The UeeMy Ghronicle THK DALLES, ORIGOX FRIDAY, - OCTOBER 30. 1891. LOCAL AKD FEKBONAL. Mr. B. Kelsay, of Fossil, is in the city. Hon. W. H. Bigga of Wasco is in the city. Hon. J. D. Lee of East Portland is in the city. . J. H. Mosier of Mosier gave this office a pleasant call Monday. O. L. Stranaghan and J. L. Langille of Hood Kiver, are in the city. Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Benefiel of Lexing ton Morrow county are in the city the guests of Dr. and Mrs. Taylor. Donald McKay a native of Scotland declared his intention of becoming a citizen of the United States, Friday at the county clerk's office. Mr. J. B. Pinkerton, contracting agent ' for the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad company, is in the city in the interest of his company. " The Regulator towed np a scow load of piles Thursday evening for the new wharf at this place and Mr. Walsh, the foreman is having them driven at a very lively gait. A few unlicensed dogs are being daily " impounded and a wholesale business is expected to be done when tho marshal is able to hire the proper kind of boys for the work. . Bartbolemew.Parodi presented Master : Lindon GrreUon Saturdry morning with half a dozen big, ripe, luscious straw berries plucked fresh from his garden on Chenoweth Creek. ..' i A number of city sports started out Monday afternoon to paint the town and about 10 o'clock; (so we areiniormea j they were succeeding admirably in mak ing night hideous. xu HutMt r loam f. h at P. T. Shorn it u v -- - - - r had a telegram from his wife Thursday from Portland, where she has gone for medical treatment, informing him of her serious illness at that place. Mr. Sharp has gone down to Portland. A man named Guilders who lives at Columbus had some goods shipped up . on the Regulator, Thursday, to be for warded by rail to Columbus, but the company refused to pay tha Regulator - company the advance charges. ' IhiB is not quite as bad as stealing but in private life it would be considered narrow and small-souled. Will the friends of an open river, liv ing in the counties east of Wasco, re ' member that they can save $6.10 on the ' round trip to Portland by buying their tickets to The Dalles, and taking the train that arrives here in the morning at 5 o'clock, and going down on the " Baker for 50 cents. A Btranger -shipped a horse up by the Regulator Friday and came himself by the Baker to save the extra (1.50. When he came to the Regulator to get - his horse he discovered that he was . minus a two-dollar blanket that he had probably left behind at Portland in the confusion arising from having shipped hia horse on one boat and going himself on another. . .The Regulator has no better friend' in this city than T. T. Xickols of the New Columbia hotel He is doing every thing he can to secure passengers for the new boatv - This paragraph ig neither written at his dictation nor knowledge, - but solely out of gratitude and because it is believed that the friends of the Reg ulator should be knwn and acknowl edged.'. ' The Union Pacific is a great company bat it cannot have everything .its own wiv. It mav find to its cost that the cutting of passenger rates to 50 cents, between this city and Portland, in order to hnrt the Regulator will only have the effect of antagonizing the merchants of The Dalles who will retaliate by ship- LflllK Bii cna III IJCIKIIUI U 1 1, ft &ftiv. A' Uft lift ern Pacific to Portland. For the last nine years the people tributary to The Dalles have paid out annually to the Union Pacific company or its predecessors, for freight and pas senger rates on its own line, not reckon ing advanced charges on goods shipped part way on other lines, perhaps not less than $250,000 annually at a very conser- valive estimate, aino times 4200,000 'is , $2,250,000 and this sum represents the amount that would be saved to the peo ple of The Dalles and its tributaries dur ing the next nine years if the Regulator ' carried all the freight and passengers and the conditions weie otherwise the same. Two millions two hundred and fiftv thousand dollars is a whole lot of money, icy countrymen. Frank Lee, the well-known editor of the Northwest Pacific Farmer, late of the Klickitat' Leader, who from long resi dence in Klickitat countyis in thorough familiarity with her resources estimates thai the farmers of his old county will save this year not a dollar less than $150,000 by the Regulator's being on the river. He takes into account the amount of wheat, wool, cattle, hogs and general farm produce shipped from that county, exclusive of the money' saved on import freights. Mr. Lee says he has a very poor opinion of the farmers who would for 20 to 25 cents sell themselves to the Union Pacific and. allow the Regulator to be driven off the river for lack of patronage. : He says that the farmers will show very poor jadgement and business sense if for perhaps $1000 which they can gain they are willing to kill the Regulator and thus loose not year in succession for many years, be cause it is not probable that any other company will come and it certainly should not come to their rescue for many years. The CnaoNicxK office has on exhibit ion in its show window a cample of one of the "old rotten pipes, belonging to the D. P. Thompson water company which has lain in the ground for thirteen years. We invite inspection of it. Es- j pecially do we invite brother John Michell to come and see it. If after see- j ing it, he is not found, next time he is j at chnrch, penitently kneeling at the mourner's bench, and with streaming eyes, confessing the numerous falsehoods he has told about these same water pipes, we shall conclude that he is af flicted with an ungodly and impenitent heart. The pipe is a full half inch thick and the asphaltam is as fresh on te outside as the day it was laid in the ground. It is good for another hundred years. . f The Chronicle is getting in its work. Monday morning seven passengers from Baker City and three from Sherman county availed themselves of the cut in rates and saved $3.10 each by buying tickets to The Dalles and going from here to Portland, on the Baker for 50 cents. Keep this up brothers and the U. P. may find it a very expensive thing to fight the peoples' line of boats. The Union Pacific did a fine trade at North Dalles Monday. At the noon hour the wheat teams were strung half way up the grade and filled every available a tmce back of the landing. The com pany is still paying S2) cents and the farmers are happv, but they must never forget that they owe this price to the fact that the Regulator is on the river, and when the time comes they must recognize it, if necessary, at a temporary loss to themselves. The Regulator must be sustained. Mr. Linus Hubbard has left at this office two samples of crude petroleum, one from the Braddford, Pennsylvania and the other from the Lima, Ohio oil regions. We are promised other sam ples when they arrive and all will be nlaeed on exhibition, so that those who have never seen this oil in its crude state may inform themselves and be able to recognize it should they meet anywhere in this region. We have also throueh the kindness of Mr. Hubbard been able to add to our exhibit a sam ple of salt rock taken from the Pefford mines, sixteen hundred feet under ground. A quiet little supper party met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Garretson of this citv a few niehts azo. After sapper the ladies retired from the dining room leav insr it for a short time in possession of Mr. John Schenck, Master Linden Gar retson and the Chinese waiter. As Mr. Schenck arose to follow the ladies, Mas ter Garretson whispered in his ear, "Hold on, John. When the Chinaman leaves I will sing you a song." Then as the Chinaman closed the door after him Master Linden struck up the following : Girls may whistle and sing, Girls may dance and play, But they can't strike a match On the seat of their pants Because they ain't built that way. Written for the Chronicle. A case is now on appeal before the supreme court of Indiana, which will undoubtedly terminate in the supreme court of the United States, and which will try the question of saloon licensing on new and fundamental grounds. Cer tain parties in Indianapolis brought suit for damages against a saloon keeper, on the trround that the location of bis sa loon in the vicinity of their property had depreciated its value from $5,500 to $3,000, and its rental from $35 to $20. The defense presented was the license Issued by the board of county comtnis- sioners permitting the defendant to open a saloon. .The plaintiffs demurred on the eronnd that a law licensing a busi ness which depreciated adjoining prop erty and was a nuisance is unconstitu tional, and on its being overruled, the case has gone to the supreme court to be decided on these broad grounds. The recent decision of the United States supreme court in the case of Crowley vs Cbristensen, has furnished the plaintiffs a strong point in support of their posi tion. That decision states that "by the general concurrence of opinion of every civilized and Christian community, there are few sources of crime' and mis ery to society equal to the dramshop, where intoxicating liquors, in small quantities, to be drunk at the time, aie sold indiscriminately to all parties ap plying." ' And again the decision says "Their sale in that form may .be abso lutely prohibited. It is a question of public expediency and public morality and not of Federal law. The police power of the state is fully competent to regulate the business,' to mitigate its evils or to suppress it entirely." The plaintiffs in the present case take a new step forward, and question whether an act of the legislature can rightly sanction a business which robs its neighbors of a part of the value of their property, or extend the protection of law to any of these fertile "sources of crime and mis ery to society." If in this case it shall be finally decided that such a law is un constitutional, there will scarcely be any need there for a prohibitory consti tutional amendment, or a prohibition party. . Advertised Letters. The following is the list of letters re maining in The Dalles postoffice uncalled for. Saturday, Oct. 23, 1891. Persons call ing for these letters will please give the date on which they were advertised : That Faaa and Those Portage Rate .superintendent .barley came up on the passenger last night. A Chronicle reporter isaid to him this morning: see iarley the Times-Mountaineer says you travel on a pass. How the mischief did you, who, all your life was, according to Mike Nolan only a second rate blacksmith, succeed . in hoodoing the railroad company out of a pass?" Mr, Farlev answered, "Oh that's nothing 1 have got no less than seven different passes over as many different railroads in the United States, and I can get at least seven more, if I should ever have occasion to use them. The "born fool who turns the crank for the Times-Maun taineer ought to know that it is a simple matter of courtesy among the officers of all roads, long or short, everywhere in the United States, to give passes to all high functionaries, from superintendents down." But I see Mr. Farley, said the Chronicle man, that the Sun is going after you with a sharp stick for placing the freight rates on the portage' too high What have you to say about it?" "Up to the present time rejoined Mr. Farley I have heard no complaints from any body except from of the Sun and Mike Nolan. These brothers are in a great pucker. Iain working for the interests of Eastern Oregon as well as for the state that employs me. The rates now- fixed are wholly' experimental and not permanent. Just as soon as experience proves that rates can be put down, down they'll go." "But Mr. Farley" said the Chronicle man, you are accused of wanting to make the rates on the 6tate portage, pay for itself in the course of three or four years. Is that true?" "There is not a word of truth in it. I never had any such intention, neither has the board of Portage, commissioners, who are the party really responsible for the rates fixed. I made out the sched ule of rates and submitted it to the board and the board approved it with the distinct understanding that when- it can be definitely ascertained what rates can be made so as to fully clear all costs of operation with a little more for con- tingences they will be so fixed. GENERAL NEWS. Eakin, Hart C Brownhill, Tom Campbell D W (3) De Rouge, Rev T Evans, Mrs W A Foster, Squire -Hanna, Fred Howard, A Humberd, Isaac . Adams, Evlyn Bane, frank Burk, Lany Colegrove, R Dunning, Marion Evans, George W Goodwin, F HallJlunes Howells, Rev E D Ingram, Miss Hattie Long, Jennie Mace, Mrs James Stewart, B (2) Shane, Mr-s Jennie Shortz, Phillip Taylor, Miss E Van Brugh, H T Wrenn, L A & O J Williams, Sarah J yuinn, W Ji M. T. Nolan, P. M. . Wheat and Freight Rates. Quotations for No. 1, Walla Walla wheat today (Saturday) is $1.40 per-100 S or 84 cents per bushel in Portland. Freight by rail in car load lots from The Dalles to Portland is 17 cents per 100 fi or 10 2-5 cents per bushel, adding warehouse charges and handling, 1 4-5, will make 12 cents per bushel ; deduct this 12 cents from 84 cents in Portland, would leave 72 cents per bushel, sacked, for the farmer for the best merchantable wheat, under the Union Pacific carrying rates. This year 9-10 of AVasco connty's wheat yield rates as No. 2 and rejected wheat. A Model Livery Stable. The new barn of R. B. Hood opposite the old stand is such a model of its kind that one cannot. help saying as he looks at it, "It was a good thing the fire came along and burned the old one down." The new building is two stories high and covers thejentire lot of 100x50 feet. It is a handsome structure, both inside and out. The entire building np stairs and down is lighted by electricity, not lamp being used in the building or about it. When one has'occosion, during the night, to go up stairs, the simple pres sure of a button lights the whole upper floor. The roof is painted with fire-proof paint and water pipes are run to the up per part of the building so that the roof and upper story can be flooded in a few minutes. The same arrangement is made for the first floor. Tho barn can easily accommodate, without crowding, between thirty and forty horses. The stalls are capacious and convenient. The hay is conveyed from the mow to the mangers in a close shute, and the flooring of the mow is of dressed and matched lumber so that horses are spared defilement from dusty hay. There is a handsome office on your right as you en ter the building, a large watering trough at the south end, convenient rooms for harness, wood, tools, etc., besides a com fortable sleeping room for the men on the upper floor. A long drive way is filled with buggies, carts and carriages of every description and gentlemanly and obliging employes are always ready to attend to the calls of customers. It is a model structure and is conducted in a model manner and one is surprised to learn from Mr Hood that the whole building was rushed np under the superintendence of Hugh Glenn in the short space of two weeks. Saved from Death by Onions. There has no doubt been more lives of children saver from death in croup or whooping cough by the use of onions than any other known remedy, our mothers used to make poultices of them, are eaten in the United States every Jin breaking up a cough or cold. Dr. day. Is it any wonder that Americans j Gunn's Onion Syrup is madebvcoinbin are dyspeptic? I ing a few simple remedies with'it which, make it more effective as a medicine and destroys the taste and odor of the onion. 50c. Sold by Blakeley & Houghton. Mrs. Grant, wife of the great com mander, is enjoying good 'health, and has many years before her. Over two and a quarter millions of pies Card of Thanks. The thanks of the people of the city, and especially the suffers by the late fire are tendered to the laidies aid society of Antelope for their very generous dona tions to assist the sufferers from the lute fire. The children's clothing as well as I the money are duly appreciated. Rout. Mays, Mayor. ' BORN. In this city, Sunday, October 25, 1891, to the wife of William Neaback, a sou, who tipped the scales at ten and a half pounds. Bill is going to call him Ben Harrison ana raise mm up in the nur tune and admonition of republican doct rine. So he savs. Nobody Knows. A few days ago there appeared in the Telegram an interview with Mr. Mike Nolan of this city in which that gentle man is made to say that the new line of boats is paying a net profit of some four or five hundred dollars a day. Meeting Mr. B. F. Laughlin, the manager of the navigation company, this morning a Chronicle reporter asked him if the statement in the Telegram was true. Mr. Langhlih answered. "It is not true. AVe are not even receiving a gross daily income of the amount named, never' speaking of the expenses, which are very much larger than the amount named in the Telegram. The fact is no one knows how 'much our income and expenses are, nor can anyone know till the first bal ance sheet is struck at the end of this month. We are --simply satisfied that the line cannot be running behind, and that is about ull anybody knows." ' Sold for Seventeen Cents. A native of the faderland came into the store of Prinz & Nitschke this morn ing to buy some cow-hide chairs.. After the usual salutation Mr. Prinz asked his countryman how he was doing and the answer came "Putty coot, I tell you, Wheat is a goot price. I yust sold mine to the Union Pacific company for 82K, half a cent more as George Smit would pay me." "Is that so," said Mr. Prinz, That was a mighty goot speculation, I tell you. You say you had thirty-four bushels on your wagon, so you saved about seventeen cents. Give ino your hand mine friendt. I like to shake hands mit such aschmart man. This year you save seventeen cents. Next year you lose two dollars and a half when the Regulator is gone. Shake but the man was gone, as mad as a wet hen. Germany imposes a duty of $4.76 per 100 kilos (.220H pounds) on bacon, ham, salted pork and canned beef, and forty eight cents per 100 kilos upon lard. The attempts to induce Yakima In dians to enlist in the army have been futile. Said one old buck: "Twenty years ago they were forcing ns to lay down our arms for the plow, and now they are urging ns lo lay down the plow for the gun." Tillamook county will he for Binger Hermann because Binger is for Tilla mook county. Headlight. Binger is for every county. But really, Oregon wants a congressman who can do something be sides get appropriations. Oregon needs some other services quite as much. "Absolute rest and freedom from an noyance" are what Jay Gould needs, his physicians say, but these blessings are only offered by the grave. There is one trip Jay can't make without hesitating awfully. The grave has low rates, ex cellent accommodations and aposlute freedom from annoyance, yet Jay pauses in uncertainty about taking stock in it. His doctors are beginning to think- he's afraid he might put his foot in it. Postmaster General Wanamaker re- parts that free delivery in Astoria is a success. He is now about to introduce a patent mail box, costing ifl.lU lor folks to put on their doors. It is so ar ranged that it will be a postoffice in miniature and will deliver all mailable matter to the postman and receive all the mail carrier brines without any effort on the part of the householder beyond putting the letters ana papers in the box, or taking them out. The Portland Chamber of Commerce has decided to adopt the report of Bogue and will endeavor to take $300,000 worth of stock in the Paul Mohr road, from Columbus to a point opposite The Dalles, Portland has always gone at the opening of the Columbia with the same cheerful alacrity that a boy shows on being in vited to interview the kitchen wood-pile and in this case is literally throwing her money to the dogs. However, it is her money and she can blow it in as she pleases. tlood Kiver Ulacter. John H. Parnell, a brother of the dead Irish leader, savs he thinks the "uncrowned king" left a considerable estate, though much of it may have been consumed in the litigation forced upon him in his last years. At the timeH of his greatest affluence he was worth 150,000. He had an estate in County Wicklow, some stone quarries, copper mines and mills, but it is unknown whether they were mortgaged. John Parnell himself has -a small fruit farm in Georgia. He is described as a rather seedy-looking man of forty-seven, who dresses in a rough suit of brown goods and wears a faded slouch hat. H. P. Isaacs of Walla Walla says: The cause of this depression in the grain market is due to two facts : First the prevailing unfavorable northwesterly winds have kept the wheat fleet from traveling to the mouth of the Columbia. Second: the warehouses at Portland are full of grain, lots of money is tied np in them and it is impossible to draw money on this grain until it is aboard ship. When this grain fleet arrives the stringency in the money market will be relieved by placing cargoes aboard ship and drawing money on the same. The Liverpool dealers are unable to advance on gram until afloat. As soon as the tleet arrives money will be easier and the market will again become active. A Sure Care for Piles. Itching Piles are known by moisture jike perspiration, causing intense itch ing when warm. This form as well as Blind, Bleeding or Protruding, yield at' once to Dr. Bosanko's Pile Remedy, which acts directly on parts affected, absorbs tumors, allays itching and ef fects a permanent cure. 50 cents. Drug gists or mail. Circulars free. Dr. Bo sanko, 329 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa. Sold by Blakeley & Houghton. A Favorite Remedy. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is a favorite during the winter months on ac count of its great success in the cure of colds. There is nothing that will loosen a severe cold so quickly, or as promptly relieve the lungs. Then it counteracts any tendency toward pneumonia. It is pleasant and safe to take, and fully worthy of its popularity. For sale by Snipes & Kinersly, The 'Dalles, Or. d-w SNIPES 1 KLl ail Retail Draifc; r (Washington! flortb Dalles, -DKAI.EIiS IX- SITUATED AT THE HEAD OF NAVIGATION. Fine imported, Key West and Domestis ! CIGARS. ; Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center in the Inland Empire. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. VXTM. SAUNDERS Architect. Plans and V specifications furnished for dwellings, churches, business blocks, schools and factories. Charges moderate, satisfaction guaranteed. Of ace over French's bank. The Dalles, Oregon. D1 R. J. SUTHERLAND" Fellow of Trinity if!.. 1 I '.. T ...... .l 1 . .... .... - , , i S-.1 H 1 1 V. 1 1 1 U 1 1 1 IR I III 11 f I ( II - ikisk oi rnysicians aim nrgeons, Ontario, Phy sician and Surgeon. Office; rooms 3 and 4 Chap man block. Residence; Judge Thornbury's Sec ond street. Office hours; 10 to 12 a. in., 2 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m. - A Fifteen Cent Farmer. The wife of a Klickitat farmer came into tho store of Leslie Butler, this morning. In the course of her trading she told George Krause that her hus band had just sold 30 bushels of wheat to the Union Pacific at half a cent more than George Smith would pay. Then answered Mr. Krause "You sold out to the Union Pacific Company for 15 cents. Cheap enough." - DIED. In this city, Sunday, October 25, 1891, of hemorrhage of the bowels, Fred Stont, aged abont 25 years. - This year of '91 will go down or up in history as the year in which all the rac ing records were broken. Sail,steam, trotting, pacing, jumping, running, etc., in all departments of speed the partici pants have displayed speed hitherto un heard of. Unnecessary Sufferings. There is little doubt but that many persons suiter for years with ailments that could easily lie cured by the use of some simple remedy. The, following in cident is an illustration of this fact: My wife was troubled with a pain in her side the greater part of the time for three years, until cured by Chamber lain's Pain Balm. .It has, I think, per manently cured her. We nlso have used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy whenever needed and believe it to be the best in the world. P. M. Boston, Pennville, Sullivan Co., Missouri. - For sale bv Snipes & Kinersly Druggists. A Great Liver Medicine. Dr. Gunn's Improved Liver Pills are a sure cure for sit-k headache, bilious com- Dlaiuts. dvsneijsia. indigestion, costive- nes3, torpid liver, ate. These pills in sure perfect digestion, correct the liver and stomach, regulate the bowels, purify and enrich ?he blood and make the skin clear. They nlso produce a good appe tite and invigorate and strengthen the entire system bv their tonic action. They only require one pill for a dose and never gripe or sicken, bold at zo cents a box by Blakeley & Houghton. An Old'Aelage. There is an old adage: "What every body says must be true." Henry Cook, of New Knoxville, Ohio, in a recent let ter savs: "Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy has taken well here. Everybody likes it on account of the immediate relief it gives." There is nothing like it to loosen and relieve a severe cold. For sale by Snijies & Kinersly, druggists, dw There Is None Uetter. Dr. R. L. St. John of Howland, Put nam county, Missouri, takes especial pleasure in recommending Chamber lain's Cough Remedy, because he knows it to be reliable. He lias used it in his practice for several years, and says there is none better, It is especially valuable for colds and as a preventative and cure for croup. This most excellent medicine is for sale by Snipes & Kinersly, The Dalles, Or. -. ; d-w They Speak From Experience. "We know from experience in the use of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy that It will prevent croup, says Messrs. oaa berry & Worley, Percy, Iowa. They also add that the remedy has given great satisfaction in this vicinity, and that they believe it to be the best in the market tor throat and lung diseases. For sale by Snipes & Kinersly druggists. D R. O. D. DO A XE-physician and bur geon. Office: rooms a and A rhnnirmn oiuc. nesiaence o. zi, rourtn street, one Mock south of Court House. Office hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 5 and 7 to S P. M. PAINT Now is the time to paint your houw and if you wish to get the best qualil and a fine color use the Shcrwin, Williams Co.'s Paint. For those .wishing to see the quality and color of the above paint we call theii attention to the residence of S. L. Brooks Judge Bennett, Smith French and others painted by Paul Kreft. Snipes & Kinersly are agents for tht above paint for The Dalles. Or. Best Selling Property of the Season in the Northwest. C'N. THORNBURY, T. A. HCDSOW, Late Ree. U. S. Land Office. Notary Public At t (leys, Rooms 7 and 8, U. S. Land Office Building, THE DALLES, - - - OREGON. For Further Information Call at the Office of Interstate iMestmeDt Go., o. HE DAL WASH1NT0N ST., PORTLAND A 8. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.-a. flee In Schanno's builUme, up stairs. Dalles, Oregon. Of-Tlic DS1DDALL Dentist. Gas Riven for the painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth et on flowed aluminum plate. Koonis: Sign of the Golden Tooth, Second Street. AR. THOMPSON A ttorkkt-at-law. Office ia Opera House Block, Washington Street, The Dalles, Oregon F. P. MAYS. B. 8. HUNTINGTON H. S. WILSON. AYS, HUNTINGTON t WILSON ATTOR- NBYS-AT-LAW. Offices. French's hlrvb nvnr First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. B.B.DUFUB. GEO. ATKINS. FRANK MKNKFEK. UFUR, WATK1N8 & MENEFEE Attor- NRYH-AT-I.A W Room No. 43. orpr Office Building, Entrance on Washington Street The Dalles, Oregon. V H. WILSON Attorney-at-law Rooms m a and 53, N The Dalles, Oregon. er Vogt Block, Second Street, Qld PeopI J. V. S. Is the only Sarcaparilla llisr i l l o; feeble people should take, as the inii-.r-s! ; .clash which is in every other Sarsapari 11a i: a. -. c k! .r of, Is under certain conditions kinr.vn lo he emaciating. J. V. S. on tho coutraiy i.s pure!; vegetable and stimulates digestion a:ul crca-et new blood, tho very thing for old, (Iclii aie or brokcu down people. It builds then r.p 'a ;d prolongs their lives. A case In point :- Mrs. Bclden an estimable and elderly lady of 610 Mason St., S. F. was for months declining co rapidly as to seriously alarm her family. It cot sobadthat she was finally afflicted with fainting spells. She writes: 'While in that dangerous condition I saw some of the testimonials con cerning J. V. S. and sent for a bottle. That marked the turning point I regained my lost flesh and strength and have not felt so well in years." That was two years ago and Mrs. Belden is well and hearty to-day, and still taking J. V. S. If yon are old or feeble and want to be built up. Ask for - Filings, Contests, And Business of all Kinds Before (lie Local and General Lan Office Promptly Attended to. Over Sixteen Years Experience. -WE also do A General Eealjsiate Business. All Correspondence rroniptly Answered. S. L. YOUNG, (Successor to li. HECK., Vegetable Sarsaparilla Most' modern, most effective, largest bottle, Same price, ?1.00, six for $5.00. For Sale by SNIPES & KINERSLY. THE DALLES. OREGON. Joy's THE Dalles, Portland & Astoria NAVIGATION COMPANY'S . 1 Elegant Steamer REGULATOR Will leave the foot of Court Street every morning at 7 A. M. for Portland and Way Points Connections Will be Made with the Fast Steamer . ' MMiES GITY, At the Foot of the Cascade Locks. rt?.,.r.:.'l!-!Jfc. - s'vfiiScJcy.w -DEALER IX- HS, VflTOBES, Jewelry, Diamonds, SILVERWARE :: ETC Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repaired and Warranted. 1G5 Secoi-.il St.. The Dalles.Or. Minnesota Thresher Mfg. Co., Manufacturers and Dealers in Minnesota Chief Separators, . ' Giant & Stillwater Plain and Traction Engines, "CHIEF" Farm Wagons! - Stationary Engines and Boilers of all sizes. . Saw Mills and Fixtures, Wood-Working Machinery, Wood Split Pulle3Ts, Oils, Lace Belts and Belting. ' v : - Minnesota Thresher Mfg. Go. Get our Prices before Purchasing. ' , 267 Front Street, PORTLAND, OREGON. Crandall & Barget, MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN FURNITURE CARPETS Undertakers and Embalrhers. NO. 16G SECOND STREET. JOLES BROS -: DEALERS IN:- Staple aim Fancy Gieries, Hay, Grain and Feed. . Masonic Block, Corner Third and Court Streets, The Dalies, Oregon. Health is Wealth ! New - Umatilla - House, . ' THE DALLFS, OREGON. HAND LEY &, SI NNOTT, PROP'S. LARGEST : AND : FINEST .- HOTEL : IN : OREGON. ft, TREATMENT : Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby -vraa Bick, we gave her Castori. When she was Child, she cried for Castoria, When the became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When ihe had Children, she gare them Cagtoria For Passenger or Freight Rates, Apply to Agent, or Pnrser on Board. Ofllcc northeast C3mcr of Court and Main street Db. E. C. West's Nervjc and Bbaih Treat Kent, a guaranteed speoinc for Hysteria, Dizzi ness. lAmvuiuous, mis, iservous iscurajgia. Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the upe ui njcuuui or iodhch), HKeiuiness, .Mcnuji De gression, boltemng oi the Brain, resulting in In sanity and lending to misery, decay and death Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Towci in either sex. Involuntary tosses and Snermat- orrho?a caused by over exertion of the brain, sell bdusc or over niauiirence. if.m ii cox contain one month's treatment. ?1.00 a box, or.six boxei. lor o.uu, seni Dy man prcpaia on receipt oi price. WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES Toeiireanv pjiko. With oarh ordr-r rvopivwi K us for six boxes, accomnanitd bvt5.00. we wif. send the mrrchoser our written smarnnteo to re. tuna toe money it me treatment does not eucci a cure, unarantees issued only oy BLAKELEY & HOUGHTON, v Prescription Dmggiats, 175 Second St. The Dalles. Or. NEW Tne Coiumtila PacklngGo., PACKERS OF Popk and Beef. MANUFACTURERS OF Fine Lard and Sausages. Curers of BRAND Hams aniBacon, Undertaking Esfablishment ! PRINZ & NITSCHKE. DEALERS IN Furniture and Carpets. ' We have added to our business a complete Undertaking Establishment, and as we are ia no way connected with the Undertakers' Trnst our prices will be low accordingly. Remember our place on Second street, next to Mooay's Dans. . Ticket and Baggage Office of the O. R. & N. Company, and office of the Wester Union Telegraph Office are in the Hotel. ' - Fire-Proof Safe for the Safety of all Valuables. P. Thompson" President. J. B. Schenck, H. M.Bbai.i. Vice-President. Cashier First National BanK. the dalles. OREGON A General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to Sight Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly remitted on day of collection. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on New York, San Francisco and Port land. . DIRECTORS. D. P. T. W Thompson. Sl'AUKS. H. M. J.VO. S. SCHBSCK.' Geo. A. Liebk. Beall. Wasco waieloDSB Co.; Receives- G-oods on Stor age, and Forwards same to their destination. Receives Consignments For Sale on Commission. fates Reasonable. FRENCH & CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERALBANKINO BUSINESS -MARK HOODS W. "7". Oo. THK DALIES, OREGON. Phil Willig, 124 UNION ST., THE DALLES, OR. Are Your Children Subject to Croup? As a preventive and care for croup, inamDeriam's uougn tvemeay lias no rival.- It is, in fact, the only remedy that can always be depended upon and that is pleasant and safe to take. There is not the least danger, in giving it to children, as it couiains no injurious substance. For sale at 50 cents per bottle by Snipes & Kinersly. Druggists, d&w. Notice. ' Chas. Stubblinz desires all those in debted to him to come up and settle as soon as possible. He lost all his stock by the late fire and a prompt settlement would greatly oblige him. 9-26-d&w-tf A Bjan of work horses for sale client). four and eight years old, weight about 1050 each. Anplv at thisoflice. dw9-28-ln Dried Beef, Etc. Masonic Building. " The Dalles. Or. DIAMD - HOLLER HULL A. H. CURTIS, Prop. lour of the Best Qual ity Always on Hand. THE DALLES. OKEGON. Keeps on hand a full line of MEN'S AND YOUTH'S Ready - Made Clothing. Pants and Suits MADE TO ORDER On Reasonable Terms. Letters of Credit issued available in the Eastern States. Sight Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fav orable terms. . The : Bnrnefl Ont tnt Again iit Ensiness ! Wn. micjiEiiiL, UNDERTAKER, Ana tmbalmer, has again started with a new ana complete stock of everything needed in the undertaking business. Particular attention paid to embalming and taking care of the dead. Orders promptly attended to, day or night Prices as Low as the Lowest Place of business, diagonally across from Opera Block, on the corner of Third and Wash ington Streets, The Dalles, Oregon asw I t Ml 'iARE4TRlCHY First Class Karcest, Fastest ui Finest ) the WarU. fajweneer accomodations unexcaJled. HEWVORbTLONOONDERRV AND GLASGOW. , KTery eaturtlftT, NEW YOEK, GIBBALTKK and NAPLES, At reeular lnterrals. SALOON, SECOND-CLASS AND STEERABE rates on lowest terras to and from the principle SCOTCH, EKSLISH, EI3H a ALL COHTBTZXTAL FUNIS. xcarsion tickets avaiJable to return by either th pie- -tureaque Clyde Sc North of Ireland or Naples A Gibraltar Srub aid Monty Ordtn for Any Amout t L evict Bit,. Apply to any of onr local Agents or to HESDEBSOS BKOTHEKS, Chicago, III.. Call and see my Goods leforc purchasing: elsewhere. $500 Reward! $20 REWARD. w TILL BE 1'AiiJ FOR ANY INFORMATION leading to the conviction of partiescuttina the ropes or in any way interfering with the wire poles or lamps of This Electbic Liqhi CO. .11. GI.ENN, ' We will pay the above reward for an) caseol Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, In digestion, Constipation or Costivenesa we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fall to give satisfac tion. Sugar Coated. Large boxes containing 30 Pills, 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and imi tations. The genuine manufactured only by THE JOHN C. WFST COMPANY, CHIGAGO, ILLINOIS. I1LAKELEY & HOUGHTON, ; Prescription Dragglsts, 176 Second St. The Dalle, Or. Foi Sale at a Bafdain A GOOD , Traction Engine Has only been run sixty days. Buffalo Pitts Thresher Only used two months. - Chopping Mill, Capable of 15 to 20 tons per day : costr 31. The above will be sold on easy terms. -. W. L. WARD, ' "- "v.- - The Dalles, Or., PAUL KREFT & CO., DEALERS IK Paints, Oils, Glass And the Most Complete and the Latest Patterns and Designs in WAIiZj paper. Practical Painters and Pnner Hnmrprn 'nn but the best brands of the Sherwin-Williams Paint used in all our work, and none but the most skilled workmen emnloved. All imlan. romptly attend ed to. " 10-17-d SHOP Adjoining Keel Front Grocery, THIBU SIHEKT, 7 ! i. o o