El : l D B Bran and Shorts (Diamond Mills), $12 T?er ton. Flotir at Bedrock Prices. Good Potatoes, 65c a sack. Seed Wheat. Chicken Wheat, 75c sack. Choice Wheat, Timothy and Alfalfa Hay. All Goods Sold at Lowest X. EE Telephone No. 61. Its mother Ob, John! John! what shall we do? Baby has swallowed its rattle? Its father Do? Nothing; now lie' 11 have it with him all the time, and we won't have to be forever hunting it up when he cries. Tid Bits. OJST THE OUTSIDE hat ?8 the best place to keep the huge, old-fashioned pill. Just aa soon as vow get it inside, it begins to trouble you. What's the use oi suffering with it, when you can get more help from Dr. Pierce'e Pleasant Pellets? These tiny, sugar-coated granules do yoa permanent good.- They act mildly and naturally, and there's no reaction afterward. Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the liver, stom ach, and bowels are prevented, relieved, and permanently cured. They're the smallest, the easiest . to" take, and the cheapest for they're guaranteed to give satis faction or your money is re turned. You pay only for the food you get. Nothing else urged y the dealer, though they may be better for him to sell, can be " just as good " for you to buy. Mistress Bridget, I don't like your liaving these men in the kitchen. They are all strangers to me. Bridget (pleas antly -Stip insoide, then, mum, and O'il interiaice you. Judge. There is no medicine so often needed in every home and so admirably adapted to the purposes for which it is intended, as Chamberlain's Pain Balm. Hardly a week passes but some member' of the family has need of it. A toothache or keadache may be cared by it. A touch of rheumatisn. or neuralgia quieted. The severe pain of a burn or scald promptly relieved and the sore healed in JDUch less time than when medicine has to be sent for. A sprain may be promptly treated before inflamation sets in, which insures a cure in about one aird of the time otherwise required. Cots and bruises should receive im mediate treatmeut before the parts be come swollen, which can only be - done when Fain Balm is kept .at hand. A ore throat may be cured before it be comes serious. A troublesome corn may removed by applying it twice a day lor a week or two.- A lame back may be cored and several days of valuable time aaved or a pain in the side or chest re lieved without paying a doctor bill. Pro cure a 50 cent bottle at once and you will never regret it. For sale by Blakeley t Houghton Druggists. Mr. Oldstyle I don't think that a col lege education amounts to much. Mr. Sparerod Don't you? Well, you ought to foot my boy's bill and see. New York "World. It Should Be in Ertry House J. B.' "Wilson, 371 Clay St., Sharps Itarg, Pa., says he will not be without Br. King's New Discovery for consump lion, coughs and colds, that it cured his 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 lore good than anything he ever used for lung trouble. Nothing like it. Try it. Tree trial bottles at Snipes & Kin-rslv's. pr 0 n on Seed Rye. ". . Feed Oats. Rolled Barley. Poultry and Eggs , bought and sold. Choice Groceries & Fruits. Grass Seeds. Living Prices. Cor. Second and Union Sts. NOTICE. To All Whom It May Concern: ! By order of the Common Council of Dalies City, made and entered on the 3d day of October, 1894, notice is hereby given that said City Council is about to proceed to order and make the improve ment in Tenth street in said City as hereinafter stated and that the cost of such improvement will be levied upon the property adjacent thereto and said improvement will be made unless with in fourteen days from the final publica tion of this notice the owners of two thirds of the property adjacent to said street about to be improved shall file their written remonstrance, against such improvement as by charter provided. The improvement" contemplated and about to be made is as follows, to-wit : To improve Tenth street by building a sidewalk on the north side thereof, six feet wide, commencing at the intersec tion of Tenth street with Union street, in said citv and running thence easterly 75 feet. ' Said improvement will Deconstructed in accordance with the provisions of Ordinance No. 270, which passed the Common Council of Dalles City, May 10th, 1893. Dated this loth day of October, 1894. Douglas 'S. Dcfur, Octl5-30 Recorder of Dalles City. NOTICE. To All Whom it May Concern: Bv order of the Common Council of Dalles City, made and entered on the 7th day of September, 1894; notice is hereby given that said City Council is about to proceed to order and make a sewer in the streets and parts of streets as hereinatter stated and that the cost of such improvement will be levied upon the property directly bene fited thereby, as by charter provided The improvement contemplated and about to be made is as follows, to-wit : To construct a terra cotta sewer com mencing on Court street at low water mark in the Columbia river, thence southerly to Fifth street ; thence easterly to Washington street ; thence southerly to Fulton street; thence easterly to Laughlin' street; thence southerly to the alley south of Alvord street. ' Said sewer shall be of the following size, to-wit: From the Columbia river to Fourth street, sixteen inches ; from Fourth street to the corner of Washington and Fulton streets twelve inches, and from said point to the termination thereof eight inches. Said improvement will be constructed in accordance with the provisions of Ordinance No. 270, which passed the Common Council of Dalles City, May 10th, 1893. Dated this 15th day of October, 1894. Douglas S. Dufue, Octl5-30 Recorder of Dalles City. NOTICE. To All Whom It May Concern; By order of the Common Council of Dalles City, made and entered on the 3rd day of October, 1894, notice is here by given that said City Council is about to proceed to order and make the lm provement in Union street, in said City, as hereinafter stated, and that .the cos 5 of such improvent will be levied upon the property adjacent thereto, and said improvement win be made unless with in fourteen days from the final publica tion of this notice the owners of two thirds of the property adjacent to said street, about to be improved, shall file their written remonstrance against such improvement as by charter provided The improvement contemplated and about to be made is as follows, to-wit: To improve and grade Union street in said city, thirty feet in width in the center thereof, from the intersection of Tenth street to Thirteenth street ; thence west one block to Liberty street; thence south one block to Fourteenth street ; thence west on Fourteenth street four blocks to Trevitt street; thence south one block to Fifteenth street; thence west on Fifteenth street two blocks ter minating at the intersection of Fifteenth and Mount Mood streets. All of said improvement will be con structed in accordance with the provi eions of ordinance No. 270, which passed the Common Council of Dalles City May 1U, lo3. Dated this 15th day of October, 1894. Douglas S. Dufue, Octl5-30 Recorder of Dalles City Notice of Proposed Street Improvement By order of the Council of Dalles Citv notice is hereby given that the portion of the east side of Union street, com mencing on the south line of Fourth street, Dalles City, and extending south erly to where the north line of the alley which forms the north line of the public scnooi grounds intersects said street, said public school grounds being situ ated on both sides of Union street be tween said alley and the "bluff, shall be improved by the construction of a plank sidewalk eight feet in width - along the east side of said street. Dated this 20th day of October, 1894. Douglas b. dufuh. Recorder for Dalles Citv DISLIKE THE TELEGRAPH. The Chinese He card It sa an Instrument of Evil. Two American bicyclers, Allen and SachtlebenT'teH in 'the Century of their meeting1 with a Chinaman m the heart of the flowery kingdoHrwho electrified them by addressing them in the purest English. "He vas one of that party of mandarins sons which had been sent overdo our country some yeara ago, as an experiment Dy ine uinse government, to receive a rifcfbugh American training. We cannot here give the history of that experiment, as Mr. Woo related .itA-how they were subsequently accused of cutting off their queues and. becoming denational ized, how, in consequence, they were recalled to their native land, and de graded rather than elevated, both by the people and the government, be cause they were foreign in their 'senti ments and habits; and how, at last, they gradually began, to force recogni tion through the power of merit alone. He had now been sent out' by the gov ernment to engineer the extension of the., telegraph line from Su-chou to Urumtsi, for it was feared by the gov ernment that the employment of a for eigner in this capacity would only in crease the pav7er for evil which the na tives already attributed to this foreign innovation. The similarity in the phrases telegraph pole and dry heaven had inspired the common belief that the line of poles then stretching across the country was : responsible for the long-existing drought. In one night several miles of poles were sawed short off, by the secret order of a banded conspiracy." After several decapita tions, the poles were now being re stored, and labeled with the words: 'Put up by order of the emperor.' " PARIS SEWER BOOTS. How They Are Utilized In Making- Fine Shoes for Ladies. Speaking of the fashions brings us to an odd discovery which has recently been made. There is a small shop on the other side of the Seine, vn the Hue des Ecoles, which deals exclusively with the second-hand boots of the men who work in sewers. These hoots, says a Paris letter, are furnished by the state, and come half way up to the thigh, and each man is allowed a new pair every six months. .When new they cost nine dollars; when sold second hand they realize the modest sum of fifty cents; but as at least six thousand pairs per annUm are sent to the Rue des Ecoles . it makes quite a -booming industry. The leather of these boots is, so to speak, tanned by the alkaline and greasy water in which the sewer-clean ers so perpetually paddle, and they are eagerly sougbt for by the great Parisian bootmakers; for this leather, being at once tough and light, serves to sustain the curve of the Loui3 XV. heel. At first this was done by a piece of iron; but that was heavy and clum sy, so finally the ingenious dealer hit upon this substitute, to the delight of the sewer-cleaners, who realized a modest sum. and the content of the fashionable bootmaker, whose shoes profited by the change; but the great lady whose satin-shod feet glide over the earth with such majesty of gait little knows that one of the component parts of her dainty footgear has risen from a sewer to reach her. THE GRAVE OF LAFAYETTE. An American Flag Has Always Waved Over It. "While in Paris a short while ago," said a traveler recently, according to the Washington Post, "it occurred to me that it was a fitting act to make a pilgrimage to the tomb of that illustri ous Frenchman dear to the hearts of all American patriots, Marquis de La Fayette. I asked a number of peo ple before I could find anyone to en lighten me as to the spot, but after re peated inquiry ascertained its location. The grave is situated in old Paris, within the grounds of a convent that the ancestors of La Fayette founded, and where repose the remains of many of the French nobility. "The first thing that attracted my attention in connection with the hero's tomb was that above it floated a silken flag, bearing the Stars and Stripes. It seems that a good many years ago an American gentleman left in his will a sum of money to be used for the special purpose of keeping an American flag forever flying above the grave of La Fayette. It has done so without inter mission from the day the will went into effect,. and whenever through- the wear of the elements one flag becomes unserviceable, a new one straightway takes its place. Through untold cen turies the emblem of the country which in its early struggles for liberty had his beneficent aid will wave above his ashes." Misunderstood. A young man, who looked every inch the bridegroom, stood in the rotunda of the Great Northern the other day, says the Chicago Times, telling a friend of the manner of his proposal to his bride. She had known of his wild ways and fondly hoped to reform him through marriage. "After. I had popped the question and she had accepted me,'' he said, "I at once began to talk about the wedding. 'We will go away some where by ourselves, my dear,' I said; 'there will.be no flourish, no cards, no ceremony' here she interrupted me, and, with a dignified sweep of her arm, declared: 'Mr. , I shall certainly in sist upon a ceremony.' " The -Home's Ears. When the horse sleeps it is said that one ear is directed forward, why is not known. A writer in the English Me chanic thinks this is to guard against danger, being a survival of their orig inally wild habits. He says; Watch a horse asleep through the window of his stable and make a faint noise to the front. That ear will be all atten tion, and probably the other will fly round sharply to assist. Now let him go to sleep again, and make the same noise zo tne leit. Tne forward ear still will keep his guard, with possibly a lightning flick round, only to resume its former pr-Uion. I A Siberian Traveler's Protection Against ' ' the Cold. The author of "On"Sledge.and Ho back to the Siberian Lepers" wns-dc?-termined not to freeze todsath. She had a whole out4SSfWodlen under wear, then a loose kind of waist lined with flannejj-it very thickly-wadded eider-down ulster, with sleeves long 'enough to cover the hands entirely, and a fur collar reaching high enough to cover the head and face. Over all this sjie? had a sheepskin reaching to the feet, and furnished with a collar which came over the fur one.- Then over the sheepskin she wore" a" dacha, which is a fur coat of reindeer skin.. But this was only the beginning. On my feet were stockings made of long hair; over them a pair of gentle man's thickest hunting stockings; over them a pair of Russian boots made of felt, coming high up over the knee; and over them a pair of "brown felt valenkies. Then I was provided with a large fur bag or sack, into which I could step. v My head-covering was a fur-lined cap, and the etceteras consisted of shawls, rugs and wraps. .The sledge one of the elevated kind had to be mounted. I stood beside it trying to solve the knotty problem, of how to get in. There was no step to to help me; and there was a crowd of men, women and children gazing at me. Three muscular policemen attempted to lift me gently into the sledge; but their combined strength was futile under the load. So they had to set me on the ground cgain. Then 1 attempted, in a kind of majes tic, contemptuous way to mount with out assistance; but alas! my knees would not tend. My pride had to suc cumb; I was helpless. Two policemen came and essayed another manoeuvre. They took me by the arms, and then, at their signal, I made one desperate, frantic effort, and I was in. I was in, but I had to be packed and stowed away. The men pushed and pulled and dragged and coaxed, and at last, I and my clothes were ready for starting. As to bowing and thanking my assistants, that was impossible; I just sat, and fairly gasped, and longed to get away. A LANDLUBBER SURPRISED. Quickness ot JlrltfsH Tans in Clearing; a Battleship for Action. At the words: "Clear for action" there is a commotion which a landsman might mistake for a panic, as men rush from point to point. A blrfejacket, says the London Daily News, never walks when an order is given, but does everything at the double. Everyone knows his station, and goes to it-by the quickest and shortest way. With a rapidity that seems wonderful, com panion ladders, with their ponderous gangways, are unshipped and stowed away; railings around the 'low decks, fore and aft, are lowered; the ventilat ing cowls and chimney stacus disap pear, to be replaced by covers flush with the deck; hatches are battened down, water-turht doors closed, and tackle rigged for hoisting ammunition from the magazine. Between decks everywhere something of the same kind is being done as quickly and as quietly, and then the men stand to their guns. When the bugles sound for firing to commence, the great barbette turntables revolve slowly, trained- by unseen power, and the quick-firing guns in maindeck batteries are worked with surprising celerity by detach ments of royal marine artillery. At a prize shooting recently a de tachment fired sixteen shots' in three minutes from one of the repulse guns, scoring nine direct hits and planting all the other seven shots so close to the target that they would have riddled the hull of a very small ship. The seventeenth round was in this gun when the "cease fire" sounded, so that one gunner, who was loading, must have lifted seventeen hundred pounds in three minutes. This incident gives a vivid idea of the work that would have to be done in action by crews of these quick-firing guns, as well as of the smartness with- which the "blue ma rines" set about their task. Fire dis cipline will be a potent factor in any future battle at sea, and there can be no better means of acquiring it than by such exercise as one has seen at general quarters during the maneu vers. CURED BY LAUGHTER. Cases Where Health Was . Restored Through Fits of Mlrthfolness. The remedial effects of laughter are really wonderful. Cases have been known where a hearty laugh has ban ished disease and preserved life by a sudden effort of nature. We are told that the great Erasmus, the eminent theologian, laughed so heartily at a satirical remark that he broke a tumor and recovered his health. In a singu lar treatise on "Laughter" Joubert gives two similar instances. A patient being very low, the physician, who had ordered a dose, of rhubarb, counter manded the medicine, which was left on the table. A monkey in the room jumped up, discovered the goblet, and, having tasted, made a terrible grimace. Again putting his tongue to it, he per ceived some sweetness in the dissolved manna, while the rhubarb had sunk to the bottom. Thus emboldened, he swallowed the whole, but found it such a nauseous potion that, after many strange and fantastic grimaces, he ground his teeth in agony, and in a violent fury threw the goblet on the floor. The whole affair was so ludi crous that the sick man burst into re peated peals of laughter, and the re covery of cheerfulness led to health. A Facer. Apropos of the fact that those who "came over in the Mayflower" mostly bore such surnames as Winthrop, Hay throp, Lothrop and Lathrop, the Corn hill Magazine tells, of a- New Tork parvenu who loudly proclaimed to a Plymouth Winthrop: "My people came over in the Mayflower." "Indeed!" was the crushing answer. "I didn't know the Mayflower took steerage passen gers." . FULL DRESS. Mexican Mustang Liniment for Bums, Caked & Inflamed Udders. Piles, Rheumatic Pains, Bruises and Strains, Running Sores, Inflammations, Stiff joints, Harness & Saddle Sores, Sciatica, Lumbago, Scalds, Blisters, Insect Bites, I All Cattle Ailments, j All Horse Ailments, All Sheep Ailments, Penetrates Muscle, Membrane and Tissue Quickly to the Very Seat of Pain and . Ousts it in a Jiffy. Rub in Vigorously. Mustang Liniment conquers Pain, Makes flan or Beast well again. Strayed. From the fair grounds, one black mare, white hind foot, small white spot in forehead, and one light sorrel horse, white bind foot, small wnite strip- in face and saddle marked, both branded on left stifle. Horse also branded A on the right hind leg. A liberal reward will be paid lor information which will lead to their recovery, by the under signed. A. S. Macallistkk, Notice. . All city warrants registered prior to January 2, 1892, are now due and pay able at my office. ' Interest ceases after this date. .1. 1. Bcbget, City Treas Dated Dalles Citv. Auar. 1. 1894. Another Call. All county warrants registered prior to January 1, 1891, will be paid on pre sentation at my omce. Interest ceases after Sept. 10th. Wm. Michell, County Treaeurer. Talkerly Why did Deepdye get a di vorce from his wife? Hardtack To get revenge on me. He knew I would marry her. Pot tin Your Glasses and Look at This, From $100 to $2,000 to loan. Apply to OEO. VV. KOWLAND, 1 1 S Third St. The Dalles. Or ScMATSJfi COPYRIGHTS. CAW I OBTAIN A PATENT t For prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to M U N N fc CO., who have had nearly fifty years' einflriflnM In 111. MUnt tmainmut- finiuiimmf. tlons strictly confidential. A Handbook of In formation concern tM Patents and bow to ob tain them sent free. ai, "'toptim,llB" leal and sdentiflo books sent free. Patents taken tarongh Munn ft Co. receive special notloeinthe Scientific American, and thus are brought widely before the pnblio with out cost to the inventor. This splendid caper. issued weekly. elegantly Illustrated, has by rxartbe ihkik cinnuBuoa or any saentrao van world. S3 year. Sample copies sent fr Bulldina Edition, monthly, S2.G0 a year, copies. 25 eenta. Kverv number contains Single tifui plates, in colors, and photographs of new houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the atest aesrans ana secure contracts. Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat ent business conducted for Moderate Fees. Oim Office is Opposite U. S. Patent office and we can secure patent in less time than those Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip tion. We advise, if patentable or not. free of charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. A Pamphlet, "How to Obtain Patents," with cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries sent free. Address, C.A.SFJOW&CO. Opp "stent Orner. 'wuhinoto" n. C. Ad. Keller is now located at "W.. H. Butts' old stand, and will be glad to wait upon his many friends. iil.IElLll PltOKKSSIONAL. II H. RIDDEU-attorst-at-Law Office i . Court Street. The Dalles-, Oregon. B. B. DDFUB. FB1RK HKNEHI. DUFUR, & MENKFEE ATTORNEYS- AT law Rooms 42 and -is, over Poet nil H'llldinsr, entrance mi Washington Street he Dalles. Oregon. - t a. BKNNETT. ATTORNEY-AT LA'A-. Of V. '8ce In Schanno bntl'iiiut. up stair. The iiif-. Oreeom J. B. CONDON. J. W. CONDON. C LONDON & CONDON, ATVORNEYS AT LAW J Office on Court street, opposite the old court house. The Dalles, Or. B. I.HUNTINGTON. H. S. "WILSON. HUNTINGTON WILSON ATTOKSa-YS-AT-uv Offices, French's block over -list Na tional B&nl . . Dalles. Oregon. H. WILSON Attorney-at-law Rooms French & Co.'s bank building, Second treet. The Dalles. Oregon. T8CTHERLAND. M. D C. M.; F. T. M. C. . . M. C. P. and 8. O., Physician and Sur geon. Rooms 3 and 4, jnapman block. Residence Mrs, Thorobury's. west end of Second DR. EBHELid AN (Ho Jsor athic; Physiciah and Sukqkon. Calls aunwered promptly lsy or night, city or country. Office fJo. 86 and t K. O. U. DO A N K PHYSICIAN AND 8UB I oaoH. - Office: . rooms 6 and 6 Chapman Si:k. Residence: 8. . c.-rner Court and fourth streets, see nd door from the comer 8ice hours 9 to 13 A. M., 2 to 6 and 7 to 8 P. M I dlDDAIJ Dentist. Gas given for the J painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth t on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of tie ttoiden Tooth. second street. SOCIETIES. w ABCO LODGE, NO. IS, A. T. A A. M. Meets first and third Monday ot each month at 7 DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6. Meets in Masonio Hall the third Wednesday if each month at 7 P. M. TODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. .! Mt. Hood Camp No. 59. Meets Tuesday even- ragof each week In Fraternity Hall, at 7:30 p. m. C COLOMBIA LODGE, NO. 6, I. O. O. F. Meeta J every Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in K. of P. hail, corner Second and Court streets. soionrning orotners are welcome. H. Clough, Bec'y. H. A. BH.LS.N. Q. FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. ., K. of P. Meets johanno's building, corner of Court and Second (treets. Sojourning members are cordially in vited. W. L. BRADSHAW, D. W.VAQga, K. of R. and B. C. C. 4 8SEMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF L. Meets in K V of P. hall the second and fourth Wednes lays of each month at 7:30 p. m. - WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE UNION will meet every Friday afternoon t 8 o'clock at the reading room. All are invited. FERN LODGE, DEGREE OF HONOR, NO. 25. Meets in Fraternity Hall. Second street, every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. MBS. MAMIE BRIOOS, U. OI 1. Mbs. B. J. Russell, Financier. rrHE-DALLES LODGE No. 2, I. O. G. T. Reg X ular weekly meetings Friday at 8 P. K., a' K. of P. Hall. ' J. S. WlKZLER, C. T. Dimsmorb Pabish, Bee y. -rVEMFLK LODGE NO. 8, A. O. D. W. Meeta JL in Fraternity Hall, over Kellers, en Second treet, Thursday evenings at 7 :30. C. F. STEPHENS, W. 8 Mtxbs, Financier. M. W J AS. NE8M1TH POST, No. 82, G. A. R. Meets every Saturday at 7:80 r. at., In the K. of P. Kail. AMERICAN RAILWAY UNION, NO. 40. Meets second and fourth Thursdays each month in K. of P. halL J. W. Ready, w. H. jokes, Bec'y. . fTes. B, OF L. E. Meets every Sunday afternoon In the K. of P. Hall. Gr ESANG VE REIN Meets every Sunday evening In the K. of P. Hall. BOF L, F. DIVI8ION, No. 167 Meets in K. of P. Hall the first and third Wedne lay of each month, at 7:80 1. M. "Tk Regulator Line" , Tie Dalles, Portland ana Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Frei gin ana PasssnaerUfig Through Daily Trips (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a.m.. connectlngat 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. PAS8BNOKK KATES. Oneway .....'...$2j00 Round trip ........ 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 way landings must be delivered before 5 p. m. Live stock shipments solicted. Call on or address, W. CALLAWAY, General Arent THE-DALLES. OREGON J T FORD, Evangelist, ; Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes under date ol March 23, 1893: . D. X. JXLED. Ill ITU. VU., . Dufur, Oregon. Gentlemen On arriving home last week,' I 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, strong and vigorous, and well fleshed up. S. B. Cough Cure has done its work well. Both ol 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 Yours, Mb. & Mbo. J. F. Ford. . If you wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and ready for the Spring's work, cleanse your system with the Headache and Liver Cure, by taking two or three doses each week. Sold under a positive guarantee. 50 cents per bottle by all druggists.