HOMES FOR THE HOMELESS. CHICKEN BILL LOWELL. stamps upon her child. Her life is the matrix in which the child's life is form ing. and what she is, within limits, her child must be. The outline- of his character as they develop may show that they are inher ited from the father or from his side of the house. She may not radically change these outlines, but the filling in is under her control. She can soften the hardest outline, she can strengthen the most imperfect and feeble by skillful shading. She can modify it and har monize it and beautify it in a thousand ways through the transforming power of her love. The infant is but a sketch upon which the mother is set to work. The full picture is wrought out by the labor of days and weeks and months and years; bv innumerable delicate touches that, though continued through long reaches of time, seem invisible, butjat last, on occasion, when she may be sleeping under the sod, come out ns does sympathetic ink when held to the tire. When the parent nest has performed its function, and our young are fledged and flown, then the worhi takes them in hand and trains them, intensifying the teachings we have given them and not always mingling love with those teachings. The world’s training will not hurt them if they have been pre pared for it at home; if they have learned those le-sons of obedience to law, of subordiuat'on of self, of in dustry, of patience, and persistence, and achievement, and devotion to what is noblest m life that they should learn at home. Those lessons that every man and woman who achieves a success worthy the name must learn somewhere and at some time, and can learn in childhood, at home, with infinitely more ease than at any other time and in any other place. When the resposibilitics of life begin to press on them, we begin to hearthem say: “My father used to do” so and so. “Mv mother did” this or that. They do not recall otir teachings so much as what we did and what we were. Little incidents in their childhood, which we had forgotten, they quote as full of instruction and the beg nning of knowledge and philosophy to them. Does the parent live who does not at times wish he or she could go back and make different impressions on the minds of their children from those inefface- lbly stamped thereon? We can not go back. We can only say: Young father, young mother, what you are you -tamp upon your child. Be therefore what you would have your child to bv.— N. F. 'Tribune. After Being Rich Half a The co-operative system inaugurated iytng In Poverty Dozen Time«. seven years ago by the publishrrs of The recent death in this city of the O maha W eekly B ee , whereby the ••Chicken Bill" Lowell adds another to patrons of that paper share directly he long list of mine discoverers who in the income from advertising, has lave died in poverty and without been a marked success. ~ Last year riends. Chicken had a vein of crooked- T he B ee Publishing Company divided less in his make-up, and this may ac among its subscribers, real estate, ma count in some small degree for his for- chinery, implements, musical instru orn condition in his later years, but, lestitute as he was, he would not have ments, silverware, clothing, books and lad many sympathizers, anyway. other articles, valued in the aggre Bill was one of the first settlers in gate $43,137.00. These premiums alifornia Gulch, where Leadville now were for the most part paid for in ad ‘ands, and some of the best properties vertising, which, owing to the extensive here were once owned by him. Like circulation of the pajier, had become lost of the great prospectors, he had so valuable as to command three dol • capacity for keeping properly or lars per inch for each insertion. Three loney. Once in possession of what farms, covering in all 200 acres—80 romised to be a paying claim, he was acres in Kansas, 80 acres in Iowa and i it easy until it was disposed of, and 40 acres in Nebraska—procured in i:e money that he received burned his trade from the J. I. Case Threshing i ckets as long as it lasted. During the fifteen years he was rich half a Machine Company, of Racine, Wis I •ist izen times. When in funds he lived consin, were among last year’s prem ■ ke a lord, buying every thing that he iums to pataons of the W eekly B ee aw, treating everybody who camo This year the B ee ’ s premium list / thin reach, and in general squander- excels all its previous efforts. Three ig money in every conceivable way. good farms, each 80 acres, located re »Tien he hail exhausted his purse and spectively in Woodbury county, Iowa, ds cr dit he would goback to the mines and Howard and Hall counties, in Ne nd begin over again. For a long time Bill was confident braska, are on the list. The most valuable among these is the Hall hat all he had to do to make a fortune county farm, with house, well and vas to sober up and go out and look other improvements. This farm is near >r a lead. His faith in the country was rodigious, but his dependence upon Grand Island, a rapidly growing city limself was even greater. His good of over 7,000 population. There are ortune had been so conspicuous, and also among this year’s premiums, a he men who had b .light his claims had Minnesota Chief Threshing Machine, nade so much money, that his opinion with horse power complete, several vas eagerly sought lor, and some cap- harvesters, 20 fanning mills, 12 plows talists were always willing to pay him and many other farm implements ; 2 » round price for any thing that he gold and 40 silver watches, from the vould say had mineral in it. A few Waltham and Elgin factories; 1 grand rears ago, having squandered his last piano, 2 parlor organs, 35 sewing ma jenny, he returned to Leadville and re chines and thousands of other articles, sumed prospecting with a sublime con- aggregating in all $45,518 00. Every idence in his ability to locate some- .liing that would be of value. He was subscriber guaranteed a premium watched jealously by many fortune worth at retail at least $1.00. uinters, but as he d d not appear to Sample copies, with full premium liake much progress, he was soon left list, mailed free. This is no swindling o himself. After many weeks of un- scheme, gotten lip by adventurers, but atisfactory search he became impatient, a perfectly legitimate division of pro ind hearing that there were several cap- fits, by responsible publishers of a talists in town, he secured considerable reputable paper that ranks as the nineral from a mine that was in suc- leading journal West of Chicago and •assfuloperation and “salted” hiselaim is now in its sixteenth year. No intel n great style. Then, going into town, ligent person would expect that every le called attention to the strike that he subscriber will receive a $1,500 farm, uul made, and invited bids. Tabor, ifterward Lieutenant-Governor and a $1,000 piano, or a $650 threshing Senator, inspected the property, and, machine, but all have an equal chance nfluenced to some extent by Bill's I in the distribution which is always {Teat success in the Little Pittsburgh PARIS FASHIONS. conducted by the subscribers present, mil other projects, offered h m two usually numbering many hundreds. housand dollars for his claim. The Decrees Rendered by the Recogn* Leader« of the Beau Monde. The enormous increase of its circu >id was a small one, as things were lation is, however, by no means en going, but Bill was desperately short, No such thing as a false chignon has tirely due to this co-operative premium md for a salted mine he thought the been tolerated in Paris for some time. scheme. Its consistent and aggressive mm was ample. The transfer was Shoe and gaiter-boot heels arc quite championship of the rights and inter uiekly made, and nightfall found Bill moderate in height, and even danc'ng ests of the farmer, mechanic and n town liquoring up. shoes are made with quite low heels. laborer, and its fearless opposition to Before morning Bill was suffic’ently to explain to tome of Tournurcs are much less exaggerated monopolies and monopoly methods xj'mmunicative lis new-found friends what an elegant has made the B ee popular and influ oke he had played on Tabor, and oy n Paris this summer than they were last year. The cushion, hot and heavy, ential. lie next day the news had spread The subscription price of T he hrough the camp. When Tabor heard is generally discarded, and the skirt is W eekly B ee is Two D ollars per >f it he was at first inclined to take merely held up by a few steel circles. Foulard dresses, very cool and pleas year. Direct your remittance by mmmary measures, but a further in- to wear at this season, are made money order, postal note or registered pection of the claim convinced him that ant bions ■ fashion, or with a long polonaise letter, to T he B ee P ublishing Co., .here was something in it, and putting draped over a short plaited or gathered O maha , N eb ., who will mail to you a t force of men at work he sank the skirt. B ue is the favorite color of the numbered and registered premium re haft fifteen feet deeper and came upon season, but red and buff are also much ceipt. Each subscriber should also i body of mineral which was of re- worn for seas.de c. stumes. give explicit directions as to post- narkable richness. This was the be Bulgarian embroidery is worked in ginning of the Chrysolite mine, from colored office address. silks, combined with gold span vhich millions of dollars were taken, gles, over a ground of etamine. It is LUCK OF A POKTUGUESE FROM fill heard the news of Tabor's hig worked so close that tho ground almost trike in Denver when h's two thou- entirely disappears. It is in great vogue FAYAL. N ew B edford , Nov. 15 (Special)— and dollars was nearly gone, and he ust now, and harmonizes very well lurried back to Leadville for the pur- A Portuguese from Fayal bought a ose of convincing Tabor, if possible, with mo lorn costumes. Sleeves are ticket of The Louisiana State Lottery, hat ho ought to have a share in it, but mad slightly puffed out at the bottom, and gathered over a wr stband of Bui and after carrying it in his pocket for le did not succeed. The Govern >r gar an embroidery, two inches deep or nade him somo donnt'ons from time to more, buttoned 1 ke a child’s sleeve. fourteen months, gave it to a fellow ¡me, but, remembering the "salt,” he French stays—a! least, those of really countryman who has been in America gave him nothing else. After that opi- only a lew weeks. The latter investi ode Bill was not himself. He used to good eorscLercs are so I eautifully made gated, and found that the ticket had ay that Tabor’s strike "queered” him. that, although mak ng the figure look drawn $15,000. The money arrived le knew, he said, that there was big sl'ghter, they compress neither thewa'st the chest. A Parisian never com in this city to day, and the Portuguese uoney in that claim, and nothing but nor mits the error of wearing tight, -till' will sail in a few days for Fayal.— New lis uncontrolable thirst had ever in- stays; she eons ders a graceful, snpp e lueed him to salt it. York Tribune’» Special, Nov. 16</i figure infin t 4y more desirable th in a "1 couldn't wait,” he la'd. “I might -tiff, A young man from Fayal, who has if over so small, wa st But then been in San Francisco live weeks, has lave known that w hen I located a c'aini she does not fall into the opposite ex ere would be nvneral there, if 1 would drawn $15,000 in a lottery, and will go ami we r loose, ill-fitting gar go after it. I had never failed up treme, even home in the barkentine "Moses B. miy w.th her robe de chambrt > that time, and I wouldn’ have failed a ments; Parisian lady has her corsets, but the Tower,” to sail this week. The ticket lien if 1 hadn’t been too dry to work.” had been purchased for $1.10, and After that he never made any more acme of art is to appear to possess a per held fifteen months by a Portuguese uoney. Fortune had come to him fect figure without any corsets at all. Tho coat shaped sleeve is still much in California, who got tired of it and nany t'nr.-s only to be east aside, and presented it to the fortunate man. n his extremity it would not respond worn for dresses, but no longer exclu sively so. For yachting, lawn-tennis The money has arrived in this city, o his bidd ng. —Denver (Col.) News. and seaside costumes, the sleeve is now and Messrs. Loum Snow & Son, agents very generally made fully gathered on of the barkentine, have deposited it in the shoulder, and very ample in all the MOTHER AND CHILD. a bank for safety. The owner of it upper part, while from the elbow down takes it very cooly, and does not wish • he latter Reflecting the Inmost Con- ward it is quite plain. The bodice is to have his name printed.— New Hert made either Jersey fashion or gathered sciousiiesM of the Former. ford, (.Mats.) Standard, Nov. 16. to a plain shou dor-piece like a The mother is as the sky over the baby on blouse; or again, it is a jacket w.th loose nd tho earth under its feet. As it —Strong-minded Wife—Eh, Jeanies, haws from her breast its supplies of fronts opening over a full plastron. Striped summer erge and etamine are you are great on languages; what is the difference between exported and trans ood, so it draws from her soul its moral favorite materials for such costumes, ported?” Submissive husband—"Why, nd spiritual supplies. The tones of which mostly have a very simply draped my dear, if you should go to the East icr voice, tho character of her move- overskirt over a plaited underskirt—-V. Indies you would bo exported, and I— uents, the states of hor mind, the qual- Y. World. well, 1 should be transported.”— Pitts ty of her personal m ignetism, impress burgh Chronicle. Utilizing Coal Waste. hemselves upon tho child and are re —Didn't stop to think: Ono of her jected by it unconsciously but absolute- Chestnut, pea and buckwheat coals, friends, not very well off in a worldly way, had brought her a simple but y a d certainly. What has been sa d formerly allowed to go to waste in the prettv gift on her birthday. "It’s only •f the teacher is especially true of the huge piles of “culm" which accumulate a trille—” tho friend began, when Miss uothor, who is the baby's first and near every mine, have, within the last Volatile interrupted her with: “O, no greatest tea -her: fifteen vi ars, been successively,separat apologies, I beg. I shall value it just “There is an educating power issuing as much as the presents Ihavo roceived ,'roin the teacher, not by voice nor by ed from the worthless material by which are really worth something.”— mmediato dcs'gns, but sihnt and in- processes that have been invents I to Harper's Bar ar. j . olun:ary, a* indispensable to his true meet the need. Tho ne plus ultra seems be reached in an air-blast, which —"What kept you so late last night, unet on as any element in it. This un- to only transports the waste from the Archibald?” demanded Mrs. Spoteash. onseious tuition is yet no product of not breaker to the refuse heap at ono-s:xth •'Taking inventory," replied Spotcash. ■aprioe, nor of accident, but takes its the cost of the old method by mule "1 knowed it,” she replied, "smelled it pial tv from tho undermost substanco but, before depositing it in its on your breath tho minute you camo >f the teacher's character. As it is a.i carts, final resting-place, by means of a grad in. You’ll keep on taking till you get .'manat on flowing from the very spirit ed series of screens, takes from it and yourself in tho lockup and disgrace >f h s own I f?. so it is also an influence out into the different sizes all the your family, and thon I hope you'll be acting insensibly to form the life of the sorts good fuel. The "buckwheat” is found •cliolar." satisfied. "— Burdette. Every obs rving mother must have to be just tho stuff for making steam on —A young married lady who moved seen and felt tho truth of these state the Hudson river boats. The cost of iiÿo tho country from a oity home, ments in her own experience. Her child carry ng tho culm from tho breaker to considered keeping hens a pleasant and reflects not her surface moods alone, the dumps has heretofore been, at a profitable dut* As sho became more but her inmost consciousness. Has she low estimate, twenty thousand dollar- absorbed ia tlm pursuit her enthusiasm a secret grief? She will see it in her per dav in tho authracite region of increased and "hens” made a favorite baby's eyes, hoar it in the tones of Pennsylvan'a.— N. Y. Post. subject of hor thoughts and conversa its voice. Is and she and impa tion. During one of her animated de tient? However she irritable may repress all pos —Mrs. M tchcll, of Chadbourn. N. scriptions of success, a friond inquired: manifestation of thia, ner baby will C., was very ill in bed, and seut het ••Are your hens good hens?” "O, yes," itive recognize the negative manifestations she replied, in a delighted tone; "'they And respond promptly to them. What eight-vear-old I oy to the well for water. haven't laid a bad egg yet."—Catskill <he del's then is of far less oonsequence He fell in. anil his helpless mother was forc-xl to lie there and hear his scream Mail. ibau what 'be is, tor what she Is she untd his voice was still in death. ST. VITUS'S DANCE CUBED F akminudalk , L. I., N. Y., Sept 2 1885. I have been troubled for several years with an afl'ectiou of the nerves which no > doctor or no medicine could cure until I tried B kandbeth ' s f ills . I would be taken with a viqlent pain in the middle of my spine, and my arms and legs would twitch violently. It acted something like St. Vitus Dance, for 1 couldn’i control my limbs. It would come aad goonceor twice a month, lasting two or three days at a time. Finally, at the beginning of one of mv attacks, I took five B rand - retii ’ s P iles . A b soon as they acted freely 1 found myself almost well. So 1 con tinued taking them for a month—one or two a night. It is now a year since 1 have had an attack, a> d I attribute my cure to B randreth ' s P ii . ls , F rances W ood . POSITIVE PROOF Of th« Wonderful Etfioacy of inliual autism as Applied to the Cure Lisease by Drs. D^rrin -A Reporter's Interview with a Well-Known Citizen. [San Francisco Daily Report.! Having seen in print numerous testimonials of remarkable cures performed bv magnetic agency, a D. R. reporter set out yesterday in search of some positive evidence on the point There was a decided bias in ttic reporter s mo tive. which obviated the possibility of any sur reptitious use of hifalutin statements not justi fied by the facts. He selected from the circular of the most prominent among our local mag netic healers the name of a well-known citizen, who, it was claimed, had been cured by his treatment. Calling A non George M..Mitchell, of the New Zealand Fire Insurance Company, at 312 California street, be was very kindly re ceived by that gentleman, who willingly con While in Portland, we vis't d the Van- tributed much valuable information. "Mr. Mitchell.” asked the reporter. is it monciscar dispensary whose advertise true that you were treated by Drs. Darrin, the ment appears elsewhere in this paper. magnetic healers i" Drs. Taylor and Clark are the proprietors, " It is." replied Mr. M. I had been afflicted both of w hom have first class certificates, with nasal catarrh so seriously as to affect my and also many letters of recommendation voice and make my condition apparent to my from prominent men in Canada and else friends. After various futile efforts to procure ca’led upon Drs. Darrin and placed where. Dr. Taylor is a regular graduate relief. 1 under theii treatment.” of St. Louis Medical College, Dr. Clark myself “How long luui you been ho afflicted I 1 l-'ane being a regular graduate at University of state also how serious your trouble w as. anil the Toronto. Canada, the latter gentleman result of your experiment.” “Certainly. 1 had been troubled with catarrh having had twenty-six years experience and practice. There being so many hum almost as long as I can remember, it was a source of constant annoyance to me. My symp bugs among advertisers nowadays we were a perpetual sensation of a cold in the took pains to examine the diplomas of toms head. In twenty four hours after Drs. Darrin these gentlemen before insertiny their ad first treated me I was greatly relieved. In vertisement and were satisfied of their about five weeks after my first visit I wan dis ability and integrity.— Hogue Hirer charged as cured, and. though that was over two years ago. 1 have had no relapse since. 1 Courier. _____ never was in better health than now." Mr. Mitchell's appearance fully justified the If afflicted with Sore Eyes, use Dr, Isaac Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggists sell it 25c. latter statement, lie is a picture of health, and a model of gentlemanly good nature. Convinced that it was unnecessary to seektor further proof of tiie ltrs. Darrin's wonderful skill, the reporter retired. SCHOOL AND CHURCH. ltrs. Darrin cun be seen daily nt their parlors, Stockton street. Sun Francisco, from tl A. M. —After nine years’ labor, the first re 113 to 8 t-. M. The pot poor treated free of charge from vision of the Malagasy Bible is now 9 to 10 a . m . daily. _________ completed. —There are now thirty-one women in the Universalist ministry. Six of these have churches in Illinois.— Chi cago Inter Ocean. It is stated that nearly one thou sand persons have united with the Meth odist Church at Los Angeles, Cal., as a result of the recent revival. —The Baptist Southern Theological Seminary has had $60,000 given to it by Messrs. Rockefeller, Hoyt, Bostwick, Pratt and others. —The pupils of a Georgia school who went out on strike against an ob noxious teacher got so far as to nail up the school house door. Then their daddies took them in charge.— Chicago Mail —The superintendent of the Rutland (Vt.) schools encourages the pupils to lay aside their spare pennies in a sav ings bank, and with such success that at the end of last month they had de posited about two hundred dollars.— Rutland Herald. —The order of Jesuits, which has been in existence 350 years, has sup plied the world with 248 saints, 1,500 martyrs, 13 Popes, 60 Cardinals, 4,000 Archbishops and Bishops, and has at present 2,500 missionaries.— N. Y. In dependent. —The French officials on the island of Marc, New Caledonia, continue their high-handed persecution and im prisonment of the native Christian pas tors for the crime of being Protestant Christians. As yet no effort to secure redress has been available. —Rev. Dr. Carey, of Delhi, India, in a recent missionary speech in England, said that there are two William Careys now in the missionary field, both con nected with the Baptist Society, and that another of that name, now a little boy, he trusted would yet be a mission ary. —The New England Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church re cently held its eighty-seventh •'.nnual session at tho Washington Street Church, Newburyport, Mass. The membership of the churches repre sented has increased to more than thirty-five thousand, and the number of pastors has more than doubled since the conference last met in Newbury port, thirty-five years ago. — Boston Journal. —The New York Examiner reports religious interest in most of tie Baptist schools for colored people. In Rich mond Theological Seminary a number of students are planning to go to Africa as missionaries. At Hartshorn j Memorial College, tn Richmond, the students have given eighty dollars for African missions. At the Atlanta Seminary one hundred and twenty-five young men are enrolled, nearly half of whom are ordained, licens d, or have I the ministery in view. PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS. —A teacher of swimming is sub merged in business even when he has but one pupil. — Texas Siftings. —As the convalescent patient said to the doctor, when an extravagant bill was presented: “What is the use of ¡ your saving my life, if you shove a bill at me afterwards so big that I worry ¡ myself to death over it?”—.V. Y. Tele- | gram. —“Is there any thing which can be | both rare and well done at the same | time?” asked Dobbs, as he contem plated his roast beef. “Yes,” said Nobbs, “a truly generous action is rare, I and it is, of course, well done."— N. Y. \ Ledger. —An Irish peasant being asked why he permitted his pig to take up its quarters with his family, made an an swer abounding with satirical naivete: “Why not? Doesn't the place afford ! every convenience that a pig can re quire?"— Boston Post. —“O, dear!” sighed Mrs. P., with a ! toothache. “Why can’t people be I born without teeth?” “If you will re-' fleet a moment my dear,” replied Mr. P., "you will be convihced that such is ' the fact.”— Burlington Free Press. —Master—"John, how ts this? This letter must have arrived a week ago. I and you have only just given it to me 1” j Valet—“But, sir, it only makes an ap pointment for to-morrow and I did not think it necessary to hand it to you be fore.”— N. Y. Telegram. —"What kind of a man is he? good, . bad or indifferent?” "Well, if you size Í him np alongside of Judas Iscariot, he looms up middlin’ fair; but when you set him down between such fellows' as you an’ me. Judge, he does dwindle terrible surprisin'—he does for a facL" —Prairie Farmer. POWDEI Absolutely PUri Tills powder never vx/lea. A him «! rtrength and wholesomeaesi MonjeeonJd the ordinary kimAi, ai d cannot be «¿j tinn with Wio multitude o( low tea» «1 / ¡Uum or phosphate powdem Sola oni/i! R ot al B akins P owmb C o . iofl WaU There are twenty linte kilns in Alabama that turn out 2’,0 0 barrels daily. DELICATE DISEASES of either sex, however induced, promptly thoroughly and permanently cured. Send 10 cents in stamps for large illustrated treatise. World’s Dispensary Medical As sociation tk>3 Main street, Buffalo, N. Y, The total production in the United States of petroleuni during the year 1885 was 21,842,041 barrels. VALVULAR DISEASE 0E HEART. DR. F1INTS HEART REMEDY, in cases of chronic valvular disease of the heart, should be used to remove the affec tion and abolish the pain which ¡3 felt with or without mus< ular exertion. At druggists. $1.50. Descriptive treatise with each bottle; or address J. J. Mack & Co., 8. _ ______ RUPTURE PEhMANENTLY CURED. *We will pay your fare from any part of United States to Portland and hotel expenses while here if we do not produce indisputable evidence from well-known bankers, doctors, lawye’ p , merchants and farmers as to our re liabi ity in the cure of reduceable rupture or hernia, without knife, needle or sharp instru ment. You are secure against accident from the first day until cured, and the cure guaran teed permanent or money refunded. You can work every day, no matter what your occupa tion, without ci anger or inconvenience. Con sulfations free. Office hours from 10 to 4 daily. Correspondents will enclose stamp for reply and address Drs. Forden & Luther, rooms 8 and 9, First National bank, Portland, Oregon. sick, we gave ner Castoria, When Baby When she was a Child, she cried for Caatoria, When she became Miss, she cinng to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria, Go to Towne & Moore when in Portland for best Photographic and Cravon work. CVRIS AlX HVMogij from a common niotch, or EruJ tn the worst Scrofula. Salt.rQ M Fever - aorea,” Scaly or u Skill, in short, all diseases caused1 blood are conquered by this jKiwirfuU fving, and invigorating medicine. J Fating IJIeerw rapidly hetl und»| nign influence. Especially has it maJ its potency in curing Tetter, Hotel Ho I I n , Carbuncles, Sore Fye*. 2 ulou* Sores and SwelliuKL| joint DiMcaMO, White MV||j Goitre, or Thick Neck, and EuM Gland». Send ton cents in i-taiiipil large treatise, with colored plates, J Diseases, or the same amount (oral on Scrofulous Affexitions. “THE HI a OOI» IS THE IQ Thoroughly cleanse it by using br. Piq Golden Medical Discovery,»nu di gent ion, a fair skin, buoyaiiu Its, and vital Mtrenglh, will CONSUMPTIoj which Is Scrofula off the Lunn rested ami cured by this remedy,if t3 fore the last stages of the (lipcaseaif ii From its marvelous power over this m fatal disease, when first oll\-ring til celebrated remedy to the public, L'r.B thought seriously of calling ft Mil sumption Cure,” but abandccM name as too limited for a in}‘dicintl from its wonderful coinbinatk n of M strengthening, alterative, or blo<»d-cM anti-bilious, pector.il. and nutritive i ties, is unequaJed, not oi ly us a nmei consumption, but for all tliroule cafties of the Liver, Blood, and Lus If you feel dull, drowsy. d'hilifaH sallow color of skin, or yt ilowisli-lffo« on face or body, freque nt headache« n<*8s. bad taste in mouth, internal n chills, altern ting with hot flushes,lov| and gloomy forebodings, h ngulur ap ami coated tongue, you arc fiufferij Ind igCHtion, «pe|)«dn, nnd II Liver, or ”BilioiisncKS.” In cases only part of these symptoms aw rienced. As a remedy for all pv.chi Dr. Pierce’« Golden Medical co very is unsurpassed. For Weak Izunrc* fpIttiM Blood, Shortne«« oi Ercath.l chili’*, .1 Nthma, Severe Conti kindred affections, it is nn•etpeient« S old bv D ruggists , at $1.00, w BOI I I FS for $5.00. Send ten cents in stamps for Pr.fl book on Consumption. Address, . World’s Dispensary Medical 1 ciation, OtiiJ Muin Street, B uffauj J <5/ BROWN’S a ^IRON BITTERS Combining IRON with PURE VEGETABLE TOXICS, quickly anil rompktely CLEANSES and ENRICHES THE BLOOD. Quickens the action of the Liver and Kidneys. Clears tho complexion, makes the skin smooth. It does not injure the teeth, cause headache, or produce con stipation—ALL OTHER IRON MEDICINES DO. Physicians and Dn ggists everywhere recommend it. . K”. HJQB D- Iff™*«- "■<» of Wells, Fargo A Co. s Express, San Francisco, Cal., sayB: “I suf fered with Impure Blood and Malaria for about four years, and tried almost every kind of medicine with out relief. After using Brown’s Iron Bitters for three months I was as well and strong as ever ” A lma S mith , Marysville, Cal., nays: “I have suf- sered with Scrofula for the past two years and have tried many different medicines without relief After taking two bottles of Brown’s Iron Bitters I am en tirely cured.” M rs E. A F rost , Fresno. Cal., says; “I have Buffered with Impure Blood for nearly five years I have used three bottles of Brown's Iron Bitters and am now well.” Miss I da B rinkerhoff , Dixon, Cal. says- "I have used Brown’s Iron Bitters for Impure Blood with very beneficial results.” ornuir ka <<><>!*. beaver . w . oKU 11 L-and all other Furu 1» >u»;hi for CM prices, Send for circular, which give« nmjj E. C BOUGHTON, 49 Bond Street, S«*« > " Hi T? Mucliine. 100 Ibi PJ j V j All kinds of ice mjchrnW DAY. 1301 Vallejo street, San truin'* 250 ENVELOPES BY I No. 6, XX Envelopes, post paid. E. W adswobth & Co.. V\ether»tR.<"- LADIES ATTENTlOl SNEIxU HKITSHU & W0ODARD, VN holesale Agents Portland, Or. A D - "*«' > J » S >& ’ »^4 < H T , Old and mil 1 remedy It not at druggist; : ** >» r b»“1«- 6 for ?5. U se'b""; 4,'o-- s. r. D i sea I ■> ill byexprw prepaid. eaht — onic r bo and Provisions At 25 per cent, less than you have been doing, write to American S omething for E very „H ovhehol " Combination Tailor System most ingenious invention by which tu cutting can be acquired by any °ne —-«.tivs is the most simple, accurate and least cw^. duced. For price of system, with pw* Tj terms to agents and county rights, appu Manufactu erand Sole Ageut for »Ma® Coart and Territories. Room 10. f«’ Building, corner Seventh and Market^ Thi« BELT of M m.nle d-r^ngemenu o' organ*. Theqg^ of F.LEClWml through «w pfrr them t’ eoufound tb>**"* . .dreoMd » h„,l to IM. H»» »ncciflc parpo«- For eire«^»ig fot inatlon, trie R*’« C«’1" Street, If You Want to Buy Your Groceries WELL DRILlINt Machinery for Wells of any depth, frontWtrtl for Water. Oil or Gas. Our Mounted Steam WJ Portable Horae Power Maehinewtt^’«“" Guaranteed to drill faster and with leaH**’’’ other. Specially adapted to drilling rock 20 to 1,000 feet. Farmers nnd othwaaren» to $4« per day with our machinery and from bualneas for Winter or Summer. We are w« largest Manufacturers in the buslneaa- Stamps for illustrated Catalogue K. A ddki » Pierce Well Eic.v.ior Co., V» • Genuine has above Trade Mark and crossed red lines on wrapper. Tnke no other. Made only by BROWN CHEMICAL ( O„ BALTIMORE, MD. 4 $500 REW is offered by the prfl V J A of Dr. Sage'sCiitarrhl & \ ? for a case of catarra O' they cannot cure. 1 ilttV0 a discharge M nose, offensive or otherwise, J smell, taste, or hearing, weak eyes. or oressure in head, you haveCatarrn. sands of cases terminate m conwmr« Dr. Sage'sC atarhh R emedy cim> J cases of Catarrh, “Cold in the* and Catarrhal Headache, su» • Mercantile Union. ; ' • t I i - S t , Sts FRAscia,-,, for Infants and Children. "CaMoria ia ao well adapted to children that L^r^end!,t“ •uPertOT‘o»°r prrecnpuon known to me. - H. A. Aaraza. M. D.. Hl So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Cantoria cures Colic. Const r*- B out Stomach. Diarrtir». l Kills Worms, gives sleep, and WllEoui injurious medication. Tan CaxTaca C omfzkt , ISO Fulton S'-1*