THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE. FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1893. he Weekly Ghroniele. OHBJUON l.nVAV BltBVITIKH. Friday's liaily u-v had it liaiidearidiii-l ' Willi very haiuliiie trlmiiiluir. h i.l.'i.I it n Im.iIiHiit mill And lliwil He Dlint I" wlimiilK liirgn yU'l'l ' '"" 1,ur'1 in Vi ('. Thompson ,1U" resigned the re- r ' I .1.. I...I l,.rllu.wl Kpmlnp 1,1 l" i"i'"""-' .... v....... Ling 'nk- Vilit wa hideout 'Ht night in vicmlty l l'uri ann nwiinn mrtHus a Uroli" saloon brawl. t i rv. i ... I.. ..... ,i..u.n n n in ti yri1" "" pi, and now whistle blows down work at 3 ,x p. 'lie Moody warehouse it being cleared lie W00J oo storage (or the accomnio Jon of the wheat, which will begin to Lin hortly. has. Basconi today caught a number iatlluli, Dome of them sixteen inches ;, in "China" slough, near the rall I, diiwii from Jefferson atreet. r t in to le hoed that later in the sea- it any rate, we will be treated to of those fine outdoor concerts that bind favored us with last summer. 1 letter received in this city says Mr. U. II in ton lias the best hay ranch in Unit", as he has rut and put up three itnl thounand tons of the finest hay krled to brutes. LatSunday, says the Observer, Q. F. fcjnpir's little hoy was kicked in the ibr a borne, and rucived very serious Jjrirs, bis features being very badly fiirt'd. Mr. lounger lives about miles south of Grass Vluley. wonder," said one of the loungers, lutt was the original ol the swallow- l-dcost?" "It is my idea," said the Vtlj. whiskered man from Montana, at they was cut that way in the first Ivloniuke it handy fur a man to get it. Miry'l Academy, advertisement of happsara in another column, is one mot creditable and popular in tioot of which our city and county bout. Superior instructors, the nt surroundings, and a complete atlon in etiquette and morality, ill as all branches of learning, make .inry Kaunuij wuu miiumi iurii I ns a niost valuable school for girls, i. Saturday last, 12th inst., Julius leck, a well known citizen of this L . ,1 .1 ! 1 f . f ' . uy, iitiwrieu imp me ai urini, ir suffering the keenest agony from vr in the luce. 1 tie deceased had tumors removed from bis face in the past year. Cancer in the of the (ace then ant in, and the old t. wss In constant pain for several Uu prior to his death. Moro Ob- 'lint cases for assault and battery et for trial before Justice fcchutr. afternoon. The comiiaints are v. Jas. Crate, for striking li. J I'linorin the (ace; K. J. O'Conner for l-'iiif 11. h. Cheuoweth in the jaw ; Tlioe. McCoy for assaulting R. J. xinor. (utei o! (.-rate postponed till clock and the others until 7 o'clock evening. lotter received by Mr. Davis, for ty of Missouri, states that wheat there for 35 cents per bushel, and thing else in proportion, while Mr. worth, of French A Oo.'e bank, has '1 from Nebraska to the effect that pt there brings thirty odd cents per li. Wheat is 45(o!60 per bushel hut it lacks considerably of being 'iwliel, as promised a year ago by tauncratic side of the bouse. e school of whales was seen last off Cape Hatteras, and the quet- i broached whether the whales are wing in number and returning to old haunts. There was a time i whale oil was the chief liahtine Then as they grew scarce It P'ed providential event that kero I was discovered. Now, who knows? jf'uiy kerosene is about giving out w may have to go back to candles "lrm oil. C'liRns'icLB force are grateful for watermelon, weighing six pounds, the iiiuiumoth farm of Kcratchem 'iflld. near this nluco. This enter- "S farmer believes that he has I new commercial importance for 'melons, Bnd this year bus raised 1 "n nn extensive scale for the pur "t feeding to cats. He thinks that .I''1 w ith watermelon furniHh a su- ' article of fiddle-strlrgs, In that i.iuK.ier ami longer tluin those , iniysold. Success to this pionuer '"-w industry. Buturiliiy n I)Hlly. I 1 k Into the iizure evil 1 '( Iiit I mnii:ht in uiu. I I ,l,', P 'lll. lUiil- til Mill II' f M' My I'Miil li.rm t h IhI.' t.n'i 1 . "In. - -lirc'llll,ff wltl. II lov.T wit, I lnH.' i,n, ,,( lici.vi'iil v lilinv y irin,ii' ,h.1.-., I liillnt mlmtt, 1" U .H'iv,lhiKl I'lii". - I iuliti n upol in Joiirmil. " BttmiUon of patrons is called to ' ili tin's new sign, y Mifilley hits received a large '''r of the new school laws for free '"ti'in. Ask him for one. '"r il Mutineer Kmulrick made the ;r"'ii l. I'mil to J'ortlimd in 4S'' H' riving Thursday nigbl. ,)r' Koii school for deaf unites will r'l for tl.n ... t... . iir.vi it-;iiiiir li!rill HI eptcniU.r 13th. Thoso Inter ested shnnld send for a circular to It Frving, superintendent, which gives all needed information. The Athena 1'reHs has improved greatly in appearance of late, in fact does not look like the same paper. The Wasco county Sun appeared this morning, and diHielled tho awful dark tiens that has reigned since Tuesday. The fire department committee, in relution to the tournament, are anked to meet at the ball Tuesday evening J. M. Huntington has presented us with a very handsome and valuable spirit thermometer and calendar for three years. C. W. I'helns it Co. sold and deliv ered three Kushford wagons today, also one Walter A. Wood reaper. Fair for a dull Saturday. The pumps at the Cascades are In place and pumping will begin Monday or Tuesday. As soon at the water it exhausted from the canal work will be gin at once. The state apportionment for teachers' salaries, due the third Monday in Au gust (next Monday) it not forthcoming, as the money is tied up in the sus pended Portland banks. This affects a good many teachers in Wasco county. The 0-year-old ton of Jack Klton fell from a barn floor on Mr. Taylor's ranch in Irv Hollow Thursday, the fall render ing him nncouscious for twelve hours. I)r. F.shelman was summoned to attend to his injuries, and at latest accounts he is mending, but confined to his bed. A surprise party was givea in honor of Miss Bella Schwartz of Portland last evening at the residence of Mr. J. Frei man. The hours were pleasantly passed in games and other amnsements, after which a delicious lunch was served. Among those present were Misses Lena Thompson, Sophia Nichols, Bertie, Kdna and Grace Glenn, Delia Michael bach, Kin ma Williams, Annie Wentz, Julia Nickelsen, Kmma Ostland, Ksther Freiman, Hattie Cram, Hilda Beck, Bella Schwartz, Masters Frances Ire land, John Fritz, Leo Newman, George Weigle, Simon Freiman, Earl Sanders. Monday. UuiRh, and the world laugha with you, HmI, and you wmfn alone. Fur tlii'erowd tuat Uyi while the band organ plava, Wueii the bat in paaaed baa flown. Travel is increasing slightly. hacks are so scarce about Arlington that a number of threshers are idle. The Brookhouse case it in progress this afternoon before Justice Schutz. Tramps complain that timet are so hard now that they must either go to work or starve. Prinoville it to have a base ball tour nament. Several clubs have signified their intention to be present. In Portland when one visits a bank on business instead of asking "Is the cashier In?" the inquiry is "Is the as signee aronnd?" James Crate, - It. J. O'Conner and Thoa. McCoy were each lined $10 and costs by Justice Schutz. The fines were paid, but the county will have to whis tle for the costs. Parties who have returned from The Dalles say about two-thirds of the wool that w as stored there has been shipped. though nut one-tenth of it has been sold. Ochoco .Review. The Regulator is doing thriving passenger business now. It not only beats the train starting from here in the morning to Portland, but furnishes a vastly more pleasurable ride. Mrs. E. P. Roberta tent to the Oregon department of the world't fair a box oj peach plums, and word came back Sat urday, that they were the finest lot of fruit of the kind they ever saw, and Mrs. Robert came in for fair share of praise for the fruit having been raised by an Oregon woman. Parties coming from the mountains inform the Grant County Newt that the sheep up there are to fat that they can almost be tracked by the grease, and that the finest pasture in the world can be found in abundance. A better time it coming for our sheepmen after the big scare it over. An annular eclipse of the tun will oc cur October t)th, 1803, the patht of the annuals being in the Pacific ocean, and running through Lima and Peru. It will appear at a partial eclipse to the western halves of North and South America. It will begin in The Dalles at 10 :14 a. in., and will continue till 12:45 P. m. ! A (lliiiifiwoman was arrested this mol.nim Ht ,ie InnUnce of a barber a Hhrt ,liMUl. the road. Sim he llU!) witUrn n the suit, desiring :Per- hups, lo guard his reputation, we will I not mention hi uiuuc. It scorns that while he vif ill lii-r room lust night she I iibstriictcd '- out of his punts, and he ' had her pulled for nitty larceny. Malcolm MikmIv and a party of young mm left Saturday night for the country, and w!. ilc com nig home last night, met w ith un nceident. Mr. Mixidy't homes were U ttacl e.l to Mr. R. B. Hood's spring wiik-on. nod whciiu'joiil the topof 5-M1U' hill th'i lior- e to k irgM nd ran down the hill and could not he die -ked. The wrtR'm was overturned, and by reason of the bur icr pulling the horses stopped of thoir own accord when re.ichii.g the bottom of the hill. Neither the burses nor the gentlemen were banned, hut the wa'on Is wrecked. A GOODLY HERITAGE. What I. . Hay,. Jr.. Mara la thai l'ial Mlllltia of Waaro Ciunty. Knin Hit' bally Chronicle .Hatiinlii) I. N. Day, jr., was in town last even ing. He is a very pleasant and brainy young man, aliout '.'3 years old, and a conversation with him developed the fact that he is prone to investigate any Jiibject under his notice with circum spection and ability, and always "knows what he is talking about." Like everyone else visiting our coun try, given to observation, he has been greatly struck with our exceptional facilities for fruit raising, and, speaking of the fruit itself, said it it more solid, more spicy, richer, has less sugar in it, it firmer and will atand shipment lietter than any fruit he ever saw, that it far excels California fruit. At for himself he would ask nothing better than forty acres of cherry treet in Wasco county 100 acres would suit him better. "It it turprlsing," laid Mr. Day, "that people are here who raise wheat when the land will yield 200or $300 net from fruit. How much will that farm produce?" be asked, pointing to a field of wheat about three miles distant from town. He wat told that the average profit did not exceed $4 or 5 per acre, and he said : "Two cherry trees will do better than that." "You do not need rain in the summer time. All you have to do is to cultivate the soil, keep it stirred, and the yield will be abundant. I observe what I be lieve to be another good thing, that is, heading the trees low ; that is a good plan in a dry climate." Mr. Day was informed that was the reason that we did not trellis our grapes ; that by cut ting them ofT they spread over the sur face of the ground, keeping it moigi and cool, appropriated the sunlight for their own growth; and that last year 1,000 pounds of grapes wat gathered from a tingle vine. Continuing in the same lit rain, Mr. Day said : "With the proper amount of energy this should be the San Jose of Oregon. The old pioneers do not ap preciate what they have. Many of them have made scarcely any efTort to improve their land, but the time it coming when this order of things will pass away. New people will take their places, and make this the most valuable country in the Northwest." r. a. mn4 "tha Nobl Blwmak" Vlacaaa tha Financial Hltnatloai. Having sprinkled the floor with water fresh from the well and sprinkled a boat ten million flies with insect powder from the nozzle of a powder gun, and teeing no prospect of any great rush of busi ness, I conclude to sit down and ponder over the great question of the day. To present myself to the subject in a broad and general way ; to eliminate all per sonal interest in the matter, and study money from a financial standpoint ; and as it relates to, and effects the domestic and political relations of man. Right here I was disturbed and greatly re lieved by the arrival of my friend Charley the "noble siwash." The sub ject drops me at once, and I fall some what ungracefully into practical grooves, and I regret to say that the world will have to move on at well as it can without the benefit of my opinion, as to whether money has any of the essential elements of wealth or not. Charley knocked the bottom out of all my long cherished opinions, relating to political economy. The quiet confidence that I have reposed in the ability of congress and the chief executive, to make times good it more or lest shaken. When we Charley and myself had adjusted our private financial matters to our entire satisfaction, he Charley wanted to know why it was that "Bos ton man all round every where, talked all-time balo money!!" Now it oc curred to me, that inasmuch v at it is possible for this poor untutored tavage to become a citizen some day, that I would be failing in my duty should I fail to explain the matter to him. So I went to work in dead earnett, with poor jargon and English. I told him all that I knew about tariff; the Sherman silver bill, read and interpreted, at well at I could, the president'! message, etc. In tact I spread myself for about two hours. When I had finished, Charley regarded me with a calm and intense diguity for about ten minutes, then spoke as fol lows : "You no sabe money; congless no sabe money ; president no sabe money ; me, Indian Charley know keep more. Now, me spose you berygood man, me tell you all about it. Y'ou see, Boston man, all time heep like him Chinaman. Chinaman ketch 'em hiyu money. All right, now last spring, Boston man heep big fool, he tell Chinaman get out, go home! All right, Chinaman go home, take all the money, you see? Now, spose Boston man tell me, Indian Charley, you be president, all right, me be president, me tell Chinaman no go home now, no buy ictas iu China, buy ictas from Boston man. You no buy ictas from Boston man, me cut your long hnir otr and make hiyu rope and hang hiyu more Chinaman. KoMilna; the I'rodncera at Hum. The great meat monopoly of the North west has reduced the price of stock so low that the growers, tiarticularlv ener getic sheep men, find it more profitable to ship their stocK ana pay tne neavy freight 2,000 miles to Chicago than it is to sell to the home concern. The infor mation is at hand that w ithin the laxt six weeks several train-loads have been shipped from Pendleton Biid seven from The Dalles. The total numlx-r of sheep shipped to Chicago from Tho Dalles has been aoout L'.i.uw, at an average profit of about tV00 per train load. S. B. Barker, of Condon, expects to ship about 3,000 head to Chicago, starling in about ten days. It will require thirteen cars to ship this n urn tier. With the price of stock so low here one would naturally expect to find the price of cured meats correspondingly low, but tuch it not the fact. The eaitern cured meatt come into active competition with that of home concern after paying enormout freightt from Chicago to this place. In other wordt it it cheaper to raise stock and ship it to Chicago, have it killed and cured and then shipped back, paying freight both wayt than it it to kill and cure it at home. There it a large field in the Northwest for a pack ing establishment to run on a reasona ble basis, and we are glad to know that one of the large establishments of Chi cago are now gathering information that will help t!em in building up tuch a business. The late flurry in Chicago will probably delay operations to some extent, but it It only a question of time when there will be another concern. Pacific Farmer. FIERCE FIST FIGHT. Frank Haatar I'onajda Fred Jealya late laienalbllity. A sanguinary fistic encounter occurred Saturday evening at the Umatilla house corner. A horse owned by Frank Heater was bestrode by Fred Joslyn, without permission, and Heater, soon after emerging from a saloon, ordered him to dismount. The parties were more or less under the influence of liquor, and some sharp words ensued, leading to a blow delivered by Joslyn upon the fadnl anatomy of Heater. Heater was hot, but be became hotter, and proceeded to maul his antagonist with great vigor. Joslyn't brother in terfered to save him trom the fearful thrashing, but a burly half-breed named Teio interposed and kept him and a half-dozen others from interfering. Heater beat bit victim into state of unconsciousness, cutting hit face up terribly. So thoroughly was the animal instincts aroused in him that be became temporarily mad, and for several min utes, paced the sidewalk in an irregular beat, brandishing hit arms about bit nude body, bit upper clothing having been torn from him in the ttruggle. The tight wat demoralizing in the ex treme to the hundreds who had congre gated, but no one cared to try to quiet him in hit maddened condition. About a quarter of an hour after the commence ment of the fight, Marshal Maloney took him in charge, and gave him a chance to cool gradually. He was not arrested, all witnesses agreeing that he was first assaulted, and this will end the case, as far at legal formalities are concerned. Hlaa Nichola' Ad venture. From the mother of Mollie Nicholt, who wat in town yesterday, we learn further particulars concerning her dis appearance. V bile riding alter stock, she came upon a band of horses belong ing to another party, and volunteered her assistance to help corral them across the river. While doing to one broke away. She mounted a horse which was not nsed to her, and riding near where a mowing machine was at work, the horse became frightened either at the machine or her fluttering tkirt, and threw her violently. She lost conscious ness and wat taken to the house of Mr. Davis, where the did not revive for fourteen dayt, her identity being un known to them. When she regained her tenses she found that from the waist down the wat temporarily par alyzed. She told the necessary facts about herself and wat toon afterward removed to her home. At the present writing she it as well as ever. Am Incipient Bleae. A lamp exploded iu Louis Heppner't house last evening, the liberated oil burning a hole lu the carpet. The alarm bell wat rung, but there was no occasion for their services on reaching the scene. Shortly afterward parties on the street noticed flames within the house of Mrs. Nolan, next to Maier fc Benton's grocery store. Mrs. Nolan was watching the first fire and had set a candle near the curtains. The wind blew the flame ujion them and they caught fire. Those not ic ing the flames triecJ to get in the house to extinguish them, but the, supposing them to lie burglars, would rot let tliem in. They finally beat toe dixir open, made their way to the room in which was the lire and extinguished it, mi'.i h to the surprise of Mrs. Nolsn COMPOUND. A rivciit iliar vcry ljr nn oM IiIijpIcIiiu. A'u. .rVi ii yl ,Honfiy by thtvi'.tn.ir vf Latltet. la tho ln lirrrily nnfnanil reliable nv-ll' ! rowrrd. ivwaro vt nnprlnlpli-U druta who j offer lufi rlor ii-IU Iuoii Id pl.icei'f t J". A- f-r j Conk's CoUou Hoot Compound. tiV no ( ruf. or liK-lone L au.l 6 com In ro'a la letter anil wo wlllaond. waled, by r. tiini n.a I. FuHwkW . portK'ulan In plain enveloix u iouim 01 i.tainpa. auutvmwi ro naii'Y1 uppny. ho. C IT.l.or l'.l. vk. lxstmlt. ."lilrti. Hutd lu The IUa by lipua & Klucrsly. Kir? PERSONAL MENTION. Kriday a bally. Mrs. Hope is visiting at the Cascade I-ockn. Mrs. Tipley of Fossil is visiting Mrs. M. Hart in this citv. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Dietzel departed for Portland on the morning boat. R. Ilinton and Miss Lulu Bird re turned last night from Bake Oven. Mrs. George Herbert and family have gone to Cascade Locks to visit relatives and friends. Mr. H. F. Turner called at Tiik Chronicle office today. He it on bit way to Portland. Mr. L. P. Wilson, the "Mexican Stove Polish" man, left for Portland by Regu lator thit morning. Mr. J. D. Parrish, proprietor of the Prineviile stage line, left for Portland this morning to remain a few days. Mr. Al. Bettlngen and hit better half left by steamer thit morning for Astoria, where they will enjoy the fresh ocean breeze. Mr. Geo. Egbert returned thit morn ing to Portland after having visited bis parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Egbert of 10-Mile. Mist Minnie Freiman. erhn )im hoon vititing in Portland for a short time, re turned on the steamer Regulator last evening. . Mr. John Ganaway hat just come in from Prineviile and reports the roads in excellent condition and freighting very light. Even Prineviile it at quiet in itt business habits as any place. Judge Bennett and B. S. Huntington returned last night from Mosier, where they have been to take evidence in the suit questioning the legality of organiz ing school district No. 52, and of which suit Miss Bowman is referee. R. B. Wilson, general freight agent solicitor for the Northern Pacific, and E. A. Hackett, assistant general agent of the freight and passenger department of the Burlington, are in the city today, and made The Chronicle a call. Messrs. D. D. Dufur and N. J. Sinnott returned last evening from Badger lake, where they have been rusticating for the past week or ten days. They report the fishing in the lake and Badger creek good. The only objectionable feature about it is that it takes an early worm to catch the fish. They returned with about one hundred of the speckled beauties and distributed them among their friends. Thanks! thanks! Saturday. Supt. Troy Shelley is in the city. I. H. Tefle of Celilo is in town today. Mrs. Reedy and daughter left yester day for Portland. Mr. William Fredden hat gone to Hood River for a stay of several days. Mist Bella Schwartz left for her home in Portland thit morning by the Regu lator. Messrs. M. Jameson and Arthur Clark have gone to Collins Landing to spend Sunday. R. E. Haworth, a building contractor of Portland, is visiting bis brother, J. F. Haworth, of this city. Jas. Benson and Thos. Grav of 5-Mile, and Harry Mahuer and W. it. Williams of 8-Mile are in the city. Mrs. C. McFarland left thit morning for a visit with her sons, Messrs. B. F. and Homer McFarland, in Heppner. Col. Geo. T. Thompson returned from a short trip to the O. N. G. encampment of the First Regimen tat Camp Com pson, near Gladstone. Mrs. E. M. Wilson departed thit morn ing by steamer Regulator for a thort sojourn in Portland with her daughter Mrs. F. P. Mays. Attorney E. B. Dufur and family left the city yesterday for an outing on the bead waters of 15-Mile creek. They will be gone a week. Mrs. Nichols, mother of Miss Mollie Nichols, who wat thrown from her horse and injured so seriously, in Sherman county recently, returned to her home in Kalama, Wash. Mrs. G. M. Sterling and Mist Beulah, Misses Clara and Lizzie Sampson, Mr. Nitschke and family and Mr. Hal. French left this morning for an outing at Collins Landing. Miss Mvrtle Michell left this morning to join Mist Beulah Patterson at Collins Landine, where they will remain a lew days with the familiet who are camping at that popular place. Messrs. J. G. Day of Cascade Locks and I. N. Day, jr., of San Jose, Calif., were guests of the Umatilla House last night and returned by steamer this morning. These gentlemen were driven ont into the fruit region of Three Mile. They were agreeably surprised at the orchards and vineyardt and were enthu siastic over the outlook and apparent re sources of this section as a fruit country and see no reason why The Dalles should not be the San Jose or Fresno of the Northwegt in the near future. Saturdny. A. J. Splawn of Seattle Is in the city. Lawrence Nolan left for Portland this morning. Examiner Staage returned from Port laud last evening. Taylor Hill, a stockman of Prineviile, came in this morning. Mr. II. E. Haworth returned to his home in Portland this morning. iniitor Henry Blackmail of Heppner in registered at tho Umatilla house. .Mrs. Kenton of Rockland, Wash,, left for Portland this morning by steamer Regulator. Mr. and Mrs. J119. Coveuton and Mrs. Khen and family, left this morning for Trout lake. Mrs. Ja. M. Huntington and f.iinily returned from Sacramento, Calif., where, 4 hey have bin visiting friends. Mrs. D. E. Thompson of Is Angeles', Culif. arrived this morning mid is the guest of her son, A. li. Thompson. News from Walter French is of the inust eiicoiiriitfint: kind, and the parents have no doubt that he mill permanently recover. Hon. W. H. Wilson itnd family re turned yesterday morning from an ex tended visit with relatives, also at the world's fair. Mrs. Jos. lieezley and Mrs. J. H. Phirman departed for Portland tliia DMirniinr for a short sojourn in that city. Mrs. I'hiriiian will meet her cousin there, Miss Edith Statilev, of Petalunm, v aiuornia. A ttnnaalraa Itvpurt. A senseless report was started Satur day that the First National bank of this city was to pay depositors 25 cents on the dollar the first ot the year. The re port scarcely deserves mention, but since evil tidings spread swiftly, it is well to nip it in the bud. Certificates of deposit granted by this bank are worth par value today, and are just as good at greenbacks as a medium of exchange. Depositors will not lose a single cent, and those who extended their time on them will get face value and interest be sides. Furthermore, the suspended First National bank of this city, it likely to be the first In Oregon to open it doors for the transaction of business again. Liked the Peach Flu ma. Mr. J. A. McDonald, of the Earle Fruit company, sent a box of peach plums to a Chicago lady, from Mr. G. A. VanAnda, superintendent of the Columbia River Fruit Co. That the was delighted with them may be inferred from her enthu siastic acknowledgement: Chicago, Aug. 11, 1893. Dear Sir The box of plums arrived yesterday all O. K., not a bad one among them. They are very much admired. I put some on the table tonight and everybody thought they were grand. It must be fine to see such a lot of fine fruit and have all one wants to eat. We think seriously of starting a fruit farm if we could be assured of such nice fruit aa that and could have more money than now, for I tell you those plums were mighty good. BORN. In thit city, on the evening of the 19th, to the wife of Mr. Hugh McCully, of Albina, a daughter. t Real Eatate. John Prall to Tbos. Huteson, 160 acres with improvement! in section 29, tp 1 south range 15 east, W. M. ; $2,000. Mr. J. C. Bos well, one of the best known and most respected citizens of Brownwood, Texas, suffered with diar rhea for a long time and tried many different remedies without benefit, until Chamberlain'a Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy wat used; that re lieved him at once. For sale by Blakeley 4 Houghton, Druggists. lm. SIX SPASMS A DAY. Z. fll Mtdical Co., ZlkHart, In. Cr.RTt.r.KKx: I never loae an opportunity te rccuounttud It. Miles' Restorative Nervine to ens' gk one Mtlirtryi with nnrroin eomplainal J-4 XI -j Willi the aaaurance thai It will not e"a dapnomt thrm. When our boy waa eighteen mnnihaold he waaattacked with violent paaina. honwiimea he would have five or six aiMunelnasiugtedar. Witiicbsut wtii ciane without acmrivi Bnallr our druaxiat recommended . . Dr. Miles'Ka aioraUve KwCURF D '" VVe tried a hotile, end I 1 law la eould set that hawaa aracriTie raqal vn riser ooaa. We uwd three tMiitlea, and I am nappy to aay the child waa CNTISJELV CURCO. We uaed no other remedy, ana his cure la eomplete. li la S3THOUSANDS ly healthy. You are at liberty to on my name la auaoiaa vhi raaiet or th le woMotarvt B. O. Bsaoox, Afent Pacific Ex prase OB. Ilaetlnfi, Nebraska, April elh, WW. Dr. Miles Nervine. HOST CXBTaIH CUBS FOB HEADACHE, HEUBALQIA, HEBVOTJS PEOB TEATI0H, DIZZIHES3, 8PA3M3, BLEEPLESft. HESS, DULLKESS, BLUES, and OPIUM HABEt, SOLD ON A POSITIVE OUARANTCB. TRY OR. MILES' PILLS, 50 DOSES 23 CTS, SOLD III HI.AKRLKT A IIOUMHTON. ONE DAY CURE HAT TEES OW.. WG XC-r OIlYLANa.O Fur fialB by nlie At K literal y. As ri TTTHvIr for CAfar-h fi tti Jif, Kiv:. rt l I atiii nrp!i. r Imuryi'tA orAont by mail. 6Uc. u. 1. UtuuitiiM, naxrtitt, ttv I 5