W&l 1 T it t -1 1 ''11LJ L.-'1 "" " " ' " "!!S-!Sg5 Wr$m1&'V?$''Xf LOUIS W VAWWUVBWE, Ob of ths test kflCnrt Valine men in CMHfO, recroMnUUTt c-r tt gmt ttnostmt uo. s HEADACHE 8tEEPUMJte83, NERVOUS1 rH8STWATHWI. ' t Dr. ante JKedfcal Co., Xtkhort, Xnd. Gentlemen 1 1 take pleasure In Informing yoa of tbo very beneficial results whloh have followed the UM Of D. MlLf ' JlkaTARATWC NtaviNK In the esse ofmyselr and wife. Tor year I m subject to a distressing pala at.tbe, bsie of .the CURED wS-W-BKr reoommerxled to ma. Mr ease had been ho obsti nate that I bad no confidence In tbo efficacy of any medicine Yet u a latt resort I consented to tire it atrial. Much to my wrpriie, I .experienced narked benefit j my sleeplessness disappeared: my headache wee removed t toy qjclU and general SETHOUSANDS AINCD TWCNTT POUNDS., AttftHI OCCUHMB SyoKtteVeWn'e0' fiet of results. - LodD,7Vamdsbvu(. 60LD ON A yoTiyrpIAWWTKK. ' TRY DR. MILES' PILL8,r5i Df SES 25 CTS. Hold tv O J. Kr.V, druggist, Baltiti Are You Ever Tired? Do you ever ihlnkyonr skin needs a rest? It certainly does. It needs a tonlo to tone It up Just like a rundown ytiu. at i iirvTVTmTir7 ytrtff'iiri.i The Bkln Food find Tlsaur-llullaer. Is iv food for tbo skin. It mnkcR the skin linn nnd prencrvea lt( eaxtlclty, thus pre venting wrlnkloM. Vou cunnot freckle or tan with the crcme on your fttce. NOtoll ct tabic Is complete without It. Ona pot (75 cents) ast tb ee mouth-, used daltv. ItUthoONIiYMKIA FOOD on thM murk et. BBWAItfci th J . .. .. J M. 1Wivw.i s imku.rbv f'fA'l IUNH nnd accept nofcubnUtuto. MRS. NETTIE HARRISON, AMKBlCA'd BKAUTY DOOrOB, SB Gcory Bt., Snn Francisco, Col For sale by VHUO LKOG. Orugglst, Patton Block, Salem, Oregon. For any special or complicated blemish 01 tie face and form, write to MH3. NKTrlE HAitrtlrtON, 2 Ueary St., San Francisco, superfluous hair permanently removed. IiBAVES SALEM from U. V. Dock at 8 o'clock a. m. every Wed- nesd iy ana tuiuraay. IiBAVES PORTLAND lroaitheOentraldockat foot ol Washington street every aunday and Tburs 17, LEAVES SALEJt for Albany 'every Monday and Tuesday, re turning tame days, , i-oncerniuB freight and pasjenger bnslncM, call on the aijent, AL U1CU1UCN. CflflS. WOLZ, Proprietor of the GERMAN :-: MARKET South Commercial Ht., B ilem. AH klndb Fresh, oalt und Smoked MeaU nnd Biutnges. . FilEE DELlVKHYt fiifl M SlNJECTIC mniii I hiamuMunrmnA. OwrwrECTIOX STBIKaStrM wlvb tmrtjU. liclraa. DowMtSTAIK. KUTVKtnS STBICTOttl; Cuna OONOIUlllOtA ta OLEET In 0t U foes ir A qoicKCtmB fcr LEUcowmau whites. SuMfcr'UnnOOOISTS. $eUlUtnTMAnttl KAL'n,cntvrinii.'cn r:rA-r n.'ini't .11. ' ! - BLOOD DISORDERS A New Remedy A true Specific a jxwUIts nd ptmisnait dlmtnstfon of all poiion from th blood, and a orton of htaluqr rliror to th tiJue u vBatd to tulfertn fix Jm SrU tun ina remedy which hi been underjoing the most ever prirate experiment! for the put thiee year. , It n Vet Med, and It wUI not fail, ai it U a True Specific & Syphilitic pouon and all Wood dbcate. Do you be Uev it ? Send for full partlculara and proof free. Stop, fillinz your tyatm wuh mercury and otter.poUoM.; This remedy will cure you in r o da wUfcout fafl. Wa guarantcn o cure or refund the mosey. Address MOFFAT CHEMICAi CO., 170 First Street POKIT-fcAKB, OB. Smith Premier Typewriter. Hold ea pay . Kor KfBt. W. 1. 5TALEY, Agfjirt, Um, I J Stealer mm. ifro H:X,MJRPWt,Qa,HAgtt. Tk4f Bt, rafUMd. Bf4 far fUlegm. ii.il.HrtMfriUi iqiil buiiEJ) itniM jpaith bn, tALMAoe bltcflurtafia on Of drlfllBt MlrlACLES, ONE It KftfilalH Hi Dt slstilflmtit r.f His Tkt Math fi a I -Tim Omnfjitilrtil ft vlotir tVa Meter Ton Una (o tin (lootl. tlhoorfiMMny Ms-It, flr. !' I inBj'O (otlny clioao tot Hid mibjeet of lili tllscourflo tlio liKitilry fit1dreod by tlio hhil i Eitylouf to thojo wliu BUrronhdcd liliil wliort, tho Invitlld Woiiinfl lliivlrig touollod his gflnjlent, lie flnked, "wlio loiihcd wo" (Mnrk y, 01)? A gf6t crowd of OJtcllod itoojilo elbow ii each otlior this wtty nnd Umt nnd Oirlst in tho midst of tho commotion. ThojWero on tho wny to boo hint restore to cofflploW bentth n dy Ina jwrson, Borno tuOTiKIlt, lio coilld'offecl tho ouroj bilifJro that ho could not. At tiny rnto, It would bo nn Interesting oxporiincnt. A vory slek woman of 13 y6rtrs' Invitlldlsm in In tho crowd. Somo any hor lintno Wfl Mnrthnj others Bny It wts Veronica. 1 donot tkia6w" what her'namo was, but tWff Is rirtlrr;'iho' dad tried nil styles of euro. fEroryvriielf.of her hmnbld homo had medicines on It, Sho hnd employed many of tho doctors of that tlmo, when , medical science was moro mdo nnd rough nnd ignorant than wo can lmagino in this tlmo when tlio word physician or surgeon stands for potent and educated skill. Professor'Lightfoot gives n list Of what ho supposes may havo been tho remodics nho had applied. I supposo sho hod boon blistered from head to foot nnd had tried tho compress and had usod nil styles of astringent herbs, arid she had boon mauled and hacked and cut and lacerated until llfo to her wad a platrue. Beside that tho Biblo indicates her'doc tors' bills had run up frightfully, and sho had paid money for medicines and for surgical attendnnco and for hygionlo ap paratus until her purso was as exhausted as her body. What, poor woman, are you doing in that jostling crowd? Botter go homo and to bed and nurso your disorders. Nol Wan and wasted and faint, sho stands there, her face distorted with suf fering, and over nnd anon biting her lip with somo acuta pain und sobbing until her tears fall from tho hollow eye upon tho fadod dress, only able to stand bo- "causo the crowd is so closo to hor, push ing her this way and that. Stand back I Why d6 you crowd that poor body? Have you no consideration for a dying woman? But just at that timo tho crowd parts, and this invalid comes almost up to Christ. But she is bohind him, and his human eyo docs not take her in. She has heard so much about his kindness to tho sick, and she does feel so wretched; she thinks if sho can only just touch him once it will do her good. Sho will not touch him on tho sacred head, for that might be irreverent. Sho will not touch him on the hand, for that might seem too familiar. She says: "I will, I think, touch him on hiacoat, not on tho top of it, or on the bottom of tho main fabric, but on the border, tho bluo border, tho long threads of , tho fringe of that blub border; there ckiiibo no harm in that. I don't 1 think" h'b will hurt mo, I have hoard so much about him. Besides that, I can stand .this no longer. Twelve years of suffering have worn mo out. This is my last hope." And she pressed through tho crowd still farther and reaches for Christ, but cannot quite touch him. She pushes still farther "through the crowd and kneels and puts her finger to the edgpe of the blue fringe of the border. She just touches it.. Quick as an electric srock there thrilled back into her shat tered' nerves, and shrunken veins, and ex hausted arteries,, and panting lungs, and withered muscles, health, beautiful health, rubicund health, God given and coafBlte health. The 13 years''march of pain and pang and suffering over sus pension bridge of nervo and through tun nel of bone instantly halted. TOE nEAUNO TOUCH. Christ recognizes somohow that mag netic and healthful influenco through the' medium of tho bluo fringe of his gar ment had shot out. He turns and looks upon that excited crowd and startles them with tho interrogatory of my text. "Who touchedme?" Tho insolent crowd in substance replied: "How do wo know? You get in a crowd like this and you must expect to bo jostled. You ask us n question you know wo cannot unswer.' But tho roseate and rejuvenated woman came up, and knelt in front of Christ, nnd told of the touch, and'told of tho restora tion, and Jesus said: "Daughter, thy faith hath 'made" thee whole. Go in Deaco.' So Mark gives tw a dramatiza-. tion of the gospel. Ob, what a doctor ChristisI In every ono of our households may he be the family physician. Notice that there is no addition of help to others without subtraction of power from ourselves.' The context says that as soon as this woman was healed Jesus felt that virtue or strength had gono out of him. No sdfMtiea of help fo others' with out subtraction of strength from our selves. Did you never get tired for oth ers? Haye you, never risked your health for others? Havo you never preached a sermon, or delivered an exhortation, or offered a burning prayer, and then felt afterward that stre-sgth had gone out of you? Tbea ye have never imitated Christ. Are you curiowj t Icaow how that gar mint of Christ should have wrought stich'a'care for this tmppliant invalid? I suppose that Christ was surcharged with vitality. Yob lmow that diseases may bo conveyed f rem city to city by gar nests aa; In case of epUcmie, and so I supposo that ganBMiU may be sur charged with health. I suppose that Christ bad each -physical mniniotisai that it permeated all his robe down to the last thread on the uoruer or tae vine fringe. But Jb addttto to that there was a di vine thrill,'therewa a Mfraelow po teacy, there was aa eawipotest thera peutics, without which thk J3 yeara ta vaMd would sot have bees instantly re stored. Now, if craiiipetesce caaaot help other without defleUoa, bow oaa we m aayeet to Ueas the world witboat traxix' dxtttM tlii"iajWlBiiJi siMi'.iiiH-iiiiiwi ChrkHntl 6bjeet bMHl 1ft) fak H( femil Who HI MtwtSiiimUonot itotmum oref tvcrfe Unit li may edtitfala lil children, a tnfili whttfifl ftiitidrty lilght flol ltfnfirj, nil hln hefvotis' oiiefky wrung out by ho Jive service hi fchufolii WrMibdtli wliool, 6rfcllyefsglltlon,lirtilliil(nt6Jaiifl( Add thd strength lift uli9 011 1 of hlrtl. A tooUier- who robs herself bt slem! lit i behalf of sick efAdle a tvlfo wit) bear te!!l!r7lftKS that su tun? cntiuifrtK' be' titiMrttitl In tho combat menliist dlfrrfskr, woman w'10 ky "'frd al '" enrnwt prAysr" pnil goou counsel wioiy kitpii nun many years devoted tOftarititf hef frjinlly for God and useful ties and heaven, and tolm hart rKiUiltltf ia show for it but protrinturd gray hairs nd n profusion of deep wrinkles- is Ilk Christ, rwidstfongth has gone out of her. Tlmt str etigtli or vir trio may nave gono out through a garment sho has uindo fo tho home, that strength may lmvo gono out through tho bock yon knit for the barofoot destitute, that strotlgth may go out tlirough thd mantle liririg up in some closet after you nro dead, So a cripplod child sat ovory morning on hor fnthor's front stop bo that whon tho kind Christian toachor pnssod by to school sho might take hold of her dress arid let tho dress slldo through her palo fingers. Sho said it helped her pain so much nnd made hor so happy all tho day. Aye, havo we not in nil our dwellings garments of tho do Tinrtod. a touch of which thrills us through and through, thd Hfo of tH6b who nf o gone thrilling through tlio lifo of those' who stay? But mark you, the Sincipld I ovolve from this subject, o addition of health to others unless thoro bo a subtraction of strength from ourselves. He felt that strength had gono out of him, CHRIBTS SENSrriVKNES8, Notice also in this subjoct a Christ sensitive to human touch. Wotalknbodt God on a vast scalo so much wo hardly appreciate his accessibility God in mag nitude rather than God in minutiso, God in the infinite rather than God in the in finitesimalbut horo in my text wo havo a God arrested by a suffering touch. When in tho sham trial of Christ they struck him on tho cheek wo can realize how that cheek tingled wlthpain. When under the scourging the rod struck tho shoulders and back of Christ, wo can-re-alizo how ho must have writhed uridor the lacerations. But horo thoro is n sick and nervoless fingor that just touchos the long threads of tho bluo fringo of his coat, and ho looks around and says, "Who touched me?" Wo talk about sensitive peoplo, but Christ was tho impersonation of all sen sitiveness. Tho slightest stroke of the smallest finger of human disability makes all tho nerves of his head and heart and hand and feet vibrate. It is not a stolid Christ', not a phlegmatic Christ, not a preoccupied Christ, not a hard Christ, not an iron cased Christ, but an exquisitely sensitive Christ that my text unveils. All the things that touch us touch him, If by the hand of prayer we make the connecting line be tween him and ourselves complete. Mark you, this invalid of the text might have walked through that crowd all day and cried about her suffering, and no relief would have come if she had not touched him. When in your prayer you lay your hand on Christ you touch all the sympathies of an ardent and glow ing and responsive nature. You know that in telography there aro two currents of electricity. So when you put out your hand of prayer to Christ there arfc two currents a current of Bor row rolling up from your heart to Christ and a current of commiseration rolling from tho heart of Christ to you. Two enrrents. Oh, why doyou go unholped? Why dd you go wondering about this and wondering about that? Why do you not touch him? Aro you sick? I do not think you aro any worse off than this invalid of the text. Have you had a long struggle? 1 do not think it has been more than. 13 vears. Is your case hopeless? So was this of which my text is the diagnosis and prognosis, "Oh," you say, "there aro so many things between me and God." There wasawhole mob between this invalid and Christ. She pressed through, and I guess you can press through. Is your trouble a home trouble? Christ shows himself especially sympathetic) with questions of domesticity, as when at the wedding inCanahe alleviated a housekeeper's predicament, as when' tears rushed forth at the broken homo of Mary" and Martha and Lazarus: Men aro somotimes ashamed to weep. There aro men who if the tears start will conceal them. They think it Is unmanly to cry. They do not seem to understand it is manliness and ovidenco of a great'heart. I am afraid of a man who does not know how to cry. Tho Christ of the text was not ashamod to cry over human misfor tune. Look at that deep lake of tears opened by the two words of the evangel ist: "Jesus wept!" Behold Christ on the only day of his early triumph marching on Jerusalem, ,tho glittering domes ob literated by the blinding rain of tears in hU eyes and on his oheeks, for when he rw,ifdd tho city he went over it. Oman of the many trials, O woman of ttie'haart-- break, why do you not touch latnr ALWAYa.HBUTUL, "Oh " savs somo' one, "Christ1 don't tare for me. Christ Is looking the other way. Christ has tho vast affairs of Ids kingdom to look after. He has the' armies of sin to overthrow, and there aro so many worse cases of trouble than I mino be doesn't care nwuv me, siw iua face Is turned the other way." So his back was turned to this invalid of the . text. Ho was on his way to effect a aore which was famous and popular and wide resounding. But the context aays, "Ha turned him about." If be was facta to the north, he turned to the soatbj it be was facing to the east, he turned to the west. What turned him about? The Bible says be has no shadow of teratag', he rides oa is his chariot through the eternities. He marshal oa, crritlilnir , scepters aa tbosgh they ware tea era- 1 tritn aMan oa a brook's bank, aad tosa- lag tbreM ea either ata a Ua wkbort , JjSfai TosHtX 5i swrnmu fcdA l,r,.r.,1 ftUrf MhArlt,1' M, W tOM Mil tllrf Itttf MlrtHf allM AtmlM Of hell (.'fttiuot Aloft rtrnlfl' did bt divert h litcli, b thd wall, Mob) ficreirt flriifef 61 human stiff erlng- tuf h (lcltrrfrtbrj1Ht Oh, what cWott Ultra 14 lu thin sub jeet fof r?rl -who Aro Called hotf' otnl Of eottfiw it lit ft misapplied word III that ft44 but t UM It Id the Ofdl' tiary Jtotlaitee, After It lent of suffer' In, oil what heVvotif cleprowlon she frifisl haVe1 bAdf You all khOvMhfttft fcood dl fef iftedfelrffl taken If It i1wl iot cilfd leaded the Byslelrt exhausted nnd Ih tho lMbj 1m so many words bIio "had suffered many things of lnanV lihyslolrrri and was nothing bettered, but r'athef grew worse?' Sho wai as nervMSrW nervous' could bd, Shdknew' All about Insomnia1, arid about tho awful atrprehensloti 6f something going to happen, ftfld irritability about little thing that In health would not hnvd perturbed her. I warrant you It was not a straight stroke sho gave to tho garment of Clirist, butn trembling fore arm, and an tincdrtaln motion of the hand, and ft quivering Anger with which she missed thd iriark toward which she aimed. Slid did -not touch the gArmeflt Just where she expeotod to touch it. Whon I see this nervous woman corn lag to tho Lord Jesus Clirist, I say she is making the way for all nervous peoplo. Nervous people do hot got much sympa thy. If a man breaks his arm, every body Is sorry, and thoy talk about It all tip nd down the street. If a woman had an eya put-cat by accident, they aay, "That's a dreadfal thing." Everybody is asking about her; convalescence. But when a person Is Buffering undor the all' ment of, which I am now spoaklng thoy aavs "Oh. that's nothing; She's a llttlo nervous, that's all," puttinga slight upon thembstf agonizing" of suffering. Now, I have a new prescription to give you. I do not ask you to discard human medicament, I believe in it. When tho slightest thing occurs in tho way of sick ness in, my household, we always run for tho doctor. I do nOt want to despise medlcino. If you cannot sleep nights, do not doapiso bromido of potassium. If you havo nervotis paroxysm, do not de spise morphine. If you want to strength en up your system, do not despise qui nino as a tonlo. Uso all right and prop er medicines. But I WBnt you to bring your insomnia, and bring your irritabili ty, and bring all your weaknesses, and with them touch Christ. Touch him not only on tho' hem of his garments, but touch himon the shoulder whero he car ries ouir burden, touch him on tho head whero he remembers all our sorrows, touch him on tho heart, the center of all his sympathies. Oh, yes, Paul was right; when ho said, "We havo not a high priest who cannot bo touched." CUBISTS BUFFERINGS. The fact WChrist himself is nervous. All those nights out of doors' in malarial' districts, where "an EnRlishman or on American dies if ho goes at certain sea sons. Sleeping out of doors so many nights, as Christ did, and so hungry, and his feet wet with the wash of the sea, and the wilderness tramp, and tho per secution, and the outrage must havo broken down his nervous system; a'fact proved by the statement that ho lived so' ehort a time on the cross. That is a lin gering death ordinarily, and many a sufferer on the cross has writhed in pain 24 hours, 48 hours. Christ lived only six. Why? Ho was exhausted before he mounted tho bloody tree. Oh, it la a wornout Christ, sympathetic with all people worn out. A Christian woman wont to tho Tract House In New York and asked for tracts for distribution. The first day sho was out on 'her Christian errand she saw' a policeman' taking an intoxicated Woman to tho station house. After the woman was discharged from custody, this Chris tian tract distributor saw hor coming away all unkompt and unlovely. Tho tract distributer went up, threw her arms around her neck and kissed her. The woman said, "Oh, my God, why do you Idss me?" "Well, replied tho other, "I think Jesus Christ told me to." "Oh, no, the woman said, "don't you kiss me. It breaks my heart. Nobody has kissed me since my mother died." But that sisterly kiss brought her to Christ, started her oa the road to heavon. The world wants sympathy. It is dying for' sympathy large hearted Christian sympathy. There is omnipotence in the touch. Oh, I am so glad that whon wo touch Christ Christ touches ub! The knuckles; and tho limbs, and the joints, all falling apart with that living death called the loprosy, a man is brought to Christ. A hundred doctors could not euro him. The wisest surgery would stand appalled before that loathsomo patient. What did Christ do? Ho did not amputate; he did not poultice; he did not scarify; He touched him, and he was well. Tho inotber-ln-law of the Apostlo Peter was In a raging rover urain tever, lypnoiu fever, or what, I do not know. Christ was tho physician. He offered no febri fuge; ho prescribed no drops'; he did not put her on plain diet. He touched her, and she was perfectly well. Two blind men come stumbling into a room where Christ is. They are entirely sightless. Clirist did not lift the eyelid to ace whether it was cataract or oph thalmia. He aid not put the mem Into a dark room for three or four weeks. He touched them, and they saw everything, A man came to Christ. The drum of Ids ear had ceased to vibrate, and he had a etatteringtongue. Christ touched the ear, and he heard; touched his tongue, and be articulated. There la a funeral com ing out of that gate a widow following her only boy to the grave, jurist can not stand it, aad he pate his hand on the hearse, and the obsequies turn into a ret arreetion day, HK WILL WAX OtfS BURTjE.VS. O my brother, I aw so glad when we touch Christ with oar sorrows he touches as. When out of your grief and'vexatioa yoa pet year band ob Christ, it wakes all hamaa retsiaiaceace. Are we tempt ed? Be was tempted. Are we riok? Hews sick. Are we persecated? Ue was perseeated. Are we bereft? lie was bereft. St. Yoo of ' JTermiirtht oaa moraiac was oat a saw kwiiNWj uxn lf mt .JilMl'lJUJJ IliP !J JL"Iiil-LJliL!JCiJ!J! fntimtKud, TlTiii.ilgnl&fYorirtH- Klled Mt btfftf to ewtotf tiji In iko 19 Ahd atop" In in Mllil'd bd wlilld Bt, YOti trtWMtt tlrd nlihl oh III doorstep h thd id, Somebody ftskttl, hint why that x!chir!cliy, Hd replied! "It isn't im. eecentflelty 1 wafit k kaW hoy thd poof BtirTef. I want to Know tuetr agonic that 1 tmf ympathl with Mmw, ftad therefore I tfept On IMs &A4 tfdf, IrM night," That H thd w Chris knowd to tnuoll about otif dorr wtttt Hd llpt on the cold doorstep of an InliO kttabld world that would hot let kin IA, fla I symbftthelld now with all tho Buf fering and all tho tired and all thd pdr; plexed, Oil, why do yoti not go and touch him? You titter your' Y6i6o lil a mountain pas, and thoro comd back 10 echoed, 1W oboes, DO echoes perhaps weird echoes, Every volco of prayer, every ascription of pralnd, every groati of distress had di vine refipdnso and celestial reVerbdratlorj, and alt tho galleries of heaven aro filled with sympathotio echoes nnd throngs of ministering atlgols echo, and thd temples' Of thd redeenied echo, and the hearts of God tho Father, God the Soil nnd God tho Holy Ghost echo and re-echo. I preach a Clirist so near you can touch him touch him with your guilt and get pardon touch him with your troubld and got comfort touoh him with your1 bondage ana got mnnutniMion, xou have seen a man take hold of an electrid chain. A man can with ono hand take one end of tho chain, and with tho othor band ho may tako'hold of tho other end of tho cnain. Then iuu persons taxing hold of that chain will altogothor fool the electric power. You havo soon that xperiment. Well, Christ with ono wounded band takes hold of one end of tho electric chain of love, and with tho other wounded band takes hold of the Othor end of the lectrio chain of lovo, and all earthly and angoiio beings may lay hold of that chain, ana around and around in sublime and Verlasting circuit runs tho thrill of ter restrial and celestial and brotherly and saintly and chorubio and soraphio and archangelio and divine sympathy. So that if this morning Christ should swoop bis hand ovor this audionco and aay, "Who touched me?" thoro would bo hun dreds and thousands of voices' respond respend ing: "II It II" 4 All for a Barloy Corn. LaFontulne, in one of his fables, tells nf a barnyard fo.wl that scratched up a eem. wtulo scrutchlDur for corn. Not knowing its value, he gave it to a stone r,uttor tor a barley corn, thus do many persona throw away the priceless pearl of health. A "trilling" cough is neg footed, then comes consumption, then death. Stay the couidi, or look out for a eollln. ur. rierce'a uniueu aieaioai Discovery will euro catarrh In the bead bronchial or throat affections, or 1udb scrofula (commonly known ns the con sumption of tho lungn). If taken in time, autt given a rnir trim, u win cure, or the money paid for It will be refund ed. It Is the ouly guaranteed cure. OUT OF SIGHT. Tbo traveling public are now fully alive to the fact that tho Chicago, Un ion Pacific & North Western line oilers the very best accomodations to the public from and to Chicago, Omaha and Intermediate points, not only dur ing tho world's fair, but all the year round. 4-8-ot 's Cures Prunlc C. Stuart Marshall, Mich. A Business Man's Letter Groat Prejudlc Overcome Ittton Misery With DypepiUH "C. L Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.i "I hare been led to address you frost a deep sense of graUtude for the great benefit I nave recelred from Hood's Sarsaparlllt. "For SO years I have been a constant safferer from dyspepsia. Havo spent man hundreds of dollars for medicine, with' only temporary relief. I liave always beea an enemy to patent medicines. ButfUrw la my boao Hood's Barsaparllla has A Haarty Welcome. '"Those who have not been afflicted wltit dyspepsia, bare no conception ot the misery I endured, and those that have need no description of the horrors of the unfortunate dyspeptic. " This Is why I changed my mind la regard to patent medicines i An old friend had beta' afflicted for many years with dyspepsia, and for a low months I noticed that lie had beea wonderfully Improving. I. ascertained that the great change had been wholly wrought by the use ot Hood's Barsaparilla. He ad vised me to 'try it by all means,' but the Idea of me taking 'patent medicine' was a very bitter pill to swallow. Jlut urged by my great sufferings to do sowstfiliiy, 1 finally yielded and began to take Hood's Sartaparilla I am now using my fourth bottle, and fee) better than I lare In twenty years, and eoa slder myself cured. Use this statement u you please. I liave been In buslaess hr over 40 years." Vhakk a Stimkt, Mri saH,Mleh. (letHaod'a Head's PIHa Act aU7. ? Vmpl aad eaeteewy, ea Um liver aad bowels. Vurm fir le or Tnwl. iiiiutiu tsar saltes east ef .wuiainginsure; wlH UA . et ssns sawvws '.rill. A- a4w aaVftasHf.Or, SwaTr iiirfiiiTifii' r"T i ' 1i f'""'f ''""' i r liana n",ff m.".., Jtf&.iti I i-iSuW.tMa Wiurmm-v, ,rrv , r.yitmt'imfrii -S yrJ J-t, . fXg MmL VJSL Binckweirs Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco, ttrmefcd only of "pure leaf' grown Irt ili him Garftti Belt Its uniform quality, and rich fragrant aroftM rKCrtnmnd It to ail wlio' cfaire a really good atioktv No other smoking tobacco has ever been made which hm secured ahd held the" pdpW favor is has BttkkweH'a Bull Durham. It Is How, as H has been at all times dur ing the last 25 years, the best In the world. Made only by -, g BLACKWELIAS DURHAM lk)BAC(K) CO.! J Dl)HAM, N. & ' ' A W. CK)11LE & CO., General Insurance Agency. ' Representing the following well-known and reliable Compsnleet 8TATR IN9URrN0B CD, iKtna Traders -insurance un sun js(inwii, National Insuranoe Co , . Westebester rire las. 00., Lion Klre Insiranoe Co., , Imperial Klre iBsuraaes (K, Ki liondoa A l.nafaiJhlro Klrelus.Boo Loadna Assuranae t'orMsauaa, Alliance Assurance Co., Norwleb UBloa rir Jfbs.lPs. Oldest and lie Jdlng Firm DV he City Devoted Kaeluslvwiy to laiaraaee. ' CLEAN If you would bo clean and havo your clothes done up. in. the noatost and drtsj-ieat mannor, tiiko them to the SALEM SA'M LAUNDRY Where all work isdono by white labor and in tho most prompt manner. COLONEL J. OLMSTED, T )li PBOMSSIONAli AND BUSiNBSB CJXriDS. P.H,D'AKCY. QKO.O.DINOHAH. D'AHOV A UINOU AM. Attorneys at Low, Booms 1, a and 8, D'Aroy HulldiuK, Ml aiutstreeU Special attention, given tobusi ness In the supreme and cltcntt courts of tUo state. 3 It R. V. DOIdK. Attorniy at law, Halctri, Ore kou. OlUce 2U commercial street. flTlLMON 1BD, Attorney, at law, Baicra, I uregon; umoe up iiir iu i-hikiu mw. LF. CONN, Attorney at law, room 7, Mur ,' pay block. H. J.'BiaOKR, Attoi Bey at lawaleea, Ore gon, umoe over liusn's bunk. JJ.BHAW.M. W.HUNT. 8UAW A HUNT . Attorney t law. Office over Capital eys nk, National batik, Helen, Oregon. 3 J1 BTuek. HIOHaHOHON. Attorneyatlaw Of- flee upstairs In front routns ol newnusn' ,er uotnmerewi ana tjoun sircow, aalem, Oregon TOHN A, UAH40N. Attorney at law. rooms 8 and 4, liush bank building, balom.Or. U. r'. BONHAM. W. U. HOLMEM. DON MAM dt HOLMES, Attorneys at law. Jr Offloe In Bush block, between Btateand court, on OommereUl street. K. K)GUBS, Htenographer and ,11 tie- wrltest. Best equipped typewriting or- ue but one in Oregon uver sum. uuu, dalem, Orsjoa. TELLA HHERMAN-TypeiKriling' ana commercial nienograpny. twin n, um? k. Urst-classwork. lutes reasonable. iock, 0. BROWNE, M, .. Physician ana uur smob. Office. Murphy blojki reslaenoe, ', commercial street. r-vll. A. a. Ollil.tB.speclallstln diseases of II the aei ear. nose and throat, Koom iu uusn 1 bank building, Holera. P tlOB R.T.O. BM1TK, Dentist. S3 State, Stredt, Bttlem. Oregon. Finished dental opera ion. v inisueu u.uuh uvw description.' Painless toperW ttons a special tions 01 every 1 1101 ty. WW.IUUII, J . lions and Architect, plans, specldeo- superiHietinanoo tor si classes ol buildings. Office i!BO Cominwciui street, up stairs. 0. A. KOHKHT, Architect, room i: Mar quaw building, Fonland, Oregon; P. J. LARSEN & CU, Manufacturer of Wagons, Car riages, etc Rapalrtn a P-",'B0ftgtoto.tKl TlUrKOriON LODGE NO. 9 A.O. U. Wr Jr Meets In their hall In Btuto Insurance l?ulld.ng,.very Wednyveung. J.A.BEL'W1 0D, Recorder. THE PACIFIC DETECTIVE AND COLLECTION BUHBAO A.l,KM, - - - Oregon. Office removed to 311 Commercial rtt. Hates reasonable. 1'ubllo and tirlvato work m? iloue. O.B.CLEM Munagtr, MONEY TO LOAN Oa Improved' Real EstaU. In, amounts and time tosulU No delay la ooasldertng leans: FEAR k FORD, Boom 13, Bush Bank block. S1MW Authodxed Capital 60,00; CAPITAL NATIONAL BANK B4ea), Oretoa. W. A. CUHICK. Hre. W. W, MARTIN, Vic. iHU,OaHBtyaad WarroBU iK)iciit at nw J. Hi HAAS, THJt WAT CHMAKElt, 1111 1 ".malftltl it i ayrerT fmnrnwmrwmm aa AreiUfariataetS. ",MH" rWwli3saiaaIt twnr. ANIW Quiti Qamt rlMvet f-n iiitiiM WJrTlpTCW WlrTWtrt II ll(r1 ifcffiy 6 Insurance Co., DtU.'il f unco I. tL - Steed or Stelen: i ,i, fine hlu liav coMlnff with two white DlBd feet, hmo one dark biowurgelcHng, wKheae nrhltnhtnrl font. par. h weighing? about 1MB.I.A ee iln liberal reward will be given for the Ta'f same to O. W. THOMAHf . 17 at dw Asylum Avenue, tfelem, ura). aw DISSOLUTIONS yi r: NOTlOK Is hersbv given that ta rm'tt Martin A Harklns, Blacksmiths, has Jto solved partnership bymBtnaleoaeeai. Jn business will hereanw be conduotad irMut 0. Martin at same place, and all aeONUM. with the heretofore xltMBsj-nrnvwal tMsat tied by him, ana an mil are, payaow wi m 'j nanaing our pasiouMoraers, m-nre'r. fully. MARTIN KARKl PROPOSALS FOR .WOOD. , Sealed bids tor furnUhtog wopd-wU nlvorl L thn nfrlfta nf the clerk df Sfl ulil Nn. 04 until l!l rVulnnkLBlI. eSA.Ttseedar. June r, 18W. Wds will boprjled.at jhwsj. lar nwUor of the hoard of dlraefefit m o'cloek p. w. of sold 30th day, of 'Job;,, fir Um -delivery ol wood before Heptember 30, IBM, M the following schools) Llaclan,vu mtm ak, Bocordsflr. Vark, 18 cords oak, M oprdsi Kat8Hlem,0 cords oak,-l0oord'r.' Xwtta Haiem, wcorusoaK.woorusnr.. 1 1. .1 All wood must be 4 'feet In length, i ably straight and corded closely, . -M. ,. The fir aiust be large or hear wood 'asM tba oak must be split, oak and. not grab wood. The hoard reserve the right tortjeetaay or nil bids. , ....', a ' ,-t'--i?- 1 Poue by order ef the board. May . MH. . , Attest. r',M.!K;,V&iSS&. Board o(,alrstefa. I WEBSTER HOLMlM.DUitjlct Clerk. "M STATE TREASURER'S FOURfK liOj6E.- BTATB OF ORWKJK X r TUBAUURir DEPARTMENT, BAtat'May'l'.MM. , XTotleo Is hereby ftvea that thenasataaas IN pBbandsufaclenttopayaiioawMwa ,, state warranUL Indorsed lift? nali id for want or funds." prior to, ana maa. tor ln, March a.lBM, 1HM, ana 101 bii sua. "XIV" will tie Interea mid Upon utesenutiQB ., id u Interest on sold worranu wUl aot be aiwwea' otter the data ot tbfai anttee, l"STu MEwdHA wiw-aw mate iiiwiim. HOWARD, The House Mover. 451 MaiN i Street. Has the' best faellltlea lor movlBir' and rais ins; beuses: Leave orders at uray Bros,,1 or address Malem,Oregoa. ,. WISC0S1N CENTRAL UNES. (Nsftturn Pacific ft. R. Ce., Li-), LATEST TIME CARD; ' Two Through Trains Dally; IfcMptn l:HOmi llhlAimi i aipm 7 l&nhi 7il5pm l--Htl'auinin l.'l&iuu I.. Dnluth..a 7.Wpinll . Anhland. a 0jm lChlcwgos Tleltets sold and t'OMaga ebeoked tbroufk to all points in tbo United Mates and CwMda. Clme etinneetloB made la Chletmo with all trains going &at ana wuin Vat IMll'tn AiruuUSAa' AlftlftU uMrttoa'owsly tojo&wmrm ticket agent or KBatBj Maa ILMare BMwa gjsom am 6.47pm wmpai) ,- .1 -! IU '' - l' lentor a mm, virnnv, ties. 1'nss. n"d Tkt. Agt., Chlesmo, lit : JtiDrntrntm ELEtiRIC 2B UHtTPATiNTi; mmo MAWCTM WriftaaaaT. WmVtsMNTI. ., waawt lllMu Ml miMwi HWSSHIfl rj.apB.K- rf. hmhimh. w iri... .. 'y.'.' "''jmml. iiL' n TJJt'.uiitM 4ls-!sa3u5STESnri ' ' S