the Hot Springs lode brings better resnlte daily. Messrs. Scott and Fallon of the U. P. made a visit to the mine a few days since and brought in a sample which they submit ted to Assayer Gove, who makes the fol lowing returnj 61 per ct lead, 131.95 ox. silver, 23.33 ox. gold. Total, $603.15. This and other assays, and the generally favorable outlook encourages the com pany to posh developments as rapidly at possible and the working force will soon be increased and Che tnnnel started from the gulch to intersect Uieosctnd ahaiU CONGRESSIONAL. LATKHT TELF.URAPIIIO RRPOKT. A Broopiis of Measures Introduced la tat Rational LegiiUtnrs. SENATE. The consular and diplomatic appro priation bill was taken up and passed. Senate confirmed the nomination of Governor Swineford of Alaska. Berry, from the Committee on Pub lic Lands, reported favorably Senator Stanford's bill granting Seal Rocks to the city of San Francisco, in trust, with an amendment identical with that reported by the House Commit tee to lteprescntative Felton's bill for the same purpose. The amendment gives the United States the right at all times to control or limit the number ol seals taken, to protect fisheries, and provides that whenever any of the rocks or space occupied by them shall be required by the United States for erection or maintainance of any public work the United States shall bo rein vested with full control, title and pos session of such rocks or space. After a long debate a bill was passed providing for a commission of three IMTsons, to be appointed by the Pres ident, with the consent of the Senate, to investigate the truth of the alleged discovery of a specific cure of yellow fever. ' Logan introduced a bill in the Sen ate to provide for the location and erection of a branch home for disabled volunteer soldiers west of. the Rocky mountains. It appropriates $150,000 for the purpose. Among measures passed were the following : Bill to relieve the State of Colorado from charges on account of ordnance stores furnished to the Ter ritory and State, amounting to $33,081. Bill providing for the purchase of o portrait of General Geo. B. Thomas. Bill to establish a new Land Dis trict in Wyoming. The bill consti tutes the counties of Johnson and Crook, in that Territory, a new Land District. Bill to legalize the incorporation of national trades unions. Bill amending section 3,893 of the Revised Statutes, relating to the trans portation of obscene publications through the mail. The bill extends the scope of the old. section. Bill authorizing the payment of $2,500 to Mrs. Louisa A. Jackson, and $2,500 to the legal representatives of Mrs. Martha Vaughn for patriotic services rendered and hazards and losses incurred in conveying informa tion of great value to Union officers in Kentucky in 18C3. ifill relating to the Supreme Court of the Territory of Montana and pro viding for the establishment of Judi cial Districts in that Territory. The bill makes the Court to consist here after of a Chief Justice and three Associate Justices, to hold office for four years. The Territory is divided by the bill into four Judicial Districts. Bill to create two additional Land Districts in the Territory of Dakota. This bill authorizes the President to appoint a Kcgister and Receiver for each District. Bill referring to the Court of Claims claims for property seized by General Johnson in the Utah expedition of 1857. The Chair laid before the Senate a message from the President, with a letter from the Secretary of State, in relation to the distribution of the fund for relief of the owners, oflicors and crew of the boat Gen. Armstrong. The agricultural appropriation bill was taken up and passed. It includes an amendment offered by Dolph, ap propriating $5,000 to aid in reelaima tion of the arid region in Washington Territory by sinking artesian wells. Among memorials presented was one by Miller, from tho Congress of Workingmen's Clubs of the United States, praying for the passage of the bill establishing postal savings bunks. Beck called up his bill to prohibit members of Congress from accepting retainers or employment from railroad companies which have received land grants or pecuniary aid from Con gress. The bill passed ayes, 37; noes, 11. HOUSE. Cobb moved to suspend the rules and pass the bill repealing the pre-emption, timber culture and desert land Asts. Cobb and Payson supported the bill, and referred to frauds which had existed, as they averred, in entries of lands under the Acts which it was pro posed to repeal, Payson declaring that during the past four years 90 per cent of the entries had been fraudulent. Henley of California, opposed the bill, on the ground that while the des ert land should be amended it should not be absolutely repealed. Springer of Illinois said that under the pre-emption, timber culture and desert land laws vast areas of the pub lic domain were being fraudently ap propriated by cattle syndicates and foreign land grabbers. An English lord had recently acquired C000 acres in Este's Park, Colorado, and this was but a sample of the manner in which the public domain was being taken up. If this bill were passed, the people's land would hereafter be held for peo ple's homes. On motion to suspend the rules and pass the bill was agreed to, yeas 183, nays 40. Delegate Voorhces of Washington Territory has introduced a bill which gives the Olympia Improvement Com pany the right to build a dam across Budd's Inlet, in the city of Olympia, on plans to be approved by the Secre tary of War. The dam is to be provid ed with locks and draw for the passage of vessels, with a waste-weir for the passage of logs, and a fish-weir. It provides that Congress shall make an appropriation of $20,000, to aid the enterprise. MELODIOUS SNORING. The Awe-inspiring Night Performances nf My Dearest Friend. I have a friend who snores. My friend's snore is like himself, whole sotMed, Sflf-satistiod, unctuous, able bodied in fact, the kind of snore that leaves absolutely nothing to the imag ination. In my opinion my friend's snore is not equaled in this part of the country, and 1 ought to know for I'vu sat up with it nearly every niu'lit since it was a shrill treble snore in knec nants, watched over it with more or less tender solicitude during the trying period in which its voice changed and its mustache sprouted, and celebrated its arrival at the fullness of its deep baritone maturity by congratulating tho other members' of inv friend's family upon their fatal connection with a steambont explosion early in the fifties. I say I have sat up with my friend's snore all these years out of re gard for tho truth. My friend and I have always roomed together and always occupied the same bed, but never slept together; he slept but I didn't; I lay awake to hear him snore. My temperament is artistic in tho ex treme. Nothing inspires In mo such profound reverenco as a thoroughly perfect and artistic achievement of any kind, therefore nothing could induce mo to fall asleep during the progress of the symphony which my friend nightly porfc'rnis in his nasal organ. Symphony Is a good word. It defines the situation exactly. My friend's snore is not, liko that of ordinary individuals, a series of aimless vibrations of tho uvula; it has an object in view. It is a sym metrical and well-regulated perform ance curtain rises to slow music, and when tho climax is reached, curtain falls in a blaze of green light with plenty of thunder andlightning. Each performance consists of one act only, which Invariably commences about nn hour after mv friend has retired and continues till his alarm clock has awakened him to a remembrance of those minor duties which tho day de mands of him. Tho steamboat explosion abovo re ferred to is the circumstance which brought all these facts within mv grasp. On account of this painful incident, my friend, at tho tender age of three and a half years, became an orphan. Unable to penetrate the misty veil of the future, my father, who happened along at tho time of tho explosion, did not leave the boy to porish among the debris of the ill-fateu boat and worse-fated passen gers, but fished him out and warmed him in tho bosom of his family. Thus at a tender age we were thrown to gether, and dospiUi the orphan's in firmity, which was not long in coining to the surface, wo became firm friends Tho scenes of our youth were the rolling prairies and" virgin forests of Minnesota, and our companions, from necessity, chosen from the youth of the neighboring friendly bands of Sioux and Winnebagoes. Ere we were out of our teens thepipoofpeaco we had smoked with these bands was broken into a thousand pieces and tho frag ments drenched with blood. Tho blow eamo without a moment's warning, and the day before it fell will still bo vivid in our memories whero recollections of other days have vanished. How dis tinctly I retail each Incident of that memorable day as, now at midnight I recline on ono elbow and gazo upon tho face of my snoring friend! Tho curtain has Just risen, and more plainly than words, tho pleased exprcuwion on my friend's face, and tho peculiar gurgling cackle which apparently issues from the neighborhood of his epiglottis, ro calls to my mind a wigwam oh the bank of a river. I am reclining in tho shade while my friend amuses himself by tak ing various liberties with tho embryo warriors indifferent stages of nakedness nnd dirtiness, who swarm about the wigwam. At one a. m. the pleased ex pression is still on my friend s face, but ho has drawn out another stop and tho windows begin to rattle cheerfully. As fdainly as I can view tho phenomena go ngon in the region of my friend's larynx my mind's eye sees him seize one of the dirtiest of the young savages, and hold ing him by the heels, souse him, kick ing and whooping, in the river. At throe a. m. tho occasional bits of plas ter which fall from tho ceiling, again freshen my memory, and I see dis tinctly tho fast and furious fun my friend is having with tho littlo savages on the river bank. For an instant something seems to stick in my friend's throat. He is pulling out another stop. Tho pans and plates in the kitchen rat tle in sympathy with the result, and the expression of my friend's face becom ing more serious, I notice an ill-favored squaw emerge from tho wigwam brand ishing a huge knife. Another stop and the loud pedal. Bless me, how the bed groans and the foundations of tho house tremble! Then scowling braves follow tho squaw and draw their knives. My friend suddenly realizes his danger and flics, pursued by the braves withdrawn knives. Good Heavens! My friend's entire anatomy must be lined with boiler iron! Tho savages nre gaining on him a chromo is shaken from its moorings on the wall. My friend stumbles he falls the savages are upon him! The alarm clock goes off and the cur tain falls. "I feel as though I'd been dream ing," my friend mutters, as ho gets into his trousers. I answer him not a word, but sink exhausted on my pillow, nnd sleep the sleep of the innocent till the sun is high in tho heavens. Curtt's J, Dunham, in Current. A very interesting discovery is said to have been made by tho experts who are now examining the collection of papyri, consisting of many thousand rolls, which were found at El Fayouin, in Egvpt, and. were acquired by the Archduke Bainer. The experts declare that among the relics are several auto graph letters of the prophet Mahomet. Chief Ensrinwr John R. Cantlln, of the Philadelphia Fire Department says that he was cured of a terrible cold by lied Star Cornell Cure, and that he has riven It to his men with most satisfactory results. Mr. Wesley Sisson, a well-known lawyer of Chicago, was so helpless with sciatica and iiillammntory rhaumatism that he could not feed himself. Nothing relieved his mitrerintrs until he used St. Jacobs Oil. It conquered all pain and be rose a cured man. YOUR HEARTS BLOOD!! Io Von Wlah to Ile, or Will Yon 1.1 ve and Knjoy Mrvt It is hard for most people, who are not in perfect health, to realize that they are ill, and it is only when the disc use, which may have been long in developing ititlf, suddenly causes a general break-down of the svstem, that they send for a physician and seek to recover what they have lost through neglect. In many cases the neglect is pardonable, for the reason that comparatively few persons know enough about their own bodies and tho diseases to which they are liable to tell what is the nature of the slight indisposition which they may feel, or to realizo tno consequences of delay in procuring a restoration of health. In no class of diseases is it so difficult for an ordinary person to realize the danger he is in as in those of the heart, which are so insidious m their approack and development that they readily escape detection until life is m danger. But by those who have in formed themselves upon tho subject, tho slight symptoms by which heart disease makes its presence known are readily, recognized, which enables them to apply tho proper remedy lonir before the diseaso has progressed so far as to render sudden death possible at any moment Dr. Flint's "Treatise on Jioart Disease" lias been written with a view of enabling nny person who so desires to become familiar with diseases of tho heart and kidneys and the other nervous affections to which they give rise, thereby putting it in the power of everyone to recognize the significance of symptoms which would otherwise have no meaning. The extent to which heart disease has been developed by modern life, the wear and tear of business and the abuBO of such articles of general con sumption as tea, coffee, alcoholic li quors and tobacco, has rendered it de finable that the publio should be in formed of the dangers which surround them on every side, of the fatal dis eases to which all are exposed, and from which few escape, of the signs by which they may be recognized, and of the methods by which they may bo cured. All this has been clearly set fortli in Dr. Flint's Treatise, wherein it is also shown why Dr. Flint's Heart Remedy become a spe cific for all kinds of heart disease, and affections arising from it, and how its use must necessarily prolong life by rendering sudden death from heart diseaso almost impossible. A cloar understanding of the physiology of tho heart and the nature of tho dis eases to which it is subject, will make it clear that heart disease can be cured if the proper remedy bo applied, and the only proper remedy is that which reinforceB nature in her efforts to expel disease. This Dr. Flint's Heart Kemcdy does, and the way in which it acts is fully explained in the treatise above mentioned. There are few people who know that nearly every case of rheumatism is followed by lieart disease; that tobacco so thins tho walls of the heart that they become hardly thicker than this paper; that tea and coffee give rise to serious heart affections ; that consump tion, pneumonia and kidney disease are often caused by disease of the heart; that a slight pain in the left arm or shoulder, a tendency to faint ncss or dizziness, a shortness of breath upon exercising, a faint sense of weight or uneasiness in the chest, are sigiiB of serious disease of the heart Yet your physician will tell you all this is true, and will show you the re port of hospitals in which it is shown how great a proportion of their in mates are alllicted with heart diseaso, duo to these causes producing these effects and manifesting these symp toms. Yet tho foregoing gives but a glimpse of the wide range of heart di sease, which makes itself manifest in serious and fatal disease of tho brain and spinal cord,livcr,kidneys, stomach and intestines, consequent upon the derangement of the general circulation which necessarily results from abnor mal action of the heart. Thus Bright's disease, inflammation of the kidneys, diabetes, irritation of the bruin, menin gifis, inllamation of the brain, mania and insanity, epilepsy, insomnia, hem orrage, head-ache, dropsy, bronchitis, asthma, pneumonia, congestion and in flamation of the liver, and neuralgia, as well as many other diseases not here enumerated, are directly caused by unsuspected diseaso of the heart In these and kindred diseases a cure must be effected by restoring the cir culation to the normal stato, which can be done only by regulating the action ot the lieart, wlncn is accom plished only by Dr. Flint's Heart Kem cdy in the way set forth in his treatise Nervous diseases not dependent upon heart disunse, but which derange the heart s action, are also relieved and cured by restoring the circulation to its normal condition. Thus insomnia, nervous exhaustion from worry or over work, dclirum tremens, alcoholism, shaking palsy, sciatica, rheumatism, sea-sickness, sick-headache, etc., are at once reached through the circula tion and are rapidly cured. All this is fully set forth and ex plained in the treusise referred to, which will be forwarded to any ad dress by the proprietors of Dr. Flint's Heart Kcmedy. J. J. MACK & CO., Nos. 9 and 11 Front St., San Francisco. At all druggists. SR. HENLETS Celery, Beef and Iron eives food to the brain, enriches the blood, aids digestion, and fives refreshing sleep where other remedies fall. Try It. Get Lyon's Heel Stifleneni applied to your new boots and shoes before you run them over. Go to Towne St Moore when In Portland for best Photographic and Crayon work. IT SEATS THK DUTCH. During the put jresr over SO,000 inch books M these have been Olven Away by the Amkhi can Kchal Homk, (Weekly, 16 yeara old. i& column., 8 iwifO!. of ltorhealer, N. Y.: Law VVIlluiut Lawyers, Family Cyclopedia. Ka.-m (')i'loM-ilia. Karnien' : Stockbreeders' Guide. I oniimin Kense hi l'uullry Yard. Wurld t'yclniMMlia. liiiielins lAlcdical) Counselor. Hoys' t'suful I'nMline. Klve Years llufure Hie Mant. 1'eonle's HiMl.iry of Called States. rnivermtl HUtnryof All Nations. I'optilnr History of the Civil War (both sides.) Send I.I6 ami K't any ON K Hook and Weekly one year, postpaid. Katisfai'llon Kuaranteed. Cloth-Hound Hooks, Ax 7, to MM paxes. Iteferrnre, Mayor I'arsons, HocIkhot, N. Y. Address Ituralllome Co., (Limited,) 1 toe heater, N. Y. Samples, i cents. Tatrlck Mullen was fatally crushed In a mine at Grasa Valley Cal. FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS I the sum Dr. Pierce oners for detection of any calomel or other mineral poison or injurious nru. in ins justly celebrated "1'leasant Purgative Pelleta." They are about the size of a mustard seed, therefore easily taken, while their operation is un attended by any grinins pain. Hillousnesa, sick-headache, bad taate in the mouth, and jaundice. yield at once before these "little giants." VI your rtriiRKint. Two miners were au (located to death at Tlntlc, Utah, by inhaling fumes ot giant powder. Many persona think that corn Is the best food for poultry. It is if von do not wish egH. lor eggs feed soft food, bran or meal, with a little salt, in the morning, and a little cayenne pepper added every Other morning; corn, wheat or oats in the evening. A sole diet of corn produces too mucn lat. UNDIGESTED FOOD In the stomach develops an sold which stings the upper part of the throat and palate, caus ing "heartburn.'' It also evelvea a gas whiuh produces "wind on Uo stomach.'- and a feeling and appearance of distension In that own after eating. Kor both this aridity and swell Ing Hosteller's Stomach Hitters Is a much bet ter remedy than alkaline salts, like hartshorn and carbonato of soda. A whicRlassfat of the Hitters, after or before dinner, will be found to set ai a, reliable carminative or preventive. This fine specific fordyspepsla, bots In Its acute and clironlo form, also prevents and cures malarial fever, constipation, liver complaint, kidney troubles, nervousness and debility. Per sons who observe in themselves a decline ot vigor should use this One tonto without delay. In Butte county, Cal., there are 102 land owners whose holdings vary from 1,000 aores to 110,000. The "Favorite Prescrlption"of Dr. Tierce cures "female weakness" and kindred af fection. Uy druggists, . Nothing reduces a man's iucome like a visit from an Assessor. 1'or llroncliliil.ANlluiiulto, nnd I'liliiiomiry 4"oniliilnl "i'rotcn'i VrouchUU Troches" manifest remarkable curative properties. l'S cis a box. Try Germka for breakfast HUMILIATING ERUPTIONS ITCHING AND BURNING TORTURES and icvitnv BPWiKsor Itching, Scaly, Pimply, Inherited, Hirofulous, and Contagious Diseases of the Hlood.Nkln, and Scalp, with Loss of Hair, from infanoy to old age, are positively cured by theCL'TICl'HA ItKMKDIKH. CuTiuuK ItKsoi.VKftT.Uienew Wood purifier, cleanses the blood and perspiration of Imparl Ues and poisonous elements, and removes the CAUSE. Curni'HA, the great Bkln Cure, Instantly allays Itehlmrand liiflammaUon.clears the Xkln and ttcalp, heals Sores, and restores the Hair. CUT4CUKA feOAf, aneqiiialte Skin Heautiller, Is Indispensable in treating ckln Diseases, Hnby !limior,8ktn HlemiHhes.ChappedandOllybkln Hold every where. Price: Cuticuha, Atk).i Its bolvknt. $1: ttOAF, 2.'k3. Prepared by the Pot- TKH Imi'O AND ClIICMICAL Co., HoKTON. MASS. Mend ror " now to Cure bkln Diseases." U. ItiiKUMATio, Neuralgia, Kolatis, Sudden, M Sharp and nervous palns,lnstantly relieved I A by tlui L'l Tin m Autlfslu l'lutw. Kc HEART DISEASE. DR. FLINT'S HEART REMEDY should bs used by th ovsr-worked man ol business or professional man, whom worry anuo.vt, ssppuif mi sireninn anu niaxing su mint's rnuy tor luddon and gsnsnu breakdown in noaitn. Palpitation of the Heart Persons who suftor Irora occasional pslpitstlon of ths heart are often unawart that tlmy arc the vio ilins ol hsart dlseus, and ars bsbls to dis without warning. They should banish this alarming symp tom and ours Uit disease by using Da. Kusi s Uaaaf HsMlDT. Neuralgia of the Heart Neuraliria ol ths Heart is a common affliction, and one which la not only extremely painful, but very dangerous. Its paroxysms can bs relieved and the disease cured by using Dr. Fukt'r Hkart Khiidt. Warning Symptoms. Three-quarters ol the sudden deaths from heart disease could have been prevented, hod ths victim taken warning; from the symptoms and taken a roper remedy. Whenever huart diaeue is sua pected, take Da. Fust's llt lliasoi. Never Falls. ricart disease can bs cured. Therefor, let those sftllcted with It tok hop. Da. Pun's Heart ItiMiDT can bs relied upon in oasos ol lonfr standing-, and will not fail In any case, if used faithfully. Danger Signals. A sense of oppression or weight In the region of the heart, a lli'lit diuiness. Irregular iml-e, a prefer ence lor certain position, are unuhtiir signs of heart disc, and an warning that suililtii death Is liable to occur, l ie, thereto, Da. 1u.ni s liiuar iUaiDT. At draggli, 91.S0. Decript'T treatli with tacb bottle ; or odJreu, J. J. MACK A CO. 0 and II Front St., gan Pranclsoa, Cnl. CUMi HUM All ILU I AILS. Best OxiKh H) run. Tmim .hI. TJs 1-4 r i . Ml UJ r.i FARMERS! ATTENTION! Vm only the CtlifornU Hand Forewl and 11ihI k isiiftlirtl SACK NEEDLES With Cutler lu th ejr. Koch Ddl ruarantmd. Frica, 80 emu. Ak your dealer fur thru, uc orler from the aianufactimn, WILL fc FINK, 818 Market StS. F.