Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, June 05, 1894, Image 3

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Here and There.
Eleotioo onnies but onoe a year.
Miss Lhiuh Muir is visiting friends in
Walla Walla.
J. H. Piper was np from the Lexing
ton Saturday last.
Artbnr Smith will clean watches at
the reduoed price of SI.
Mrs. Pry Wilson came in from Monu
ment Sunday evening last.
Frank Kellogg returned from Harney
and Grunt last Saturday.
C. A. Hod son will soon leave for the
valley where he expects to live.
Wanted A few more customers for
the home laundry. Mountain House.
Jas. Fristoe oame in yesterday from
Pendleton with a load of beer for J. B.
Natter.
Hood's Pills are the best after-dinner
Pills, assist digestiou, cure headache.
Try a box.
Those that have county sorip for sale
should call on (ieorge denser at The
First National Bunk. 2-tf.
So far as oan be heBrd from, the re
publican ticket, with a tew exceptions is
ahead in Morrow count.
Photographs $1.50 pel dozen at Shep
pard's gallery, near opera bouse, north
Main St., Heppner, Ore. 26tf.
At Adkins urove last Sunday, a picnic
was held, several of our Heppner people
being in attendance.
Green Mathews has opened up his
barber shop, next door to Hayes Bros.
Shaves, etc, on tap as nsual.
Qraetna Abrahamsiok, the little
daughter of A. Abrahamsick, is quite
ill at her home in Heppner.
John Her bad a horse killed Saturday
last by lightning, and another crippled
at the same time in the same manner.
We respectfully call attention to the
mammoth ad. of The McFarland Mer
cantile Co., whioh appears in this issue.
The people's party had quite a speak
ing in Heppner Saturday afternoon, a
number of the populist candidates being
present.
Priueville News: Mr. John Friend,
of Heppner, passed through town
Wednesday, en route to California with
forty head of bunchgrass horses.
Thin or gray hair and bald heads, so
displeasing to many people as marks of
age, may be averted for a long time by
using Hall's Hair Benewer.
The Almota is now running on the
Columbia between Celilo and tbe upper
river points. The Union Pacifio is not
likely to be in operation for several
weeks.
Hog Hollow, near Butter creek,
enjoyed quite a dance last Friday night.
It was given in honor of a lot of sheep
shearers who were at work in that
vioinity.
Echo stage leaves Heppner for Echo
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
Arrives Mondays, Wednesdays and Fri
days. Fare, one way, $2.50. PhillOobn,
agent, A. Andrews, Prop.
A great bargain sale has just com
menced at tbe McFarland Mercantile
Oo's. big store Everything at oost for
oasb, until fall stock is laid in. See "Ad."
John D. Hiokey has his wool orop into
the Heppner market, and expects that
the wool and increase will a little more
than pay expenses. John is a close
manager.
Sunken eyeB, a pallid complexion, and
disfiguring eruptions, indioate that
there is something wrong within. Expel
the lurking foe to health, by purifying
the blood with Ayer's" Sarsaparilla
Cures erysipelas, eczema, salt rheum,
pimples and blotches.
The regnlar subscription price of the
Semi-Weekly Gazette is $2.50 and the
regular price of the Weekly Oregonian
is $1.50. Anyone subscribing for the
Gazette and paying for one year in
Bdvance can get both the Gazette and
Weekly Oregonian for $3. All old sub
scribers paying their subscriptions for
one year in advance will be entitled to
the sBme.
A lady at Tooleys, La., was very sick
with bilious colic when M. 0. Tisler, a
prominent merchant of tbe town , gave
her bottle of Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. He
says she was well in forty minutes after
taking the first dose. For sale by
Slocum-Johnson Drug Co.
Dr. S. F. Soott, Blue Ridge, Harrison
Co., Mo., says: "For whooping oougb
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is excel
lent." By using it freely the disease
is deprived of all dangerous oonsequenoes.
There is no danger in giving the Remedy
to babies, as it contains nothing injuri
ous. 50 cent bottles forsale by Slooum
Johnson Drug Co.
A Runaway. Last Saturday while J.
A. Burdell'B team was standing in front
of A. Abrahamsick's unhitched, it took
fright and rBn down May street toward
the court house, following tbe sidewalk
past T. W. Ayers' house, tearing off
Borne piokets, and it was thought for a
time the rig would plunge into Willow
creek. However, when neariug the
bridge, the horses turned and upset tbe
rig, passing on over tbe bridge, leaving
most of tbe wagon on the west side. At
the corner of May and Court street, tbe
remnants of the rig and tbe horses
parted, running some distance where
the horses were caught without damage
to either. Tbe wagon was badly
wrecked.
Attention Citizens op Heppner.
White's Dramatio Company will per
form this coming Friday eve, June 8th,
in Clay Green's Celebrated Drama,
"The Gambler's Wife, or Never too Late
to Repent." This play ran two hundred
nights in in New York City. Miss
Laura White will recite The great Fire
man's poem. For the benefit of the fire
companies of Heppner.
SciuiKKEti Poison. Ben Swaggart has
B new kind of squirrel poiaon wbiob is a
dead shot on squirrels. It is for sale at
Phill Cohn's, at tbe low figure of $1 per
gallon, in bulk. This poison is guaran
teed, or money will be refunded. It is
somethinB that eauirrels will eot, eve .
at this time of the year. Now is the
time to kill them.
Babn Burned. Jas. Fristoe brought
in word yesterday that Cbas. Cunning
barn's barn took fire, burning it to tbe
ground, together with the contents, 235
Backs of wool and a number of tons uf
hay. We are informed that there was
some insurance on the outfit.
Machine Oils. Penland it Co. have
on hand a fine assortment of machine
oils, for sale cheap.
Simmons Liver Regulator, bear in
mind, is not an experiment. It is en
dorsed by thousands.
CHINESE PENAL PAINS.
Hospitals and Prisons Alike a Dis
grace to the Celestial Land
National Ignorance Govern All the Chi
nese Institutions, and Neither Deoeney
Nor Humanity Have a Place In the J
Treatment of Sick or Sinful. t
The Chinese people are lawabiding.
With those of their own number who
are lawbreakers they have but little
sympathy, and the government has
none at all. I like China. I like the
Chinese. Moreover, I respect them.
Hut in two details of their national
life they meri unqualified condemna
tion. Their hospitals and their prisons
are unmitigated national disgraces. On
second thoughts, I withdraw the word
unmitigated. The Chinese hospitals
through which I went were almost
everything that hospitals should not
be. But the patients themselves would
most strenuously have resented any im
provements along the line of their own
comfort. The savants of China are held
back by the ttut ropes of public opin
ion; they are enchained by the general
ignorance, as are their prototypes every
where else.
The deplorable condition of the
Chinese prisons is justified in the na
tional philosophy. To the Chinese
mind a law is a thing to be obeyed.
A law concerns the millions and con
serves the welfare of millions. It
must be held inviolate by the indi
vidual, be his whim his personal bent
whatever it may. The Chinaman who
disregards any item of the Chinese law
becomes a social leper. Individual ten
dency, moral ill health, inherited traits
they are taken into account not at all.
This is cruel? YesI But it renders
existence possible in the overdensity
of Chinese population, a writer in the
Pall Mall Budget says.
A Chinaman is forgiven nothing be
cause of his ancestry, nor does he suf
fer for that ancestry. From the mo
ment of his birth each Chinaman has
an equal chance with every other
Chinaman. Bank is nowhere more
venerated than in China. Nowhere
does it secure to its possessor more
benefits, more privileges, but it is not
inherited. It is conferred by the em
perorconferred for personal merit or
for personal achievement. No China
man is "noble" except through per
sonal fitness. There are two excep
tions to this rule two only. The di
rect descendants of Confucius have a
rank of their own. It is a high rank.
It is respected. But it gives them no
power of interference with national
affairs. The descendants of an em
peror are never less than royal. But
they have no necessary power. In
brief, then, in China "every man is
served according to his deserts," and it
is greatly to the national credit that
they who do not "'scape whipping"
are so very few.
A Chinese prison is called a "cangue."
Its outer door is barred with bamboo,
and is guarded by petty soldiers or
policemen. The "cangue" contains
two rooms and two yards. One room
and one yard are tor men. The other
room and yard are for women. The
space set apart for women is very much
smaller than that for men. But the
women's quarters and the men's quar
ters arc alike in being entirely devoid
of any provision for personal comfort,
or for personal decency.
Chinese prisoners are by the govern
ment provided with absolutely noth
ing but the space beyond which they
may not pass. If their friends thrust
food to them through the bars of the
prison fence the law does not interpose.
Otherwise the prisoners may starve.
The law does not interpose.
1 used to take food to the Shanghai
prison yards. I was not jeered at. A
Chinese crowd is, I believe, incapable
of jeering at a woman. But I was con
demned for it. And a high Chinese
official remonstrated with my husband.
I used to buy Chinese food at a cheap
chow-chow shop and when I reached
a prison fence hire a coolie to feed the
poor starving wretches. I did not
quite care to feed them myself. And it
was quite impossible for them to feed
themselves. No Chinese prisoner can
reach his own mouth, for his neck is
invaribly locked into a board which is
about three feet square. It is very
heavy, and galls the neck. It blisters
or ossifies the shoulders. The "pig
tail"drags heavily over it, and pulls the
poor enlocked head uncomfortably to
one side. It prevents the hands from
lifting rice or water to the craving
mouth and from brushing from the
tingling nose one of the myriad insects
that infest the prisons and the prison
yards of China.
PARIS FASHION BITS.
Tablieks, tunics and overskirts area
foregone conclusion.
Braiding is again in high favor on
skirts, redingotes, capes, sleeves, coats
and bodices.
New velvet Spanish and zouave
jackets are finished with ruchings of
cream-colored guipure.
Frknch designers use red and green
shot velvet to trim brown bengaline,
cheviot and Scotch tweed gowns.
Red serge, camel's hair or sacking
dresses are combined with black wa
tered silk and trimmed with many
rows of very narrow jet gimp.
Geranium red bengaline for vests on
black gowns is a fashionable freak
that will have a cheerful effect when
the cheerless days of winter set in.
Granite and armure weaves in two
colors, but not changeable, are among
the late importations. They are in
cheviot finish and are exceedingly soft
and pliable.
Leather shades, gold, yellows, rus
sets, light olives and sapphire, swal
low, peacock and drakes' neck blue
are among the most fashionable colors
of the season.
Ctclonb. Word was reoeived today
from Long Creek to the effect that that
oily had been visited by a cyclone, oo
onrring Sunday last at 11 a. m . , passing
through the east side of the town.
Tweoty dwellings are in kindling wood.
Mr. Bnd Mrs. D. J. Parrish and tbe
infant child of Dr. Nichols were killed,
besides many were injured, and it is
thought some fatally. Tbe loss is esti
mated from $30,000 to $40,000. Tbe
flouring mill and school bouse are
ruined. It was the most terrific storm
ever experienced in that section.
I suffered from biliousness, indigestion
etc. Simmons Liver Regulator Cured
Bfter dootors failed. W. D. Bird.
Invalid 3 Years,
Cured by Hood's
"C. T. Bood & Co.. Lowell. Mass.:
"Gentlemen: I am glad to tell you that I
have been given good health by Hood's
Sarsaparilla. For three years I was an in
valid, suffering terribly from
Nervousness and Lameness.
"Iwas so nervous . I could nut bear the least
noise, and I had to walk with crutches for
six months, as 1 could not put one of my feet
to the floor. Physicians did not do me any
good, so a friend told me to get Hood's Sar
aparllla, but
I Said There Was No Use.
"However, after thinking the matter over, I de
oided to give It a trial, and have taken six
bottles of Hood's Sarsaparllla, and the re
sult Is that I am well as any one could wish
to be, and can do any kind of work. I ad
vise all my friends to take Hood's Sarsapa
rllla tor I believe it will do them good."
Miss Susis Dodson, Colton, California.
Hood's Pills cure liver Ills, constipation,
biliousness, jaundice, sick headache, Indigestion.
No Cbickets. It is reported from y
reliable source that there are no cricketf
north of Harney (town) for a distance ol
from ten to twelve miles. The Bamt
authority also states that he traveled
listanoe of one hundred miles or mon
iver the mountains north, east, and
-iouth of that town and saw only a few
oriokets and tbey were on Cow creek
9e further states tbat be has made thi
Ticket pest a study for some yeart
past, npon which he bases the conclusion
tbat they will almost entirely pass out of
Harney county this summer. Tbe
drift, he says, of tbe main body of them
have been west and northward ever
sinoe they were first discovered on tbe
eastern border of Harney county three
yeara ago. News.
Don't Delay.
It is your duty to yourself to get rid
of the foul accumulation in your blood
this spring. Hood's Sarsaparilla is
just the medicine you need to purify,
vitalize and enrioh your blood. That
tired feeling which affects nearly every
one in the spring is driven off by Hood's
Sarsaparilla, tbe great spring medioine
and purifier,
Prodnoe $2 50 and get the Gazette for
me year. Nice family paper, and bul
ly to paper oabins.
HERR KRUPP.
A Rare Instance of Refusing; the Con
ferred Title or Nobility.
It is a common thing in Europe for
kings and queens to reward such of
their subjects as may become famous
in war, in politic:, or in literature, by
bestowing titles upon them. Occason
ally, however, says the Golden Days,
this honor is refused, but the instances
are so rare that when they do occur
they are always thought worthy of
mention.
After the late Germanemperor, Fred
erick III., had begun his brief reign,
he determined to raise some leading
representatives of industry and com
merce to the peerage.
Herr Krupp, the inventor of the
Krupp cannon, at whose manufactory
eighteen thousand men are regulary
employed, had died a short time be
fore, but his son had succeeded to his
business, and the young man's name
was placed by the emperor upon the
role of honor.
When he heard of this, he at once
took train to Berlin and secured an
audience of Prince Bismarck, who was
then chancellor. He insisted that the
prince should ask the emperor to strike
his name from the list, but this Bis
marck refused to do. Then the iron
master made a special plea.
"My father," said he, "gloried in be
ing the son of a workman, and never
would so much as listen to a proposal
to accept titular and hereditary dis
tinction. I cannot be untrue to his
principles, particularly when my year
of mourning has not yet expired."
Bismarck thought this plea might be
urged upon the emperor, without
wounding his feelings, and he prom
ised to put it before him that day.
Frederick was really dying then,
and could not speak on account of the
disease in his throat. When Bismarck
told him what Krupp had said, he
looked surprised and vexed. Then he
seemed to see the matter in a new
light, nodded assent and wrote on his
tablets:
"I dare say Krupp is right; he has my best
wishes."
That night Herr Krupp was told that
he was at liberty to remain Herr
Krupp.
MEXICAN VILLAGE LIFE.
The Government of the Larger Haciendas
of the South.
A great cotton hacienda in Mexico is
strongly built, with walls like those of
a fort; the tops of the walls are often
studded thickly with broken glass of
a jagged and deadly appearance; for
further protection, companies of sol
diers are kept within the establish
ment. A hacienda of this type, whether de
voted to the manufacture of sugar or
cotton, the raising of cattle, or mining
of silver, is a complete little state,
with every appliance for luxury and
security. It contains within its walls
hundreds of peons, soldiers, barracks,
a chapel, houses for the laborers,
apartments for the owner and his fam
ily, and every necessary of life for
man and beast.
The administrador, or general man
ager, is the father of the great family;
he decides all disputes arising between
the various members of U, and if he is
only ordinarily just, never finds his
authority disputed, but is looked up
to witn much respect and consulted
by the peons in all family matters.
A gentleman who was for some years
administrador of an estate in the state
of Coahuila told me that while occupy-
It is the Headquarters !
jpaints, Dru&rs Oils. Glass, Toi
let Artloes, Patent Medicines,
Bto.
Office of all stages running
A GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY !
great philosopher has laid down the maxim of
"Never put off till tomorrow what can be done
today." If you want bargains today, if you need the
necessities of life in the line of Dry Goods, Gents' Fur
nishings, Clothing, Trunks, Valises, etc., at prices never
before offered in Heppner, call on L. Bluruenthal, succes
sor to J. H. Kolmau, Cor. May and Main streets.
GREAT BANKEUPT SA.Hi 35!
This stock will shortly be increased, however, by a well-selected lot of goods, direct from
Portland. .Remember that these prices have never been equalled in Heppner.
sw-lra. L. BLUMENTHAL, Heppner, Oregon.
SHEEP
PLEASE SEND US YOUR NAME
AND ADDRESS,
THE ONLY WAY YOU CAN AFFORD TO RUN SHEEP.
MW$ YOIUT IHOOL !
Why. Pay Freight on All Your Dirt,
Pendleton Wool Swioj k Packins
PENDLETON, OREGON.
Annual Convention
WIH COUNTY SUNDRY 8: SlIfllH.
AT
PETTEYS' GROVE, ON
A good program is being prepared, consisting of Music, Recitations, Essays, Select Readings
and papers on various subjects of interest to Sunday school workers.
A large general table will be provided for the accommodation of those in attendance.
W Sunday schools are requested to have
tendents to wear crape on their left arm, out of
LEGAL
BUNKS
The Lancashire Insurance Co.
OK MANCHBSTBRt ENGLAND
A. W PATTERSON, AGENT, onojtie Bot .m theworwi
ing this position he conceived a hiirh
opinion of the simplicity, honesty and
trustworthiness of the Mexican labor
er. In most of the haciendas the ma
chinery is of a most primitive kind,
modern improvements being used only
in the largest establishments.
Tortoises and Ituin.
The tortoise is not an animal one
would naturally fix upon as likely to
be afraid of rain, but it is singularly
so. Twenty-four hours or more before
rain falls the (iallapagos tortoise makes
for some convenient shelter. On a
bright clear morning when not a cloud
is to be seen the denizens of a tortoise
farm on the African coast may be seen
sometimes heading for the nearest
overhanging rocks; when that happens
the proprietor knows that rain will
come down during the day, and as a
rule it comes down in torrents. The
sign never fails. This pre-sensation,
to coin a word, which exists in many
birds and beasts may be explained
partly from the increasing weight of
the atmosphere when rain is forming,
partly by habits of living and partly
from the need of moisture which is
shared by all. The American cat bird
gives warning of an approaching thun
derstorm by sitting on the low branches
of the dogwood tree (whether this
union of the feline with the canine is
invariable the deponent sayeth not)
and uttering curious notes. Other
birds, including the familiar robin, it
is said, give similar evidence of an im
pending change in the weather.
A mix of potatoes that yielded forty
three pounds.
A scjuash weighing one hundred and
twenty pounds.
Wukat from a yield of sixty-eight
bushels per acre.
Sutv-skve.v pounds of potatoes from
two pounds planted.
Oats from a yield of one hundred
and twenty-five bushels per acre.
A blackbekbv bush showing twenty
one feet growth this year.
A branch from a prune tree thirty
three inches long with farty-six pounds
of fruit on it.
Hood's Pills become tbe fsvorite cathar
tic with every one who trie tbem.
out of Heppner.
PHIL. COHN, Proprietor.
MEN
of the
THURSDAY, JUNE 14.
their banners draped in mourning and Buperin.
respect lor our late President, J, B. Ely. !Mi.
Plenty of them at the
Gazette Office
A VETERAN'S VERDICT.
The War is Over. A Well-known Sol
dier, Correspondent and Journal
ist Makes a Disclosure.
Indiana rnntrlbutnd her thousands of brave
soldi era to the war, and no state beare a bet
ter record in that r;spe:t than it does. In
literature It la rapidly acquiring an
enviable piare. In war and literature
Holomon Yeweli, well known as a writwr as
"Hoi," has won an honorable posl Hon. Dur
ing the late war he wan a member of Co. M,
2d. N. Y. Cavalry and of tbe I'dlti Indiana In
fantry Volunteer. Regarding au Important
circumstance he writes as follows:
"Heveral of us old veterann here are using
I)r. Miles' Restorative Nervine, Heart Cure
and Nerve arid Liver Pllis, all of tbern Riving
splendid nails faction. In fact, we have never
used r(;medlHH that compare with them. Of
the PiliB we muHt say they are the bent com
bination of the qualities required In a prep
aratlon of their nature we have ever known.
We have none hut words of praise for them.
They are the outgrowth of a new principle la
medicine, and tone up the system wonder
fully. We Kay to all, try these remedied.
Solomon Yeweli, Marlon, Ind., liec. 5, IMA
Thene remedied are sold by all druggist! on
a positive guarantee, or sent direct by the
Dr. Miles Medlral Co., Elkhart, ind.. on re
ceipt of pri'-e, l per bottle, six bottle 10, ez
preHK prepaid. Tbey positively contain ueitber
opiate nor dangerous drugs,
Fr Hfile by 'J. VV, Ayern, jr.
Boili, ubopflfpR, tumorn, and even
canners, are the retnU of a DHtnrnl
effort of the pyfltom to Pipe th pnlfionfl
which th Jiver and kidnpys bare failed
tn removw. Aver's HareapBrilla itimn
1 at e8 all the orcrane to a pfper preform
a Que of their fut.ot.ot.8.
Why Don't You
Call on the New Firm at the old Van Dnyn stand ?
You will certainly be surprised at the low prices in
Dry Goods, Ladies Furnishing Goods, Boots
and Shoes, Notions, Clothing, and
A Complete Line of Groceries.
COME IN AND SEE US !
No trouble to show goods and give prices.
Kespectftjlly Yours,
HORNOR & VJHIUN.
They All Get
PROM a bushel of corn, a distiller gets four gallons of whiskey
L which retails at $16.00. TI,a Dmlm.( L q Ii. , Key'
who ra,sed the corn gets 40 cents ; the railroad gets $1.00 ; the manu
facturer gets $4.00 ; the reta.ler gets $7.00; the consumer gets sis
months, and the policeman gets paid for running him in
' You 11 get something too if you run in and see the new lines of
Dress Goods we open out this week-you'll get an agreeable surprise
and nerhaDS a dress. V Kiva r,0QH ik e j ,
j i , wvuvv aw wwdb ui new ureBs materials
and laces that left the other side of the fish pond only four weeks ago!
VI
T
-OF-
The -kh kite
C. BTJHL, Proprietor
The Enterprise Bakery and Grocery Store.
On May Street, opposite Palaoe Hotel. They will keep on band a f nil line of
STA.PLiil lTSTD FANCY
Groceries and Provisis.
A fllll linA nf nliniAa Pica .1 T .1 . 1- ... ....
usually kept in a firBt-class bakery utore.
-
Land Patents
Land patents secured for settlers in the shortest possible time.
Contested Cases
Contested cases intelligently and skillfully handled.
Old Claims and Disputes
Old claims and disputes speedily settled.
Contests
Between individuals having coDllicting olaims under the agricultural land
laws, and those between nlnimunfa nmW 1UinnRl r ."j ,
olttimanU; and also between claimants
............ uu men Krni.i,rn, aim me states ana tlioir grantees, under
the bwsnip-Land and Hchool-Land Grants.
Specialty made of securing patents in the shortest possible time for settlers
who have complied with the laws under whioh their entries were made, and who
are annoyed and worried by delays in the issue of their patents, oaused by Triflinif
IrregnlRritiei whioh can be easily and speedily removed.
Advioe also given in all mutters relating t the pnblio lands, especially on
points arising under the new laws whioh have been reaently passed providing for
the disposal of the publio domain.
If you want your land patent in a hurry if you want your land business, of
any character, attended to by skillful and competent attorneys, aud promptly dis
posed of, write to
PRESS CLAIMS COMPANY,
John Weddf.risurn, Gen. Man.,
P. O. Box, 385.
BORG, : THE
Out for
Cash Bargains
IN
Jewelry,
r r. rrv. n XCs
mmm
SEE BOKU, MAY HTKEET, HEI'I'NEK, OR.
DR. POOTE'S IIAN-ROOK OP IIEALTII HINTS AND READY RECIPES,
y la the title of a verjr valuable book that gives a great amount of Information of the Utmost
Importance to Kverytxxly, couceruluK their dally habits of gating, Drinking, Dressing, etc.,
IT TlilXS ABOUT
What to Eat,
How to Hat It,
Tlilnits to Do,
Tlilniri to Avoid,
Perils of Summer,
How to Breathe,
Influence of Plants,
Occupation for Invalids,
Alcohol asa food and a
Medicine
Superfluous Hair,
Itaw.vlng Hame,
Kestorirur the Urownen.
Dangers or Kissing,
Ovftrl.eMtlr, IO.hu,. PpMvrll Nkm r.Kll.t...!.
Ventii.Tion: n.; " KxercTse? "e-
IT TELLS HOW TO CURE Black Eyes, Bolls, Bonn, Chillblalns, Cold Feet, Corns.
Coughs, Cholera, Diarrhoea, Diphtheria, Dysentery, Dandruff, Dyspepsia, Earache, Felons, Fetid
Feet, Freckles, Headache, Hiccough, Hives, Hoarseness, Itching, Inflamed Breasts, Ivy Potoonlng,
Moles, Pimples, Piles, Rheumatism, Klngworm, Snoring, fitammerlng. Sore Eyes, Sore Mouth,'
Sore Nlpplea, Sore Throat, Sunstroke, Stings and Insect Bites, Sweating Feet, Toothache Uloei
Wart, Whooping Uough, Worms lu Children. IT WILL SA VK XtOCTOUS' KILLS.
tlfAII new subscribers and prompt renewals duringthe month of May will be
presensed with a free oopyof this as a premium.
Something
IIej3j3iier, Oregon
For the Cure cu
Liquor, Opium and Tobacco Habits
It is located at Forest Grove, Or.,
The Most Beautiful Town on the Coast.
Call at the Gazktte office for particulars.
Strictly confidential. Treatment private aud sura
cure.
Tb.y will sell obeap foi caah. Call ana
am
under any of the pnblio land laws aud the
Washington, V. 0.
JEWELER!
Watches,
Clocks,
SILVERWARE,
MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS,
Etc., Etc.
Trust, JJusts
Parasites of the flkln. Care of Teeth
Bathing-Best Way, After-Ulnner fops.
I.unga aud Lung Diseases, Effects of Tobacco,
1 low to Avoid Them l.'nre for Intemperance,
nothing, What to Wear, Headache, Cause & Cure,
How Much to Wear, To Uet lild of Lice.
('ontavlnnit IilsAnuu 11.1..1 a .1
1(ut ... A nr. 1. 1 '-l...-' 'nna, aimuu,