THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, SATURDAY. MARCH 14. 1896. uriTCLO mszfiv FROM RHEUfflATISHI C. H. Xing, Water Valley, Kis3., cored by rer's SarsapariSfa "For five years, I suffered imtold misery from muscular rheumatism. I trieil every known remedy, consulted the Lest physi cians, visited ITotSpiIuKS, Ark., three times, spending $1000 there, besides doctors' Mils; hut could obtain only temporary relief. My flesh was wasted away so Hint I weighed only ninety-three pounds: my left arm and leg were drawu out of shape, tlia muscles being twisted cp in knots. I was unable to . tlrcss myself, except with assistance, and could only hobble about by using a cane. I had no appetite, and was assured, by the doctors, that I could not live. The pains, at times, were so awful, that I could procure' relief only by means of hypodermic injec tions of morphine. I had my limbs bandaged In clay, in sulphur, in poultices; but these gave onl7 temporary relief. After trying everything, and suffering the most awful tortures, 1 begun to take Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Inside of two mouths, I was able to walk without a cane. In three months, my limbs "began to strengthen, and in the course of a year, I was cured. My weight has increased to 1G5 pounds, and I am now able to do my lull day's work as a railroad blacksmith." The Only World's Fair Sarsaparilla. ATMS' a PIZZS cure Headache. HfiSONAL MENTION. P. Isenberg returned home Wednesday Mr. Chas. Cramer of Mosier. was in town today. Mr. H. D. Parkins of the Cascades re turned tbie morning. Mrs. . W. Allen left this morning for her home in Portland. Mr. Henry McNulty came up on the Rwrnlatrir lftHt evening. t D 7 Mr. Geo. Morgan went to the Locks today and will return tins evening, Mrs. C. C. Hobart returned to her home at the Cascades this morning. Mr, Hugh Glenn returned from Port land today, after an absence of several days. Mies E..S. Brooks of Toledo, Or., who lias been visiting relatives here, left for iiome this morning, bhe was accompa nied as" far as the Cascades by her uncle, jar. b. j.. tfrooks of tnis city. Thursday. Mr. M. today. Mr. J. A. Soebe of Hood Biver is in the city Mr. I. N. Burgess of Bakeoven is in the city Mrs. Judge Liebe left for Portland to day for a week or more. Mr. T. E. Connoy of Hood River is TegiBtered at the Umatilla House. Mr. A. B. Coston of Walla Walla, a newspaper man of several years' exper ience, is stopping in the city for a few days, on business as well as social intent . .; ' y ' . Friday. Hon T. E. Coon of Hood Biver is in the city. Mr. W. E. Walther went to the Locks this morning, Attorney Riddell made a flying trip to me uea unates yesteraay. G. W. Phelps and Fred W. Wilson -went to Duiur this morning. Miss Edna Moody left for her home in Salem today. She has been in the city kdouc two montas. Mr. J. C. Wheeler, Mrs. Mrs. Oyler, all of Hood "Visitors in the city today. Hayne and Biver, are The Building Boom. xne Bound oi tnenammer and Baw is beard all over the city. Residences are going up, big blocks are in progress of erection, and alterations are being vari- Washington and Madison is almoEt im passable. Wiseman & Marders are making a .Ulaes front on, the east side of their saloon building. The ruined Vogt block is aeain reach ing skyward, masons, being busily at worn on the walls. A glass front is beine made" on the Second street side of the old Chronicle building, and will be fitted up as an of fice by Mr. Wheaidon. Mrs Obarr now has a three-story frame hotel. The work is going on -very fast, and the lower story will soon be ready for occupancy. The frame of Henry Fowler's new re sidence is erected. ."Billy" Wolf is constructing a new residence on Fourth street. ; ,. G. W. Phelp9 is erecting an implement house 20x100 feet adjoining his store building. F. W. L. Skibbe is to erect a jeweler shop near his hotel building. The Seufert residence has been re modelled and looks like a new building. Mr. John Frederickson will build a new residence on Eighth etreet. ' :. - 'A note is made elsewhere about the "Williams building. Bills Allowed. The following is the list of claims aerainst Wasco county allowed at the March, 1896, term of court: t A M Keleay, clerks salary . . $166 66 S Bolton, deputy clerk salary. . . . 73. 00 C L Gilbert, " " .... 65 00 John Fitzgerald, janitor salary. . . 60 00 Robt Kellv. deDUtv sheriff eal. . . 100 00 GBAND JCBOBS. F A Seufert......... 6 00 Wm Bolton 19 00 W A Gates.... t 1 20 M Randall 6 00 J R Nickeleen 10 40 Wm M Yates ." 10 40 Geo Mmteomery 8 40 CIECCIT COUBT JUBOES. W T Vatiderpool 5 60 CI Brown 12 00 AM Walker 2 00 G H-Riddell... 6 00 Robt Mcintosh . Fred Dietzel G W Rowland.. Robt Cooper S S Johns Wm Frizzell.... L M Smith E P FitzGerald .. E A Griffin L P Klinger S S Brooks James Darnielle . C S Smith C W Phelps John C Wheeler . Larkin Lamb. . . . W H Williams... J F Staniels Thos Harlin W E Waltbere... Hans Hansen 2 00 2 00 4 00 2 00 16 00 27 00 20 00 18 00 22 00 19 00 20 00 14 00 20 40 18 00 22 60 21 20 20 '0 18 00 2 00 14 00 2 00 WITNESS GBAKD JTTBY. O D Doane 2 00 SB Driver 14 40 Ers All ice Kenney 12 00 a A Howell lz eu H F Woodcock 11 20 WHFarlow 10 00 WTHunt 8 00 Geo Weiele 2 00 W Bolton 2 00 MattNyquist... 2 00 WITNESS CIRCUIT COUBT. Dock Sine.. '. . 8 00 Lee Jack 8 00 Loi Poo 4 00 P T Sharp 2 00 W HStaats 2 00 Jas Sutherland 8 00 l oi Poo 4 00 John Anderson 2 00 Mrs Alice Kenney 8 00 Thomas Knowlea Iz 4U WHFarlow 8 00 Eliza Stoey 7 00 J E Stoey 11 00 Emma Hunt ., 13 00 W H Hunt 8 00 John Howell 12 40 Carrie Edmonson. 21 00 Tim Edmunson..,. 21 00 Ed Miller 18 00 Isaoc Troth 18 40 Floyd McKelvry 18 40 Jess Gregory. 18 00 John Webb.. 18 40 Clyde McKelvry ,. 10 00 H McGinnis 19 60 ECDiekerson.... 21 00 W Ralston 10 00 R C Smelcer 4 00 Ed Norris 15 00 John Swanson 4 00 Denis McCalley 4 00 MatMelquist $ 6 00 John Guier...- 2 00 G H Dufur 3 00 Knud Hange 4 00 David King 4 00 Emma Cams 2 00 Pearl Blake 2 00 Ida Gilmore. 2 00 E M bhutt. eec'y stock union, lounty on wild animals. . .-. . 60 00 H league, bounty on wild animals 3 00 M W Morns ... 1 00 W H Odell . '. 4 00 Alex Dairymple 1 00 Ralph Doyle 4 00 Raiph Walters 2 00 E T Greene ;. 2 00 GeoSherrill 1 00 M Allen 1 00 Ralph Doyle 3 00 L. A Dalv 1 OU J W Brown 2 00 John Tetnplemire - 2 00 r U Cloure Z uu W A B Campbell 7 00 WBWinane....""- 2 00 Tommy Thompson 2 00 E Dnnsmore i 00 Robert Haves 1 00 Joseph E Ensley 4 00 with the great advantages to be gained We dislike at all times to shatter pleasing dream or knock the underpin ning out from an air castle, especiall when it is of brief duration anyway, but we may as well inform the Walla Wall DeoDle that if the Ehops are ever re moved from Albina they will be re placed at The Dalles. It occupies the most strategic point on the whole line. as all railroad men well know, and was the reason why the shops were put in at The Dalles in the first-place. Owing a temporary "onpleasantness" they were moved, but not for a business reason The conditions which removed the 6hops have passed, and our citizens would now make every decent effort to meet the company half way should it contemplate a removal from Albina. WILL URGE THE WORK. -etters From Congressmen Hermann and Ellis to the Commercial Club The memorial recently sent to on congressmen by The Dalles Commercial' Club has elicited the following replies Washington, D. C, March 3, 1S96 Roger B. Sinnott, Esq., Sec'y: Veab. bib: l am in receipt or a me. morial from The Dalles Commercial Club, asking congress to make addition al approonations to completo th wor at the Cascade Locks. The delegation will take immediate steps in that direc tion, and renew our efforts to secure the much-needed appropriations. Very truly, W. B. Ellis. Washington, D. C, March 3, 1896. John S. Schenck, Esq., President. Deab Sib: i have tte honor to ac knowledge receipt of a communication froth The Dalles Commercial Club, signed by yourself and Mr. Roger B, Sinnott, secretary, with accompanying papers, all relating to the locks m the cascades of the Columbia. In reply beg to assure vou and the very influ entinl body you represent that I shall cheerfully co-operate with my colleagues in congress to secure the desired legis lation. . Yours respectiuily, Binder Hermann, Klrors and Harbors. Ed Hill David Miller.' Frank Bonner Chae Davis. . . W H Howell. . 8 P Ward Phil Wagner ' 1 Robert Hayes 1 Sam Vickers. 1 CAGibon 1 J F Jones 1 Bert Davidson -1 WH Kenney 3 Peler Slatter. D Davidson . . W J Davidson . . . W J Harmon WL Hendricks.. J W Pennington. JLHanna ...... M M Morris A J Grubb Frank Johnson. . DD Nelson; Henry Suilinger . H Moses N J Spichengor. . L Cover ......... M Thorn burn Tom Taniwa 1 00 2 00 1 00 1 00 4 00 6 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 15 00 1 00 "Splendid New If Trne." The Walla Walla Statesman . attaches a great deal of importance to a-rumor afloat among the railroad men on the O. B. & N. that the machine shops at Al bina and Starbuck will be removed and combined at Walla Walla. The States man says : ,'-It is said that most of the breaks in machinery occur between Walla Walla and Spokane and that it would prove a great saving to the. rail road company to have the repairs made at some central point like Walla Walla. It is given in farther explanation: that the company has", little inveeted in the Albina shops and that the loss by removal of the company's property at that place would be email compared correspondence from the Oregonian contains Telegraphic Washington to the following: ' Mr. Hermann is making an especial fight for the Willamette project, as re cently published in the Oregonian This and the improvement of the Yam hill river 'he wants to secure provision for in the coming bill. Another work regarded of great importance is the cas cade locks. The engineers think a con siderable emergency has arisen, be cause the canal on the inside is not reveted, and loose earth enters the canal and dissolves, which may result in a permanent injury to the canal aud locks. He is struggling for an appro priation of $179,000 for revetting the iw net walls and protecting the outer walls It is thought in some quarters that the canal cannot be used until this ia done. Memorials of both the Astoria and The Dalles chambers of commerce have been presented by Mr. Hermann to the committee, in which the early comple tion of the boat railway at The Dalles is sought. It appears, that the right-of- way business is not yet entirely cleared up, and hence there is a very great doubt about securing any further ap propriation for this purpose at this session oi congress. until there is something more tangible to work on, congress will not be likely to do any thing. It has been the absolute plan of congress for many years to do nothing in tbs way of government improvements until the title to the land upon which the. improvements aresitnated are vested in the government beyond any question of doubt. Mr. Bowe Returns- Mr. F. H. Bowe baa just returned from California. He hastened home some two weeks before he intended, ow ing to the report of the loss of logs by the breaking of the jamb in the Klick itat river. He finds the loss is not nearly so bad as be feared. The most of the logs were saved by a second boom in the Columbia below the mouth of the Klickitat. The breaking of the jamb was, however, a fearful sight. Logs were piled up fifty feet high and when they broke there waB a fearful crash. An Indian living near by thought the world was coming to an end, and left his cabin for higher ground. Mr. Bowe says the cold snap has in jured the peach and apricot crop con siderably, though the Associated Press is contradicting that report. Mr; Qoorlay' Lecture. Mr. Hugh Gourlay proposes to lecture at the Baptist church on th 18th inst. on the subject of "Civil and Religious Liberty vs. A. P. A. ism from the stand point of a Protestant American Citizen." Speaking to a Chboniclb reporter he eaid that his object in . delivering the lecture was not to foment discord among the different religious beliefs, but to quench the spirit of intolerance which he believes ia fast coming to the surface. He says if he thought his lecture would do aught to fan the flame of religious diecord he would keep quiet forever. He claims therefore his mission ia peace ful, and that be desires only to pour oil upon the troubled waters. Asked if he would reply to Bev. E. B. Sutton's re cent lecture, which he attended, he eaid he would not attack it as a whole, but that he would show many things claimed by that speaker to be fallacies. He said his lecture was intended to be an appeal to American fairness and justice, and that he would eo interpret history as to show that our Catholic citizens have al ways been loyal to the country and its institutions, and that the pope has never interfered in American affairs. While no physician or pharmacist can scientiously warrant a cure, the J. C. Ayer's Co. guarantee the purity, strength and medicinal virtues of Ayer's Sar saparilla. It was the only blood-purifier admitted at the great world'p lair in Chicago 1893. Soothing, heating, cleansing, "DuWitt's Witch Hazel Salve is the enemy to eores, wounds and piles, which it never tails to cure. Stops itching and lumniu'. Cures chapped lips and cold-sores in two or three hours." For ealo by Snipes Kineraly, Drug Co. Test it any way yo Eggs! Eggs! Eggs! FROM TB0B0UGB8RED FOW LS. Rose Comb Brown Legiiorns Pen No. 1, $2.00 per 13. Pen No. 2, 1.50 per 13. Pen No. 3, 1.00 per 13. Pen No. 4, 1.00 per 13. Golden Wyandotte Eggs $2.00 per 13. i i 'ia u iiKe jv. Vs Measure it CTiw it and you will find A few more choice Cockerels. for circular.- Address Send febZMm ED. M. HABEIMAN, Endersby, Wasco County, Oregon. PodertaMng Establishment PRINZ & NITSCHKE DEALEBS IN Furniture and Carpes. We have added to our business complete Undertaking Establishment and as we are in no way connected with the Undertakers Trust, our prices wil oe low accordingly. I am Comnig Take your order for a well I have the latest in well-drilling ma chinery run with gasoline engine. Sat isfactory work guaranteed at reasonable prices. (Jail on or write me lor lull in formation. - r. L. KBETZER, feblO The Dalles, Or. RUPTU RE Instantly Relieved end Permanently CURED Kn'fn esT Orwatinn. Treatment Absolutely Painless CURE EFFECTED 'rom Three to Six Weeks, WRITE FOrl TERMS THE 0. E. MILLER CO. Offices: Eoorai: 700-707, i.'arquam Entitling PORTLAND, OREGON TH3 GolcmDia Packing Co.. PACKERS OF Potk mi Beef MANUFACTTJEEHS OF Fine. Lard and Sausages. Curersnf BRAND Dried Beef, Etc. Bale Oven and MifcW STAGE LINE, THOMAS HAEPEE, - - Proprietoi Staces leave Bake Oven for Antelope every day, and from Antelope to Mit chell three times a week. GOOD HOBSES AND WAGONS. largest piece of ever sold fop tobacco 10 cents THE NAME OF THE NEXT PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES WILL BB ANNOUNCED IN THE " lew York Weekly Tribune Of November 4th, 1896. Public interest will steadily increase, and the question how the men whose votes turned the scale at the last election are satisfied with the results under the administration they elected, will make the campaign the most Intensely exciting in the history of the country. The NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE, the letdine Republican family newsnaner of the United States, will miblish all the Dolitlcal new of the day, interesting to every American citizen regardless of party affiliation. Also Beneral news In attractive form. Foreien correspondence 'coyerintr-the news of the world; an agricultural department becond to none in the country; market reports which are rec ognized authority; fascinating short stories, complete in each number; the cream of the humor ous papers, foreign ana domestie, with their best comic pictures,, fashion plates and elaborate de scriptions oi woman s auiie.wim a variea ana attractive aepariniem oi nousenoia interest, ijw . IUU IICTMIJ AJtLPUUC BU 1UCD1 IBUIli; )U . . 1 Lll f CllUUlflUVU 1IUKU1 till U UIBIU1 All other weekly publication in the country Issued from ehe offic-d of a doily. Large changes are being- maae in its aeiaiis, tenaing to give u greater me ana variety, ana especially more interest to tna wom-n and voune oeor)le.f the household. A snecial contract enables us to offer this splendid Journal and the "Semi-Weekly Chronicle" for ONE YEAR FOR ONLY $1.75, CASH IN ADVANCE. The rorular subscription price of the two papers Is 12.75. Subscrip tions may beein at anv time. Address all orders to Chronicle Pub. Co. Write ronr name and ad- dress'on a postal card, send it to Geo. W. Best, Room 2, Tribune Building, Mew York City, and sample copy of The New York Weekly Tribune will be mailed to you. When yog utciot to My Seed Wheat, Feed Wheat, Rolled Barley,Whole Barley, Oats, Rye, Bran, Shorts, Or anything n the Feed Line, go to the WASCO : WAREHOUSE. Our prices are low and our goods are firft-clas. Agents for the celebrated WAISTBURG "PEFKLESS" FLOUR. Highest cash price paid for WHEAT, OATS and BARLEY. When the Train stops at THE DALLES, get off on the South Side ATTH fiElht COIiUjVlBlfl HOTEL. .. - - 08 - - -' Th Is large and popular Rouse aoes the principal hotel business, and is prepared to furnish the Best Accommodations of any h House in the city, and at tne low rate of , $1.00 per Day. - prst Qass Heals, 25 Cei?ts Office for sill Stage Unes leavlns; The Dalles for all points in Eastern Oregon and J astern Washington. In this Hotel. Corner of Front and Union fits. T. T. NICHOLAS, Propr. BLAKELEY& HOUGHTON DRUGGISTS, 175 Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon .-ARTISTS MATBBIALS-A V 30Country and Mail Orders will receive prompt attention.