TELEGEAPHICL The London Tiroes still continues its attacks oa ParnelV The Mexican Senate has ratified the treaty with France. . , Berlin rejoices at Boolanger'a failure to. get into the French cabinet. The Nanaimo safferers relief fond at gan Francisco haa reached $11,619. Kissane, alias Rogers', says he will de fend himself against Darr in the court. The Canadian Pacific has reduced freight rates 40 per cent, to British Co lombia point. A papal rescript has been iaeaed, order ing high mass and Te Doom to be song in all the Catholic churches of England, in honor of the qneea's Jubilee. The United Presbyterian general as sembly decided by a vote of 101 against 54 that there was no church law pro hibiting the use of music Instruments in church worship. The terrible plague of locusts has vis ited the central portion of Spain. The insects are so thick that gangs of men bare been sent to clear railroad lines. Crops hare been fearfully ravaged. The eortes is about to rote a credit for the sufferers. Twelve hundred coal miners at Bach mut, Russia, who are out on a strike, attempted to rob a brewery owned by a firm of Englishmen. Fifty English work men attached to the brewery mounted horses and resisted the attack of the strikers. During the fight which occurred, three of the workmen were killed. Many of the strikers, who are all Russians, have been arrested. The conflict was ended before military aid arrived. June 2. Parnell's health is much improved. Got, Sawyer inaugurated governor of New Hampshire. Ex-Vice President Wm. A. Wheeler is dying at his home in M alone, N. Y. President Cleveland contemplates a trip to the west, and may visit Portland and Oregon. O'Brien arrived at New York, and was given an enthusiastic reception at the academy of music. A Butler club was formed at Boston. However, Butler said he failed to see any field for it, as he did not intend entering 5olitics again. This is thought to be 'en's prodigal campaign lie. Sherman held a brilliant reception in the parlors of the Grand Pacific at Chica go at which over 4000 perrons were pres ent. He said he was goitrr straight to his home at Mansfield, Ohio, from Chi cago, and there retire to private life. June 3. Mrs. Whitelaw Reid is spending the summer in California. Ex-Vice President Wheeler's malady is softening of the brain. Trains are delayed by slides, tunnel caves, and washouts, on the Northern Pnr-ifiiv The jury in the third trial of Andrew Hamlin, for rape, at Jacksonville, could not agree. It is rumored that the general offices of the Oregon St California Tine are soon to be removed to cn r rancisco. Abe Ward, aged 65 years, was accident ally shot and killed by a young man named Turnbull, near Vancouver, while hunting. - The Hnokane river is reported very high, ana fears are entertained that it will do a great deal of damage to the city of Spokane Falls. Mrs. Ray Pelane, of Eugene City, has been appointed assistant national in spector of the Woman's Relief con, bv President Elixabeth D'Arcy Kinne. STATE AND TERRITORY. A rich quart ledge ha been discovered near urant s Push. The West Shore will illustrate Astoria, in tne July numDer. Hf Wolli a minor u-aa billnrl in the coal mines at Roslyn, W. T., last luesuay. Milton Harper, a pioneer of Whitman county, W. T., was kicked to ueatn dv horse a week ago. Dr. M. M. Murphy, who was arrested in this city for illegal voting at the last city election, is " spouting" pro hibition at Coquille City, and practicing medicine, between unnks. A Chinaman shot and killed a brother celestial at Marshneld, on rnday last. Th rrnrt Inn which Waa then in SPS- sion, at once indicted the murderer for murder in the second degree, and the trial was postponed till the September term of court, in Coos cetinty. Boat No. 1, of the Ocean Canning Co., capsized below the breakwater, at me mouth of the Columbia, about 9 o'clock lt Priiliv nitrVir Tti rantain. John Reed, was found dead, in the net; the way of the boat-puuer was not recovereu. A boat belonging to the James Williams Co. cent uhnm ahont th same time. at Sand island, but the men were tiotb saved. THE POWER OF BOODLE. Boy Father, is "pants" a good word? Parent It has been trying to get Into the language a long time, my son, lmt I believe the best judges prefer the word LmruMra Boy How does it happen that this word "boodle" was adopted in ail we pa rwra as anno aa it rim oat T Parent Boodle, my son, is a different thing. It can force it way anrwnere. LLhicsgo Inter-ocean. WHY THEY DELAYED. "What's the trouble now?" asked a nervous passenger oa a new Dakota road, . as the train came to a sudden halt. "Oh, nothin ranch said the brake- man, strogs$Bg te ret away, "the freight Ku4 si n nil (h track and ran iatotbe depot, knoctia' it dear oa t o time, and oar engineer east tell na E0YAL LOYE C? KUtTIC. - ' "The bomb-ridden exar of Russia be guiles the Interims of time while he Is not dodjicg K&JUstic missiles by play ing on the French bornJ with which in strument he is an adept. On one occa sion while he was the mmritt H. played a French born obtisrato to a Riven by Mine. Nilsson. When his im perial majesty last visited Copenhagen be attended a concert in which Kilason sane the same air and ha wan mffrt& tn tears by the memories of a time when be could toot his horn in peace, undis turbed by revolutionary subjects and the cares of government. When late King Victor Emmanuel visited the small cities of his realm one of the first questions si ways was regarding the condition of the opera house. If there was none he would sugzest and aid in the conatrnrlion of one, even in towns having no greater puputauoo wan suuu tnnabitania. 1 al ways feel an affect ion for the king, for he gave me this decoration the cross of Ban Maurixio de Lauaro after the series of concerts given by Patti in Florence. ictor Emmanuel was a nrotector of Ver di, and made the cempoaer a senator. although the composer had no longing for political honors.) His son. Kin? Humbert, pars a subsidy of 10.000 f ranees a year out of his own personal income to the Apollo theatre of Rome. Ex-Queen Isabella of Spain used to sing very well, but, her voice being no longer fresh, she now has a prference for instru mental music. The qoeen of Belgium is very fond of music, and by her efforts she has contributed much to the progress mane in musical art in Belgium of late years. Tne emperor of Austria disburses over $1,000,000 francs a year to the Vien na opera house, it being his idea that his capital should have an opera house to rival the grand opera of Pans. . LADY CLERKS IX WASHINGTON. Women clerks are disappearing from the departments in Washington, says the Philadelphia Telegraph. It may not be many years before a woman will be a rare sight in a depart ment. Slowly, but surely, they are be ing got rid of under the civil service sys tem. They are not now seen walking arm-and-arm through the treasury cor ridros or standing by the windows at noon time with their cups of tea. It is not that they are closer to their desks. They are not there. Since Secretary Manning first took the treasury portfolio and the new order of things was begun nearly 20 per cent, of the women have gone and none have come in their places. When a female clerk dies or gets married, resigns Or is dismissed, a requisition goes to the civil serviee commission for a man to fill the vacancy. I was asking why this was if it was true tbat women did not make as good clerks as men. The reiIy was that some oi mem made better clerks than did the men. The trouble did not lie in that. The fact is they are hard to deal with. Most of them depend upon the gallantry of the superior officers and are constantly ask ing favors, many of them not hesitating or seeming to think it improper to ask nign officials even as nign as secreta ries to make false statements or violate the law in their interests. The most trouble is when examining them for pro motion. Some have not hesitated be fore hand to ask for a list of the questions. So persistent are some that it reflects upon the whole class, and the departments have entered upon a systematic effort to get nd of them. WORD TWISTISGS. "My dear boy," once asked a head master of a Philistine member ot nis sixth form, "do you mean to say tbat you have never lieard of that magnificent statue of Michael Angelo, by Moses?" Clergymen seem especially addicted to this habit, perhaps because their excessive anxiety to be correct renders them nerv ous, and to those of their congregation who are gifted with a keen sense oi tne ridiculous such slips are excessively try ing, from the impropriety of openly testi fying appreciation. "Sorrow may endure for a iov," so an Irish clergyman is re ported to have read with great feeling ; with hnt nk'ht cometli in the morning With the transposition of initial letters, a new field of solecism is oened up, in which a living cleric works with an in voluntary assiduity that is most upsetting to his hearers. ' My brethren." so he once said, "we all know what it is to have a half-warmed fash in our hearts' in ten.lini? to sav "a half-formed wish." He has been known to speak of "kinquer- inir pnn." and. on one occasion, speak ing to a gentleman who had intruded upon his seat in church, he politely re marked, "Pardon me, Sir, but 1 think vnn are ortninewing my pie." Here we are next door to the carrying out of the nortmanteau urinciD.e. a proximity illus trated by the feats of two other clergy man, nnn of whom gave out his text from "the Colostle to the Episians," while the nth? read "knee of an idol.' for " eye of a needle." The rector of an lush coun try parish, was liable, out of nervousness, to contort and entangle his words in a strange fashion. Thus we have heard him sneak of the "imperfurities" of man, when it was unite obvious that he could not make up his mind between "imper fections" and " impurities," ami ended hP aml-nmatin? the two words into "j - n one. AS MANY WOMEN AS MEN. There are still a few theorists who jus tify polygamy on the ground that more women are born into the world than men. but the theory has long been exploded August Bebel, in his remarkable work, momHv translated into Engl isb. shows that in ten states, with a population of rv tVKi OCX), the excess of females over males was only 2.500,000: and when we rniuinhn tb extent to whk-h men out- nnmher women in the colonies, and the (act that in India there are 6,000.0.) more mfl than women, the natural inference is that if the inhabitants of the earthj were distributed accoroinf to tne sexes, mh simI women would be found to exist in ahmit eoual rroportiona. All the Year Round. Csssreies Uwth af w elaasatsf SSd pre serving year HM.H mmaamww at v , For several years two entirely differ ent ideas nave been associated in my mind in what was to me for a long time a mysterious way. I read somewhere in a book of Mexican travels a startling account of "a happy wedding party assembled in an adobe building which was struck by an enor mous aerolite that killed everybody and buried the building out of sight in a twinkling. In one of Walt Whitman's poems there is a tine, "Where the lilacs last in thdooryard bloomed." I have never read or beard that line, but instantly comes up in my mind the picture of that awful event in Mexico. Invariably the perfume of one suggests the dire and sul phurous cruelty of the other. There are no lilacs in Mexico. Nor is there any mention of flowers at all in the naive and terrible story of nature's dramatic ca tastrophe. Will yon tell me why a fleeting scent of spring flowers brought with it a picture of pampas grass, a sound of mandolin, a half Spanish song, a bride in black lace and yellow skirts, a group of happy, swarthy faces and a thunderbolt that buried them all forever and instant ly in indistinguishable ruin ? Yon cannot. And it is my purpose to tell you that is why I have written this paper. U. In the late spring of 1884 there was living at Dobb's Ferry, on the Hudson, near the city of New York, in a very pretty ball-Swiss cottage that glowed warm with redwood shingles through the ilac bushes, my mend Binmnzer. I used to go and see him quite often, for he had the Ideal home of the romancer. His was the only perfect realization of love in a cottage, nnmarred by any of the dis turbing elements of life, that I have ever seen. He had married a beautiful girl, with whom he had fallen in love. He had won her in spite of wealthy rivals and the opposition of wealthy parents. Tne whole courtship was a kind of beautilul infatuation, lie had a good position in a commercial house in Beaver street, New York, and on a moderate income they bad furnished this little home and settled down into that holy selfishness which benignantly regards the rest of the uni verse as subsidiary and contnbutive. And the rest of the universe appeared to have aided and abetted the dream. Everything bloomed and glowed and sung for them uneventfully. They were so radiant with love themselves that they made the world shine. And 1 don think any body of either sex could have watched them billing and cooing up there over the blue Hudson like a pair of rob ins without feeling a kind of happy envy, mixed with a protest against the decrees of fate for having concentrated all human happiness in one pair. Lou, as he called ber, was literally a radiant woman. Her pale beauty was of that beamy order that emits an aureole. You never could quite divest yourself of the notion that a lambent, psychic light fell on things when she looked at them. She was, 1 suppose, that perfect equi poise of gentleness and sweetness and tenderness that the poets have found no other name for than woman. Mrs. Sherman, who used to drive up there from the Clock Tower House, called her an "alabaster lamp." I stood there on the graveled path one afternoon ad miring the bush lilacs that hung drowsy in their own penume in great masses round the porch, and she came and put her bright face through them to eee who it was. She lit ttie scene in an instant. After all, flowers and sunshine itself were only frames for that face. 1 remember the shade of disappointment that crossed it. She thought Bioniner had come. Such women pierce every man with tinv darts made of his own unworthiness. Ill, But the aerolite! Yes. Well, listen. Do you recall the 2-th of May, 18H ? Let me remind vmi of to things that occurred in New York. In the first place we hal one of those unreasonable hot spells that sometimes visit us for two or three days in the spring. People fell down in the streets, struck by the sun as if with a bludeon. Then there was a kind of incipient riot up town, caused by a strike of railroad men. It was a r ridav morning. 1 be shadows of the lilacs were dancing across the white cloth on the breakfast table in Binninger's cottage. A bobolink was pouring out a bravura air exultingly on the rail of the porch. You could hear tlie stroke of a steamer's paddles on the ri-er below. Every thing at this early hour was drowy and cool and musical. liinninger sat there at the table, drink ing his coffee and trying to look at the morning paper at the same time. Lou sat opposite at the same table, drearily watching him. In a high chair, rather prematurely, was the curly headed Binninger, trying to hit the dancing shadows with a spoon. "Jack, ' said .Mrs. riinmnger, wiui a imtwe. And J acx inrew aown tne paper. and with his coffee cup in his hand re garded her with concentrated admiration and tenderness. "I'm going to the city to-day." " I la, ha !" he cried. "Ton my word , I believe you're afraid to tell me what von want. No. no." she replied quickly, "I don t want any thing ; it's not that." Isn't It?" 'No. no. I must go down to the dress makers, and I ve some shopping to do. But I can't wait and come back with yo-i. I must hurry home by 2 o'clock. You'll not mind, will you 7" "Yes, I shall mind," be said. "To know you are coming, and into that dingy old office at 4 o'clock, makes the whole dav light. Must you goT" "I really must. I want my dress for Sunday, and there a tot of other things. "Well," he said, getting op and look ing at his watch, "by Jove, I've only got seven minutes to caicu uiu uuu. uu' hv. Bobbles!" and be kissed the curly headed bov. not his arms round his wife. arizad his hat. stood there at the door a moment and came back and kissed ber a train. "Jack," said she, "if you don't think I Ativht to goT "My dear, if yon most go, dont be fcnlish and tire yourself out running all orer town, and doot, on your life, fail to be here when I enme back. trooa-Dy. lVs rot to run for it. There's the whia- Urn cot as far as the littlt nf. Son- si tVer3 tin Cci. It wts tarn. The bcbci'St wsa calllrj ca tite rail. .lie heard BcLUa's voice In. the breakfast-room. The bright morning was fall of inarticulate voices. Bat he did not understand them, and a moment later he waa running down the hill to the train with a happy heart. Could he have interpreted the voices I think this is what they bad said : a. St. . aa. . a " . w . a . uont teener go l ixn't let ber go! Don't let her go!" - IV. Seven hours in the counting-room. A long desert of calculations broken by a hall-hour's oasis of lunch at Delmouicos : a passing word with Saunders, who asked after Lou. Saunders had been in love with her himself. Two minutes with Brainsby on the comer, who said he had got his steam launch and was going to drop in at Dobb's Ferry some day with a cargo of presents for Dobbles. An hoar's worry over a firm complica tion, in which one of the partners had been unreasonable and curt; one by one the hours, full of hard application, melted away. The voices of the newsboys told him the afternoon papers were out. Slow- iy tne oay, wnicn nad been an exssper atingly hot one, drew to a close, lour o'clock came at last, and he was firms up town to the Forty-second street depot. There was the usual crowd of business fellows on the train. They talked horse, steamship, oiL They were light-hearted, careless and communicative, and the train dropped tliem all along, at Yonkers, Biverdale, Hastings. At a few minutes past five o'clock Bin ninger stood on bis gravelled walk. He bad a litti surprise In his pocket for Lou. He waited for her to put her head through the lilacs. He bad grown ac customed to this little luxury of expecta tion and impatient welcome, niirt For the first time he was disappointed. But in the three or four seconds that he stood there making a noise on the gravel with his cane, be noticed how strangely still the afternoon was against the blitbe ness of the morning. Then be went into the house with a sadden eagerness. Bobbles was tied in a high chair at the window, his head hanging over on his arm. His eyes were red. He had evi dently cried himself to sleep. The table stood empty in the middle of the room. He had pictured the dinner waiting and the copper tea urn singing and steaming. The voiceless place maddened him. "Lottyte"be cried encouragingly, and then imperatively, stamping his foot. Lotty put her head through the kitchen door, looking a little scared. "Where's Mrs. Binninger?" "Shure, and thin she's not come yet!" "Well, where's the telegram? Why don't you give me the dispatch ?" "Indade. there's nary dispatch at all." He was losing his temper. He damned the country telegraph service. "Get the dinner on the table. Shell be starved to death when she gets here. I'll go down and get the dispatch." "Nothing here, sir," said the girl at the telegraph office. Td a sent it up if there had been. ' He'd wait for the next train. It thun dered along in a few minutes. He told Charley Purdy to wait with a hack. She'd be too tired to walk up the hill. He saw the crowd get off. His wife was not among them. His restlessness was growing st a frightful pace. She must be on the next train. The harder he tried to think himself into a reasonable condition of calmness the more resistless became his fears, and his helplessness made him furious. The one sharp thought that kept singing in his mind was: "If she had been detained she would have telegraphed. Her first thought would have been of roe and my anxiety." Then he began to realize that he did not know exactly where she had gone in the city, lie telegraphed to two or three friends. The answers were cruel "Have not seen her to-day." Train after train came along. It seemed to him that every man's darling was com ing home except bis. It was 7 o'clock i before he knew it. The sun had gone down behind Piermont and the river was bloody with color. His growing impulse was to take a down train and fly after tier. His reason held up the city, with its million people, and reminded him heartlessly of the needle in a haystack. He tried to laugh at his fears : called liimself a fool. But no sooner had he done so than up rose with terrible dis tinctness the great, sweltering city, with its myriad dangers, its colliding life and death and the possibility of his darling having fallen into some snare or met with some accident. He invented a thousand absurd reasons to account for ber absence and silence, and they only added to his misery by their ingenious shallowness. At 9 o'clock a new and terrible idea was springing up in his mind in Spite of every enort to keep it down. It was this: "bhe will never come back." He heard Bobbles crying as he ap proached the cottage. He felt a cold sense of something down in his soul, as if a relentless iron were working its wsy into bis consciousness. He walked the floor with his teeth set, as though to keep the phantoms of bis imagination back. And so the long night passed with no wife, and only the sobs of the child, wak ing at intervals and calling for "Ma." V. As soon as it was light Iotty went over and brought Mrs. Chamberlain, a neigh bor. She looked at Binninger with con cern. 11 is whole face bad changed. "What a boy yon are," she said : "Lou has been detained by somebody, and she has neglected to wire yon because she ex fiected to come back. You are borrow ing trouble. It's annoying, but certainly not serious. I've done it myself. You will go down and make some inquiries. and I'll stay here till she comes, and tiien telegraph you." This is the slap on the hack of the hearty man when the bell of doom is tolling in your soul. the aerolite bad fallen. The next day passed hopelessly and Helplessly. Lou never came back to the cottage. She was lying there on a slab in the morgue, waiting to be identified. T Mrai ear a Lt- t Vaw asvU tsm m wvtv w mm awoaw vaaaj aaao vesaa mi smv ci and made sore te come at last, when all other hope gave ont, to this ghastly finals. lou bad bnmed across-town from ber dressmaker to see a maid who had ad vertised. She bad been compelled. account of a street distsrbaace, to get out of the vehicle and wslx. la Forty second street st 1 o'clock she feU under the rays of the ssa and was carried into the hallway of a tonewt hocse. Tea minutes later a mob sailed thrcrj tb tieet, chared try the r-"-. Eooecf tj vLa t. r-.. j t j Crzyt rsrana eaaach. oocasocs tsde. Tt 'Z is this boose, One wcan rcUai the dress half off the inseoaiUe lady and wrapped her own dirty and ragged shawl about ber. Bough men foarht over her body. She was mistaken afterwarde for one of the same class, and an ambulance car ried her to the hospital, where she died while Bin dinger was waiting for the 8 :31 train.' a . I went np to the funeral. I didnt know Binninger. He looked so tired and frightened. But I shall never forget the strange odor of those lilacs. I stood there and saw them carry out the coffin and heard Bobbles somewhere opstairs sobbing and calling. ADTICX TO XOTXZSS. Are yes dlatarbed at aixat aad brekea of year rant bySsiek saild emflariac aa4 srying wtth paia of comar teethr If ao, aeavd eteaoe and get a bottle of the WlaaloWa Seothla- Srrnn for Children's Teething. Its valss la Uoaieulabfe n wta relieve tkapoerUtos enferer Immedi ately. Pep ead npaa tt mothera. there la a Intake about tt B eares dieenterr and dlarr. hoe, racnlatea the stomach and bowela. eorw wts4 eattai eoftoaeUe gams.iodaoee lnaaama- ttoa, and alvsstsae aad merry ts the whole Tetem. Km. Wlnalow! Soothinf Syrop for Children s Teething la aleasant to Qe taste, aad female narsee raea aad physician la the United is te sale by ail drarglata taxoafb Katea. and the World. cru fob Piurs, Pllaa ara fraaamtly sraoadad br a aeaaa of waifbt la U back, loin and lower part tha abdoma. eaoslat tha patient to iiDDoaa ha baa aoaa affaatioa of tha kldaayt or ntf hborlof rffmaa. At tiaMe yaiptaaaa of lndlraatioa are preeent, aataleaey, naaaetaeaa of the stomach, to. A molatura, like perspiration, prodaelac a very dlaafreeaole Itching, after letti rig warm, U eoatmtoa attendant. Blind, bieedior and Itchlag piles yield at onoe to the application, of Dr. Boaaanko's Pile Remedy, which acta dlrert. lT apoa U parts effected, abaorbtoc the tamer, aHeylnf the intense itching .and effecting a pet manent en re. Price te eenia. Addreea, the Dr. noaanco Jteaiciae (JO., naa, U. Hold or Geo. K. Oood. HOW TO SECURE HEALTH. Soortlla SeraaoexCle and BUUJnrla or Blood aad Urer Srrap wiU restore perfect health to w pnyi j organuauon. 11 is. inaeea. a ttrenrthenlnr it ran. nieaaeat to take, and haa ftoa proves ltaelf to be the beat blood purifier ever discovered, effeetaally curing scrofula, arpbUltio disorders, weakness of the kidneys, erysipelas, malaria, all nerrous disorders and debility, billows complaint, and all diseases indicating an Impure condition of the blood, liver, kidneys, stomach, eto. It corrects indi gestion, especially when the complaint la of an exhaustive nature, haying a tendency to lessen the vigor of the brain and aerroa system. WHT WILL YOD DIE t Soovill'i gareeDartlla or Blood and IJvar Syrup for the cure of Scrofulous taint, Khen matUmJWhite Swelllnr. Gout. Ooitre. Con n mo tion. Brooehitla. Nervous debility, lfalaria,and au otner diseases arising from an impure con dition of the blood. Certificates can be presen ted from but leading physicians, ministers, and heads of families throughout the land, en dorsing Seovill's Blood and Liver Syrup. We are constantly in receipt of certificates of cures from the most reliable sources, and we recom mend it as the boat known remedy for the cure of the above named diseases. PILES CAN HE CTJREO. Winmtu), N. Y., Hay IS. 1W. Fer thirty two rears I have suffered from piles, both internal and external, with all their attendant agonies, and like many another suf fered from hemorrhoids. All tboae thirty-two rears I had to cramp myself to pay doctors and druggists for staff that was doing me little or no rood. Finally I waa urged by one who had bad the same complaint, but bad been cured by Brand ret h's PlUs to try hli cure. I did so, and began to improve, and for the past two years I have had no inconvenience from that terrible ailment. Rich to Bixurrr. Go to Wm. Brown A Co. 'a ro7 a barrain In ladles' French kid shoes. "See their advertise ment." 1 Wonderful Popularity ot tlje Ite- nowned Medicine. The Greatest Curative Success of the Ape-A Voice from the People. No medicine Introduced to the public has ever met with the success accorded to Uop Bit ters. It standi to-dsy the best knows curative article ia the world, lu marvelous renown it not dueto tne advertising: It haa received. It is famous bv reason of lu inherent virtues. It does all that la claimed for it. It is the most powerful, speedy and effective agent known for tne building np oi aebtntateo systems. The following witnesses are offered to prove this. What it TUl for an Old Lady. Coshocton Station, K. T.. Dee, 2. 14. Gwwth: A number of people had been nslac your Bitters here, and with marked effect In fact, one ease, a lady of over seventy years, had been sirk for years, and for the pert ten year I have known her she haa not been able to be around half the time. About six months ago she got o feeble she waa helpless. Her old remedies, or physicians, being of no avail, I sent to Deposit, forty Ave miles, aad got a bot tle of Hep Bitters, ft bad such a very beneficial effecSon her that one bottle improved her so she waa able to areas aersen ana wain about the house. When she bad taken the second bottle she waa able to take care of her room and walk out to her neighbor aad haa improved all the Ume since. My wife and children also have de rived great benefit from their use. w. a. HAl hawa i , Agt. IT. S. Ex. Co. An EutlitiKiaKtlt Eiulornemcnt. Goaasa. S H, July 1 lftM. Gist:-Whoever tou are. Idont know, bnt I thank the I.orl and feel rrateful to von to know that ia this world of adulterated medicines there is one compound that proves and does au It ad vertises to do. and more. Four years ago, I had a alight shock of palsy, which unnerved me to soon an extent tnst tne least excitement won Kt make me shake like the ago. Last May I waa indsced lotrv Ho Bitters. I Baed one bottle. but did ee any change: another did ao change my nervea that they are now aa steady as they ever were. It ased to take both hands to write, but now my road right hand write tnts. ov. it yon continue to maanianare as bor. eat snl good aa article as you do, you will accumulate an honest fortune, aad coaler the greatest bieiag oa your fellow-men tbat was ever eoaierreo oa meagina TIM BCRCH. A Husband's Testimony. My wife was troubled for year with blotches, moth Batches and elm Dies oa ber face, which nearly annoyed the life oat of her. She spent many ooikars oa ue taoaeeaa laiaiuM tr, rarea. with nothing bat iniartoae effects. A lady friend, of Syraeosa, . Y who bad bad similar ezperteace aad had bom eared with Hop Bitter, iadneed her to try it. One botUe haa mavd her face aa smooth, fair aad soft ae a child' aad given her such health that tt seem almost a miracle. A Itk-h Lady's Experience. 1 traveled an ever Xarope aad ether fomtra sawatria st a cost ef thMaaae eoilara, la Mates of health aad feaad tt net. I retaraed dlaaea raad and dlsbeansaad. aad waa stored te real Toothful hlih and spirit wn loan tarn tsrw ln.la ad mow i. Jisra. 1 hoe a avaer atcf proat by sty wwta aad tay A UVI, Ittttlfa. Si- - SUET MID COAI?- : lied hy tie Cctlcnrav TUzzClz3 , For eleaataf tas rtta aad IXprf r-. srlnf Humor, tor aUaring Itchier, thw aad laaaasarioa), for anting tha Srst "" , r-t Xcsema, Parlai mil Crot, ac-4 1 - oerofnia, aad other iabertted tta and 1 ftiiiassa, Crnccaa, the rree f kia Care, sod CrncFaa Soar, aa exquMte 6x1a BeaatUer, externally, aad Ctmcraa KasoLvrwr, th aew Stood furtSerateraally. are lafalHMa, ACOUrixrmcwrwtM. I have snffered all my Ufa wtth skta Sits a . of different kind aad have waver foaadpee maaent relief. untH, by the ad vtcaof a lady fnad i eed your valuable CrncraA Rkkkdis. I .-are them a thoroagh trial, using six bowe of vheCcnccaa KtsoLvsirr, two boxa of tm .Tii aad seven eases of cmcru Soar, aad the .weultwa loot what 1 had been told ft woaM m a eomplete ettre. , BELLS WADS. Klcfcmend, Ta. Reference, O.W . Latimer, Draft, ist, aUchmoad. ' SALT KHETJX CXBXB. 1 was troaMed with Salt Xbeum for a aumber of year, ao that th skin entirely came off oave jf my hand from the tnger tip to the wriat. I tried remedies aad doctors' ecTiptioas ta aa on rpnse until 1 eommsaoed taking CtmcvSA UKvxtixs-and now I am entirely eared. K. T. fABXXB, m yorthamptoa Be. Beatow. DRCGGISTS EXDORSK TUKM. , Have sold a euaatlty of your CuUenra Keen. die. Oo of my rustomera, Mr. Henry Klnta. bo had tetter oa her head to gueb aa extent as to cause the ski a to peel oft, aad for sight . rear she suffered great! y, waa completely cured y the us of your tried icine. C M. MY K. Drug 1st, Cantoa,0hio. rTCHIXO, SCALY, FTJtFXT. or th last year I have had rperle of hehlaf scaly and pimply humor on my face to which I haveappliedagreetmaaymethodsof treatment without succesa, and which waa speedily aad entirely cured by Ccncca. If a. ISAAC PHELPS, Ear ana, O. KO MEDICINE LIKE THEM. .' We have sold your Ccrtcraa Remkdixs tor tha K-t six year, aad no medietas oa oar shelve g.ye better satisfaction. V. r. AiMKiun, jvrucfiK, auoaay, a. x, CtmcraA Rem vmks are sold everrwhere. Price, Cm ova. M cents. RaaoLvairr, tLM; Soap, Ht cents, rrepered by the Porrga Paca no UMBMICAL co., noaten. Mas, -noma r Usw to Care Skta lit GRUBS. Pimple. Skla Blemishes, aad Baby Humor, cured by Ctm- CtTBA AAAt. ' OATAItltll to CONSUMPTION. Catarrh la U dettraetlvs fore stand strt le tnd undoubtedly lead on to eonsumpUoa. It la Iherefor singular that those afflicted with this fearful disease should not make It the object of .heir live to rid themselves of It Deceptive remedies concocted by igaorant pretender ta medical knowledge have weakened tha eost dene of the great majority of sufferer la all ad vertiaed remedies. They become resigned to a life of misery rather than torture them sal res wits aoubuui palliatives. ut u is wiu never ao. i;airrn must ae me it every stag and combated with all our mlxhu In many cases the disease ha assumed danger- oui symptoms. The bone aad earUlag of tha nose, me organs or n earing, oi seeing ana last ing ao affected aa to be useless, the uvula so cloagated. the throat so inflamed and Irritated as to proauce a constant ana irriiaung cougn. Sanford's Badleal Cure meats every phase ot Catarrh, from a simple head cold to the moat loathsome and destructive stages. It is local aad constitutional, instant la relieving, per manent la caring, safe, economical aad never- lauing. Each nackara contains one bottle of the Rad ical Cure, one box Catarrhal Solvent, aad aa improved inhaler, with treatise; price. i. rotter Drug at Chemical Co., Boston. AiaPwaLry'.feleisaJoMeB f J I sation ever present with those of ia I 4 flamed kidneys, weak back aad loins. 1 aching hips and sldea, overworked or worn out by disease, debility or dissipation, are relieved In one minute and speedily eared by the Cnticure Anti-Pain master, a sew, original, elegant aad Infallible antidote to paia aad ia- nammauon. A I ail aruggista, Ota.; BVS tor Si; or of Foster Drug Co., Boston. Somethins New. -This I a eut of the new- REEVES AUT0MATI Oscillating Straw Stacker. Elevating arhlrh at desirable to nlace tha the straw and chaff In a stack. It oscillates aad stands in any position without cur rones or prop. Th above machine Is for tale by W. i. IIEKREN A HON st Vt State street. Also a full line of farm implements, consisting of WAGONS, CAKKIACK8. KUtKUKH. PLOWS. HARROWS, MOWERS, HAY RAKE8. PACIFIC HAY AND STRAW CUTTERS, Walter A. Woods' twine binders, also the Vic tor clxp xoilL , Come and see as at State street. W. .1. 1IEICUEX & SOX ALWAYS VICTORIOUS. i: QlfJlHOKlGO Every one's doty Is to aot allow the liver, tha stomach aad the aldaeys. three great org-aa. to bscnm clogged or torpid, and la tlnte expel all Impurities of the blood. Tha Oregoa BW-od Punier, a purely vegetable coin poo ad. Is the Remedy to cure all disease ( the kidney and liver, La those eaoaed by Imewre blood, as btt iousaa,eoaupatioa, sick bead ache dyspep sia, aerofula, eraptloas of tha skin, rheuma tism, etc Try it and you will Sad it always victorious In h battle with disease, sold every where, f l.M per botu. sis bottle for H-00. 4 Zm3-dw GEO. IL JON114S REAL ESTATE OFFICE. -4M Commercial atrreet. We have for sale farms of all stars and price, os tha prairie aad la the hills, stork reaches lath Wall. Timber Uads for mtU ate ta good lecatino. Sevrral goad farms aa tha line f the Oroeaa Pari Be railroad tat Lfaa ceny, slaw sa timber leads. Stat very Sae U s close te the eity oa either ft la pat. ra1f ail aioif from IStoUarrsa. a Is eniuva lea W have tweeaafas i-v v property. WU1 ex hangs rood f-i-. I parueoUr aad prieta, ea.1 at t &. CemaMftial atteet. . , xtw wbere the town site ia. juakoui uta. dreg aiore.