r i . THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1892. v.- The Weekly Gteoniele. THK DALLES, OREGON LOCAL ANO PERSONAL. Fruin the Daily Chronicle. Friday. Another traction engine for Klickitat .-' ' came up today from Russell & Co. Filloon & Co., received another ear load of farm machinery todav. ' Delinquents paid up so well on ice ' water that sheriff Cates has decided to ; offer lemonade to the tardy , payers to morrow. ' '. C. W. Phelps & Co., have not had time to hoist their sign nor write an ad. " yet ; but they sold three mowers and a header today. . . Mr. Max Vogt having tendered liis . - resignation, Mr. Hugh ..Chrisman jsteps in as water commissioner to supply the vacancy. A good selection. A, " The firemen of the East End were made , happy today by the arrival of their new hose cart from St. I'aul. It will be used in the tournament on the 4th. -. The city blacksmith shop of Gunning k.' , & Hockihan, and the city wagon shop of A. Sandrock, are both busy today, yes terday and tomorrow. See advertise ments new today. The Examiner should revise its Ex change list, if it wants Al. Snyder to have the joy of perusing its sunny scintilla tions exuberantly, as the Tronscrip is published in Dallas, Polk county, Or. Mr. C. J. Trenchard telegraphed chief .engineer Fish today that in the event of ' holding the annual tournament here next September, not less than thirty . I . Tcompanies might be expected to partici pate. .' ' ' Judge Thorn bury is tocay congranlat ' inc himself that he is once more a free American citizen of the United States, and the.baliwick of The Dalles. The shackelsof cbuntv judge and council man were thrown off this morning. Every community has a certain num ber of doubting Thomases who are never satisfied, but there is not in The Dalles a single member of that family. There was one once, but somebody said scat ; and that ended it. . The down freight this forenoon con sisted of nineteen cars. Sixteen cars were loaded with cattle from far interior some as far inland as Pocatello, There was no rest nor refreshment at The Dalles, but they steered right on to the butcher's trust elyeium. Little Paul Reese, a lone traveler all the way from Illinois, arrived at the ( Umatilla house this morning on her way to Centerville, where she has friends. Considering that the little Miss is but eleven veara of age. her trip speaks vol umes concerning attentions and, kindly acts of the conductors along this line. The Columbia was made so angry yes terday by the 6 1 rone winds, that some of the passengers on the Regulator became sea sick. It was a gale that had got lost on the way to Chicago, and was in such . a fine hurry, coming up the Columbia, that the managers seemed to think peo ple here had no. rights the weather was bound to respect. We hope it reached its destination on time. That cookoo-clock in Garretson's jewelry establishment, when the street is quiet early in these calm mornings, sends its sound upon the ear of the pas sing pedestrian in such clear notes that one at least supposed the real bird had been imported. Looking up at the Chapman block as if to sec the bird, a man this morning said he would like to see one, as he had beard of them before. He was told to come around to Garret- son's, after business hours, and 'take look at the miraculous songster, and set his watch. From the Daily Chronicle, Suturaur. Mr. Geo. Filloon is in the city. Mrs. Harriet Wilson, left homeward last evening Sir. J. u. Morrow of Jrieppner, was registered at the Umatilla house yester- day. ' Harvesting will begin in some parts of the Inland Empire right after the Fourth. The Prinz & iXitschke building will be covered with a tin roofing by Maler & Benton.", , . , ' Mr. rrank Woodcock, who was so s badly hurt last week at Wamic, is re covering. ..... , .... Mrs. S. G. Rigdon is in the city. He is quite active in preparations for Rus , sell & Co., display in The Dal les ; 4'th of -July parade. ' ;s ... ;-' ." K;;' An experienced wool ; growers says: "Sell when the buyers leave there is the end of the market." ' Perhaps this may be a good pointer. Messrs. Maier & Benton were awarded the contract yesterday for plumbing the the Mclnerny residence ; also the resi dence of Hon. J. B. Condon. They make ,f speciality of sanitary plumbing. We understand that friends of Green the murderer of Wm. Dunn, have re ftained Hon. Wm. Lair Hill to defend ' him. Mr. Hill is accounted one of the best criminal lawyers on the coast. T Messrs. Nicholas and Roger Sinnott - t 'were among the passengers to arrive . this morning. They spent one day at Denver, and would have laid off a day , :at Salt Lake but were anxious to be at . home for the 4th . ' 1 . ' Offers of lemonade to delinquents at the sheriff's , office had a timely effect. The offer liolds good f or Tuesday r. - The Cosmopolitan opened yesterday with our young friend, Claude' Cooper, the trusted agent of Meesrs.', Sinnott & Fish, as managers. " . Mr. and Mrs. Rand, and Mrs. Graham of Hood River, were among the 'watchers" who spent the night at the Umatilla house last night, watching for the yesterdays afternoon train to convey them to their homes. - A cross section of a pile, which come from Seattle harbor, is perfectly honey combed with teredeo. It is worth while to take a look at this, and to remember, while looking, that at the .seaport for this Inland Empire Astoria, teredo is unknown. ' ' The many leading cities of the' United States having representatives and visit ors in The Dalles, as attested by :the Umatilla house register, shows that as a commercial city in Oregon-this place is entitled to rank close to the head of the procession.' " ' To set everything, at rest concerning the Columbia river- improvements, we may as well say that there is absolutely nothing in the way of a speedy ' comple tion of the cascade locks : Unless it be the veto of the president ; which . is not at all Ukely. .... ' . . . Mr.' H. C. Neilson says the man must be an idiot who presupposes that twenty-five pounds of iron is equal only to twenty-five pounds of feathers. He says a bale of wool, as it comes from the ranches, wouldn't have left his foot in the shape that iron goose" of his did, a few days ago. l.anl Office BuHtnetw. Capt. Lewis and his assistants in the land office have been quite busy the past four days on a report which shows the approximate number of acres open to settlement in each county in this dis trict. Wascocountv, surveved . .". 747,870 Sherman " ': ....... 185,000 Gilliam " " ........ 43T,000 Morrow " 200,000 Grant " " ........ 460,000 Crook " " 2,300,000 Surveyed lands open 4,827,370 Unsnrveyed 371,800 Total 4,090,179 Embraced in grant to Dalles . Military Wagon Road Co.... 300,000. Willamette Valley and Cascade Wagon Road Go 150,000 Total in grants. . ........ 450, Embraced within the limits of the Warm Springs Indian res ervation about 500,000 RECAPITULATION. Surveyed and open to entry. . . .4,327,370 Unsurveyed and not embraced in Indian or other reservat'ns 371,S00 Embraced in road grants 450,000 Warm Springs Indian res'vat'n 500,000 Total ..5,649,170 Regarding the coming Behring sea ar bitration tribunal it is said there are only five men from whom Carnot can choose French arbitrators, for only five men fulfill requirements, viz., jurists of distinguished reputation, acquainted with the English tongue. Of these five, one only exactly fits the requirements. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby was nick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, the chin;; to Castoria, When she had Children, she fare them Castoria Two men of Destiny now face each' other for the second time. MAKRIED. At the Methodist parsonage, July 1st, 1892, Mr. Bion Hazen and Miss Sadie Miens. Rev. A. C. Spencer officiating. A New Kind of Insurance. For twenty-five cents yon can insure yourself and family against any bad re sults from an attack of bowel complaint during the summer. " One or two doses of Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy will cure any ordi nary case. It never fails and is pleasant and safe to take. Xo family can afford to be without it. For sale at 25 and 50 cent9 jer bottle by Blakelev & Hough ton, druggists. d&w Mr. W. M. Terrv. who has hpen in t.liA drug business at "Elkton, Ky., for the past twelve years; savs't "Chamber lain's Couch Remedv inves better satis. faction than any other cough medicine I nave ever sold. - ihere is eood reason lorims. io omer win cure a cold so quickly ; no other is so certain a pre ventive and cure for ".crouD : no other affords so much relief in cases of whoop ing cough. For sale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists. . d&w ... Dissolution Notice. Notice is hereby given that the law partnership heretofore existing between K. B. Dufur, George W'atkins and Frank Menefee, under the firm name and style of Dufur, Watkins & Menefee ig this dav dissolved . by mutual' consent. George Watkins retiring from the firm. All persons knowing themselves indebted to said firm will please call atoneeand pav the same to Frank Menefee, and all per sons having claims against said firm will present the same to him for payment. Business will be continued at the old of fice, under the firm name of Dufur . & Menefee. . E. JJ. Vvrvu. .. '.''. Geobcb i Watxus. Dated this 25th day of June: 1S92. 6.2Sd4w - , .- WEATHER (iAUUEKS. THERMOMETERS . TURED WITH . ABE. MANUFAG GREAT CARE.. They Are Made ' Very Accurately. nd. Though Qalekijr, fin Through Nine teen Palm or Hands The Different . Processes of the Instruments. The making of a thermometer may be eitlier a delicate scientific operation, or one of the simplest tasks of the skilled mechanic, according to. the sort of ther mometer made With , the extremely sensitive and minutely accurate instru ments designed for scientific uses great care is taken, and they are kept in stock for months, sometimes for years, to be compared and recompared with instru ments that are known to be trustworthy. But so much time cannot lie spent over the comparatively ' cheap thermometers in common use, and these ore made rap idly, though . always . : carefully. The method of manufacture has been so sys tematized within a few ' years that the very cheapest thermometer should not vary more than a fraction of a degree from the correct point. Whether the thermometer is to be charged with mercury or alcohol; wheth er it is to be mounted in a frame of wood, pressed tin or brass, the 'process is substantially the same. Mercury is generally used for scientific instruments, but mosttaakers prefer alcohol, because it is cheaper. ' The alcohol is colored red with an aniline dye which does not fade. . .The thermometer maker buys his glass tubes in long strips from the glass fac tories. The glassblower on the premises cutshese tubes to' the proper lengths, and with his gas jet and blowpipe makes the bulb on the lower end. The bulbs are then filled with colored alcohol, and the tubes stand for twenty-four horn's. On the following day another work man holds each bulb in turn over a gas jet until the colored fluid, by its expan sion, entirely fills the tube. It then goes back into the hands of the glass blower. . He' closes the upper end and turns the tip backward to make the lit tle glass hook which will help keep the tube in place n the frame. MARKING THE TUBES. . The tubes now rest until some hun dreds of them,' perhaps thousands, .are ready. Then the process of ganging be gins. There are no marks whatever on the tube, and the first gnide mark to be made is the freezing point, 32 degs. Fahrenheit This is found by plunging the bulbs into melting snow. JSfo other thermometer -is needed for a guide, for melting snow gives invariably the exact freezing point. This 13 an unfailing test for any thermometer whose accuracy be suspected. But melting snow is not always to be had, and a little ma chine resembling a sausage grinder is brought into use. This machine shaves a block of ice into particles, which an swer the purpose as well as snow. When the bulbs have been long enough in the melting snow a workman takes them one by one from their icy bath, seizing each so that his thumb nail marks the exact spot to which the fluid has fallen. Here he makes a scarcely perceptible mark upon the glass with a fine file, and goes on to the next The tubes, with the freezing point marked on each, now go into the hands of another workman, who plunges them, bulb 'down, into a , vessel " filled with water kept constantly at 64 degs. A standard thermometer attached to the inside of this vessel shows that the temperature of the water is correct Another tiny file scratch is put at 64. Then a third workman plunges the bulbs into another vessel of water kept constantly at 90, This is marked like the others, and the tuba is now sup plied with ' these . guide marks, each 83 degs. from the next. A small tab is then attached to each tube, on which its number is written for, owing to un avoidable variations in the bore of the tube, each one varies slightly from the j others. ! MARKING THK CASES. j With its individuality thus established the tube goes into the hands of a mark er, who fits its bulb and hook into the frame it is to occupy, and makes slight scratches on the frame corresponding to the 33, 61 and 96 degree marks on the tube. The frame has a number corre sponding with the number of the tube, and the tube i laid away in a rack amid thousands. . The frame, whether it . be wood, tin or brass, goes- to the gauging room, where it is laid upon a steeply sloping table, exactly in the position marked for a thermometer of that size. The 32, 64 .and 96 degree marks must correspond with the marks upon the table. If they do not, the error in marking is detected and the frame is sent back for correc tion. .. ., . ....... ,, A long, straight bar of wood or metal extends diagonally across the table from the lower right hand corner to the upper left hand corner.. . On the right this works upon a. pivot and on the left it rests in a ratchet, which lets it ascend, .or descend only one notch at a time. That notch marks the exact distance of 2 degs. . With the three scratches already made for a basis the marker could hardly make a mistake in. the degrees if he. tried. . The marks made upon the frame or case are all made by hand with, a geo metric pen and India ink if the frame is of wood, and. with steel dies if it is of metal. The tube bearing the correspond ing number is next attached to the frame, and the thermometer' is ready for the market without further testing. . Some makers use only two guide marks, but the best makers use three. , r . r. In the process of , manufacture the ordinary thermometer goes through the hands of nineteen workmen, . half of whom are often girls and women. Some of the larger concerns in and near' New York produce several hundred thousand instruments annually, and on every one of them the purchaser may see, , if he looks closely, the tiny file scratch on the glass at 33, 64 and 96 degree marks or somewhere near them, as different mak ers use different points. New York Sua. IRON AND WOOD SHIPS MATERIALS' USED IN SHIPBUILDING AND THEIR VALUE. - ' The Paints In tvhieh Iron and 8teel Are Superior ; to Wood Their Lightness . and Durability and the Coraparatlre . Safety or All Kinds of yeasetfe.. The three materials used in' the feu struction of ships in general are wodd. iron and steel. .,. Wood has been in use from tiino immemorial. ' iron is only about fifty years old, and steel is easily within the memory of every man of' moderato years. The importance of thi three materials are. inversely, as stated steel being the most valuable, then irou and last wood. Noticeably is this so in the construction of ; swift steamships, for wood is unsuited to the" great engine power nowadays put into ships-., it can not properly stand the strain,' V . i " Iron ships are superior to wooden one in the' following particulars Lightness Combined with strength, durability when properly treated, ease and. cheapness of construction and repair and safety when . J properly constructed and subdivided. In wooden ships it has been, .found that about one-half of the total weight of the ship is required for the hull, whereas in iron ships only from SO to 40 per cent, of th weight is thus,. taken up... -For in. stance, in a wooden armored warship, the 'weight of th hull being 50 per cent of the. displacement leaves 50 per cent. for the weights to be carried. ' In an iron armored, warship the weight of the hull lKjMUly W per cent, leaving 60 per Cfint fov weights to be carried. ' The tensile 'strength of iron is from 40.000 pounds to 60.000 pounds per square inch, and -tins strength can be secured throiV'hout ail the metal used, so that tlie mat&inJ worked into the .ship is uni form and homogeneous.-;rbese'are quali ties wanting in wood: the greatest cart' canuixraliminate such weak spots as are due to ne presence of knots, crossgrain hidden' defects, etc "..Generally good sriwid tiuibw may be said to have a strength to resist pulling apart (tensile strength) of about. 10.000 pounds. ' "f- IRON K.ylt SCPKIUOII TO WOOI. ,When ; in ..- shipbuilding it comes to ! fastening pieces together, as. for in ! stance, in making u ship's keel or her deck- beams, the weakness caused tiv scarfing the pieces of wood together be cianes an element of strength in riveting th? iron. No matter how it may be nec csosjiry to treat, the pieces of nietttl, whether by riveting or Welding or by augle irons, the . iron stands far above the wood in resistance to tensile strains It is only when resisting strains of coin pression that there is a tendency of iron plates to buckle, and this is guarded against by making the plates thicker than -is required tor other strains or by re-enforcing them. ' - Durability is a quality of iron that is not yet thoroughly determined. : In gen er;it. a wooden ship may.be said to last about . fifteen 'years. Some last longer but there will be nmeli patching and re newing to be done: . The rules of Lloyds alldV nbout fourteen years as the aver age 'durability of the best built timber Vessels. Iron is not subject to the internal sources of decay to which wood is liable. Worms and marine animals cannot in jure it, nor will it rot from imperfect ventilation. Neither can the purls work loose from the motion and straining of tho ship, allowing water to get in and cause tlecay. The danger to iron lies in the 'rusting or corrosion, especially in the under water parts outside frdin the sea water and inside from the bilge water. The only prevention is careful watching, cleaning aud painting, and even with all this supervision galvanic action is likely to do some damage. Therefore the life of n iron ship is lim ited, and in tie present state of knowl edge of the subject may be set down as approximately thirty years, for. though a ship will last longer, extensive repairs will, have to be made that will cost con-. sidoVable money. STEKl. BKTTKU' THAN IRON'. ' It ia also easier to repair tin iron ship; since the necessary shape can be turned out at once. The rapidity with, which an iron ship can be built counts for much. In tho present day the ease With which iron is obtained and worked con stitutes uuother element of cheapness, for the final cost today must amount to nearly 2o per cent. less, especially when the time, preparation, saving of weight and life of the ship are considered. As to tho safety of n ship when prop erly constructed and subdivided, it j only necessary to say that when the in ternal space of an iron ship is sub divided into many compartments ' by longitudinal or transverse partitions rising to a sufficient height, or by- horizontal-platforms, or inner skin, and all such divisions tire made water tisht then that sliip is safer than any wooden ship I would be against, foundering, for the space required for these bulkheads can- uoc do touna in a iimoer ouxii vessel. . j The subject of steel may be briefly dis cussed by remembering that steel is sim ply a superior kind of iron, and by vir tue of -its greater strength is of lighter weight. ' The strength of steel is from 70,000 to 100,000 pounds per square inch. Steel is. as strong lengthwise as it is broadwise: ' iron is' one-fifth stronger lengthwise7 than it '"is broadwise. -' The elastic limit of steel is about 5.1 per cent, greater than that of iron: So steel may be ' trusted with working loads nearly 33 per cent; greater than the oth er material. Lloyds estimate that by bnildin'ships of steel there is a saving in weight over iron of about IS percent or,- to: pat the same things in another way, a steel ship of the same dimensions us an iron ship wonld have an increased cargo capcirvin-weigbtyof-me 15 or aoptirceitt... - v- '- ' . ;.;ln tbo-Matfer of cost, steel ia more ex pensive at; first bnt the best proof of its ultimate cheapness is fonnu ,in the in disputable '.fact- vhat modem merchant ' ships are beinjC built of sstuel. . In ISiJO'. there were 560 steel ships built,' 99 iron " nnd 2? composite and wood.' There need . be no- further argument as ' to the su periority f' steel from every point of view. New York. Times. - v phamjbeThun's Colic, -Cholera nd Diarrhoea Remedy can always be de pended upon, it is pleasant to take and will cure cramp, cholera morbus, dysen tery and diarrhoea in their worst forms. Every family should be provided with it. 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists, d&w The affection which Tammany sudden ly evinced for the west would set the -lachrymal glands of a crocodile to secret- i ing like a freshet. . , C'Ol'NTV TRBASCKKK'S HOTICK. All County Warrants registered prior to January 17th, 1889, will be paid if presentea at my omce. . interest ceases from and after this date... Geo. Ruch, Treasurer '' " . Wasco Count v, Or The Dalles, May 13, 1892. 5.L0wl0t Tammany came in like a lion and wen out like a door-mat. . For the best wagon .on earth get the Mitchell. For sale by J.M. Filloon & Co. . CleTB and Steve. ' Telegram. If the names of the nomi nees are too long to suit your laziness, call them Cleve and Steve for short. . You can buy Standard Mowera, Reap ers, Hakes, or anything in the implement line; as cheap irom J. M. Filloon & Co., as if you were in Portland. They keep an unlimited supply ot extras tor all ma chines sold by them. Opposite Brooks & Beers. . 4-22wtf ' . WANTED. ... Four hundred men to sell, our - choice varieties of nursery stock either on sal ary or commission." Apply at once and secure choice of territory. ' Permanent emoloymant the year around. - May Brothers, Nurserymen, 4-lowl0t . Rochester. N. Y. Benjamin . Harrison may be sour, sawed-off and all that sort of thing, but -ucky. His luck is whafc the . presby terians call Predestination with a capi tal P. . Saved from Death by Onions. There has no doubt been more lives of children saver from death in croup or whooping cough by the nse of onions tnan any otner Known remedy, our mothers used to make poultices of them, or a syrup, which was always .effectual in' breaking up a cough or cold. Dr. Gunn's Onion Syrup le made by combin 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. Harvesting- In Illlnnls. , Hili.sboko, July 2. Harvest has be gun in Montgomery county. The wheat is without rust, the heads well filled and the yield will be eqhat to theicrop of last year, wHich was the largest in ton years. Every measured bushel of Vlieat ti; year is expected to weigh sixty;' pounds or more. Farmers in Kansas aro hiving trouble to secure. .help to harvestXnir' immense crops. ' ' ' '. : K ., : ' A Great Lljer edlc)n ' ' : Dr. Gnna's Improved LrVtfrlla are a sure cirefor sick headache, bilious com plaint .dyspepsia,- indigestion, costivc ness, torpid liver, ate., These pills in sure perfect -.digestion, correct the liver and stomach, regulate the bowels, purify and enrich the blood and make the skin clear. They also produce 'a good appe tite and invigorate and strengthen the entire, system by their ' tonic action. They only require one pill for a dose and never gripe or sicken. Sold at 25 cents a box by Blakeley & Houghton.. . . The demon who so villainously out' raged and murdered Mamie Walsh, near Milwaukie, is now in custody at Oregon City. He has been in the state but about a month, from Iowa, and bears the name of George Wilson. A complete chain of evidence fixes his guilt. The vagabond cringing under the fears of .lynching, had the audacity to ask to be buried in the same cemetery as Mamie Walsh, because she was innocent and he also is innocent. It ia possible he may be lrnched before tomorrow. A Sure Cure'for Plies. Itchinz Piles are known by moisture like perspiration, causing intense itch ing when warm, ibis form as well as Blind, Bleeding or Protruding, yield at once to Dr. Bosanko's I lie ' Kemedy, which acts directlv on Darts 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, bold by Blakeley x Houghton. ISEASE! 1 Statistics show that one in rotra baa a weak or diseased Heart. TaasratsrnvtoineataakM- 'sresvtht spprtsriH, stattertaaT. tain and kvaaTTsaeiia,pia laatda,taeaasetartasi ssrollea saklcs, dre-pey (sd tfe4k,l for .which DR. MIL.KM KMW U1UT sTCTRJB is a marreloua remedy. "I bane been troubled with heart disease fur yesrs, my left poise was Tery weak, could at times soaraeljr reel It, the smallest excitement would always weaken my nerves snd heart and a fear of Impending death stared me In the face for boars. 1K. MILF.S' eEHVIJf K and KJBW JUXLAKT ClKal the only medicine that ass proved of sny bene lft and cured me. I. M. Dyer, dorerdale, kid. Iw. Blllee' I.lTer Plus are a sura remedy for Biliousness and TsrpM Liver. AO Pesee eeota. ' Floe nook- on Heart Diseass; with wonderful Corel Kree at druggists, or address OR. .MILES' MEOIQM.CO., Elkhart. In soi.n bV blakci.it HOWGHTOX. ... ..... . . . . 1 HEART Q C N. THORN BURY,. -i.X. A. UCDSOW, Late Rec U. S. Land Office. - Notary Public 1TE0P1R 0150)1, : II. S.. Land Attorneys. Over Sixteen Years Experience. -BUY AND SELL CITY AND fODNTRV REAL ESTATE. 600,000 ACRES OF- UutaraveL'JABM. Property POH. SATiTl. Henri or a Pamphlet describing this lsnd. . WE ARK AGENTS FOR . ' Thompson's Afltlltloii to The Dalles.. ' This addition 1h laid off Into one-nrrc lota, lum la dustiucd to be the nrinpml reaklctK part V the city. Only twenty minutues walk from the eoort honwe. - Do not be afraid to consult or write us, we aire advice or information in nil brAnchrs of our bus iness free ol chare. , w ,..-.. Settlers Located !; on Government Land. . Office in, I1. S. land Officr Bulldinir. THE DALLKS ORKGOBL ATTENTION FARMERS; ... The Imported Belgian , ... . Stallion Will stand for the Season of 18w; ' " At Richmond's Stable In The Italics on Friday and Saturdays. At Hurry Gllpins. mileeiMii ol Kiiirflcld School house, 'Mondays. itR.Snod Erass' '4 mile west ot Boyd 1'. O.. Tuesdays ami , neanesauys. nfnC W" imported la 1SS8 by D. P. Stuohs UUUU Sons, of Knirtield, Iowa. Ho is a Dark Bay, with Black Points, and is registered at Brus sels as No. fcM,nnd in Aincricajw No. V. 'J. (XKX is one of the Finest Krcrt Draft He rses in America, is coining 7 yrs old, aud wclRhs lKUO lbs TERMS 120 for the scnson.or i'b Insure a foal. By the Season, payable Oct. fat To insure, due and payable as soon as the marc is known to be in font. Man's not brotiKUt regularly will be charged (or by the season M. W. & W. L. FKKK.MAN, Owners. BOYD, WASCO CO., OREtfgN. FARM FOR SALE. I oiler for sale all or u part of mjr farm of 480 acres in Sec. 24, Tp. 1 south, range 14 east, 15 miles southeast of The Dalles; good improvements, good young fiv.e-acre orchard now bearing, plenty of good water for house nse and stock ; . 175 acres in cultivation, good outlet . north, east,south or west via county roads. I also offer for sale 1 60 acres in section 26, township 1 sooth, range 14 east; also five head horse, one doable set of harness and a few farm implements, etc. Prices reasonable, terms easy and title good. For particular come and See me at The Dalles or J. II. Trout at the farm. jan29-tf . :, E. W. Tkoot. O c H a a . 0 a a e -a .- a b "5 o . Ld I o H o . .2 c' n c ' "5 "S3 . S B n Sxi H 2 S 3 U a. S3- H 0, : -t ine coiumtiia Packing ca.. PACKERS OF ; Mk and Beef. MANCfACTURERS OF Fine Lard and Sausages. Curers of BRAND Bned Bee Eta . ' . .. - t . ' . . . Masonic Buildingv . The Dalles. Oe. DM0in) :-.fB0LlER - IIIll A. H. CURTIS, Prop. Fldiir of the Best Qual ity Alwajrs on Hand. . .. -: t OftEGQBT- THE DALLES. 'Ad on a new pilutluss reKniate the llrer, etmarA and bowels) - tkronuh M turvtt. II a. Hius' Pnxa tpttdUV earv biltoosneaa. . torptd irrer sn eanwpst . tioa. . Smallest, mildus. surest I Op doea,2S ''. , bamnlea tree at dmittstV ' to. Wist Est. Cs.. lUkanV nl SoU br Bl. A RELET HOTJOBTOW-