Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919, September 03, 1880, Image 4

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    Forms Made Beautiful.
“Have you had much dealing with
Who Murdered Morgan?
A Blind Man’s DueL
actresses ?”
“Oh, yes, and very pleasant people
“ I know Morgan was killed,” said
It is doubtful if any theatre ever
“Some lauios are terribly irregular
they
are,
always
wanting
the
best,
and
Mr.
Weed, “and when and where he afforded such volumes of romantic inci­
and crooked in their shapes, and it is
my bussness to straighten them out and willing to pay well for it. Lotta is was killed, an I who killed him. It was dent as the deck of the old-time Missis­
sippi steam« r. In the old days before
make them look as though they had among my customers, and I havo made 1 a dreadful murder.
“ How do I know ? he asked, repeat­ railroads traversed the continent in
good figures,” said an tlJerlv lady to a corsets in old times for some famous la­
reporter who had called at het corset dies on the stage, I can tell you. Among ing my last question. “ I know because every direction, and the West was a
manufactory to Darn something of her others I. remember now- that I have made the criminals themselves confessed it tc wilderness, New Orleans was the Mecca
of travelers, and the fleet, wave borne
art “I doubt,” she continued, “whether for, were Jenny Lind and Fanny Ellsler.I me before they died.”
said,
“
will
you
“
Is
it
possible?
”
I
Actresses
always
want
their
corsets
to
:
palaces of the inland sea, cairied thou­
anybody else than the doctors and the
tell
the
public
about
it.
fit
very
tightly,
so
as
to
show
their
shape
sands
of pleasure seekcis to ths South.
corset-makers—and, perhaps, I might
it partly before, It was then that life was a carousal, and
“
Yes;
I
have
told
in
the
best
advantage.
I
have
never
even leave out most of the doctors—has
five years after men and women sum ndered themselves
any idea of the extent to which curva­ been in their dressing-rooms, but I uti- . It was in 1834, about
the
sudden
disappparance
of Morgan, to the most lavish enjoyments. Gaming
ture of the spine prevails. Well, if a derstand that very often they weir their
woman has a backbone that is very corsets next the skin, or with only a that, on my trial for libeling the Ma­ was a custom and courage an instinct.
son«, two men volunteered to be my wit­ Men were as prone to broils as the
eccentric, and a pair of shoulders that very thin gauze jacket beneath. Some i
nesses. One of these men was John sparks to fly upward.
society
ladies
do
that,
too,
and
even
in
Conspicuous
feem to have been borrowed from ill-
Whitney.
”
cold
weather,
when
they
are
going
out,
among
the
fierce
and
rollicking
habitues
matched people, she cannot be expected
I think Mr. Weed said the other was of the steamers was Captain West, a
will
endeavor
to
find
warmth
in
a
tight
to advertise the unfortunate fact.
She
the man who had charge of the old fort noted duelist. One day he was engaged
cornea to me, and I turn her out as fitting suit of chamois skin, rather than
confined by his cap- in a controversy with a gentleman whom
straight and beautifully molded as Di­ put on comfortable, healthful clothing, where Morgan was
he met on the deck, whom he accused of
ana. Where she has protuberant points for fear the beauty of their sbapd3 may i tors.
be
affected.
I
have
heard
or
read
of
a
•
I
le
went
on
:
staring
a« him impertinently.
that mar the general symmetry of her
lady
who was going to a grand ball, and
invited them to eat seme oysters
“
I
“
W
liy
do you look at mo so intently 1”
outlines, I repress them as fur as pos­
she actually starved herself for «lavs be- I with me after the triai, and while we demanded the Captain.
sible ; where she has unsightly hollows
forehand, so that she might get into the t were at the table John Whitney con­
“1 am not looking at you,’’ calmly
I pad them out with the elastic white
splendid dress she was *o wear on the ■ sented, in reply to our urgency, to make replied the stranger, his eyes meanwhile
horse-hair, or whalebone scrapings ; her
occasion. The night came; she got her a clean breast of it about the murder of fixed in a stony- glare upon the duelist’s
shoulders I put in proper shaj>e with
corsets laced on htr so that the dress Morgan, lie declared the terrible se­ face.
adjustable bracks; if she is too fat, I at
“But you are, sir !”
least give symmetry to her excessively could be put on, and she still could cret had been a burden on him day and
breathe. The dress was put on. Then I night, and then he tol«l who the mt!
“I am not.”
liberal proportions, and if she is too
nature demanded some sustenance. Up­ were who left the lodge one dark nigh
The Captain turned away, but a short
lean, I round her out to a pleasing em­
on serious consideration, she concluded to put Morgan out of the wav, lest he time afterward he Kit those stony eyes
bonpoint Mimi, 1 do not say that 1
that she could hold one dozen of the very might reveal the secrets of the Order, were again upon him and following all
can make a thoroughly bad figure a
smallest oysters without the corsets lie said he was one of the men. The his movement s v»itli pitih-. s ferocity. It
thoroughly goes! one, but I do pretend
anti dress bursting.
Eleven of them others were Colonel William King, became in» \ ressiblv annoying, and the
to be able to improve all except those
she succeeded in swallowing, but the Garside, Howard and Chubbock, They Captain at last determined to make an
whom nature has made perfect l»eyond
twelfth she had to leave on her plate, went to the fort, bound the prisoner end of it. S.epping up to the stranger,
all art—and even to them I can render
though she felt as if she was starving hand and fcot, laid him in a boat, carried he inquire I, with suppressed passiou :
service by aiding the preservation of the
for it. There was absolutely no room him to about the middle part of the Niag-
□
“Can you light as vv>ll as look i ’
beautv of their figures.
There are
for that twelfth very small oyster. The ara liver, where it was two mi les to eithri
“Perhaps so ; I never tried it. Place
many voung misses who get round­
story is told of a French woman. I shore, and then tying weights to his uio, how« ver, in position, and I will do
shoulder« <1 from habit in sitting at their
hardly think an American woman wo ild h"ad and heels, they flung him over­ my best.”
studies mainly, and 1 have invented a
be so foolish. She would at least Lave board. When lie had told the story,
The singular condu jt of the stranger
sp< cial cornet for ibeui to remedy that
had the daring to swallow the twelfth Whitney said he felt relieved. ’Ph«' had by this ‘iine attracted tmiviisal at­
defect—one which not only conceals the
oyster, if she wanted it, and trust to other witness turned to him and said : tention, an 1 whispered conferences re­
deformity, but corrects it, giving them
Providence for the consequences. But “John, Weed can hang vou now.” garding Lis i- iuaikab’e apprarai.ee agi­
naturally a square and erect figure.”
the fitting of corsets depends upon the ‘‘Yes,” said Whitney, “but he won’t.” tated littl* groups of petsons all over
“Is there any established system of style of dress in a verv great degree. If I thought much about my duty to the
the boat. In a short time, however, the
rules for the shaping of corsets (”
a lady is going to wear one of those public, but it, was obviously impossible verse! it,uuded to a landing for wool,
“Decidedly, but to make jierfect-fit- long-bodied, closi fitting cuirass waists, to convict him unless he would say sol
ting corsets the svstem has to have as she must be shaped tc match it, and emnly in court what he had said to me. and the parties to the impromptu duel
went ashore. The stranger was led off
many variations as there are individual would have to have a very different cor­
It was nearly thirty years afterwaid by a negro st want, who seemingly
figures to fit. Wholesale manufacturers set from that which she would wt ar when I met John Whitney in Chicago,
make and importers bring from France under her wrapper about home when no when I was there at the Convention in picked Lis way. Inde.d, from the in­
tense intere-1 he was manifesting in the
thousands of doz ns of corsets, some of callers were expected.
“ Gentlemen 1860. lie came to me and said he encounter, the colored servant was ap­
them very handsome to look at and callers ?”
Not necessarily.
Women wanted to make a careful confession for
many of them pretty good.
They will dress more for each other’s inspection me to write «’own, to be published after parently niur? deeply int< rested in the
fit more or less accurately, too, and are than they do for gentlemen’s admiration. his death. There was nobody else he encounter thin his master. But tho
most lively to do so wl ere the woman is They know that a man’s eyes are much dared to trust it to, he said. I agreed time allotted for th? pieliuiinarie? was
least in need cf a prop r corset to cor­ more likely to tike for granted the re­ to commit his dreadful secret to paper brief, and the men w< re speedily put in
rect a natural or acquired deformity. ality of a pretty figure and much less as soon as the Convention adjourned. position and p;-»t l-> put in tin ir hands.
But there is as much difference realiy apt to detect small delects, as a general The hour it a«ljourned he was waiting The wor I was giv u, ami t xo ringing
between those corsets ami one made by rule than women are. Men admire, for me at my hotel. I was in the depths reports flashed « ut on the air. Captain
an < xperienced a’’tist—as 1 claim to be women criticise. Women kr.oA- each of disappointment, and was busy with a West fell pieiced to the heart. The
—to fit the particular person for whom other’s little tricks and devices, and in­ hundred things, ami I told Whitney stranger stood erect, calm and dignified.
it is designed, as there is between a stinctively arm themselves against each that I should come back to Chicago i His second ru died up to h’m.
“Are you hurt, sir I ’
slop-shop assortment of ready-made I other’s scrutiny, even when they may be shortly, and would then attend to it.
“
No. How is it with my antagonist? ’
clothing and tho well-fitting suit ot ; the dearest friends and have no appar­ We exchange«! letters after that, but he
“Cant you see? You have killed
clothes made to accurate measure for a ent immediate fear of betrayal.
died suddenly and I never saw him him
particular customer by a good tailor.
I use the very best French coureille, a again.
“No. I am tumble to see.”
Why, I often have to tit ladies w ho are linen fabric of great strength, and whale-
“l'he Chicago papers,” I said, “ought
“You can’t see ! ’
so crooked that 1 have got tc cut out I bone ordinarily; but I also make corsets to look up his relatives or friends tlu-re,
“No. 1 am blind. ’
paper patterns on their backs and work | of both farmer’s satin and real satin and see if he left any document or told
And l e w..s. The tragedy was a nine
them up to ideal lines of beauty, as you ones ate generally wanted by actresses, his secret.”
«lays
’ vvuid'T, and all soils of rumors
may say. Now, w hat use to them would and I make them of all colors, blue,
“Yes,” ho replied, “it would be wi 11. were rife as to the identity of the fatal
be a corset made to fit the female world green, crimson, white and so on. Woven It is strange, by the way, that every
stranger. But who he was and whither
in ordinary ?”
corsets have gone out of repute. They one of those five murderers is dead, ami he went v as a mystery no n r solved.
“Many physicians say that cortets were very ingenious, but could not be all but one died violent deaths. Col.
1 he cireumstair'o vetit to make up an
produce deformities.”
made to fit so peifectly as those made by King committed suicide, ami Garside inci lent in the lark an I Lloo lv memor-
Improi»eriy fitting or.es, or those (Miand to individual measurements. It is was kicked to death by a horse.”—Corr.
j i s which lit le fam. us the olden time.
worn too tight by foolish women, do; not enough to know that a woman is so St. Paul Pioneer-Press.
but 1 will not make a corset to constrict many inches around the waist. That is
Didn’t Think lie had Better Eave
the chest and compress the lungs, or to only a foundation for further knowledge
Bedouin Marriage Customs.
Any More.
pinch the waist to a purely aitificial in tPting her. But that is as far, prac­
form. That is, from an artistic point of tically, as the ready-made or woven cor­
Professor W. Robertson Smith, the
We met Inni on the train.
view, as great an error as it is from a sets go. As for cost, that depends on Heresiarch of the Free Col leg«', has 1 >een
lie wasn’t a very healthy specimen of
physiological one. My husband was a materials anti horn, instead of whale­ writing bwmv
some liivvivoviii^
interesting letters to the
niauhood,
and looked as if there had
physician.
I have studied anatomy, bone. But 1 make none lower in pneo Edinburgh Scotsman during a voyage in
been
a
dr<
ught when he was planted.
anil have forty years’ experience in than $5, and from that up to $20. A the Ilejaz. In one of his latest letters
He
had
found
thia out in some wav,
corset-making, so 1 do not make such corset woitli $50 would not be astonish­ he says : “ I sjioke in my last letter of
and had evidently determined to make
mistakes.”
ing, but then the value would be in the differences that are observable in mar­ up the deficiency by keeping himself
“From what you say. one might ornamentation and embroidery, an I for riage customs, and generally in the place
readily imagine that deformity is rather practical use it would be no better than of women in the Ilejaz and Yemen. In continually moist in his journey through
the rule than the exception among one that cost $10 or $12.”—.New York traveling between Jaddah and Suez, 1 life.
lie walked un to the water tank and
American women.”
obtained some additional particulars on
Sun.
told
the man in the looking class to
“Then one would imagine a great
this head, from the waylay of Yemen,
give
him some gin. The man didn’t
mistake. When I first went into the
who was my fellow-passenger. Mustafa
His Name.
answer him, and he told him that he’d
business for myself, 35 years ago, Ameri­
Pasha is a very superior tv pe of the of­
be darned if he wouldn’t go next door
can women were, as a general thing,
My wife hez jes’ presented me wid de ficial Turk—a man of good education ard git what he wanted. He walked
lean, angular and badly sha]»ed. But fines’ boy in dis country,” said Black and observant habits, who has served in
since then I have been able to note in B II, entering a Little Rock magistrate’s Syria as well as Yemen, and appears to into the next c tr, and «aw another man
iii a lookingglass. “ Want some gin !
them a 4-omleiful improvement, until office,taking olP his hat and slinging pres- have made a caie’ul study of the habits
Yes, that’s whit I said: ‘ Want some
now I believe theAr have finer figures, as piration from his brow w ith a crooked of
the
people c.v« r
whom he
gin,
’ Le repe at-d, as the lookingglass
a rule, than the women of England or linger.
rules 1 learned from him that the
man repeated his words, lie saw this
France. Don’t imagine that I am claim­
“Yes, gemmen,” he went on, “de fines’ Bedouins of Yemen have various tradi­ by the movement of the othir man’s
ing the credit of that improvement for chile I eber seed. An’ I’se j«‘s’ got a tional usages which they know to be in­
mouth.
my corsets Nature has done it. There $20 gold piece right heah to gib to de I consistent with Mohammedan ortho­
“ Don’t you sink I ha«l better have
has been a ¡»erfecting of the physical roan what can guese w hat I hez named doxy, and are, therefore, careful to eon
development of the race, in women at biro. Ter keep yer from spreadin’ ober coal from the Turks. But there is one any mo’ ?” lie asked, shaking his head
least, though I fear it has not been so de whole universe ob names i’ll state dat custom among the Aseer which, shock­ and putting on a complacent grin.
The man in the looking glass shook
apparent in men. We have fewer large, hits a Bible name.”
ing as it appears to outsido.-s, is openly
Lis
head and grinned too.
fine-looking men now than we used to
avowed and defended from the Koran.
“ Abraham T’ guessed some one.
“W’ell, so long as you aro so polite
have, 1 think, but our American women
'Phe Aseer Arabs are accustomed to con­
“ Nor sab. ”
’
bout
it, I’ll drop on myself. 1’11 break
are the finest in the world, in graceful
tract marriages of a temporary chaiactor
“ Paul ?”
that
next
do’ feller’s jaw one of these
elegance of form.”
by verbal agreement. The so called
“ Nor sah.
days, ’n’ don’ yer furgit it.”
“Fat women are conspicuous ameng
It is,
I marriage uiay endure but a day.
“ Job ?”
He took off his hat, smiled, and the
vour customers, are they not ?’’
in fact, do more than a nominal con­
“ Nor sah.”
oth< r man did th«1 same.
tract to avoid the name of immorality.
“Yes, but 1 have made them an
“ Elisha 1”
“That feller’s a brick,” lie ejaculated,
With this it naturally goes that no
especial study, and they are no trouble
“Guess agin.”
as he re entered our car. As ho passed
to me.' No matter how fleshy a lady
weigl t is laid on the chastity of unmar­
“Nicodemus 1”
the looking glass he shook his fist at the
may be, I can make her up to look trim
ried women. A man who contracts
‘■j Keer er cornin’. ”
man he saw walking alone, and said :
and shapely. It is easivr to get a grati­
such
a temporary marriage as I have de­
“ Abimelish 1”
“You look ’nougli like that other fel’
fying result from shaping a figure that
scribed may already have a regular wife.
“Try me again.”
ter
be his brother, but yer no good, n’
is ample than from one that is mragie.
The guessing ceased after a time and In that case, he visits the new wife in that’s what’s matter ’th me.’’
Horsehair pads, sometimes three inches finally Bill remarked:
her own home, instead of bringing her
thick, will bring the latter up to proper
“l’se nametl dat boy Judus Escarut.” to the house where a mistress is already
Buried Alive.
lines, but placing them p.-oj«erly and so
“ What
said the magistrate, “Judas installed. The Waly tells me further
that they will stay in place is harder betrayed our Savior.”
that, not only in Yemen but among
The long wished-for means of distin­
than restraining an exuberance of adi­
some
of the tribes of the Syrian guishing between death and the state of
“Can’t hep hit. Dat’s de boy’s name.
pose tissue.”
Judas has been slighted. Nobody hez desert, the wife claims the right coma, or trance-like condition, which has
“Have you any especial style of corset eber had de immoral courage ter name to leave her husband at will and so frequently been the cause of prema­
for fat women F’
a chile fur dat man. But dat ain't de take another spouse, and, also, that ture interment, has been supplied by
“Yes, and for fat men, too. I call it main reason why I names him Judus. it is a recognized practice for hus­ electricity, which enables us to distin­
the ‘military’ corset It is a corset, I’se got de Bible ter ’stain me in gibin bands among some af the latter tribes— guish will absolute certainty between
bandage and brace combined, very long, de chile dat name.”
he specially named the Aneze—for hus­ life and death. For two or three hours
so as to come down over the hips, and it
“How does the Bible sustain you in bands to make an exchance of wives. after the stoppage of the heart, the whole
is very difficult to fit properly, so that desiring to perpetuate that name?” asked All these were obvious remains of early ot the muscles of the body have complete­
few persons can make it.”
polyandria, and confirm the observation ly lost their electric excitability.
the magistrate.
“Your pasting reference to fat men
W’hen stimulated by electricity they
“Hits dis fack. Chris’, in remarkin’ that the introduction of Islam was
was, of course, merely a jost”
marked
by
great
social
reforms,
of
no longer contract. If then, when
of Judus, said dat hit would hab bin
“Not at ail. I make a great many better fur dat man ef he hadn’t bin which we know but little, buv which, in Faradism is applied to the muscles of
all probability, were at least momentous the limbs and trunk, say five or six hours
gentlemen’s corsets. Some wear them born. ”
as the innovations in religion which are after supposed death, there is no con­
because they wish to seem less corpulent;
“Well.”
generally
regarded as forming the es­ tractile response, it may be certified w-ith
others, because they want their support,
“An considerin’ how- many neufs is
and not a few who do not really need opened at the doo’ when I goes home sence of Mohammcdism. I find, on certainty that death has taken place, for
them, to give themselves erect, graceful wid a side ob meat, it would hab bin turning up the traditions of the prophet i no faint nor trance, nor coma, however
shapes, late and buckle and strap them­ better fur dat boy ob mine ef he had in Bokharv and Mowatta that the sys­ deep, can prevent the manifestation of
selves just as carefully as women do. neber seed daylight, 1 knows what I’ze tem of temporary marriages which still i electric muscular contractility. Here
Lawyers and book keepers, people who a talkin’ about I take de Scripture i lingers among the Aseer was well known ; there is no possibility of mistake, as
write a good deal, and are apt to get from de references. In de futur, ef I | in Mohammed’s time and abolished by | there certainly was when the old tests
round-shouldered, wear corsets frequent­ finds dat de boy hez made a impression I him after considerable hesitation. There I were emploved. Muscular contiactility
ly; also gentlemen who ride on horse­ on hisself, den I’ll charge bis name ter seems to hare been a gcod deal of dis­ i under the Foradic stimulous disappears
cussion on the subject even after the I gradually after death.
back and wish to have an erect look. I I Jim.”
Prophet’s death, as at one time he bad
prefer not to mention names among my
It is instantly diminished, but onlv
Howells said once in an after dinner conceded the practice to his followers.” finally extinguished in three hours; and
gentlemen customers. Should I do so,
— - ■
»«•»■<-------------------
vou would hear some of the prominent speech that such was bis stern impartial
hence Dr. Hughes Bennett has suggested
Many
a
man
dreads
throwing away his that electricity may sometimes be of no
names of New York, b it they might ity as editor of the Atlantic Monthly,
not like that notoriety. No, it’s no use; that on one occasion he respectfully de­ life at once who shrinks not from throw­ use in medico-legal investigations, by
ing it away by piecemeal.
I will not tell.”
clined one of his own contributions.
offering evidence as to the time of death.
How a Married Woman Goes to
Sleep.
There is an article going the rounds
entitled, “ How Girls g<> to Sleep.”
The manner in which they go to
sleep, according to this article, can’t
bold a candle to the way a married
woman goes to sleep. Instead of think­
ing of what sh? should have attended to
before going to bed, she thinks of it af­
terward. While she is revolving these
matters in hei mind and while snugly
tucked up in bed, the old man is scratch­
ing his legs in front of the fire and won­
dering how he will pay the next month’s
rent Suddenly she says :
“Janies, did you lock the door?”
“ Which door,” says James.
“ The cellar door;” says she.
“ No,” says James.
“ Well, you’d better go down and lock
it, for 1 heard some person in the back
yard last night.”
Accordingly James paddles down
stairs and locks the door. About the
time James returns and is going to get
into bed, she remarks :
“ Did you shut the stair doorJ”
“ No,” says Janies.
“ Well, if it is not shut the cat will
come up into the bedroom.”
“Let htr come up,” says James, ill
nat ti rediv.
“ My goodness, no returns his wife;
‘ she’d suck the baby’s breath.”
Ti en James paddles down stairs again
and steps on a tack, and closes the stair
door, and curses the cat and returns to
the bed room. Just as he begins to
climb into his couch his wife observes:
“ 1 forgot to bring up some water.
Suppose you bring some up in the big
tin.”
And so James, with a muttered curse,
gees down into the dark kitchen and
falls ov^r a chair and rasps all the tin­
ware off the wall in st arch of the “ big
tin ” and then lie jerks the stair door
open and howls.
“ Where the deuce are the matches ?”
She gives him minute directions, and
adds that she would rather go and get
the water herself t’-an have the neigh­
borhood raise 1 about it. After which
James finds the matches, procures the
water, corn s uu stairs and blunges ieto
lied. Presently h s wife says:
“James, let s have an uiulerst Hiding
about ni jiay niatt<-rs. Now, ni xt week
I’ve got to p«y—”
“ I «lou t km»-, w h .t y«"u’v.' got to pay
and I don’t care,” shouts James as he
lurches around and jams his face against
the wall; “ all 1 want now is to go to
sleep.
“ That’s all very well for you,” snaps
his his wife, as she pulls the covers
viciously; “ you never tliink of the worry
and trouble I have. And there’s Ar-
luinta, who I believe is taking the meas­
les.”
“Let her take ’em,” rays James, stick­
ing his legs out as stiaigLt as two ram­
rods.
“It set ms to me you have no sense
nor feeling,” whines the wife, “and it
you had any respect for me you would
not cat onions before \ou come to bed.
lhe atmosphere of the room from the
smell of onions is horrid ’. ’
“Well, go down and sleep in the
kitchen, then, and let me alone,” says
James.
Hereupon she begins to cry gently,
but about the time James is falling into
a gentle doze, she punches him in the
ribs with her elbow and says :
“Did you hear that scandal abeut
Mrs. Jones?”
“What Jones?” says James, sleejiily.
“Why, Mrs. Jones.”
“Where?”
“I declare,” says Lis wife, “you are
getting more stupid every day. You
know Mrs. Jones that lives at No. 21 ?
Well, day before yesterday Susan Smith
told Airs. Thompson that Sam Baker
had said that Airs. Jones had—”
Here she pauses and listens. James
is snoring in profound slumber. With
a snort of rage she pulls all the covers
off him, wraps herself up in them, and
liys awake tid 2 A. AL, thinking how-
bad ly abused she is.
And that is the way a married woman
goes to sleep.
“1 have little about me, but that lit­
tle we will share, ’ said a Dublin Queen’s
Counsel to an ugly customer who, with
[ a menacing air, asked for alms at night
■ in a lonely suburb.
“This revolver,”
j said the Q. C., as he diew it from his
pocket, “has six chambers. I will give
you three—” Just then the Q C. found
iiimself alone.
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»
<
—
From tho Banks of tho Hudson.
N ewburg , N. Y., Oct. 20, 1879.
H. H. W arner & Co., R ochester ,
N. Y.—Gentlemen: A lady of over 70
years of age, in failing health for over a
year, has been using Warner’s Safe Bit­
ter’s on my recommendation. SLe feels
very grateful for the benefit she has de­
rived therefrom, and says that until she
used it her stomach could bear no vege­
table food for over three years. I be­
lieve it to be a certain specific for dys­
pepsia
Warner’s Safe Pills are also
meeting w-ith very good success, in all
forms of Liver Complaints, A!alarial
Troubles, Dumb Ague, and wherever a
safe and efficient cathartic is required.
I cannot speak to highly of them.
D r . J. C. J oslyn , Af. D.
Chronic Constipation Cured.
f . a , frank ,
g .
San Francisco.
p.
frank ,
Portland
ROTHERS,
FRANK
FARM AND MILL MACHINERY!
142 and
Í44 Front Stre
Portland.
3X9 and 321 Market Street. San Frnnci.co.
FARMERS’ A\I> MILL MEVS AITFATÍ0X
» ealled to Frank Brathee* l’ull mrl t’omplele Line of Farm and Mill Marhlaery,
swtingot me well an >wu Wa ter A Wohls
Reaper., Healers
self-Binding HarveeterB, Pitta
dvwn a ><i mounted Horne Puwerí, Coate/ Sa.ky Wheel Kikes, Victor Sulkv Wheel Kikee, Tiffin Wood Revolv­
ing Kake., Eagle H<v Pre*e‘, Coop- r's Farm Engine« UoOj»er’B Self-I*rof>elling Engine*, Browi.e Sulky Blows,
Browne G uig Plows,'Black Hawk and Clipper Rock Inland Walking Pi.w i, Deiauce Walking and Ruling CulU-
vators, Buford Root S>-rapen«, Rui.lali'a Improved Roliiug Ha Tvw. S.'o:.4i .m l Square Harrow», Wojd and
Ste-1 Gocdi, Saw and Flour M.ll Machinery Portable and tita r uu-y E igiuo», etc , etc. I ull and Completo
Line of Buch gwd* as are required by Farmers an 1 M.Il men, and at ttie Lo ve.<t Market i’rie*. No teoond-haed
good* Bo.d by us Si nJ ior Sjncial Circulars, Uaialeguc. and Pnec Li t. Addruts,
I
FRANK BROTHERS,
Pori land, <>sn.. and Pan FrandMn.
Je21 if
CHAS.
H. DODD <fc Co., CO.,
fetiecvsKors to Hawley. Dodd
—IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN
<
Hardware, Iron, Steel and Farm Machinery,
Offer for sale, at lowest rates, lhe following Ar.t-i las. tuaci.!nery, for which we are Sole Agent» t
CANTON
TXXnEHlECTlX«..
BUCKEYE MOWER AND REAPER-
So large a portion of the grass
and grain crops of the Pacific
Coast have been cut by the Back-
eye that no farmer here can ba
ignorant of its merits or require
argument to convince him of its
The lie plus ultra of ail Threshing
Machines uneqtialed for light draft,
power, durability, fast thresh infant!
clean separation; as improved, for
I88O, it stands unrivalled.
superiority« as it is too well and favorably known to need comment. It
the perfection of all Reaping and Mowing Machines.
BUCKEYE SELF-BINDEB.
The Standard of Excellence and
leads all labor saving machines.
It took the World's Binder Prizes
in 1879. It is the simplest, strong­
est and lightest running Binder in
t lie World.
em mm : ¡nur
fi THE SAJES T b
The Canton Monitor Tpriglit En-
gine is far snperior to any »Horizon­
tal Engine; lighter on the horses and of greater power. It is the most
economical Engine in the world, consumes the least water and fuel, has
the patent Safety Plug and is the safest Engine made.
We arc al»o Sole Agent» for
SCniTTLER FARM. FREIGHT AM) SPRING WAGONS.
Send for Special Circular» nnd new Price List.
CHAS». II. DODD
CO . Portland, Oregon.
HEALTH FOR ALL.
Tliat nightnurc—Ma'.arUl Fever—bas ariirod In all
It» unwfeaM tiKB*. Itijuri»«.» «trug» are takenin lan«e
q iai titi'8 at lngcr < \pen
t"> bu nlue thit chilly,
< r< epaig, .‘h.ik:,,g
w:th no other re» ilt «ban U»
iuMair the sietem, ¡‘furnier s S ire, Safe and Speody
. cv.r »■:<! A,ue Mixture—v vegetaule coiuponml—wiO
not on'y »ave you frem this ahakinr, but will al.o rv-
•uce your expeuse. l’rice, 81 per butUe. TrieJ, »p-
roveii and ruionmiended b> luauy
Priee. One Dollar Per Bott le.
Your Prügelst ba» i«, or will get it for you.
«. rigaial." liibi.t u|K>u havii g It.
Plain Words arc Best.
We leurn that certain people find
fault with W. E. Clark, of Providence,
R. I., for not “writing up” his gn at
Kidney MeJicine, H unt ' s R emedy , in
more floweiy style. It is not Mr.
Clarke but Lis critics
are foolish.
What does a man w>
threatened
«nth Bright’s Disease, ot tny disease of
the Kidneys, Bladder, Liver or any Uri
nary organs, most require —fire words
of a cure ? In Hi nt ’ s R emedy , the |
Great Kidney and Liver Medicine, he
gets the cure—a sure cure.
Sold by all druggists. Trial size 75
cents.
<----------
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~~~~
iV In raaxtitc HUJ
purctitM« or la
writlux in
to »V iMlrrrllM-
ment lu tilia pi, per y oh will pleMe ii'«a-
lion the >iMine ut the nnper.
LIBERAL ADVANCES
Made on Consignment» of
___ BY
CHRISTY & WISE
Wool C mmissinn Merchants,
C j 7 Front St., fan Francisco,
34 Front Street, Portland.
fyloAwiui
What was it ? J went out in the ;
woods and got it.
After I got it 1
looked for it. The more 1 looked for it
the less I liked it. I brought it home
in my hand becase I couldn’t find it. A
sliver.
J.
“Tho
•X-.’
Æ. «TKOW ITILI 1><; FÎ
r-lirvi Iuoi'cn-»r »r d I hc '. t tu
LEATHER AND SHOE WDINS ,,
141 Front t t. I'nr 1 ixsarZ, O»
xELGIN WATCHES
/
All «tvlc«. Gold, Silver and Nickel, $6 to 815C
f /X', J Chains, etc. sent C. Q. D. to
examined
-J Write for Catdogue to STANDARD AMER
-J' IC a N WATCH CO. PiTTSBURC., 1’* n,2t0 I I
i
AMERICAN
EXCHANGE
HOTEL.
B. L. LONGFELLOW, Prop.
Front Street, bet. Madison and
It 1» th» best Blood Purifier, at
every function to more healtkful
thus
vuus a benefit
uenem in ail
all disease*.
disease«.
«
In eliminating the trnpnri tie* of theblood.the
resultKtbecureofekcror
natural and necessary result
la the cure of bcrof-
nlous and other Skin
Kkm Eruption» and DUr«
uloun
DI ssum «.
including Cancers, Vice«
;
Licer» and other Rocvr
Kore».
Dyspepsia, Weakness of tbeKtomacb.Oooatf-
pation. D.rxniess, General Debility, etc., ar«
cured by the Hare Bitter«. Ill* «aeqaaled
as an appetizer and regular tonic.
It Is n medicine which should be In every Him-
ily. and which, wherever used, will »arc the
payment of many doctors' bills.
Bottles of two sizes; prices so cent» and *1 jOtk
Jefferson.
Roanl and Room, per day, SI 00 to 81 6ft.
Hotel Coach to and from Depot Free of Charge.
CWNo Chinese Employe«!,"*«
D iabetes C ure
B u "E«$
Re?C’it.y Overhauled and Refltttd.
je30-lm‘
B. L. LONGFELLOW, Proprietor.
•I . RViKt
•P ills
They Purify tho Blood.
Warner’s
Safe Reme­
dies are sold
by Druggtata
and DMuen
in Medicine
everywhere. >
B.H.WWUS4M,
Proprietor»,
!
.
Roehealer. M.T.l
OSTKend for Pamphlet
and Testimonial».
DR.
HODGE. DAVIS & CO., Agents.
Portlnnrt <trv(.*.
HENLY'S
CELEBRATED
w
OREGON WILD GRAPE ROOT
P hiladelphia , Pa., Oct 4, 1879.
H. H. W arner & Co.—Gents: For
I X 1/HITTERS.
s
the past ten years I have suffered the
s?
'S
evil effects of what may be termed
chronic constipation ; my skin became
They Cure Dyepepsia.
yellow and my liver out of order; I
Wonderful virtue of the OREGON WILD GRAPE
tried all the remedies that could be ob­ ROOT,
the principal component of the 1 X L BITTERS.
tained, and that was all I could do, after A taoleapoonfulof tie ¡X L BITTERS taken immedi- .
finding no permanent relief from regular tely after every meal a certain cure for Dy«p«p»ia.
medicine treatment, and finally com­
D. J. klALARXEY <4. CO.,
menced using your remedies. I first
tried the Pilis, and at the end of one
w-eek my bowels had attained a regular­
Grain. Flour, Butter. Cliecse,
ity and healthy action unknown for
Eggs. Hops, Hides. Wool.
years. I was so pleased with the effect
Hay and Mill Feed.
that I concluded to try a bottle of your
Bitters, and although I have not en­ STAPLE GROCERIES
tirely used the first bottle, I am so per­
_. .ASD..*
ceptibly improved and toned up that I
write you giving this voluntary testi­
3F>x,o'<7 1 j »1 one.
monial to the excellence of your reme Nos. 8,’I1O and 1‘2 Front Street i
m22tf
I
dies. Yours truly, E. J. C ampbell .
Producs Commission Merchant,
Bladder, Urinary and Liver Diaeasea, Dropsy,
G ravel and Diabetes, are cured by
HUNTS REMEDY,
HUNTS REMEDY
the Great Kidney and Liver Medicine.
cure» Bright’» Disease, Retention or Nonreten
bon of Urine, Pains in the Back, Loin», or Sid»
HUNT S REMEDY <
«TO* Intemperance, Nervous Diaeaaes, Gcoerw
DrbiHty, Female Weakness and Exceaa«*.
HUNTS REMEDY
cure» Biliou»ne*», Headache, Jaundks*, Boux
Stomach, Dyspepsia, Constipation and Pile»
HUNTS REMEDY
ACTS AT ONCE on the Kidney», Liver, and
rc*Ujrin« u,en» U> * healthy action, and
Jlun.
»i-
been fiaved who have been given up
to die by friend» and phyiMana
Send for pamphlet to
CURES when al! other medicine» fall.
WM. E. CLARKE, Providence, R. I.
Trial size, "5 cents. Large stze cheapest.
60LD UX ALL DRUGGISTS,