The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947, July 01, 1896, PART 1, Image 2

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    THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE . WEDNESDAY, JULY :'21. 1896.
The Weekly GMomeie
JW STATE- OFFICIALB. ;
. ajvernoi ..W. P. Lord
Becretary ofBtate -;'; ,illcJud
. Treasurer ....Phillip Metschan
Bnptof Public Instruction...... M. Irwin
. a .rn.no.runaru1 C. M. Jdleman
' ' v IG.W.Mc Bride
tMnators.... . J j. H. MitcheU
!B. Hermann
W. R. Ellis
State Printer W. H. Leeds
'... .
COUNTS' OFFICIALS
County
Sheriff.
Judge....;..........
...j. ..Geo. C' Blakeley
.... ...4..T; J. Driver
Clerk..
Treasurer... .,
Commissioners
Assessor.
; A. M. Kelsay
Win. Jllcneii
(Frank Kincaid
AS. Blowers 1
...T. H. Wakefield
Surveyor
ourveyur .- - - -r
Superintendent of Public Schools. .-Troy Shelley
Coroner W. H. Butts
.l. r . tsnarp
HVCH TO LEARN.
The American people have much
- . 1 ' . ".T
to learn petween now ana nexiiso
vember. ,They must learn that ft is
. time to stop trifling with economic
. Joans: .that the resources of this
; country, rich and varied as they are
IS
. made upon them by the vacillating
course ui pumiciaus kuu ijaeiuiu-
statesmen. ..
, Four years ago the nation was en
joying unexampled prosperity; labor
was employed at remunerative wages;
capital was making a sure' return;
our relations with foreign nations
were honorable and peaceful, whilel
peace and plenty brooded over the
Jand. r t
tion of 1892, when the people over-
xthww existing conditions and started
-on a course which has stopped, but
.'-A fthnrr. rlrafanno frnm rnin Kinno
.March 4, 1892, there has been sad
died upon the country a debt of
(. O O AAA AAA a.nsx,. wK'nK .a An
- -WUKJVJUUj USlU " 11 11 I. blilb 1 J 1111
annual interest charge of over $11,-
flOfl AAA Tlio inmliii nihiili m
mained after years of Republican
Tule has disappeared, and in its stead
1 1 .. 1 C J.I.I. TL.
una uccu ten a muss ui ueuus. lue
American people have paid the price
of their folly, and years must pass
Hoeiore me eirecis wu cease Demg
felt. i
This one mistake the nation made.
Tt. nnw hna an riniinrtilnit.v fit mflltino-
"ir j r
another. The agitation which is
being carried-on for the free and un
limited coinage of silver is one of
the distressing signs of the times.
Should such a policy be decreed the
consequences to the country would
be dismaL The credit of the . na
tion, the welfare of the people, the
hopes for the future, are all involved
in the settlement of this question.
. Free coinage of silver cannot be
defended from any logical standpoint.
A large amount of silver is carried
in circulation because , the govern
. ment ! carries, a greater amount of
gold in which the silver, should it be
desired could be redeemed. . The
amdunt of bullion in a silver dollar,
at the commercial ratio, approxi
' innt.iv fifi.v rants, and should silver
be coined via, unlimited quantities,
the purchasing power would sink to
'the commercial value and it would
$ake- two dollars to buy what now
?an be obtained for one. The cred
, itor to whom; 4 debt of fifty dollars
; is due would receive but twenty
five, a nd . the countiy. . would soon
sink to an ultra silver basis.
The debtor . class might reap a
. temnorarv. advantage, but the fruits
l rf : CJ
would, bo bitter as further invest-
' i B ' , j a
UJCIJV VL. nuuiu j v 'tw vi uuv.
, business stagnation result, to which
' the present stringency would be in
significant - in comparison. The
.American people maintain a standard
of living higher than anv other na-
. , O . n
s tion. ; Under silver monometalism it
..would be brought to, the level of
Mexico. . -
The present campaign must be
" Ann ft rA iiAnfiAn ' Tf i a fVia ? 1 1 f vr rf
V1JC JL tUUVMVlVUl , Xw A a VUV UUUJ VI
every' voter to inform himself as best
ue luay, anu ne.x.i nureuuer ueuiuc
whether he shall vote to overturn all
: honest - conditions and -throw the
nation into a chaos from which it
i T V !t Jl
will take years to extricate it.
Those Democrats who object to
the arraignment of Cleveland's ad
r ministration, contained in the Repub-
; siller , whether or not all that was
sad is not true, i: There can be no
v doubt ' but that - the country V has
. massed through a period of-'.distress
-nasurpp.ssed in pur : previous history!
and it is just as true that this result
is due to - Democratic-, legislation.
... .. " . 4 ft . , sr j ' 1 tr
Ask the ; sheeD irrower -whose wool
lies unsold in the warehouses wLethe
the Republican platform is too severe
upon this free tradeadministration
Ask the manufacturer whose' mills
are closed and whose market is taken
a way by cheap fore ign i m porta tion,
Ask the laboring man vainly seeking
work. Ask these and many more
who have seen their belongings
swept away if every word in the Re
publican pfatform upon this point is
not true. We are not afraid of their
answer. ' '
THE, GOLD STANDARD:
The fact cannot be too often re
oea ted that the declaration of the
i 1
Renublican' nartv iD favor, of the
"
gold standard , simply , means the
maintenance of a thing that already
exists.; It is the free silver people,
says the Globe Democrat, who pro-
pose to make a change and establish
anew standard, inev arc against
the Dresent currency system, a'nd
anxious: to substitute for ii one un
iler'which. a different kind of money
would be used for the payment of
debts and wages and the transaction-
of the country's business. ' The Re
pnblicans believe in keeping things
as ther are in tnat respect. J.naw;
is to sav," they hold that we now
have sound and satisfactory money,
and that it would be foolish and dis
astrous to throw away this advan
tage. It is not proposed to eliminate
silver from the currency and prevent
its use for commercial purposes, but
only to so limit the amount of it that
it can circulate freely at parwitn
gold. Any intelligent voter can
readily comprehend the distinction
and the reason for making it. We
have absorbed as mnch silver as we
can , carry with safety, and the Re
publicans are opposed to an increase
of it that would inevitably unsettle
values, depreciate the currency, and
force. us at an inferior standard.
It is not true, as the free silver
orators practically assert, that the
Republican party is seeking to make
gold the only form of money in the
country. On the contrary, it mere
ly insists that other forms of money
shall be kept as good as gold. There
should be no objection to that from
any man who has the prosperity and
welfare of the country at heart.
There cannot be two standards of
value at the same time, and the Re
publicans contend that the one
which . now - exists, and ' which is
known to be safe, should not be ex
changed for ore that would be un
safe add in every way mischievous.
The silver element now in the cur
rency is. freely accepted because it is
on a parity with gold, and the1 Re
publicans wish to continue it in ser
vice on that basis; but they are
against the free and unlimited coin
age of it because that would dcstioy
the parity and flood the country with
a depreciated circulation. It is not
a question of dispensing with the use
of silver, but of adapting the volume
of it to the conditions which govern
its value. ,The limit of safety in the
coinage of such money . has been
reached, and the Republican party
says that we should have no more of
it when the result would certainly be
a stupendous misfortune. That is
what is meant, and all that is meant,
by ( the maintenance of a gold stand
ard. : -
The Oregonian has not given
much attention of late to the tariff
question, but it speaks out now and
then To. show it is all right on this
great issue. It would be hard to
overestimate the work the Oregonian
is doing for the cause of sound
money. ' It is presenting facts and
arguments to the people of Oregon
that cannot . help ; but hold . this
state in the Republican ranks. We
are glad to see it striking, home on
protection as it did . yesterday in
saying: - ,.
The people of Oregon and Wash
ington - want resonable protection,
equitably distributed ; therefore will
not forget that protection is an issue
in the presidential election. - The
Democratic tariff ,1 scheme bow m
force is unfair. 'It protects the East
and South at the expense of ' the
West and North. There , is no de
mand . for ; a . prohibitive tariff, but
there is a demand, and a just one,
that, so. long as protection shall have
any. place in our system; equity shall
not be disregarded in the application
of it.
THE TYPICAL' .AMERICAN: :
The second act io the presidential
drama has been played, and McKm
ley has felt his proudest moment.
The notification committee has per
formed its pleasant mission and told
the Ohio '. statesman of the honor he
has received. Every - day brings
new assurances of . the satisfaction
with which the nomiuatiou of Mc
Kinley is received. East and West,
North and South; even from the
bolting silver states, are heard the
shouts of ratification of the coaveu-
tion's work. . , ' : "V
The more McKinlev s lire is
biouitht out in detail, the more the
people lenrn that his character de
serve' all lue encomiums that have
been heaped upon it. ' He is a brave
soldier, a wise statesman, a patriotic
citizen, a model husband. His life
has been representative ' of what
every, ( American snoma attempt.
The efforts of partisan traducers to
belittle the name of McKinley will
fail, as they should, because of their
untruthfulness. , McKinley is a typ
ical American, and " in this day of
distrust throughout the land he is
just the man who can win "the confi
dence of all classes.
It is not McKinlcy's fame as a
Statesman, his record as a soldier,
nor his keenness as a politician that al
together makes him the hero of the
day. , His home life, his character as
man and a citizen, are among his
chief recommendations. Like that
Other Ohio- statesman, to whom his
tory has never given proper doe
the eminent man who occupied the
presidential chair for only four
vears. out who save to tne nation
one of its best administrations
Rutherford B. Hayes, McKinley will
enter upon hia office unimpeachable
in character and lacking nothing in
qualification. Truly he Ss "A Typ
ical American.""
Had U not been for the action of
the silver senators m defeating the
emergency tariff .bill, there now
would be hundreds of thousands of
dollars 4he proceeds fiem wool
sales in active circulation in The
Dalles Good authority states that
the passage of this bill would have
made a difference in the price this
season of from three to five cents.
.Multiplying 6,000,000 pounds, a
fair estimate of the wool in our ware
houses,, by either one of these figures
and you get what Teller and his
crowd have cost The Dalles; and we
are but a drop in the bucket com
pared with the- rest of he countryj
The action of the silver gang shows
he exteme limit of selfishness
Should such men have any standing
before the" country ?
The report which comes , from
Portland that several . members of
the First Regiment have lost em
ployment "because they answered the
summons calling them to Astcria,
should attract attention throughout
the state. It is generally considered
the First ; Regiment did ' effective
work in bringing . a peaceful solution
to the fishermen's strike. . The 'pres
ence of armed men was a prevailing
argument against any acts of vio
lence which may have been con
templated Such being the fact, the
action of Portland business men in
discharging employes who answered
the call of duty is reprehensible in
the extreme. There- is too little re
gard foi law and authority, and
when once the majesty of the law
has been upheld, all good citizens
should rejoice in the result. The
militia boys were not called upon to
shoot or kill and more's the rejoic
ing thereof but there is little doubt
but that they would have done what
duty demanded. , The names of the
Portland men who have discharged
militia iren should be made public
so the people 'may have a chance to
see what kind of creatures they are,
It is a safe k assumption they are
closely allied in thought and feeling
to the men who fired on Sumter.1 .
NOTICE FOR ; PUBLICATION.
Land Okfici at The Dalles, Or., I ,
May 4, 1896.
Notice is hereby given that the following
named settler has filed notice of his Intention to
make final nroof in BUDDortof his claim, and
that said proof, will be made before the register
ana receiver at ids utuiras, urcgoii, uu juu zu,
1896, vis:'
. ' Janaea F. Elliott.
Hd. E No. 3269, for the N WJ& Sec. 22, Tp. 1 N, B
15E - -
He names' the following witnesses to proV '
his continuous residence npon and cultivation
of, said land, vis: J. If. Allen U. J. Hurst
James Hurst, W. Bennett, all of The Dalles, Or
.-. mayS-i - MS. 1 . MOORE, Eeglatet .
THE ELKS EXCURSION.
A Trip Oo7i tba River Ever to Be B-
' 1 membred. ,
.The Elks had a great, time Saturday
aigbt upon the occasion of the first ex
cursion given by . the lodge of, this city.
The Regulator, which' left her dock at
:30, carried 150 happy excursionists,
who made tbe quiet banks ot the Colum
bia re-echo their merry laughter.- The
cabins 'were beautifully decorated with
evergreen, from bunches of which pro
truded two magnificent specimens of
elk heads. From " the . ceiling hong a
representation of a clock with the hands
pointing to the hour of 11 a time foil of
meaning to all good Elks. ."' , '
; Upon the lower deck a canvas had
been stretched which afforded an oppor
tunitv'for the Elks and (heir friends to
enjoy dancing. ' Delightful, music was
rendered by-Prof. Birgfeld, Mr. Peterson
and Miss Newman, n
At Lyle a stop' was made for nearly an
hour, after which the steamer drifted
slowly down the river for several miles.
Tbe moon had by this time rieen in fall
glory and the' scene, was undescribably
poetic. When :. weary of dancing, the
merry makers gathered in email- groups
upon tbe deck and listened to story tell
ing, sang rollicking songs and watched
the lights and shadows upon the moun
tains, through which the Columbia
works itsway to the sea.
Delicious refreshments were served
upon the boat and everything possible
was done by tbe officers and crew to
make tbe event unusually pleasant. Capt.
Waud, Officer ' Alden and Steward'
Rofeno and his assistants were untiring
in their efforts td please. -
The committee of Elks who had tbe
excursion in charge were J. S. Fish, R
Lonsdale and G. W. Phelps, and tbe
time and attention they devoted were
rewarded by the 'unequalled success of
the evening.
Cascade Lodge of Elks is a new insti
tution in The Dalles, but its roster roll
contains tbe names of our best citizens
and its meeting nights are largely at
tended and prove most, bd joy able events.
The Elks will soon move into the mag
nificent K. of P. hall in tbeVogt block,
where they will entertain their friends
on numerous occasions.'
NARHOWLY ESCAPED DROWNING
The Wife of Ediward , Z,eoard Drifts
' '.. . . Underneth si Scow.
Mrs. Ha. Leonard bad a very narrow
escape from death by (drowning Satur
day, andthe lives of her child, and two
ofiher laches were- also endangered
They were-all in a saoall boat, with Mr.
Leonard aad attempted to cross io front
of the wood scow "Flyer," owned by
Mr. J. T. Peters, which : with saris Bet
was slowly going ur stream. The little
boat got too close to tbe scow and Mr
Leonard lost control of it. It drifted up
against the scow, and. the powerfal sue
tion of tbe current had a tendency to
draw it underneath. By main force Mr
Leonard held the boat as long as he
could, while the ladies commenced to
elamber out on board the scow. The
small boat was rapidly filling, however,
and when all were out but Mrs. Leonard,
he was compelled-to loose his hold by
reason of the terrible pressure. The
boat and its oeeupant floated directly
underneath the scow, but the boat mir
aculously remained upright, with - Mrs.
Leonard lying down along th bottom.
A. small boat from tbe scow was hur
riedly lowered and chase given to- the
drifting boat.' It was overhauled about
a half mile below the scow, about a mile
down the river from The Dalles. . When
found Mrs. Leonard was still conscious,
butber lungs were filled' with water.
aiter laboring with her some time she
was fully resuscitated.
-. Belra Hogae'a Body Found.
About midday Saturday Louis Neil,
who had made a trip to his ranch, which
is situated some six and one-half miles
down the river, found the body of young
Belva Hogne, who was drowned on
Tuesday, June 16, near the water's edge,
in a very decomposed state. . He lifted
the body from the river and immediately
procured a vehicle and bad it conveyed
to the morgue. The boy capnot be
recognized and the mother, though some
what relieved at bis body haying been
recovered, refuses to be fully reconciled.
Tbe boy's father has not yet been com
municated with and ii, consequently,
still in ignorance of the family's lose.
The funeral took place from the morgue
at 9 o'clock Sunday - morning. Pendle
ton Tribune.
Spanish Outrage.
An American citizen writing . to a
friend at Key West, Florida, gives an
account of outrages perpetrated on Cu
ban women who obeyed, Weyler's order,
requiring them to pieeent themselves at
the Spanish forts and camps. He was
an eye-wi tness of one of the outrages.
Recently, Senora Martinez and her 15-year-old
daughter appeared at a Spanish
camp. After addressing' insulting re
marks to them, the officer in command
tore the clothing from the girl and ex
posed her to the soldiers. Then at the
point of the boyonet, the nude girl was
forced to march in front of the column
of troops. To escape -dishonor by the
Spaniards, hundreds of ' Cuban women
are joining the insurgent army. '
- V;-:-:V " '.'
', ,;; - , ' T Kent. ,
A" good six '. room house below the
bluff. Enquire of A. 8. Mac AUister,
this office. -' -' jun29 tf
AS
mm. jmi
ffi CIKS
OF GREAT INTEREST TO VOPErJ.
Pale Cheeks and -Nerveless Hands are rio Longer!
Admired. To be Strictly Correct you must
have Rosy Cheeks and Good Health.
Men Admire Wholesome-looking; Women, and now
Seek their Wives from that Class. '
A FEW POINTERS FOR THE GIRL OF THE PERIOD.'
Pure blood ia the secret of health and
beauty. The features may be regular, the
form perfect, but no woman can be beautiful
: in the full sense of the word while suffering
from any of the peculiar ailments of her aex.
Disease destroys the complexion, ia produc
tive of wrinkles and premature old age.
Regular monthly uterine action is necessary
. to every woman's health, and if this funo-
tion of life is checked, disease, a pale and
sallow complexion, and a feeling of exhaus
timi Km the result. - The monthly secretion
must continue from puberty to the turn of
, life without unnatural obstruction. Any
breach of this law of Nature will result in
the distressing symptoms which make the
' lives of seven-tenths of the women of this
country miserable, almost unbearable. A
few of these symptoms are severe headache,
loss of appetite, pale or sallow complexion,
palpitation of the heart, swollen ankles or
. lees, nervousness, offensive breath, etc, etc
Tne sufferer may exhibit one or more of
these symptoms, or may have all. They
imply indicate the ravages disease has made
npon the system, and the more of the symp
toms the patient shows the greater the neces
slty for prompt and persistent treatment,
until they have been banished and the
bloom of health is restored. To accomplish
this end Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are the
only unfailing remedy. They positively
cure all suppressions and irregularities,
which, if neglected, inevitably entail sick
ness and trouble. By taking these pills for
a week or ten days before the expected re
turn of each period, the prompt appearance
of ' '.Ahe visitor" is insured. For suppres
sion the pills must be taken steadily until
the re-appearance takes place generally in
a month's time, sometimes less. Follow the
directions on the pamphlet about each box.
' Nursing women will find their milk im
' proved in quality and quantity by taking
these pills, and also obtain relief from pain
in the back and general dragged-out feeling.
All displacements from weakness of the
uterine ligaments are speedily relieved and
ultimately cured by the use of these pills.
Leucorrhoea, bearing down, weight in the
pelvis, and all female weakness, find speedy
'- relief and cure in the administration of the
Pink Pills for Pale People. ,
The most critical period in the life of a
woman is that attending the cessation of
menstruation, or, as it is most generally
. termed, the change or turn of life.. The
- symptoms attending this period are fainting
' spells or attacks of faintnesa or dizziness,
headache, ' general debility, exhaustion, a
: feeling of melancholy, hysteria, pain in the
loins or limbs, hypochondria, etc The
change is a gradual one for better or worse
for the former if the patient is wise enough
-to fortify the system against the ravages of
, the symptoms attending the change. For
this purpose no remedy ever discovered
equals Dr. Williams Pink Pills. They
. purify the blood by acting directly upon the
sexual system, lessen the severity of this
critical period, and finally leave the patient
in the enjoyment of robust health. All
ladies appoaching this critical period should
take Dr. Willliams' Pink Pills.
PALE AND SALLOW GIRLS.
What can be more distressing than to see
a girl drooping and fading in the springtime
of youth Instead of bright eyes, glowing,
rosy cheeks, and an elastic step, there are
' duU eyes, pale, sallow, or greenish complex
ion, and a languidness of step that bespeaks
disease and an early death if proper treat
ment is not promplty resorted to and per
sisted in until the impoverished blood is en
' riched, and the functions of life become regu
lar. Upon parents rests a great responsi-:
biliry at the time their daughters are bud
ding into womanhood, U your daughter ia
Dyuam.lt Did It.
S. B. Baialey, who is Operating tbe
Nelson placer - mines in Baker county,
which are fed by tbe ' waters from the
reservoir that recently gave way,- re-
suiting in the death of seven people, in
speaking of the catastrophe to a Pendle
ton Tribute 'representative eaid that
in his opinion the reservoir was blown
up with dynamite: "I am satisfied that
this is the cause ot the accident," said
be,1 "and I think l ean place my hands-
on the man who did it. There was a
loud report heard in the vicinity of tbe
reservoir the day before tbe dam gave
away and in my opinion it bad some
thing to do with what followed.- There
are some people'who ill resort to any
extreme to do one an injury, without
anv regard to the consequences that may
be visited upon innocent victims. That
reservoir always has been safe, and I
still maintain that it would be there to
this day had it not been tampered
with."
YOU 3 r,4Hfeffl
' ''wM J3:' You will find one coupon
I 'I $ Inside each two ounce bag
rSVwX and two coupons Inside each
lilfllnlr" 1 J fourouncebagofBlackwell's
N flTrl Ini V -S3) .1 ' i l Durham. Buy a bag of this
. ' r"? jj zSlfWw i i 1 .celebrated tobacco and read
BLTTTHE rmJ . .3 the ooupon-whlch gives a
s sua. -fibSt ,i ..... "4te list of valuable present and
GENUINE ' jM :''yi bowtoetthem'-
pale, complains of weakness, is' " tired out "
upon the slightest exertion ; if she is trou
bled with headache or backache, pain in the
aide; if her temper is fitful and her appetite
poor, she is in a condition of extreme peril,
a fit subject for the development of that
most dreadful of all diseases consumption. '
If you notice any of these symptoms lose no
tin., in nw.nrino Tlr William' Pink- Pilla
They will assist
e patient to develop prop-
erly and reirularly ; they will
enncn toe
Diooa ana restore health's roses to tne
cheeks, bright eyes and a lightness of step
will surely follow their use, and all danger
of consumption and premature death willbe
averted. Wise and prudent mothers will -insist
upon their daughters taking Dr. Wil
liams' Pink Pills upon the approach of the
period of puberty, and thus avoid all chances
of disease and early decay. .
A Thankful Girl.
from the Examiner, San Franeiieo, OaL
Miss Lottie Donell lives with her parents
at 702 Natpma Street, San Francisco. She
is a young lady nineteen years of age, and of
prepossessing appearance. Ever since she
was ten years old Miss Donell has been a
sufferer from a rheumatic affection of the
wrist, and since she was thirteen yean of
age she has been subject to various female
weaknesses which have kept her physical
vitality at a very low stage. Thus, as she
says, she has been victim of disease ever
since she can remember. When she was
a little girl at school she was always placed
at a disadvantage with her playmates on ac
count of her frailty of body and timidity of
manner. She could never loin in any of the
more boisterous games, although sh always '
longed to do so. .
But the embarrassing conditions of Miss
Donell ' life have all been eliminated with
in the past year, and the change is wholly
due to the effective work of Dr. Williams'
Pink PUls. -
"It must be remembered, " said Miss
Donell in telling of the great relief that Dr.
William.' PUls had afforded her, " that at
the time I began taking the pills I had been
for yearsa confirmed invalid. Mywristwa
swollen out of all proportion by the chronic
rheumatism that had long since settled in it.
The female complaints from which I had so
long suffered had wasted my body away untU
I was but a mere shadow of my former self
and I had really come to think that the
brightness and happiness of life was not
meant for me. I had not the energy to per
form even the most simple of my household
duties, and, in a word I was completely "run
down.' I began to take Dr. Williams' Pills
while I was in this condition and before I
had taken half a box of them I realized that
they were doing me good. I began to feel
lively again and to lose the lax. feeling in
my limbs. I felt so happy over the momen
tary relief that had been afforded me that I
resolved to continue taking the pills. After
taking several more boxes I was more than
convinced of the high merits of the pills, for
I was then wholly relieved from the rheu
matic pains in my wrist and I had so far re-,
gained my vitality of body that I really
believed I had never experienced the ener
vating effects of those wasting diseases which
are so peculiar to women. It is a very great
pleasure to me to be able to tell my young
lady friends of the relief that has been af
forded me by Dr. Williams' Pills and I will
surely continue to recommend their use to
all who are afflicted with the complaints
from which I suffered." . ?
Piuk PUls are sold by all dealers, or will be
sent post paid on receipt of price, CO cents
. i r n . .
box or six boxes for S2.50 (they are never.
sold in bulk or by the 100), by addressing Dr.
WiliiwJJ' Medicine Schenectady, N. i".
Fruit mua Vegetable UhlpmeuM.
The following shipments were made
by express last night from The Dalles :
-A. Sechler, 4 cr beans, 10 bx cherries
and 8 sk beans.
A. Y. Marsh, 11 cr beans, 11 sk beans.
J. Klindt, 12 bx cherries.
- A. M. Eelsay, 6 sk beans. :
A. Field, 8 cr beans, 3 sk beans.
The commission companies, 24 sk
beans, 79 bx cherries, 4 ek beans. '
The total weight of all those ship
ments was 4,057 pounds.
When yon take Simmons Liver Regu
lator this spring for your blood and for
malaria, be ' sure to note how well it
works, and how quickly yon find your
selves improved in health and spirit.
"I was induced to try Simmons Liver
Regulator, and its action was quick and
thorough. It impaired a brisk and vig
orous feeling. It is an excellent rem
edy." J. R. Hiland, Monroe, Iowa.