rilE OUEOON STATESMAN: FRIDAY JUNE 17. 1887. 3 TELEGRAPHIC SOMAM. It in thought that the ptvpirlunt may call an extra notion of Cuiikivhh noon. Irinh Americans have informed the N. Y, republican dub that they prefer Blaine for prcHiilcnt in 1SSH. Michael Davitt kiivh he is gi-tting tired of moderation in Irish matlorH, ami thinks now that more active measures should be instituted. The examination of Mrs. Mary Teller for the murder of her husband Frank Teller at Sxkane Falls, has linen com menced. No new lijjhl has been thrown on the matter. lle(HrtH from Fort Ouster, Montana, are that a lare body of Soux Indians are on their way to visit the Crows ami fearn that an outbreak is imminent are sustained. All hope of ttie peacable return of ihe hostile Apaches has Ivoen abandoned, and extermination has been given as the order of the day. They killed Mike Grace, a brother of ex-Mayor (irace, of New York, at Tempora Gulch, An.., and the U. S. troops have orders to fol low them into Mexico if necessary. June i. Potter, manager of the Union Pacific, if taking in the Sound country. Lansdowne w ill he made a duke. He lias a half column of titles already. The Kentucky distiller w ill make no whisky this year, because! there is enough in bond and in foreign ports now to last three years. The l.ick telescope, on Mount Hamil ton, California, the greatest telescope in the world, w ill tie finished about the mid dle of September next. The Indian outbreak in Arizona terri tory is assuming an alarming asju-ct. A telegram from Nogales, A. T., fays that the murderous Apaches threaten many lives. The immigration commission has or dered the return of ninety Irish immi grants whose passage was paid by the English government under the clause on paupers. A syndicate of capitalists of New York and Baltimore will take up the unissued ti Ier cent, bonds of the Oregon Pacific, and that line will be pushed on to its eastern terminus at ioi.K city. They are still drawing jurors for the Ja cob Sharp trial in New York. They have been at it for several weeks already. Tlie trouble is that Jake is disiosed to buv the jurors so soon as they are accepted. He is one of the few men who inherited a name that fits him precisely. June 10. It is reported that It lsiia is again mov ing toward Herat, aud w.ir is expected. The severalty system on 'he Crow res ervation is said to be proving successful. President Cleveland has returned to Washington, leaving Mrs. Cleveland in New York. It is rumored that Lieut. McNuft and his command had an engagement with the Indians, but rejorts are meagre. Oregon will draw tJ7(i4 per year from the government, lor military purpose, under tbe law passed at the last session of congress. Maine liquor dealers ure now selling imported liquors ojs-nly in unbroken packages, and the prohibitionists stand aghast, and are powerless to do any thing. Gladstone and Parnell both replied to Smith, in the bouse of commons, on the Irish coercion measure. The govern ment again resorted to the cloture ruie to fthut otf lie hate. STATE NEWS. A nice Masonic hall building is being erected at C'uiiuilii: City. Travel overland to Oregon from the south is increasing very rapidly. The assistant editor, the scissors, now has full charge of the Coos Pay New s. The Grant's. Pass Courier got ten sub scribers in two days, and will celebrate. The eagle will distribute his screams quite generally over the state on the Fourth of July. A school teacher in Josephine county got drunk, so the county superintendent revoked bis certificate. The Oeh'xto Review makes bold to de clare that Crook county is the flower of them all in Oregon. A Crook-ed state ment. Iiedington. of the Heppner Gazette, intends to hold his homestead, if be has to go buck and interview Sparks with a mountain howitzer. The Willamette Fanner makes the statement that apples will not be kalf a crop in Oregon this J ear. The statement is probably exaggerated. Cal. Yocum stabbed Sampson I'reiu h at Canvonville last Saturday for knocking him down twice. Three bad cuts were inflicted, which may cause death. The Warm Snrings si washes w ant the of their reservation made, to suit themselves, and threaten vengeance if they are not permitted to boss the job. Horace Woodcock has discovered very rich quartz ledge on Lightning gulch Kerbvville. so we are informed. He savs the rock is full of free gold, and the led.-e is verv rich. Grant's Pass Courier. CHESTNUTS IN NEW SHELLS. To the question, "How's business'.' the tailor answers: sew. sew: the acro bat, jumping ; the yachtman, booming the distiller, still; the baker, rising ; the writing master, flourishing; the trial jus tice, fine: the apartment hotel-keeper flat; the weather bureau clerk, fluctuat ing: the plumber, piping ; the gardener springing up; the furniture teamster, on the move ; toe minister w nose tmimi u in debt, fair; the shoemaker, awl right with an ut.ner tendency; the rag gatb erer, picking up; the hod carrier and the nlevator bov. now up and now down ; tbe llntle rtaker'. run into the ground ; the doc tor, recovering; the cobbler, on the mend : the astronomer, looking up; the lohster catcher, gone to pot ; the cooper (w)hooping her up; the aronaut, going up; thy diver, siig down. NOT FOND OF WATER. The fact that neatness of person is a habit that is easily lost if neglect is once allowed is proved nowadays in a great many individual cases, but it has been proved on a larger scale by the exerience of the world after the baths of the an cients went out of fashion. In the change of the world's habits incidental' to the change of religion, and esiKcially w ith the deserved condemna tion of the Roman public baths by the Christian church, the practice of public bathing came to an end, and that of private bathing unhappily became only too rare. The usages of the generations preced ing the present century, in personal habits, are almost incredible to us. A lunik recently published, of which Mr. Alfred Franklin is the author, contains some facts regarding the domestic life and social usages of the period from the twelfth to tbe eighteenth century, which are in a sense instructive, since they show to what a condition even "elegant society" may descend, w ben the watch ful care for personal cleanliness is once abandoned. Tbe ladies of the seventeenth century very seldom washed their faces. They sometimes dipped a cloth in spirits and passed it over their faces, and their toilet codes and directions, still extant, prove that they avoided water for the face be cause they believed it was destructive to the complexion. As for any other sort of baths, no reference is found to them in these toilet directions, probably for the very good reason that none were ever taken. That the same ladies washed even their hands seems to be established also. In an old romance a princess says to a young lord of the court: "You see, sir, that my hands are whiter than yours, al though it is four days now since I washed them." This seems to have been a common place remark, and treats of a condition of things which was taken quite as a matter of course. Richelieu was known among the men of the seventeenth century as a man who was to some degree eccentric, from the fact that be was neat in his person. That he is mentioned as a "man who bathed" seems to prove that it was not common for men to "bathe" at that time. The women of the courts of Louis XIV and XV of France powdered their faces incessantly instead of w ashing them, and built enormous head-dresses upon heads that were never combed. The accounts which are given of some results of this practice are almost beyond belief. CALM ASSURANCE. "The late Lord Longford," says a coi resondent of the London World, "was an old Wykehamist, and remarkable as a schoolboy in several ways. When at Winchester as the Hon. W. L. Paken harn he had the reputation of being the best const ruer of Virgil in his time at 'pulpiteers,' the school term for viva voce rendering into English. As a cricketer, he enjoyed the extraordinary distinction, together with two other Wykehamists, A. Lowth and N. Parnell, of being se lected to play for the Gentlemen (18) against the Players at Lords in 183(1, while be was still a boy in tiie school eleven. He was always extremely well dressed, ami lr. Moberly, who had thirty years' experience as head master, said "he was the most impudent boy he ever knew, a statement erhaps founded on the following fact: Pakenham, on one occasion, appeared in school with a large bunch of flowers in his buttonhole. 'Pakenham,' said Moberly, ' I do not ob ject to one tlower in a well-dressed boy's coat, but 1 cannot permit boys to come into school with nosegays.' 'Very well, sir,' said Pakenham. Two days after- ird he came into school with a gigantic nilower fastened to bis coat. Paken ham, what is that'." said Moberly. 'Only flower, sir,' said Pakenham, in a mild jiee ; 'you said you did not mind my oiniug into school wuii a single nower in mv coat.' " ilil SUING A FLY FROM II IS NOSE. As the bearskin companies stood in the Jarfield circle on Thursday at the unveil ing of the statute, the hot sun made the bovg wilt, and a good nianv hats came oil'. "We would put those men under ar rest if thev were regulars," said an old of lice r on the platform. ' You bet," replied another. "I sat on ourtinartial at West Point when a ca- let was tried for brushing a fly oil' his nose while on parade." ' ho was that .' That little rooster over there in front Iressed in a brass foundry." 'What! Phil Sheridan?" 'No other. And he got three davs for it, too." New lork Lvenuig Sun. AFRAID TO LET. A prominent Southern politician was criticising Mr. Cleveland a few days ago, at Washington, in the presence of a sen ator from the South. The politician, who is a democrat, ventured the prediction that Mr. Cleveland, in tbe event of his renom ination, would not carry lrgmia North Carolina, or Louisiana. 'You evidently don't know what vou are talking about," said the senator. "Perhaps not, was the reply, but J am willing to back mv judgment tor ifl (MM)." The senator promptly accepter the offer and wrote out his check lor the amount. "Now," continued the politician, if vou have anv friends who are anxious to bet that wav I have lu,0(W I would like to invest." After some furthur talk the senator asked tx-rmission to withdraw his bet, which, was granted. N. Y World. INI'XAMATION F 'INK KID.MiVS Hun. Kdward A. Moore. Member of Assembly frum Kiehmond countv. New lork. write: 'Some two Years rko I wan taken with in Bam mation of the kidney. The pain was intense I applied fls soon as possible nu Allcock's Porus Piaster m-or each kiduev. Wonderful to say the pain and iullamation uegau to abate lu three hours mi iwu uavs i was entirely cuicj. j ni ways Use great pleasure lu recommending All .wVi V asters: thev are certaluly the best ex tenia! remedy known. I used them as ckest protectors, aud fouud them most ctlieient." A specific for liver and kidney coin plaintrfundcr's Oregon lilood Purifier. BILL NYE'S MUSINGS. He Plays Missionary Among the Sliinnecock Indians. REMNANTS OF A FADING RACE. The Ghost of Longfellow Stalking Abroad in I ho Land The Marvel ous Changes of 2."0 Years. There can ho nothing more pathetic than to watch the decay of a race, even though it be a scrub race. To watch the decay of the Indian race has been with me, for many years, a passion, and the more the Indian has decayed the more reckless I have been in studying his ways. The Indian race for over two hundred years has been a race against Time, and I need hardly add that Time is away ahead as I pen these lines. But the Indian is on the wane, what ever that is. He is disappearing from the face of the earth, and we find no bet ter illustration of this sad fact than the gradual fading away of the Sliinnecock Indians near the eastern extremity of Long Island. In company with the World artist, I went out the other day to Southampton and visited the surviving members of this great tribe. Neither of us knetf the meaning of fear. If we had been ordered by the United States government to wipe out the whole Sliinnecock tribe, we would have taken a damp towl and done it. The Sliinnecock tribe now consists of James Dunn and and another man. But they are neither of them pure-blooded Sliinnecock Indians. One-Legged I .ive, an old whaler, who, as the gilteti iv.ider has no doubt already guessed, has but one leg, having lost the other in going over a reef many years ago, is a pure- blooded Indian, hut not a pure-blooded Shinnecock. Most of these Indians are now mixed up with the negro race by marriage and are not considered warlike. The Shinnecocks have not been rash enough to break out since they had the measles some years ago, but we will let that pass. There are now about 150 Shinnecocks on the reservation, the most of whom are negroes. They live together in peace and hominy, trying moat of the time to ascer tain what the wild waves are saying in regard to fish. There is an air of gentle, all-pervading peace which hangs over the Sliinnecock hills, and that had its effect even upon mv tumultuous and aggressive nature, wooing tne to repose. I could rest there all this summer and then, after a good night's rest, go right at it again in the morning. Kest at Southampton does not seem to fatigue one as it does elsewhere. The Sliinnecock Indian has united liiB own repose of mariner with the calm and haughty distrust of industry peculiar to the negro, and the result is something tint approaches nearer to the idea of eternal rest than anything 1 have ever seen. Tbe air seems to be saturated with it, and the moonlight is soaked full of calm. It would be a good place in wr.icii to wander through the gloaming and pour gallon or so of low, passionate yearn ing into t lie ear of a loved one. We visited Mr. James Bunn at his home on Huckleberry avenue, saw the city hall and custom house, and obtained a lront view of it, secured a picture of the resi- nce of the street commissioner, and sen I talked to Mr. Bunn while the art ist got a marine view of his face. Mr. Bunn was for forty years a whaler, hut had abandoned the habit now, as there is so little demand among the res taurants for whales, and also because there are fewer whales. I ascertained from him that the w hale at this season of the year does not rise readily to the fly, but bites the harpoon greedily during the middle of the dav. Mr. Bunn also gave us a great deal of other information, among other things informing us of the fact that the white men had been up to their old tricks, and were trying to steal portions of the reser vation that had not been nailed down. He did not say whether it was the same man who was trying to steal the old Southampton graveyard or not. J ames is about seventy-live veers old, and his father once lived in a wigwam on the Shinnecock hills. Mr. Bunn says the country has changed very much in the ist 2-"0 years, and that I would hardly know the place if 1 could have Seen it at lirst. During that time be says that two other houses have been built and he has resbingled the Lot his barn with hay. It is, indeed, a pathetic picture. Here on the stern aud rock-bound coast, where their ancestors greeted ( olumhus and other excursionists as they lauded on the new dock and at once had their pictures taken in a group for the illustration on the greenbacks, now the surviving relic of a brave people, with bowed heads and frosting locks, are waiting a lew days only for the long, dark night of merciful ob- vion. So he walks in the night-time, all through the long fly-time, he walks by the sorrowful sea, and he yearns to wake never, but he there iorever in the arms of the sheltering sea, M he in the lap of the sea. At least that is mv idea of the way tin Shinnecock feels about it. The Indian race, wherever we liud it. gives us a wouuenui illustration oi me great , inherent power of rum as a human leveller. 1 he Indian has, perhaps, great er powers of endurance than the white man. and enters into tne great unequal fight with rum almost hilariously, but he loses his presence of mind and forgets to call a cab at the nroiier moment. This is t matter that has never been lully under stood even by the pale face, and of course the Indian is a jiertect child in the great conflict with ruui. The result is that the Indian is passing away under our very eyes, and the time will soon come when the Indian agent will have to seek some other healthful outdoor exercise. So the consumptive Shinnecock, the author of "Shinny on Your own Ground and Other Uatnes," is soon to live only in the flea-bitten records of a great na tion. Once he wrote pices for the boys to speak in school, Biid contributed large ly to MeXiufl'y's and Sanders' jeriodicals, but now vou never hear of an Indian who is a good extemporaneous public speaker, or who can write for sour apples. He no longer makes the statement that ho is an aged hemlock, that his limbs are withered and his trunk attached by the constable. He has ceased to tell through the columns of the Fifth Header how swift he used to be as a warrior and that the w arpath is now overgrown with grass. Ho very seldom writes anything for the papers except over the signature of Veri tas, and the able young stenographer who used to reMrt his speeches at the council (ire seems to have moved away. Two hundred and fifty years ago the Shinnecock Hills w ere covered by a dense forest, but in that brief period, as if by magic, two and one-half acres of that ground have been cleared, which iB an average of an entire acre for every hun dred years. When we stop to consider that very little of this work was dono by the women and that the men have to at tend to the cleaning of the whales in order to prepare them for the table, and also write their contributions for the school-books and sign treaties with the White F'ather at Washington, we are forced to admit that had the Indian's life been spread for a few thousand years more he would have been alive at the end of that time. So they wander on together, waiting for the final summons. Waiting for the pip or measles, and their cough is dry and hacking as they cough along together towards the large and wide hereafter. They have lived so near Ma'nhatten, where refinement is so plenty, where the joy they jerk from barley every other dav but Sunday gives the town a red dish color, that the Shinnecock is dying, dying with his cowhide boots on, dying with his hectic flush on, w hile the church bells chime in Brooklyn and New Yorkers go to Jersey, go to get their fire-water, go to get their red-eyed bug-juice, go to get their cooking whisky. Far awav at Minnehaha, in ttie land of the Dakota where the cy clone feels so kinky, rising on its active hind feet, with its tail up o er the dash board, blowing babies through the grind stone without injuring the babies, where the cyclone and the whopper journey on in joy together there refinement and frumenti, with the new and automatic maladies and choice diseases that belong to the Caucasian, gather in the festive red man, take him to the reservation, rob him till he kicks the bucket. And the Shinnecock is fading, he who greeted Americus Vespucci when he landed, tired and sea-sick, with a breath of peace and onions ; he who welcomed other strangers, with their notions of re finement and their knowledge of the Scriptures and their fondness for Gam brinus they have compassed his dam nation and the Shinnecock is busted. Bill Nye in New York World. SOLOMON'S JUDGMENT. The London academy gives the follow ing as "Solomon's Judgment in Chi nese." Two women came before a mandarin in China, each of them protesting that she was the mother of the little child they had brought with them. They were so eager and so positive that the mandarin was sorely puzzled. He re tired to consult with his wife, a wise and clever woman, whose opinion was held in great repute in the neighborhood. She requested five minutes in which to deliberate. At the end of that time she spoke : "Let the servants catch me a large fish in the river, and let it be brought here alive:" This was done. "Bring me now the infant," she said, "but leas'e the women in the outer cham ber." This was done, too. Then the manda rin's mother caused the habv to be un dressed and its clothes put on the large fish. "Carry the creature outside no" and throw it into the river in the sight of the two women." The servant obeved her orders, tinging the tish into the water, where it rolled about and struggled, disgusted, no doubt, bv the wrapping in which it was swad dled. Without a moment's pause, one oP the mothers threw herself into the river with a shriek. She must save her drowning hild. "Without doubt she is the true moth er," she declared; and the mandarin's wile commanded that she should lie rescued and the child given to her. And the mandarin nodded his head, and thought his wife the wisest woman in the flowery kingdom. .Meantime the false mother crept away. She was found out in her imposture, and the mandarin's wife forgot all about her in the occupation of donning the little baby in tne best ol silk she could find in her wardrobe. ADVICE TO MOTHERS. Are you disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child Buffering and crying with pain of cutting teeth? if so, send at once and get a bottle of tbe Winslow'i Soothiug Syrup for Children's Teething. Ka value is lncaiculabe It will relieve the poor little sufferer immedi ately. Depend upon it, mothers, there la ne mistake about it It cures diseutery and diarr hoea, regulates tbe stomach and bowels, cure wind colic, aoftene the gums, reduces lnflama- lion, and gives tone and energy tp tbe wkole system. Mrs. Wtnslow's Soothing Syrup for Children's Teething is pleasant to the taste, and Is the prescription of one of the oldest and best Irmale nurses and physicians in the United fetates, and Is for sale by all druggists lkroua the World. Price ib cents a bottle. I UK Ftltt I'If.KN. Piles are frequently precede i by a sense of weight in the ba k, loins aud lower pait of the abdomt u, causing the patient to suppose he has some affection of the kidneys or neighboring organs. At times symptoms of indigestion are present, flatulency, uneasiness of the stomach, eic. A moisture, imu yvisvumnoii. ,m wj niug a verv disagreeable itching, after uettinir warm, Is common attendant. Blind, bleeding aud itehing piles yield at once to the application, of Dr. Bousaiiko s rue Kemeay, wniru acis oiii-ci ly upon the parts ettecten, aosoroiugine tumors allaviiiK the intense itcliinn.aud effecting a pel msiienl cure. Price bt cents. Address, the lir. Sosanko Medicine Co., Piqna, O. Sold by (ieo. K. iooi. HOW TO hEClUE HEALTH. Kcovill's Sarsaparilla and .Stillingia or lilood and Liver Syrup will restore perfect health t t ne physical orgniimU'in. It is, indeed, a strengthening syrup, pleasant to take, and has Kften proven itself to be the best blood purifier ever discovered, effectually curing scrofula, svphililic disorders, weakness of tbe kidneys, ervsipelas, malaria, all nervous disorders aud debility, bilioux complaints, and all diseases indicating an impure condition of tbe blood, liver, kidneys, stomach, etc. It corrects indi gestion, especially when the complaint is of an exhaustive nitcure, having a tendency to lessen the v'gor of the brain 'in-i nervous system. THE OREGON' & CALIFORNIA. Further Intpi'entiiif News Concern ing the Oregon & California and Southern Pacific. The visit of Col. Chas. F. Crocker, vice president of the Southern Pacific, to this country, has excited much comment, and efforts have been made to find out from him definitely just what would be the policy of the Southern Pacific in the management of the Oregon & California have been made. In reference to this, the follow ing from an interview with him will prove interesting: The Southern Pacific, said Col. Crocker, would not take the actual management of the property until through rail connection was made. Construction work on both sloies of the Sisniyous is very heavy, and it is impossible to fix a date when the lines will bo united, hut lie thought the through line would be completed about the middle of October. The main office of the company will, of course, be in San F'rancisco, and general freight and passenger offices will be established in Portland, and perhaps an assistant man ager. It will be the policy of the com pany to encourage immigration into Western Oregon, and the Southern Pa cific will devote as much energy to in ducing people to settle in this state, as it had used in drawing settlers to California. Several excursions will be given from San Francisco and points south, to Oregon during the summer, with the object of showing people a country in which to make their homes. The Southern Pacific holds to the idea that the way to build up a railroad is to build up the country tributary to it. Their efforts to bring Eastern people into California have been remarkably successful, and if Oregon does not enjoy a boom equal to Califor nia's it will not, be the fault of the South ern Pacific. With reference to the report that his company would build from the 0. & 0., below Salem, across the Willamette to Dundee, and enter Portland from the west side of the river on the line of the narrow gauge, which wonld be changed to standard, Col. Crocker said that as yet the matter had not been discussed by the directors, and it was a question for the company's engineers to decide, lie expects to visit Portland several times before the line is finished through and thoroughly familiarize himself with Port land and Western Oregon. At the adjourned annual meeting of the stockholders of the Oregon & California the following directors were elected : Le land Stanford, C. P. Huntington. Charles F. Crocker, Timothy Hopkins, W. V. Huntington, R. Koeliler, George H. An drews, Donald Macleay, John Mc Cracken, R. I. Earhart and W. W. Bretheiton. Subsequeetly the following officers were elected : Leland Stanford, president; C. P. Huntington, vice-president ; R. Koeliler, second vice-president ; George H. Andrews, secretary and treas urer; L. E. Gates, assistant secretary. DISEASE AND DEATH Force their way into many a household that might be brotected from their inroads, by the simple precaution of keeping in the house that benign family medicine and safeguard of health Ifoatetter's Stomach Bitters. Particularly where there are children, should it be kept on hand, as a prompt remedy for Infantile complaints, in their outset easily conquerable, but which, if allowed to engraft themselves on the delicate childish organism, are not easily dislodged, and speediiy work grevious mischief. Irregu larity of the bowels, indigestion aud billious- ness, are ailments of common occurrence in the household. Children, living in malarious re gions, are more liable to be attacked with chills and fever than adults, aud the ravages of that fell disease in their system are speedier and more serious. In remote localities, far from professional aid, it is especially desirable. PILES CAN HE CLItEI). Westfielo, N. Y., May IS, ISSo. For thirtv-two years 1 have suttered from piles, both internal aud external, witli all their attendant agonies, and like mrny another suf fered from hemorrhoids. All :hnse thirtv-twn years I had to cramp myself to pay doctors and lruggists for stun that was doing me little or no good. Finally I was urged by one who hud lind the same complaint, but had been cured bv Bram reth's 1'iiis to iry nis cure, i uiu so, nun began to improve, and for the past two years I have had no inconvenience from that terrible ailment. KlCHAKD UEXNRTT About twenty years ago I discovered a little sore on my cheek, and the doctors pronounced It cancer. I have tried a number of physicians, but without receiving any permanent bencrlt. Among the number were one or two specialists. Tlic medicine they applied wis like flre to the causing Intense pain. I saw a statement hi C:o papers telling what 8. S. S. hail done for ctlu ra similarly afflicted. I procured some fit o-.cc. ilcfore I had used tho second bottle the p. ; Minra could notice that my cancer wr.s 1. nil- up, Jly general health bad been bail f r t v or ' hreo years I had a hacking cough ; It; blood continually. I had a severe I ,' i 1 . iy breast. After taking six bottles of s;. :'. : ..-y cough left me and I grew stouter II 1 ...L'lbeen for several years. My cuncer 1 . i i ulidoverall but a little spot about tl.e si....' f ix half dime, und It is rapidly disappear In -. I would advise every one with cancer to (ili i :H. fc. 8. a fulr trial. Was. NANCY J. McCONAUlillEY, Ashe Orove, Tippecanoe Co., Intl . l eb. hi, ltt.6. Fwlft's Specific Is entirely vet:eluUe. mid seems locure cancers by fore.ng out the Impu rities from the I lis.il. Tr -utlse on lilood ami bkin Illnesses mulled free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., HHAWER 3, ATLANTA, iA. t 'STRAYED. KKilMMY KAKM KEAKFAIK. i field, sometime in April, ss7, a roan pony, (gelding), black insne and lair, saddle marks; about 14 hands high, heavy set. aud aged about I.-... a ...r. k nitul.l ruaur,! will t.hIiI Ifor any information leading to bis recovery, o JO lui II. KICKKNS TRIED IN THS VITIATED BLOOD. Scrofulous, Inherited anrt Con tagious Humors Cured by Cutieiirn. rllHROUGH the medium of one nf your brinks I received throgh Mr. Frank T, Wrav, Drug-gl.-t, Apollo. !'., I beciuni; eiiainlcd with your Ccticcka Kkmkoibs, himI take this opportunity tu testify to you thai their uc has permanently cured me of one of the worstcasesof blood poisoning, l,i connection will) erysipelas, that I have ever seen, and this after having been pro nounced Incurable by tome of the best physic ian fn our county, I lakegreat pleasure in for warding to you tlii testimonial, unsolicited ft it Is by you. In order Unit others sum-ring from -imilnr irtaladien may be encouraged to give yuur Cutidiika Kkmkiuhs a trial. f. S. W illi I.INGKIt, Leechburg, Pa. Reference ; Fiia N k T. Wa a y, liruggist A polio pa. Scrof uloii LJleer. James E. Richardson, Custom House, New Or leans, on oath sHys:"lu 1H70 Scrofulous Ulcer broke out on my body until I was a mas of cor ruption. Everything known tothe medical fac ulty was tried in vain. I became a mere wreck. Attimes could not lift my hands to my head, could not turn in bed;wan In constant pain, ftnd looked upon life as acurse. No relief or cure In ti'nyears. In IMHO I heard of theCuncuRA Kkm koies, used them, and was perfectly cured." Sworn to before U. H Com. J. D, Crawford One of the Worst Cases. We have been selling your Cijticura Reme dies for years, and have the first complaint yet to receive from a purchaser. One of the worst casesof Scrofulal ever saw wflRCured by theusw offive bottles of Cutiguka Resolvent and Cuti ccka Soai. The Soap takes the cake here as a -nediclnal soap. 1 A YLOK & T A Y LOR, Druggists, Frankfort Kan. Scrofulous, Inherited, Contagious humors, with loss of hair, and eruptions of the skin, are positively cured by Mticura and Cuticura Soap externally, and Cu- iciira Kesolvent Internallyi when all other nediciues fail. Send for pamphlet. Druggists use Them. We have obtained satisfactory results from t'te use of the Cuticura remedies in our own iimily, and recommend them beyond any other remedies for diseases of the skin and blood, 1'lie demand for them grows as their merits be e .me known. MACMILLAN S CO., Druggists, Latrobe, Pa. Cuticura Kennedies. Are sold everywhere. Price: Cuticura, tbe rent skin cure, 50 cents: Cuticura soap, an ex inisite beautifier, 25 cents; Cuticura Kesolvent, lie new blood purifier, SI. Potter Urug 4 Chem ical Co., Iloston LI r "It I PLKS, blackheads, skin blemishes, and Xltibaby humors, use Cuticura Soap. CHOKING CATARRH. Have you awakened from a disturbed sleep vi-.h all the horrible sensations of an assassin clutching your threat and pressing the life breath from your tightened chest? Have you noi iced the languor and debility that succeed the effort to clear your throat and head of this catarrhal matter? What a depressing influence it exerts upon the mind, clouding the memory and filling the head with pains and strange noises! How difficult it is to rid the nasal pas sages, throat and lungs of this poisonous mucus all can testify who are atllicted with catarrh. How difficult to protect the system against its further progress towards the lungs, liver and Sidneys, all physicians will admit. It is 1 ter rible disease, and cries out for relief ano cure. The remarkable curative powers, when all ther remedies utterly fail.ofSaBford's Radical Cure, are attested by thousands who gratefully recommend it to fellow sufferers. No statement is made regarding it that cannot be substanti- ited by the most respectable and reliable refer ences. Each packet contains one bottle of the Radi cal cure, one box of Catarrhal Solvent, and an improved Iuhaler. with treatise and directions. L and is sold by all druggists for SI. potter Drug a cnemicai co., noston. HOW MY SIDE ACHES. From the bench and the counter, from the loom and sewing machine, goes up the cry of pain and weakness Aching sides and back, kidney and uterine pains, strains and weakness. 0ouSi..s, colds and chest pains, and every pain and ache of daily toil relieved in one minute oy tne cuticura Anti-pain eiaster. new, ele gant, aud infallible. At druggists, 21c. ; five for il . or of Potter Drug aud Chemical Co., Boston. OmwiMte 1 II T TTuTRT u.jj.uiiiuii) f-ALEM, OR. Agent for - E A D. 1 N G Bicycles and Tricycles. Semi for Catalogues. 272 Commercial street. i ii irtroa 1 " SUMO pr. . A 1 ' -c"l "'" IV., ihty fort, iK ,3 n ' 11,1,1 r: 'M'i u-15 Sfo t of IV. rv! .1..!. Ktfi hf" Prinlmis ii- - r- '.f B . V. Ol'lool ill l!:el : i -.(: X jiIm" lii-i-ji n l.-.r . l.Kii.M. v.i a: i-n.UrsTU T.Y i:m ( i- cur1 . 1 t I ::: r'v.ti r. ist:, 1 i-rril tor l'rii-e 1 . V TT, St. -mil Job 1 or. 1., l'AM-'K, SALKM, i ort'tinii lU'HiI.iwiit'rs for ihe Wiiliitm'tU' valley for the i-f.elnvti il t'nhnnh'.'' Mcycles mill frVyf'W v T ite Ci iumhias ar' wt'if k'luwn, ;:re t.est ,ru fluent f r Those viin tine ltmeii will lo well fne.illitii ur enrn'MiuiHl with me liefiirt! Wade Co. jHirehuM ni' liltiee w ith R. M. 'J I'nmmeri'i'tl i-tivet . 1H etui w TO iEfl i- Manly Vit-'or, Weakness or 1.06 of Memory per manently restored bv the use of un entirely uoV lemeilv. 'I'lie Verbis fcunla from Spain. Spini isliTroibefB never fail. tliiilliiiblriin-il.SJpnge liook unci tcsiiiimiiials, (sent senleilv Kverv man should reuiliU VON JHAKKTlUKHlKlS,0.f Trap D'J 1'si k I'lui'i-, ev ol4. CLrvvv-n tm3 Children. Tliey are es OVWrV; pecially liable to sudden. Colds, Cottflia, Croup, Whooping Confrli, otc. We guarantcu Acker's Engliah Heniedy a positive cure. It naves hours of nniious wutehinrr. Sold by I it'.i. -",. ( iiiuil, ill-lliM. v WlVWW l'10 B001! things of this VVXvV ijf8 are sorrowfully lt;t alone on account of Dyspi'pbia. Acker's Dyspepsia Tablets will cure Dyspepsia, Indipestion and Constipation; sold oil & positive guarantee at 33 aud CO cents, by nstoflict;. (Iw a 'ir-'U. t . I'll! i -,! ti iint aSi'iul ur..t r l'Y 1' if"t:il.. i: F. "M IS