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About Christian herald. (Portland ;) 1882-18?? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 23, 1883)
10 ft* From Idaho to Texas. CHRISTIAN HERALD. snow. -. After leaving Grande Ronde the face of the country changed for the worse, being rocky, and the most of it covered with sago. We fol lowed down North Powder river to Baker City. The country is com posed of alkali flats and sage brush, grass being very scarce. Baker City is not much of a place, and, M s a my«?. tery. They are generally foreigners and are not overburdened with a knowledge of the world ; but think that the Latter Day Saints are the people of God like Israel of old. They are not ashamed .to own that they are Mormons as they were further back, but are proud of it. There are portions of this country gnqdjbr stock* bufc those that live Plicate and Feeble Ladies. to Those jíiiigünr;Tn u.>umu you to feel scarcely able to be on your feet; that constaut drain that is taking from your system all Its former elasticity, driving the bloom from your cheeks; that continual strain upon your vital forces, rendering you irritable and fretful, can easily be removed by the use of that marvelous remedy. Hop Bitters. Irregularities and obstructions of your system are relieved at once, while the special cause of periodical pain ure per manently removed. None receive so much benefit, and none are so profoundly grateful and show such an Interest in recommending Hop Bitters as women. Feels low Again. I do not wish to weary the read ers of the H erald with a full description of our trip, but thought it might interest our many friends to know how we progressed during our journey of two thousand miles. Our ¡»arty consisted of John Rus sell and wife, two (single) sons *«4» „SylvpRtfir Russell and wife, Hiram Hough an ... neuralgia nnu i» wuiawyi ui ij .a * !.i ww.«« almost dead. There seemed to be here arc roo povi UJ own Abner and Ellen Russell, and the tlon of the whole system; headache, nervous As you near the Great Lake the prostration, and was almost helpless. No but one occupation that paid, and nhvsiclans or medicines <li<l her any good. writer and wife. At Weston we months ago she began to use Hop Bit- that was selling whisky. There water gets from had to worse. Three with such good effect that she seems and were joined by Grandmother Rus Some of the springs are boiling and terw feetsxoung again, although over 70 yearsohl. I were more saloons there than any We ttrink there Is no oilier inedieine flt to sell, making In all fonrt'C?D’"persorr*. z— the salt, alkali» jxQn.„&pd. use In rhe fatnlly.”-A lady, In Providence. place of its 8iza wo Tiavu seen ex- We TraTTTh I fty-two "horses, fl ve B radford , P a ., May 8,1875. I -other things in U—We camped at cept Dodge Cityi Kansas. From ‘ " it towoa mia BIB Uljev a »1 . wagons anil one hack. nervousness, sickness at thcT stomach, I Baker to tho mouth of Boise liver one place where the water was bo as monthly troubles, etc. I have not seen a sick I We left Moscow, Idaho, May 10, blue that it went by the flame of day In a year, since I took Hop Bitters. All ] the country has the sanife general 1882, with heavy hearts at the my neighbors use them. Blue creek. appearance; small valleys along the M rs . F annie G reen . 11 iough t 6f leaving friends perhaps 83,060 L ost .—»‘A tour of Europe t hat cost me I Onthe29 th of June we arrive I creeks covered with sage. Out forever, as far as this world is con “83,000 done me less good than one bottle of I from the creek it was hilly, rocky at Corrinne, a small town on the “ Hop Bitters; they also cured my wife of 15 ; cerned. But we were and are still C. P. R R. Judging from appear years’ nervous weakness, sleeplessness, and I and covered with sage. We crossed ances of this one, a Gentile town “ “dyspepsia. ” lb M-. Auburn. N, Y. cheered by the hope that if we High Authority. Snake river at or below the month does not thrive well in a Mormon Hop Bitter« Is not, In any sense, an alco-1 meet no more in this world that we of the Boise and followed it to community. More anon. hoiic beverage or liquor, and could not be I shall meet •“ in the sweet by and sold for use except to persons desirous of ob- 3 T, L. C hilders . Boise City. This was .formerly a talning a medicinal bitters. by,** where partings., are no morej Christian, Polo Pinto Co.* Texas. G reen B. R aum , U. ft. Com. Inter! Rev. I sage flat; but the farmers ha ve dug So. B looming ville ,- O, May k »79. I and sorrows never come if we up tho sage, and in some instances S irs .—I have been suffering ten years, and 1 ¡»rove faithful until death. We I tried your Hop Bitters, and it done me more I have made fencing of it,-so now it dvmml the riw.k vary muddy .as..far „ good than all the doctors. as Walla Walla. From there we lias" IKe Tppe&TU^ Ha by --------- There can be nothing passed through Weston and across valley. We are no thankful to aay that our nuralng baby wn« permanently cured of a dangerous the Umatilla Indian Reservation, raised except by irrigation. »We restores, with tho gloss and lreshness of and protracted constipation and Irregularity of the bowels by the use of Hop Bitters by iu youth, faded or grayEalr to A~naturnt, rich which, by the way, is the best body saw and heard some Bob White mother, which at the same time restored her b.own color, or deep black, as may be desired. to perfect health and strength.—The Parent«, of land, taken as a whole, we have Quails, the first that some of the By its use light or red liair may be darkened, Rochester, N. Y. ___ _ ¡»arty had heard for thirty-four thin hair thickened, and baldness often, seen. We forded the Umatilla 1884. ——— though not-ahvays, oured. years, and some that never heard river, considerably swollen, owing It ehecks falling of the hair, and stimu- to the melting snow in the moun them before. „ They are not natives .. ..lalws.aurak and sickly giowth to vigor. It prevents and cures scurf and dandruff, amt tains. The bed of the stream is of this country, but have been heals nearly every disease peculiar, to the i l l scalp. As a I.allies’ Ilair Dressing, the very rocky, making it disagreeable turned out here to stock the Harper's Magazine begin« it« sixty-eighth V1QOR is unequalled ; it contains neither oil country, there being a strict law volume with the December Number, ft is the crossing. The road followed the nor dye, renders the hair soft, glossy, ami most popular illustrated periodical in Ameria against killing them. Not far from silken in appearance,and imparts a delicate, and England, always fully abreast of the timee river almost all the way to the agreeable, and lasting perfume. in its treatment of subjects of current social and Boise City wo saw some fine or industrial interest, and always advancing iti summit of the mountains., We Mil. C. I’. B rich er writes from h’irby, ().. standard of literary, artistic, and mechanical ex chards, and everything indicated a J«.'*/3, " l<axt tall my liair commenced crossed several streams that put cellence. Among "it« attractions for 1884 are: » , falling out, and in a short time 1 became new serial novel by William Black, illustrated] nearly bald. I used part of a bottle of thrifty and enterprising people. into Hie Umatilla that were swollen AV er ’ s H air V igor , which stopped the fall by Abbey ; a new novel by E. P. Roe, illustrated j of the hair, and started a new growth. 1 by Gibson and Dielman ; descriptive illustrated , and hard to. cross, Machena creek Boise City is about the size of ing have now a full.head of hair growing vigor pipers by George H. Boughton, Frank D. Mil ously, and am convinced that but for tlie let, C. H Farnham, and others; important his in ¡»articular, the water was mid Walla Walla, and being tho center use of your prcpanRiuu A should have been torical and biographical papers ; short stories by ---- entirely hald.1’________ _____ _______ W. D. Howdte,Charles Itokds.Ac. 1 sides to our horses, and we had to ’ of trade for all Southern Idaho, and .1, W. B owen , proprietor of the McArthur (Ohio) HiK/tiirir. says : “AVER’S H air V igor go against the current, which made being capital of the territory, it is a is a most excellent preparation for the hair. HARPER’S PERIODICALS. I speak <>f it from mv own experience, jis it hard to stem; but we all got place of considerable importance. use promotes the growth of new hair, ami For a few days travel from » oise Per Year : makes it glossy and soft. The V igor is also across without any accident fur a sure cure for dandruff. Not within iliy $4 00 know ledge lias the preparation ever failed HARPER’S MAGAZINE .... ther than -getting our goods wet, the country had a better appear to give, entire satisfaction.” 4 00* HARPER’8 WEEKLY............ Although this is a toll road, it was ance, there being more grass p.nd M r . A xgi - s F airbairn , lender of the celebrated “ Fairbairn Family " of Scottish 4 00 HARPER’S BAZAR........... in a terrible condition ; being al 1688 sage. We cros-qd Snake river V icak'ts,. writes„.from Itosfon, Mast., Feb. 6, l*sn •• Ever since my liair began t<> give sil HARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE^-.-.. .. 1 5® most impassable in ¡»laces. This the third and last time at Glenn’s very ev+deuc® of the change which fleeting tune procureth, I have used AVER ’ S H air V igor , and so have been able to maintain side of the mountains there is but Ferry. From here, for several day’s HARPER’S FRANKLIN SQUARE LIB an ippearatiee of v<<uthtillness — :r matter of RARY, One Year (52 Num be»;............10 GO ’ travel, water was scarce, and we considerable consequence Io ministers, ora- little timber, but the canyons are t actors, an I hi fact every one ubu live« Pontage Free to aU. subscriber» in the Uniid in lln' eyesof flic public.’’ deep and rough. In places the had to make long drives in order to States or Canada. M rs . »>. A. P rescott , writing from 1« Fhn road runs so near the river that it get water for the stock. We came S’., < h rh nr.ori., ,l/.is< , .Ijiril II, |ss_, snys : The volumes of the Magazine begin with the “ i’wo »arsa.! ■ alHHinr « o thirds of mv h'sir looks, frightful, and makes one to Snake river again at Salmon • came Numbers for June and December of each year i off. it thinned very rapidly, ami I was •ast growing bahl. On using AV er ' s H aiiv When no time is specified, it will be uuderstow shudder, for a very little tip would f Falls, followetF4t“about six miles, \ ig >ic the falling slopped and a new growth that the ej^ryxnber wishes to begin with eonimeui’cd, mid in about a mouth my head currenl Nuaitfer. “j turn wagon and all into the seeth ’ then h ft it to see it no more only was complrt> ly covered with short hair. It Tho last Eight Volume« of Harpers lias continiuxl in grew, nud is ^uw as good 115 zine, iu neat cloth binding, will beseut by ¡n*«<| ing waters below. The east side of ‘ in the distance. before it fell. I regularly nse<Mil one bottle postpaid, on receipt of S3 0® per v0'nn?M of tlio \ iGott, but now use it dFcusionally as At IL*ck Creek Station we struck n rtrwtng.“ , Cloth Caees. for binding, 50 cants each—»71 the mountains is not so rough, but mail, portiaud. . . , .1 M • h ive hundreds <d similar testimonials has more timber than the west 'the first Mormon 'settlement; and Index t > Harper*» Magatiwe, Alphabetic! t > i!>0 etlhacy of AV er ’ s II aik V igor . It Analytical, and Classified, for Voinnis«* 1 t" I The Grande Ronde is a beautiful from here through Utah they were nuvil«« but n trial to conviuco tbc inoit akepti- inclusive, from .Inna, 1850, to June, 1880, o I about all. tho people we saw. In I ’ . mv nine. vol., 8vo, Cloth, 54 IX). valley, surrounded by high moun Remittances should be made bv Post-on»! J ’ ltEI ’ AREH IlV . Money or Draft, to avoid chance of l«*- .^.1 tains ; it is «'delightful place in the. these frontier settlement» they are Xetcnpapern are not to top'J thin aarei 1 Dr. J. C7Aycr& Co., Lowell, Mass. a hard looking set ; and how they euuiunr, but disagreeable in winter i nient without the erpreM ordei* of H asp »1 I Sold by »11 Dru£gl«la, BsuTHEns. Addreas „ I owing to the heavy winds and {manage to keep body and soul to- j 11ABPEB 4 BROTHEB8. N«w loA I AYER’S Hair Vigor Harper’s Magazine.