THE STORY OF AN ORPHAN UIRL. Mattie's story was simple enough. The oruhan aitl of a former servant in a realthy family, Mattie had shared the lessons and the play of the younger daughter of the house, until a time came - -when it was convenient to turn ine num ble companion adrift to work for herself. It may have been a pieee of ill-luck his neighbors ascribed to Drew, that it should have been to his farm the girl came as help to his sister, or it may have been a piece of his good nature that vnrt him acrree to take under his roof this pretty lass, untrained for service and edmcated far above her station. . Drew's widowed sister, Mrs. Banks, who lived with him, and whose child it was Mattie had come to nurse, amongst other duties too numerous to mention, for there was but one servant kept Drew's sister exclaimed in despair when the farmer brought home the young, ladylike, delicate-looking girl: "We want a strong, hard-working lass! This one doesn't know her right hand from her left. She is as good as a lady, or as bad, and has never milked a cow in her life! What were you thinking of to bring her here?" Ah! that's my luck; well, we must do the best we can with her. If the stew ard had never mentioned her to me now but then he did mention her, and here she i3." There she was, and there she stayed, apt to learn, willing to be taught, grate ful for tho real kindness she met with. Mattie was soon the best hand at milk ing for miles around, and soon devoted to baby. Three years passed quiot!y, and then came the romance of Mattis's life. She was twenty that summer. Adam Armitage, a grave man, was fully ten .years her senior. A great traveler, a member of the world-renowned scientific society, a student and a discoverer he was between two scientific expeditions, refreshing heart and brain by a walking tour through the home countries. Adam's walking tour ended at the farm Drew had taken only a year before, and the dwelling-honse it had been found more convenient to inhabit than the smaller building on the old land clos9to the road. Mr. Armitage found the pure air of the dons good for him. He made friends with all the family. To Mattie it was delightful to meet once more some one with all the tricks and manner of the more refined society among which her youth had been passed. Little Harry followed his new friend wherever he went. Harry's mother called him a right down pleasant gentleman. The farmer called him a good mau. , They all missed him when he went away, 'Mattie most of all; but the next summer found him there again, a wel come old friend this time, and no stranger. Drew, a keen observer of all that went - uu uruuuu mm, was uui su uiucu iut.c li bv surprise as his sister was when one day toward the end of this second visit Adam and Mattie were both mysterious ly missing. A strong-armed lass made her appearance before night. She was . the bearer of a note from Mattie confess ing that she and Mr. Armitage were mar ried, and hoping the servant sent might supply her place, so that no one would be inconvenienced. Drew might shake his head and look thoughtful, but Mr. Armitaere was his own master, and it was not the first time a gentleman had married a country lass. Besides the deed was done and past re call. They had gone quietly to one of the churches in the town, and from whence the sound of bells floated up to the farm, and had been married by special license. Adam had taten a lodg ing for his bride, and there they passed one brief, bright week of happme3s.then one morning they walked quietly back together, Mattie blushing and smiling, and looking so lovely ana ladylike in a simple dress that she used to wear before she came to the farm that they hardly knew her. Adam explained that he meant to leave his wife for two days no more in care of her old friend, at the end of that time he would return and fetch her. There were arrangements to make with regard to the scientific expedition about to start immediately. It wo aid sail with out him now, but it behooved him to do his best that his place should be as well filled as it might be. There was also, hi3 mother to see, and prepare for receiv ing Mattie. Mattie walked a little way with her husband and the farmer, along the breezy uplands, and then Adam sent her back, and hastened his own steps in the direction of the little station at the foot of the downs. When he came ag?in, he said, laughing, it would be from B station, and that he would drive in a lly through the Stonedene gate along the track, the only approach to a carriage road leading to the farm. Mattie went away smiling, as he meant she should do, and only paused now and then to look alter the two men as long as they remained in sight. It was natural that she should feel a little afraid of this unknown lady, Adam's mother, but that fear was the only shadow on Mattie's path. It was an idyl, a poem, as true a love story as the world has seen, had written itself here in thi3 out-of-the way spot on the lonely Sussex . Downs. On the third day they might look for Adam to return, but that day passed and many another, until the days were weeks the weeks months, and he neither came nor wrote. Mattie remembered how when she had turned to look back for tho last time upon that homeward walk she had seen his figure distinct against the sky for an instant, and in the next lost it entirely as he passed out of sight over the swelling lines of hills. J ust so she seemed to have lost him in one instant of her life. And yet she never lost faith and trust in him never ceased to watch for his coming again. Drew, after a time, either goaded to the step by his sister's loud-voiced argu ments, or prompted to it by his own sense of what was due to Mattie, not only took pains 'to ascertain that tho marriage was real enough, but the fur ther pains of searching for and finding the address of .Adam Armitage of Lon don. It was strange how this girl and her former master both trusted Adam in the face of his inexplicable silence; iu the face of even a more ominous discov ery that he had never mentioned Mattie's name to his mother, or alluded to Mattie i of at all. As for Adam. Mrs. Armitaere had I declared he was not with her then, that she could not give an address that would find him, an assertion that conhrmed Mattie in the idea that he had so often spoken to her. 1 As autumn passed ana tne evenings grew chill with the breath of the coming winter. Mattie s health seemed to fail. The deep melancholy that oppressed her threatened to break tne springs of life. In order to escape Mrs,1 Banks tho girl took to lonely wanderings over the downs; wanderings that ended always at stonedene; until, witn tne instinct of a wounded animal that peeks to bear its pain alone, or from tho eyer-recollection of the last words of Adam, when he said that it was by way of Stonedene that he would return, she besought the farmer to send away the woman in charge of tho house and allow her to take her place. Drew yielded to the wish of the wife whose heart was breaking with the pain of absence and the mystery of silence, and Mattie, on this foggy day had al ready lived at Stonedene, on the watch always for the coming of (Adam. The fog increased instead of diminish ed with tho approach of evening. Drew could not see his own house until he was close to it; as he had remarked, the mys- terv of Mattie s affairs was not more im penetrable than the veil' hiding all nat ural objects just then,' When he had put up the horse and gone in to tea, Mrs. Banks, as she bustled about, preparing the meal which Mattie s deft little fingers had been wont to set with so mtub quietness as well las celerity, did not fail to greet him with the question: 'Well, how is she? ' "She" had come to mean Mattie in the vocabulary of the farmer: and his sister. "About as usual in health. Drew re- plied, lifting the now five-year old Harry 7 . . 1 . . . 1 to his knee, "but troubled in mind though to be sure, that is! as usual, to "She is out of her mind," exclaimed Mrs. Banks, irritably. VEvery one but yourself knows that: and if you did not know it, it is only because you are as mad as she is or anyone might think from the way you go on.'f "Nav. nay." said Drew gently, as the butter dish was set on the table with a vehemence that made tho tea cups rattle. "There are no signs of madness about Mattie unless you call her trust in her husband 60 harsh a namei" "Husband! A pretty husband, indeed J7ve no patience with jhim; nor you either. As if it were not a common tale enough! It would be better to persuade the girl to come home and get to work again, tnan to encourage ner in ner fancies, while you pay another servant here and times so hard as they are "I was thinking to-day." the farmer went on, softly passing his broad palm over tho blonde head of the cnud upon his knee. "I wa3 thinking as I came along as how it stands written; 'He that loveth not hia brother whom he hath seen, bow can he love God whom he hath not seen: At that moment the shadowy form of some one. going to the front door passed the window against which! the fog pressed closely. Drew sat little Harry on his feet, and rose slowly, listening with in- tentness and a surprising look that made his sister ask what ailed him. "Hover! the dog does not bark. Who by the mercy of heaven, it is the man himself!" cried Drew, i as the door opened with a suddenness that caused Mrs. Banks to drop the plates upon the brick floor. For Adam Armitage stood upon the threshhold. Adam pale and worn, a shadow of his former self, but himself unmistakably. Adam looked around the room as though seeking some oneJ Bmiled in his old-fashioned way at Harry, gave a half- curious, half-indifferent glance to EIiza Banks, as she turned toward the farmer. i "Drew," said he simply, "where is my wife?" "Mrs. Armitage is waiting for you at Stonedene. sir. There was some talk of your coming back that way." "Waiting?" Adam threw up his hands with a passionate gesture. "Whit can she have thought?" i "She has thought you were gone, after all, upon that voyage, and that your let ters miscarried Sometimes she has thought you were dead, Mr. Armitage, but never " Drew broke off and held out his hand. "We knew1 you could ex5 plain what has happened, sir, he con cluded, j Adam drew his hand across his eyes in the way a man might do who has been lately aroused from) a bad dream, and has some trouble to collect his thoughts. j "That has happened," he said, "which if it had not befallen me, myself, and be-' come a part of my own (experience, I should find it difficult to find it possible. A strange thing has happened" here the old smile they remembered so well broke the light over his face "and yet a thing not more strange, j as the world goes, than tliat you I say nothing of Mattie but that you should have trusted me throughout. I detected no distrust in your voice, no doubt in your eyes not even when they first met mine" just now. They called mine, a rare case. mend ; tney inigut say tue same of your mm - w . 1 a ' m belief in me. But btonedeue, did you say9 Walk with me there and hear my tale as we go." i "This evening, and in this mist, and you looking far from well, began Eliza Banks. "Mattie has waited so long al ready that one night more will make but little difference. "One night, one hour more than I can help will make all the difference between willful wrong and a misfortune that has fallen on 11 alike." i He would not be dissuaded from set ting out at once, and in another minute tho two men were pursuing their way through the driving mist, jAdam talking as they went. j After parting from Mattie he had taken a train to London, where, arriving in due course, ho drove in' a cab to his mother's house in Grosvenor street. within a few yards of which his cab over turned, and Adam was thrown out. fall ing heavily on his head. After a long interval, however, he opened his eyes and ''covered consciousness, and. as he did so slowly at first, but after a lme more fully tho astounding discov iry was made that his memory was en tirely gone, j However, this state was one from which, so said his friend3. science could at will recall him. and the operation necessary to restore Adim to himself was deferred only until his health permitted its being attended by a minimum risV. j It was while Adam was in the state 1 above described that Drew had seen Mrs. Armitage. A proud woman, she was ill- pleased to near that he had married a farm-servant; for that was the one fact that, stripped of Drew's panegyrics upon Mattie s superior education and refined manners, alone stared her in the face. Hastily resolving there was no need to embitter her own life by an attempt to recall to her son this ill-fated marriage sue did not hesitate to deceive the un welcome visitor. Change of scene had been ordered for the patient, and before Drew called at the house in Grosvenor street for the second time, Adam and his mother were gone. It was in Paris, months after that, that the operation was finally successfully performed, and the first word of Adam was Mattie's name. The first effort of his newly recovered powers was to relate to his mother the history of his marriage, and to' write to his wife. "God grant the suspense has neither killed nor driven her mad," he ex claimed. It was to his mother's hand the letter was confided, and with that exclamation ringing in her ears, Mrs. Armitage stood beside the brazier filled with charcoal and burning in the ante-room of their apartment in the Champs Elysees. She was not a bad woman, but the temptation was too great to allow this affair to un ravel itself, and what would turn up? If the girl were dead, why no harm has nbeen doe, and the terrible mistake of the son's was rectified at once. If the other alternatives were to prove true.and Mattie had lost her senses, Adam would be free from her, or measures could ba taken to insure so desirable a result. Mrs. Armitage tore tho letter into pieces, I 1 1 A. 1 l!l II. . t and waited by the brazier until the frag ments were charred. Adam asked no awkward question, and was not even sur prised at receiving no answer to his epistle, since it had announced his com ing. The first day his health admitted of it he set out alone for England. Such was the story. When Drew told of his efforts to seek Adam, and had men tioned that no letter had reached Mattie, Adam was at a loss to understand the part his mother had played. But he never spoke of it then or at any future time. The house door at Stonedene stood ajar; evening naa dosed in now, and the chilly fog was still abroad,!) ut the figure at the gate was dimly discernible. Adam hastened his footsteps. "For heaven's sake, sir, be careful: the suddenness of it might turn her brain," cried Drew, laying a detaining hand apon the arm of his companion. Adam gently shook him off. "Suddenness," he repeated. "Aye, it is sudden to you and to Mrs. Banks.but for me and Mattie whose thoughts are day and night and night and day, full of each other, how can it be sudden?" Drew stood still, and Adam went on alone until his footsteps became audible, and Mattie turned her head to see him standing at her side. Adam had been right. ISio fear was there for Mattie's brain. AU excitement. all surprise and wonder came afterward; at the first supreme moment, and with a satisfied sigh, as of a child who has got all it wants, Mattie held out her arms to him with one word ."Husband!" As Adam drew her to him it was not only the mist or the darkening evening that blinded Drew, so that for a moment or two he saw neither of them. People say Drew's luck has turned. From that day Stonedene found a ten ant. It is newly done up and prettily finished now; Mr, and Mrs. Armitage enme down here once or twice a year with their children for a breath of fresh air and to visit old friends. An oak whose rings showed it to be one hundred and twenty years old was cut down in Buckspor, Me., recently, and imbedded at the eightieth ring, a point which was at the surface forty years ago, tne wooa cnopper louna to his amazement, a diamond pin containing twenty-four brilliants in a silver setting JNobody Knows whose it was, or can imagine how it came to be where it was found. Chicago Times. ; Measuring Wheat in North Caro iiiNA. A gentleman of our village not long since oaught in Grassy creek, about three miles from here.a huge turtle. The flesh fed four families five days, until they got tired of it, besides a good deal given away to the neighbors. The shell is used for measuring wheat. Oxford Torchlight. "Blood will tell," so be careful how you make confidants of your relatives. PortiaM -Mm Mm ! JL.KA.DIXO MUSIC HO I'M F.. J. H. BOUBIX8 V- NO', JeSO FIRV1' r.- Wholesale and retail dealers In Pianos. Organs, Sheet music and Musical .Merchandise, Picture Frames and Mouldings. Country order will receive prompt attention. a. n. MOKTIMEK. Portland blank book luaii'i- xactory, e.'i Washlnjaon street. Portland, Or. The reliable establishment. Tiptop for Rood work. 5hdcjhoolC!SvIthio UARULE WURKM. MI?KOK.fc VftXPEB, 4T Nturk.-Monuments, Tomos, Headstones, etc., furnished in 1 til an and American marble. Countiy orders filled promptly. Send for prices anrtdi signs. NDHVETftRS, W. . AlA-lfll K. Civil Kngineer, Contractor and surveyors. Office Room No. 8 Lane's Building, l'.a -t Portland. All kinds of surveying and drafting don.forany part of the countrv. BAKF.R1IX' E V PI It K Hi'KEK'V :1 Washngion! Voss & Fuhr, Props. Manufacturers of Pilot bread, Soda. . Picnic, Utitter, Boston, Hugar and Shoe Fly crackers. Orders from the trade bolioited aud promptly at tended to. D. I. KKXXK1Y,- Attorney and Counselor at Law lioom Si ekuin' building. Legal business pertaining to Letters Patent for Inventions, befor 'he Patent Oflice. or in the Courts, a specialty. ITflllK "WHITE." WE HAVE THIS DAY SOLD JL our entire interest In, and transferred the agency of the White Kewlntf Machine to Mr. John B. Garri son, of 167 Third str et. Portland, Or. Mr. Oarrtsou will hereafter supply the growing demand for tub superior and popular sewing machine. apis n I f .L ifr RA HR OREGON BLOOD PURIFIER SEEDS! SEEDS ! 'YyE HAVE NOW ON HAND AT THE OREGON SEED DEPOT The largest stock of seeds ever held by one firm north of San Francisco, which will be.sold at reason able figures, consisting of Grass. Vegetable, Flower feeds, etc, etc. Agents for "Imperial Egg Food;" also for Wickersharn's Uone Phosphates. Kend for atalogue; free to all applicants. Address, , MILLER BR'tS., 209 Second Street. Portland. USE ROSE PILLS. Advantage or Being: a Farmer. The Springfield Itepublican thus sums up the advantages of the farmers' occu pation: "There are advantages in oemcr a farmer that he ought to think of .these times. His lot may be hard work and no end of it. but he is the only man in the countrv who can command safety. The forehanded farmer has always the assurance of his living, and it may be a very good living, while he is equally sure that what he produces will be wanted for others. And if times are hard and prices low. he doesn't have to shut up Bhop, fold his unwilling hands, and see his property depreciate in idle ness, as manv a manufacturer does. H does not need to venture highly, and if he makes no brilliant profits he runs no risks. It is estimated from actual figures that out of 1000 traders, but eeven can acquire wealth. CiruriVATED Bibds. The New York Times tells of a robin in that city that whistles three airs from "Fatiniza" and speaks rench. uood Times, that may all be very well for New York, but we have a plain untaught shanghai rooster that speaks Crow perfectly and sings "In the Morning by the 'Bright Light." Hawkeye. Slnven'a Yosemite Cherty TootU Paste An aromatic combination for the preservation of the teeth and gums. It is far superior to any E reparation of its kind in the market. In large, ami9ome opl pot3, price fifty cents. For sale by all druggists. 1 lodge, Davis & Co., whole sale agents, Portland, Oregon. Book Akp Music Buyeks: Send to Wiley B Allen, 153 Third street, Portland, for any book or music published. Orders by mail filled promptly. The "Musical Pastime' a monthly Journal of music, 50 cts. a year. Send stamp for ig catalogue of music. DON'T BUY BOSS BOOTS UNLESS YOU WANT THE BEST. SEE THAT OUR NAME IS ON EVERY PAIR. AKIN. SELLING & CO. V n &a11 Mia rrvlrl mnlal rdintj-KTranlifb" of A . . vt- vw . i 0 PrrMtirwl hnj lntlv mniie Rome of the best Mioto- graphs of prominent people ever produced in Oretron. llis nictures of Mis Bessie Louie King are the best sue has ever naa. Abell takes no second place in his art work5. The Chanman Sisters, Miss Conchita, Leo Brothers and hosts of new talent at the Elite theater in Tortland, the only first class variety theater in Oregon. Turkish Ruos. Send to John B. Garrison, 167 Third street Portland, for catalogues ot ie- ftigns. Garri3on repairs ail kinds of sewln machines. Take Win. Pfunder's Oregon Blood Purifieiv That if you are In wnotof thoroughly rellubl Informa tion about theresourct-aof Oregon. Washl-iaton, Idaho and Moutuna, and the 1'iw-lli.; .Northwest in general, you should at once A har,i.somiy illustrate! and ably conducted twenty fourpage publication now euterii'g , IIS XI.VTII 8UCCESPCL TEAB. Always umlpr the sam proprietorsh p and manage ment. Hent (postage paid i for one year. 2.0a Sample copy 25 cts. X MA.MUKI.. Publisher. IV 95 Front St., Portland, Or. SEWING MACHINE STOKE 167 THIRD ST. KEPATBms Mia ON SHORT NOTICE. JlLMdln ' MACHINES OIXJ9. NEEDLES, oar THREAD. ATTACHMENTS,etc voa THI HOUSEHOLD & WHITE! JOHN A. CHILD. WALTER A. (ill A DON. John A. Child & Co., DRUGGISTS, DKALKRS IS Fine Chemicals, Toilet Articles, Rubber Goodi and DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES. Special attention giv en to CJkSlM. OIIDEIl? By Mall. THE PHOTOGRAPHER, FIRST AMD TA.XI.OM STItKKT, Portland, Orruin. Full Set of Teeth for $ Iff. Beat Set, 815. TEETH FILLED AT LOW ltATES; SATISFAC tlnn triiar.itla.ul "!.... njn.tH : . n.. ..... i , . i ...... v v. n.wi tiuiuiiiiniritru. I't'lllttl Kinu' uates. Portland. Oregon. Room 54, Union Block, Stark street entrance. l&OO. .1885. J. A. STROWBRIDGE, DIKKCT IMPORTER AND DKALER IN LEATHER & FINDINGS. NO. ISO FKOXT STREET, Portland. - - O reran. NTI3ELL 10 000 Pianos i.uoo Organs. ir. Be y f '.ufaetiirrra Front $.- tul. uoO Chh. Renter Itistrllmriit CaUlufc-im Ftm, AnrisfcLt.. 1M cor. V-!tPi.w.el, SS "ATS AW I : ' AND 1 n 813 &WESTINGHOUSESCO. Schenectady, Xcw York. i BRANCH HOUSE, i PORTLASfl); OREOO.V ! G: P. DART, Manager. fJ VyTk' iteS "ffeflii 'P:"4fSD33 MANUFACTURERS of THRKSIIERS, LEVEIt TRACTION ENGINES. DRAO HAW, Ac. We do But we'll say we. can prove that we have u machine ciflc Coas. We claim we can thresh cleaner from tlis work In general than others. Neither do we have to rebuild our ruachi ies in the Held at the TIME and EX PENSE of the FARMER, We warrant all machinery sold by uh. We FURTHER OCA RANTER that our Engine will do the SAME WORK with ONE-TIIIKD LESS FUEL and WATER than ANY EN'CilNR Iu this MARKET. ,Do not buy without seeing our goods address!, . O. IVcKtlnghouse fc Co.. Portland. Oregon. Ofllcf fool nf Mori lm N. SETI I-K TIMS Ui.I CALIFORNIA PRUIT SALT- A Pleasant and Efficacious Remedy. (F YOU HAVE ABUSED YOURSELF Bv over indulsence In eatingr or diinkiiig; have nick or nervous headache: dryness of the skin, with a feverish tendency; night sweats and sleeplessness; by all means use j SJaven's California Fruit Salt, Lnd feel yonrie once more. It N the woman's friend, rv it; l per bottle: 6 lvtt!es for ". For sale bv all rureists. HOIM E. DAVIS & CO., Wholesale Agent:. SAX c!Alli:hy. ix o t o 5 r a lx or r Corner First Mil Morrison Streets, VORTLAXP OREGON. NEW YORK JEWELRY MANUF'G CO IOT First U, net. WnhltiKton and Stark, , T .rf l.nnrl. Ore mil. Agents, for the Kockford Railrtiad Watches, and luuU.. In l-lii.la nf iowulpr 4 'omit TV OrilpM filled with dispatch. Ooodssent O. O. D. with privilege of examining before bnj ltnr. S1000 HEW AUD WILL BE PAID TO ANY PEI1SOX PRODUC lug a more eirectual remedy than Dr. Keek's Sure Cure for Catarrh, Which has stood the test for fourteen years. Phy?: clans. Druggists, and all who have used and tnor oughly tested it, pronounce it specific for the cure of that loathsome disease. Try iu , Your druggist haa it, price f i. Dr. Keck thoroughly understands, and is eminently successful in the treatment of all chronic am. diftl- enlt diseases of both sexes and u!l oges, having made a specialty of their treatment for fourteen years He treats Cancer without using the knife. Ills favor ite prescription Is furnished to ludy patients Free. No lady should be wit bout it. Young, middle-aged or old, male or female, Insanity or a life of nuD'ering is your Inevitable doom unless you apply in time to the physician wno understands, ami is competent to treut your case. Wasto no ntoro time nor money with in competent physicians. All coinmuuir'ations attended to with dispatch, and are strictly confidential. Medi ciaes sent to any part of the country. Circulars, test! njontais, ana a list or printed questions rurtihcu on application. CUXMITLTATIU.V FK.C Inclose a three-cent stamp for list and addres DR IAME K&CK. ts o. 135 First, street. Tortiaiid. Or. EYE & EAlt IXFIUMARY SANITARIUM. OR HOME FOR TIE SICK SZncuduat ICond, le. Irter or.tl Wood Hts., Konth 1'iMll'ind, uc. Dr. PIlkltiKton. late Irofeasor of Kye Er DTSt'fi"s li the Medicul Department f Wii:atnett l.nlversily has ererted a fine huil.ung. on a beautiful, elevation ;n f lie south t:ut of the c!tv. and Ls prepared to accomo- date patients salferiiiif friini nil diseus'sof the KY K, lUARtir THROAT. Als will pay Kp- ivl tittentioii to iersona laixinn under Chronic JVrervo-is aiTections, and to uisetuufi lKH-uiiur to woukmlwui r-H-eive a nun tetl nuniiHTor cases exnectimr eo'iinieiiiem. The Intention is to provi.-ie a ilouie fur sncn rases nth all the nest hvirt: n!o aJcencies ci-moliied witn tm best medlCMl skill to he had in the lnvtm'Mdis. Consulting physician and sis rgon Dr. Philip liarvey, Pri-f. of dLseii4-H of women and children in the medical department VIIIsniette LniverMty. Also Dr. J. M. F. ltmwne, iTof. of Physiology me., do't. Wlilaniette l.'niversit v. For any amount rerervnees ana circnar. n"ire.s ... .m m ... .w . v Cor. 1st and WitBhlnstou Mts., Portland. Or. Sylotf. Sow Cora tea I It CI D OR DRY, VVACF. 1 (: "A Tf OfPH b.Kli. iJ IjisiMlfators."1 price Jry Cure and In.-Aitita tore nmlleil on r-e!pt of price, with ,ru.i 'J iitu- etc. n.t. KKI oSlOKK A Co.. DrugirlMs 1 -1 rt-l utreet. Po-iUnd. 'Jr. . Kfiv tor the W. J;";'" IPlli 0 II VA II li'lr, -Urn . T - -J- r l.r Jf U I USE ROSE PILLS. Also General Agents for Tks Wettlnghame Machine Co. Aietv Doable Cylinder, Single Ac Uou, Self.Contalo. cd Engine. Unexcelled for Kconorayin every particular. rSkilied Knrrlneer unuetes n:ry. No Packing, no AdjUBt iug, no I'oiiiiding In boxen. and THE A I) IIORSK TOWEIIS, I'ORTABLK anJ not ola'm to have the ONLY .THRESHER In Oregon. the bwa adapted to the wantn of the Farmers of the I'a straw, sav tha jjraia hottt-r, an. I io more and better or licarlnsr from us. Tor circulars or other Information It The Flnet ISITTEUS In the U OKL1X TI1EY EFFECTUALLY CURE MALARIAL IrlSEASES, Vitalize the Syitcm nnd nrreat the i-Avaire the Dreiolful Alcohol IlaUlt, Dll'SUUAMA. Auk your Drugxlfct or Wine Merehiuit them. WILMKR1HXO A. CO., AeenU. Han Fma el ceo. CHARLES IvOIIN A. CO.. Sote AgonU KvrthwMtern Coast, Ao. 41 Front tiet, Portland. Or. BOSS BOOTS ARE BEST. THEY ARE ALL STAYED SEAMS. IVL V SO OTIIF.R. See that Unr Jiame U on Every Pair. AKI.V, REIJ.1MJ .lr CO., Iortl:ind. Orecon.. D R. SPINNEY.- No. 11 Kearny street, 8. F., Treats all Chronic and Special Diseases YOUNG MEN fTTHO MAY BE SUFFERING FROM THE KFi VV fects of youthful follies or indiscretion, will do well to avail themselves of this, the greatest boon ever laid at the altar of suffering humanity. DR. 8PINNKY will guarantee to forfeit for e ery case of Seminal Weakness or private diseases of m.oy kind or character which he undertakes and fails to cure. . 11IDDLE.AOED HFJV. There are many at the age of thirty to sixty who are troubled with too Irequent evacuations ot tuebladder, often accoinpaiiled by a sli'h sniKrtlng or hnrnlng sensation and a weakening of the system in a manner the patient cannot account for. On examining the urinary deposits a ropy sediment will often he found, and sometimes small particles of albumi-r will appear, or the color will be of a thin mJkish line. Again changing to a dark and torpid appearance. There are many men who die of this difficulty, ignorant of the cause, which Ls the second stace of iSemlnhl Weakness, Dr. 8. will guarantee a perfect cure in all such cases, and a healthy restoration of the gouitor nninary or gans. Office Hours 10 to 4 and G to 8. Sundays from 10 ta 11 A.M. Consultation free., 'thorough examination and advice, ". . . Call or addre s UK.- H lIXX F.Y fc CO., No. 11 Kearny ,tn-i t, tan Francisco, Cal. BiaTAlfBAST T1IK MKST IS TUE CXTT All Sroderu Improvements. Open all day. .1. il. IttCK.W Kit. Ironreor r- CRS. rnttLAfJD & ruberts, Cor. rrt A VftmliiSI M-., Portlan!, Or. (DcTidon's rhof.igrsph Gallery. fint-ciasj work at the meet reasonable rate Have both ha 1 dirut years carxtlenco la Oregoa aud Callfornhi. PERUVIAN I- t- V - v 1 f ' ,. . ... . t.'.'.-.-.? . - ' . ... . - I - - p-f ' - - ' - -' M m. mm u ' '' ' If USE rose pix,:ls.