ii Bran and Shorts (Diamond Mills), $12 per ton. Flour at Bedrock Prices. Good Potatoes, Q5c a sack. Seed Wheat. Chicken Wheat, 75c sack. Choice Wheat, Timothy and Alfalfa Hay. All Goods Sold at Lowest 3. EE Telephone No. 61. "What a world of insincerity thia is!" exclaimed Penniquick. "When I stopped that runaway horse all the papers said I deserved great credit. And here I, ve been in no less than twenty places trying to work my face for a drink !" Boston Transcript. THE WEAKEST SPOT in your whole system, perhaps, is the liver. If that doesn't do- its work of purifying the blood, more troubles come from it than you can femember. -1 ! -U-.-: 'r-u ; ?.:,: ( Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery acts upon this weak spot 'as nothing else can. ' It rouses it up to healthy, natural action. By ithoroughly purifying the blood, it reaches, builds up, and invigorates every part of the system. For all diseases that depend on : the liver or the blood Dyspepsia, 1 Indigestion, Biliousness ; eveiy form -of Scrofula, even Consumption (or Lung-scrofula) in its earlier stages ; and the most stubborn Skin and Scalp Diseases, . the " Discovery " is the only remedy so unfailing and effective that it can be guar anteed. If it doesn't benefit or cure, you bave your money back. On these terms, it's an insult to your intelligence to have something else offered as" " just as good." Dr. Sags's Catarrh Remedy by its mild, sootliing, cleansing and heal ing properties, perfectly and perma nently cures Catarrh in tho Head. Binkerton How does Badstock come to get so many invitations to evening parties? Pilgarlic Well, you know a man who can stimulate the flow of con versation is always a welcome guest. Binkerton But Badstock is no talker. Pilgarlic He doesn't talk much him self he sings. Puck. Strength and Health. If you are not feeling strong and healthy, try Electric Bitters. I "la grippe" has left you weak and wear", use Electric Bitters. This remedy acts directly on liver, stomach and kidneys, gently aiding those, organs to perform their functions. If you are afflicted with sick headache, you will find speedy and permanent relief by taking Electric Bitters. One trial will convince you that this is the remedy you need. Large bottles only 50c. at Snipes & Kinersly's drug Store. "That cat made an awful noise in the back garden last night." "Yes, father. I Buppose that since he ate the canary he thinks he can sing." London Tid Bits. The success that has attended the use of Dr. J. H. McLean's Volcanic Oil Lin ament in the relief of pain and iu curing diseases which seemed beyond the reach of medicine, has been truely remarkable. Hundreds supposed to- be crippled for life with arms and legs drawn up crook ed or distorted, their muscles withered or contracted by disease have been cured through the use of this remedy. Price 25c, 50 and $1.00 per bottle. For sale by the Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co. Mrs Dabbler What do you think of my cake, dear? Mr Dabblea It just strikes me. Mrs. Dabbler of course; it's a pound-cake, dear. Inter Ocean. For a pain in the side or chest there is nothing so good as a piece of flannel dampened with Chamberlain's Pain Balm and bound on over the seat of pain. It affords prompt and permanent relief and if used in time will often prevent a cold from resulting in pneumonia. This same treatment is a sure cure for lame back. For sale by Blakeley & Hough ton Druggists. Seed Rye; Feed Oats. Rolled Barley. Poultry and Eggs bought and sold. Choice Groceries & Fruits. Grass Seeds. Living Prices. Cor. Second and Union Sts. WHY PEOPLE WORSHIP GOLD. Tls Relic of Barbarism and Has No Basis in Actual Value. Men are accustomed to regard g'old as the epitomization of wealth; to asso ciate it with ease and luxury; to con sider it the apotheosis of security and power, says William Penn, Jr., in Blue and Gray. This is merely a relic of barbaric ages, when monetary science was unknown and bits of the rare metals, coined or uncoined, were the particular possessions of king's and con querors. This popular ascription of in herent value to the yellow metal, this silly notion that it by some means pos sesses a reg-al rigiit to rule the com merce of the world, is so ingrained in human nature that most men recoil in dismay when it is suggested that its use as money may be entirely discon tinued. While silver shared the throne with g'old it, too, -was held in as much and sometimes in greater reverence; but when, : in 1873, concerted action condemned the white metal to take its place with corn and cotton and all the other subjects of the g-olden king1, the power of gold was doubled and made absolute. Too many who regard Bold as a ruler by inherent . right ' forget that, during the long struggle for su premacy, silver was more than once within an ace of degrading her rival to the ranks, but at the end the gold power triumphed. Had the result been reversed the advocates of "honest" money might now be filled with horror at the thought of "fifty-cent dollars" of gold instead of silver. People who are influenced by this ancient form of gold idolatry would do well to consider that it is a god of their own creation, whose power may and should be cut off whenever it becomes oppressive. The Pope as a Mountaineer. The present pope in his younger days was an ardent Alpine climber. A mon ument is now being erected at Pietras tornina, in the extreme corner of the Parthenian district, as a reminder of his exploits as a mountain tourist. In 1844 Gioachimo Pecci was at this place to meet a fellow prelate. The ruins of the robber castle, that of the prince of Storno, which, according to the tra ditions of time and place, no man had ascended for many decades, aroused the ambition of Bishop Pecci. For the sum of twenty paoli he secured the loan of a shepherd's suit, and, rigged out in this style, he managed to reach what seemed to be an inaccessible height of two hundred and fifty meters. Pecci was- at that time an apostolic legate. The monument commemorates the anniversary of these exploits- The Heart of ah Admiral. A silver box was recently .found at Aubonne, in Switzerland, containing the heart of Abraham Duquesne, the great admiral of Louis XIV., after whom the first settlement at Pitts burgh was named, and who was the only Protestant allowed to remain un molested in France after the revoca tion of the edict of Nantes. His sons, who were banished, had placed the heart in the church of Aubonne, from which it is to be sent soon to Dieppe, Duquesne's birthplace. ' W. A. McGuire, a well known citizen of McKay, Ohio, is of the opinion that there is nothing as good as children troubled with colds or croup as Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. He has used it in his family for several years with the best results and always kept a bottle of it in the house. Alter having la grippe be was himself troubled with a severe cough. He used other remedies without benefit and then concluded to try the children's medicine and to his delight it soon effected a permanent cure. 50 cent bottles for sale by Blakeley & Houghton .Druggists. Notice of Proposed Street ImproTcment By order of the Council of Dalles Citv. notice is hereby given that the portion of the east Bide of Union street, com mencing on the south line of Fourth street, Dalles City, and extending south erly to wnere tne north line of the allev which forms the north line of the public scnooi grounds intersects said street, said puDiic scnooi 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 nlank Sidewalk eight feet in width along the east side or said street. - Dated this 20th day of October, 1894. Douglas s. jjutur, Recorder for Dalles City. Cord Wood. We again have an abundant supply of dry fir and bard wood- for immediate delivery at the lowest rates, and hope to be favored with a liberal share of the trade. : Jos. T. Peters fc Co. i-nrrA :ROYAfc DEADBEATv How King Milan Filled His Pepleted Parse by Shady Methods. One hundred and sixty thousand dol lars per annum is the income conceded to ex-King Milan of Servia, by his son and by the national treasury in con sideration of his quitting the country and betaking himself once more to Paris or some other distant capital. It is now some months since he left the French metropolis to all intents and purposes penniless, numerous judg ments out against him and a quantity of so-called debts of honor unpaid. His credit was exhausted and he was, financially speaking, on his beam ends. It may be remembered, says a writer in the Philadelphia Press, that when he first abdicated he stipulated for a large annuity, which was granted to him. On two occasions subsequently he obtained large lump sums from the Servian army to defray pressing debts. Then he commuted his annuity for a third lump sum of large dimensions, sold his office and dignities in Servia for a fourth sum, his Servian citizen ship for a fifth ; and finally obtained from the czar a gift of two million rubles in return for a solemn under standing never under any circumstances to return to, Servia. It was not very long before he had squandered all his money at the card table, upon the turf and in the demi-monde. Finding himself without resources, he effected a reconciliation with his wife in the hope of inducing her to come to his assistance, she being very rich, Queen Natalie, however, knows her hus band too well and declined to do any thing whatever for him until he had eaten humble pie by himself demand ing ' the annulment of that divorce which he had taken so much trouble to obtain, eind even then she refused to give him any of her own money, but merely offered to use her influence with her son to grant him a new al lowance. Seeing that young Alexan der was somewhat slow about comply ing with the request, and his position at Paris without either money or credit being absolutely untenable, he, in de fiance of all the promises which he had made alike to the czar, to the Austrian government and that of Servia, re turned to Belgrade, where his pres ence brought about a couple of minis terial crises and led to no end of diffi culty. And he has refused to budge from there until his financial exigen cies are complied with. I suppose that unless the tired Ser vians depute some one to put him out of the way by means of knife, pistol or poison, we shall in course of time see him once more going through the same process. That is to say, he will commute his present income for a lump sum, squander it and then return to Belgrade and upset one or two more ministries, disturbing things general ly until again bought off. KEPT AHEAD OF THE TRAIN. A Moose Able to Travel at the Bate of Forty Miles an Hoar. The morning express on the Bangor & Aroostook from Houlton had a race with a moose one morning recently, .says the Boston Herald. Between Island Falls and Crystal, about thirty miles out of Houlton, the engineer saw a huge moose on the track, watching the approaching train and evidently undetermined whether to derail it or jump off and let it go about its busi ness. The engineer blew a succession of sharp blasts with the whistle, and this tkc moose evidently took for the word go for a race between himself, and the train. At any rate, he turned, and, with the train not more than a dozen rods from him, he started down the track. The train was moving at the rate of forty miles an hour, but the moose flew like the wind ' and kept his distance. The passengers heard the warning blast of the whistle, and knew that something was on the track, but not until the train reached Crystal sta tion did they learn that they had been racing with a moose. For a quarter of a mile the big ani mal kept up the almost incredible pace necessary to keep ahead of the train, and then,, as if satisfied that he had convinced his competitor that there wasn't anything in the steam engine line that was coming into Aroostook could outdo him in a sprinting match, he left the track and plunged into the woods without so much as looking be hind him. THEY ARE MEN AT TEN. The Boys Have Bat a Short Childhood In Cores. In Corea the boys are called men as soon as they reach the age of ten. They receive their final names at that age, and assume the garments of full-grown men, all except the horsehair hat, which they cannot put on until' they have passed through a period : of probation. Permission to wear the horsehair hat is the final act of transforming the small Doy into a real, sure-enough man though he doesn't look it. Such a short childhood may, at first thought, posseses a charm for boys in our colder climate. But it will be quickly understood that making boys into men as soon as they are old enough to feel .that they would like to be men is not a wise idea. The Coreans, al though possessing a certain degree of a queer kind of civilization, are not a people to be patterned after. In Corea, if a young man's parents are not rich, he can never hope to become so by 'his own efforts. And. if he is not a member of a noble family he can never hope to reach an exalted position. As for cour age the Coreans have never shown much of that. The Corean men are not in themselves a good argument for a brief childhood. Frogs Are Wonderful. The toad is a higher animal than the frog, because it gives birth to little air breathing toads, whereas the frog lays eggs that produce fish-like tadpoles. But the frog in certain respects is the most wonderful creature in the world. Think of a vegetable-eating fish with gills that turns into an air-breathing land animal,' developing teeth and be coming a carnivorous quadruped. That is the life history of the frog.- BAf3YWASWEl.-irr-BAPTIZED." T Stolen for the Purpose by Pious But PU. fertnff Guatemala Domestic. A San Franciscan, traveling through Central America with his wife and young babe, rented furnished apart ments in Guatemala and engaged a serv ant to act as nurse and general house maid, says the San Francisco Argonaut. She had been in their service less than a week when she inquired of the father if the babe tvas baptized. He replied in the negative, whereupon she insisted that the child, a girl, would be forever lost. Within six weeks he had tried four consecutive servants, but found that each one would pilfer small arti cles, and finally determined to get along without any help. .One after noon, while sauntering lazily through the plaza, he was accosted by servant No. 1, who asked if the babe was yet baptized. "No," replied the father. "Still unbaptized." "Well," she an swered, "it is all right, as I stole her away one Sunday, and the good padre baptized her, calling her Maria, so her soul will be saved." "As it cannot hurt her, and may help her, I am satis fied," thought the parent, and so dis missed the subject from his mind. The next day servant No. 2, with a new charge bundled in the linen swath on her back, approached him at the mar ket place with the oft-repeated query: "Did you have the baby baptized?" and to his reply of "No" 6he consoled him by explaining that she had taken the little one to the cathedral and had it named Catarina, so her soul was saved a second time. Somewhat amused, the father hunted up and in terviewed the succeeding servants, and discovered that the babe had been stolen to the church by each of them and quietly baptized. Consequently the name ran Maria Catarina Margarita Cruz Eloisa Refugio, besides that of Emily given by the parents. LONG MATRIMONIAL CAREER. A Couple in Hungary Celebrate Their Hundredth Anniversary. We have all heard of tin weddings, celebrated after ten years of marriage; of crystal weddings, after fifteen years; of china weddings, after twenty; of sil ver weddings, after twenty-five; of gold, after fifty, and of diamond, after seventy-five, or, as some folks celebrate it, after sixty years, says the Philadel phia Press. But the scale of celebra tion does not seem to extend any fur ther, and one wonders what precious thing would be selected to give its name to a wedding recently celebrated in Hungary the one hundredth anni versary of the marriage of Szarthmary and his wife. This appears to be' a circumstance which is entirely impossible. But the marriage of this aged pair is duly and officially recorded as having taken place in May, 1794, at which time, ac cording to the record, they were of mar riageable age. As in Hungary, at that time, a bridegroom must have reached the age of twenty and the bride that of fifteen, the pair must now be at least one hundred and twenty and one hun dred and fifteen vcars respectivelv The one Hundredth anniversary was celebrated at the town of Zsombolyi in the town of ' Banat, which has for a long time allowed the venerable couple a pension in recognition of their great age and fidelity to each other. . Even the oldest residents of Zsom bolyi have no other recollection of Jean Szarthmary and his wife than as old people. No one relation of either survives. Their century of wedded life is so well and officially attested that many notables and Hungarian of ficials attended the anniversary cele bration and gave them many presents. SAVING TIMBER IN MISSISSIPPI. St riii gent State Laws for the Preservation of Forests from Extinction. Timber depredations, according to the New York Evening Post, have been stopped practically in Mississippi by a law which punishes offenders severely There are large areas of forest land there belonging either to the United States government or to the state, and the temptation to settlers in remote regions ' to enter upon them and help themselves to wood was Often too strong to be resisted. When drivent from federal land by deputy United States marshals, . the timber,: thieves found refuge in the state forests, which were not so well policed, and by moving from the one territory to the other they contrived ' to escape arrest. The federal officers finally - became so vigilant that timber stealing' proved a dangerous business, and the - thieves transferred all their operations to - the state lands. The legislature thereupon passed the law referred to, and it has improved the morals of the people so much that some districts which former ly were the scene of wholesale -depredations are now almost free from the raids of poaching woodmen. The stat ute imposes a fine of two dollars per acre for each acre in every f ortyacre sub-division of land upon which any trespass is committed. - For- the pro tection of private owners it also pro vides that for every tree cut down without their consent a fine of five dol lars shall be paid.- ; Odd Phase of Sunstroke. "A peculiar phase of sunstroke,'' said one of Philadelphia's most emi nent physicians the other day, accord ing to the Record, "is that a subject does not succumb to the attack until some hours after it occurs. The only explanation that medical science can give is that a sunstroke consists in a disintegration of the blood corpuscles, and ' considerable time elapses before the disintegrated blood -reaches - the nerve center in the brain which acts . as a governor on the heat system of the. body. The flow of the ' blood 1 finally paralyzes the heat centers, and the heat runs riot, raising the temperature of the body to a fearful height within a few min utes. As an instance of heat prostra tion the doctor cited the statistics of the British army in India, where the great majority of sunstrokes take ef fect between seven and nine o'clock in the eveninrr. ' . - Mexican Mustang Liniment for Burns, ' Caked & Inflamed Udders. Piles, Rheumatic Pains, Bruises and Strains, Running Sores, Inflammations', Stiff joints, Harness & Saddle Sores, Sciatica, Lumbago, Scalds, Blisters, Insect Bites, All Cattle Ailments, 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, email white spot in forehead, and one light' sorrel horse, white hind foot, email white etrip in face and saddle marked, both branded 0 on left stifle. Horee also branded A oil the right hind leg. A liberal reward will be paid for information which will lead to their recoverv,- by the under eigned. A. S. Macallister, SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for vvasco county. T-n-l Unit TfllnHfT ire T T Tknllr- CafcVi T tlUOCUU ATI J j iriaill til la , v n . v. .a xui , ctii aaa j. . Delk. and H. Fleckenstein and S. Julius Mayer. partners doing business under the firm name 01 r lecaensiein k juayer, ueienuauis. To J. T. Delk and Sarah E. Delk, of the de fendants above named: In the name of the State of Oregon, you and each of you are hereby reauired to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled suit on or oeiore monaay, me inn aay 01 feDruary, 18U5, that beincr the first day of the next reeular term of said Circuit Court following the expiration of the time prescribed in the order heretofore made for the publication of said summons; and if you or either of you fail so to appear and answer said complaint, judgment for want thereof will betaken against you, and the plaintiff will ap ply to the Court for the relief prayed for in his said bill of complaint, to-wit; For a decree or dering a foreclosure of the mortgage of ulaintiff. described and mentioned in plaintiff's com plaint, and that the premises mentioned therein. to-wit: fractional block 13, in Hood River proper, in Wasco county, Oregon, be sold in the manner provided by la w : that from the proceeds of such sale the plaintiff have and recover the sum of t763.67, and interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent, per annum since the 4th day of January, 1893; and the further sum of f 100 reas- nn.til. uttnrnoc'L few. tmutha. . .. I V. . L. n ......... and disbursements of thi suit, including sub sequent and accruing costs and exnenses of sale: that upon such foreclosure and sale all of the right, title and interest of the defendants, or of any or eiwer ox mem, ana 01 any or all persons, clalminflr or to claim through, hv nr under them. or any of them, be foreclosed and forever barred of the eauitv of redemption: that, nlnintiflf We .1. lowed to bid for and to purchase said premises at his option 7 that the purchaser thereof have the immediate possession of the same; that plaintiff have judgment against the said J. T. Delk and Sarah E. Delk for any sum that may remain unpaid on said note after the foreclo sure and sale of said premises: and for such further and other relief as to the court may Beem vo j lira, uuu cuimoie. The service -of this summons is made upon you by publicationthereof in The Dalles Chron icle, a newspaper of general circulation, pub- iiHovu weeAiy ai. xraues jicy, rv asco - county, Oregon, by oider of Hon. v. L. Bradshawi judge of the said court; which order was duly made at chambers In Dalles City, Oregon, on the H. H. RIDDEIX, nov7-decl9 - Attorney for Plaintiff. CO - 3 OA. P !3 O - CO CO W Pk " Q P 03 r-t if O -5 a- el t-i CO o ta Z. fTW CO G2SA BSSaEgl, . V.C3 ; PRORK3SIOMAL. H : H. RTDDELL ATTOBNIT-lT-LlV Office Court Street, The Dalles, Oregon.. I. B. Duma. FRANK MENKFBa. DOFTJB, & MKNKFEK Attobnsts - AT uw Rooms. 42 and 48, over Post tnre Building, Entrance on Washington Street The Dalles. Oregon. -- V!i. BEMKIT1T, ATTOKNEV-Ar-U A . Of- ace m Schanno' building. nt uin.. The uIihi. Oregon. J. B. CONDON. J. W. CONDON. CtONDON & CONDON, ATVORNEYS AT LAW Office on Court street. oddosIib the old court house, The Dalles, Or. B. S.HUNTINOTON. K. B. WTUON. HUNTINGTON & WILSON Attobnitb-at-la w Offices, French's block over -"iiBt Na tional Bank .- Dalies. Oregon. - H. WIL6ON ATTORNy-at-la w Rooms . French fe Co.'s Dana building, becond icreet. The Dalies, Oregon. J SUTHERLAND, M. D., C. M. ; F. T. M. C . II. C. P. and S. O., Physician and Sor- sreon. Rooms a ana 4, wnapman block. Residence Mrs. Thornbury's, west end of Second street. 'Chapman block. wtf 1 K. O. D. DOAN K PKTSICIAN 1KB sua I t io!. Office: -rooms & and e Chapman t,-k. Residence: S. E. corner Court and Fourth streets, sec nd door from the corner jmce hours 9 to la a. m., 2 to o ana 7 o a r. m. DelDDALL Dentist. Gas given for the Rainless extraction of teeth.- - Also teeth er on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of oe uoiden loocn. tjecona Btreet. SOCIETIES. w ASCO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. fe A. M. Meets nrst ana unra Monaay 01 eacn month at 7 DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6. Meets in Masonic Hall the third Wednesday. it each month at 7 P. M. trODEEN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. Mt. HoodCampNo.S9,MeetsTuesdayeven- ingof each week in Fraternity Hall, at 7 :30 p. m. COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 6, I. O. O. F. Meets every Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in K. of P. hall, corner Second and Court streets. Sojourning brothers are welcome. tl. tJIX)UOH. eec y. n. a. rm.i,-. . t. F'RIENDSHIP lodge, o. or r. neeis every Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in 3channo's buildine. corner of Court and Second itreets. Sojourning members are cordially in Tlted. W. L. BRADSHAW, D. W.Vahss, K. of R. and S C. C. ASSEMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF L. Meets in K of P. hall the second and fourth Wednes lays of each month at 7:80 p. m. WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE UNION will mt every Friday afternoon at 8 o'clock-at the reading room. All are Invited. ERN LODGE, DEGREE OF HONOR, NO. every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. mbs. mamik ubioss, c 01 a.. Mbs. B. J. RcesELt, Financier., rpVHE DALLES LODGE No. 2, I.O.O.T. Reg J ular weekly meetings Friday at 8 p. X., K. of P. HalL J. S. WlNZLKB, C. T. Dinsmork Pabish, Sec'y. TEMPLE LODGE NO. 8, A. O. U. W. Meets in Fraternity Hall, oyer Kellers, n Second ttreet, i nursaay evenings at 7 :su. - C. F. STEPHENS, ' W. 8 Mtbs, Financier. M. W w a a uvoirTTti DncrTt x- w i- . t ir every Saturday at 7:80 r. jc., in the K. of P. HalL - AMERICAN RAILWAY UNION, NO. 40. Meets second and fourth Thursdays each mftnth in K. of P. halL. : J. W; Rbady, vt . xx. ifunisBt ecu y. rreBi B OF L. E. Meets every Sunday afternoon In the K. of P. HalL ESANG VEREIN Meets every Sundav evening n tne k.. ot r. nail. BOF L, F. DIVISION, No. 167 Meets in K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednee lay of each month, at 7:30 r. M. "The Refiilator Line" The Balles, ftrtlaii anil Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Frelgat and PassBiigBr Uhjb Through Daily Trips (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalies Bud Fort land. Steamer Regulator leavea The Dalles at 7 a.m., connectingat the Gas cade Locks with Steamer Dalles City. Steamer Dalles City- leavea . Portland (Yamhill Bt. dock) at 6 a. m., connect ing with Steamer Regulator for The DalleB. ; 1 . i-, : PA8SKNOKK KATES, One way. .'. i Bound trip . .$2,00 . 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 eolicted. Call on or address, "' ' !' W: C. ALLAWAY, ' General Agent- THE-DALLES, OREGON J 1 FORD, Evangelist, Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes under date ol ALarcir zo, u. S. B. Med. Mfg. Co., ' - , Dufur, Oregon. -Gentlemen : : On arriving home last week, I found all well and anxiously awaiting. - Our 1 . . , i - . . r t. 3 1 A llLtie girl, eigiil ttiiu uue-uau yvm.o wiu, who had wasted away to 38 pounds, is now well, Btrong 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 Yours, Mr. & Mrs. J. F. Fobd. Ifyou 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 druggiBts.