The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947, May 29, 1895, PART 1, Image 2

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    THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 1895.
The Weekly Ghraniele.
THE DALLES
OREGON
Entered at the postofflce at The Dalles, Oregon,
as second-class mail matter.
STATE OFFICIALS.
3.vernor ' W. P. Lord
Secretary of State H It Kincaid
Treasurer Phillip Metschan
SuDt. of mono instruction u. u. irwin
Attorney-General.. C. M. Idlemnn
. - (G. W. McBride
oaw jj H. WitcheU
V. B- Hermann
-B""" jw. R. Ellis
State Printer V. U. Leeds
COUNTY OFFICIALS.
Countv'Judge.......... Geo. C. Blakcley
Sheriff. T. J. Driver
Clerk A. M. Kelsay
Treasurer Wm. Micheil
Commissioners.
ICTanic Kiucaia
(A. B. Blowers
Assessor.. F. H. Wakefleld
Surveyor , E. F. Sharp
Superintendent of Public Schools. . .Troy uneuey
Coroner V. H. Butts
LOTAN CONVICTED.
The jury in the case of the United
States vs. Lot an and Seid Back returned
a verdict early Sunday morning, con
victing them of conspiracy to defraud
the eovernment. The verdict is no
-doubt a surprise to everyone who has
followed the hiBtory of the case. It will
take much more than the testimony of
a man whose character is so confesesdly
corrupt and despicable as that of Blum,
to satisfy beyond a reasonable doubt
fair-minded
men that a man of . the
wealth, business, social
and political
-standing of James Lotan ever so far for
got himself as lo place all of this life
that is dear to him and bis family in the
iiands-of a corrupt gang of curs such as
Blnni and Jackling, for a few thousand
dollars. If Lotan is guilty of the crime
charged, he is an idiot as well. ' We do
not believe he is either.
UNFULFILLED PROMISES.
None of the promises which formed
the consideration for which the present
administration was placed in power have
been fulfilled. The ' government was
turned over to a democratic president
and congress because of the assurance
that the poor were to be relieved of tax
ation; corporations and millionaires
were to bear the expenses of the govern
ment; manufacturing industries were to
be encouraged, and the entire nation
made more prosperous than before. No
sooner had the new congress been elect
ed than trade relations became demoral
ized ; dealers .withheld their orders ex-'
pecting the new tariff law would depre
ciate prices ; manufacturers reduced the
-quantity of the output of their mills, ex
pecting that a reduced tariff would re
duce thev price of their goods, and also
-because the customary orders were not
received ; they in turn declined to pur
chase materials, anticipating cheaper
raw materials ; prices of raw materials
fell ; mills closed ; workmen were thrown
out of employment, and trade in every
line cSnti acted long before the proposed
tariff law was presented to congress;
capitalists called in their loans and drew
from the banks their deposits; banks
failed, and the financial crash of 1S93
came without warning.
The physician in charge examined the
pulse and tongue of the sick nation, and
pronounced the disease Shermanism,
superinduced by excessive consumption
of silver. This was stopped suddenly,
and the patient was the weaker for the
radical treatment. The new tariff law,
-which all saw had become very distaste
ful to the nation, was nevertheless
forced down the patient's throat, and
the worst predictions of republican
writers and speakers were more than re
' alized ; national debts increased, and
.national revenues fell off.
Finally the promised income tax law,
the quintesence of wisdom and justice
from the standpoint of populists and
socialists, is presented to the supreme
court, a court a majority of whose jus
tices are democrats, and all that is left
of the work ot this administration, that
any one claimed was beneficial to the
nation, is shattered into useless frag
ments. The ' federal election -law. the
red rag in the eye of the South, is gone,
Otherwise none are so foolish as to claim
any benfits to the nation from this ad
ministration.
Where are the promised blessings?
Perhaps the democratic sheepherder can
tell us.
SESSION LAWS OF 1895.
The legislature of 1895 has received
blame without limit; but few words of
praise. We confess we were unable to
appreciate the value of their services to
this great state until the concentrated
wisdom of the session, as contained in
what history and our children will call
the "Session Laws of 1895," came to our
liable, and we learned for the first time
that hereafter all lands covered by
' county roads shall be exempt from tax
ation. Thus the great burden, which
has worn the poor county roads into
chnck holes and ruts and rendered them
nable to bear the ordinary palatial
-vehicles of wool and wheat haulers, ia
rremoved, and, best of all the enre is im
mediate, for because of the nrgency of
the case, the law went into effect upon
being signed by the governor. We have
cow we will hear no more of them. If
county roads are to be exempt from tax
ation what right will any one have to
collect road taxes. Thia great boon, an
appropriation of $40,000 to pay the mem
bers, a law proteciing song birds and a
few laws of minor importance are all
contained in this one book'
CITY FINANCES.
The indebtedness of the city is now
taken care of for the next twenty-live
by the bonds recently sold. The new
charter forbida the incurring olany
other debt, but this will not take care of
the citv's finances unless the utmost of
economy" is practiced and every unnec:
essary expenditure shut off. The in
come of the city is from $10,000 to $12,
000 annually, and for several years its
expenses have ' exceeded $15,000 per
annnm.
The greatest hindrance to the growth
and prosperity of this or any other city
is heavy taxation and debt. The surest
way to avoid both is to place the city's
affairs in the bands of careful and eco
nomic business men, ana Keep it mere.
It is not too soon to give the matter
close attention. Let no taxpayer be in
different to the coming city election.
THE WAY IT SEEMS TO US.
We. make no pretension of under
standing the silver question as well as
they who continually discuss it, but we
are of the opinion that if wheat will sell
in Oregon for sixty cents or more per
bushel next fall, populists, silver demo
crats and silver republicans will forget
that wheat and silver have any more
intimate relation than silver and sugar,
silver and wool, or silver and cotton
If farming and stock raising are no more
profitable thia year than they were last
the political philosophers of the side'
walks and country stores will evolve a
remedy, and the voters of the Pacific
coast are likely to try it.
ERA UD
IN THE FRANKING
PRIVILEGES.
Attorneys in this city desiring the De'
cisions of the Department of the Inter
ior in land cases ordered them of
Washington book firm ; the price of the
publication delivered was less than the
government price, although the govern
ment is supposed to sell the publication
at cost price. Yesterday the set of
books, consisting of nineteen volumes
arrived by registered mail, and the tag
attached to them, bearing the address
and registry stamp, contained also the
words : "Public. Documents, Free, Jno,
J. O'Neill M. C." Apparently this "M,
G." is in congress for revenue only, and
as part of his income counts the funds
placed to his credit by this book house
for the use of his mail frank.
Now that the democratic administra
tion is done with Republican Collector
Lotau we " would suggest that they turn
their attention to congressmen who sell
their mailing frank to law-book sellers.
Mr. Attorney General and Mr. Postmas
ter-General, here i a chance to dig up
fraud in your own family.
Within five, miles of The Dalles there
are now thousands of acreB of lands pe
culiarly -fitted for producing apples,
prunes, grapes, and peaches of the finest
quality, which are now lying idle and
unimproved ; yet there are many men
in this city who insist that theie is noth
ing here to attract capital and labor,
That a good apple farm is a profitable
investment, when wisely conducted, no
one will deny. The market offered by
Montana, Wyoming, Utah, California,
JNevada and Arizona is unlimited; we
have no competitor for this trade to
amount to anythitog except Washington
Apart from a very email territory, Cali
forma cannot, and does not, attempt to
grow apples. To reduce the land re-
ferred to to productiveness will require
capital, labor and time, and to produce
apples free from fruit pests requires skill,
care and patience; but what business
does not require all these to become
profitable. Send here capital and labor
and Wasco county will find the resources
to employ them.
"If any other man than Governor Alt
geld was governor, we would not lynch the
men ; but u-e are determined he will neuer
have a chance to turn them loose," was
the language of a lynchingnob in Dan
ville, 111., last Saturday morning. Two
young men were hung by this deter
mined mob because they dared not trust
the governor to see to it that the law
should take its course. This reminds
us "vividly of what might have happened
in Oregon at any time during the past
eight years upon a similar occasion had
one arisen. The mob at Danville would
have done greater justice had they taken
Altgeld instead of the rapists.
We would suggest that Commissioner
Lamoraux, of the general land office,
spend his summer in the Cascade range
shooing off sheep. He would learn that
the pasturing of these mountains for the
past fifteen yeara baa not harmed the
herbage about which he ia so solicitous'.
His knowledge of the Cascade mount
ains ehonld be amended at once. -
Reports from Sherman county are to
the effect that theTecent copious show
era have left the grain in a very promis
ing condition. The same ia true aa to
Tygh Ridge in thia county. Reports
from the Big Bend of the Deschutes are
less encouraging, aa less rain has fallen
there than farther south.
A NEW USE EOS HORSES.
Eastern Oregon is rich in horses but
extremely poor because of its riches ;
mechanical geniuses have long been in
a conspiracy against : the bnncbgrass
horse-raisers, and the trolley, the cable
car, the bicycle and bloomers have
"done up" the horsemen. We have
shipped our horses lo the East and the
South, but have returned from each
venture poorer than we started ; we
have tried canning them, Wit the over
sensitive epicures turn from the flesh of
the cleanliest of all quadrupeds in disr
gust, and eat the wallowing hog instead.
We haye about despaired of finding a
use or a market for our splendid de
scendants of Arabian and Norman
sires.
It is strange that no one has before
suggested our plan. Tub CHKOsicfiEis
devoted to Oregon, and particularly to
Eastern Oregon, and hence we ' ptri
otically make our scheme known, re
serving to ourselves none of the benefits
sure to come from it. Only a few years
ago government' mules were the stand
ard of value up and down the Pacific
slope. Prior to the dastardly conspir
acy which built the Pacific railroads and
demuleized mules, the . government
purchased that noble and beautiful ani
mal freely at 16 to 1, placed its brand on
the rump, and the government mule
was the standard. As compared Co a
government mule, all other brass was no
where; a mule was worth sixteen horses
every d?y in the week after the govern
ment stamp was impressed upon him,
and he'was placed in circulation.
But our scheme We propose the or
gnnization of a new, progressive party ;
one that will be loyal to the interests of
the country : controlled neither bv sil
ver, mine corporations, nor gold bond'
holders, but guided by plain horse sense.
Horse hide is strong, white and pliable;
it will neither wear out nor erode; it is
lighter than base gold and baser silver,
We suzgest for our party a banner a
horse-hide, fringed with the mane and
festooned with the tail, and for the sin
gle platform the free coinage of horse-
hide. This will create a demand for
something we have to sell. Why should
Oregon seek to raise the price of the
products of the wealthy mine-owners of
Montana and Colorado? We own no
silver mines; we own horses. Make
horse-hide a legal tender, and Oregon is
saved from bankruptcy and the country
from ruin. We propose a joint conven
tion for, Oregon and Washington, and
we suggest that Governor Lord at once
appoint Al Sutton, the veteran horse-
raiser of Oregon, as the leader of our
state's delegation.
Governor, here ia. a chance to name
another delegation. Populists, here is
a parry whose fundamental idea is in
direct line with your interests.'- Do
away with the banner of the fish that is
trying to swallow the coin, and join our
standard.
SECRATARY GRESHAM DEAD.
Secretary Gresham died in Washing
ton, D. C. at 1 :15 o'clock this morning,
after an illness of about four weeks.
That his illness was aggravated and his
death -hastened by the cares and annoy
ances of his office, there is little doubt.
As a judge he won for himself an en
viable reputation, and by reason of hia
services upon the bench he came near
winning the nomination for president
Disappointed in this, he left the party
which bad honored him and joined the
party against which he sought the presi
dential nomination. For this service
rather than because of any peculiar fit
ness for the position, he was made sec
retary of state. ,
His warmest friends will scarcely
claim that his administration has been
success. Petulant and exacting, he
waa illy qualified to nil the position
which requires the most skilful diplo
macy. Had death come to him while
he continued to fill the position he waa
beet fitted to fill that of TJ. S. judge
the American, people would feel far dif
ferent toward him than they do. He
was a man of great talent, but not as
secretary of state. -
The Dalles haa never had an enter
prise which has contributed so much to
the business prosperity of The Dalles as
the D. TP. & A. N. Co.'s line of boats,
The men who put their capital into it
have been rewarded in many ways.
which are often poorly appreciated.
From the business the company is now
doing it ia apparent, that they will be
rewarded in a way they can appreciate.
With a copital stock of $39,500, it owns
over $60,000, and ia doing a paying busi
ness. The way- to help the town and
the county is to stand in with the boat
line.
This earth is too pleasant a dwelling
place for the boy or man mean enough,
to plant tacka for the purpose of punc
turing bicycle tirea, or who goes about
using pins, for that purpose; such imps
of satan should have been born on Sat
urn, where they corxld delight them
selves making holes in that planet 'a
beautiful tirea. -
' Seldom has Wasco county had a bet
ter grand jury than' the one selected and
sworn yesterday ; it ia composed of men
who know the beat interests of the com'
m unity and understand how to protect
them. There will be no monkey busi
ness with this grand jury.
Advertise in The Chronicle.
CIRCUIT COURT IN SESSION.
.fudga Bradsbmw Opens Court Wnat the
Docket Shows.
Promptly at 10 o'clock thia morning
Judge Bradshaw convened court for the
May term of 1S95. The room was well
filled with spectators, while the entire
bar of the city was in attendance. . .
Clerk Kelsay read the list of jurors,
from which was chosen the grand jury
as tollows: D.- Farrington, Thomas
Johns. Frank Lublien, Joel W. Koontz,
Henry Simmons, B. F. Laugblin and
Wm. Floyd. The last named gentleman
was appointed foreman by the court.
J. W. Blakeney was chosen bailiff for
the grand jury, and J.-H. Jackson and
J. Doherty court bailiffs.
In the case of J. C. Flanders vs. O.
D. Taylor, the report of the referee was
filed and the decree prayed for granted.
The default in the case of Mary A
WilEon vs. Wallace Wilson, is to be
tried in open court.
A default waa entered against L. F,
Pugh in the suit brought by W. H,
Pugh.
"A demurrer to the complaint was en
tered in the case of the Grant Powder
Co. vs. E. S. Larsen et al.
The case of Oregon Lumber Co. vs. G.
E. Wood ward was settled.
A demurrer was filed in the case of
the Columbia Building and Loan Asso
ciatidn vs.'Alfred Kennedy.
A motion to dismiss was made and al
lowed in the suit of Mary E. H in man vs.
E F. Hinnian.
A mandate from the supreme court
was entered in the case of Moore vs.
Simonson. Thia matter was decided re
cently in the supreme court, where both
parties ' appealed and the judgment
was modified. . '
The criminal charge against M. A.
Oiler was dismissed on motion of the
district attorney.
Answer filed in Esberg, Bachman &
Co. vs. E. Jacobsen $: Co.
Motion to dismiss allowed in Van
Voorhies & Co. vs. G. J. Farley.
More CloaiDff Kxeiciscs.
Below we print the program of exer
cises held at the .ast Hill primary,
Academy Park and Union Street schools
last Friday. These would have been
published Saturday, but a press of mat
ter crowded them out :
UNION STEEET SCHOOL TEACHERS, MISSES
BALL, SNELL AND K. COOPER. -
Song "Vacation" School
Kec. "Vacation" .Edith Mans
Kec "He Doeth His Alms to Be Seen of
Men" Dora Sexton
Rec "Battle of Bunker Hill" Arthur Akin
Rec. "Dollie's Lesson" Lena Sandrock
Soug "Perseverance". . Three Girls, Three Boys
Dialogue nen i m a woman . v seven uiris
Rec. "Little Mag's Victory" Adelbert Moody
Walogue "A Strange Secret". Three Girls
Song ", Down in the Meadows" School
Rec. "Mother" . Bertha Finch
Rec. "Barbara Fritohie" Emily Crossen
Song "Has'e Away". ..Three Girls, Three Boys
Rec. "Studying History" May Jones
Song" Hail to the Festive Day" .... Four Girls
Ree. "The Lost Watch" Carl Groehler
Rec. "That Hired Girl" Harry Sylvester
Dialogue "Ragged Dick" : Three Boys
Song "Carve, Carve Dat possum" Two Boys
Dialogue "Irish Servant" Two Boys
tee. "ungin or Decoration nva uagiey
Ree. "Army Overcoat" -Webber Varney
Rec. "Grand Army Roys" tieoige Foster
song "our country" our utris
Drill "May Queen March Twenty-Six Pupils
ACADEMY PABK SCHOOL MISSES PHIKMAN,
FLINN AND MISSES EINTOUL
May Song ('lass
Rec "The Two Bootblacks" Roy Grimes
Rec. "Lost Tommy" Loto Kelsay
song Two Giris
Rec. "The BravjstBoy in Town". ...
Bculah Gilgard
"Toadstools" Three Little Girls
Three Sangs Primary Class
Rec. "The Bite" Guy Be ton
Rec. "The Old Reading Class" . . .Pearf Bunker
Rec. "The Clown's Baby" Lulu Rowe
Song Dora Johns
Rec. "Grandma's Angel" Lucile Crate
Rec "A Roy's Speech" Oscar Beck
Patriotic Drill Twenty-one Girla
Rt c "The h irst of April" Maude Micheil
Song "The Tardy Bell" Two Girls
Rec "A Model Tea Party" Nina Guthrie
Rec "The Queen's Gift'' Florence Sampson
Rec "A Sad Case" , . . . Dalles Simonson
Violet Drill .' Sixteen Little Girls
Bong "Good-bye" School
EAST HILL PRIMARY TEACHERS, MISSES
NAN COOPER AND LURA WELCH,
' PAST FIRST.
Song "It is Lovely May" . : . '. School
jj.ee "A Schoolboy's Troubles" . . . . Ray Taylor
nee "KainDow,- seven rupus
Rec "The Crow's Children"
. Lindsay McCartney
Song "The Hay Makers" School
Rec "Daisy N ure s" Three 2d Grade Girls
Rec "Johnny on Babies '.....Harry Dorfmeier
Rec "Spring Beauties". Nellie Mc Haley
Sons Class of Seven PutjIIs
Rec "Little Miss Mischief" Martha. Bartell
Rec Farmyard Song Eugene Davi -
Rec, "Vacation" Seven Pupils
Rec "The Two Armies" Josie
AJUI
PART SECOND.
Son "Mayday Morn" School
May Festival Thirty-five rupils
MOSIER BREEZES.
Some Items of Interest From
Neighboring- Town.
Oar
Strawberries are here and the best
season of the year ia at hand. Who can
fail to enjoy it? Some of the people
think it strange that some of our straw
berry men should import foreigners
(Japs) to pick their berries, when there
are so many of the neighbors that would
like the job and are needing it.
Mr. Frank Hunter, a tamale maker of
Portland, ia here, with hia brother, who
ia not expected to live. -
Mrs.' Root and sister,-Mrs. Wagner,
took a pleasure trip to Cascade Locke
last Tuesday.
The concert waa a grand success in
every way. Some splendid singing and
speaking and the receipts were far be
yond what waa expected. '
Mr. Geo. Sellinger ia remodeling hia
house. He will finish it now by lathing
and plastering it.
Mr. Kelley, a fruit commission mer
chant of Butte, Mont., waa in this vicin
ity looking for customers. He was well
pleased with the prospects for a fruit
crop and the way they prune and culti
vate these orchards here.
Mrs. Kincaid of Portland, is visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Powers.
Thursday we were called to attend the
funeral of Grandpa McClure. : He passed
away Tuesday night, being 77 yeara and
9 months old, and if he had lived but a
few days longer he and his wife would
have been married 53 years. . A large
crowd was out. Rev. Johns of Hood
River preached th funeral sermon fol
lowi d by a few touching remarks by Mr.
Micheil of The Dalles. The family has
tho sympathy of the writer and all
friends in the neighborhood.
At the Wool Warehouses.
Things are very lively in the East End
just at present. Long lines of wool
wagons are continually arriving and dis
charging their loads. Thia is but the
beginning of the receipts, and when the
end will be no one can now tell. If the
trade continues to increase the remain
der of the season in like proportion as it
has done thus far, new and increased
storage facilities will become a necessity.
The Wasco Warehouse received over
300 sacks one day last week, and now
has the upper deck crammed full. Man
ager Lord sees the ; necessity of having
more room and will build a shed on the
south side of the brick warehouse.
At Moody's storage house the situation
is much the same. . A new baling ma
chine has been built, making two in-the
establishment. The wool ia stored in
the warehouse ten aacka high, there
being over 100 sacks in each tier. The
porches are now being filled with wool.
There is no movement towards selling
and buyers and sellers are cautiously
awaiting developments. The situation
seems a little brighter than it did a year
ago at this time.
Company G, Attention!
Armory of G Company,
Third Regiment Infantry
Oregon National Guard
ARD.
The Dalles, Or., May 27, "J5.
Orders)
jno. z )
Pursuant to Order No. 2, headquarters
Third regiment, O. N. G., each and every
member Company G Will assemble at
their armory May 30, 1895. at 12:30 p.
m fully uniformed, armed and
equipped, with canteens and leggins, for
the pnrpoae of serving aa an escort to
Jamea W. Nesmith Post, G. A. R., dur
ing the ceremonies of Decoration day.
By order of -
Levi C. Chbisman,
Official Captain.
D. H. Roberts,
. First Sergeant.
Hard Freeze at Dufar Last Night.
Mr. Timothy Brown of Dufur called on
The Chronicle thia morning and said
that at Dufur and in the vicinity a hard
frost came last night. It ia yet too soon
to ascertain just how much the damage
is, but potatoes and small fruits such as
berries are considerably injured. The
gram is too far along to be hurt. The
frost was not unexpected, aa in the early
evening it waa much colder there than
in The Dalles. Mr. Brown has been
working in the Dufur Flouring Milla but
on account of ill health ia compelled to
take a rest for some time.
I.et Us Be Thankful.
This ia a glorious day for Wasco
county. Early thia morning a gentle
rain began to fall, and haa continued all
day,wetting the ground and calling to
renewed life the growing grain. It
means dollars and dollars to the resi
dents of thia section, and the farmers
and merchants and everyone else can go
to church tomorrow bubbling over with
feelings of thankfulness in their hearts
that the harvest is now aseured.
All pain banished by Dr. Miles' Pain Pill.
New England Marble Granite Works,
Calvin H. Weeks, Proprietor.
-WHOLESALE AND
Fine JJonumental Wof IfflpoBdtate.
Do not order Monumental Work until you obtain our figures. You will find
that, for good work, our charges are always the lowest. Cash or time settlements
fas preferred can be arranged for at greatly reduced figures. Send address for de
signs and prices. Second and Tbird-etreet cars pass oar salesrooms. .
720 Front Street, opp. tho Failing School,
Great Bargains
in Millinery.
Trimmed Hats, 75c and up.
MRS. PHILLIPS,
Wool Growers,
Attention.
I will be in The l)alles during the Wool Season of this
year, prepared to buy all kinds
the highest market price. See me before selling or ship
ping your Wool. "'
Possibilities
For flaking a Fortune Lost!
REGAINED.
There are many people who spend tho Inst
half of their Uvea weighted down under the
burden of disease. With ill health, lite drags
so; opportunities for travel and pleasure are
lost; possibilities for making a fortune in
business are thrown away. They stand pas
sively by and see others, wlthno better nat
ural abilities or advantages, carry off the
prizes in life, having won them because they
tried for them. r
Hall of success in life. Is in daring to try. t
Are yon a little nervous?
Nervousness is prostrating and is followed
by sleeplessness, exhaustion, hysteria, men
tal depression.
Nervous prostration Is followed by nervous
debility, nervous debility left ulone, soon be
comes paresis, (softening of the brain) a com
plete breaking down of the system.
Insanity, and death.
There are troubles In life, enonjrh to bur
den us down, that are unavoidable; without
disease; especially, when a little care, a little
medicine, and you are rid of it.
Albert Den no, 17 Enjrrew Ave., Rutland,
v i., under dato of April 2, 1894, writes;
'Dr. Miles' Nervine is a wonderful medi
cine, my wife has taken it after having La
Grippe and It haa helped her very much when
everything else had failed."
, Mrs. Anna Peuser, wife of the propriotor of
the North 81de Brush Works, 838 3rd St, Mil
waukee. Wis., writes. May 3, 1S94:
I had been suffering for years from head
aches, neuralgia, sleeplessness and a general
nervous prostration, unfitting me for social
and household duties, and at times I was
completely prostrated with pain. I tried
several physicians and many remedies, but
received no benefit until I used Dr. Miles' Re
storative Nervine, when I found almost Im
mediate relief and in a brief time have be
come quite my former solf. I have since rec
ommended the Nervine. to others who have
used it with the same good results."
Dr. Miles' Nervine Is sold on a positive
guarantee that the first bottle will benefit.
All druggists sell itatll, a bottles for So, or
It will be sent, prepaid, on receipt of price
by the Dr. Mile Medical Co., Elkhart, lnd.
Dr. Miles' Nervine
Cures.
Buchanan Again Sentenced.
Albany, N. Y., May 27. The court of
appeals has sentenced Robert Buchanan
to die the week beginning July 1.
A Gentle Corrective
is what you need when your
liver becomes inactive. It's
what you get when you take
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets ;
they're free from the violence
and the griping that
come with the ordinary
pill. The best medical
authorities agree that
in regulating the bowels
mild methods are pref
erable. For. every de
rangement of the liver, .
stomach and bowels,
these tiny, sugar coated
pills are most effective.
They go aDout i
work in an easy
their
and
natural way, and their
good lasts. Once used,
they are always in fa
vor. Bcin? composed
of the choicest, concen
trated vegetable ex
tracts, they cost much
more than other pills
found in the market,
yet from forty to forty
four are put up in each
sealed class vial, as
sold through druggists, at the price of the
cheaper made pills. . -
" Pleasant Pellets " cure biliousness, sick
and bilious headache, dizziness, costive
ness, or constipation, sour stomach, loss of
appetite, coated tongue, indigestion, or dys
pepsia, windy bclchings, "heart-bum,"
pain anu distress aiu;r caiiug, wm &muicu
derangements of the liver, stomach and .
bowels. Put up in sealed glass vials, there- .
fore always fresh and reliable. Whether
as a laxative, or in larger doses, as a gently
acting but searching cathartic, these little
" Pellets " are nnequaled.
As a " dinner pill," to promote digestion,
take one each day after dinner. To relieve
the distress arising from over-eating, noth- .
ing equals one of these. little "Pellets."
They are tiny sugar-coated, anti-bilious
granules. Any child readily takes them. ,
Accept no substitute that may be recom-l
mended to be "just as good," It maybe
better for the dealer, because of paying
him a better profit, but he is not the one
who needs help. '
A free sample (4 to 7 doses) on trial, is
mailed to any address, post-paid, on receipt
of name and address on postal card.
Address World's DiSPENSAav MKDICAi
Association, Buffalo, N. Y. ,
RETAIL DEALER IK-
PORTLAND, OR.
Washington St.
of Wool in any quantities at
CHARLES S. MOSES.