THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 29, X894, iWJLD IIOGS IN ARIZONA. i Large Drove of Deonorate Do Bceadanta of Tame Porkers. TO STOP THE PROGRESS of Consumption, you will find but me guarantied remedy Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical" Discovery. Ia advanced casea, it brinirs comfort and relief; if you haven't delayed too long, it will certainly cure. It doesn't claim too much. It won't make new lungs nothing can ; but it will make diseased ones sound aad healthy, wheu everything else has failed. The scrofulous affection of the lungs that's caused Consumption, like every other form of Scrofula, and every blood-taint and disorder, yields to the "Discovery." It is the most effective blood - cleanser, strength -restorer, and flesh - builder known to medical science. In all Bronchial, Throat and Lung Affec tions, if it ever fails to benefit or care, you Lave your money back. . A perfect and permanent cure for your Catarrh or $500 in cash. This is prom ised by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. A misunderstanding: "Yes, I was at the church. The bride walked in on the arm of her father." "What! I didn't know that she was an acrobat. Texas Sittings. Kenneth Bazeniore had the good lor tune to receive a small bottle of Cham berlaiu's Colic, Cholera, aud Diarrhoea Remedy when three members of his family were sick with dysentery. This one small bottle cured them all and he had some left which he gave to Geo. W Baker, a prominent merchant of the place, Lewiston. N. C, and it cured him of the same complaint. When troubled with dysentery, diarrha-a, colic or cholera morbus, give this remedy a trial and you will be more than pleased with the result. The praise that natnr ally follows its introduction and nse has made it very popular. 25 and 50 cent bottles fur sale by Elakely A Houghton druggists. " Youngun Newlywed was telling me that his wife writes him two or thre times a week. All for love, of course, Olhand Humph! I'll bet its mostly for money. Buffalo Courier. Deafness Cauaet b Cared By local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to core Deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies Peafness is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, aud nnless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condi tion, bearing will be destroyed forever; nine casm out of ten are caused bv catarrh, which is nothing bnt an in flamed condition of the nioruas surfaces We will give One Hundred D Uars fur any ease of Deafness tcaueeo bv catarih that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Vure. hend tor circulars, tree. F. J. CHKNEY 4 Co.. Toledo, O. aCSSold by Drmrgi'ts, 70c. "Ifyour boy doesn't re form, old fellow. you won't be able to keep him out ol jail when he grows np." "Don't you he lieve it. I'm going to make a policeman of him." Life. "I know an old soldier who had chronic diarrhoea ol long standing to have been permanently cured by taking Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhus Remedy," says Edward Shiirn- pik, a prominent druggist of Minnea polis, Minn. "I have sold the remedy in this city for seven years and consider H superior to any other medicine now on the market for bowel complaint'." 25 and 50 cent bottles of this remedy lor sale by ISlakely A Houghton drug gists. Mirtress I wish to know h-w to have Biy'photograph taken so as to please dear Charley. Familiar maid Let me sit for you. Miss Emma Mnrphy, N. C, Bulletin. My boy was taken with a disease re sembling bloody flux. The first thing I thought of was Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Iieracdy. Two doses of it settled the matter and cored him soond and well. I heartily recom mend this remedy to all persons suffer ing from a like complaint. I will an swer any inquiries regarding it when stamp is inclosed. I refer to any county official as to my reliability. Wm.Koach, 3. P., Primroy, Campbell Co., Tenn. For sale by Blakaly A Houghton drug gist. Oat Tour Mob 7. All eonnty warrants registered prior to Angnst 1, 1890, will be paid on pre sentation at nit office. Interest ceases after July 12th. W. Micnii.i., County Treasurer. I The ThrtUUiB Eiperleue of au Oirer-C'oa. ! fluent lluater Who Went Out to I Has a Teatter Young sucker I A Had Old Hoar. j The wildest of wild hogs live both I above and below Yuma, on the Oolo ! mlo river, savs the San Frnnei.soo Chronicle. While the steamer was ly iii? at fustic Dome landiuff a few days since, loading with ore, a tiue Kind of them on the opposite shore rauie down to tli river to feed on the bunks, where the jrrsuw und weeiU were preen, and to pet a drink of water. They puil " attention to the bout or to the Indians at work. After loafing around for awhile au old boar came out of the brush, and, on spying us, gave a "swish," and away they all went. llanily a day passes that the Indians and cattlemen do not run upon them. These bands seem to be more timid than ujfly. When the late Thomas lllythe was trying to settle a colour ut Lerdo, forty-five miles below Yuma on the Colorado, he set down a large number of very fine full-blooded Berk shire and l'olaiid-China pips, and turned them loose on the banks of the river near Lerdo, where they lived on the roots. prusA, weeds, tules and luesquite Ivans; bred, multiplied, kept fat and filled the low and tule lands with a larpw number of fine porkers. Never seeing a human beinp, except now and then a loue Indian, they soon beeam wild, und wilder still, and scattered until the low lands and wood wer.1 full of them. Notwithstanding thai the coyotes slaughtered the little oius in preat numbers, they have inereav 1 until It is estimated that at the pre .- ent time there are more that ten thou sand of them roaminp np und down the Colorado aud llardie rivers, from their mouths upas hiph as tide runs, or from sixty-five to seventy miles this side of the pulf. They go wherever they please; noth ing stops them in their course. When the Colorado ia at its UixkI they will cross it from shore t J shore, even near the llardie, where it is fonr miles wide when at its highest puupe. Their ran pre gives tnem the finest of feed wild, sweet potatoes, tules, stray fish, clams, dead turtles und seaweed alonp the river bank at low tide. They nre un molested, except now and then by a hunter who finds his way down the river. Most of the huntera pive the wild swine a wide berth, except umv and then as they happen to spy a nice little roaster on the bank and within easy riile shot. A few years apo a man and his family were livinp a few miles below the col ony on the bank of the Colorado. He had a pair of very fine, larpe stap hounds, which the owner claimed could run down and kill any wild hop in that repion. One day he took dops and rifle and went fora nice little one, just ripht for the oven. He had not pone far be fore he found a larire band of hws. and turned his dops loose on them. No sooner had they started when out of the tules near by jumped an enormous boar, a monster, who, with mouth wide open, paying no attention to the dops, made for the hunter. The latter drew up his ritle and fired, but on came the boar, the dops nipping him at every jump. The hunter fired a second shot, but on came the beast. The hunter turned and ran for a mesquite tree a few yards distant, the hop close to his heels. He dropped his pun and jumped for life, praspinp a limb of the tree just as the hop grabbed his pants a nil tore one half of them from him, but he was safe, just out of reach. The dops all this while ran prabbinp the hop by the hind legs, to which the Wast paid no atten tion. The mad boar seized the bark of the tree in his preat tusks and tore it into shreds. Finally he turned upon the dops, instantly killed one and wounded the other o that it die:! soon after. He then turned his attention to the tree where sat the hunter. He puarded him until it was dark. Twice did the man pet down and try to pot his riile. but his foe was on puard and drowc him Ixick up the tree. Ihirinp the nipht the Ixjar left. Dayliplitcame and mi did help. The men had hardly reached the river and pot in their boat when down came the old bog after them in vain pursuit. Kapoieon as a Xlmrod. An anecdote of the first Napoleon is told in a story, forming part of the recollections of the two uncles of the writer, described as "favorites" of Napoleon III., runs an follow:;: Once, huntinp with the cm per jr. they were consoled by him for their bud sliootinp, with the assurance that the first Napoleon was even a worrit shot than they. It seeius th..t whenever a stap wps broupht to bay, it wan usual to leave the animal to be killed by Napoleon. On one occasion Napoleon could not be found, and the master of the hounds did the busi ness. Suddenly Napoleon arrived. and the stap was hurriedly propped up on his legs with tree boughs. The pun was handed to him and he fired at the stap, which, of course, f.:ll to the ground, while a piteous whine from a hound showed that something different from a dead stag was hit. Napoleon was completely deceived, and observed: After all, 1 am not so bad shot as they try to make out." CLOSE OF THE CRIMEAN WAR. Data at the Treaty ol raet and How linn latHl Wre Itevunletf. The formerly ratified treaty of pence was broupht to Londen I y William Stuart, first attache to the I'j-Ui.di em huKK.v at l'aria, on April -"s I ' '. Suu day May 4, was uliecrved as a iray of general thanksgiving to almi;'iity 'od for the preservation of peace; und on Monday the 5th. It was formally pro claimed in London, with the usee! solemnities. Addresses to the crown, approving of the peace, were curried in both houses of parliament on the evening of that day; and 011 the HU both houses cordially voted "thuuks to the army, nuvy and muriues employed in the operations of the late wur." The .feelings entertained toward the men who fouphtand bled in the Crimea by the queen, the government aud the people of Kugland are also placed on record in au excellent dispatch of Lord l'anmure's, which will be perpetuated as long as the lanpuape exists. "Since the period," said the noble secretary of war, "when the army first quitted "the shores of Lnpland, there has lieen no vicissitude of wur which it ha not been called upon to encounter. It was assailed by cholera shortly after its arrival in Turkey. Then was proved that moral as well as physical courage pervaded it ranks. Led to the field, it triumphed in engagements in which heavy odds were on the enemy's side. It carried on, under difficulties almost incredible, a siege of unprecedented duration, in the course of which the trying duties of the trenches, priva tions from straitened supplies, au.i the fearful diminution of iis saiuiix rv from disease neither t-hixU its eov.r.'.Tc r.cr impaired it discipline. Notwith: t ' il inp that many a gallant c imrti'V n 11 in their ran!;.,, and they were ca'U : to mourn the 1 aliant comniuiider v!r led them fr.un Cnglaud. and v.'eelo'ied in the fie 1.1 1:1. noble ciuv.'r . .". --b!ier, her maj-v.ty's t re-ops tic.cr flinched from tin ir duties nor dl-apooir.ted tiie sanptiine hotN's of their e- -mitry." A lie is the hardest thing in the world to koop within bounds. There is a deal more in a dollar some times than a hundred cents. Cupid ought to throw away his arrows and fill his quiver with cash. One good woman can turn more step" heavenward than 40 preachers can. We know why weddings always occnr on time; so few brides are married with their hats on. Atchion Globe. Only one man can take a woman's heart away from her, whether or no; if another gets it, it is of her own giving. The man who thinks he can do any thing finds it difficult to do something, and generally winds up by doing no'hing. Friend What do you do with all yon rejected manuscript? Scribbler Keep it to sell when I make a name. Arkansaw Traveler Astronomer You don't seem to know orach about an eclipse. Old Henpecked O, don't I? I married a brilliant woman. New York Journal. Minnie She was engaged, but there was a cruel misunderstanding. May What was it? Minnie He understood her father had monev. Puck. Jasper Do you think Stead's book. "If Christ Came to Chicago." will have any success? Jumpnppe No; the idea is too wildly improbahle. Puck "And Skipley has really forgiven the man that eloped with his wife?" 'What else could he do? The fellow returned the $(i nmbrella they took." Inter Ocean. Grigshy Why does every hody cry at weddings? Bangson Well, I imagine the poor people who have been married themselves start it and the others joiu in. Truth. LmI! fle Hollar Itewarrf. Strayed from my west pasture, one iron-grey horse, branded - (half circle) on left shoulder and two S'a crossed on right shoulder; rather thin cinch sore on left rib; foretop roached back to the plxce for halter. Prottabiy went tow ards Tygh ltiilge. Will give $0 rewanl for his return to me at my ranch, or a liberal reward for any information lead ing to his recovery. A. 8. KomtRTH, lrn Propyct Ranch. Nolle to Taxpayer). The county board of equalization will meet in the assessor's ofliee on .Monday, Sept. 24th, and continue in session one week, for the purpose of equalising the assessment of Wasco conrily for 1SUL All tax payers who have not been inter viewed by the assessor will please cull at ihe office on Thursdays, Fridays or Sat urdays, as all property must be assessed. Joe 1. Koontz, Conntv Assessor. 4;orl Wood We again have an abundant supply of dry fir and hard wood for immediate delivery at the lowest rates, and hope to be favored with a liberal share of the trade. Jos. T. Pbtshs & Co. Mora rrtlla Than Omfort. "If they make my home much more attractive and comfortable." said Mr. (ilimmerton, "I shall have to leave it altogether. They have taken there lately to making sofa and chair cush ions of lovely materials, ami very soft and comfortable, which tlu-y scatter! around on the chairs and sofas, but it seems that these are for visitors only! and to look at: they are not for mem- wn, 01 ie lamny. 11 1 uirpei anil su down on one tif them I hear .Mrs. (Jlitn- merton or Miss tilimmcrton say: 'Oh, don't dj that!' and then they come and put it and smooth it and fix it over ' again, but I know that its invitation is not for me." In parts of this conn try dogs are nsed to drag around little milk carts. In con nection with this beverage there is little barm in working the growler. Phil adelphia Times. for dilte and Gruba In my moles and horses, I give Simmons Liver Kegnlator. I hae not lot ne I gave it to. K. T. TjtTkoH, Acrt. for Grangers of Ga. -a For Bant. The Union street lodging honfc. For terms apply to Geo. Williams, admin istrator of the estate of John Mlchel bacli. lm. for Infante and Children. CaatarU promote. Pla; tton, and ovsroouMM t'latulancy, ComittpaUou, Hour ftomach, Plarrhcea, and FteverUhneaa. Thus tha child is rendered lwolthy and lu sleep MtunO. CaetorU contains no Morphine or other narcotic property. "Caatortatesowellailaoted to etalMren that I recommrad Itaesuwiorloaiirprajcrlpuoo known to bm." 'i- Aauasa. M. 1;, 1U Bouth Oxford BC, Urooatju, M. Y. For eevaml years I ha iwwnniaoad your Piuurta,'and uhall alwaye eoaonne odo, bj It baa utTarlably produced heoenoJal raMUIa. Edwib V. 1'ARoaB, at. I)., rath Street aixl Tlh Are,, Now SurkUty. "The me of 'Oaatorta la so nnlenjel Bad Ita merits to wall kaowa that U a work of Miperenwation to eadune lu ew ar the in U7liireat famllnw woo do not keep Oaatoiia CUmtoa lliBTm, I. u.. Tub CaaTAOB OoaiMirr, TT Murray Street, N. T. The Palles Daily and Weekly ghronicle. li ft T) ft run 1 n ft l I in A i nniri!!iiiuui Liiir Ike BallEs, PortlaiiJ and Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH FrBigHt aun PassBoger Line Through Daily Trips (Sandays ex cental) between 'The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a.m., connecting at the (Jas cade Locks with (Steamer Dalles Citv .Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland (Yamhill it. dock) at 6 a. m., connect ing with Steamer Regulator for The Dalles. FAMrlKNUKll KATE. One way Round trip. .$2 00 . 3.00 Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. All freight, except car lots, will be brought through, with out delay at Cascades. Shipments for Portland received at any time day or night. Shipments for way landings must be delivered before 6 p. m. Uve stock shipments solicted Call en or address, W. C. ALLAWAY. raril Agent B. F. LAUGHLIN, THE-DALLES, OREGON J F. FORD, ETaiielist Of Ds Koine, Iowa, writes mider date el March S3, ISM: S. E. Mid. Mro. Co., Dufnr, Oregon. Gentlemen : On arriving home last week, I fonnd all well and an x ions! y awaiting. Oai little girl, eight and one-half years old, who bad wasted away to 38 pounds, is now well, strong and vigorous, and well fleshed np. S. li. Cough Cure has done its work well. Both of the children like it. Your 8. B. Cough Cure has cured and kept away all hoarseness from me. So give it to every one, with greeting for all. Wishing you prosierity, we are Yours, Ma. & Mas. J. F. Fobd. K you with to (eel Irak and cheerful, aud read; for the Spring's work, eleauat Tour system Willi the Headache and Liver Cnro, bj taking two 01 three duemeacb week. Sold uuder s pmltire simian te. cent nor bottle hr all drueaisis. J. s. SCHSHCa, J. M. Pattsimoii, aaulor. First Rational Bank. THE DALLES, - OREGON A General Banking Business transacted Deposits receivetl, subject to Sight Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly remitted on day of collection. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange told on jiew lorn, tan francisco and Portland. BIN KOTOWS. D. P. Thompson. Jko. 8. Sohsncs . to. M. Williams, Uso. A. Lisas. H. M. Bcall. FRENCH & CO., BANKERS. TKANSaCT A OBMERALBANKINU BD8IMKSS Letters of Credit Issned available in the Eastern States. Sitfht Evrfianoa and Tal..n. Transfnrssoldon New York, Chicago, St. Lmis. San Francisco, I'ortlivnd Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or-' agon and Washington. Collections made at all DnintM nn la. orabl Ufruit. THE CHK0N1CLK was ostabliihod for the ex preBu purpose of faithfully representing The Dalles and the surrounding country, and the satisfying oiTect of its mission is everywhere apparent. It now leads all other publications in Wasco, Sher man, Gilliam, a largo part of Crook, Morrow and Grant counties, as well as Klickitat and .other re gions north of The Dalles, hence it is the bent medium for advertisers in the Inland Empire. The Daily Chroniclf. is published every eve ning in the week Sundays excepted at $G.OO per annum. The Weekly Chronicle on Fridays of each week at $1.50 per annum. For advertising rates, subscriptions, etc., address THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO Tbo DnllOB, Orojton. FIRST CLHSS JP n B T I Mi CAN BE HAD AT THE CHRONICLE OFFIC Reasonably Ruinous Rotes. New - Umatilla- Hous THE DALLES, OREGON. SINNOTT &. FISH, PROP'S. Ticket and Baggage Office of the U. P. R. R. Company, and office of the W J Union Telegraph Office are in the Hotel. Fire-Proof Safe for the Safety of all Valuables LARGEST : AND : FINEST : HOTEL : IN : OREGCl BticcwaaoT In Paul Kreft A to DEALER IN PAINTS, OILS AND GLAS And the Most Complete and Latest Patterns and Designs in WALL PAPER. WALL PAPEJ . ""'ai. rAiHl'.Kanrl PAPER HANGER. None but the belt s of J. W. MAHUItY'H PA t NTH I.. .11 i. J hut .... , ------ .. i.nvu II Mil Will WITH, H IMI liuiiw most ski led workmen employed. Agents for Mamiry Liquid Paints. Nhl icel com hi nation or soan mixliira. A Hr.t.j.U.. ,.iu ; .n All onSJ promptly attended to. I Store and Paint Bboo cornsr Third and Washington St.. Tho Dsll'. 0r( Blakeley & HoughtoJ DRUGGISTS, 175 Second Street, The Dalles. Oreg A full line of all the Standard Patent Medicine Drugs, Chemicals, Etc. .-ARTISTS MATERIALS.-'- ' Country and Mall Orders will receive prompt attention.