Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919, April 16, 1880, Image 4

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    Our Treatment of the Insane. Hunger and Hopeless Sadness {
Agricultural Implements.
remains unrivaled as a table-rake reaper
in the esteem of many thousand farmers
5^8»
After using your self-
mding harvester four successive sea
who
have
so
long
and
severely
tested
it.
A
special
correspondent
of
the
Liver
­
sons,
commencing in 1876 with teD, and
Dr. Hammond, in the International
We have been handed one of the Testimonial letters, attesting its unvary­ increasing the number from rear to rear,
pool
Daily
Po3t,
writing
from
Conne
­
Review for March, presents this topic
in an able manner. Tho treatment of mara, says: “At one side of the fine I Walter A. Wood’s Mowing and Reaping ing popularity, are constantly pouring in till 1 have over one hundred in 1879, I
this class of unfortunates has taxed the bay which opens up to the town* of Machine Company’s Twenty seventh upon the makers. Its simplicity, won­ feel that I can sj»eak from experience.
generosity, philanthrophy and ingenuity Roundstr ne is tho Island of Innisnee, Annual Circular for 1880, and as a derful durability and splendid execution They work now even better than from
of benevolent men for ages, yet in read­ uj>on which there are about 84 family large proportion of the farmers of Ore­ are so familiar as to have become pro­ the first, as our men have become fullv
acquainted with them, and they are in
ing the article mentioned it would seem residents. In company with the parish gon and Washington Territory are well verbial.
While
they
have
been
careful
at
all
priest,
Father
Mollony,
and
others,
we
every way reliable and satisfactory.
that appliances for the treatment of the
times
to
retain
in
it
tho
perfection
of
acquainted
with
the
n
ac
’
iinery
manufac
­
made
a
visit
to
this
place.
The
hold
­
As near as we can figure it, thè aver- :
“mind diseased” are yet far from being
OF MOIOTIRIN TIIMJEJS i
principle
which
has
given
M
alter
A.
age cutting per day with each machine i
in all instances of that humane charac­ ings on this little island range from £2 tured by this company’, we will notice a
Wood
’
s
chain
rake
reaper
its
great
promi
­
is about 15 acres, using three horses. •
ter which misfortune should always ex­ to £5 per annum. The land is the few points in their catalogues. They
nence,
they
have
from
time
to
time
lhe work done is the very best, there
property
of
minors
and
is
under-the
cite. Rumors in regard to the bad
have their machines represented by made such changes in construction as
being practically no grain wasted. Vours
management of the Longview Asylum control of tho Chancery Court. It is agents all over the world—London,
practical
experience
and
rigid
tests
in
not
over-rented.
All
the
evils
of
fail
­
tru
b-
O liver D alrymple .
in Ohio became so prevalent that the
the
field
have
shown
to
be
desirable
;
England
;
Paris,
France
;
Buenos
Ayres
ure
in
each
of
the
industries
in
which
Legislature of that State appointed a
Last but not least in the Wood's Pains in the Back and Kidneys,
Non-Rctention •!* Urine,
committee to investigate them, and tho they were engaged have fallen upon the and Valparaiso, South America, and at and all these improvement® have proved
family comes the well known
Inflammation of the Bladder or Kitlncts
to
be
all
that
they
claimed
for
them
and
following extracts from the report of inhabitants. Not only have crop? been Cape Town, South Africa, etc., as well
Wood’s header, brought out in 1876,
• Diabetes,
this committee aro given by Dr. Ham­ bad and labor unobtainable, but their as in all th? towns and cities of the have kept the machine in the front line and having been so thoroughly tested in»
Brick Dust Deposit in Vrinc,
of the “march of progress.”
speculations have accumulated a mass of
Leucorrhtea«
the
last
four
years
in
California,
Oregon
mond :
United States. We will give the farm- Walter A. Wood’s Iron-Frame Mowing At*
Nervousness,
According to the testimony of several debt upon them. In the first house
and W ashirgton Territory, and fount! so
'ers
a
tabular
statement
of
the
Walter
tachments
—
Width
of
Cut,
4
ft.
3
In.
Painful or Suppressed Menstrual!
which
we
entered
a
heartrending
sight
eye-witnesses, a punishment frequently
complete.
We will not use space
The
mowing
attachment
comprises
a
was
presented.
That
the
cabin
or
hut,
A.
Wood
harvesting
machines
produced
AnJ
all
the
complaints
arising
futma
di*etsed
or
state of the KiJnevs or t’rinarv (W mi of
and sometimes gleefully resorted to by
in describing it. We will close this ar­ sex It is PL' k ELY VEGErABLE and KNTiKKLY debilitated
HARMLESS an 1 .jpactady ¿w-.el totha needs of W
separate
frame,
gearing
and
cutting
ap
­
attendants in this asylum is one known which consisted of a single room, was and sold from 1853 to 1879, inclusive :
ticle by saving that Frank Brothers, of and Children. It presents the
paratus,
complete,
including
two
mowing
as “taking down.” “Taking down,-’ in smoke begrimed and almost absolutely Year, i.
No. M.ieliines A'ears.
No. Machines
San Francisco, California, and Portland,
Made.
scythes, thus rendering it, with the ad­ Oregon., are general agents for tho Pa­
the words of tho testimony, consists in destitute of even the rudest furniture, 1853 . ............................. Made. 500 18ti7.............. ..............
ll,5M
tripping or throwing the patient to the might bo expected to bo under the con­ 1864. ............................. GO) 1888............... .............. 17,500 dition of the reaper wheels, seat and cific Coast, for this full and complete
For those who wish to make their own Tea; and for those whoso mode of life renders it difficult to do this we
1839.............. .............. 23ÍOOO pole, a complete mower—making the
floor, holding her down (for “taking ditions of lire w hich prevail in Conne­ 1855
line of machines, and by calling at their have prepared a
1870.............. ................15,000
W56
down” is a female punishment; the nun mara; but the wretchedness of want 1857. ................................ B.HOQ 1871............. ...............10,711 Wood combined machines the most scores, either in Portland or San Fran­
............................ 4,500 1872............... .............. 17,097
CONrCTHIJTFLA.TED
EXTRACT,
b^iug usually Knocked down) with the which had been reached by the inmates 1858
1873............. .............. 20,715 effective, most economical and cheapest cisco, samples of the-c machines can be
1359.
Which
contains
th
urtucs of the Plant in a form convenient for travelers an 1 others.
.............................. 6,000 1874 ............. ................‘50,430 in the world.
knee on the. chest, while another em­ was plainly told by tho appearance of 1860.
seen, as well as a full and complete line
o;500 1875............. .............. 23,507
1861. ....................
To Walter A. Wood is due the credit of farm machinery.
ploye gags the patient, and still another hunger and the aspect of hopeless sad­ 1862. .............................. 5,500 187«.............. ................23,830
6,500 1¿77............. ........... 19 071 of having introduced the first successful
holds the patient’s hands. The patient ness presented by the family. A man 1863
1878.............. ................25,065
ls64
i
8.500 1879............. ...-....... 21j9’0 self-binder, and this high honor is frankly
Wonderful Cures
is held down till she is quite weak and and his wife and several children were 1865 ................
Full Directions Accompany Each Package,.
.............................. 10,500
1806
exhausted, becomes purple in the face, huddled together over a few sods of turf
Total number................................................. 327,012 conceded by’ competitors 03 well as by
which were smouldering on the floor.
Rev. F. W. Buchholz, Waseci, Minn.,
the agricultural community throughout
and the breath is almost gone.
We think it is needless to sav that
Another punishment is to make a It was not easy to distinguish at first— superiority in principle combined with the world. After several years of ar­ used the St. Jacobs Oil in the case of a H. o «. cl t lx o Following T o w t 1 -»-tv
n I
;
“spread eagle” of the patient. This in the comparative darkness of an general excellence of manufacture must duous experimenting he commenced lady of his congregation who had been
......
.
, ,
...
P obtlajid , Oregon, July to, 17».
Mj kidneys were in a very Lal condition. The Urine was like brick dust, and I sutTere I a great deal wit
consists in stripping a patient to naked apartment into which the light was only’ have conduced to these results ; for com their sale in 1874, laying the foundation bed ridden with rheumatism for seven­
my
back.
All
remedies
were
unavailing
until
I
tried
the
OREGON
KIDNEY
TEA, which g.ve me almost
teen years. She used the St. Jacobs mediate relief.
ness, and making attendants whip him admitted by the aperture of a small mercial energy and skill, however for his subsequent trade in them.
ft. HAMILTON.
They have proved more and more suc­ Oil for three days, and was able to leave
with wet towels. This is a punishment doorway, which you had to stoop to pass marked, could not alone have created
„ .
....
P ortland , Oregon. August S, 187».
II lying u severe backache last Winter, I wu induced to try the OREGON KIDNEY TEA. I found it very
inflicted for a refusal to work. It is de­ through—-how many persons were in the the immense demand for these machines. cessful each year, and the economv her bed.
benencial in its results. It was not more unpleasant to take than other tex I would recommend it to tho*
JOHN P. FARMER,
Mr. II. Schaeffer, No. 31 Brown attlictcd as 1 was.
found in their use is rendering it practi­
scribed as very painful, and is practised place. The group around the turf em­
It will be observed that over 327,000
rm
*
P
orti
.
and
,
Oregon,
July 31, 187».
bers
seemed
to
be
the
only
occupants
of
cable for grain-growers to largely in­ street, Allegheny City, Pa., had the , v. 1 ¡‘e
because it leaves no marks.
KIDNEi TEA has cured my bark and KiJnevs, and I am ata loss to expreee my gratitw
of
these
machines
have
been
in
use,
and
rheumatism for < iglit years, and had I shall always remember the OREGON KIDNEY TE A with pleasure and esteem, and highly /«commend it to « I
There is testimony as to ducking, the dwelling, but presently there camo a we think that the demand from year to crease the areas sown.
. mv friends and acquaintances.
j H r DOWNING (at P. Selling^).
kicking, beating, black eyes, and other rustling and piteous moan ing from some year exceeds that of any other like
The cutting is clean, the binding ex­ used every known medicine without re­ "" .....
....
,
P ortland , Oregon, July 81, 187».
marks of cruelty. It is in evidence that living creature which lay imbedded in a
cellent—much better than when done by lief. A single bottle of St. Jacobs Oil
u inle I was in Tillamook last Winter, I was affected in my ba -k anl Kidnevs so that it was almost impoai •
establishment
in
the
world.
This
record
I hie for inc to read» Portland. When I got here I was induced to try the OREGON KIDNEY TEA. I draok, at
weak patients are ovet worked, and all heap of straw close to the turf fire, and
hand—and the bundles being large, com­ cured him.
tnv meals, the tea made front it, and it has elfoete l a rad cal cure. 1 can highly recommend it to all who are
tells not only of progress, but continued
p_ COHN.
Gustav A. Heilman, Esq., editor of mulcted a I w as
inmates have not been properly fed and an eldeily woman, a relative of the oc­
pact and well tied, the shocking and
superiority, unequaled in the history of
T
xdbpzndrncz
,
Oregon,
December
13, 187».
Pittsburgh
Daily
Republican,
suffered
cared for. Hard work has been need-- cupant of the cabin, evidently, poor
stacking can be done rapidly and well;
Both myself and wile have been for some years afflicted with disease of the Kidneys, and had tried many
mowing and reaping machines.
creature,
almost
within
the
grasp
of
lessly compelled in a room in which the
and in case of wet weather, they dry with rheumatism for two years, and lay remedies without obtaininr any permanent relief. About three months ago we were induced to try a package of
This company’ manufactures the fol­
OREGON KIDNEY TEA, wnich has apparently entirely cured both of us, as since taking it two weeks we
mercurv stood at one hundred and death, struggled into a partly erect po­
out better. The bundles come to the many a night unable to sleep on account the
have felt no sytnpt >uw of the disease. We can heartily racommenJ it to others similarly afflicted, as we believe
lowing
machines
:
*
M. L WHITE.
twenty degrees. The use of “cribs” and sition, a dog at the same time stalling
Two bottles of St. it will <lo all that is claimed for it.
! thresher well bound, avoiding the delays of terrible pains.
Wood's Iron-frame Mower..................
4 ffe 3 in cut.
A storia , Oregon, December 28, 187».
the “strong room” is shown.
Loath­ from the straw at such a point as to sug­ Wood's Iron frame Mowur_......................... 4 ft. 6 in. cut. incident to handling straw-bound grain. Jacobs Oil cured him.
1 take pleasure in testifying to the merits of the OREGON KIDNEY TEA. For the past three years I har
Iron-frame Mower ..........................3 ft. 6 in. cut.
Mr. F. Wilke, Lafayetie, 1ml., re-’ been suffering from Kidney troubles, and during the time have triel nearlv everv kind of Kidney medicine in
some vermin in loathsome numbers gest that the woman had been lying Wood's
With the self-binder, one man, with
Wood's Enelosed-gear Mower.....................4 ft. 3 in. cut.
the market, almost without any relief. Having heard that the OREGON KIDNEA’ TEA ppiirrnsend wonderful
. have been allowed to accumulate upon with the animal in order that the brute Wood's Enclused-gcar Mower.....................1 ft. 6 in cut. two or three horses, can cut
bind porta a case where a man suffered so properties, I purchased a package, and from the first dose obtained relief, and by the use of the one package feel
Wood
’
s
Enclosed
gear
Slower
.....................
3
tt,
6
in.
cut.
SAMUEL GRAY.
the bedding, the apparel, and the person might impart some heat to the poor W oq £ h Sweep rake Reaper.........................5 ft. cut.
twelve to eight acres per day better and badly with rheumatism that he could not! completely cured.
of patients. All of these things and creature’s wasted frame, This was not Wood's Sweep rake Reaper........................ 5 ft, tl in. cut. cheaper than when it is done by hand. move. His legs were swollen and he litNi i
E cgens C itt , Oregon, October 20, 1879.
Wood's Chain-rake Kcat»er.......................... 5 ft. 6 in. cut.
certify that I was suffering from an attack of backache so severe that 1 went about doubled up acd
others told with a painful plainness is a case of a skeleton in the cupboard, but ' Wood's Chair-rake Reaper.......................... li ft. cut.
'Those who have used the Wood self- the most terrible pains. Twelve hours cruld 1 here
n
aighten uo. I used one package of the OREGON KIDNEY TEA, and 1 am fully persuaded that I
Mowing Attachment..... ........ *
JOHN W. LENGER.
the testimony that has made part of a veritable skeleton upon what should Wood's
cu’- binder are absolutely unanimous in the after the first application of the St. was restored oy its help.
Wood's Self-binding Harvester..
H
arkisrcro , Oregon, Decembor 31, 1879.
be the hearth. It was but a work of Wood’s Self binding Harvester.. .......... «ft. 6 in. cut. assertion that the grain saved more than Jacobs Oil the pains were gone and the
this report.”
I have used the OREGON KIDNEY TEA for pains iu the l»aek, and I am satisfied with its effects, and do rxt
hesitate to recommend it as a mild and safe remedy.
Z. T. 3tX)TT.
swelling had disappeared.
Few, even among those who have supererogation to inquire what were the Wood's Header..................... ........ i<\ 12 and it ft. cut. j payS for tjie binding material.
HAr.RisBrr.o,
Oregon,
December
31, 1879.
Mr. Wood claims that tho now on- The Walter A. Wood Harvesters_ 5 feet 3
given some attention to the subject, know means and resources of this family.
Mr. Henry Schaffer, Millersburg,
The OREGON KIDNEY TEA has done my wife as much if not more good than any of the many remedies
inch Cut: 6 foot 6 inch Cut.
the depth of wretchedness to which There was no ¡»revision in the house ex- closed-gear mower was brought out in
Ohio, was cured of rheumatism in the she has used for pains in the back, and I believe it to be a good remedy for the d-.avises which it is recommended
for.
a . M. COX.
in
use
bv
more
than
These
harvesters
are
provided
with
an
hips.
within a comparatively short period the ept a very small quantity of potatoes 1878 and is alreadv
*
*
H arrisburg . Oregon. Dec. 31, 1879.
Its popularity is so adjustable reel of the most approved
lunatic was consigned, and which, even and a little Indian meal, and anything 10,000 farmers.
Mr. F. IL Witt, Cleveland, Ohio,
Some three months ago I was attacke I with a saver« Pain in mv Bick. I bought a package of the OREGON
KIDNEY TEA an>l by the time J had tisod one half of it 1 was entirely relieved and have not been troubled
Cured after since.
at the present day, is in some ¡daces that the small patch of land which the great and the demand for it so active pattern, having a wide range of perpen­ rheumatism in the leg.
( cheerfully recoinmenl it to all who nny bi suffering from a lanu or weak hick, as a ploasmt, safe and
good remedy.
B J. GRIGSBY
scarcely lessened.
Dr. Conollv, whose family held could supply for food or seed that he has, for the past two seasons, dicular and horizontal movement ; and three applications.
by means of levers, while the machine
advanced ideas of science and humanity for the coming season had been eaten fallen largely short of filling orders.
Mr. Ilenry Lear, Patriot, Ohio, had
It combines the best qualities of the ; is in motion, the reel can be accommo­ such ¡»ains in his shoulder- that he could
led to the uniform adoption in England into. Wo were quits prepared for the
of the “non-restraint” system of treat­ announcement which Father Mollony well-tried and justly-celebrated “Walter dated to the lriglit and condition of the not move. St. Jacobs Oil cured hiui . SOLD BY ALL DRLGGISTS & GENERAL DEALERS.
ment, speaking only thirty years ago on afterwards made, that this family, A. Wood Iron-frame Mower” with many
s' I grain. The reel sprocket-wheel has two after a few applications.
Mrs. Vrena Gugehnann, aged 59
this subject, says : “Very few phy­ among several others, had been relieved new and advantageous features entirely | sets of teeth, tnd can be speeded to suit
peculiar
to
itself.
Its
superior
cutting
the
team
and
the
different
kinds
and
bv
him
through
the
fund
of
.£'20
¡»laced
sicians of education were to be found,
pears, living in Rochester, N. Y., rheu­
ONE DOLLAR
matism in legs ; could not Avalk. Used PRICE,
until a recent ¡>eriod, w devoting them­ at his disposal by the Archbishop of qualities, adaptation to all conditions of ' conditions of grain.
grass and surface, unequaled lightness
The iron fiiger-bar is used, to which bottle of St. Jacobs Oil, and felt, as she
selves to mental disorders. Thoie occu­ Tuam.”
I
of draft and stillness of operation have the guards are bolted, so that they slay asserts, like new born.
pied in asylums were chiefly distin­
Dak:ta Wheat Fields,
been fully’ demonstrated, and its strength exactly where they are put. When the
guished by an eccentricity and a rough­
Christian Hanni, Esq., Youngstown,
and durability subjected to unusually i guards am screwed to wooden finger­ Ohio, is full joy over the wonderful cure
ness which, unfitting them for other
professional vocations, made them will­
Of the four hundre I million bushels severe and trying tests, with the most j bars they frequently work loose and out of his wife by St. Jacobs Oil.
For
ing to undertake to treat mad people. of wheat produced iu the United States, gratifying results both to the farmer of line.
twelve long years she had suffered with
The guatds are of malleable iron, neuralgia in tho head, and often had the
By such persons, ill educated, preju­ by far the largest portion is sown in the and the manufacturer.
faced
with steal plates of the same tem­ most terrible pains. Half a bottle of
diced, and without any resources but Fall, and is called Winter grain. The Walter A. Wood s Sweep-Hake Rea cr—
The New Silent No. 8
Junior Size, 5 ft. cut; Senior Sizo, 5 ft. 6 per as the sections and open under the St. Jacobs Oil cured her entirely.
methods of violence, and who had never varieties are conditioned by soil and
in. cut.
back of the knife. When worn out,
studied the condition of the insane, were climate, the latitude of Milwaukie mark­
Mr. Win. Reinhardt, Elmore, Wis.,
This reaper has passed through eight these steel plûtes can be rculaced at a rtq»orts as follows: St. Jacobs Oil is
bitterly and unscrupulously opposed with ing in general the north rn boundary of
trade
harvests, during the first three of which trifling cost, without the necessity of really a wonderful remedy, for 1 could
every contrivance of v ulgar minds, Winter wheat.
The area suited for tLe production of it was mainly furnished for the Euro­ buying new guards. Some manufactur­ mention dozens of cases where it has
Meantime, the outside walls of an
asylum were regarded with awe ; the wheat sown in the Spring hitherto has pean trade, having been generally intro­ ers use east iron g uilds without steel proved its magical influence. One case
shrieks issuing from it made night liid- been of limited extent, but there is an duced to the home trade in 1875 in re­ I>lates.
Is the Cheapest to Buy
in particular 1 will state: I know a i
sponse
to
a
growing
demand
in
many
Descriptive of the Wolter A- Wood Wire- man who has suffeied with lhcuinatism
eous; the frantic creatures enclosed in undevelojied section of the country so
... . ¡BECAUSE IT IS ....
Binder.
their dens furnished appallin g sub- wide and far reaching that it may be re­ sections for a first-class reel rake reaper.
for the last twentv-four rears, and of
Separating the Grain —In lodged and late he could hardly move around. After The Easiest to Learn«
jects for the artist or the nov­ garded as the great Summer wheat field It has made for it:elf a most brilliant
The Easiest to Manage,
Its capabilities are so record, and one to which each succeeding tangled grain this is indispensable. The using a few bottles of St. Jacobs Oil he |
elist; squalor and dirt, anti fam- of tho future.
The Most Durable,
every- vast, and the insurance of production year has added new laurels ; its sales, separation of the bound from the un- was entirely cured.
and
ferocity
we o
ine
The Lightest Running,
And now in so certain, that the millions of the Old both foreign and domestic, during the Ixjund grain, and the delivery of the
where to be met with,
B. Seim, Esq., South Adams, Massa-'
....AND DOES......
period
named,
having
reached
an
unpre
­
bundle by the Wood binder are un- cliusetts, writes : Allow me to inform '
the latter half of the nin teenth century World may ever think of it as a land
The Most Perfect Work.
cedentedly large number, and can be equaled. There are no scatterings, inter­ you how much good St. Jacobs Oil has
we find that the methods which U
Con- j that will supply them with bread.
lacing or hanging togetherof the bundles, done in this neighborhood.
A traveler making the tour of the St. called
ollv so vigorously denounced, and to the
A tvoman ' 2V O SHUTTLE to THREAD
The
Model
Reaver
of
tho
Period.
and consequently none of that difficulty had the rheumatism so badly that she i
abolition of which he gave his life, are | Lawrence and its connecting chain of
l'«es a Straight Self Setting Needle and
They manufactured and sold in 1879 in shocking and stacking tangled grain could not even attend to her wash. k
in full use in almost every* asylum in ! lakes, landing at Duluth, and journeying
Docs the Greatest Variety and
the United States ; that the attempts to ‘ west over the Northern Pacific Railroad at least three times the number of these inevitable in the case of self-binders of Three applications of St. Jacobs Oil1
Widest Bange of Work.
EGREAT
reapers
made
in
any
previous
year,
and
other
makes.
’
two
hundred
miles,
beyond
the
forest
re
­
improve the condition of the insane are |
cured her. Her joy seemed to have no | Those who have tried it aro delighted
Compressing the Bundle.—The com­ bounds.
opposed, as in his day, by those who gion of the Upper Mississippi, will find I the increase fur 1880 promises to be
with it, as it is the only silent
pressing of the bundle is accomplished
have the charge of them ; tha; deus are himself on the eastern edge of this equally large.
!
sewing machine that makes
We call the attention of the public by the pressure of the iron arms, which
still in existence, chains still employed, bread laud of the future —the valley of
Henry Ward Beecher, Newman Hall,
Keller ca and Cam
the lock stitch .
adapt
themselves
to
its
size,
instead
of
to
the
following
points
of
excellence
;
Believes and Carew
flowing
north
­
the
Red
river,
a
stream
blows still inflicted, systematic flogging
De Witt, Talmadge and Rev. Samuel
by
the
wire
itself
—
a
feature
not
practi
­
The
automatic
gear
for
controlling
the
still practiced, the strait jacket still used ward to Lake Winnipeg, anil thence to
Cowley, all preached on virtue one I It is the Best Machine for all Family Believes and Cure,
Believes and Care.
raking—In 1878 they added to this cally carried out by any other manufac­ night last week. Straws show which Use. not Liable to pet out of Order-
as a means of restraint: and that these Hudson bay.
IHIECMATISM
Other binders compress the way the wind blows. A word to the We place it on trial with all other
In August, 1869, the writer of tins reaper what they term the ‘ automatic turer.
agencies of subjection are supplemented
RHEUMATISM
RHEUMATISM
bundles
bv
means
of
tension
on
the
wire;
gear,
”
which
comprises
a
train
of
small
wise,
etc.
by the Utica crib—an apparatus not article rode over this former hunting
RHEUMATISM
Machines
in
the
world.
RHEUMATISM
only inhuman, but one which no person ground of the Sioux, where through by gears compactly encased in a close box and with such machines the result is
RHEUMATISM
But one month has scarcely closed,and It was Winner over Eighty Competit­
possessing a competent knowledge of the gone ages they chased the buffalo and at the right hand of the driver’s seat. that the operator, to avoid breakage of
NEURALGIA
yet a Philadelphia girl is already dis­
NEURALGIA
ors in Paris in 1878.
physiology of tho brain and the pathol­ fought the Chippewas. T1 e valley of This train of gears absolutely controls ' wire, must loosen the tension, causing
I
NEURALGIA
ogy of insanity would venture to intro­ the Red river was avast expanse. No the successive action of the rakes ; and loose binding, or he must bind small gusted with leap year. The other even­ Try it nnd you will be sure to like and bay it
NEURALGIA
ing
as
she
bo^an
“
Will
you
-
”
her i
neuralgia
duce into the ward« c.f a lunatic asylum. ' hill, no gentle undulation, nothing but by means of a lever connected with it, ' bundles, in order to bind them tightly.
NEURALGIA
young
man,
without
wasting
to
ascer-
Agenti»
Wanted.
Amount
of
Wire
Used.
—
It
binds
Within al>out a year four homicides \ the fringes of trees along the streams, the driver in his seat, and without stop-'
BACKACHE
B ackache
occurred in the New York City Lunatic ■ bounded the sight. It was a reach of ¡»ing the machine, can set this device so \ large bundles more tightly than any tain whether or not she was going to
BACKACHE
Asylum on Ward’s Island. I:i one of p airie unbroken by the plow. Our own that every alternate rake will act as a j other wire binder, and it is the large propose, sprang from the sofa, leaped
BACKACHE
BACKACHE
these a patient was beaten to death by , v »ices, or the song of meadow lark, rake, and every alternate rake act as a bundles that require to be most firmly through the sash, and hai carefully
.131 Third St., Portland, Ogn.
BACKACHE
avoided
the
house
ever
since.
And
yet,
1anl5tf
an attendant; in another, an attendant plover and curlew’ and other fowl, alone beater ; or so that every third rake will bound and at the same time save labor
HEADACHE
HEADACHE
was killed by a patient; in the third, a broke the solemn and oppressive still­ act as a rake, and the next two act as in handling. To illustrate this advan­ aware that she possessed :i very large
UHT OUT!
HEADACHE
patient was thrown off tho wharf and ness of the solitude. At Georgetown beaters; or so that every fourth rake tage : A bundle having a band one foot mouth, she was merely abont to ask,
toothache
drowned by another patient; and in the j the Hudson Bay Company had reared a ! will act as a rake, and the next three ' long contains less than one-fourth as “Will you please shut vour eves while I Portland City Directory for 1880,
TOOTHACHE
Bl a dozen« 3 dozen for Bt,
TOOTHACHE
fourth, one lunatic was ordered to give a house, and two or three settlers had set act as beaters; or so that every fifth' much straw as a bundle having a band gape?”
KWELL’NOS
McCormick
’
s
Almanac
for
1880,
hot bath to another, not only insane, up their cabins upon the banks of the rake will act as a rake, and the next I two feet long. A great saving is there­
SWELLINGS
Sent
Postpaid
far
S8
SB.
If you arc going to paint your house,
SWELLINGS
fore attained by making the bundles as
but paralyzed. After getting him into river. We encountered a man whose four act as beaters.
E. JLt, ItfoOormlclc,
SWELLINGS
barn,
wagon
or
machinery,
the
wonder
­
SWELLINQi
ebS-tf
the bath tub he turned on the hot water birth-place was in Virginia, who had
Although the automatic gear thus in­ large as can conveniently be handled.
SI Second Street, Portland, Ogn,
ful
Inqierishable
Mixed
Paint
is
surely
CHILBLAINS
and walked awav, leaving the poor been a frontiersman in Ohio, Indiana, dependently regulates the raking accord­ This feature alone would make the Wood
CHILBLAINS
the
best,
for
it
is
warranted
by
their
wretch actually to be boiled to death. Illinois, Wisconsin—a vidette of civili­ ingly as it is set, the driver can never­ binder cheaper than any other at half
ESTABLISHED 1852.
CHILBLAINS
agents in your own town not to chalk,
CHILBLAINS
WILLIAM BECK dk «OFÎ,
In the asylum at St. Peter, Minnesota, zation.
theless, by means of a treadle operated price.
CHILBLAINS
crack, peel or blister; to cover iictter and
Importers
and
Dealers
in
One
Spool
—
One
Tie.
—
In
forming
the
a patient who refused to cat had his
“ Have you any neighbors ?’’ we by his foot, hold the gavel on the plat­
SORENESS
work easier than any ot her paint. Tbelmper
SORENESS
form as loQg as he chooses, or while I band, one spool and one tie are better lahabte Paint wan awarded the first premium, I GINS, RIFLES and REVOLVERS
mouth filled with food by a nurse, and asked.
SORENESS
over all other paints, at the California fjtate
Of Every Description,
| than two, taking less wire and requiring Fair, 1878, and ftie gold medal at th? Oregon
the mess pushed down into his stomach
S0RENES8
“Oh, yes; three families have just turning corners.
Cutlery, Fishing Tackle, Bird Cages, Beads, Velocl-
SORENESS
State
Fair,
1878.
Get
a
circular
from
their
less
machinery
to
be
looked
after.
with the handle of a knife, while an­ settled about twelve miles from here.
Five Rakes—Experience has demon­
l>oles, Croquet Games, Base Bails, etc.
Agent, which explains this wonderful discov­
BRUISES, SPRAINS,
Every binder is run by power and ery. Try tne aiu au l you ceruun.y would Corner Front and Alder St a., rortland. !Ogn
other nurse held him down. On one They are getting pretty thick, and 1 strated the superiority of five rakes over
BRUISES, SPRAIN'S,
have no other.
BRUISES, SHRAlNs
occasion he ran away, yelling that they shall have to move on, 1 reckon.”
a less number in reeling all kinds of put to the actual test of binding bundles
BRUISES, SPRAINS,*
before it is packed for shipment.
BRUISES 8PRAINK
wanted to kill him. die was caught and
They have l>een getting thicker since, grain.
Benson’s Capcine
ZB" In making any ptirfinuc or tn «
CUTS, W0UND8, CHAFINGS
The Wood self-binding harvester, as writing tn responso to aur n.lrerliao-
laid on a bench ; one attendant held his and the locomotive is speeding its way
The folding platform is peculiar to
CUTS, WOUNDS. CHAFINGS
CUTS,
WOUNDS! CHAFIXaL^
hands and sat across his body , another across the valley, on to the Missouri, Walter A. Wood's Junior and Senior is well known, enjoy the decided prefer­ ment in Ibi« paper you will pleanc men­
CUTS,
WOUNDS, CHAFINGS;
-
tion
the
.mine
of
the
liaper.
attendant and a patient helped to hold and bevond the Yellowstone ; it is flv- Sweep-rake Reapers. The change from ence of the leading grain-growers of the
Will, F m |., Mt. Auburn IncNmd R a R m » a
him. His mouth was plugged to pre­ ing down the valley to Winr.epeg, and field work to road transport is effected Northwest. These large operators, hav­
A Wonderful Remedy.
dne,“n*U’
“LllJoubu<11J it to .
First
{
’
lass
ing
so
much
at
stake,
are
sure
to
care
­
vent his closing it. The food (soup) soon it will thunder along the Saskatche­ by the removal of one bolt and the grain
■There is no comparison between it and the common
■slow acting pjrous plaster. It is in every way
J. JackMB Sniitk. Member City CoonriL *■—-
was poured in from a pitcher ; his breath wan, far away in the distant Northland. wheel, the turning up of the platform j fully examine all makes and then select
Hsuporior to all other external remedies, including
toad, O.: “Seem» destined to occupy a moat
STATIONERY,
was heard to “ gurgle ” as the soup went Farm houses dot the landscape ; towns (which is hingedt^nd the fixing of an the very best. Oliver Dalrymple, we
liniments and the so-cs'led electrical appliances. It
position in evry household."
“nPorta.t
contains new ruedivirial elements which in combina­
into his windpipe, and in five minutes have sprung up ; the traveler beholds axle to the main shoe, on which is placed suppose the most extensive grain-grower
V Cap!ti
Chief DMMttv.
tion with rubber, possesses the most extraordinary
F^ee, Cleveland, O.: “Surprising relief.
»in-relieving, strengthening and curative properties.
he was dead.
piles of lumber, long lines of farm wag­ the grain wheel. When this is arranged, in America, east of the Rocky moun­
* AND ALL KINDS OF
Any physician in your own locality will confimr th<
seeders, harrows, reapers, the machine can pass through a gateway tains, harvests his crop with some one
I ons, plows,
above statement. For Lame Back, Rhenm^rim
Mme. Marie Salvottl, Prune
»"*■ ■ •
TlaUpeii
van co“»P*r« with RaaaprcaSl
Female W.sakness, Stubborn and Neglected Colds.
Sidney Smith used to say that the threshers and farm engines at every five feet in width, and, by folding up hundred Walter A. Wood self-binding
and
reliable
cure
for
the
ailment,
named.**
and Coughs, Diseased Kidneys, Whooping Cough
common practice of the clergy in his dav station. Marvelous the change : in 1869 the seat-stand (a moment’s work), harvesters. Largely owing to the facili­
affeectioiw of the heart, and ail ills for which porou>
«ialmaar. Cleveknd.
p!a-
‘--------------
1 it is simply
---- ■-------------------------
p'.x-rtcrs
are used,
the best known remedy
was to draw sin out of men as Eve was a furrowless plain ; in 1879 a Harvest of tlixough one of four feet. The change ' ties for rapid and satisfactory work af­
—AT—
for .iheuiuatism and kind rod discMM It
|A s ik
1 for Ik-neon 1 Caprine Porous Plaster and take
dm benefited me greatly. *
drawn from Adam’s side, bv easting 8,000,000 bushels of grain—ere long to can be effected altogether in a few min-, forded by this machine, he has been en­
■no i other. Sold oy all druggists
__________
__
Price ___
25 cents
Address,
J K- GILL & CO ,
ni^‘<.,?‘I" PM!7ey’
P*toce Market, ChicM»,
■Seat on receipt of price, by“'¿eabury A Johnson? r,
them into a deep sleep.
abled to increase his acreage of grain
be 80,000,000.—C. C. Coffin in Har­ utes.
in.. i consider it a greater discover) than eleetridity **
13 If - - * — R«>nk«e]lcra. Portland. Ogn.
JPlatt Street, New York_____________ meh 25-lm
per’s Magazine for March.
The Walter A. Wood Chain Rake Reaper. from about 1,200 acres in 1876, to
ST. JACOBS OIL.
Nothing niakc3 a woman so mad as to
HOTEL DE FRANCE,
This machine is so well and widely ' 20,000 for last harvest. He states that
Sold y druggtote at M cents a bottle Dinctieu la
eleven languages.
go to a shoe store to buy a pair of cheap
A Danbury man can kick eleven known throughout the entire coast as to ' this machino “has no equal/’ Read
GENERAL AGENTS,
LEWISTON, IDAHO*
slippers for her husband, and have a inches higher than his head. During render unnecessary a detailed description . what he writes after four years’ experi­ Mme. M. LeFrancoi*. • • • • Proprietress vorn mission and Forwarding Merchante,
J, A. STROWBBIDQH,
This well kniwn establishment, entirely rebuilt,
clerk try to sell her the identical pair good fruit years he hojies to make con­ of its numerous excellent jx)ints. For ence with the Wood binder :
108 Front street,
411 Washington rtieet.
open for the reception of guests, with everything new
Direct ImpMter «sd Darier la
Portland,Ogn.
Han Francmoo, Q¡ü
she had just worked for a Christinas siderable money in traveling through many years it has stood securely pre-.
and elegant Experienced French Cooks in the culin­ Special attention given to the sale or Ytool.
C asselton , Dakota, Oct. 6,1879.
department The House will be kept open all Fiour, Grain and Produce In Portland .nd Baa
LEATHER AND SHOE FMMW^
present for her minister.
the State and kicking boys out of trees. eminent among self-raking reapers, and • H on . W alter A. W ood , Hoosick ary
nigh . and a tree coach to and from the steamboats.
Frauclsoo.
The Oregon Kidney Tea!
The Most Wonderful Medical Discovery
Challenges the World .’as
Remedy for
Leaf of the Plant in its Natural State
Hodge, Davis & Co., Proprietors,
_____ _______ Portland. Oregon.
Wheeler & Wilson
SEWING MAGHINE
V«/'
j
WHEELER i WILSON MANF’G CO.’
h-(jPorous Plaster
q
BLANK BOOKS,
School and Miscellaneous Books,
HI rrwtt BL WrUMMkUp