Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, July 06, 1906, Page 8, Image 8

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OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1906.
HINDOO CREMATION.
PITIABLE IMPROVIDENCE.
THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE.
Tlio Kind You Have Always
in use tor over 30 years,
and
sonal
AU Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" are but?
, Experiments that trine with and endanger the health of
K Infants and Children Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Irts and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys "Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and "Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep
The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THE CCHTAUH COMPANY, TT MURRAY STRICT. NEW YORK CITY.
ADVERTI SEME NTS.
Tbe first newspaper advertisement
appeared in Great Birtain in 1642. In
Greece advertising was done by pub
lic criers. The first printed advertise
ment in England was got up by the
celebrated printer Caxton. It an
nounced the completion of a book
called "the Pyer of Salisbury."
The ancient Egyptians, Greeks, and
Romans were the first to use bill
posters, some of which were found
on the walls of buildings in Pompeii.
It was not untill the eighteenth cen
tury that the magazine and newspaper
advertiseing became the recognized
medium between manufacturer and
buyer.
IN NATURE'S
Buried deep in our American forests,
manv vears uo, Dr. Pierce found a
beaui' ful, blooming plant the root of
which possesses wonderfully efficacious
properties as a stomach and general
tonic, also as an alterative or blood
purifier and liver invigorator, having an
especial aifiniry for all mucous surfaces
upon whk-ii it exerts a most salutary,
60othing and hoaling influence.
This stardv littie plant is known to
botanists as "Hydrastis Canadensis, but
has several local English names, being
fenerally known as Golden Seal. Dr.
ierce found the root of this common
forest plant to possess medicinal prin
ciples of great potency, especially when
combined, in just the right proportions,
with Queen's root. Black Cherry bark,
Stone root, Man drake root and Blood
root, the properties of each being ex
tracted and preserved in chemically
pure glycerine of proper strength.
This compound Dr. Pierce named
his "Golden Medical Discovery," in
honor of the sturdy little Golden Seal
plant. So little used was the root of
this plant bv the medical profession at
that time, that it could be purchased
in the open markets for from fii'ieen
cents, to twenty cents a pound. The
use of many tons of this root every
year in Dr. Pierce's two leading medi
cines for it enters into both "Golden
Medical Discovery" and also into Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription as one of
their most important ingredients has
caused the price of the root to advance
nntil to-day it commands upwards of
a dollar and a half a pound.
DR. pieece's faith.
Dr. Pierce believes that in our native
forests are to be found an abundance of
most valuable medicinal plants for the
cure of many distressing and most
fataf maladies, if we would only seek
them out, test them and learn how
and for what diseases to use them.
Furthermore, he believes that the veg
etable kingdom is the one to resort to
for the most harmless remedial agents.
They act most kindly upon the hu
man system and are eliminated or car
ried out of the body by the natural
functions without injury, even in cases
where it is necessary to make protracted
use of them in order to experience per
manent cures. Dr. Pierce's medicines
being purely vegetable, are perfectly
harmless. In other words, while they
are potent to cure, being purely vege
table in composition and containing no
alcohol, they leave no bad effects be- without fear of sucessful criticism and
hind. This is not generally true when j with confidence that the good se::se of
mineral medicines and those containing ! the afflicted will lead them to appreciate
large percentages of alcohol are taken : this honorable manner of confiding to
into the system and their use protracted j them what they are taking into their
over considerable periods of time. ) stomachs when making use of tiiese
Many years ago, Dr. Pierce discov- j medicines,
ered that chemically pure glycerine, of A litte book of extracts from mpi'v
proper strength, is a better solvent and ; standard medical works of a!! the u.f
preservative of the medicinal principles ferent schods of practice, indorsing, in
residing in our indigenous, or native, ; the strongest terms, all the several in
medicinal plants than is alcohol; and, 1 gredients entering into Dr. Pierce s
futhermore, that it possesses intrinsic medicines and telling -wl.at dV;:res
medicinal properties of its own, being these most valuable medicinal .ilvh"
demulcent, nutritive, antiseptic and a will cure, will be mailed ." 1. vy
inost efficient anti-ferment. ! address bv Di K. V. I'leii f. 8uf nl.
THEY STAND ALONE. i on'receipt' Of ivout-t for tili;:e
The
fact that neither Dr. Pierce's '.
Bolden Medioal Discovery, the great
stomach tonic, liver invigorator, heart
regulator and blood purifier, nor his
"Favorite Prescription" for weak, nerv- I
Bought, and wliieli nas been.
nas borne the signature of
has been made under his per-
saperrision since its infancy.
Signature of
GOLD.
The first mention which we have of
gold is in the eleventh verse of the
second chapter of Genesis, or in oth
er words four thousand and four years
before Christ.
Gold was used as money by the an
cient Egyptians at a very early date.
Herodotus tells that the invention of
the coinage of gold belongs to Lydia,
about 750 B. C. Authorities conflict
about the first coinage of gold. Some
say it was Miletus, and some the Per
sians, but there are no records to
show just when.
Cheapest accident insurance Dr.
Thomas' Eclectric Oil. Stops the pain
and heals the wound. All druggists
sell it.
LABORATORY.
ous, over-worked and broken down
women contains any alcohol, entitles
them to a place all by themselves.
They are neither patent medicines nor
secret ones either, for every bottle of
Dr. Pierce's world - famed medicines
leaving the great laboratory at Buffalo,
2S. Y., has printed upon its wrapper
all the ingredients entering into its
composition. This is why so many
unprejudiced physieians now prescribe
them and recommend them to their
patients when they would not think of
advising the "use of a secret nostrum.
They know what they are composed of,
ami that the ingredients are those en
dorsed by the most eminent medical
authorities of all schools of practice.
ALL EIGHTS PROTECTED.
The exact working formula for mak
ing Dr. 1'ierce's medicines without the
use of a drop of alcohol and preserving
them unimpaired in any climate for any
length of time, cost Dr. Pierce and his
assistant-chemists and pharmacists a
tedious course of study and experi
ments, extending over several vears,
w ltli the use ot chemically pure giycer-
ine, of just the right strangth, and with
laboratory apparatus and appliances
specially invented and designed to carry
on the delicate processes employed, Dr.
Pierce finally found that all the medici
nal principles residing in the several
native medicinal roots could be more
perfectly extracted and better preserved
from fermentation than if alcohol was
employed.
Besides the glycerine, of itself, pos
sesses the property of greatly enhancing
the efficacy of the several mediciilal
agents employed, whereas alcohol is
well known to be objectionable in any
medicine to be employed in" chronic or
lingering diseases, where, at best, treat
ment must be continued over a consid
erable period of time in order to make
the cure complete and permanent.
The exact proportion of the several
ingredients used in these medicines aa
well as the working formula and peculiar
process, apparatus and appliances
employed in their manufacture, are
withheld from pi blicity that Dr. Pierce's
proprietary rights may not be infringed
and trespassed upon by unprincipled
imitators and those who" may be pirati
cally inclined.
In favor of Dr. Pierce's medicines is
the frank, confiding, open, honest
statement of their full composition.
giving every ingredient in plain Ewnlish
Dr. Pierce's Pleasn- f
IV Mors
largely composed of Jvdt-j viiln. Ur
concentrated extract of . Mandrake :v e:
and they regulate and invigorate eia.
ach. liver a:iJ bowels.
; The Funeral Pyre and the Rites Be.
fore the Burning-.
Toward the upper end of the ghats
is the burning ground. There are no
steps here, but a slope of beaten dirt
Stop half an hour and you may se
every step of the cremation rites. Sit
ting on stone ramparts above, to the
right and left, are friends and relatives
of the dead ones. The figure to the
right, huddled up in a bright green
wrap, is of the lowest caste of Hindoo
and keeps the mat shed near by, where
the sacred fire for igniting every corpse
is for sale. You hear hoarse, loud cries
of "Ram! Ramanal" and, behold, a
burial procession is coming down the
slope. Four men carry the corpse
slung between two bamboo poles and
cry to the god Ram. He is the personi
fication of filial love, and thus it is
meet that they should call him to wit
ness. They swing down to the river
and immerse the corpse. It Is wrap
ped in a white shroud stained with red
blotches. Then they lift the head
slightly out of the water and remove
the hroud from the face, 6plashlng
water five times upon the mouth.
Others In the meantime are building a
wooden pyre, made of fagots sold
near by and when finished standing
three feet or more above ground. The
corpse, its dark color showing through
the dripping shroud, is then placed on
the wooden altar and covered with
fagots. This done, all but two mount
the ramparts and watch the final cere
mony. Of the two remaining, one
pours oil upon the wood from a small
clay dish, while the other goes to the
fire house above. He soon returns with
a long straw wisp, blazing at one end.
He advances to the corpse's head.
touches it with the wisp.and then cir
cles the pyre five times, touching the
head each time until the fifth, when
he places tie blazing wisp beneath the
feet, and the whole pile bursts into
flame. When all is consumed the ashes
are raked into the river and float away
to bliss eternal. F. J. O. Alsop in Out-
ln-
THE UNDER MARRIAGE.
Wedding; Cnntomi and Frolics That
Prevail In Holland
In Holland two weeks before a mar
riage takes place cards are sent out de
claring that the banns have been pub
lished. This is called an "under mar
riage." The card also announces when
the final marriage is to take place. The
wedding itself is a small affair, and
the civil marriage is the only one rec-.
ognized by law. A church wedding is
usually looked upon as a concession to
either fashion or sentimentality and is 1
called a "consecration of the marriage.1
The couple enter the church behind the
family members, bridesmaids and oth
er attendants. They are shown to seats
before the whole assembly, and the
clergyman conies in with two witness
es long after the others have been seat
ed. He first makes a prayer, then de
livers a sermon on a suitable text,
which usually brings the bride to tears.
After that the couple are married. Then
a hymn is sung and the blessing given.
The whole occupies about an hour and
a quarter. Before leaving the church
a huge Bible is presented to the bride
groom. During the two weeks of wait
ing between the "under marriage" and
the real marriage all the wedding fes
tivities take place. The happy couple
are literally surfeited with dinners,
balls and theater parties, and all man
ner of practical jokes are played on the
pair. At the dinner toasts innumerable
are given, and at each the whole com
pany rises from the table to sound and
touch glasses with the bride and groom,
who never rise. Among their friends
the Idea is not to allow the couple a j
night of sleep, if possible, before the !
wedding day,
Canny John Sherman.
The late Secretary John Sherman
showed his talent for financiering at
an early age. II and two of his
brothers had been given a sum of
money with which to pay their board
while on a shooting trip for a week at
the house of a farmer near Lancaster,
O., their home.
The week ended, John ordered the
wagon and paid his board. But the
farmer refused the money, saying that
the sons of Judge Sherman would al
ways be welcome guests. Vhen John
found that he did not have to pay his
board he sent the wagon back to the
barn and stayed another week.--XJp-plncott's.
Scholarly Version.
On the campus of Emory college, in
Oxford, Ga., there is a table to the
memory of Ignatius Few, the first
president. One day a freshman was
crossing the campus with his cousin,
who asked him to explain the inscrip
tion on the stone.
" 'Vivit non inortnus est,' " she
read slowly. "What does that mean.
"Will?" v
"That," said the freshman easily,
"oh, that means, 'He lives no, he
don't, he's dead.' "
An Odd Epitaph.
The following epitaph is to be read
on a tombstone at Saragossa, Spain:
"Here lies John Quebecca, precentor to
my lord the king. When he is admit
ted to the choir of angels, whose so
ciety he will embellish and where he
will distinguish himself by his powers
of song, God shall say to his angels,
"Cease, ye calves, and let Me hear
John Quebecca, the precentor to my
lord the king.'?
She Made Good.
"I don't see what sense there is in
you women dressing so expensively."
''That's just the way ' papa used to
talk."
"Talks that way yet, doesn't he?"
"No. indeed. When I caught you he
admitted, that there was method in my
madness." Houston Post.
rise Way Money- Is Wasted. Tbrongk
Isrnornnce of Food Values.
Examples of glaring Ignorance of
food values may well be culled from
the notes of those experts who have
visited the poor of the different cities.
In the slums-of Chicago It was found
that a woman whose husband was out
of -work and whose family was living
on a few cents a day bought lettuce, a
food so innutritious that, at least when
out of season and high in price, it is a
luxury even for the rich. This woman
sacrificed the inexpensive but nutri-
tious classes of foods for leaves con
taining over 80 per cent of water and
15 per cent of refuse. . - It has been
truthfully said that a man would
starve to death on a diet of lettuce
alone.
Pitiable improvidence was found In
the New York slums. A watchman
was feeding his family at the rate of
14 cents per person a day all that he
could afford yet his wife bought ex
pensive cuts of beef instead of the
equally nutritious cuts of lower price;
also large quantities of butter whose
value might have been Invested in
dried beans and more bread. She also
wasted money on soda crackers and
Jumbles costing two or three times as
much as bread and containing no more
nutrition. It was estimated that his
wife might have obtained about eight
times as much nutrition for her mon
ey had she substituted dried peas for
green peas. Another large saving
would have been the substitution of
fresh for condensed milk. John E.
Watkins in Reader Magazine.
THEY WERE GLUTTONS.
The
Gormanda of the Eigrliteeiith
Century In England.
Plenty was the watchword of the
eighteenth century gormand In Eng
land. His tables groaned under an ar-
I rav of food warranted to take nwnv
appetite of all save the Garean-
I tnas of the day. One blessiner was
evolved from the old sops and the later
bisques and olios soup, which now
was ever the prelude to the dinner. It
i wa3 removed for meat or fish a chine
of mutton and three ducks in the.,case
jf Squire Hill at Teddington, who, for
entrees to support them, offered pul
lets with eggs, fillet of beef and scol
lops, turkey en daube, stewed carp,
veal a la royale, fricasseed chicken,
with ham and pigeons for center dish.
This was but the first course or relay.
Next came the roasts two pheasants
and four partridges and six teal, and
now, for side dishes, sweetbreads and
marlw, four woodcock and ten snipe,
salmon and smelts, marrow pudding,
fone quarter of lamb and oyster loaves.
For center dish, mince pies. And men
ate and survived, and still had heart
within them to wait the removal of the
cloth, and, greeting the dessert, sat
over the mahogany until indeed they
fell beneath it. After all, gormand la
not the name for such as these. They
were gluttons.
A DOG IS ALWAYS HONEST.
He Can't Growl and Was- Ills Tail al
the Same Time.
"There is one peculiar thing about
dogs," remarked a . well known local
fancier and huntsman, and that is you
never saw one pant and wag his tail
at the same time. A dog is not capa
ble of a double emotion. He can't
growl and wag his tail at the same
time, for it is impossible for him to
be mad at one end and glad at the
other.
"If a dog is glad to see his master
he will bark and wag his tail. If he
wants to get into the house he will
paw at the door, whine and wag 'his
tall, but they are all symptoms of one
and the same emotion. But if his mas
ter opens the door he will cease to
show anxiety immediately by whining
and will show pleasure only by the
wagging of his tail.
"In order to get a man's temper one
must watch his eyes, but for. a dog's
you have to watch his tail. The dog Is
likewise Incapable of deceit, and hence
he is nothing of a politician. He de
ceives no one, not even his master. If
he is overjoyed every emotion Is in
dicative of that fact, and his whole
makeup gives ample testimony to It.
If he is displeased or angered it Is the
same way." Houston Post.
A Double Presentation.
John Kendrick Bangs once ran across
a gift copy of one of his books in a
secondhand bookshop, still having this
inscription on the fly leaf: "To his
friend, J. G., with the regards and the
esteem of J. K. Bangs, July, 1899."
Mr. Bangs bought the copy and sent it
to his friend again with a second in
scription beneath, "This book, bought
In a secondhand bookshop, is re-presented
to .1. G. with renewed and re
iterated regards and esteem by J. K.
Bangs, December, 1899."
The Snme Thing.
"What makes you think you have
great business ability?" laughed the
successful business man. "Why, you've !
never made a dollar!"
"But you forget, dear," replied his
energetic wife, "that I made you!"
Detroit Free Press.
Playing; Indian.
Mamma Playing Indian is so rough.
Why are you crying? Have they been
scalping you again? Spotted Panther,
lias Willie No, mamma. We have
been smoking the pipe of peace.
Stray Stories.
He Saw It.
"Yes, she's pretty, but a poor con
versationalist. She seldom says a
word. I can't understand why so
many men propose to her."
"I can," sighed Henpeck. Houston
Post.
Some Facts Concerning: It That Are
Tiot Generally Known.
Though every schoolboy presumably
knows to a nicety where the Cape of
Good Hope is situated, there does un
doubtedly prevail in less enlightened
circles some vagueness of conception
as to the exact locality of that cele
brated headland. Even the gentle
reader Is faintly conscious of uncer
tainty and answers with a briskness
not born of conviction: "The Cape of
Good Hope? "Why, of course I know
where It is. Down at the end of South
Africa." Gentle reader, you are not
rery far out, fifty or a hundred miles
perhaps. And, as you say, it is not of
the slightest consequence from a prac
tical point of view.
The Cape of Good Hope lies at a con
siderable distance from the end and is.
In fact, the middle of the three promon
tories, severally Inconspicuous, which
jointly terminate a slender peninsula,
some twenty miles In length, forming
the barrier between False bay and the
Atlantic ocean on the west. These three
headlands, lying near together and
commonly undivided on a map of mod
erate scale, are locally designated
Cape Point. It was here that Bartholo.
mew Diaz first encountered in full
force the prevalent southeasterly gales
and denounced the rugged, threaten
ing, threefold promontory under the
sounding appellation of the Cape of
Storms, to be afterward rechristened
lby pious, trustful hearts the. Cape of
Good Hope. The Cape of Storms, the
Cape of Good Hope, Cape Farewell! Is
there nothing in a name?
TOBACCO HEART.
The Way Smoklnn- Acts I'pon and In-
Jnres the. System.
Are you "learning to smoke," boys?
Learning by heart-tobacco heart?"
Read what a doctor says in the Med
ical Summary and then enjoy your
smoke if you can:
In smoking tobacco we take in car
bonic oxide, several ammonias and a
very poisonous oil containing nicotine.
The ammonias and nicotine are the
substances which by acting in numer
ous directions are so injurious to the
system. The ammonias act on the
blood, making it alkaline and fluid,
thereby impairing Its nutritive prop
erty. The stomach is debilitated and dys
pepsia induced. The Innervation of
the heart is disturbed its action is
weak, irregular and intermittent, and
faintness and vertigo are the conse
quences. Owing to the disturbances in the
blood and heart the process of nutri
tion is slow-, and in tlssyoung serious
ly affected tissue Is paralyzed and vi
sion is impaired.
Tobacco is essentially a functional
rather than ot,st!t!'? prt5cnr. It mod
ifies the special energies and not the
structure. Tobacco is eliminated by
the kidneys and very rapidly; conse
quently the bad effects quickly disap
pear under proper treatment if, how
ever, the habit is given up.
Japanese Politeness.
A Kussian - soldier left behind his
brothers in arms. He slowly rose up
and faced his captors. They smiled
amiabl3-, and, reassured, he pulled oft
his cap and commenced to fan himself
with it. Now, it is a common custom
for a Japanese soldier to carry about
with him in the hot weather a small
fan. On this occasion a fan was forth-
coming and handed to the Kussian, but
he refused to take it, preferring to use
his cap. Still, with an amiable smile
on his face, one of the Japanese again
proffered him the rejected fan, at the
same time covering him with a re
volver. The captive took the gift with
out further reluctance. From Brindle's
"With Russians and Japanese."
The Larkapar.
Great vigilance has to be exercised
by the antiquarian painter. This was
demonstrated by Sir Laurence Alma
Tadema's picture "The . Finding of
Moses." Looking at the picture, a well
known botanist examined with admira
tion the painting of the lifelike lark
spurs which form the foreground, and
then, turning toward the artist and
congratulating him on the successful
rendering, pointed out that larkspurs
were of a comparatively recent growth.
The painter laughed as he replied, "So
I thought, until dried specimens of
them were discovered in some of the
recently explored royal tomba of
Egypt"
Fishy. "
Mother (reproachfully, to her small
6on) Jamie, where have you been all
afternoon?
Jamie (uneasily) At Sunday school,
mamma.
Mother Then how is it you are wet
! and smell so of fish?
Jamie (in desperation) Well, you
see, I've been studying about Jonah
and the whale, and well I guess it
came off on my clothes. Harper's
Weekly.
Lack of Perception.
"Dat dog o' mine," said Erastus
Plnkly, "keeps on a-tryln' to whup
ev'y four footed critter dat comes down
de road."
"He must be a fighter" ,
"No, suh. He ainno fighter, but he
don' seem able to reco'nize de fack."
Washington Star.
The Place For Him.
"Notwithstanding what you say about
Kraftie," said Goodart, "he seems to
he a loyal fellow. He appears to keep
ill with his friends."
"He should be kept in with them,"
replied Crabbe. "Most of his friends
are in jail." Philadelphia Ledger.
To be nameless in worthy deed? e
eeeds ao infamous history. Browne.
OREGON
Qunnr I iiuti
and Union Pacific
THREE TRAINS TO THE EAST
DAILY
Through Pullman standard and Tour
ist sleeping cars daily to Omaha, Chicago,
Spokane; tourist sleeping cars daily to
Kansas City; through Pullman tourist
sleeping cars (personally conducted)
weekly to Chicago. Kansas City, reclin
ing chairs (seats free to the east daily.)
HOURS
Portland to Chicago
No Change of Cars.
70
70
Depart.
Time Schedules.
Akbi
Chicago
Portland Special
Salt Lake, Denver,
Ft. Worth, Omaha,
Kansas City, St.
Louis, Chicago and
Cast.
5:25 p zn.
9:15 a. m
Atlantic
Express
8:15 p. m.
Bait Lake, Denver,
Ft. Worth. Omaha.
Kansas City, St.
Louis. Chicago and
Bast.
8:4)0- m.
via. Hunt
ington.
8L Paul
Fast Mall
6:15 p m
via Spo
kane. Walla Walla, Lew
iston, Spokane, Min
7:15 a m.
neapolis, St. faui.
Duluth, Milwaukee,
Chicago and East.
Ocean and River Schedule
For San Francisco Every five days at
8 p. m. For Astoria, way points and
Portland, Oregon.
8 p. m. ; Saturday at 10 p. m. Daily
service (water permitting) on Willam
ette and Yamhill rivers.
For detailed Information of rates.
The Oregon Railroad & Navigation Co..
your nearest ticket agent, or
General Passenger Agent.
A. 1 CRAIG,
Astoria & Columbia
River Railroad CO.
Leaves. J UNION DEPOT Arrives.
j : I " '
8:00 A.M. For Maygers.Ralnier, Dally.
Dally. Clatskanie, Westport
Clifton, Astoria, War
ren ton, Flavel, Ham- 11:10A.M.
mond. Fort Stevens,
Gearhart Park, Sea
side, Astoria -and
Seashore.
Cxpress Dally.
Astoria Express.
7:00 P.M. 9:40. P.M.
C. A. STEWART, Comm'l AgL,
Aider street, ftione Main suo.
J. C. MATO. G. F. & P. A. Astoria, Or.
UPPtfi WILLAMETTE
RIVER ROUTE.
SALEM, INDEPENDENCE, ALBANY,
CORVALLIS AND WAY LANDINGS.
Leave Portland 6:45 a. m. dally (except
Sunday) for Salem and way points.
Leave Portland 6:45 Tuesday, Thursday
and Saturday for Independence, Al
bany and Corvallis.
Regular service, courteous treat
ment and prompt dispatch are our
specialties.
OREGON CITY TRANSPORTATION CO.
Office and Dock:
Foot Taylor Street
Phone Main 40.
COLUMBMIA RIVER SCENERY.
Portland and The Dalles
ZEOTJTZE
Regulator
Line
Steamers
"BAILEY GAT2ERT" "DALLES CITY
"REGULATOR" "M ETLAKO
"SADIE B."
Sir. "Bailey Gatzert" leaves Portland
7 A. M. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fri
days ; leaves The Dalles 7 AM. Tues
days. Thusrsdays and Saturdays.
Str. "Regulator" leaves Portland 7 A
M. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays i
leaves The Dalles 7 AM. Mondays.
Wednesdays and Fr.Jays.
Steamers leaving Portland make daily-
connection at Lyle with C. R. & N. train
for Goldendale and Klickitat Valley
points. I
C. R. & N. train leaves Goldendale on, I
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at
6:30 A. M., making connection with,
steamer "Regulator" for Portland and
way points.
C. R. & N. train leaves Goldendale on
Tuesdays. Thursdays and Saturdays at
8:30 A. M., connecting at Tyle with,
steamer "Sadie B." for The Dalles, con
necting there with O. R. & N. trains.
Ea and West. t .
Str. "Sadie B." Seaves Cascade Locke
dally (except Sunday) at 7 A M. for Th
Dalles and way points; arrives at 11 A. -M
; leaves The Dalles 2 P. M., arrives.
Cascade locks P. M.
Meals served on all steamers.
Fine accommodations ior teams and
wagons.
Landing at Portland at Alder Street:
Dock.
MARCUS TALBOT,,
V. P. & G. SL.
Gen. Office. Portland. Oregon.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
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