The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947, June 16, 1897, PART 1, Image 2

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    THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY. JTJNE 16. 1897.
The Weekly Gtooniele.
COUNTY OFFICIALS.
Cramy Judge Kobt. Mays
Sheriff. .' T. J. Driver
Clerk A M. Kelsay
Treasurer C. L frhillips
!.,. I A. o. jj lower
Commissioner !D H KimseT
Assessor W. II. Whipple
Surveyor J. B. -ioit
Superintendent of Public Schools. . .C. L. Gilbert
Coroner W. H. Butts
STATE OFFICIALS.
ejvernor W. P. Lord
Secretary of State H R Kincaid
Treasurer .Phillip Metschan
Bupuof euhllc Instruction i. ju. irwin
Attorney-General C. M. Idleman
u,.f IG. W. McBride
Bwators.. - IJ.W. MitcheU
(B Hermann
uusicdoiucu 1 W. R Ellig
SUte Printer ... '..,W. H. Leeds
THEY KICKED, OF COURSE.
The firemen's tournament at Baker
City is over, that is all except the
kicking, that still continues. It is
quite probable that the races were
fairly run, impartially timed and cor
rectly judged, and yet every team
competing has son; kick to register
and each is satisfied and apparently
honestly satisfied that every other
team had the better of it. This very
fact indicates the fairness ot the
races, which, no doubt, were decided
in favor of the teams that won
them.
We may draw a moral from this
and profit by it at the tournament to
be held here in September. The se
lectins; of judges and timers should
be left entirely to the competing
teams. It won't stop the kicking,
but it will enable The Dalles to say,
"Gentlemen, if you are gentlemen,
you selected your starters, umers
and juiges. If you made a mistake
it was your own, not ours. We are
glad to have 3'ou shove your legs
under our mahogany and partake of
of our hospitality, but if you want
to kick shins under the table, just
kick each others and let ours alone."
We have never known a firemen's
tournament to pass off without kick
ing. It's a part ot the program in
which each team makes about the
same time, and all break the record.
Good generalship requires that the
kickers should kick against each
other and not against us, and a little
worldly wisdom will suggest some
such plan as we have outlined. By
the way, we might add to disprove
the old adage, "The kickers always
get there," that in firemen's tourna
ments the kickers are the fellows who
don't get there.
When the soreness of defeat wears
off, all the competing teams will real
ize that Baker City treated them
fairly and royalty. Being a mining
town, it wouldn't know how to do
anything else.
swell its rolls at the expense of the
others. They have become entirely
too plentiful, too aggrescive, too
much of a business proposition. They
are quite a drain on individuals and
the community, and while some of
the money expended in them comes
back, there Is some that does not
They are a good thing, only it
should not be forgotten that it is pos
sible to have too much even of a
good thing.
THE DEMOCRATIC IDOL.
THE STRIPED BASS.
The question of introducing striped
bass in the Columbia is being agi
tated. The bass is a game fish, and
a good one. There is no objection
to him on that account. The only
question is, will he interfere with the
salmon. If so, we do not want him
if not, we do. Until this question is
settled, and settled definitely, we do
not want him. We have the carp,
and we would like to be rid of him
A fish that will come ashore in the
night and eat up all the garden stuff
and grass within two hundred yards
of the water, is too deucedly handy ;
too versatile. It is said the striped
bass is fond of him, and will assist in
destroying him. If so, and the
salmon will not be injured, the
quicker the bass can be put at work,
the better.
As far as the carp is concerned, it
is a source of wonder why any one
should have been foolish enough tj
transplant it anywhere. It has more
bones than a sucker, and tastes like
blue clay. It is a sluggish, lazy,
swiDifh fish, no sport to catch, no
good to eat.
There seems to be a conceited
plan among the papers opposed to
free silver to belittle William J.
Bryan. He is spoken of as "little
Billy Bryan," and in other terras
equally suggestive. Whatever opin
ions may be held concerning the free
coinage of silver, and however much
the papers in question, or their read
ers, may differ irom jar. .Bryan m
bis views, the fact is undeniable that
he is no longer the coming man of
the free silverites, for he is here, and
here to stay. He bas taken a firm
hofd on those who followed him in
the last campaign, and he is to be
the next antagonist the Republican
nominee for president will have to
face.
It is utter foolishness to belittle an
antagonist, and those who watched
Mr. Bryan's campaign realize that in
his case it is something that cannot
be done. Possessed of strong con
victions, a wonderful mind, fine ora
torical powers, young, keen, hopeful,
aspiring, aggressive; he is foeman
worthy of any man's steel. He may
be thought little, but he is large
enough to have out-topped Cleve
land. That gentleman is a back
number; Bryan is the living popu
lar volume. His campaign was one
of the marvels of American political
history. He made from three to
twenty-five speeches a day for months.
He was tireless, sleepless, and in nil
that campaign, making as be did in
numerable speeches, he never made
a mistake. He is the idol of Democ
racy today, and has awakened among
the masses an enthusiasm that will
make him a dangerous foe to the
best man the Republican party con
find. The measures be advocates
may be wrong, his theories of gov
ernment faulty; but right or wrong,
he looms up across the political sky
the giant of the Democratic party.
It may be the race of last year over
in 1900, but whether it is or not,
if W. J. Bryan is alive, then he will
be the candidate for president whom
the Republican nominee must meet.
The silver question has been stirred
punch-bowl and the gewgaws and
jim-cracks accompanying the bowl,
will probably have to be loaded on
a wood scow and sent down to Asto
ria, or freighted over to some point
on the SouLd where the ship may be
found. That silver set ought to be
a valuable souvenir, for it was a sub
ject of annoyance, sorrow and tribu
lation from its inception. It was
hard to get, and apparently just as
much difficulty has been experi
enced in getting rid of it. Oregon's
best wishes go with it, if it goe3, and
along with the wishes goes the hope
that it may never come back.
AN UNMUZZLED PRESS.
up,
and the roiled waters will not be
SECRET SOCIETIES.
These be the days of secret soeie
tics. Their name is legion, and the
field, already filled, is being yet more
olosely packed with yet other orders,
treading on each other's heels in the
scramble for first place. '
Secret societies are all right in
their place; their objects are all for
good, or most of them are; but they
are becoming a nuisance, just from
sheer force of numbers. There are
now thirty or forty of them, each
ready . to prove that it is the best ;
each with its members working to
get other members; each trying to
taken out of politics m the next
dozen years. It will die eventually
from the repeated defeat of silver
advocates, from the balance of the
world deciding against it; but until
then William Jennings Bryan is its
avatar.
In the' trial of the newspaper cor
respondents on indictments for hav
ing refused to answer certain ques
tions asked them by the senate sugar
trust investigating committee, the
question to be determined, and
which the papers the reporters rep
resented are determined to have set
tled, is the right of a newspaper
representative to refuse to disclose
the sources of his information. Act
ing under instructions from their
employers, the. reporters refused to
answer the questions put to them,
and are now being tried for con
tempt. The question is, can they, or
ought they, be made to tell where
the information came from. To the
first half of the question the answer
might be yes; to the latter half there
can be but one reply, and that
most emphatic no!
Newspapers publish news at their
peril. If they make misstatements
concerning any one, both the crim
inal and civil law may be invoked
the one to their punishment, and the
ether to compensating the injured
party in damages. Public good dc
mands the publication of public busi
ness; liow it is managed, or misman
aged, and this regardless of whom it
hurts. All the public needs to know,
all anyone needs to know, is that the
statements made in a paper are true
The fact that the injured parly, if
such, has his remedy in the courts, is
sufficient protection to the public
against any abuse of power on the
part of the press. If the position
maintained that a reporter must dis
close the sources of his information,
much of the power for good will be
taken away from the press, for then
the information will be withheld.
Men in high positions, realizing that
a newspaper seciet is inviolable, fur
nish information that otherwise
would never be made public.
Once the press, is muzzled, a great
sigh of relief would go up from pec-
ulative senators and other officials,
as well as from some of the big syn
dicates and trusts. Free speech and
a free press, "unaweil by influence
and bribed by gain," are necessities
of the times.
his delicate instincts will cause the
ladies to smother him with flowers.
The annexation of Hawaii is as
certain to happen as anything earthly
can be. The sugar trust is against
it, because it wants its products, now
admitted free of duty, shut out of
competition with itself. The greater
number of the people do not want it,
because of the mixed population it
would add to our citizenship. But
in spite of this feeling, the annexa
tion will be made, simply because
this government will not allow any
Other nation to absorb Hawaii; and
to prevent it this government will
have to take it in.
hb n?.n
!lifl liiillQ
80
1811
Senator Aldnch is said to be so
sisk that he will be unable to attend
the session of the senate during the
debate on the tariff bill. Some very
ugly accusations have been made
against him, be being openly ac
cused of having . been band in-glove
with the sugar trust in preparing and
advocating certain duties in its favor.
If one-half the statements are true
we do not wonder at his being sick.
He ought to be dead.
A CROOK COUNTY IDEA.
Geo. W. Barnes, in a communication
to the Prineville Review, gives the en
tire credit of opening the Cascade re
serve to pasturage to a few Prineville
men and the Prineville papers. We re
alize that the Prineville' papers present
ed the facts in the case strongly, and do
not doubt but that the gentlemen named
by Mr. Barnes did all in their power;
bat there are others, and one of them,
contrary to Mr. Barnes assertion, was
the Hon. John H. Mitchell. Mr. Barnes
very childishly remarks that "if the
trnth could be non, he (Mitchell) did
all he could against tbeui, because he
did not get all the votes of Wasco,
Crook, Gilliam and Morrow." Mr.
Barnes is a lawyer, and yet he makes an
assertion which he admits he does not
know to be true.
John H. Mitchell is still a factor, and
a large one, in Oregon politics, and in
his own interests he would not oppose
the demands of the people of Eastern
Oregon, for he may yet ask fartLer
favors at their hands. Bnt ontside of
that, Senator Mitchell has always, m
season and ont, looked after the inter
ests of his constituents, regardless of any
selfish interest. It was throngh his
prompt action, and through him alone,
that the reservation was thrown open in
1895 and kept open in 1896. We know
whereof we speak.
Mr. Barnes is either grossly misin
formed, or has a grievance of his own
against Mitchell.
The battleship Oregon will not
come to Portland, and so the silver
A TENDER MURDERER.
It is wonderful how keen a sense
of propriety, how delicate a percep
tion of moral turpitude, and how
tenderly solicitous of others' good
names even a hardened criminal may
be. E. B. Soper, alias "Sandy"
Sopcr, is an apt illustration of this
fact. Sandy, judging from his pic
ture in the Oregonian, is a lantern
jawed, crop haired crank, and yet his
history shows that he -as a loving
father and a tender husband. He
loved bis children so dearly that re
alizing he could not educate them
and give them such advantages as he
desired, he killed them to put them
out of their miser'. Then when he
thought over his act, and of - what
disgrace it would bnng upon his
beloved wife, if it was discovered
that her husband was the murderer
of her children, his conscience smote
him. He just couldn't bear to think
of it, so, moved by his mighty love
for the dear woman, he killed her
too, to prevent any such disgrace
falling upon her.
Then he came to Portland and
mairied again, and the evidence goes
to show that he there murdered an
other of his children, a little 2-year-old
girl, by his second wife. Tfie
motive in this case is unknown, but
presumably it was a highly-sympathetic
and proper one.
Soper is on his way back to Mis
souri to answer for his crimes before
a hart-hearted lot of men, but un
doubtedly a proper appreciation of
A man working out his road tax
in Columbia county, was suddenly
stricken with total paraljsis of .tLe
tongue. It is supposed over exertion
of that member induced "by his try
ing to do his full duty as a public
servant was the cause of the trouble.
It Shortened the Patient's Leg Two Inches.1
and so Affected the llervous System
that He Continually Shook as
with the Palsy.
.. j j
After Six Years of Torment He Succeeds in Find
ing a Remedy for the Horrible Disease.
HOOD RIVER'S EXPERIENCE.
Only One Basket for Its Eggs, and That
Dropped.
Hood River is undoubtedly one of the
finest eections of Oregon, and yet just
now the people down that way feel
pretty blue and sore, resulting from the
partial failure of the strawberry crop,
aggravated by a really inferior berry and
from that and other causes, poor prices.
The trouble with Hood River is that,
like many other communities, it has put
all Us eggs in one basket. This is only
true in a sense, for ontside of the ber
ries, hundreds of acres of orchards are
growing that in a year or two will yield
abundantly and furnish at least a second
basket for the eggs. This trouble will
soon be obviated, bat it should have
been done long ago.
Eight years ago, in starting the
Glacier, we advocated bringing the
waters of Hood river throngh the val
ley. We talked it in season and out,
bnt the insane desire possessed by some
people to pull a wagon out of the mad
by pulling in opposite directions pre
vailed and nothing could be done. Now
the big west side ditch is nearing com
pletion and water will be abundant for
all purposes.
Year after year the berries have been
picked and sent away, the checks rc
ceived, cashed and sent awnv too. It
took all the berry money to buy hay and
feed. It is the richest agricultural conn
try on earth, for its farmers haul their
produce to market in top buggies and
haul their bay home in the same ve
hides. No other country could stand
t. With the completion of the big
ditch, Hood River can have bay to sell.
The soil is adapted to the growth of
clover and alfalfa, and when the money
received for berries is kept at home,
things will be different.
It is undeniable, though, that Hcod
Hirer has bad the worat season it ever
experienced, and one that if its good
citizens are wise, will never happen
again. Water will be abundant for all
purposes, the orchards will come into
bearing and the many little and big
holes through which the money leaked
out being stopped, oar neighboring town,
in the language of the immortal Sandy
Bowers, will "Have mouey to throw at
the birds."
The rain yesterday morning reached
the country south of us, watering it
well, the rainfall increasing in amount
as tar ont as Tygh Ridge, where it was
quite heavy, the water standing in the
roads when it was over. The Juniper
Flat section was the center of the
shower, which seemed to exhaust iteelf
before it crossed the Deschutes. Sher
man county got bat little of it, bnt was
favored with a good shower last week
that passed over us.
The city election takes place next
Monday; but little interest seems to be
taken in it so far. The usual custom
has been to call a citizens' meeting
Thursday or Friday before election for
the purpose of nominating candidates,
which custom will probably be observed
on the present occasion. We under
stand Mayor Menefee will not accept
that office again, and candidates do not
seem so numerous as they are for places
with more money in them. Bat one
name has been mentioned for the place,
and that is Hon. W. H. Wilson. We do
not pretend to say that Mr. Wilson will
accept, for we do "not know ; but others
mention him as the only available man.
Do yon want your windows cleaned,
carpets taken up, beaten and re laid, or
janitor work of any kind done by a
first-class man? If so, telephone Henry
Johnson at Parkins' barber shop.
'Phone 119. alO-tf
There is n name in this section of the
country, connected with the medical world,
that is better known to the publio than that
of Mr. Monroe Peterson. He is jrituated in
a nice, comfortable home, with a jgood farm,
boat four miles west of Johnson City, 111.,
He is now fifty-eight years old, in a healthy
condition, and weighs one hundred and ninety
pounds. Not a more upright and honorable
citizen does our nation afford, and he is
looked upon, with wonder, because of his
healthy condition after so long a period of
misery and suffering.
The cause of Mr. Peterson's long suffering
was a hurt which he received in a fall, while
running a drill in 1861, being a soldier at
the time. He has been crippled in his right
leg ever since that date. Sciatic rheumatism
then set in, and his leg began to slowly
wither away and draw up in the joint, and
now it is about two inches shorter than the
other. It began to grow worse and, finally,
his whole body began to shake like a person
with the St. Vitus' dance. Kis first severe
attack was about six years i!o.
There is no disease in the power of human
endurance more awful in its pains and
afflictions than sciatic rheumatism. Some
times its pain may be a slow, steady one,
while, at other times, it comes with jerks
and wrenches that seem to twist the body
out of all shape of recognition. It seems to
contract the muscles, drawine the body al
most in a knot. While this is probably the
worst stage of sciatic rheumatism, it is some
times found in milder forms. So it was
with Mr. Peterson, but with it was associ
ated a feeling and condition almost as un
comfortable and unbearable. The body was
in a continual shake, rendering it impossible
for him to do anything. He had lost all
control of bis muscles. On application to a
physician for relief, he was told that the
affliction mieht last him all his life. or. on
the other hand, it might leave him entirely
at an unexpected moment.
For over three years he was not able to
write a word, so severe was his shaking. He
could not even sign his vouchers, thereby
having to make his mark and witness it. At
this time he could not walk a step without
aid. nor even ait down in a chair without
assistance. So severe was the shaking of
. - 1 1 . i 1 . i . 1 1 1
mi neaa inat ifc almost caused nun u go
blind. He could not distinguish a person a
rod's distance in front of him. He came
very nearly losing his mind, and his friends
thought, as a last resort, that he would have
to be taken to a hospital. When he was
taken to town for examination by a physi
cian, he hail to be examined in the buggy,
so difficult was it for him to get out. Often
times it would seem that life was nearly ex.
tinct, and his feet and hands would have to
be bathed in warm water and rubbed in
order to restore the circulation. For two
years he was not able to feed himself at the
table. His ever faithful and dutiful wife put
the food to his mouth. At night he would take
smothering spells and would have to be
lifted up In bed that he might regain his
breath and strength. At this critical period
he was not able to put on his clothes, not
able to do anything but sit and suffer his
miserable life away.
One physician gave, as his decision of the
ease, that his leg would have to be placed in
viae and stretched to its original length,
From tha Egyptian Prmss, Marion, Illinois.
thereby
extending the nMtvMA mrtntfn
nerve which was the seat of trouble. Mr.
r-eierson. unwimno- to anhiiv hi,
such severe treatment, objected, thinkin?
subject his body
- . 1 HVt VUICU, J 11
some more humane way. All kinds of patent
medicines had been tried. At times be
thought he was enjoying the comfort and
pleasure of a partial relief, but soon' he
would be back in the same old rut, making
his life one of misery and affliction. Instead
of life being one of improvement and joy, it
was one of continual toil and suffering.
Electrio currents, which have gained such a
foothold among the remedies for rheumatic
and neuralgic pains, were tried wifh only
partial relief for a while. He was treated
by nearly every physician in the conntv.
All kinds of medicines were tried without
avail. Much money had been spent in vain.
Still was this disease like a vampire sncking
away at his miserable life. The doctors
finally gave him up, saying nothing could
relieve him. They had tried every remedy
known to the medical world, and now they
thought it best to keep the money which
was Being spent for doctors' bills and medi
cines and make his last days as pleasant for
him as his miserable condition would allow.
He was placed before a State Board of pen
sion examiners and was told that it would
be useless to spend any more money in this
direction or to try to improve his health, for
it was an impossibility. Ashe now thnuirlit
the culmination had been reached, but, not
to be baffled by despair, he still sought means
by which his miserable life coulcT be made
'As Ions' as there is life thera
He saw an article in the paper
more happy.
is hope.' E
which stated that a distinguished lumber
man in Michigan had been cured of a rase
resembling his own by Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills for Pale People. He then renewed
courage to try again. He ordered one-half
dozen boxes, and by taking pills one day
rested the following night better than he had
rested for years. So severe was his case that
he took them nearly six months. He began
to gradually mend and is now a hale and
hearty man. He now goes anywhere on the
farm that he desires, and is now able to write
a good, plain hand and sign his name to his
vouchers, and is able to do his chores about
the house. While he is too old to labor
hard, he is in such a condition that he tan
spend his last days here on earth in peace
and comfort.
These pills were not known to this section
of country till Mr. Peterson tried them, and
now they can be had at any drug store.
Hundredsof boxes have been sold on account
of the reputation of this one case. At least
half of the people, not knowing the name of
the trills. Call forftllA tinH IT,. P.tomia
triedT"
Signed.) Monroe Petebsox.
Subscribed and sworn to before me on tha
25th day of May, A.D., 1896.
JOHN H. JS.0PP,
seal. Justice 0 the Peace.
An analysis of Dr. Williams' Pink Pin
shows that they contain, in a condensed form,
all the elements necessary to give new life and
richness to the blood and restore shattered
nerves. They are an unfailing specific for
such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial
paralysis, St. Vitus' dance, sciatica, neuralgia,
rheumatism, nervous headache, tha nfW
fects of la srrinne. palpitation of the heart m)
and sallow complexions, all forms of weakness
either in male or female, and all diseases re
sulting from vitiated humors in the blood.
Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be
sent poet paid on receipt of price, 60 cents, a
box or six boxes for 2.50 fthev are iwr enlt
in bulk or by the 100) by addressing Dr. Wil
Hams' Medicine Cwnpany, Schenectady. N. V
THE RECORDS AT BAKER.
What the Boys Will nave to
Fall.
Beat this
Following is given the summary of the
events as ran at Baker City this year :
1897 Eecobds.
Speed race Pendleton, 23 3 5 ; Wal
la Walla. 23 3 5; La Grande, 23 3 5;
Waitsbi,rg, 24!; Hnntington, 25 ; Bak
er City, No. 5 team, 24; Baker City, No.
3,25 2 5; Pendleton, Walla Walla and
Li Grande tied.
In the runoff, the time was: Per
dleton. 23 3-5 ; Walla Walla, 23 3 5 ; La
The Snns; Kecltal.
Theoni recital, given by the pupils'
of Miss Dorothea Eliot at the Congrega
tional church last night, was a genuine
treat to all who had the pleasure of
listening to the well trained voices.
Some of the best talent in the city
have had their voices under Mtsa Eliot's
training, and her effective work was
visible, if the term may be used, in all
of them. The church was crowded, and
thongh the program was an exception
ally long one, the time passed all too
q lickly.
We congratulate Miss Eliot on the ex-
c llent work she has accomplished, and
Grande, 23 4 5.
Walla Walla and Tendleton again tied. I tnose who havu had the l enefit of her
fn the second run off, the time was,
Walla Walla.
Walla Walla wioninc
23 1-5; Pendle:on. 23 3 5.
Wet test Walla Walla won, time 34;
Waitsburg, 43 ; Pendleton, 35 1-5; Bak
er City. No. 5, no time; Baker City, No.
3.35: La Grande, 36 2-5; Hniitington,
47 2 5.
Hook and ladder race Baker City No.
1 won, lime 21 4-5; Waitsburg, 24. No
other teams competed.
Championship race Baker Citv.No. 2
won, time 62 4 5; Baker City, No. 5,
second, time 53; Pendleton, third,
time 53 4-5 ; La Grande, 57 ; Waitsburg,
Hnntington and Walla Walla, no time.
Hub and hob race First heat. La
Grande defeated Walla Walla; time
23 4-5.
Second heat Pendleton t defeated
Waitsburg; time 23 2-5;
Third heat Pendleton defeated Baker
City, No. 5; time 23 2-5.
In the rnn off, Pendleton defeated Lh
Grande; time 23.
Foot race Seventeen entreee, Frank
Shelton, of Baker City, won in 23 sec
onds; distance 220 yards.
Yellow washing powder will make
your clothes the same color. Avoid
this by using Soap Foam. It's pure
white.
teaching upon their irood Mi tune therein.
The program was as follows :
Soap Foam
compounds.
a2 3m
excels all other washing
a2 3m
Nebraska corn for sale at the Wasco
warehouse. Best feed on earth. ni9-tf
Trio "Tbe Water IJly" Ft am Abi
Jlb-s Michell, Mrs. Varney,
Miss SiiinpMHi, Miss Cubhing,
Mrs. Brad-biiw.
"The Lily" DeKoven
Mr. Wm. Crosseii.
"Deei In the Sline". . . W. H. Jude
Mi. Nicholas Siuuoct.
"Good Sight' .' Anion Dvorack
Mrs. W. L. Bradahuw.
a -'My Hame Is Where the Heather Blooms'
. DeKoven
ft-'-WithoutThet" ...Guy d'JIardelot
Miss lluy dishing.
o "Cuhan nmmock Song" Paladflhe
b "Bercmse" Chaminade
Mis Eliot.
Quartet "Song ot the Shepherdess"
E. A'. Anderton
a "Bedouin Love Song" PlntuU
b "Oh Fair, Oh Sweet and Moly" Otto Cantor
Dr. 0. 1. IHiane.
n" Where Blooms the Bose" Clayton John
6 "Slumber Song" Xicliolai Heint
Miss Georgia Suinpaou.
a "Madrigal" . . Victor Harris
b"0 Wondrous Dream" Wilton O. Smith
Mrs. A. N. Vamey.
a "Who is Sylvia?" :. Schubert
b ' 1 Cannot Help Loving Thee" . . Clayton Johns
c "Lethe" F. Boolt
Miss Myrtle Michell.
"To Seville" F. Dettauer
Miss rJliot,
Duet "Like tbe Lark" Fmnz Abt
Mis llot and Miss Georgia Sumpsuu.
The Westfield (Ir.d.) News prints tbe
following in regard to an old resident of .
that place: "Frank MeAvoy, for many
years in the employ of the L., N. A. &
C. By. here, says : 'I have need Cham
berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy for ten years or longer am
never without it in my family. I take
pleasure in recommending it.' " It is a
specific for all bowel disorders. For
sale by Blakeley & Houghton.