FRIDAY.. ..FEBKUAKY 16, lSTi. JInil Iie. Tell me, little housewives, Playing In the sun. How many minutes THl.tho cooking's done? Johnny builds the own, Jenny rolls the crust, Katy buy the flour. All or golden dust. rat It lierc nnJ pat It there Whatn dalnfy size! Rake It on a shingle, Nice mud jrfwl Den't you hearthe bluebird Utah upln tlie air? Good morning, little ones, Arc you Iwnr there? I'relly .Mister Squirrel Bounces down the rail, Take h Mt and wleliet-, Curls his bushy tall. ' , Twirl It so and mark It to, looking wondrous vise; All the piuius are pcbblcc Rich mud pies! Arms that never weary, Tolling dlmple-decp; . , And soon we'll take n jieep. Wish wo had a shower Think we need It so That would make the roadside ' .Such a lienp of dough I Turn them In and turn them out; How the morning flies; King the bell for dinner 'Hottfiutd'ples! Four Aces. A TUmLI.IKO CAI.IFOlINIA INCIDENT Or '49. Spindle was a new arrival. The camp, with customary propriety, hail dubbed him thus because he was so slim. On the same principle his nwkwnrkncsa soon gave him notoriety. Nor this only; liko One-eyed Tom, Spindle made one of the happiest hits. Young, passionate, elated beyond de gree with the splendor of his prospects, it was no surprise that he should court the pale-faced gamblers, who were the aristocrats of the camp. It was no won der tlint they should discover his weak ness and determine to "salt" him. Play? No, no; Spindle did not play; he onty came in 10 waicn tne game; It was tiresome sitting there In the tent alone. "Try it; double your stake on 'threes ; triple it on a 'full,'" said a pleasant faced fellow, who was raking in a hund red slugs or more. Spindle was inclined to listen. "Tell you what to do," said the gambler, continuing, "go me halves for an hour, and see how you come out." He did so. At the end of the hour he had won a "stake" of several thousand dollars. Spindle was fascinated. "I will double this to-morrow night," said he, men tally, as he left the gambler's tent lie doubled it. "TWs must bo tripled," said Spindle, as he sought the tent again; two nights afterwards It was tripled, "Spindle means to break or be broken," said the bystanders one night, .about a week after his original venture. "Look at the dust he is betting." He is indeed betting heavily. The rattle snake has charmed him. Bet after bet, till the winnings of the week have left him ; bet after bet, until its earnings aro all gone till the last "slug" Is up, 'and he has but a single "sight" for it. Woe to him, for he wins ! The tide is floating again, aud Spindle is even. "Safe, safe," he remarks, betting a hundred "slugs" as, a "blind" on the strength of his confidence. Ono by one the cards go round to the players. Spin dle does not look at his, but gathered them under ills hand on the tabic. "I see your 'blind' and go you a hundred better." It was "Eaglcnose" who spoke "Eaglenosc, thf lucky." Spindle looks at his cards. He has a first-class hand four queens and a king; four aces only will beat him. Eaglcnose can have but three of those, for he saw one on the bottom of the pack as the gambler laid the cards on the table; the gambler meant that lie should see it. "I sec your bet and raise you a hun dred better," replied Spindle. Kaglc nose is uncertain. He looks wistfully at the gold, furtively at his antagonist. and very carefully at the cards in his hand. "Ho waits, he weakens," said Spindle to himself. "I thought ho was 'bluffing.'" Spindlcdocsnotseothcsmilc on the face of the bystander at the back of the gambler, or he would think very differently. Rising from the rough stool on which he sits, Eaglcnose Bteps back in the tent and oieiis a strong wooderi chest Two bags of dust are taken from it, and the gambler staggers under the heavy load, as ho brings It to ward the table. Kpindle sees a $10,000 mark on each of them. "Bet you them 'ere things," says Eaglenose, as he lays the two bags witli the other gold. It is now Spindle's turn to hesitate. Can it be that ho has the other ace? No, he ...!1t .1.1 1. I.. l.t, , n win nut imiiK ii, uui wiuueuaii ne (10 . He had not money enough on hand to "call" him. He does not wish to do this; it would be cowardly. "Ha!" sjivs Spindle, "I have It now; I will bet my claim and the few thousand I have lelt against his pile, if it only bo large enough." This to himself. Then to Eaglenosc. "What's your pile?" "There are five more bags in the chest," said the gambler quietly; "what do you do?" "Bet my claim against your pile," said Spindle, intensely excited. The bet was taken. Spindle threw his cards on the table with a half paralyzed motion and a face whiter tliau the tent above him four queens and a king. Eaglenose filed his off, onebv one three aces, a king, ami an ace. Not a wonl was spoken by cither, and Eaglcnose had no reason for so doing. A few mo ments afterwards the ruined miner stag gered to the door of the tent, passed out into the moonlight, aud the game goes on as ever. Half an hour later, Spindle sat in his tent alone. Before him was the picture of a fair, sweet ftice that had won his love a few years back. Noboiiy sees him weep while ho watches the play of light in those eloquent eyes. You could step in, and step heavily, too, without startling him. He is lost in reproachful thonghtJeading down to despair. All thatJje-Jaadlioped to do was vanished. Xnal night, rich in gold, to-night bank rupt "Why, then, should he live? He can liear the roar of the Yuba as it tum bles over the cliff only a mile above him. He steps out into the open air; the cataract glimmers in the distance, and the sound of Its waters soothes and fascinates him. Nobody will miss him; why should he hesitate? ..-J 'in?ove8 toward it with eager bound and determined purpose. Up the rocky oriirrPVKUp' U1',' tul stands on the wflooU HecIp ce' far ab the fal1 taL?Wu ,iVrh,le tents n 8 ll T'y a '""isrcd SSm 2. lS,7"a8., !Ltt. Pn-yor A quick, ter- arouud, on the white tents of the sleep ing camp, and on the whiter face of tlm rata rant rtiwnr? ir w'eui l"C It is dangerous to be "highly sunken" of in Cincinnati. A baby w.-U lift at a rich man's door, the other night, with a note, saying: "Having heard you spoken Very highly of, and also that you were extravagantly fond of babies, I have brought you tills treasure." Man and "Woman... ' BY XlASIEL SCHINDLEU, OIITOU Or TOE CHRIS Differences aro not necessarily vari ances, and not every difference includes an antagonism. Differences, between persons or things to be radical, and, so to subordinate, orput the one into bond age to the other, must rise in diflerent planes of beinir. Such aro the differ ences that subsist l$twen vegetable and animal life: anH iitrilh'beteeriSriimal and human life. Each of these orders of life Includes a specific purpose, comes about in answer to a. specific creative thduglit, find lias, therefore, Its"" specific sphere of agency, . and jri Allege, Aud whatever differences' bno may see in such snoeifie snlinrp. thev aro. not coflic- tive nor variant; they are not proofs of lufenonlvron the onc'Jialiu.wr superior ity on the other; they do not nicaiitliut one has more or less privilcg6 than the other. They arc only the bass and alto, the tenor aud treble that blend in ono soiigj that swclUi"r into Uic choral BJ-in-nhoiiios of one hvmn. They may be differences of sex, they may be differ ences of physical conformation, of tem perament, mental and ,moral tendency, but as there is right development and a coming into normnl conditions, they all accord, complement each other, and are made mutually helpful. And not one can say to the otlicr, I' have no need of thee, or I am more than thpu. Tho differences offtho sexes-tire not essential. Trace them to their sources, and von have accord, the male aliil female clement pbisitig IiVf-lits unity of one.ature. uiey arc not auogeiucr un liko the difference between the tongue and the groove. It would be impossi ble to tell which came first Into the ar tist's mind. Simultaneously they must have entered his 'cbnflniisW5s.' By itfclf, neither means, anything. They diflcr, nevertheless. And yet tho oue takes the other. They unite in oue thing. They complement each other. Yet neither loses its individuality in the otlicr. Out of mere dlllcrcnces, there fore, no man can construct an argument Unless they rise out of different creative intents, they are.iuvalid for an argu ment, and may as&vell beurued against the man as tlie woman. For the ends of a Human Economy the mam and woman elements have each become the basis of an individual, personal life. And that there Is no rad ical unllkcncss between them, and that the ono is not over the other, in point of personal privilege, is lurtncr seen in their vital resemblances. Jn God, the masculine and feminine elements exist under one will. And even in the hu man sphere one always sees tho man uniting the masculine and the feminine, aud the woman uniting the feminine and masculine. And it is common also, to sec the man dominated by tlie woman and the womau dominated by the man. For sex of character does not ahvay con form to sex or hotly, in its most In trinsic sense, its exists, often, contrary to tho physiological indications. If, therefore, sex is to determine the matter of franchise or any other question con corningpersons then tho feminine man ought not to vote, and the masculine woman ought to vote. I mention this In passing to show how utterly shallow aud arbitrary is the argument that un dertakes to determine franchise by pex. No male but has tlie female clement, no female but l:ns the male element ,Aiid I do not want to fee the marf who has not the female element, or the woman that has not the male clement. And what God's meaning In this solemn fact is, is quite clear to all eyes, except those of politlcans and priests. It is God's way to utter his voice against all tyrannies of one sex over tlie other, and to assert that personal rights are eter nally the same for each. For this lvlncr of the male element across ,inlo" the sphere of the female, and of -the female across into thesnhcrcof the male, makes it impossible to draw the line of demar cation between tho two. Now it comes in order for me to note the vital and substantial resemblances of the sexes spoken of already in a more specific way. Has the male a human body? So has the fciriale'.'arid of kin dred susccptibilties to nleasuronnd pain. Has tlie male an intellect? So has the female, and so essentially the samcthat one communicates its thought to the other as understandingly as does one sphere communicate its gravity to an other. Has tho. male- speech? Ho lias the female, and just the same, coming to each in the same spontaneous and mysterious way, and bearing from one to the otlicr messages of truth, herald ries of faith, aud the tender freightages of love. Has the male an understand ing, a conscience, a power of intuition, a reason, a will, a moral faculty, a re ligious sense, a spirit? The fcmaleiius like rich and divine endowment, an swering sweetly aim eloquently across to that of her brother. ' " " Intellectual a fid ililritual faculty "Wat assumes personality. Personality, at least in human beings, is tho condition of liberty. Liberty culminates -iu-tlic free State The free State culminates In granting full range to the exercise of all the faculties of tho rational person, The rational person has the native right iu irancuisc in cuurc muiiicreuctt to tuc matter of sesf complexioiror phyI'dlog Ical conformation. The State does not create nor confer this right: It is in born, God-given, inwoven into the nor sou in creation, and exists prior to and is condition of the State. It come.? from personality, and Is tilts innate heritage of the soul. If not so'wlfenec our" own Jlcmiblic with its millions of sovereigns, whoae latliors talked so of "inalienable rights:' rights that dawned up Iu their inmost spirits from their profoundest depths, that kincrs naled on their tl iron cm -nn despotism blanched .throughout all. the earth? The State may Tc"gulafptHb franchise for safety's sake, and in the interest of the common weal, but the right of franchise inheres and antedates tnc fetate. Ann tue State's right to reg ulate must forever turn upon the morals of the voter. Otherwlso the Stale be comes tyrant and only needs the pretext or the opportunity to vest Itselt in a king. The question to be asked is not what is the sex of the voter, nor what is the color or siiape or the voter, but is the voter a person, a soul, in self-con. sclousncis or the FdeasW Justice and'HUt crty. And to an sucn tne pathway to the ballot-box must be thrown open wide and kept clear of hindrances, though they be poor as Lazarus,, aud fragile and '(imuf as children, though they be black as night, or tender, deli cate, fair and fragrant as angels. A party rose In England during-the sixteenth century, opposed to the king, and favorable to popular lorms of gov ernment In- which thotpeople nwouId themselves have a voice. They adopted as their motto the words: "We hope in God;" thefirst letters of eaclfwortl'mak- aud a half before tho adoption of the American Constitution. A Plttstleld (Mass.) womau makes her living by assessing regularly on the 11- They pay it readily rather than stand a I'lwecuiion unuer tncjaiaine law. Way5mmg 10 Wief meeting trouble half Urlt. When you sec ft fellow mortal Without tlxcd and fearless vlcwe, Hanging on the sUirts of others. Walking In their cait-oirMioci--. Bowing low to wealth or fa or, , - With uncovered, abject head, Iteady to retreat or waver. Willing to be drawn or led : Walk yourself with firmer bearing Throw jour moral shoulders back; Show your spine has nerve and marrow, : Just the thing he must lack. j Myxelf; . I-nmrJiow little more I know! 5 -Whence came I,-whither do Iio? A centered selfthat feels and In, A cry between the silences ; e o Between the cradle and the shroud, Ajl4ieteors flight from cloud to cloud. , , . A Woman's Dreams. She sat alone iu the moonlight, her beautiful check resting on ncr hand, so soft and white aud dimpled. You could tell, as you looked at her, that her thoughts were far away, and that she was thinkimr of soniethlnir beautiful. Her eyes were wistful; her Hps were souiy pressed logeiuer; mo unique iu her chin remained, that little rosy cleft, that impress of Love's finger. She was less glowing than at times, but none the leas lovely. I thought to myself as I looked at her that she was nearer Heav eu than we coarser mortals, and I longed to know whither her pure heart turned itself. I approached her; she did not hear me. L spoke; she did not answer. I touched her softly on the arm; she looked up aud smiled, a far away smile, such as an angel might nave given. "You aro thinking very intently," I saui. She answered. "Yes." in a subdued tone of voice, as though that which was on ncr mum was too holy for discussion. But I persisted. "Will you tell me what your thoughts were?" 1 asked. She shook her head. "You could not understand," she said. "I could try," I said humbly ; "lam coarse and rude, I know, but I could strive to comprehend." She smiled sweetly, but still with that lar-away iook in ncr dark eves. "2fo( not coamc," she said, "but you area man. It Is so different with me; vic juu a woman you wouiu under stand at ouce. Jfow erhaps you may aiiiuc, may laugll at- me." "Believe mo no," I whispered; "1 ndoro the beautiful, the true, the pure. Let mc know your sweet thoughts." She gave mo her hand. "I will tell you," she said. "I havo thought of uoiiung cisc an tiay. Last night I lay awake thinking of it. I am sure I must uerignt; butlf lam wrong oh! iflam wrong, Edgar, I tremble to think of It." "J on cannot be wrong," I said. Sho gave mo her other hand. "You think not?" she said; "all! but you cannot uc so good ajutigeasa wonv an. I think, I believe" "cs, yos," I whispered, bending nearer; -yes, vngeune." "I am almost sure," she said. In ac cents softer than the ripple of falling water, "almost sure, Edgar, that blue fringe will look better on my now walk mg suit than purple velvet. Don't you iiiiutv rot" High-Heeled Boots and Crooked Gains. It Is worthy of note that, while a ma lignant hatred of Chinese is fomented under cover of hostility to their inuni gration, our women have fallen in love with Chinese costumes and customs, in some respects, aim acceptctl them as models. The pictures of Chinese Indies. to which one has been accustomed for many years, bear a close resemblance to tne American belie or tho present dav. The repulsive hump, the crippled feet. aim tuc menacing gait or our women, ir tney no not ionny tiicLiarwimau tneory of the origin of the species from mon keys, at least give the appearance of ret roKradimr monkey-wards. The dress. uncouth and deforming as it is is, would not of Itself deserve notice: but the hlcrh heels, crippling the feet and distorting the limbs, are an outrage of grace on anatomy, on humanity,cutltliug thcau- inors, couiu iney oo delected, to enmi nal responsibility. A convention of corn-doctors, in the Interest of the trade, could not devise a better scheme for cood times. Women whose pedals aro solidified may escape with only corns of which we nope aim pray tiiey may have aiuiiniuiicuucrcrop. uut mat a wiiolc (feneration of Httlo crirls should have their toes jammed into the points of ineir ikmiis, to no itte work or Heels, and that their legs should be thrown out of natural balance, and the pliant bones bent into semi-circles, Is a .sacrlfico to fashion which would disgrace a nation of Hottentots. Should the wicked cus tom hold a few years, there would not bo a decent foot or an rutlieletic leg in our woman population, except among washerwomen aim tuc like. And all this Is a trille compared with the mis chief done to the iK'lvis, spine aud chest by the constrained attitude which the abnormal elevation of tho heel must of necessity Induce. I-ashiou is at best a cruel tyrant; but the whole history of caiiniyiiiis nue woes not, exin una grosser violation oi natural law, aad a more un pardonable assault on the beauty and health of woman, than the invention of h'ujh-hcclcd boots. lhicific Medical jonrtuu. A Livixo Dead. Over in Brooklyn there is a young girl who, seven years ago, was thrown from a horse. Her back, if not seriously broken, had at least ceased to perform its function, her neart ccascti to neat, aim sue was dressed for tho grave, but about her face there lingered so much of life that her guar dlan and aunt refused to allow her bur ial. After a few days, wonderful as it may kcciu, she recovered the use of an arm, she breathed, and to this day she live-J, her body perfectly helpless, the faculty of swallowing entirely, de stroyed. She has taken no food in the natural way since her injury. One hand is tightly closed, and the other she uses with an almost natural freedom. She is partially blind, and can only faintly utter a lew oroKcn worns. ncr Dooy is wasted till it is the size of a child of six or seven, but her face is still pretty, and bearcs no sign of her fearful experience. She Inserts a knife in the closed hand, and cuts sheets of wax into propcrshape, aud moulds it. colors it, and makes vcrv beautiful wax flowers, lying upon her oack witu a raised sneir swung across her breast Life is maintained bv In jections, and weekly surgical operations cnauic in is unnappy young creature to remain on earth. As her parents left her well off, and she has an aunt whose de votion admits no mercenary thought this young lady is comparatively un known. But what a fate has be'fallnn her a living death who can tell what can oe me action oi uer mum, for she is incapable of writing much, or speaking but a very few words, and withal seems to have developed an unknown sense, for when her auut enters the room with a letter she herself cannot read In the gloom of the apartment, the blinded creature, lylntr. ncrhans. turned oni away from the letter, utters a strange noise and faintly speaks the name of the person from whom tho letter comes. S. Y. Letter to Si. Louit Republican. "Here lies a man who never had an enemy!" Then here lies a man who never had an idea. Wendell FMlUpt, SiVNCISCO. THE FLORENCE SEWINI MACHINE riIJ. 8EW EVEKYTHINa NEEDED IX ! f , a lamiiy, from the Heaviest to the Light cm xaune. . , It Doh .Ho re Work, Morf JUluda ofWork. Aud Better Work Than any other Machine f. ... j ! V S i . , 1 1 ? i If there U a Florence Sewing Machine within one thousand miles "of San Francisco not work- ine well or Klvln? entire satisfaction, If I am Informed of It, It will bs mended to without espdCM of any kind to the owner. M.IMCEX IIILI' Aceut, 19 New Montgomery St., Grand Hotel Building, San Francisco. stsu fob nun libs ami Hivma of work Active Agents Waattd Evarywhsre. Jan.2G,lK7I-n3810m . . it - t-,1 f, .; CH A RIVES TENOE & CO .,t if . . 1' - !' IMTOKTERS OF STRAW and FANCY GOODS NO.. 13 HANMWfE STItEET, lktwren lluili mid Sutler, next Coimoiolltuii WOTJlf 1 OOAJ H ( 1 r ; No 3i.ltue.du Kaubors:roU,onnlTe. r.irK nU-tf 1- PORTLAND ADVERTISEMENTS- IJELLINGEBi vSc CO., , Wahlnton-SL, bet. Second and Third, rOftTLAND -OREGON Jjt0 1MA WWI y E MANUFACTURE AN"' A XO. 1 ARTICLE OF -1 t : I t H BREAD, , CRACKERS, . ! CAKES, Clai8Uak'ry9rt'Hi?a.ll3rPd L"? "First W Goods delivered to any fan of the cltv jaalnls H. J. B. CAKQWELL, DoHtlBt. Destau Rooct-No. S9 First 8t., Portland. ?JF.7X.': L?tnd Improd .Styles of work at painless extraction oftecth. cs. NitroUK Oxide Gas. for the CtiOn nrferth lnl' E. n. SUATTCCr. B. EILMK. HIIATTX'CJt dk KU,UX, Attorucysi a."t-Ia."W. OFFICE ROOM SO. Z,. DEKUM"S BUILD lng, First street, Portlf Mi, Oregoa. nnr PORTLAND ADVERTISEMENTS; '1RST PREMIUM dregoa Stale Fair, 1871. THIS SPACE RI3ERYED FOR HIMES & BACHELDER, Steam Hook and Job Printers, who Intend Oil- in It wllh nn advertisement as soon n they tet time to write one. In the mean time coll on them at 93 Front St. if you want any kind of Printing done. nSOtf DR. "W. B. CABDWEIL, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, G1 ltADUATE OF BEI.LEVUE HOSriTAl. T Medical Colleirc. OHlcc. No. 73 First street, between Washington and Stark, Portland, Ore gon, umce Hours Irani u A. m. to to 1,7 to it. p. yt. KDtcimitv. MLsMine or tne Hicin. Particular Attention uald to calls from the Lountry. rc JACOB MAYER, " Iriijifirter amfWholesale Deatcr In DRY MILLINERY AND FANCY GOODS, Hats and Gr.NTB Furnishino Goods, Ladle' and JlipiicV TRIMMMED AND UNTRIMMED HATS AND BONNETS, Frames, Urald, I'ord, Ornamcnti, Flower IllblKins, Trimmlnc, etc. iDms ,Goodi, White Goods, Tanker Xo Hons, Kir. Ladies' Cloaks, CloaK Trim mings, Etc. AGENT OF THE EI.I.ENDAI.E WOOLEN MILLS CO. A Ftdl Stock of lUunkcd, Yarn, Ben vcrx, TjLcecdt and Cassimeres Constantly on Jfand. ITKST KTYLKS BY EVERY NTKAMIUt 3T PARTICULAR ATTENTION Paid to Orders. nl mi. j. a. ;i.kv.v, DENTIST 107 Front Street. PORTLAND; OREGON 111 MUltPMY A KELLY, nn.vi.EH im FAMILY GROCERIES ror.Mnr ri:oDicE.nuirs asd teoetibles. Corner of Third and WnhIn"lon street (op- po-ne iTPnuytetian unurcn.i, rortinnu, urcron uci uenvereu to nil jvan.soi me city tut. OF CHARGE. nl 1H.VAC JIEIlGMAN, Union HVIa.X'lX-o-t, for. Second ami Wnililngtou Htn. HAVING RECENTLY PURCHASED THLS Market, lam now prepared to sell on reas onable terms the best Meats the country af fnrd. i nl I1U. IU IU FKKKLAXD, (LATE or SAN rK.l'CI-CO,) I E jV O? I S T . ROOJt NO. TWO, DEKUMS' RUILDING, Cor. Flrsfnnd' Washington 8ts., Portland. HAVING HAD A NUMBER OF YEARS' practice In an Francisco. I feel competent to do Flrt Clast Work la nil Dental Opera, tlon-i. siitlfactlon guaranteed. Nitrous Oxide administered. Kefereuces : Rev. Wm. Roberts, Judge O. N. Denny, Dr. Dickson, Messrs Qulniby and Perkins, and Mrs. Dunlway, of the New NoRTiiwicsT. nl MISCELLANEOUS. $20 A DAY TO MALE AND FEMALE AQENTS ! fJX) INTRODUCE THE CELEBRATED $25 Buckeye Shuttle Sewing Machine. Rtltcli alike on both sides, and Is the only licensed Shuttle Machine In the United States for less than HO. It U3es the Celebrated Wil son Feed, and Is acknowledgedby all to be the best Family Machine for heavy and light sew ing In the market. Outfit free. Address MINER &- PEARSON, nl General Agents. Albany, Oregon. Empire Hotel, MAIN STREET, DALLES CITY, OREGON. BOARD BY THE DAY, Week or Month, on the most reasonable terras. Kuperlor accommodations for1fnlllej, Csncord Coach to and from the house free. A large safe for tho keeping ot valuables. House open all night. . nil THOMAS SMITH, Proprietor. PRIVATE BOAEDIKQ HOUSE. AtBEHT A. JfAXXING T'"EErSAFIR.ST-i;i.ASrtlHJAUlU HOUSE J for the accommodation or people who pre ,r 3. nulet home to tho confusion 01 a hotel. Tercia moderate. Olympla.W.T. n2itf: JAMES F. BROWN, Attorney, Counsellor at jiiw and JS'OTARY PUSLIC. EUOENE CITY OREOON Consultations in the English, French, Ger-l maa ana iiotiana languages. FORpSALE. A RA'R'E - CHAK;ClE CAPITAL 1ST ! ' V- J 'h ft . A ONE-HALF 8R IN E-THIil INTEREST " l-r' . . IN .1 YESLEK'S Mammoth Lumbering. Hills ! SEATTLE, WABHMQTOJr TEE, canbehad 1. V JIOR PARTICULAaS' INQUIRE AT TOE OFFICE 9F THSJiKrfi'eBtMWIST,1 oc or THE PMPXIETW T SEATTLE. .... J-: Nov.3,'lJn;-n i .. UXKt aEED REMEDY..' IBL-UM -WEEP REIY1EDY, .on Oregon. Rheumatic Cure. HISTORY: ; THfc? REMEDY LS COMTOSBD QP-THB Active principle of tho Unk A ecu, Eng. ThaspiumCordatumOriglnls.Lat-Indtecnpus io uregon. urows most aounaaniiy'nnu- per fectly In Washington county. PROPERTIES, ETC.: It contains an Active and Volatile PrtneJnle. exlTacted by Ether, and a bitter Tonto Prin ciple. MEDICAL PROPERTIES AND USES: It Is the miKt. sure and speedy cure lor Rheumatism, Rheumatic Gout and Rheumatic Painsofall kinds that was ever Introduced Into the Materia Medlcn. Tho UNK WRKD RBM EDY, as prepared bv u, in conseiwnee nf tl existing bitter principle, possesses the neces sary virtue of being 11 IPo-woi'ful Tonie, Promoting the Appetite and Invigorating tlie while Digestive AppHratus, thiM butkllDg up and strengthening tlie syMein, wttlle Ht the same time the volatile prineinle, being ab sorbed in tlie blood, actH s.peelfle!ly on tho iim-muutjc i-oison, removing it ironi tne circa latlon and y"item. There nre few remedies known to the IikHchI Profession wliirh will remove the Rhettmatle Poison from the blood, but whofte action is. so powerful In depraving the tijstem of Ilia al ready enfeebled Rheumatic patient, that tnefr use has to be abandoned before spsclfle-ejreets are obtainable, and hence the want of success In treating this prevalent and consequently heretofore Incurable disease. Unlike fhee medicines, already known, the UNK WHBD REMEDY, although producing as active and as powerful effect k on the blood and syctem iu re moving the Rheumatic Pou-on, also possesses a strong Tonic and Recuperating Element whleh admits of its continued use even by tho most delicate and debilitated. Thus we havo the combination for the rlrst time of theo two necessary elements m oue remedy, which ac counts forltssupcriorand never-tailing curative ellt-ct in RhcumatHm. Rheumatic Gout and Rhenmatle Painsofall kinds. N. R. The UNK WEED REMEDY Is partle ularly APl'LU'ABLE TO LADIES, in eonsc- fquenceoflts Tonic Qualities TESTIMONIALS : We are aware of tlie fact that It Is generally on easy matter to procure certlOeatea atieuteg the eftieaey of patent remedies from aeertMn class of those who usolhem. We baveseleaced the following because the names attached to them are thoMr of men of the meat ea refill's ml scrupulous character, and beeanee tho large class of their acquaintances in Oregon will net, for a moment, accuse or suspect litem of any exaggeration In the statements they may makc: Certificate from the TJemitv Jailor of Mult nomah Comity Jail: City Jail, Portland, Oreeon.l June 7, 1871. f Dr. A. M. Ivnrvca Co.: I was attacked with a tevere case of rheumatism. It was In my thlglK, hips, misers, shoulder blade Indeed In all the Joints 01 my bodv I suffered areatraln and anguish. I was attended by a regular phy sician, uui wiiii nocueei. i was imiueeu to try vour I Ilk Weed Remedv. and it immedlotetr cureil me up. I conslifer it, from my expe rience, me oei remeuy ror rheumatism known. aij-'I.kh r. tuii Kit. Deputy Jailor. Tills Is to certify that the above statements cornct to my o u knowledge. JOHN 1'. WARD, Jailor. .Uta California Rook and Job PrlntlnjOgjcc,- Sati FrnndM-o, J one i, 1S71. J have been sublet to rheumatism In iw right V M Tattm rv - T-Vw ' t . T .-n .v w.; rttr several yes urill u 1111 Eiivmun, n-..iT-ii(iK me QnSDW work, on a reenrrenee m in, attaek lime fcllice, 1 wjh. iiiuuct-u iu Weel llHiiv, ami ine remit wns-a cure In a lew day. 1 tone onw twb-i' the eoatesus of one bottle. Myl firS( that taw "Vat" la a errtatn jnATioi'.'J Uea ta all its sarmv an-l 1 imuld heart. 1 111 1 1 11 hb mat dretidrb. Lsestrs yiur -Remedy" and becnreA. Oastttnaae ef A. B. Ripley, Kq,. special eon tritaurtB the "Wilunnefte Farmer,1 andVee. ressry of the Oregon Horticultural Heetety: Oswego, Oregon, March IS, 1CL Dr. A. M. Ixwyea: Some loor wc-ffc aco I wai entirely prostrated with rheumatism; lit feet I was almost helpless. I sent to yon lor om M onnre bottle of the "I'nk Weed ltej,mly, by the use of which I experienced almost imme diate relief, ami by the time the bottle was gene the rheumatism was gone. From my own exjierlenee, and Irom what I have heard others say who have uset the Unk Weed, I believe It to Im- a certain cure for rheuniHtUm. Yours respectfully, A. It. SHIPLEY. Cerlifleate from Hon. .V. J. Durar, ex-rrert-dent of the Oregon State Agricultural Society and author of "statistics of Oregon:" East Portland, April 1, 1S71. Dr. A. M- I-urvi-a A Co.: I was afUleted with a severe attack archruale rhenmattsm; was cou rt ned to soy bed moot of the time from January to Jaly. when 1 nl the Unk Weeil and ft cured me up. -V. J. DUFUR. CertMeate from JanM Bybee. the celebrated stock-grower and "King of the Oregon Turf:" Sauvle's Island, miliary 11, 1S71. To Dr. A. M. Iryea A Co.: XhiKistoaeknewl ed"e the eflleaey of your "Unk Weed Remedy, or Oregon Rheumatic Cnre." I was afUleted for months with a very serious attack of In flammatory rheumatism, and tried nearly alt of the nvealled rhenmatle remedies without any relief perceivable. I then tried your Remedy, and Its uh.- resulted in the meet happy effects a perfect cure. Truly yours. u.v-iitss ii i iireis. Certificate from the well-known merchant. O. W. Weaver, Esq.: Tlie Dulles, May a, 1SI1. Dr. A. M. Tirvea & Co.: I have nsedthe "Uhk Weed Remedy," ami cMi eheerftiTly reeara mend it to persons afflicted with inflammatory rheumatism. It cured me of that disease. My hands, wrists, anklen indeed, all my Jemls were swollen and very painful. u. w. WISAt CilU Certificate from Hon. Nat. H. Lane. Pilot Commissioner of Oregon, ami a member of the City Council ot Kast rortiamt: East Portland, April rl, 1S71. Dr. A. M. Loryea .t Co.: I have been altlleted for heveral years past with "weakness In the back," and wandering rheumatic tmins, ac companied by severe constipation. By the use of , one bottle of your "I'nk Weed Remedy, or Oregon Rheumatic Cure," I have been entirely relieved, and I cheerfully recommend it aa a most valuable and effective remedy. NAT. H. LANE. Certlflcate from Hon. GMeon Tibbeits. a member ofthe City council of East Portland: East Portland, April 7, 1S71. Dr. A. M. Loryea A Co.-Gents: JhU te toln; form you that I have used your "Unk Ajeed" ror neuralgia and rheumatic l""'."" found relief from the use of only one bottle, and loan remmYou Certificate from Hon. F- I. Qulmby, cx Cminty Commissioner of .Multnomah county, Oregon: EMt Porllami( ArrH it lsn rr A.M Loryea i Co.: IhaveusedtheMUnk weed Remedv," and im satisfied it is a valua ble medicine It regulates and invigorates the ivctem. This U my experience with the Rem euy. Truly yours, E. L. QUIMBY. Certlflcate from the celebrated musician, rroC Otto VIeuxtemps: Oregon Musical Institute, 1 Portland, May 22, 1671. f Dr. A. M Loryea i Co.: I was attacked with severe inflammatory rheumatism, -susertng great pain, and was so prostrated that I was unable to tend to my business. I used one bot tle of your "Unk Weed Remedy, or Oregon Rheumatic Cure." and was entirely cured by It alone. OTTO VIKUaTBMPS. PUT UP IN TEN-OUNCE BOTTLES, One Dollar nud Fifty fonts per Bottle. PREPARED AT THE OREGON MEDICAL LABORATORY, J1Y DR. LORYEA A CO., EAST PORTLAND, 'dREGON. wFob SAI.C bt JCix. Druggist lnlS