The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947, September 20, 1893, PART 1, Image 2

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    I
THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20. 1893.
The Weekly Chronicle,
Eatrrnl at the pnatitfnre at Tha Pallta, Orrfon,
as aaroud-claaa mail HialUT.
THE HCXGEK FOR LASD.
In view of the fact that state warrant,
draw ing eight per cent. Interest, are now
Fort v veara ago substantially all the , aullini at a discount of five pr cunt.
BCBSCKIITIOS KATK8.
Y MAIL. rOOTAUl rasrAID, IK ADVASCX.
OnxMi ... fl
hix. nioiit
Thrw mouth . . W
Advertising rate ruwuuable, aud niadr known
oa avtUcrttuiu.
AilitrwM all snimunU-attoni to "TIIE CKRON-1
lt'Lt," in lstlUa, urvyuu.
STATE rriCIAL8.
O.ttmirti .. W. rVnnorar
Racrulanr ofniala ti. W. Mi-Hrui
I kuuivt ..Philllj, Uetw-hau
apt. of Public Instruction k. B. MiKliujr
. U. N. lMlph
nt Jj. H. Miuhll
Coalmen ft; k.
6 talc' l-rl liter Krauk Baker
fOlNTT OFFICIALS.
fVmn'T Judge. (ieo. C. Blkeley
Bherirf. T. A. War!
'! J. M.CToni!
Treaaurar Win. Micholl
Ja. lMriitell
i Frank Kim-aid
AaMaor Joel VV. Roonu
Burreyox E. F. eiharp
Buperintenovntol rublic school ..iw nmy
Comner N. II. katwond
country lying west of the Missouri river , Bnj UHn the holder of the warrant, who
uiust lose the iive per cunt, the halem
Independent urge that a receiver be ap
pointed for the state. That paper be
lieve tlie tumlc of the state are manipu
lated by the treasurer so as to secure
large profits, and wants a bill introduced
at the next legislature to loan out the
state money to the highest responsible
bidder among the bunks, the interest to
be paid in cash. The Independent finds
no fault 'with the treasurer, finding for
him a stifhYient excuse in the fact that
his salary is only half what it should be,
but wants the sulary raised to $1,800 a
vear and the state's money loaned out
at the beet possible Interest.
Coniniiuioner
Organized gangs of crooks may for a
time defy the law and apparently flour
ish. But sooner or later their sins find
theui out, they become as a stench in
the nostrils of the law-abiding, and vig
orous measures suddenly drive them
from their vantage ground, and they are
brokeu up and dispersed. The exten
sive gang of horse thieves operating
throughout the Northwest will in good
time share a like experience, though
they now seem to be thriving. The dis
patches tell of even a larger and better
organized gang than this that must suc
cumb to the law. It is a distillers'
onion, a brotherhood of moonshiners
which has just been located in North
Georgia. It is a stransre sort of associa
tion, having headquarters in Murray
county, and having a membership of
hundreds scattered throughout the sur
rounding counties. The objects of the
association are to protect the members
Irani the government, and to encourage
the manufacture and sale of illicit
whisky. When a member of the union
is arrested, it is the duty of the other
members to see that he is released. If
the deputy marshal gets one witness to
jiwear that be saw the man making
"whisky, three or four will testify to an
alibi. Each member is bound by an
oath signed in blood. He is sworn to
-Jcill any member who informs on an-
-Other. In this way they hoped to pro
tect each other from revenue men, but
their secret leaked out, and it has be-
come necessary to bring prisoners to At
Janta for trial to get them away from
' the influence of the distillers' onion.
was embraced within the public domain.
arable land was as free as the water in
the streams that coursed across it. The
supply seemed inexhaustible, and the
internment found it necessary to hold
, out special inducements to lure settlers
j into the farther west, in the Racine
I Northwest iriiinct so far as to denote till)
acres to a sinele settler and his wife.
Today we have the exciting spectacle of
nearly 200,000 people racing and strug
gling to acquire a reserve just thrown
open to entry. And the land in this re
serve is of a character that few would
have taken a quarter of a century ago.
Out of this spectacle little can be
drawn that is not tinged with a melan
choly aspect. If the arable land is not
quite exhausted, the time is certainly
near when it will lie. A government
which has civen with lavish hand for
more than a eentury can give no more
forever. Henceforth It must live entirely
off its people. Henceforth the deserving
homeseeker must make t-rim with the
speculators and the land grant railroads,
and the surplus population must settle
down to the bard conditions of tenant
life.
There is evolution if not revolution
ahead. A nation which has never
known landed want, which has stimu
lated and fostered the moving and de
veloping spirit of its surplus population
and its border elements, can not face
NEWS NOTES.
It is estimated that the hay crop this
year is worth about $1,000,000,000. The
indications are that the corn crop will
be at least 1,700,000,000 bushels. The
value of the crop at 43 cents a bushel
would be about 72:,0O0,OOO. The wheat
crop of the year will probably bung to
the producers i()0,000,000 ; cottou at
least 2"0,000,lKX); oats. $ 183,000,000,
and potatoes 12),000,000. In the lan- J
guuge of the esteemed New York Sun,
"We will be tiappr yet,
Yiiu bet:'
It has been figured out that according
to the votes cast iu the house on the re
peal of the purchasing clause of the
Sherman act, 41,000,000 of the eople of
the United States are opposed to the
right about to the conditions long ruling j further purchase of silver and 151,000.000
favor it. A majority of 22,000,000 is
ample.
in Europe without suffering inconven
ience and trouble. The United States
having long fostered the land-seeking
appetite must now expect to encounter
some distress in dealing with
that appetite. Either immigration
must be checked, the people edu
cated to acceptance of the changed con
ditions, or the prevailing system of
land tenure will have to be modified or
revolutionized. The American spirit
is not a tenant spirit. It craves a free
landed title, and to satisfy that crav
ing will hardly quibble at an undertak
ing having for its purpose restrictions
upon the ownership of land. The
American people are not likely to make
one bite of the Henry George cherry,
but they may be expected to do conaid
erable nibbling within the next quarter
of a century. Spokane Review.
There is occasion for haste in the
matter of signing and sending in peti
tions to congress, praying for that body
to not meddle with the tarriff at this
session, if any good is expected to be de
rived from this action.
Hcports come of forest fires in Wis
consin which are even more disastrous
iban bare occurred on the coast.
'lell of an unprecedented destruction of
timber, besides the loss of life and prop- j
ettjr. The originator of a forest fire can-i
not commit a crime more far reaching
The following are the nations, accord
ing to the Chicago Tribune, which have
Thev i Btpped free coinage since Germany did
in 18.1 to avoid a slump from bimetal
ism to silver inonometalism : France,
Italy, Belgium, Greece, Romania, Rus-
1 sia, Austria-Hungary, Holland, Sweden
Great Britain will require at least 28,
000 quarters ot wheat from abroad.
France must import more than twice as
much as she usually does. Germany
already has begun to draw on American
markets for supplies. When nations
thus bid against each other there is a
fair chance for prices to advance.
MARKET REPORT.
Caafldaaeo Being: Itaatorad Country
Prodnn, Foultrv and Grain.
i i T i. i k: . . . . :
in its consequences than this. A city j w ' r
may burn, ana uie uvea lost uave uu
eflect upon others, while the property
materials consumed are comparatively
pinal! and may easily be replaced. But
vnpn a 1 1 1 ! Ml ui n buiic jo u uaiose, an ,
w-!.,m.in i. .aid to he. tiie results have ! driving ""y
an influence for all time. Statistics now 1 h -ulu frightened away
ehow that the Umber supply of the the shores at this time are just
world is only sufficient for the demands the sort of Europeans the United States
of 300 vears, but if it is to be burned in I not want-
Bach vast tracts, the estimate will be
changed to a paltry figure. Besides
I For the first time in taw recent his-
tory of this country there is more eini
! gration than immigration at the port of
' New York. The reputed hard times are
foreigners home. Euro-
this the decrease in rainfall will hasten
the end so pitifully described in Camille
Flammarion's imaginative but logical
tale,"Omega, or the End of the World."
The Vancouver Columbian says : The
republicans in congress are beginning to
clamor for Governor McGraw to call an
xtra session of the legislature to elect
United States senator to fill the vacancy
c:itt-ed by the rejection of John A. Allen
by i'i:.t body. Upon partisan grounds
tii is agitation is based. It is urged that
the senate is so evenly divided that one
vote may give the republicans the senate
for the next six yean. No worse mis
fortune cocld befall the people of this
Htate than to be compelled to endure
another senatorial farce. The action of
the last legislature came near enough
putting the republican party in hole
mid McGraw is too shrewd to risk
another.
Rnth democrats and republicans are
now looking about to find good timber
f'r a governor of Oregon, since Sylvester
J'ennoyer cannot accept nomination
(or a third term. Prominent on the re
publican side are Hon. O. N. Denny and
Hon. J. I). Lee, of Portland. Both
ir.3f gentlemen are well qualified for
liV,'u. the gubernatorial chair. To O.
,. Ji'uiny, Oregon is indebted for the
introduction of Mongolian pheasants,
Ikmu.'c he has some claim to the grati
f.i. !! fif this state, besides being a man
of irfWible will power and great exec
itbility. West Side. .
T'mi 'e Sam puts the Indian off into
fco.ne. corner and when white settlements
approach his confines, concludes that
the corner is too good for him and hus
t'es him off to narrower and more dis
tant 'iiarter. There is no hope for poor
Ixoniy to become civilized.
'J'l.r financial outlook is brightening.
If lo. I.;. 'ess does not soon prescribe the
ne, the patient will have re
d without it.
No law can make two unequal- things
equal. By adopting a double standard,
silver is sure to fluctuate, and the poorer
will drive out the dearer metal. Bat if
gold alone is the standard, it will make
no difference what amount of silver is
TmHHDAY, September 19th. Busi
ness in the past few days has remained
qn'iet and not so satisfactory as expected.
There is, however, a feeling of confi
dence among business men of an early
improvement and activity in trade.
General merchandise quotations are un
changed save in coffees and rice, which
have experienced an advance recently.
Country produce continues to arrive
freely and prices are steady, with a
downward tendency in some kinds.
Fruits, such as will suffer exporting, are
in fair inquiry at last quotations, ex
cepting peaches, which have declined
and are now quoted at 60 to 75 cents per
box.
The market supply of egs is some
what shorter and has an upward ten
dency, although present quotations are
unchanged.
Poultry is in fair demand for export,
and spring chickens are quoted at (2 to
2.50 jer dozen. Old fowls, 13 to 13.50
per dozen. Ducks and geeee are out of
the market and no quotations are given.
Turkeys are in fair demand at 10 cents
per pound. Only a few have been
offered at that jirice.
The wheat market is quite unsettled,
and has a slight tendency to advance
above quotations of today, which are 47
to 4H cents per bushel.
In San Francisco a steady advance on
future deliveries coutinues, for lHfcetn
ber delivery $1.1'?4, May 11.30'u' per
cental. The Portland market is slug-
i -- .. - j . . i . i i
contained in the dollar, and will always j "I''7 'IJ. '"'"ugn
euuic wiiem is arriving uaiiy iruiu x.ai-
circulate at par.
Never in the history of the United
States has there been such a rush as oc
curred Saturday on the Cherokee strip.
The mad haste of the settlers is scarcely
to be wondered at when the land is
worth from (25 to $100 an acre without
improvements.- There were several
tragedies, as might have been expected,
and for several months there will be
fierce legal fights, besides these personal
encounters.
The idea that silver was demonetized
by the act of 1873 is constantly reiterated
and seldom challenged. As matter of
fact nothing of the kind was done. The
United States simply stopped coining
silver, but all that had been previously
minted was left untouched and contin
ued to circulate as before, and no one
was alarmed about it because there was
no danger of nndue inflation. The con
ditions have been very different under
the operations of the Sherman purchase
act, which, was adopted to stay the tide
of free silver. Silver has not been de
monetized and never will lie. Neither
can it be endowed with a fictitious value.
era Oregon and Washington. The sur
plus of America, according to Brad
street, will become exhausted in seven
weeks, if the present export to the
United Kingdom continues unabated.
The great grain centers of the east, in
view of the present condition, are anti
cipating
futures.
an advance in all cereals on
A Good Thing- to Raap at Hand.
From the Tmj- (Kan., fblef.
Some years ago we were very much
subject to severe spells of cholera mor
bus; and now when we feel any of the
symptoms that usually precede that ail
ment, such as sickness at the stomach,
diArrhu-a, etc., we become scary. We
have found Chamlierlain's Colic, Cholera
and Diarrho'a Reiaedy the very thing to
straighten one out in such cases. We
are not writing this for a pay testimonial
but to let our readers know what is good
to keep handy in the house. For sale by
Blakeley & Houghton, druggiHts.
The fiOth anniversary of the birth of
the Empress Dowager of China Was cel
ebrated recently in the traditional man
ner. More than 1,200,000 pieces of red flick l':le. 3"' find sjieedy and
silk, 40 feet long and three feet wide,
Htrcngth and Health.
If you are not feeling strong and
healthy, try Electric Bittern. K "la
grijijie" has left you weak and wea"7,
nse Electric BitU;rs. This remedy acts
directly on liver, stomach and kidneys,
gently aiding those organs to perform
their functions. If you areafllictcd with
were made in the imperial factories to
be used, according to foreign papers, in
the decoration of the streets of Pekin.
The empress, however, told the various
mandarins that they should not send
her the usual presents, but should use
the money in relieving the poor. Her
majesty, it la said, gave about $20,000 to
the poor of each province from her own
purse.
permanent relief by taking Electric
Bitters. One trial will convince you
that this is the remedy you need. Large
bottles only 50c. at Sni pes & Kinersly's
drug store.
Tha Halutarr fcrTacia
of Simmons Liver Regulutor upon the
system, prostrated by long suffering
with dysjepsia, and kindred diseases, Is
without a precedent. Its tonic, and al
terative effects are wonderful.
Cholera Is epidemic in the department
of the Finltre, which borders on the
English channel.
Land In the Cherokee strip lsot
proving so desirable to the boomers.
They are disgusted with the hot winds
and lack of water.
Mrs. Osborne, 70 years old, was caught
In a prairie lira in the Cherokee strip
and burned to death, llor huslmnd
nianage a to reach a small creek and
save himself.
An imperial ukaso will soon be imned
abolishing the practice of knoutin by
t e police. It is stated the initiative
has been taken by the mar himself. All
the governors favored the abolition.
A barrel head with a message w rinen
on it, picked tip at the mouth of the
Halifax harbor, says the schooner Sen
ator Frye, of Gloucester, Mass., is lt
The crew of fourteen were all drownxl.
News is received from Brunswick, tia.,
that the yellow lever is dangerously ep
idemic there. A large force of yellow
fever experts were sent there, and a
plague camp on the outskirts of the city
established.
James Cresshury and Isaac Roland,
two colored men, working in the main
wheel pit of the big Niagara tunnel, fell
from a scaffold to the bottom of tho pit,
a distance of seventy feet. Crocshnry
was instantly killed and Roland fatally
injured.
The floods in Spain show an appalling
loss of life, and the survivors are starv
ing to death. Some caves, in which the
terror-stricken inhabitants of Villa
Cauas sought refuge, are fairlv choked
with the corpses of men, women and
chil-tren.
Three negroes (brothers) were lynched
in the outskirts of New Orleaus for re
fusing to tell the w hereabouts of a fourth
brother who murdered Judge Victor
i-.stopmal in cold blood. The negrif
element is now massing for revenge
against the whites and many have lett
in terror.
San Francisco Chinese are evidently
afraid that the people are about to fol
low Um example set by those in sooth'
ern wauioruia, and many of tueni are
getting away from the citv as fast as
they can. The greater number of them
have gone east. It is exjiected 300 will
leave this week.
Emperor William has left Stuttgart
for Guens, where he will attend the
Hungarian maneuvers. Five army
corps and three divisions of cavalry will
take part in the maneuvers. No le.s
than 142,000 men, with 2T4 guns, will be
engaged. This will be the largest
maneuver array known, surpassing the
great French operations in 1SV1.
The authorities at Rio admit the dam
age done is more severe than they were
at first willing to admit. The govern
ment no longer attempts to conceal the
fact that a few people were killed and
some buildings damaged. The reliel
gunboats fired from stioltor behind the
islands which dot the bay. The fire
from the fort was ineffective.
The Bowers Dredging company Satur
day completed dredging a deep water
channel at Olympia. It moved 242,000
cubic yards of dirt. The dredger goes
to La Connor Monday to dredge a chan
nel across the Swinomish flats at the
mouth of tiie Skagit river. The govern
ment has appropriated (15.0(H) ior the
work. It will give a channel six feet
deep at low water.
The Tacouia News sjteaks strongly in
defense of Krug, absconding treasurer of
Seattle, that the banks terrorized their
depositors and would not allow them to
withdraw their mo'iey, threatening
them with social and business boycott if
they persisted. When taxpaying time
came around Krug was induced to loan
the money he had to projierty owners,
telling him that for the sake of Seattle's
good name it was best that he should
loan it to those who needed it until the
banks would "loosen up bit." He
took care of taxes for men of wealth who
had money in banks, he loaned money
to property-owners, who needed it to
pay interest, he loaned to business men
who could not got credit at the banks.
He knew that the greater bulk of state
funds were In Seattle banks, and be did
not doubt that when the panic was past
these banks would release their grip on
the people's money and he would be
saved whole. So be gave right and left,
and the banks should thank him for his
kindness. The News said Krug should
have remained in Seattle, that he was
guilty of no treason to his town or de
sire for personal gain, and that Seattle
would not have been so ungenerous as
to coldly condemn its savior.
Karl's Olover Root, tne new blood-
purifier, gives freshness and clearness to
the complexion and cures constipation.
25c, 60). and $1.00. Sold by Snipes A
Klnersly, druggists.
MOKE CUFF DWELLEIW.
Dlaoovery of Another Ruined City
in Maw Mexico, ' f
ook'sCottonUoot
COMPOUND.
A nwnl dlacmvrr bf an old
monthly by thaimimU of
Lailitt. ia tha only prforflr
aaToaud iwIIaIjI mrll lua
Dswara of unprincipled riruuuia who
offer Inferior nj!lclna In placa of tliU. Aak for
Cook's Cotton Hoot Compound, tik no tvbttU
lute, or fcioloM Si and 0 cnu in poaiaaa In letter
anil w will wild, analrd, hrntornmalL. rullvaUd
partl' iilan In plain anYdopn, to huUm onlr, 3
jump, AdaruM Pond Mir Cairpanr.
Ko. fl H,hr Muck. Detroit. Mich
Bold In The falla hr lllukclejr A II., unlit,, u.
It Hhowa Thai tha frahlatorlo Ha That
LIod Tbara Waa Civilised Ovar
fifteen Thmuaad Km, ma Im
lha t ara of tha CllOa.
To the lover of arehiixihigy no field
preaeiita a finer proHjiect than this por
tion of northern Nw Mexico, writes a
New York Ailvcrtiner correHjxindent
from Aliiuiiiu. N. M. It ahoumla in
antiiiiiitiea of every description pe
tinninjr to the prehistoric race of
America. Its ruins and monument
are undoubtedly as ancient ua the
pyrumiiU nnd aomcwhat uuulofrmia In
I miitiv respect. .Mr. A 1. r. loupe
vhu nrti.-.t. and the writor hnvo Ikm-u in
I cump amid the ruins fur thu lout two
i weeks, excavating' and Investigating
I L-enerully. '
j We est iiuute that the city must have
l contuincd fully Ao.uoo inhuhitunta, aa
v. o have counieu over io.insi rooms in
the face of the cUITh, where they are
ten deep and ton feet hijiitirc on an
averocti. Thev extend around the face
of a circular mountain for a distance
of over five miles. The level mesa on
top Is full of the mlnaof their old tem
ples, pow-wow holes and dwelling.
Kstimatiiig three persons to each room,
and I.'i.ihki rooms, we have Vi.ihhi, )mt
the probabilities are Unit each room
was the uIkkIc of at leuat five persons,
uml the buildings on top of the mesa
may have contained fully ua many
more. It is sufe uml conservative to
suy that it wait a city ot at least M).0H
inhuhitunta.
That they had enemies there can be
no question, as they selected a strong
uutural fortress for their city. Their
enemies were undoubtedly auvu.'ch,
perhaps the Apache Indians, whosr
present reservation is on the hunting
grouuds of their fnrcfathcra, not more
than fifty mile distant from this
ruined city.
The cliff dweller were doubtless a
civilized people to a great extent, an
their architecture, their pottery and
other evidence here abundantly tes
tify. It would seem that their enemiea
finally prevailed over them, destroying
them and their city, as they '.iave din
appeared from the fuce of the earth.
The country ia aa wild an the interior
of Africa. It ia not an agricultural re
gion, and how fully M.ooo people main-
..
POW-WOW lllll.KM.
1 kat m ffnalltrnAnt h fatal; In as.. .a
O "'R OQ aw, I
below th kn, and wucured lounH J
Willi WWW aa a- - VB
Oth or blood medicinal had (ailed
. j i .
to uo nta any goou. " iu t,
C. b7
-24 5 fS ?
I was trotibUvl from ehlMhrvul -
rmvsvl iMtf Tatunr, and Ihraa k.T
r ' ' 1 ourad turn pat mananUr.
(ran. ttwurrttraAiuwCodukWA1
J. F. FORD, ETanEelist
Of
lindar ,
Im Minn, Iowa, wrltaa
March 23. 1M
K. 15. Mxn. Mro. Co..
Dufur, Ornirou.
fifutlrmm :
On arriving home last week i i
all well and anxiously awaiting ih
little girl, eight and one-half veart,.
who iiad wasted awav to an jionnii. I
now well, st ron ir and vigorous, and
lleshed op. S. It. Couch Cum. I... j
Its work well, ltoth of the chil(lr.Bl
it. Your S. R. Couirh Cora I... .
and kept away all hoarttene m, J
or all. Wishing yon proerity, a,!
I oura, ,uu. M HI, J. t, flla I
If ynu wlah n tar Iraah and chaartul.Ami. I
for the "print's work, clranaa your ma,.
tha Hernial' and Llvar :ura, by taklm
thraa dNiaaa aaeh week.
Hold omler a pnaltlva suaranta.
aU oanu twr hnttla by all druat
C. F. STEPHEN
DIALER IM
Dry Good!
Cloth inc
BtMta, Shaaa, Hata. Iu. j
FanciJ lood?, Jlotion,
Bta.. Eta.. Kta. I
Second St., Tho Dallei.
"TlielieffolalflrM
Tie Dalies, Maui anil km
Navigation Co.
tutned life in such a place and under
such conditions w ill forever Im a puzzle
to the most discerning urc hnsdoinl.
There is a large spring of delicious.
ciNil water on the face of the cliff neur
the only entrance. This at lcusl in
sured u permanent water supply
arruitist any prolonged siege of tlui en
emy. They buried their deud on the mesa
in c utiiromris hollowed out for a dis
tance along? a main avenue of over two
miles. The sight is. indeed, a ghostly,
grewHomc one, never to be forgotten.
Orinning skulls and crumbling bones
reflect back the lijrht from torches.
The tMpuichers are hollowed out in the
walls similar to the rooms in the face
of the cliff. It is a dry, soft conglom
erate formation, the arches and walls
of which are aelf atipportinjr, and never
was there a more favorable place, nor
could there lie, for a repository of the
dead than thin.
We have already excavated to a con
aidernble amount pottery in a good
state of preservation: also copper orna
ments and vessels. We dove fmir Mex
icans ut work and will remain here
month yet in hopes of making further
important discoveries.
The ruined city waa discovered in
January last by Mr. A. P. F. Coapc, an
Lnglishman, who has spent the Inst six
years in this part of New Mexico hunt
ing and fishing.
The ruin are so well preserved that
they look as If they might not have
been long abandoned; yet how many
thousand years hove rolled around
since the city throbbed with life and
act ion no one can even conjecture. .
The country abounds In many other
ruins of the prehistoric race of Amer
ica. In Canyon Largo, about aixty
miles from herein southern Colorado, J
there ia quite a tier of cliff-dwelling
villages in which much valuable pot
tery is said to have U;en found. Hut
this was evidently the chief city and
capital of tho cliff dwellers, an the
pow-wow holes and foundations .of
large public buildings and the plaza
aUitit them would indicate. This is
Indeed the 1'oniis ii of America, and
well worthy the attention of the scien
tific world generally.
THROUGH
Freiliattvili
Through daily service (Sunday
cepted) Wtwoeii The Dalles and P
land. Steamer Regulator leav T
Dalles at 7 a. ui. connecting at Casrat
Locks with steamer 1 Miles 0"
Stcamer Dalles City leaves Porti
(Yamhill street dock) at 6 a. m.
nwting with steamer Regulator for V
Dalles.
PABSKN&EK KATES.
One way....
Round trip.
.. 1.
Tickets on sale for Long Reach, Oca!
Park, Tioga and-liwaco. Be
checked through.
Freight Rates Greatly Redid
Shipments for Portland receivd
any time day or night. Khlpinj"""'
way landings must lie delivered W
6 p. m. Live stock shipments oli
Call on or address, ,
W. C. ALLAWAY
Uaaaral
B. r. LAUGH LIN,
Uonaral Manafat-
THE DALLES,
OREGON
Mhh. WAr.Trn Damiiohcii Is the for
tunate, or otherwise, owner of sixty
dozen forks. They were all wedding
gifts.
A rt'l.i.-nr.oopKb North Carolina In
dian, Joseph H. May tubby, has helped
to prove the worthiness of his race by
winning the pri.e for declamation at
Trinity college this year.
LlKt'T. Pf.aht has nly his own per
versity to blame for the troubles he
bus lieen experiencing. lie would
make thirteen H-rson the numlM-r of
his expedition and he would start it
Friday.
.A. NEW
Underlain liMki
njfJJJi
IJiINZ & NITSCIIKJ
pr.Ai.rR8 in
Furniture and Carpets
W have addnd to our o
somplnte Undertading -"t,''1
and as we are In no way oonnecw"
tha Undertakers' Trust, our pric
lie low accordingly.