The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, May 19, 1894, Image 4

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    D ON1 T LISTEN
to the dealer who
is bent on bigger
profits. The
thing that he
wants you to
buy, when yon
ask for Doctor
, Pierce's Favorite
'Prescription,
tstit "just as
good." Proof of
1 V 111 I onty guaranteed
LI Illl' remedy for the
ailments of wo-
saanhood is the " Favorite ' Prescrip
tion." If it ever fails to benefit or
ure, in making weak women strong
r suffering women well, you have
your money back. .
Anything "just as good," or as
sure to bring help, could be, and
would be, sold in just that way.
This guaranteed medicine . is an
invigorating, restorative tonic, es
pecially adapted to woman's needs
sad perfectly harmless in any con
dition of her system.
It builds up, strengthens, regu
lates, and cures.
For periodical pains, bearing-down
ensations, ulceration, inflammation
everything that's known . as. a
"female complaint," it's a remedy
that's safe, certain, and proved.
Everything catarrQal in its nature,
Catarrh itself, and all the trouble?
that come from Catarrh, are per
fectly and permanently cured by
Dr. Sage's Catarrh .Remedy. No
natter how bad your case or of how
long standing, you cafti be cured.
Easily, Quickly.
Permanently Restored.
WEAKNESS,
NERVOUSNESS,
DEBILITY,
and aU the train of arils
from early errors or later
excesses, the remit of.
overwork, sickness,
worry, etc Pull strength,
development and tone
given to every organ and
gortlon of the body.
Imple, natural methods.
Immediate Improvement
seen. Fa llare impossible.
3,000 references. Book,
explanation and proofs
mailed (sealed) free.
ERIE MEDICAL CO.
BUFFALO. N. Y.
THOSE
WHO WISH
Je UllUUj
PLASTER, LATH.
Picture ppames,
-AND-
Shafting, Pulleys, Belting,
Engine and Boiler,
CALL AND SEE
ZE3I- C3-XjS3STT.
"The Regulator Line"
Tie Dalles, Portlani and A&teria
Navigation Co,
TTTT? OTTfiT-T
Freignt ana Passenger Line
Through Daily Trips (Sundays ex
ceptcd) between The Dalles and Port
land. Steamer Regulator leaves The
Dalles at 7 a. m., connecting at the Cas
cade Locks -with Steamer Dalles City.
Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland
Yamhill st. dock) at 6 a. m., connect
ing with Steamer Regulator for 'The
Dalles.
PASSENGER BATES.
One way
Sound trip...'...-...
....$2j00
.... 3.00
- Freight Rates Greatly Reduced.
. All freight, ' except car lots,
will be brought, through, with
out delay at Cascades.
. Shipments for Portland received at
- any .time day or night. Shipments for
iv ' landmen mnst Via delivered hfnr
6 p. m. Live' stock shipments eolicted.
Call on or address, , : ;
W. CALLAWAY,
. . General Agent
O. F. LAUGHLIN,
General Manager.
THE DALLES,
OREGON
UIM of C3ED
Glass
limft
Cement
A AlVkJk
SOME CURIOUS FACTS.
,ne Origin of Amber, Crystal and Pearls
Explained by an Expert.
"Amber , is curious stuff," said a col
lector of curios to a Washington Star
reporter the other day. "It is only com
paratively recently that its nature has
been known, and even at this day very
few people- seem to have any notion as
to what it is in reality. The ancients
..garded it as altogether mysterious and
oven magical. They found that it was
.enderod electrical by friction so' as to
attract light substances, and our word
'electricity' comes from the Greek name
.ir amber, which was 'electron.' A fa
vorite puzzle with them wa how the
insects so frequently found in amber
oame to be so situated. Not as a mod
ern poet has phrased it: " .
that tho thing was cither rich or rare, .
But how thedevil did it get thorc?
"I have myself seen a chunk of vrry
transparent amber in which a small liz
ard with five logs was encased, looking
as if it might have been alivo ycsiorilay,
though, doubtless, it had been dead for
thousands of years. The mystery re
garding this sort of phenomenon i: easi
ly enough explained when it is under
stood that amber is actually tho fossil
gum of an extinct kind of cone-bearing
cree. In tho process of hardening it im
prisoned the flies and other creatures
preserved in the chunks of it Unit are
found to-day. It. is discovered plenti
fully by digging in certain pai la of the
great plains of North Germany, where
the strange tree once flourished., It is
also found in considerable quantities
along tho shores of the Baltic, in the
yellow, sandstone. At Palmickc::. . in
Bast Prussia, it is dug in regular, mines;
elsewhere it is picked from cliffs, and a
ffood deal of it is gathered in the shape
of nodules cast up by the waves. ' The
finest specimen of amber in Europe is a
cup made of' that material, now at the
Brighton Museum, England. J t was
found at Hove some years ago, together
with weapons and utensils of stone and
bronze, so it is evidently very ancient
indeed. In the fourteenth century, and
before amber was made into knives and
forks with one prong, which wero used
by princes and church dignitaries, it
was more valuablo than gold then. Xow
it is worth from $3 to $50 a pound, ac
cording to its quality. The most im
portant use made of it is for meerschaum
and- other jripes. Meerschaum, by the
way, is a material dug out of the earth
in Turkey; it comes in. boxes holding
fifty pounds, and valued at from S-0 to
$300. The dust and chips obtained from
It in the process of manufacture are
worked into pipes, this material being
jailed 'imitation meerschaum." Amber
lust is melted, and the product is what
is sold as 'amberine.' " '
"What a very, beautiful sphere of
crystal this is!" said the newspaper roan,
caking in his hand a cool globe that
looked like a huge dewdrop, which the
collector handed him for examination.
"Yes, that is a pretty specimen. I
suppose you are aware of the theory en
tertained by the ancients regarding
such rock crystal. They thought it was
actually ice frozen to great density by
Juration of time, congealed beyond
liquidation. 'Krystallos' ' in' Greek
means 'ice' The famous writer on nat
ural philosophy, Pliny, who wrote more
facts that were not true than ever any
.aan collected together before or since,
.ays tho crystal is undoubtedly water
.rozen by cold so intense that nothing
an melt it again. Roman ladies of
that time were accustomed to carry
such spheres as this one in their hands
during bot weather for coolness. It
was the thing also to have tho material
worked into wine jugs and other vessels.
Nero had two drinking cups of crystal
worth $3,000 each, and a crystal ladlo
-lso; but Avhen he learned that he had
lost his kingdom he broke them, lest'
chey fall into the hands of any ono else.
A crystal lens was employed in Rome to
Kindle the sacred vestal, fire. Great
.:are was taken not to put the crystal
ware in a warm place for fear that it
would melt. The most remarkable dis
covery of crystal on record was made in
18C7 above the Ticfen glacier by a party
of tourists, a single cave in the granite
yielding 1,000 crystals of from 50 to 100
pounds weight."
"And what is this?" ' . . .
"That," replied the collector, "is a
diminutive Chinese god, covered with a
coat of pearl bv a real pearl ovdter. On
such parts of the coast oi ine fiowery
Kingdom as produce pearl oysters a
regular business is often made of manu
facturing pearls artificially by intro
ducing into the shells of the live oysters
foreign objects of various kinds. . You
doubtless know that the pearl is a mor
bid symptom in the bivalve. A grain of
sand or some such substance, getting
into tho oyster produces irritation and
the animal protects itself by covering
the objectionable particle with coating
after coating of its own pearly secre
tion. The interruption of light by the
successive coats of which tho pearl is
formed in this ay gives it its beautiful
luster. Taking advantage of this habii,
of the pearl oyster the ingenious China
man pries it gently open, and' puts in
whatever ho likes, may be a little figdre
of a god like this Tho oyster goes
to work and covers it with "pearl, until
after a few months tho idol is a pearl
idol."
Bueklen'a Arlncs Salve.
The best ealve in the world for cuts,
bruipes, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever
sores, letter, chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi
tively cures piles, or no pay required.
It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac
tion, or money refunded. Price 25'cents
per box. For sale by : Snipes & Kin
ersl.y --' - --- -:
The regular subscription price of the
Weekly Chronicle is $1.50 and' the
reenlur price of the Weekly Oekgonian
is $t. 50. -..Any one subscribing for The
ChkonioIb and paying for -one year, iu
H.lvam-e can get both The Chbonicxb
and Wj:eki,y.()regosian for $2.00. All
old ; subscribers paying their subscrip
tions tor one year, in advance will be en
titled to the same offer. ,.
Ilaworth, printer, 116 Court St. tf
SEEING WITH ONE EYE.
Effect of Judgment Trained br Binocular
Vision. . .
A person may see as far -with one per
fect eye as with two, but he cannot see
as clearly; for the advantage that
binocular, or double vision, possesses
over monocular, or one-eyed vision, is
that the former, by allowing the ob
server to catch sight of the object from
two different points of view, gives him
at once some idea of the proportions of
of its different parts. ' r
But though this is true in theory, in
practice the judgment interferes, and
the judgment has been educated and in
measure' rendered independent of. the
services' of binocular vision by expe
rience and the use of other senses, such
as touch, says the Washington Post. -
Thus a man with only ono eye is
never deceived as to the nature of an
object with which he is well ac
quainted, for the report of it that he
gets from, his vision is corrected and
supplemented by his experienced judgment-
and transmitted to bis centers of
consciousness in as perfect a form as
that which reaches those of a man with
two eyes. ' - -: :- r
The advantage of : binocular 1 vision
may be thus further illustrated: In
rapidly dipping a pen into an inkstand
or putting a stopper into a decanter the
one-eyed man cannot judge so accurate
ly as the two-eyed man. Or, again, if
we shut one eye and attempt to plunge
the finger rapidly into the open mouth
of a bottle we are apt to over-reach, or
fall short of it.
An Affectionate .Jurkul.
The jackal is only a Mtlle wild dog.
Its body is but fourteen or ii'ieoa inch
es long, its tail about ten mere, and it
stands about fifteen inchcn high. . It
has the habits of a dog; when wild it
howls, but when tamo it barks just
like a housd dog. It is nocturnal in its
habits, but that is becuuse the heat of
the climate in Asia and Africa is so
great that most animals shun the light,
and the jackal does not like the heat
any more than other animals do. It is
easily tamed, and becomes as affection
ate and faithful as any doar.
j . Brazilian Rat Killer.
A "globe trotter" recentlj- rvtm--"l
home from an extended tour t!ir i;;;li
foreign countries says: "In all rav trav
els there was nothing that intc ro.--.tcd
mc more than a peculiar custom prov
alei it in Brazil. In that tropical coun
try rats are vtfry troublesome, and to
rid their houses of the pests the hiiinb
itants resort to a peculiar method. ..The
giboia, a small species of boa, is reared
expressly for the purpose, and the ser
pents, many of them fifteen feet in
length and about five inches thick; are
sold in the markets of the principal
towns. The snake is harmless and
slow of movement during the day, buj
at night, when the household is deep in
slumber, the exterminator gets in his
work. His method of killing a rat is to
catch it by the- nape of the neck and
crush the cervical vertebra. The ser
pent, like a dog in this country, soon
becomes accustomed to its ' master's
house, and if carried away to a distance
will find its way back." :
Poverty Breed Ins; Cruelty.
The rise in the price of meat in Ger
many has not only increased the gener
al consumption of horse-flesh, but in
western Germany has led many of the
peasants, who have. to forego the meat
market altogether, to draw, blood for
blood sausages every Saturday from the
living swine. The blood is let into
sausage skins, is sprinkled wit!i fat, and
after having thickened is eaton with .
sauerkraut for the Sunday dinner.
It Shonld Be in Every House
J. B. Wilson, 371 Clay St., Sharps-
burg, Pa., says be will not be without
Dr. King's New Discovery for consump
tion, coughs and colds, that it cured bis
wife who was threatened with pneumonia
after an attack of "la grippe," when
various other remedies and several phy
sicians had done her no good. Robert
Barber, of Cooksport, Pa., claims Dr.
King's New Discovery has done him
more good than anything he ever used
for lung trouble. Nothing like it. Try
it. Free trial bottles at Snipes & Kin-
ersly'8. Large bottles. 50c. and $1.00. .
The Colorado legislature has passed
the bill for a house-to-house registra
tion of voters and twenty-seven women
have been appointed on the list of can
vassers for registering, the women
voters
Persona who sympathize with the
afflicted - will rejoice with D. K. Carr of
1235 Harrison street, Kansas City. He
is an old sufferer from inflammatory
rheumatism, but has not heretofore been
troubled in this climate. Last winter
he went up into Wisconsin, and in con
sequence has had another attack. "It
came npon me very acute and severe,
be said. "My joints swelled and became
inflamed ; sore to touch or almost to look
at. Upon the urgent request of my
mother-in-law I tried " Chamberlain's
Pain Balm to reduce the swelling and
ease the pain, and to my agreeable sur
prise, it did both. I have need three
fifty-cent bottles and believe it to be the
finest thing for rheumatism, pains and
swellings extant. For sale by Blakeley
& Houghton, druggists. -
A crescent brooch, fully four' inches
long from end to end, is of graduated
smoky topazes set with small bril
liants. ook'sMonRoot
COMPOUND.
A recent discovery by an old
physician. Sveeaqfitllit mtea
Mtonthtif bv thousand of
Ladies. Is the only perfectly
safe and reliable medicine dis
covered. Beware of unprincipled druggists who
offer Inferior medicines in place of this. Ask for
Cook's Cotton Boot Componnd, take tut suZwff
tute. or inclose $1 and 6 cents in postage in letter
and we will send, sealed, by return mail. FoUsealed
particulars in plain envelope, to ladies only, 2
stamps. Address Poni', Lily Company, .
Ko. 0 Fisher Block. Detroit, Mich.
A CHAPTER FOR BOYS.
What Johnny Shonld larn If He Wool
Make Hiinxel. ir.wful..
" To run. V''
To swim.
' To carve. , ' " : . ' ,
' To be neat. " ; "
. To be honest. .;. .
' . To make a fire.
4 To be punctual. .
' To do an errand. - .
To cut kindlings.
: To sing if ho can. '
i To sew on a button. : . ,
j To hang up his bat.
f " To hold his head erect. "
; To respect his teacher. .
To help his mother or sister. ;
i To button his mother's boots. '
To wipe his hoots on tho mat.
- To read aloud when requested.
. ' To help the boy smaller than himself.
! - To speak pleasantly to an old woman
; To put every garment in its proper
place. .- ' . . - ,
-"To remove his hat uponentering a
house. . - - , -
I . To keep his finger-nails from' wearing
mourning.
I ' To lift tho baby out of the cradle and
hold it for half an hour.
To treat the girls so well that thej
will -wish ho was their brother, -r i -f y
To close the door quietly,, especially
when there Is a sick person in thr
housn .
y No Sentiment There. :
: In nine cases out of te n ships leaving
New York, Boston -or Philadelphia' for
distant ports am lirovisioncd s- -ylose
by their owners; that if a v;hi-wrecksd
2rew of ten men -Were picked up and
fed for three days it would put every
body on short rations. 1 A losr. of four
days on sailing time would do the same
thjjig. ....
NOTICB.'
To Whom it May Concern: :
Notice is hereby eiven that by order
of the common council made and en
tered on the 3rd day of May 1894, 1 was
authorized and directed to advertise the
matters substantially contained in the
docket of city liens of the assessment of
property for the construction of an 8-4
. . y
men terra cotta sewer in Lincoln street
us provided by special . ordinance No.
285, which passed the common council
of Dalles City March 12tb, 1894, and
was approved by the mayor March 13th,
1894. .
That the assessments which have not
been paid npon the property as now ap
pears in sain nen oncKet are as iouows :
Lots 8 and 9,block 1 Trevitt's Ad
dition. Capt. McNnlty ..... $49 30
Lots 4, 5 and 6, block 1, Trevitt's
Addition Mrs. Marv Booth. . . 73 90
Lot 3, block 1. Trevitt's Addition,
J. L. Thompson 24 bo
Lots 1 and 2 and b of 3, block 5
Trevitt's Addn fjatholic churcn 1SJ3 25
Lot 8, block 2, Trevitt's Addition
Mrs. T. W. Sparks . 24 oft
Lot 4, block 4, Trevitt's Addition, .
Mary Bonzey Z4 bo
That unless within five days from the
final publication of this notice, to-wit,
. . , . . n r . .nni - , 1
Monaay, xuay zoin, loyi, as requirea Dy
Sec. 74 of the charter of . Dalles City.
said sums above mentioned are not
wholly paid to the city treasurer and a
duplicate receipt therefor filed with the
recorder of Dalles Uity. the council will
order a warrant for the collection of the
same, to be issued bv the recorder and
diiected to the marshal.
Dated at Dalles City, Oregon, this 8th
day of May, 1894.
JJ0UGLA8 O. UOTOR,
m8-14t . Recorder of Dalles City. :
1
Rheumatism.
I 'bUJ.Im -
Kidney Complaints,
Lame uacni o
D.1. SAKDEK'S ELECTRIC BELT
With Electro-Magnetic SUSPENSORY
Win cure v Ithout medicine all Tfyfcm reaultinsr trmn
over-taxatiou of brain nerve forces t exoeeaes or indis.
cretion, as nervous debility, sleeplessness, languor,
rheumatism, kidney, liver And bladder eomplalnta,
lame back. Inrabaffo, sciatJra, all female complaints
zeneral ill health, etc. This electrla Belt coutalns
WoMterfDl ImpmoMsU over all others. Cnrrent la
instantly felt by wearer or we forfeit &,0Mi.OO, and
will cure all of the above diseases or no pay. Tnou
..nds have been cured by this marvelous Invention
after all other remedies failed, and we Rive Hundreds
of testimonials in this and every other state.
Onr Pwrariml baron KLBCTB1C STISPESSOKT. the
ffmttest boon aver offered weak men. FREB with all
Bflts. Uealth and Ytnroua Siranffth GUAUlNTEED la SO t
SO daj Send for lltuaM Pamphlet, maileC .sealed, free
8ANOEN ELECTRIC CO.,
tSo. ITS a-lrst 8t.-eet, FOSLTTMkXJ OKE.
Removed to corner Third and Washington
' . streets, Portland, Or.
J. F. RffiD, Evangelist,
Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes under date ol
March 23, 1893:
S. B. Med. Mfg. Co.,
Dufur, Oregon.
Gentlemen :
On arriving home last week, 1 found
all well and anxiously awaiting. Our
little girl, eight and one-half years old,
who had wasted away to 38 pounds, ie
now well, strone and vigorous, and well
fleshed up. S. B. Cough Cure has done
its work well. Both of the children like
it. Your S. B. Cough Cure has cured
and kept away all hoarseness from me.
So give it to every one, with greetings
for all. , Wishing you prosperity, we are
Your 8, Mb. & MRS. J. H. JtOED,
If you wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and read;
for the Spring', work, cleanse your system with
the Headache and Liver Cure, by taking two or
three doses each week.
Bold. under a positive guarantee.
GO cents per bottle by a U drnmriBts.
w r-vr- 1 livr a.
V" ouriruuniot
CAR I OBTAIN A PATENT Vor a
prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to
SlUNN&CO., who have had nearly fifty years'
experience in the patent business. Communlca
tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of In
formation concerning; Patenta and bow to ob
tain Lbem sent free. Also a catalogue Of mechan.
leal and scientific books sent free.
Patents taken tbrongh Mann a COv reoeivs
special notice in the Scientific American, and
thus are broaKht widely before the pnblio with
out cost to the inventor. This splendid paper,
issued weekly, elegantly Illustrated, baa by far the
largest circulation of any scientific work in the
world. $3 a year, gampie copies sent free.
Building Bditlon-montuly, a year. Binple
copies, 'iS cents. Every number contains beau
tiful plates, in colors, and pbotograpns of new
bouses, with plans, enabling builders to show tba
latest designs and secure contracts. Address
MUNS & CO Kim Youk, :itil BliOADWAT.
iiAVE YOU TCIED
TO FtSD A
RHEUMATISM LUMDACO, SCIATICA,
KIDNEY, LIVER and BLADDER
COMPLAINTS, DYSPEPSIA. LAME-BACK,.
DB. SAKSEN'S ELECTRIC BELT
4 h
unr S00 book "TfiKMt CIA8S5 SrtKBty houldbe wd by erery yoans-,
middle-aged and old man. sent sealed. freeTWr. and en'. Elecrrie Belt iff no experiment
as we have restored thousands to robust health and Tieor, after all other Srestmenta tailed, as can be
shown toy hundreds of cases throughout this and other States,who would gladly testify. aaaXrommany ;
of whom we have strong letters besrincr testimony to their recovery aiter ooing our Belt -
WE HAVE CURED THESE WE CAN CURE YOU!
rcucDit ntrnii itv riiPFn
, bsaFrMn 0100, Oal August 14, IB9C.
Tr. A. T. Sanden, Dea Sir -Bf ore X used yonr belt
I was troubled with lost vigor, vital weakness, and
almost a complete loss off power. I would get up with
a vary ctrea xeeung, oones scnuiK. etc.; sin oe using
roar belt 1 haveiaa a new lease of lif h X now enjoy
1II DMUr IDBB M. Bon lurLSB IWH fJUIi M. Han lllfl
atmoMt oonudttoee in your treatment. You can pub
lish this statemenvaiso have others write or call on
i. Truly yoors H. A. HO WJlW, K and 8b Tork Bt.
RHEUMATISM 4VNOUMENES8 CURED
PoFtland. OrMmn. Aura lH 1KS
Tf. A. T. flan Jen. Ttaar Rir I oot one cf ronr belts
hen ji.nir urn fnp rhntri Alirnm. tmm whirrh 1 aiilFitred
xor sererai years. Jeor tne pasc six mo n ins j. naa nor
ham shlatna.irk. Vortr Kolt ha llatMni hihIh almost
perfect health in the two weeks I have used it. 1 cani
wais oomiorxaoiT.ana ieei use a new man geueraiij.
. J. nuuiu, proprietor international Hotel.
MERVOUS D EB I UTY UP 8 3 OF V. COR.
TW. A . T1 PtmArm Tlnnr HirT lum hMUl n.lnir wiir
leotrie belt f or jtenerai nnrvoab detaiU. and to-dav
mI btter th&n I hftM fur flv. mn. I hAva gained
in vigor dailrv and am stronain evryprt.
Youre grate rol.jr.
THE DR. SAfiDCN
Hn,ofm1etiCKlTeniebaii7,madelntoaM
invea sootmnflr.pnuongea ourrenta waicn are nsxaatiy zeit uirongnoui an weaK parts, or we xorxett
5,000. It baa an Improved Kloctrle tSaepeneoryv te (rre&test boon ever giVen weak men, and
we warrant h 10 en re any or. ioe aoore weaKneeeea,
Rffafundea. TriftY a.ri tT-rnrlfvl in Jtr.nan0-t.r1 t nkAfc
nen, and will coxa the worst cases in two or three months. Address for lull Information.
&ANDEN ELECTRIC CO. 112 First St., PORTLAHD, GSEGOB.
Removed to Corner Third
Mew Yflrtt Weekly Tribune
-AND-
flQsiei
ONLY
When the Train stops at THE DALLES, get oif on the South Side ;
- . : ; v AT THE
JStEttf C3bLtX-( I5BIH HOTElt.
- ' ' ..o0-- ww"'
.. This large aad popular House does the principal hotel bnsinesa,
and is prepared to furnish the best Accommodations of any
House in the city, and at the lour rate ol. ....... ,.. .
$1.00 per Day. - pirst QIass reals, 25 Ccpts.:
. ' . I . '' ' '.'.'.)-,.:"--" 1
Office far all Stage L.lnes leavlox: t he Ialles for all
pointa In Eastern Oregron and Kattern WashlnsTton, "
In this Hotel. .-- . . . . .. . '
Corner ol Front and Colon Bta.
'There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at its fleotk
leads on to fortune" '. ; .V:
The poet unquestionably had. reference to the ' -..
at CRANDALL
Who are selling these goods
: .TTC! i ETJ' ACU BRICK,'
D. BUNN
MAINS TAPPED
Shop on Third Street, next door west. of Young & KubsV
- Blacksmith Shop. ' : ;
DHIiSS MID FAILED
CURB FOB
DE, SANDEJTS E1ECTRIC BELT
with El ictio IffAirnetic Snsocs -
sory will cure wit It out medicine
7f suffer from Nerrois Debility, .
-NerTOHineaff leeplewmeiit,
jrooraiemory.aH remaif jom.
uu KQaorai mm mm 17 a a. u v
the effects of abuses, excesses, worry
or exposure, will find relief and pnimjx .
core In our marvelous invention,
which reonlres bnt a trln.1 fcn convince
the most skeptical. In ignorance of sf-
foots TOO dmt h&TA nndulT drained -
1 yonrsTstemofnerreforeeandTitalltj
sl which la eleetricfttv and thus t
Caused yonr weakness or lack of form
Am 7UH lOrlHIOB U1MI JUUl DTStCIIl Ul
elements thus drained, which are re
paired for vieorons strength, yoa will
tmoe the eaase and health , strength)
and vigor Will follow at once. This ;
is adf Dlan and treatment, and w
maMBtM a cur or refund rorihav
LAME BACK AND RHEUMATISM
4 Portland Oregon, September J. 186t
Dr. A.T fikiirlan. Tsaar flir VsiaiintflrrmMiranft'
hard work, combined with ibe strain eomins from the
jar of an engine, gaye me m Tere o ot lame beokg
tram whieh I coffered tor eeren yeera. I wee o bed
that I eouid not bend my back. W as all doubled op
witn xx. i Do&sat one of yonr Delta. It beipea me '
lnaiae of two daje. and I eontinned to wear It for four
months, being perfectly cared. That waatwo year
&o, and I am aa well to-day aa I ever waa im my life. I
know your belt well, and X know lota of people who
have been cared by it. Many other need it and if
thWOnld tr it thMtMnM fiiul it. liKak atasmaa asaa I did :
I the beet remedy in the world.- I am located here ,
permanently, ana win oe glad wtnlkwuhanji one waa
hi inqai rs kdoqc i ,
KOUKKT B TTB ITFT. Fnirinecc TTntal rnrtltTwl
'LOST VITAUTY AND STRENGTH.
w . M , ETerett, Wtih, Jane 38, Bltt.
Dr. A. T. Senden. Beer Bir -eince wearing yonr
bslt I have been greatly benefited. 1 feel my old en
ercy fatrfe returning; and altera month 'a nee of the
belt I find myself twice aa V: go roue aa before. My
memory la now, nearly perfect, and each day abowe
for the better. I f -el nmoh atronirer than before
using the belt. Youra truly. bCHUlXZ,
ELECTRIC BELT-
or ntfoet. end ft
ana to enlarge anrnnaen iimDs, or parta, or fneoef
11 mtnaim nf wMkriAU In nnn9.mirli1lA-i.aMa4r.rAUf
and Washington Streets. ' r
T. T. NICHOLAS, Propr.
I BU RGET'S,
put 'at greatly-reduced rates.
..' V. -
JTXTON ST.
r f- . j -
UNDER PRESSURE. "' M"
I9if ; v t. -----