FRTPA.Y.I... FEuKUAKY 0, 1372. The Nan iid Uie,Jto-te. , i. , BY ALICE CAM. TJie Snn, who smile wherever he K" Till the flowers nil smile R'ni ,, ,,, Fall In love one day will. bashful R- Thavhadjan ,d1,yn-Mu So he pushed Iwk tlx foW f " wn hood , . That covered Iter modest araoe, But woe for the day when hfc CMeO hair When lurcheefc Hh tomb a wet! inr ln loved lilm "' inaWcit eouKI. Anil hJelUiercrui.hed and weak, .! Striving Hi vulii with her faded hood " 3!o corr her guilty cheek. Lost. " Baby was lost ! Up and down, hirfi and low, every where about the house .and barn and woodshed, in the garden and down the road by the bridge, the search was car ried on with anxious hearts and eager steps. Every nook and corner where even a mouse could hide was examined over and'OverjtgajiyJntt-no Babyj The brook was loiv, so'low that Baby might have toddled over it without hardly wet ting her feet. There was no danger there; and yet for half a mile either side of the bridge the bed of the little stream was tnorougiiiy scanned, so mere could be no doubt left. Baby's mother, bareheaded, with pale faCe'and tremblinir limbs, distractedly hurrricl from place tanlace, carrying iu her hand the little white sunbonnet she had picked np near the doorstep, the oniy tning. mat could be round btiongin to the missimr. Xot half an hour before, Baby had boon nlaviiic in the yard. coointr and talking to herself, as she nursed her rag doll, and watched the pigeons on the roof of the barn. There were the prints of her tiny shoes in the moist soil bv the gate, the marks of dirty little fingers upon the white palings and that was au. The hot August sun was almost at its setting, and the shadows of the munles wore fast lengthening. "What if night? stiount come, anu uauy not round 7 What if she were wandering further ami further away, while tlicy were seeking lierj? What if she had been stolen, and was even then calling upon her mother to save her? "Baby!" 2Co answer; and the mother's face grew whiter and her limbs weaker. "I .shall never see her again!" she criedjjSTnking down upon the steps of the:pDrcii. "Xever, never, never ! And I scolded her this morning. O, my little, little lamb!" ' "We shall find her yet," said old Mrs. Bailey, soothingly. ".She's got tired and cuddled down to sleep somewhere. Or perhaps she's oil' with some of the nolglmrs' children." Baby's mother shook her head. She knew that was only said to comfort her. All tliechildrcii in the neighborhood had been for the last hour encaced iu the search. She could see them scouring the iiuitituxiyoiia me uouse, looKjng bciund the stone-heaps and among the black berry bushes that skirted the fence. Baby could not have been stolen. No suspicious character had "been lurking about, and nobody could h.ivo got away with her without being seen. There had licen no one" near the house all the morning, exeept old Deacon Pettengill, wiiii juji. ins wagon opposite me gale lomr enough to look at a yoke of fat steers in the barn-yard. The sun went down at last, and one by one the neighbors slowly came in from the search and gathered around the stricken mother, iu the yard. All had word? of comfort; but they sounded false anu nouow. "I ean't give her up so !" she moaned. "She must be somewhere near. -Help me look a little longer just a little longer !" 'X don't bolievc she's been outside the gate," said one. "We can't find any traec of her anywhere. Seems to me she would have dropped her doll or something, if she'd gone far." "We've looked everywhere, said one of the boys. "We've poked open every bunch of bushes on both sides of the road, and she couldn't have got any fur ther than Unit. If she was iuthe mowin' lot, wo should see her certalnlv, or iu tliQ baek pasture, because there ain't an v bushes or woods." "Have you looked in the well?" asked old Urs. Tompkins. "Xow it's just as like as not she's fell iu there. The curblu' ain't none too safe." JShoain't there we've looked "aid one df the boys, quickly, noting the spasm of iain that Kissed over the face of Baby's mother at the words. There's a team coming!" suddenly shouted one of a little knot of boys out side the gate. "Xow we can send word down to the village, and raise 'cm to help hunt." "It's Deacon lWlcngill's horse," said another, who had hastilyclimbcd the fence for a better lookout, "and the Deacon's driviu', too. Something's the ma"er, lie's putting on the lick." "What's he got in ills lap?" asked one woman, peering through the dusk. " by, I do bulleve it's Baby I" .. rusu inrougu uie salens liiSLJH i,eao0" Mopped Ills horse wilii j lfifflr"wlKm !" tlr rest 11. t.im i . joi.iijmiii6. iiU iuiuireti, as ne stopped out over the wheel, witli a little bundle in his arms. "Baby! Baby!" and the next mo njenttne.Jittlccaiof all the trouble andpaiiiwas tightly clasped iu its mother's anus. "You see," said the Deacon, iu answer tothemultitudinousinauiricsas to how. when, and where ho had come acros. iiauy, -aucr i ieit nere, cany tins aiter noon, I thought I felt something under the wagon-seat; but I didn't- pay any jjarticular attention to it, and forgot ail about it before I got home. I turned out the mare and run the wagon under the shed, for it began to look like rain. Long aluntt five o'clock Joel he went to takeoutabagof rye weal thatjbrought up from Piper's, and all at once, as he was hfUn' h outo ills back ho ,ir01)HMl it Mid hollered right out: 'Come here, mSSf he 'Where on earth did scvthrmLtfr?,m? J was erilli' a fccj ineoiitat the ean end of tho slunl- hhid end'of'tbe1' agoS c you believe it &tuV.d.? crcatur;, will! i.er rag doll eu d "d in to her, lym' on some meal ba under1 1 ?, seat, fast asleep. She must K cmwled into the wagon and laid dowi,Y,ii t was,lookin' at the steers affl , Ar to sleep.. I tell S'S litcliin' up again; and I never drove"o like.all-possessed but once before in in v life, and thai .was when Hiram broke hfs leg fallm' off the boss-barn." iso Baby was fouud. and ! ,.i...i.. neighborhood as one great heart brim mcu over with joy; whilo the mother close to whose breast the tired little head was tightly clasped, poured out her soul in tearful gratitude to Him who limi through that brief bitter lesson taught lffir more of the divine nature of love than she had before learned iu all the days of Jier motherhood. Independent. (From the Philadelphia Inquirer of Dec. 6U1. The Woman who Darod. V jiodurx poruS1 ; AADYtATTpnYipvotneii arc of no consequence; for that' in Co vkt sun n.nAiis kloqcIsntLy matter few husbands are; hut in this agcl VOK HE" " i iu luih i-miiA-IlKLPHIA LAWYERS PUZZLED. Tn the Court of Nisi Prus yesterday. before - Jutlge SharswoQjl, the case of Jlte Carrio H. Burnham tvLuriiitnR ot al., election officers for the Eleventh Division of the Fourteentli Ward, came nnior arcumenb The action was for; datnaces In the sum of $10,009, the pian tifl alleging that the defendants had violated the law in refusing to accept her i Vote at the last election. It had been I announced that.SIiss Burnham would I maue ucr own argumeut, aud tins at-; ractcd a large crowd In the Court mom, u number of prominent lawyers 'being proKcut. j Tho lady was attired in a plain, ilark dress and wore a lace collar, fastened by a cornelian pin. She was very decided in her manner ot spcaKiug, una pleaded witli all the dignity of au old practi tioner and the eloquence of a woman. . Mr. Hinckley opened the case for the defendants, lie argued that the word "frccdmau," as used in the plaiulill's declaration, was not to be used in the sense represented by tho claimant, but only useu, aud that according to the in tent of tho Constitution of Pennsylva nia, to mean those holding full' fellow ship iu Government affairs. He cited many legal eases to establish this prop osition. Miss Burnham, in her opening argu ment, claimed that sufi'ragc, under the Constitution of the United States aud this State, was the right of women, and argued at some length to show that the term freeman, when accepted in its true legal sense, included women as well as men. Her speech occupied about two hours indelivery, and was well prepared. She said in the closing part of her ar gument that taxation without represen tation was foreign to the spirit of the times. It Is wrong and the greatest in-, justice to take from her hard earnings for the support of the Government, and deny her the privilege of representation in that Government. These defendants, by refusing me the badge of suflragc, stamp me as au infe rior, when men beastly drunk were icr mittcd to vote unchallenged. Is this no injury to me as au individual? This was au injury done me, and through me the entire community. But there is another view of this matter, by which this injury assumes a more material form. In consequence of boingdenrived of the ballot the highest institutions of learning are closed to women. She is de prived of the opportunities of develop ment that man has, and then is told she lias not the natural intelligence that man possesses. Why, twelve years ago, a young man whom I prepared iu Latin, Greek and mathematics, he having no other teacher in those branches, was received into the State University of Wisconsin one year in auvance, yet tins institution was closed against ine because I was a wom an. Had I the ballot I would have been admitted to the benefits of the institu-; lion wiiu my pupn. Again, ny uepnv- ing woman of the ballot her wages are depreciated. I need not citcyour Honor to tue most unequal laws relating to property and the guardianship of chil-1 dren so far as woman is concerned. I know it is said she has a representa- tion thmil"b miu. T ilniiv fins n lm. possible. All such representation is iiusrepreseiuniiou. in mis matter our Government is one-sided, as is all onr legislation. 2f o wonder that the wisest i-iatcsnieu oi lorcign nations regard tins Government as an experiment. God is jut, and we cannot lone nossoss a re- publican Government based upon the consent; oi tue governed anil denying one-half of the Government renresenta- tion therein. Our whole Government ' is a iiouse oi jjnis to which all women . are subject. To complete this despotism it is only necessary for one man to as- : sume the position of Dictator. Our na-! tion must save itself by being true to , ine principles upon vhich It is rounded. ; It is said that women do not want to i vote, and I confess with sadness that so little have some women breathed the air of freedom that they deem it masculine and unwomanly to be recognized as in dividuals. Our Government needs women; it is injured bv beim? deprived of her intutional and inspirational pow- i ers. It is like a large house without a woman iu it. I know I weary you. but the right ofsullhtge is invaluable. i Tile nuestioll demands iliseussimi. !. ', liberation and judgment before its do-, eisiou. Vie do not ask for chivalry or! forllattery, but only for justice a just interpretation of tho laws of the United States and those of theStatc. The qucs- tion before the Court is the question of , the Legislature of Wyoming gave the individual representation a question of right of the elective franchise to women, the existence of this Government, for It is not .claimed that they have for whieh our laud has been thrice drenched felted or failed to take advantage of it. iu blood. I nr-.iv vou. therefore, to miike It is a valuable privilege, and curtninlv this a question of your own right. De- eide as you would wish a I'ortla to de cide were she sitting upon tlmt bench in judgment oi your own rights ami your own liberties as an individual man, The Judge ruled out the two versions of the declaration which claimed that, j under the amendments of the Const! tu- ' tion, woman was entitled to vote. , .MX. Utimorc at this point submitted !iy oi a soldier; but, on tho contrary, the wise. a man votes long after passing the leal Mr. Hinckley made the closing argu-, military age, while men who are 3e uicut, claiming that the right of sutlrage ' dared incapable of bearing arms are not was uoi altogether an inherent right, incrciore iiisiraneiiiscii. ir it should be but necessarily limited by law. Under come a principle of the government that ine construction claimed iiy the pin 411 I I t 1 I . mi, wis miner age vimiiu no cuilllctl lo ' vole. The attorney created considerable 1 merriment uy tnc argument that to ote r..,...... 1 1 I , . .i iituui.ni luuii, iuiiim uu eipiipiictl vi wise iiay u lunula tax. lien nml , women been armed and eonlnnl Such a thing was unheard of iu our his tory. Judge Sharswood will mot likelv rentier a decision at an early-day. - : Some unkind things have been said about friendship between women. Man- l.......nH 4 ....... . f t l;. t . .V. want nil whokuewhorto know what a friend this woman could be to another and she was ho truer to me than she v .i-tuiiii-i .niiua sii n jvnee i ary: lj was to any soul who entered into her life. She found me with habits 0f' thought and of action unformed, and help myself and help others. Whor... ever I went I carried with me her love as a treasure and a staff. How many , times I leaned uiuni it and grew stroii"' a .. v i . . . . ..O" ( ii never ien ironi me. it never faileil me. Ivo matter how life mirjht i-pn-r. me, I believed without a doubt that her friendship would never fail me; and it never did. If I faltered, she would be lieve in me no less. If I fell, her hand would be the nrstouh.trctchcd to lift me up. All the world might forsake me yet would not she. I might become au outcast, yet no less would I find in her a shelter and a friend; yet, saying tills, I have not said, and have no power to say. what as a soul 1 owe to her." The home of the Cary sisters in ork CltV IS ocetmirnl xr i New John u stoats, ohf friends of "tut re, who still J.;cep;up the pleasant Sunday evfen- and Mrs. wi. ."r"1"0."? Wll,c, were so popular when the sisters conducted them. ,,byrV,ld ,10t a womau love a bou- ' net? ItisthecrownofallbPfiiui wan an tue Jiie ot womanhood before! ' ""-" ':'u" i'u mo Slint-iiK.lit iimc.trii.nin .. cut the lnaioritv tliat nasscs a law is of nml f;iitii sim vimifi r.ini.A.'.. t...!i.I ten actually nhvslcallv weaker than Husbands of the Strong-Tinrlca.- Thbliusbands of the slrong-mhidctl ui ihhiuic unu careiui scicniiiic investi gation, when nothing seems so trivial as to bo unworthy the consideration of the philosophic mind, it may not be alto gether out of place to gather a few facts on this branch of natural history. The proposition that a man and wffc are one, and that one tho husband, has been disputed by some heretics of tills generation, but it is useless to deny tho r i .... . essential unity of the married pair. Observation proves that cither the husband and wife are one, aud that ono the husband, or that the husband aud wife arc one, a,nd that one the wife Theories are one thing and facts au- other. Facta arc ttubborn things, aud men and women arc stubborn facts. However much a man may have seemed to bo before marriage witli a strong-minded woman, from that fatal hour the process of absorption begins, and never ceases till he disappears ut terly as an individual existence. The case of the husband of Elizabeth Cady Stanton is au instance of this sort. Mr. Stanton, before his marriage, was a young man of line culture, a broad and liberal thinker, a youiigoratorforwhoiu great fame was predicted by all who know him, and for some time it seemed that his native powers were sucli as to enable him to escape the action of the general law but there is no resisting the forces of nature; by slow degrees tho process of absorption went on; litllo-by little he sank from the nubliu view, till he disappeared from sight altogether as one of the editors of the S'im. The liu.-band of Lucy Stone oners us another variety. Ji. u. UlacKwell was never much before his semi-union with Lucy Stone. He is less than nothing now. The husband of Pauline Wright Davis is another unimportant fact of conjugal history. The husband of Mrs. Livcrniore is Known oniy ny tradition. There is a myth to the cflcct that au innocent and worthy clergyman of that name, and of uie i niYcrauisi, persuasion, once mar ried Mrs. Livcrniore. Having immor talized hlmscir by this feat, lie retired from the public gaze to the modest se clusion ot the douiestic circle as was very proper. The husband of Julia Ward Howe did not yield to his fate without a struggle. He made superhuman cllbrts to bring himself up by philanthropy. He grasped at the Santo Domingo Commission with the clutch of despair, but it was all in vain. Destiny, iu the shape of Mrs. Howe, was too much for him. Let us resjiect the courage which deserved a better fate. Thehusbands of Victoria C. Wood hull have climbed the hill of notoriety soieiy inrougu nermcuiumshlp. As Ag ricola owed his immortality to the pen of Tacitus, so Dr. Woodhull will bq known to fame only by (he annals of lifs wife's biographer. Colonel Blood is do ing Ins incllectual best to retain his in dividuality in the columns of Woodmil v wttjtm s ii cei.ii. jus struggles are ' heroic, but lie may rest assured that he I cannot escape the general fate of his ! class. Susan IS. Anthony has no husband I Though stern, she is merciful. Various desperate and devoted men, enamored I bv hor plrllsh clmrnn. lmvn rcsnvivl in i plunge headlong into the maelstrom of iiuuriiiioiij uui witn nrm nui gntic j hand she has withheld them from the I fatal leap, nobly refusing to accept the sacniice. Tills list of unimportant husband , might be prolonged indefinitolv. but these nro quite snlllcicnt to prove the iruin oi tnc general principle which I 1 have stated. I have spoken onlv of tho husbands of the most prominent among. me siroug-miHiieti women, luit should any doubter desire further evidences, I need onlv reinforce my position hv bringing tin the husbands of tho lesser. as well as thelargerstarsiiithcwoinanl.si rights nrmament. One and all would prove that thereare no exceptions to tho general rule. Woman Suffrage in Wyoming. The message of Governor Campbell, of Wyoming Territory, vetoinc llu rnnl of the law giving the suffrage to women, is a very sensible document. Ha very properly suggests to the Legislature that the right of a representative body to disfmiiehisn its iiwii emialitiif Inntc can not readily be admitted. If one Legislature should deprive one clnss nf cltftehs of certain fundamental righfs; another legislature miirht deprive nilwr classes of other rights. Two years ago it is for the courts to dctcrmiuo whether it can bo arbitrarily recalled without violating the obligation of contracts. Tho tiovernor enters somewhat into' tho general argument upon the subject, inu .iiianun mi luiee ine asscrtinti that women ought not to vnln Ikhvim they cannot light. He says that in our legislation the right to vote is nowhere made to depend on the ability to do the uie 10 serve as soiuicrs siiouid vole, tho number of voters in tho eouritry'?w6uId "e very seriously diminished, iuhI cverv .l.ll l. t t; ,1 suiuier iiu rciurucu uisauicti iroui war for his government would be dis. franchlscd by that govcrnmcntias his rewanl. This objection of incapacity to bear arms, when fully stated, is this: that as laws uuaiiy depend lor ineir eniorce meut against opposition upon military iwwer, If a measure should be passed by a majority of which the preiioiideratlng element was women, there would bo no lnealls ut enforcing it again ,,oril' ,,f "" a ow" l)Ure,y theoretical objection; 1 nnst tnc nu- lowcvor, is a for It is not. upon general considerations, supposauie that tlie mass of wonieu would ever be a:,i'e(, ,n legislation against the mass the minority. It is the moral clement ot Hlc authority of law which tieteruiines "w acquiescence ot tue minority unoii 1 c hiajorlty is only tint ij (.iuiiiv nvitl i little larger anu not so strong; anil that would not be less felt if women were enfranchised. As for the practical rcsultof the voting or women in Wyoming, Governor Campbell says that "the lessons of the two years' experience fully confirm all that has been claimed by the mostardent advocatcsof this innovation." TheLeg islaturedid not repeal the law over the veto, and it still remains in force. Jlttr ;)cJ Weekly. 2Ccv York beaux arc horrified to learn that many of theirlady friends designed with an asterisk those of their New Year's callers who drink too much wine. They whose names are on this black list will receive no more Invitations. Light weights are some traders have. the bad weighs A costly habit: dressing In fashion. SAyjgKAKCISCO.re: THE FLORENCE SEWINI MACHINE WILT. SEW KVEUYTIIINQ NEEDED IK a fulullv. fmni tlm Heaviest In Ihi- l.lclil. Okttlbrlc. It Iliwn MoreWork. tforr Kindt of Work. Aud Belirr Work Than any other Machine. If ilierc U a Florence Sewing Machine within one thousand miles of .San Franclvco not work- ins well or Klvlnc entire vatlfactlori, If I am Informed of It, It will Lc attended lo without espenw of any kind to the owner. SIMIIKI. Ill LI., Alffut, 19 Xow Montgomery Kt., (Irund Hotel Iiuildlu?, San KrancWo. SEXD'FOB tllWTLllW'AND'SlVPltfCOr' "W011K, Active AgenU Wonted everywhere. Jan. CC,lSTl-nH10ui - CHARLES TENCE & CO., IMPORTERS OP TViiol EilliiiM'v, STRAW and FANCY GOODS V NO. tt SANSOMI! STItKIIT, IMtwViWIlSl? and ffutler,' iieifCono"i; oTI inu Hotel, sax rnxxnsvoLM..ui. ;ak Xo SI Rue du KauU)rs-l"olloiiilere, l'arl. -.' , n32-ir . -it-3 t- POnTL,VI) ADVERTISEMENTf?. JUL CO.. Wahliipon St., bet.iecondi andfThlrd, rORTr.AN-11. rE MANUFACTURE AX a xo. i 'article or nitKAn, CRAi .rKER-S CAKKS, .sua And all kinds oflVilryuiually found In a Flrxt Cla itakery. c?"Good delivered to any part of the cll MBS, R. J. HCHSEY, PORTRAIT AND LANDSCAPE PAINTER CAX UK FOUNT) IX HER STUDIO, on the third Boor of Corbrtt's Xew ilulldliif , from. Ill A. M. till I V. X. of each day BlS-I.ESoOXS GIVEN IS IMteCAl-E PAINT ING, nl XBS. K. LVWI.E.VW, r.VNUFACTUREK AXD IIE.LEK IX 8HIHIS, UXUtKSIHfllB, OUAHlflS, liu., Corner Ftout and Yimull ittret, rortland. Hblrts Hade to Order Of the best material, and warranted to fit. All Klndi ormenaine aasr. k PORTLAND ADRTISEMEXTS. FJRSt PREMIUM eregoa State Fair, 1ST!. TULS SPfE RI3KRTED FOE HIMES & BACHELDER, Steam Hook andJob Printers, who intend fill- ins it with an advertisement as soon as they cet time to write one. In the mean time call on them at 93 Front St. If you want any kind of rrIiithi;do!ie. n30tf DR. W. B. CARDWEIX, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, G1 ItADUATE OK I1ELI.EVUE HO-ai'ITAI. r Medleal irollrce. Uillee. Xo.TJ Kirst atrret, lietween Waxhlnston and Stark, l'ortlund, Ore- Kon. umce nourv ironi'... m. iu mr. ; .'tin,7 lo 9, p. t. Speciality, DUcwi-w or tho Skin. Particular Attention paid to rails from the JACOB MAYER, ImiKirter and Wholesale. Dealer In ' MILLINERY AND FANCY Q00DS, Hats and Oexth Fukxisuixo Goods, I.HdleV und Ml THIMMMED .VXD UXTIUMMED HATS AXD noxxirrs, L Braid, Conl, Ornaments, FIowch ltlhlioni. Trimmings, etc. Dress Goods, IVhitc Goods, Yankee No tions, Etc. Ladies' Cloaks, CIoaK Trim mtngs, Etc. AOKXT OF THE EM.EXDAT.E WOOLEN MILLS CO. A Full Stock nf Blanket, Yams, Bea ver, Ticcedsand Caimcrc Coitftantly on Hand. I..VTKST STYLES BY EVERT .STEAMER. i V PARTICULAR Orders. ATTENTION Paid to nl dr. j. o: i.r.v. Z E KT T I S T , 107 PORTLAND-- rrout Alreel. - OREOON ni Ml'RPHV A- KELLY, P1LVI.U3 IK FAMILY GROCERIES, tor.Mitv pi:uuiiE,rnnrs axo te6LUbles, Comer of Third and Washington Ktrect(op- IOMie 1-reKoyicnan i. iiurcii;, i-onianu, urei;on. ISood delivered to all parts of the city FREE OF CHARGE. nl ISAAC IlEKtJMAX", Cor. .Second nml Wn.shlc(ou NUb HA VINO RECENTLY PURCHASED THIS Market. I am now nronaml to sell n r onable terms the best Meats the country af- fords. DR. IL II. IBEELAXD, (L.VTE OK JAN KKANCISCO,) E N T I S X I ROOM XO. TWO, DKKUMS' RUILDIXU, Cor. Flrt and Washington Stu., l'ortlund. HAVINO HAD A NUMBER OP YEARS' practice In Man Kraiiclsco,ireelcompetent to do Pint Clans Work in all Dental Opera tions. Satisfaction guaranteed. Nitrous Oxide administered. Kefereucr i Rev. Wm. Roberts, Judge O. X. R.'uuy, Dr. Dickson, Messrs Onlmby and Perkins, and Mrs. Dunlway.of theXfrw XoimtWE-vr. nl k. n. RiiATrrcK. n. killix. SIIATTI-CIC A KII.LIX, AttornoyK-nt-Ii tt-vr . OFFICE ROOM XO. 1, DEKUMtt BUILD Ing, Flrt street, Portland, Orejon. nllf 620 A DAY TO MALE AND FEMALE AGENTS I rjH) INTRODUCE THE CELEBRATED $25 Bucieye Shuttle Sewing Machine. Stitch alike on both sides, and Is the only Ilcciued Shuttle Machine In the United Htates for less than $40. It uses the Celebrated Wil son I eed, anil is acknowletlcedby all to lie the uiTiruuuif .iiacnine lor neuvy anu iiguikew Ins In the market, out tit free. Addrcfcj MI.VEK Ar PEARSON, nl General Ascnts, Albanj-, Orecoa. 13ipire Hotel, MAIX STREET, DALLES CITY, OREGON. BOARD UY THE DAY. Week or Mouth, on the mast reasonable tonus. Superior accommodations for families, Csncord Coach to und from the house free A larjte safe for the keeping ot valuables. " House open all nlsht. nI7 THOMAS SMITH, Proprietor. PRIVATE BOARDING HOUSE. ALBERT A. MAXXIXG Ir EEPfj A FrRST-CLAKS BOARDINO HOUSE II ror the. accommodation of people who pre fer a quiet home to the confusion oi a hotel. Terms moderate. Oly mpla, W. T. nSStr. FOR BALE. . - - ' - -ft. CAPITALIST! A ONE-HALF 6R 0NE-THIR1 INTEREST i YESLESUS- Mamnioth Lumbering Mills ! SEATTLE, WASHINGTON TER,, CAN BEi irAI) 33 HGrA-Ilf ?OR PARTICULARS INQUIRE AT THE OFFICE ? "XEW 'SBKHrtlST,' oa or- THE PRIPRICTIXrVAT'iSEATTlEi if;.- NoT.23i37lTnS THE UNK WEED REMEDY, Oregon Rheumatic Cure. HISTORY: rnillR REMEDV IS COMPOSRD OP THR JL Active principle of tho,UnkWeed.Kng. Tba).p!um C'ordaturo Orislnis, La L Indigenous to urccon. uroivs mosi aounaanny anu per fectly In V.'ashlugton county. PROPERTIES, ETC.: extracted by Ether, and a bitter Tonic Prin ciple. MEDICAL PROPERTIES AND USES: It Is the most sure and sneedr cure for P.!ieumatim, Rheumatic Gout and Rheumatic laln of nil kind that nits ever Introduced Into the Materia Medlea. The UXK WEED REM EDY, as prepared by us in consequence of the exlftins bitter principle, iiossesses the neees- ary virtue of being n 3?o-vrox'iul Tonic, IYomotln; the Appetite and Iiivncoratliis tho while Di'-t'stlve AitDuratuii. thus buildlnir ur and Ktrengthenlnt; the system, while at the umr time the volatile principle, belns ab sorbed In the blood, acU speeflicully on tho llheuniatic iMlson, rvmovins it rrum tue clrcu atl.m and syxtem. J nere arc inv rcmetum Known lo me jieuieai 'rofession which will rvnuive tin- Rheumatic Poison from the blotMl. but whose action Is so powerlul In depreslns the Kysteni of the al ready enfeebled Rheumalie patient, that their me. lias to be abandoned before seei:lo cirecls areooiainauie, anu uence tue want oi succeis n treatlnc this nrealent and conveniently heretofore Incurable disease. Unlike these medicines, alresidy known, the UXK WEED KKMKDY, although producins an active and al powerlul cfTn-tx on the I.IikmI and system In re movlns the Rheumatic l'oi.-on, also po-tsesfres a rtronz Tonic aud Recuicrating Klement which admits of its continued u.e even by the most delicate and debilitated. Thus we have the combination for the first time of thee two necessary elements in one remedy, which ac counts for its mi pcriorand never-fulling curative effect" iu Rheumatism, Rheumatic Gout aud Rheumatic Pains orall kinds. X. R. The UXK WEED REMEDY is parlle ularlr APPLICAISLE TO LADIES, in conse quence of Its Tonic Qualities. TESTIMONIALS : -Wcare aware of the fact thattt Is generally sji easy matter to procure certificates attesting the efneaey of patent remedies from a certain class of those who use them. We have selected the following because the names attached to them are thoo of men of the most careful and scrupulous character, and because tho large class of their ucminintiinccs In Oreeon will not, for a moment, accuse or suspect them of any exaggeration iu the statements they may make: Certificate from the Deputy Jailor of Mult nomah County Jail: City Jail, Portland, Oregon, 1 June 7, liTl. f Dr. A. M. Lorvea .t Co.: I was attacked with a severe enso of rheumatism. It wtls In my Uilshs, hips, flnsers, shoulder blade Indeed in all the Joints of my body I suffered great pain and anu'UiMi. i was aiieiuieu uy a regular pny slclan, but with no effect. I was induced to try your Unk Weed Remedy, and it lmmedlatcly cured me up. I consider It, from my expe rience, me oesi remeuy inrrneumaiism Known. ALFRED F. TURNER, Deputy Jailor. This Is to certify that the almve statement Is correct to mv own knowledge. JOHN P. WARD, Jailor. Alta California Book and Job Printing Office,-) 53 California street, .San Francisco, June 1, 1S71. J Dr. A. M. Loryca i Co.: For several years I have been subject to rheumatism in my right skrihurkl shoulder, rendenne me nnalde to work. On n recurrence of the attack some time since, I was indued to try your "Unk Weed Remedv," and the result was a p"r cure In a few days. I took only two-t:... i the contents of one bottle. My firm belief Is that the "Unk" Is a certain cure tor rheuma tism In all Its forms, and I would heartily rec ommend all arilleted with that dreadful dis ease to try your "Remedy" and be cured. JXO. It. McLANE. Certificate of A. R. Shipley, Esq., special con tributor to the "Willamette Farmer," and Sec retary of the Oregon Horticultural fkwiety: Oswego, Oregon, March S, 1S7I. . Dr. A. M. Loryea: Some lour weeks ago I was entirely prostrated with rheumatism; inflict I was almost helpless. I sent to you for one 10 ounce bottle or the "Unk Weed Remedy," by the nsc of which I experienced almost imme diate relief, ami by the time the bottle was Rone me rheumatism was gone. From my ownxpericnee, and from what I have heard others say who have used the Unk Weed, I believe It to be a certain cure for rheumatism. Yours respectfully, A. It. SHIPIJJY. Certificate from Hon. A. J. Dufur, ex-Prest-deut of the Oregon State Agricultural Society and author of "Statistics of Oregon:" East Portland. April 1, 1871. Dr. A. M. Ijoryea A Co.: I was afflicted with a severe attack of eh route rheumatism; was con fined to my bed most of the time from January to July, when I used the Unk Weed and It cure.! me up. A. J. DUFUR. Certificate from James Ilyliee, the celebrated stock-grower and "King of the Oregou Turf :" Sauvie's Island, Jannaiy' If, 171. To Dr. A- M. Iryi t1"-: This Is tnneknowl cilge the effleney of your "Unk Wewl Kemedy, or Ore-'on ltlieumatle Cure." I was afflicted for months with very serious attack of t flammafury rheuiiiatlsm, and Irleil nearly all of the so-called rheumatle remedies without any relief perceivable. I then tr-"" J'our Remedy, and its use resulted in the nost happy effects a perfect cure. Truly yiirs, J.VJlES BYBEE. Certificate fmm the wclt-kuown merchant. O. W. Weaver, Ej.: The Dalles, May 23, 1X71. Dr. A. M. Iyirvea A Co.: I have used the "Unk Weed Itemedv." and can cheerftillv recom mend It to persons atUictesl witli Inflammatory rheumatism. It rured me of that disease. My hands, wrists, ankles indeed, all my joints were swollen and very painfnt. u. w. WxiA VrJlw Certificate from Hon. Nat. II. Lane. Pilot Commissioner of Oregon, and a member of the City Council ot East Portland: East Portland, April 19, 1871. Dr. A. M. Lorvea & Co.: I have been afflicted tor several years past with "weakness m the back," and wandering rheumatic pains, ac companied by severe constipation. By the use of one bottle or your "Unk Weed Remedy, or Oregon Rheumatic Cure," I have been entirely relieved, anil l cheerfully recommend it as a tuost valuable and effective remedy. NAT. II. LAXri. Certificate rrom lion, uiueon iioociis, member of the City council of East Portland: East Portland, April . '"' Dr. A. M. Iiryost .t uo.-i .ents: ine "V"; romi you that i nave useo your - i for neuralgia ami rhenmatle pa ns, and fonnd reiiei irom mi-uw ii umj ."... rerommrnd It to those In ner.1 ofsuch arem- cdy. Yours, OIDEOX TiiiBhi is. Certlficato from lion. r. .".""j. County Commissioner of Multnomah county, Oregon: .,...,, i.hii. wV5d Remedy? nd -VfiSyl It Is a valna blimciHclna It rogulates and Invigorates the ?vtin. This is my experleiiee with the Rem- Sy. Truly yours, r l uuiui. r..iAin rmm the celebrated musician. Prof. Otto VIeuxtcmps: Oregon Musical insiiiiiie. i Porthinil, May -Ji 1S71. f I Jr. A. .l lAityva . v,... . ' t - uikuwu " " severe lnttammatory rheumatism, suffering i m,a UA HHutmtMl tlm f T was unable to tend tomybuslness. I used one bot tle of vour "Unk Vce.t Remedy, or Oregon it alone: ' OITO VIEUXTEMPS. rUT VP IX TE-OUNCE BOTTLES, T Oue Dollar hih! Tiny Cents ier Bottle. PREPARED AT THE OREGON- HEDICAL IAB0BAT0EY, .BV DR. LOBYKA ?' E.V8T PORTL.VND, OREGON. WFOKSAtl All DBC0DI5T. Inl2