The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947, May 29, 1897, PART 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    f2
THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE SATURDAY, MAY 29, 1897.
-The Weekly GhFoniele.
COUNTY OFFICIALS.
Count j Jndge...
Sheriff.
Clerk......
Treasurer!.. ...
Kobt. Mays
.......T. J. Driver
....... ....... .A M. Kelmy
,..-..C. 1 l-hillips
Commisaionera....... ! Ktmroy
Assessor. ....l...........-. W. II. Whipple
Surveyor J. B. toit
Superintendent of Public Schools. . .C. L. (ii Ibert
C .rooer -- W. H. BBlta
i - -
STATS OFFICIAXB. . ' .-
8overnot.. ....'..'.,,.' ... P. Lord
Secretary of State HE Kineaid
Treasurer .. ....... ...Phillip Metscnan
Bapt-ol Pnblio Inatrnctioo. O. M. Irwin
iMimMj3Mviil - C. M. Idlcman
. . : '. ' (G. W. MrBride
raiMun......... JJ. H. Mitchell
' . . tB Hermann
Congressmen.. ........ ............ jw. R. Ellis
Bute Printer. . ... .... . ... . . . . W, H.AUeda
PASSING THE TARIFF.
s Democratic senators in caucus
bav.e decided to offer no opposition
to immediate consideration bj the
. senate ot the tariff bill, and Lave is
. sued a statement in which they "rec
ognize that the business interests
of the, country require as speedy a
disposition of the question"as is con
sistent with an intelligent considera
tion of the measure."
It is a wise conclusion. Uncer
tainty as to pending tariff legislation
obstructs business and interferes with
industry. The pending tariff ques
tion is responsible in part for the
present gold drain to Europe. Anx
ious to evade the provisions of the
new tariff, importers are lushing for-
. eign merchandise into the country.
A recent treasury statement shows
. that imports of merchandise for
Apwl reached the unparallcd total of
$101,305,131.. Although exports
were $6,000,000 .larger than duiing
' the same month last year, the net re
suit is an excess ot imports over ex
ports of $23,570,431, as against' an
excess of exports in April last year
of $12,500,000. .
. The conviction that tariff agitation
hurts business and industry is shared
by all parties. The Republican na
tional platform of 189C recognized
this truth when it declared that the
country wanted a speedy, business
like, American solution of the tariff,
And then it wanted rest. The De
mocracy admits that it dare not ac
. cept the responsibility for filibuster
ing or " tedious opposition to the
Dingley bill.
It is apparent that the Republican
party will be permitted to write its
policies Into Iesislation with slight
obstruction and little delay. It
seems willing to face the responsibil
ity, and the opposition in congress is
just as willing to give it free rein.
. This is what the country wants. The
Republican party has promised a
line of legislation which, it guaran
tees, will restore prosperity. In four
years the soundness or the unsound-
. ness of these policies can be made
plain to the country. The Republi
can party has declared that the
trouble lies with the tariff, and that
when it has revised the tariff, the
country will be prosperous on the
single gold standard. The country
wants prosperity, and it wants the
test proposed by the Republicans,
and, as conceded by the Democratic
senatorial caucus, the sooner the test
can be applied, consistent with de
cent regard for the rights of open
discussion on the floor of congress,
. the better , will it be. -
SOME FEET:
The Ladies Home Journal is usual
ly artistic, but its June number com
bines poetry with art on its cover.
The female figure ornamenting the
cover page is poetical only in that it
has such metrical feet. The falling
drapery fortunately conceals the
larger portion of those pedestals, but
still there is enough exposed to show
that the model was born in Chicago.
The 'posing of the figure is phenome
nally . ungraceful, the, position, re
minding one of . the wouldTbe -senator,
Corbett, for . the left leg is a
dactyl and the. right a pterodactyl,
being several inches the longer,
while the. waist line runs diagonally
around the' slouchy figure from the
articulation of the left hip to that of
the right shoulder. Bad as the bal
ance of the figure is, the feet are so
excruciatingly and( infernally ugly
that ilia only by an effort that the
gaze may be diverted from them to
the balance of the figure." .
, Bulwer Lytton, in VA Strange
Story," describes the incantations of
Margrave and Xhe circle of lamps
that had to be kept burning, and he
puts the climax to the realistic and
horrid scene by making an immense
foot ad vance ever between . ' the
lamps. That ' f wot wasn't an inch by
Ibe side of the Chicago .tootsies the
artist has placed under that female
figure on the front page of the Home
Journal. , They look . as ; though they
belonged to the Goddess of Liberty
on Bledsoe island. : ..' . .': ';
TWO CONTEMPT.. CASES.
The trial of Sugar King H.-ivc-meyer,
in Washington, "D. C, is a
fine illustration .of the working or
our judiciary system ; Ilavemeyer
was arrested for contempt in refus
ing to answer questions put to him
by the senate committee concerning
the sugar trust. , This alleged con
tempt was committed in 189-4 three
j'ears ago, and is n,ow only brought
to trial.- Why has this delay oc
curred? There is but one answer-
j "through "the wealth and consequent
'pull' of the defendant." Tet after
three j'ears the proceedings are only
a farce, and it can be read between
the lines that Ilavemeyer is to be
discharged. Tlic judge has refused
to admit the senate journals in evi
dence, and the original stenographic
reports have been "lost." - So that
between the "unfortunate losing" of
the court notes and the ruling of the
judge there is absolutely no evidence
that can be produced , against his
majesty of the sugar ring.
We have a very distinct recollec
tion of another contempt case.that
occurred in Chicago about the same
time that Ilavemeyer was snapping
his fingers at the senate . committee
It , was that of Eugene V. Debs.
Now we have no particular liking for
Debs, but we do, have the-utmost
veneration for justice, and the prin
ciple that all men are equal before
the law. Debs was the leader of a
lot of working men! He was guilty
of contempt, and he was promptly
tried without any legal quibbling,
and as promptly sent to jail. Why?
Because be did not have great
wealth, and consequently did not
have the pull.
- It is one of those cases in which
it is plainly shown that there is at
least two interpretations of the law
in his country; one in favor pt the
rich, another invariable against the
poor. Since civilization began this
has been, in -a measure, true, but
never to such an extent as at pres
ent, and it is one of the rocks upon
which the good ship of state is sooner
or later to wreck. With power to
cause legislation in favor of their
class and pull to influence the courts
in the interpretation of the laws, the
aggresssiveness of a certain class be
comes daily more bold, and its con
tempt for the masses greater.
This will continue until the peo
ple get tired unto sickness of it,
when there will be an uprising that
will make certain judges wish they
had never been, born, and that will
strip the Havemeyers and the Rocke
fellers, the Collis P. . Huntingtons
and the Spreckels of lives and mill
ions. History shows that wealthy class
es become" arrogant, and unmindful
of the rights of the toilers. The
classes are numerically as 1 to 1000,
and the result of , a conflict between,
them can be easily foreseen. . - -
And yet in the face of history the
classes will not take warning of , the
danger that lies around them. Their
ships float easily upon the placid
waters of the sea, upborne by the
tide of humanity; but there is going
to be a vast wreckage when that sea
is swept by a storm. Corrupt le'gis
lators and dishonest judges, both the
creation of the Ilavemeyer class, will
stir up the storm. ' - ; , ,:
WEEKLY MARKET LETTER.
The past week has added mate
rially to the previously strong posi
tion of wheat values, viewed from
the position of supplies and demand.
The crop prospect as a whole retro
graded, but more particularly in Cali
fornia, where drought and hot winds
have caused a reduction , in expected
yield of at least 25 per cent, as com
pared with last year. . Foreign cro"p
prospects are much poorer, especially
in France, where the estimated yield
is 75,000,000 bushels smaller than
last year, and conservative grain
dealers , predict large importations
during the coming crop year. Values
have been firmly held,' and, while no j
material advance has occurred,' the
market has- gained ' In - strength, and
receives better suppoat than during
the previous week. '' . '
IT WAS NOT. CONTEMPT.
' We suggested yesterday that Mr.
Ilavemeyer, who was being tried in
Washington for contempt of court,
would be . cleared, and that because
he had " money, and therefore influ
ence. The dispatches this morning
announce ihat this was done. They
announce, also, that Mr. Havenieyer
said, "The decision is perfectly satis-factorj-
. to me, and to "every other
decent man in the -district." He
may be right, and it may be possible
that eyerydeccnt man in the District
ot Columbia feels as- he docs, abont
it. V The population of Washingtcn
City is composed of pap-suckers,
time-servers and "puU'.'-worsbippei'S.
Wealth and Pull are the idols before
which these invertebrates grovel, and
the decent men of the country at
large cannot be. measure'd by . the de
cent things composing the peon pop
ulation of our national capital.
Ilavemeyer snapped his fingers at
the court, and the courts say that
owing to his wealth,, his social and
financial position and his great po
litical influence, he had a right to
snap said fingers at. said court as
aforesaid. ' "'.'- -'.-
"Well, after all,, ib is only a ques
tion ot time until we shall all be on
the same level with Ilavemeyer, for
our courts are rapidly approaching
that stage where the people have no
confidence in them, and when they
will pay no attention to their com
mands. Between a system of judi
cial anarch and just plain, simple,
every-day anarchj the latter . is
preferable, because general judicial
anarchy simply says there is no law
to punish or control the rich; simple
auarehy says there is no law for any
body. We do not like either, but
if choice has to be made, the masses;
will soon decide in favor of the lat
ter. ; - - : : . .-'
If there is no law to punish Ilave
meyer for contempt, there should be
no law to punish Debs for contempt!
The invidious distinction 1m caused
almost a universal "contemr t of
court," and we hazard the opinion
that if Debs were to be tried tomor
row, now that Ilavemejcr has been
set free, the American people would
not permit him to go to jail. They
would mob the , court first. . The
load has made the public ba:-k sore,
and when once that public starts in
to buck-it off.it will be time for
some judges to hunt tall timber.
. A succcsful French writer under
takes to show bis couutrymen the
barm that has come to them through
international exhibitions. lie gives
the foremcst place amoug these ills
to American progress. He alleges,
and doubtless believes, that AmeVi
cans Lave attended previous exhibi
tions merely to learn, and that they
did learn. Then they went Lome
and applied their information. ' Even
the comprehensive branch of industry-
and trade, embracing what are
known as articles do Paris, has been
trenched upon. Americans, he says,
are producing in the some field, and
their imports from France have
greatly fallen off. In addition to
these considerations he has artistic
objections to the arrangements for the
exhibition of 1900, and be combines
his griefs in deprecation of that
project. ' ' :. ' ';;
The tariff debate ' has begun, but
no one can tell when it will end.
The silver men have seemingly united
upon a plan of action,, which is cal
culated to hinder the passage of the
bill, it being neither more nor less
than an indorsement of the Lubin
idea, of giving a bounty on exported
agricultural products. The amend
ment proposed by Senator Cannon of
Utah is to pay-a .bounty of 10 cents
per bushel on wheat, 50. cents per
barrel on .wheat flour, 5 cents a
bushel on corn, 1 cent per pound on
cotton, 2 cents on hops, and 2 cents
on tobacco. . They' do hot expect
this amendment to pass, but will use
it to delay and defeat the Dingley
bill, and for that purpose only.-
The managers of the Utah Pioneer
Jubilee claim that President McKin-
ley will visit Salt Lake during the
jubilee, and that he is already plan-.
ningtne tup. . He aouot tbis very
much. Like his ' predecessor, the
president ."has a ' congress , on his
hand9." There; is going to be
little jubilee in Washington between
this and August, and the program
has not yet been" printed. Besides,
the action of Senator Cannon of Utah
m tacking that Lubin amendment
onto the tariff bill, is not going to
make the president feel hilariously
friendly towards Utah. - ,. .
A rew days ago the town was
overrun with, wool buyers? and drum
mers, but now there is hardly one in
the city. They all seemed to get
the Heppner fever at once, and de
parted for- that town.'. In a sbor
time the wool buyers will be back
and then ' a price will be made for
wool. It looks as though , each of
them was waiting for the others to
make the move, and all are ' waitin,
the action of the senate on ihe tariff
bill.
Turkey's indemnity demands shrink
with a steadiness which 8hovs that
she never expected to gel her ori
ginal figure. There is a strong prob
ability that she will never get any
thing in the shape of money out of
Greece, and very little in the way of
territory." She has won some pres
lige, however, at a very small ex
penditure in either money-or blood.
and even if she should 'get no other
compensation she would have.no
right to complain. ; -
Each day teaches the American
people a fresh lesson on the import
ance of Arbor Day and timber cul
ture. .Down in Texas week before
last six men were hung from a single
. . . . i - .
bough. , ouch incidents are alarming
indications of the depletion of tim
ber. ; Texas furnishes a profitable
field for tree culture, and the demand
is constantly increasing. Astoriau
Congressman Cochran of Missouri
has introduced in the house a resolu
tion for an amendment to the con-
8iitution" permitting an income tax
to be levied, the supreme court of
tbc, United States having decided
the' last income tax law passed by
congress unconstitutional.
A FIGHT TO THE END.
Southern raolfle Again Cnta Ita Special
,."' : . - Train Kates.
The black flago' uncompromising bos
tilities lias evidently been hoisted by
the Southern Pacific in its rate war on
the O. R. summer steamship travel
between Portland and San Francisco,
and a third cut was announced late last
Lvenirjg and ordered to be pat in effect
June 11. It is:
First clues, sleeper included. ... . .$10 00
Second class, sleeper included . . . '. . 7 50
In order, however, to secure these
fighting rates, passengers wishing to go
south or come to Portland wi'.l have to
pay lull rate of $20 first class and $15
second class, as evidence of good faith
that they are going tbrongh to destina
tion. Each ticket will be provided with a
rebate conpon, and at the end of bis or
her journey, the traveler will get a re
bate of $10 on a first-class ticket, and
$7.50 on a second-class ticket. This' the
Southern' Pacific is compelled to do in
order to protect its intermediate passen
ger business, the local rates of which'
will not be affected by the rate war at
the terminal pointe. It appears that
the interstate commerce commission has
no voice in this matter, from the fact
that San Francisco and Portland are
railroad points affected by water compe
tition, and where a railroad company is
supposed to be at liberty to meet the
rates of a water rival. In this instance,
however, the cutting of rates was inaug
urated by the Southern Pacific, and not
by the O. R. & N. . -.
N6 information could be obtained last
evening showing that the (). R. fc N. had
met this third cat rate of the Southern
Pacific, and, the information coming so
late, it .is fair to presume that no
changes were made ; but it is safe to
gamble on the proposition that the O.
R. & N. people will meet the cat today,
and. go their friends, the enemy, one
better. Oregon ian . ' .
A Had Wrack.
, At about 4 o'clock Thursday morning
at American Falls, on the Oregon Short
Line, tnere was t bad accident, result
ing In the death of one passenger and
eight or nine boboes. . . ' -
The weet-boupd passenger that passed
bere this morning was on the main track
waiting for. freight train No. 22 to pull
in. Xne ireignt was joaaea wun lum
ber, and coming down, the grade into
the station the. brakes , would not hold,
and there was a rnnaway. The engineer
of the freight gave a danger signal, and
the passenger train started to. back oat
of the way. . It bad attained a speed of
six or seven miles an . hour, when the
freight dashed inta' it, running sfxty
miles an hour. The passenger train was
not damaged, nor any one on it hart.
One passenger who was on the platform
and saw there was going to be a colli
sion, jumped off at the depot, and when
the crash came the freight cars left the
track, demolished the depot, and killed
the passenger who had just got off the
train. ;;' . ;. '':;
The . engineer ' and fireman of the
freight each received broken limbs In
the crash, but stayed at' their posts., A
gang of hoboes, eight or nine in nam her,
vetfi on the freight and all were killed.
Graduating Kxerctso.
Following is the program of the gradu
ating exercises of . The Dalles High
School : tomorrow night at the' Vogt
Grand: - . .
School Anniversary Anthem . . ' . :
... High ochool Chorus
Clasi History ...... . . Frances H. Pouts.
'Whom Does the World Owe a LtviDe?"
Victor K. U. Schmidt
Solo "I Have a Little Doll, Dears".
....... .. Trudie Kow.and
"Lookinsr Forward"..: . . Beulah Beatrice Sterling
"Music and Ita Influence". .... Ethel B, Deming
Song "Elver of Time"-". . .High School Quartet
"if Washington Should Betnrn".. .
. Arthur C. titubling
"The Love of Our Native Laud". . :
...... . . Male Eleanor Klton
Piano Duet "Tancred" . '
....... .Clara Mckelsen and Florence Hilton
"Wasco County in 1997'-'... ... Georgia L. Bonney
"Days of Youth are Days of Pleasure" . : .
-. MLxea yuurret
"Problems America Has Solved".
.... . .-, ... ..Carletjn Earl Sitnders
Class Prophecy. . . .. .-. .. . .Harriet A. Marden
"Mornine Chorus" "... '.
trouoie Quartet and; Duet Obllgnto
Presentation of Dlnloma. .-. .Dr. O. D. Doane.
Chairman Board of Directors
."Hark! .They Come". . .... . .High Bchool Chorus
Sneaking has been left or tional with each
member of the clags, and the following have
h imurawn in order 10 give more time to tnose
wno mate pari: . .
Money". .Emma E. Bonney
"The Growth of Education in Oreeou" .
tiva May ureiguton
Religion, a Criterion of a Nation's Progress"
. Orson Daton Taylor
"Great Men in Life and in Death
, Ketta Olive Taylor
tetter Vrom Mr. Farrla.
We received this morning the follow
ing letter from Mr. James Ferris, who
recently went from this place to Yakima.
Mr. Ferris is 84 years old, and his letter
siiows that he is still a keen observer,
and that his mind is still vigorous. The
letter is dated ' at Yakima City, May
26th, and is as follows: , -
Deab Friends: I write a few lines to
let you know I am in Yakima City at
John FarrisV I am well as when I left
The Dalles. Wasi eight, days coming
from The Dalles, camped - out' seven
nights, and got to John's the eighth day.
stood the trip well and am enjoying my
self well with John's children. He is
away shearing sheep, leaving the second
day after I goc bere. He has qui tea crew
ana nave all the shearing they can do.
Times are dull here and money scarce.
There is - nothing of importance here.
Last November the river was very high.
It took two bridges away and one man
drowned hard to save several others.
I am trying to set the paper that has the
matter in. If I can find it, I will send
it to yon. I got several papers from yon,
for which I thank yon very kiudly, bat
they came to the wrong office. The v
came to North Yakima and mv address
is Yakima City, Wash. The offices are
about four miles apart. Yakima City is
where I am. I send von where John is
and yon can see what a crowd he has.
w e have good - weather now. Straw
berries are getting good. I know noth
ing to- Interest yoir. Hoping to hear
from you soon, direct Yakima City,
VVaeb. .. -Yours trnly,
James Fabkis.
Advertlaed Letters.
Following is the list of letters remain
ing in the postoffice at The Dalles un
called for May 29, 1897.'. Persons call
ing for the same will give date on which
they were advertised :
Fisher, JD
James, Jessie
Kilpatrick, Frank
Manley, A B
Pressen, Mrs A ;
Ralppson, R
Rothery, B M '
Smith, DC.
Sims, J A
Sheavancy, J W
Jones, Chas (5)
Leist, RC -Pratt,
B F .
Press, A
Redden, Lulie .
Ridall, Mrs Anja
Smith, Wm R"
Smiley, Thou (21
Staples, C .
Sopping, Geo P-'
Satter white, Mrs E
Wilson, Jas D
Whitehead, Fred G
v ood, uarrv r
Wilde, John W
Waller, Alwir F
Wallis, WAV
J. A. Crosses, P. M.
There - was a .lively . rnnaway about
12:30 this afternoon, the! team being
that of . J. Collins & Co. What fright
ened the horses, we did not learn, bnt
they came np second street like a Kansas
cyclone, and sticking to the middle of
the road like a gold . Democrat. There
was some bread and several axes in the
wagon when the race began, bnt these
were thrown ont promiscuously aa the
wagon hit the street crossings. In front
of Fred Fisher's the runaways ran into
tour-horee team, knocking two of the
horses down, and falling themselves.
The tongue was broken from the four-
horse wagon, but that was all. the dam
age done. ' :-' .
Flowers for Decorating.
Al1 persons desiring to assist in fur
nishing flowers for decorating our heroes
graves on' Memorial Day, are invited to
send their offerings to Fraternity ball on
next . Monday . morning between ' the
hours of 10 and 12. , Per order -: ;. ' ; ,
,' - Maby Leabnbd,
Mabt S. Mybbs, . : President.
i' Secretary. ' ,
Casta in Tour Checka.
All county warrants registered prior
to Dec.; 1, 1892, will be paid at my
office. : Interest ceases after May . 7,
1897. C.1L Phillips,
.; . County Treasurer."
Yellow washing powder will make
your clothes "the same color. , Avoid
this by nsiDg Soap Foam. It's pure
white. ,'..'.'-' a2-3m
BICYCLES AND BOOKS.
2ffect of the Whoel on the Demand
'' for Literature.
eiew York BookaeUers Say Their feoslneaa
Has . Been Seriously Affected
' ; . by the Bicycle Epl
. demte. v
" Among the many trades that com-,
plain of' the havoc .' that , has been
wrought among them by the craze foi
bicycling ' is that of , the bookseller,
who says that, at present at least, people-would
rather wheel than read.
The Publishers' "Weekly treats of the
matter editorally in rather a despairing
vein,, though, it sees some light Xar ;
ahead, and meanwhile advises the weep
ing bookseller to udd biC3-cles to hia
stock. . It-anys: . ' '. ' '
"'Do bicycles hurt books?' tves the
momentous question recently put by
the New York Times to a. number of
booksellers in Sew York city, and the
weight of opinion :iecnicd to, be in the
affirmative. ' Not only thr book trade,
but all other trades That have been in-tervie-.ved
ou the Eubjc-ct chum to.suffei;
from the bicycling epidemic. Tliougb
much cf this y.-ailiug -is, verhaps, ex
aggerated, it is net altogether based on
imagination. It docs not, for instance,
seem - unreasonable to as.su.ne, ; when
confronted with the report that nearly
$2,000,000 are invested in the manufac
ture of bicycles in and near New York,
city nlone, and that, nearly S00.000 per
sons in the same locality are already
addicted to 'wheeling, that the 'wheel' .
does affect retail trades in general,
and noticeably" the ..book trade.vVhich
depends tipca- sedrntory rather than
perambnlatory habits.-- : -
'However, there . seercs to be some
hope left. One of the booksellers . in
terviewed, ' himself an enthusiastic
wheelman, is .of the. opinion that the
present effect of bicycling on the book
trade must be only, temporary. - His
theory is that the increase of wheeling
mean at the aamq time an increase of
vigor and good health among the peo
ple. ' Once the, first and present phase
of wheeling is over, this renewed vigor
will exhibit itself in a practical manner.
as the people cnco r.ore return to their
libraries end books in better health and
better prepared to, enjoy them. lake
all fads, bicycling- will reach a climax
and then the reaction will set in.. How
nearly that climax has been reached
it would be rash to say; but the indica
tions are that it is not yet in sight.' The
manufacturers of bicycles have not yet
touched bottom, so far as prices are
concerned, and ivntjil they do, there will
still be millions 'to pass through the
craze which for the time being is de
moralizing the equilibrium of trade.
We note in this connection the pro
posal of a bookseller that the book trade
add bicycles and their concomitants to
ita stock? Dry goods stores, the depart
ment stores generally, says our friend,'
besides a number of miscellaneous
stores -among the latter are mentioned
even several drug stores in New York
city already do a thriving business in
bicycles. If the bookseller is for the
moment denied the privilege of furnish- .
ing his fellows with lamps to their
feet, why, he claims, should '.he not
keep lamps for their wheels, and so
bind them to the habit of buying at a '
bookstore? The Prophet J ahum, thou- .
sands of years ago, lamented 'that the
city is full of the noise of the wheels.'
And the world still moves! Why, then.
should booksellers mope and be unhap
py? Let them take Launee's advice, and '.
help to 'set the world on .wheels.- At '
this fin de iecle .'everything does!
'Caps and bells' will be 'called in by
the inexorable decrees of fashion," but
of the making of many books there will
be no end nor of the selling of them,;
either. Literary Digest.
Regulator Line
Tie Dalles. Fortoi ail Astoria
.-'. ' ' ' ' V ."'
" Navigation Co.'
ars. Regulator & Dalles CSty
FREIGHT AND PASSENGER LINE
.V"'.- '. -' ' BETWEEN
The Dalles, Hood River, Cascade Locks and Port
land daily, except Sunday.
GOOD SERVICE. LOWEST RATES.
DOWN THE VALLEY
. OR TO '
EASTERN OREGON ?
Are you going '
If so, save money and enjoy a beautiful trip on
the Columbia. The wet-bound train arrives at
The Dalles in ample time for paBsenirers to take
the steamer, arfivlnff in Portland in time for the
outgoing Southern and Northern trninn; East
bound passengers arriving In The tlales la time
to take the East-bound train. -
For further information apply to
N. HARNEY, Agent, v ' .
:-, Oak Street Dock. Portland, Oregon, .. " -
Or W. C. AXLAWAY, Gen. Agt,
. The Dalles, Oregon
SURE CURE for PILES
Itchin nd Blind. Bleedin's mr Protmdtnr PI 1m vUM .
DR. BO-8AM-KO'S PILK REMEDY. Stop. ilc
in, absortw tuntars. A pOaStire eyre. Circoiara Pot free, Pria
Otis. Iruifi.ugrU.. Jt. ALOSAX&O, Phil. PT