The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947, July 28, 1893, Image 4

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    THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1893.
The Weekly Ghroniele.
wvxitil-t Immi him ll iimtUT.
hl'HsrKlPTliS KATES.
BY MAIL irOTiK rRKPII) IN ADVAXl'K.
OlHM ..r
X in Hit s
A-lvrttMui rutt rT-rtrMmaMv, atiU nitlf know n
Ailfit-Hi! rouiimmwatiotin "Til K t'KKOV
ivnnovwi
iT.tTll.tt
b'-ereuiry t( State
TreHmer - -
Buv-L. of Public liiatrueUnu.
-mtitur
Cnnprvauu'n
Alule Printer
W. MeHrnlel
..Phillip Mt'tM'hmi
B I1.,;h-lr,,'
(J- Miuhell
, n. iicniiKiiu
f . K. Kills
Prauk Baker
t'tHMT (iril(lAL.
rountr Jmlijt.. (!.'. Hiakelef
Bheri& T. A. Ward
"ler J. B. C'toiwii
Treasurer W m. Mieliell
Coiunui,uer j Frank Kim-aid
Aawoxir Joel w . Kmiu
Bnrvevor K. P. Slmrf.
BilKrinteii(itlll of l"ublic eVhooU .Troy shvliey
Coninn N. M. LiutWtiiKl
With all our vaunted enlightenment,
as a result of civilization and Christian
izing influences, such crimes as the one
at Wyeth occur at regular intervals.
That the criminal himself has never
come within these influences is certain.
He must have tn-en as unfan.ilinr with
the enormity of hi" crime from a legal
etandKint as he proved himself to he
with the facilities of our age for captur
ing criminals. Else he would not have
rode into The Pa! lev in broad daylight
go Boon afterward and only thirty miles
away from the scene. The man is one
of the lowest tytws of our civilization
one in whom the passions run riot,
whose life i aimless, whose ambition
has long since perished, and who seeks
in perpetual wanderings that spice
which is the only thing left to him to
make existence In-arable. The Nine
teenth century has given 119 railroads,
and it has also iven us an army of
tramps, luev tvcouie more ami more t
vicious through the influences of a life
freed from all restraint, and their chief
aim is to dodge officers of the law and
escape work. Tiie longer they persist
in their useless life the more firmly are
they bound to their claims. The time
will come, inuat come, when to tie con
victed of being a tramp is to be a felon,
- ajmishable by imprisonment in the pen
itentiary at hard labor. Tramps have
no right to a liberty by means of w hich
they prey upon the law-abiding, and
legislation will ultimately have to be
resorted to to stop it.
A. F. Milier, superintendent of Ore-
gon's Forestry exhibit at Chicago, is re
ppit;!bie for the statement that he has
- J9cated a tree in Oregon which is 16 feet
in diameter 25 feet from the ground and
ten feet in diameter :0o feet from the
ground. Air. Miller is well posted on
the w oods of Washington B9 w ell as those
of Oregon. On short notice and with
limited resources he has got a most cred
itable display of Oregon's timber in the
Forestry bniidinu.
If Oregon is to be represented at the
California mid-winter fair, onr neighbors
on the south must look sharp for their
laurels. AVbileourexhibitat theworld'i
fair was surprisingly small it was phe
nomenally excellent, and left a deeper
impression upon all observers than any
other etate. California's gigantic orange
pyramid did not dwarf onr apple, peach
and prune exhibit in the least.
A man who had 11,400 in one of the
Chicago bunks became alarmed the
other day and drew it out. It was
handed to him in two parcels, one of
$300 and the other of $900. Before he
had walked two blocks from the bank
somebody relieved him of the $900.
On discovering his loss he went back
and deposited the $500 again, baring
paid V-100 to learn how to keep $o00.
Senator Squire favors the passage of a
joint resolution authorizing Cleveland
to suspend the silver-purchase clause of
the Sherman act. As Cleveland sus
pended the Geary law without a joint
resolution to back him, we do not see
why it is necessary for such a resolution
relative to the Sherman law. What is
prince for the Chinese is sauce for the
silver men.
The banks at Penver which were
cloned by a senseless run of depositors
are opening again, and it is not proba
ble that a single one will fail to resume.
Idoney is tight, but securities are ample
in all cases. Mankind, after all, is a
good deal like a herd of sheep. If one
iii.ikes a break, there are plenty of
-others to make a panic out of it.
It is rumored that Governor Waite'i
declaration of war is endorsed by Mrs.
Jei-se. We are a little in doubt whether
she is in favor of blood quite up to the
hores' bridles or to send all the gold
men f the conntry to II alifax. Iiut
Mrs. Lease and Governor Waite make a
powerful pair of populists. Ex.
Siam is showing a warlike front to
Fidiice. Folks in this country know
t'tv little of the Siamese, that jeople
Wing principally associated in the com
mon mind with a iccu!iar variety of
t "
An Arkaiisus editor claims to have
sc.-s a rattle-nuke with loO rattles. It
wr. for jus' such cai'ts that the Keeley
cure whs invuiitcd.
As I'resident Cleveland has called au
extra session of congress to repeal the
Sherman silver law, it in advisable for
the people of the United States to look
into tliis question and see lint it in pro
posed to do. It is charged against the
Sheruian law that ilis contracting the
currency by driving gold to Kim-pe.
The enemies of silver my that the silver
certificates are 1-eiiig presented at the
sub-treasuries and are In-iiip paid in fold,
which fold is then idiipped to Kuro)e,
and that in order to pursue thin l-o'.icy it
will be necessary M issue bomls to
gold, and to avoid that it is proposed to
repeal tl.e Miermun law, providing for
the monthly purchase of ViOO.CXH ounces
of silver. The Sherman law contains a
clause which provides for the coinage of
enough silver to redeem the silver certi
ficates which shall be presented for pay
ment, so there is no need of paying them
in gold, and if the treasury department
is redeeming them in gold they are do
ing an unlawful act us the language of
the law admits of no other construction
but to redeem the silver certificates in
silver coin. But Senator Teller, of Col
orado, proved during the last session of
congress that they were not being paid
in gold, by the writteu statement trom
the secretary of the treasury, who said
mat Sliver ceriuicaies issueu uuuer mc
Sherman law were not.in law or :n prat-- The Oregon City UmM jH , lMt
tice, being redeemed in gold coin, nor cgldiJttte fl)r lK;,)nuir faVor. It an
had the treasury department authorized I nounCt. that it ig Ut.Bj rt aiurt the
any of the sub-treasuries to do it." So ..,,.. frjIl. tlie Btart nnJ wo.t nit
it is necessary to look elsewhere for the
cause of the export of gold and the
1 . 1 1 .... .1.... t - .
cause is found in the fact that for more
than a year the balance of trade has j
been largely against us, and the excess j
of imports over exiorts must be paid for
in gold. Iiut how the administration
intends to better the situation by the
policy it has openly announced is one of
the mysteries of the world. The gold
bugs say the error was in using silver as
money in hut amount. They say the
I silver dollar is responsible for all of our
financial ills, but can tney bear them
selves out in that statement? In Eng
land w hen the Darings failed, the bank
of England had to go to bimetallic
France for ready money so as not to lie
seriously embarrassed by the I'.aringj
failure. Tiiat failure was not caused by
debused silver currency, for England has ,
no silver money to speak of. The re-,
cent heavy failures in Australia in w hich I
several hundred millions of dollars were
swallowed up, was not caused by de
based silver, as Australia is also on a
gold basis.
SHORT OS' WHEAT.
Enough is now known of the present
w heat crop to make safe and certain the
statement that the yield this year will
be exceptionally light in the United
States. On the Pacific coast the pros
pects indicate an exceptionally heavy
crop, but in the states of Ohio, Indiana,
Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri,
Texas, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, Mich
igan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, North
Dakota and South Dakota the acreage is
light nnd the yield will be far below
average. . The significance of this fact to
the wheat growers of the Pacific coast
becomes more apparent w hen it is stated
that last year these states produced 3'J0,
000,000 bushels of the total crop of 530,
!M0 ,000 bushels. These conditions were
first brougiit out by the last government
crop report. Now they have been made
more apparent by detailed reports
gathered by the New York World from
700 correspondents reporting by tele
graph from ail parts of the United States
and Canada. Noting the facts, the Spo
kane Keview pithily says:
And yet in the face of these reliable
reports, the wheat market remains de
pressed, and the prices quoted are the
lowest paid within a century. The
canses must be sought in the lack of
sufficient money to handle the crop, and
in the falling otT of the European de
mand, due to the growing paralysis of
industry ; and these in turn are tlie out
growth of the demonetization of silver
and the consequent appreciation and
scarcity of gold. The reeal of the Sher
man act would do more to cure these
evils than a spoonful of water to cure a
malignant case of smallpox.
We have a pamphlet before us which
says that during the next six years
nine-tenths of the human race will per
ish by war, plague, famine, pestilence,
earthquake and hail, and reference is
had to Eev. 10:21, Isa. 6 :11-13, and Jer.
25:20-33. There is to be a great dis
ruption among nations, see Eev. 2 :27
and l's. 2 '9. The Jews are to become
tlie ruling nation of the whole world for
1,000 years, commencing in 2,000, and
the capital is to be at Jerusalem.
An inmate of the Oregon insane asylum
thinks an eeg represents eold and silver.
He may not be so wrong after all. If
the yolk represents the gold and the
white the silver, then why is not the
shell to represent the law? Thus an egg
is a symbol of the financial question of
today and the question is, How shall we
place the law around the gtaid and silver
so that they may be a unit?
An eastern editor who lost a subscrib
er says : The biggest fool on earth is the
idiotic imbecile w ho will withdraw his
snpjmrt from a pajier because lie s;es
something in It that doesn't suit his
tiiakfcun. Thin flam l.iirr.litil r.iB H,f.nl.l '
, 4 , . , .
a ...u... m. i n a, uiriiv.n.n I( jjj Tt all
ttifflUM filltllla f.nn aTVlUll ka wl in I . . a,...n '
" . ; "
vv irnuo r':.-r r,,iu,-,i,i na; II1UL Will
please him and displeai-e the other
fellow. The withdrawal of the aunnort
of one i 111 Wile won't top thii band
WHeon. You may depend cm that.
77 RO Kill THICK A.I THIS.
The following from the Ochoco Ke
view, in a very valuable object lesson:
"1 don't expect to make a dollar out
of the sheep busmen in the next three
vears. but 1 intend to Co riL'ht on in-
creasing my flocks until prices come n "' '-v alioiit S :M o clock in ti.f cwn
again, then 1 will sell out at a profit .m 1 g- The stranee looking man tillered
u.y three years work." said one of o.ir ! hiiu candy if he would go a little piece
most successful vouiig sheen raisers the i with him. Th children all bci-im-
j 0tl,er dav, when asked if he was dis-
; t.ouraj:t,j ou account of the low price of
sn,., u inuii u this one who is
not discouraged by preseut depressions ! up the pursuit. If he had been sin , . s'
in business, is sure to succeed, and the j fill it is doubtful if Mr. or Mrs. Wo -I
country would le better oil had it more ' would ever have seen the child ajaui.
of his kind. If half the young men of j liypsies are skilled in the art of eviid
Crook county had the couruge to devote ig pursuit u'nd there is no means m
themselves to business as he has, and as
he proposes to
the future, even
though the present outlook is not flat-
tering, the present cry of "hard times 1 out half the L nited States, ami a child
would not le heard, iiut, uufortuuately, j stolen in Colorado would -rhnps never
too many of them lack stability they le known in Oregon. These gypsies U
have not the courage to go into business ! long to bands of from ;iti to 100, several
of anv kind, cive it their undivided at-j families of them, and they are perpetu-
j tention, and stick to it through pros-
H.ritv M,j adversity until it eventually
; grows into a valuable investment.
j ,,; : lmrn Illltll .:,. ,... tl,ir
. j he llBVe a 8,lttrt.of
J
the monev luanufisi'turtd by I'ncle
s-auiuel.
ln the prosecution of the smuggling
ring iu Oregon nnd Washington, Secre
tary Carlisle is jierforming yeoman
work, which every good citizen should
appreciate. For years past the govern
ment has been defrauded millions of
dollars, but the end has come. Salem
Statesman.
OREGON'S BIG RED APPLES.
Aa taatsra W riter I'aya Tribal tn th
Exhibit ri.ni This Mats.
Apples of the crop of lS:i, taken from
the coid.torage and exhibited in the
horticultural building, are displayed by
gtHtea all(1 ,rovinces as follows : Maine,
v York Jnwr Mirbimm Vi-
consin, Minnesota, Illinois, .Missouri,
Iowa, Colorado, Idaho, Washington,
Oregon, California, Ontario, Quelrec,
Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and
New South Wales send 10 varieties of the
current year's crop. The display of
apples from the northwestern states
Idaho, Oregon and Washington are
charterized by fruits of enormous size,
high color and remarkable freedom from
scab. To an eastern man, says a writer
in Garden and Forest, of New York city,
the most interesting variety from these
states is the yellow Newtown Pippin,
which is the leading apple over a great
territory there, and which is t Tice as
large as the same apple grown in the !
Hudson river vallev. I!lue Pear-
... ... t !.t. l:wl-
main, w hich is nine kiiowu in me 1
Eastern states, ranks second in general
importance in the Northwest, and sped- ;
mens ou exhibition here measure ;
fourteen inches in circumference. The 1
n.nnn ..l,;i,! ..f .....I... ,u !
.Bw.. .u..k j. .r IC-
markable for its effective arrange-1
ment, the different colors and sizes
being alternated and comnoned for the j
purpose of giving a general effect.
There arc 26 varieties in the exhibit
although the number of plates is much I worse. The tariff should lie most ma
greater. Taken as a whole the appleex- terially reduced immediately and an in
hibits do not adequately represent the 1 -'ota Us should lie provided for, by
apple-growing of the country. Most of " the wealth of the country would
them were collected hastily and in re-1 compelled to help bear tbe burden of
stricted portions of the various states,
and some of them were taken w holly
from commercial warehouses or cellars.
Yet it is apparent that even an imper
fect exhibit is a great advertisement to
the state. The exhibits from Idaho,
Oregon, Washington, Minneapolis and '
Wisconsin, for instance, have attracted j
much attention and have already dis- j
abused the minds of thousands of people 1
of disparaging notions which were held
in regard to those states.
Our Old Fire Company.
"That was a gay old company that
we belonged to, Joe, away back in '((8,
when yon and I 'ran with the machine.'
lk yon remember that big fire in Hotel
How, one freezing night, when fifteen
people were pulled out of their burning
rooms and came down in their night-
clothes; and how 'Hick' Green brought
down two 'kids' at once one in his
arms, the other slung on his back?
Poor 'Dick !' He got the catarrh dread-
,U"' ,rum "itii exposure, ana sul
fered from it five yestra or more. We i
thought once he was going in comti.nip- '
tion, sure. Iiut, Ciinlly, ho heard of
Ir. 8age's Catarrh Hcn.cJy, aud tried
it, and it cured l.iin up as sound as a
Cint. I tell yon, Joe. that caturrh rem-
,! 1. . ,,... .1.;.... T l
..,K. i.a.vTO, ,,. eur. we Uve M,u- j, tj Ct aria, Pa.u-r. H.-rv vere intidny nt 11
man and as brave a fircmi;a uc ever trod l-v. .'- n'i 7 r. hmeiay s. ii-,. i Kfi,-r in.iniinK
sh'ie le tl " lruu ( King S New Iliscovery for Consumption, eurvli-e. HtraiiK-r. cr.illy inv il.l. Henla Ire.
a iw. I fir. King's ,cw Life rills, lluckleii's I ,r Z'., .., 7'"'. "'"" 7
. , w , i ... . f E. lit IK ll-llnv J. Uaiai.ca, irnator.
Hurklen'e Arnlra Halve. i Arnica lllve nnd l.lectrlc Hitters, and a rx-rvlc-a i-v.iry hnndiiy m-n nlm nl 1 1 a. in.
The bt-Ht sa in ti.e world for cuts, ; never handled remedies that acll as j 1 nt'TmVt" "pZZ m-.ii'ever,
bruises, sores, ulcers, si-.lt dieum, f.-ver ! "r that have given snrh universal1 1 l""","T eveninir at 7 an i.a-k a e.,r,iial in
, . i i. i ii i in- ' i ii- , . ' vlurinn la exUimled hy tnta tautor and nsple
sores, tetter, cliuppt;-! haml, thilliiains, j satisfaction. W e do not hesitate tojtoall.
. " -,iV' !
TitriiH. kiwi a i iiL-in dpimi i...u mwi ,
,llvely cures pi leu, or no pay refjuirwl. i
It lat CP11ttPU l , I .i.j ii ,,'it-n ...! .t
tion, or money refunded. Price
cents
jxir box.
Kor sale by
Snijies A Kin-
ersiy.
PREDATORY GYPSIES.
KuPuil Thai rifort t"
Mrai Mr. hiiit.
posed to 1 a gvpsv, tried to entice some ... .
1 ... .... i . work has been actuullv commenced on
sum 1 chi i re n swuv Iluirsdii night
,. , . . .. 'the superstructure. The floors of the
from near Mr. oo! house on roiirth ...
... . north wing have U-en laid, and the
street, in the r.ast l-.nd. Mr. Wo.h1 " j
, ,. , , steel uirdei'M for the next section, as well
has a verv handsome little hoy, ho i '
. , . . ., . ., as a 1. it of iron pillars and a large mini-
with others, was pUvmg in the street, ' . ,
i frightened and ran toward I
man in pursuit.
As thev neiin d
: house. .Mrs. Mood came out aim lie Bin-
; estimating how many children they II I
nap. They do not confine themselves to
:a limited territory, hut operate through-
j ally changing, dividing and redividing,
so that if a clue is once obtained it can
not be followed long Their code of
morality is a very loose one, and young
children stolen of course grow to inibilie
the same dangerous principles. No one
can be too careful of their little ones,
w hen gypsies are around, and if one is
! detected in child stealing ht
should be
captured or killed on the spot if there is
any possibility of doing so.
Wlgclna on i'nmna.
j Professor Wiggin of Canadian fame is
j 011 the lookout for a comet w hich in tide a
j tour through the sky 321 years ago, and
j which he thinks is now about due for
j another Bhort visit. The calculation is
1 remarkable which reduces this exjK-cta-j
tioii to a certainty, but we are accus-
tomed to marvels in the heuveiiB when
the astronomers apply their w its to the
determination of orbits and periodicity.
The wanderings of this luminous film or
cluster of lusant particles are so very ex
tensive, however, that it may become
attached to some other solar system and
be completely divorced from ours. These
separations in the celestial families are
known to occur through the superior
attractions of one member over another.
The larger planets are believed to have
devoured numbers of comets too weak to
pay their duty to the sun independently,
but, absorlied in the mass of these orbs,
they are no doubt still useful though less
resplendent. The sun itself lias a great
stomach for visitors. When Professor
Wiggin sights bis friend he w ill let the
world know precisely his whereabouts.
rnmyer'a Hf.lnlon.
(jovernor l ennoyer, on request, lias
, .. .
sent tlie rew lork World the following
on tlie financial situation : "The Sher- i r
mar. law, which degrades silver from its,
former position as a money metal to that
of a mere commodity, should te
re- .
1.1 l.a..n.a, ti.i.av l.. nu
11"-- " ""-" "
of both gold and silver as the staudard
woney of the country w ithout discrim-
inating against either meUl or charge
" uiintage i dei.-laml for in the last
(li-tnocratic national lilatform. should lie
.
secured. To repeal the Sherman law
without restoring the silver dollar to its
former function as full legal tender
"'"' ould n0 remedial legislation.
It would be only making a bad matter
taxation
tjnalnt Ada.
In Printer' t Ink of February, 1801,
there appeared an account of a man w ho
got desperute for work and took to ad-
vertising for a situation, lie fired at
tbe public through the w ant column this
breezy conundrum :
( an '""'i good njuart man, grt
anything to do on Ood't grtm earth
This appeal
answer was in
was irresistible; the
the affirmative by a
large majority.
Here is another case: A prominent
clergyman in Boston needed an errand
boy, so he advertised in the want col
umn. One reply read this way :
"I seen you advertise for a
hoy. I am one. I can do things as you
want 'em, aud can hustle. Most folks
ain't g't no use for
boy Udes hel bow ! 1
hard times is. . I want the job. Joe
White."
This rather shocked the minister, but
it made an impression. Of many letters
this one held his attention : it nulled on
lioth his curiosity and svmpathy. and
he took to the boy's frank and original
way of putting it. "Joe" got the job.
lleservlna; I'ralae
' luat-iie, uiui
iiinruiiifii rin.i. i.i-..a-. . t
un Rian1
rcwly to rvlvwl t.i ptmhii
purchase price, if
satif f.i.-toiy n-ults do nt follow their
US"'. There len,r,.a ,vP wol .jr
L'reut popularity purely on their merits.
Siiij;si Kiuersly's tiriiniHls.
I'orllaaeVe ew Kepot.
At lust it look, aa if 1'ortland it to
; have thetirand Central station so 1011
wistu-,1 lor. i he loumlatioiis lor I lie)
1 M...I U ....... ...... ...I.. I... I .....I
It'l III III,., a" r-l..,.,. ,..-,..-
w iud-
ilis, ct- ., are on the ground.
on the extensive building, W hich is
to be the finest nation west of Chicago,
w id U-giu to assume sliupo. The sand
has been tilled in around the north half
ot the foundation iiimily to the top, and
the work of filling is proceeding rapidly.
The station will, w it limit d.-i.bl, be cov
vered in liel'orti the coiiiitieiiiviiient of
the rainy n-asoli. i regiiniiui.
".E,rLl.wlf rieae m-iiiI kiiuim- - ll.alaclir
1 M).,.illt- mh f.ill, 'itti-tx.xc ! t liira .-M'ay.
Iluiiimia. N lMk Tt Iim- l.i t.tllii- W llrox.
Ilrti.klitiiil. N. link. 1 linve atwa N-ti a (Treat
Hiiil.Tf- fr.iin hea.ltn-lir ami your t-i,,. le are the
Ulih IhillU llinl rellfe Ine '
-..T. ,ei trulv ,
r I...K M. 4 V,
llavauna, N Iuk.
riwr taiii k
Uailroarta.
T SlIt'SD
i. Arna II P. U. Ie.a.u 1! W P. M.
l ii r. a 1 -4 r. a.
wmT a.'t'sn
u. I. ArrivwU'lH a. a ln-i-artt .1 in a. u.
r, .-'r u l.'r.n.
TwnUs'a4 IrelRhU that rarry iMmaenit-ra leav
u Kir tuo am ! ? a a , and unr lor llir
at at 16 a. a.
TiiI.
Knr i-ritiUle. fla Hake oveu. leave dally
t i- a u.
Kor Antrim. MitrlieK, i'aim'ii Illy, l--ave
lallr al a. M
h.ir Putur, K itiiraU-e. W amlr, Wailultia, Wanu
tpriim ami '1 v k n Valley, leave ually (exii-jii
4untlayi at a a a
M,r i,.,tili-iilaie. Wanli., leave every flay ol the
eek exi-'tt rumlHV at 7 a. H
Oltli-ea lor all lliiea at the l uiatilla HolIM
ntorr.HMosAi..
II.
It KIIHKUATT,iKNxr arl.wOfl,ier
i:,,tirt Mreel, The lUe, on-gou.
a nrrra fi assxris.
I)1
L'Pl'R. MKM.KER ATTuNe- av-
Lw- Knonia 4: and 4.1. ever ri
prh-e lintiilirnt. r.utrauee mi W aaiiingi-'U Hlnwt
The l)aliL. tiretfuti
. - rIKSSETT. ATTOKSP.Y AT LAW. Ol
.V B'-e 111 s4-tiHiiut, tinllillliv. tip atalra. The
aiit. t trmtim.
I P t. a. Ht'lTTIMUTIIX. H I Wll..
M
AY. HPNTlNO'TiiS Si w 'lI.nos ATToa-
riri il ui -iillu-ea. rreiii u in otbt
flnt Sauiinal bank - ' llallea. orecun.
U- 11 W IIXON Attis at Law - Bam
Kreneh o (' Ixlit liulUllif. ma-oud
Street. 1 he l-ai lea. ortwnu.
DR EriHEI.XAN llliia aoraTHir, pHTaiciaa
and rl'aoM. alia auaoered immil-tly,
1st or iilht. Pity orcuuutry. Ottiur fo. M and
IT i:haimau block. wtl
I)'
B. O. li. I O A B K raratciaii ano sca-
oh. (iii; rooms k ana e i nanman
kealduni-e H. h. OTlier ourt mil
Fmrtn atreeta, ae- md d-air Iroiu the corner.
Ottice hnura s to U A. M.. i tn b and 7 lo t. M.
I BltipAl-L 1'asTner. (,aa meen tor the
I. iaintv etrartmn nt term Alan lew a
i -li fl.iwetl alnmlnum ,lale. kiiotni. blfu ol
i i . i, iinrn I iMikii. nwuuu rw.
i i
BOCIETIEA.
Tl
! .. a
nAl.LKM ROYAL AP.I'II HAl-TrK .NO. 6
Meeta In Maanlilr Hall the third Wedueeday
II t
; b , , 1 j.
j
j lMm3'm?K.f s.!
until each week lu hrau-rnii) r Halt, at : nu p. m.
; j A u)liE, K0 i o. o. r.-Meeta
I I j everr Krulav rveiilne at 7::J o rUm it. in K.
.Tu ,..;- -,.,, .d Cnurt etrueta.
j i,j,niI1B brother- are welc.iue
nine.
H. A. Bills. (.
it. t-lqi.uk. tna. y
j tikikndhhip I
Zt
K. of P.-Meete
sn n'clia k. In
. .tn-eta. Hojouruiuc meaiuera are conlialiy In
ltl w.
. laaa.
H. W. Varus, K. n R and H.
HKKMB1.Y NO. 477, K. OF L.-Mwta In K.
til P. hall the aueimd and lourtu W ediitat
Jays n( each nintith at 7 i p. in.
11'OMKS'il
IIK1ST1AK TEMPKRESCE
t'MOS will ni.-et every Friday altrinii
atSo'clia-k at the reuilnif r-aim. A 11 are luvllvd
T 1
farmnn I-ocli-c- No. Mil, I. O.
(i.
T. Ri-cular
k r. a., a'
J 1 w-kly muethiK" Friday at
frau-niiiy Hall. All areluvilwl.
L. C. ( HKISHAH, C. 1. K. (.'. I'l.ai , He
TtMPl.E UlUCt. NO. , A. O. C W. Meeta
ill KraUTlilty Hall, over Keller, e-u beuoud
itreet, Thuraday eeuiiliige at 7
I'it L Karrr,
W. B MvsRfl. Elnaneler. X. W.
t AH. KKSMITH POST, No. IK. O. A R. Meeta
rl every batunlay at 7:UU r. a., ia the K. ul P.
Hall.
HOK L. E Meetaeycrybunday alteration In
a the K. of P. Hail.
-IEHAMI VEREIN Meeta every
J evmunn tn the K. of P. Hall.
Bundai
HOE L. F. IMVIMION, No. 1(17- Meet" ill
K. nt P. Hall the Cr.t and third Viednea
day n( each mnlith, at 7 'KM r. M.
TUB IHrWHM.
CT.
PKTl.KK CIICKCII - I'.ee. Father Ilaoiia-
O Ear l aat'-r.
Low M,ia every siimlne at
M. IllKU Maaa at lll lkla. M. Veenera at
7r. a.
CT. PAt'LS ( IH-Rrll -t'nlnn Htnet, -y,iK".lte
Filth. I'ev . Fll l. Silicon.. IteeUir. h-rvit
every Himd.iy at II a. and 7 -n r. M Hundiiv
.eliMilil.46 A. m. Frmili.K l'r-r in, Fildar at
L"IKHT BAPTIST ''lirKi-ir Rev
F ra, PiiMtor Mi-relne aervn-
O. I). Tav
every Mah
' "'"'l,,'"y
Pri'ver niwinli' Fri'.'lay e'v
at 11 A. M. r.ahliatll
nrtur ni'-rn - 9 w-rvlei'a.
Miilne at I'HHtm a rel-
t it-ii'-
t. Uluu ai..r'tl.-ea lu Hie iMMirt hullao at
, P. .M
-t)N(;KKfiATIOSAI, fill Kl'l'- ReT. W. r.
HRtTIAN Hri! H lt
W .Irs a ins
:,ill,nia
Chtireh eai-h I,td Imy al a r.
eonllitlly Invitil
M All are
Kvalif. Lutheran etittreh, f'tnth atnet, Rey. A.
Horn, iiHlt,r. Herviia-a nt II .in ft. m. Hiiniliiy
erhoul at l.JU p. m, A cordial welijume to evury
lie.
C BATCH EDTEN MOXTHi
A tronblodotrm kn Hi
mont hs and tina been l"-"
It A fn .Ijh.1 n . V a
CUIl-l,
M. II. Wolft, Upper M.irlbor
SWIFT'
I was en red several jrnr ao f white ia,g.
In my leg l-y using w "JJ' and ham hj
iyniiK,nn.f ro ISyy turn of u
. Many pniuilm iit, ,t,K:iaiis ttuha
."."". .mi 0. wit, . i ia worK.
I'kCL W. KiarTi( K, Johiuon Cltj.t
Treatia on I'.lood and Skin Pis.
takes mailed free.
Swirr Specific Co
Atlanta, Ga.
LOOK OUT
Fresh Paintl
w. v, Gu.aerr hereby atid
Ilia rc,niiiltneiita In every Irlend
And eni'tny ll he tia any
lie tliey lew nr he they many.
The time lor palnUm now haa rnma.
And every one dealree a hume
T'hat htaika Ireah and rlean and new,
Aa none but a fund iMU-r fan d.i.
r-alntliis. iwiperliir and Rlalti(, I..,,
W 111 make luur old hmtae ha,k ijluleai
He will lake yutir wnrk either way,
i Uie J"b or lijr the day.
If yon have work rive him a pall,
lie 11 take ynuroniera, larire nr amall.
Keeliectfu!!)',
V. C. GILBERT
P.O. ll'U N... X,
THL IALLKS. OH.
The Snug
W. H. BUTTS. Prop.
No. 90 Second Sreet, Tbe Dalles 0
This well known stand, kept by tl.J
well known . II. Units, long a re
dent of Win n county, haa an eitraortl
nary fine slock of I
Sheep llerdpr'g Dclisht tni Irish Disturb!
In fact, all the leading brands of 6
Wine, Lienors aud Cigar, liivstl
old man a call and you will route aj.
J. F. I0RD, EvannGlist,
Ol Ix-a Molnea, lewa. wrttee under tUk
March 2?H mi
S. 11. Mr. Mro. Co.,
1 uftir, Orejfon.
titntlrmrn :
On arriving home last week, I fen
all well and anxioualy awaiting. '
little girl, eight and one-half veam
who had wasted awav to '.1R iionndi.
now well, strong: and vigoroas, and w
fleehed up. S. It. t'ouirh t'ure hat dm
ita work well, lioth of the children Jikl
it. Your K It. Conjrh t'ure has curei
and kept away all hoaraene Irotn m
So give it to "every one, with grectiijp
for all. ishinir. yu proejerity, nn
otira, Mu. A Mil. J- t.rou.
1 1 Tim wlali ti leel lrwh and rheerrHeelnefr
lor the hi.rlitc a w-rl , eleane your aaie atj
the lieadai'he and l iver t lire, by taaa;Iv
thrtw d' ew-U wia-k.
Mold under a jIUve guarantee.
Hi cents ir buttle by all druarrea.
the Dalles
AND
Pui NEVILLE
Stage
Line
-f
J.D. PARISH. Prop.
Ieavea The liallea at t a. tn. every day, v 4
nvea at I'rtnrvllle In thirty-ai h'nin.
Prtiievlle at 6 a. in. every day, and trrt
The bailee in thirty all hourt.
Cartifs the E. S. Mail, PisngMi ui b
Conr.erU at Prlne-llle wlta-
Etaget from Eaitern and Sontirt'
egon, llorthero Oaliforoittu
all Interior Foioti.
Alan makes rloee ennne"ti"n t The Wis'
trine Imru -urllatid and haaterii P"u"
: Coartecai driren.
: gdou accoaDodatiocs ilom lie rcui.
: rirst-clasi Coactei ni Horses nseil.
. EiprKa matter Handle, win JpeciJl M
iTini orrid":
M. aiehel A To. 'a Mtore, """.T-neT
t'rlnevllle.
JK. 3STEW
rS.. a, A 1
f f f 1
PJIINZ & NITSCllKf
JJEA1.EB8 IS J
Furniture and Carp)
i.titinr
We have added to try .
somplete lindertailinif f""'",
ami as we are in no way ",nn"Z, .
the Cndertakors' Trust, r I'r"
be low acc.or'Iiii'lv-
r?ECIFi
Undertaknff Estiiliw