CI- i i - 1 ! i K.y font v.' 1 '.'ji it fASTTHTTrnV TH P I Pri W1.01 iliriiti Uil 11111 LiUIUJ. CHRIST WILL HELP YOU BEAR YOUR - WEAVY BURDENS.. c Ike Talmage Preaches an Eloquent Ser niin That Appeals to the Bailneu Man, Invalid, the Mourner and to All Hwanitj. - v Brooklyn, June 7. It is no new thing "to tb members of the Brooklyn Tabernacle cfcuroh to' have their pastor's eminence ac 'knowledged Ay the .outside, world. Cut iaven they must have been gratified by the 'distinction conferred upon him since last Sunday. In listening to. Or. Talmage to fcdAy, -they were listening to the chaplain of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Com- of Massachusetts, in which office he formally installed. with due ceremony June If The. organization, which is hundred and fifty years old, and the 3ioeal descendaat-of anCiigLiah organiza tion dating back to" the beginning of the Sixteenth' century, has had many distin guished divines as chaplains, and the honor tiaa always been1 highly appreciated.' The , UMiljJeet'-of V Dr) Falmage's. sermon this -morning' was "The Burden Bearer," and nJa text Psalm lv, 2& "Cast thy burdten -opoa the Lord, -'and- he shall sustain thee." V.M .r t h! THS BBRMON. David was here taking his own medicine. If anybody bad on him heavy weights, -David had 5 them, and yet out of bis own . experience be advises you and 'me as to the best way of getting rid of burdens.- - This is 7V"".wrld of -burden bearing. Coming into the house of prayer there may be no sign of sadness Of sorrow, bat where is the man who has not a conflict? ' Where is- the soul that has not a stmgglef And there is not -day of all the year when my text is not gloriously appropriate, and there is never -sua audience assembled on the planet where - -the text- does not fit .the oceasion: "Cast p ' '' tthy harden 'upon- tbe Lord, and he 'shall ' sustain thee;" In the far east wells of wa iter are so infrequent . that when . a man -owns a well he has a property of .very 'great! -valoe, and sometimes' battles have been f ought for the possession, of one well of but there is one well that every man a dean well, a iMiwnnlnl vaII ureal t 'fteara. 'If a man has not -a harden oh his shoulder,-be has a harden on the other fcoaWertt r, ". .'i r i e i V The day I left home to look after myself ..,. i "a"! tor mysel, tn the wagon my father" sat -driving," and he said - that day something rnich has kept with me all my life: "De Witt, it is always iafe to trust God. I have" matt y a time", corns to a crisis of 'iliffi-' wtfty. You may know that, having' been '"fck for -fifteen years, it was no' easy thing "tor me to support a family;, but always "God came to the rescue.' ' I remember' the time," he said, "when Ldida't know what . odo, and I saw a roan -c -horseback ; nd" -4ag np the farm lane, and be announced to' " m that I had been nominated for the most lucrative office in the gift of the people pt the county, and to tbaToffice I wasriect God ' in tbatr way met all my wants. I tell you 'it -1s always :safe to trust win. '1- ,.:;'X.'"!7' Oh, my friends, what we wantls a'prac- tlcal religionl 'The religion people have is onigh up-you-cannot reach-it. I had a -friend who entered tbe life of an evange ' Mat. " He 'gar e -up allucratv ibdsioessTis Chicago, and be and his wife finally came , 1 ' to severe want. ' ?He told me that in the! nun an nfvn ua wiuri 'u ijom, tnou. kaowest we have not a mouthful of "food to tbe housel Help me; helpns!" And he . .started out on the street, and a gentleman t him and said: I have heen thinkjpg you for a good while.' too. know I am flonr mterehant; if you wont be offended, -J ahonid like to send you a- barrel of floor." My friend cast his burden on the Lord, t,'j "ad, the Lord sustained" him. In the "Straits of Magellan, t have been told;'tbere is A place where "whichever way a captain ' pate his ship he finds the wind against him, and there are mefc wboall their, lvea kave been running in tbe - teeth, of the : -wind, and which way to turn they do not .v . know. 1 . Some of them may be here this 'snorning, and I address them face to face, . .;:no peffunctorily, but as one brother talks 'o another brother, "Cast thy burden upon "tha Lord,' and he shall Sustain thee.' ; THE BUSINESS MAN'S fiUBDKN. - . .. Klrat There are a' great many men who have business burdens. When we see - a ' man harried and perplexed and annoyed in "business life we are apt to say, "He ought no to have attempted to carry so much." -Ah. that man may uot be to blame at all! When a man plants a business he does not know what will be its outgrowths, what -will be its roots, what will be its branches. , ( ( .There is many a man with keen foresight . , and large business faculty who has been a ang Into the dust by unforeseen circum stances springing upon him from ambush-. When to buy, when to sell, when -to trust and to what amount of credit, what will be the effect of this new invention of machin ery, what will be the effect of that loss of crop and a thousand other questions per--plex business men until tbe hair is silvered and deep wrinkles are plowed in the cheek, and the stocks go up by the mountains and go down by the valleys, and they are at their wits' ends and stagger like drunken -'-'.- r ..... . ' " There never has been a time when there "nave been such rivalries in business as uow. It is hardware against hardware, booka1 against ! books, chandlery . against f chandlery,, imported . article against "im ported article. A thousand stores in com bat with another thousand stores. Never such advantage of light, never such vari ety of assortment, never so'mtich splendor of show, window, never so much' adroit ness of salesmen, never so much acateness of advertising, and amid all the severities of rivSlryin business bow- many men breaks down!-' Oh, ' the burden .'on the . shoulder! Oh, the burden on the heart! Yon hear that it is varice which drives j ' these men of business through the street, .- ! and that is. tbe oommohly accepted' idea. I do not believe a word of it. ' V " The vast multitude of theso business v men are tjoiling on for others. To educate their children, to puT the -wing of proteo-' tiou over their households, to have Bome thing left so when-they-pass out ; of this life their wives and children will hot Tiave to go to the poorbouse-that Is the way- J translate,, this energy in . the street and atore-the vast -majority-, 'of tha .energy; 1 unp, uouge-c U). ao ot-ao ail- tna- ousi rneaa. Some of us remember t when the Central America was coming'' home1 from F California. It wiu snvrtrnH PiwaMant Arthur's fakher-in-lAw was t he 'heroic caD i Stain of that ship, and4 went 'down with ' pmoetbl the'pajvrt ers.- ii S '? ' "': f. ; Some' of them got- off into lifeboats, but 9 tbere was a young- man returuinjj from California who had "a bag of gold in his .hand; and as the last; boat shoved off from the ship that was t6' go' down- that' man -shouted to a comnide-itr the- boat,-"Here, ; John, catch is gold; there are $3,(J(X); ' take" it home -to -rmy old mother it- wiH make her comfortable in her last days." Grip, Gouge & Co. do not do all the busi ness of the world. Ah! my friend, do yi.a !uy that Gdjiot, caw anything about roQr worldly business- I tell you God L- nnnru mncd olun r 4 - hun imii An Ua kjiows.'; all ..yoqt perplexities; -he : knows w hat mortKagee is about to . foreclose; be , knows what . note you cannot pay; he knows what unsalable' goods you have on your shelves; he knows all your trials, from. the day you took bold of the first yardstick down to the sale of the last yard of ribbon, and the God who helped David to be king, and who helped Daniel to be prime minister, and who helped Havelock to be a soldier, will help you to discharge all your duties. He is going to see you through. VVheu loss comes, and you Bud your property going, just take this Book and put-it. down by your ledger, and read of the eternal possesions that will come to you through our Lord Jesus Christ. And when your business partner betrays you, and your friends turu against you, just take the insulting' letter, put' it down on' the table, put your Bible beside the insult-' ing letter, .and f-hen read of tbe friend ship of ..him; vbo "sticketh closer than a brother." "":--THE-jbORD SUSTAINED HIM. ' A young accountant in New York city got his, accounts entangled. He knew he waahopestaBdyel) he could hot make, bis. accounts come oijit Tight, find he toiled at them day and night until 'he 'was nearly frenzied. It seemed by those books that ' something had. been , misappropriated, and he knew before God he was holiest.' The last day. cani& -He knew if he could not that day make bis accounts come out right he .would, go into, disgrace and, go into banish ment fropijt he business establishment. He went over there very early, before there' was anybody in the place,' "and he knelt down at tbe desk and said:. , "Oh, Lord, thou knowestl have tried' to be honest, but I cannot make these things come oat rigbtl Help me today help me this morning!" The young man arose and hardly know ing why he did do' opened a book that lay. on the desk, and- there was a leaf contain ing a line of figures which explained every thing. , lu other words, he cast his burden upon the . Lord-and he'i'iord sustained him.'-. Young man.'do you hear that? Oh, yes; God .has a sympathy with anybody that is in any kind of toil! He knows bow heavy is the hod of bricks that tbe .workman carries up the ladder of the wall;' he hears the pickax of the miner down in the-coaL shaft; be .knows Jio.st,ronf the tern pest strikes hesailor at masthead r he seesthe factorygirl among the spindles and knows .how her arms ache; he sees the sewing woman in the fourth story and. knows how few pence she gets for making a garment; and louder' than all' the din and roar of the city ! comes the voice of a sym pathetic God,, "Castthy burden upon the Lord.' and he shall sustain thee." . Second There are a great many who have a weight .of persecution and abuse upon' them. , Sometimes, society gets a grudge' against ' a man.' ' All ' his motives are misinterpreted, and his good deeds are djroreciafed.; ith.mor virtue $han some. ef the honored .and-. .applauded, he runs vuty agaiusii raillery ana snarp criticism, Wtn m.Rn gins to K? down he iias not .only.the force jofr natural .gravitation, but a uuuurai uauua w Dwp -miB J in- loe pre cipitatloru lMeu are persecuted for their virtues and their successes. GermaaicusJ aaad he bad' j list as many bjtter antagonists as he had adornments. The character sometimes "1b so lustrous that - the weak ' eyrsof envy and jealousy cannot bear, .to look at-it. lt-Xvas their, integrity that put Joseph in the pit, and Daniel in the den, and - Shad rach-in'Xhe fire, and aent John ' the ilEvangelirt foj desolate Patmos, and Calvin to the castle of persecution, and John, Husa to the. stake, and Korah .'after Moses, and .Saul, after David, and 'Herod after-Christ.' Be sure if you have anything to do for church or state, and you attempt it with all- your soul, the lightning will strike you. , ,.j 7 INTEGRITY ALWAYS BBXNGB ABOBE. " : The. iworjd , always has had a cross between)- two thieves, for the one who cornea to save it. High and holy enterprise has Always been followed by abase. Tbe most 'sublime tragedy 'of self sacrifice .has come to burlesque. The graceful gait of t virtue is al ways followed by grf mace and travesty . The sweetest strain of poetry ever written has tome to ridiculous parody, and as long as there are virtue and righteousness in the world, there will be something for iniquity to grin at. All along tbe line of the ages, and in : all .lands, the cry has been: "Not tbia. man, but Barabbas. Now, Barabbaa was a robber." , -:: And what makes the persecutions tft life worse is that they come from people whom you have helngg, from those to whom you have loaned, money or have started in busi ness, or whom you rescued in some great crisis. I think it has been the history of all our lives the most acrimonious assault has come X rom those whom we have bene fited;' whom we " have, helped, and that makes it all the harder to bear. A man is in danger of becoming cynical.' . ' A clergyman of the Universalist church : went into a neighborhood for the establish ment of a church of his denomination, and he was anxious to find some one - of that denomination, find he was pointed to a certain house and ' went' there. He said .to tbe man of the house, "I understand you are a Universalist; I want yon to help me in the enterprise." "Well,"atd the man, "1 am a Universalist, bnt I have a peculiar. . kind of ; Universalism.".r-f'.What. la tbatr" asked the minister. VWell," re plied the other,'"I have' been outrln world, and I have been cheated and slan dered and outraged and abused until I ben ueve In "universal damnation!" ; arj The great danger is that men be come cynical and given to belie ve. as . Da vid was tempted to say, that all men are liars.. Oh, my friendsdo. not let that be the effecfr upon "you sou Is I ...If you cannot endure a little persecution how 'do you think our fathers endured great persecu tion t Motley, in his "Dutch Republic," tells us of Egmont the martyr, who, con demned to be beheaded, unfastened his col- Llar on.the way to the scaffold; and when they askeq 'him why he did. that he said, "So tbey will not be detainer! in 'theii work; I want to be ready." Oh, how liCtl we have to endure compared wtth thosa who have, gone before us! BUDGE NOT ONE INCH. ' . Now,, if. yon have come across ill treat ment; let me Tell you. you aire' in excellent company Christ and. Luther and Galileo' and Columbus and John Jay and!.. Josiah Qui ocy and, thousands of men and women the beat spirits of earth and' iieamn .' Budge not one inch, though all hell wreakj upon you lis vengeance, ana yoa De made a target for devils to shoot at. Do' you hot J tmnk onri&t knows.a).l about persecution t Was he not hissed at FWasihe not struck on-the cheekf Was he not pursued all the days of his life?;. Did they not expectorate aponrJhimfOE, a putit-in Bible lan guage, "They spit 'upon him." And can--not he understand what persecution is! "Cast thy burden upon the Lord, and he shall sustain thee." t -.: Third Tbere are others who carry great' burdens of physical ailments. When sud den sickness has come, and fierca choleras and malignant fevers take the castles of life by storm, we appeal to God; but in these chronic ailments which wear out the strength day. after day, and week-after week, and year after year, how little re sorting to God for solace! Then people de pend upon their tonics and their plasters and their cordials rather than upon heav enly stimulants. Oh, how few people there are completely well! Some of you, by dint of perseverance and care, have kept living to this time; but how you have had to war against physical ailments! Ante diluvians, without medical college and in firmary and apothecary shop, multiplied their years by hundreds; but he who has gone through the gantlet of disease in our time, and has come to seventy years of age, is a hero worthy of a palm. THE BURDEN OF ILLNESS. ' The world seems to be a great hospital, and you run against r heumatisms and con sumptions, and scrofulas and neuralgias and scores of old diseases baptized by new nomenclature. Oh, how heavy a burden sickness is! It takes the color out of the sky, and the sparkle out of the wave, and the sweetness out of the fruit and the lus ter out of the night. When the limbs ache, when the respiration is painful,' when the mouth is hot, when the ear roars with un healthy obstructions, how hard it is to be patient and cheerful and assiduous! "Cast thy .burden, upon the Lord. Does your head acbef : His wore the thorn.' "i Do your feet hurtf ' His were crushed of the spikes. Is your side painfull1 His . was. struck by tbe spear. Do you feel like giving way un der tbe burden f His-weakness gave way under across. ... . .. - .While you are in every possible way to try to restore your' physical vigor, yoa are to remember that more-' soothing than any anodyne,and more vitalizing than any stim ulant, and - more strengthening than any tonic is the prescription of the text: "Cast tby burden upon the Lord, and he shall sustain ' thee." - We hear , a great deal of talk now about faith cure, and some people say it cannot be done and it is a failure.! rj do not know but that tbe chief advance of the church is to be in that direction. Mar velous things come to me day by day which make me think that if the age of miracles is past it is because the faith of miracles is past. .. ; .' . A prominent merchant of , 'New York said to a member of my family, "My moth er wants her case mentioned to Mr. Tal mage, " .-This was the case. f He said: "My mother bad a dreadf ul abscess, from which she bad suffered untold agonies, and all surgery had been exhausted upon her,, and worse and worse she grew until we called : in a few Christian friends and proceeded to pray about tt. We commended her case to God, and "the abscess began immediately to be cured.' She is entirely well now, and without knife and without any surgery." So that case has come to me, and tbere are a score "of other cases coming to oar ears from ' all' parts of' tbe earth! Oh, ye who are sick; go to Christ! . Oh, ye who are worn out with agonies of body, "Cast thy burden upon the Lord,, and he shall sus tain thee!",, - THS'6iTBtSs'0V BiraEiVElfBNT. Another bu rden ' some have to carry Js the burden of bereavement.' ' Ah! these are the troubles that wear us out. ' If we lose our property; by 'additional industry perhaps we may bring' back the .''estranged' fortune; if-.Jwe; , lose; -oar -good .name, .perhaps by reformation of -,rnorals ,we" may achieve again reputation for integrity; but who will bring back the dear departed f ,Alas me! f or the etobt-f 'cr&dles and these trunks of childish rtys that will -never be used again. "-Alas me I' for the empty: chair and -the silence in the halls that will never echo again' tor; those: familiar .footsteps. .Alas) for the cry of widowhood and orphanage. r'f.'Wbat;bitJr. Marahs. in the wilderness, . what, cities of . the dead, what long . black shadow; from (be wing of death, what eyes sunken with , grief, what hands tremulous , with "bereavement,-what' Instruments of music shut Dow. because' there are no fin gers, to play on them! Is there no relief for such souls' 1 Aye, let the soul ride into tbe harbor of my text.' - ' Tbe soul that on Jeans hath' leaned for repose, I will not, I will not desert to its foes; , f , . .That soul, though all bell shall endeavor' to '-'. shake, -ji: ,. .j . ' I'll never, no never, no never forsake. Now. the grave is brighter than the an cient tomb where the lights were perpetu ally kept bu,rning. The scarred feet of . him who. was "the resurrection and the life" are on the broken grave hillock, while , the voices of .angels ring down the sky at the coronation of another soul come home to glory. THE ONLY v'CKH FOB 8IN. ' Then there are many who carry the bur den, of ain. Ah, we' all carry it until, in the appointed way that -burden is lifted. We need no Bible to prove that tbe whole race is ruined. : What a spectacle it would be if we could tear off the mask of human defilement, or beat a drum that would bring up the, whole army of , the ..world's : transgressions the deception, the fraud, and: the rapine, and the murder, and tbe crime of all the. centuries 1 : Aye, if I could sound the trumpet of resurrection in the soul of the best men in this audience,, and, wuv ucnu diiu ui . i-ut3. MBb SUUIUU CUIUS. up, we could nop endure the sight: Sin,1 . grim ana aire, has put Jts clutch upon the immortal soul, and that 'clutch wili-jnever relax unless it be under the heel of him. -who came to destroy, the works of tbe devil. Oh, to have a mountain of sin on tbe souU; Is tliere no-way to'have the burden moved? Oh, yes.'-' "Cast 'thy burden upon. the Tcd,JJhesinlesspne came to take the consequences of our sinf And I know -he' is in earnest-Howdp, I inow it? ' By . tbe streaming ltemples.,and,the streaming , hands as he. says, '.'Come unto me all ye ' who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will i?iv r,yoreiiti';- Why will:, prodigals Uve on 8 wines' husks when the robe, and the ring, and the father's welcome are ready f Why go wandering over the great Sahara ..desert of your sin when you are invited to the gardens pf . God; the trees of life and the, fountains of living 'waterf Why be houseless and homeless forever when yon may become the sons and daughters of the Lord God Almighty f r:av i-mi :-. .: - Fashions In. Fan. 1 'There are : gauze1 fans of novel design,' hand painted, with flights of butterflies; swallows and dragon flies, and studded at intervils'with mock gems diamonds, ru ,bies, emeralds-and the -like. They glitter and.. look , yery . brilliant . by gaslighe;'-an(li are, .comparatively inexpensive. HiA,nretti , ua ui otacK gauze, cauea tne nsmgOB. is ornamentea witn Graduated lines o: gold-' It would be just the thing' to carry witn a DlacK ana im d h, 1 1 tmam jama.1 - young girls have their first .name painted. vu wwi ,aijq..t wxu was iu crepe tie Chine; with the word "Violet" painted f H: violets upon it. The flower fans are lovely, but very fragile. They generally copy the form and colors of a poppy or a rose. -1' : ' .' " : - . .- ? H: .-Lt . .. f- .. t : - She' Knew What to' Do.'-!'""' ' Amy Tbfe newspaper articles' 'on "What Shall We' Do with. Our floys" make me tired. - r,-' Mabel Me, too; every girl knows that the best thing to do with her boy is to marry him. New York Epoch. SJIIPES & RljlERSLY, Wiolesale and Betall Dmmrjsts. -DEALER8 IN- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic OIGhA:R,S. s ;I - PAINT :....,.. ' ''' -- Now is the time to paint your, bouse and if you wish to get the best quality and a fine color use the , Shenvin, Williams Co.'s Paint. For those wishing to see the' quality and color of the above paint we call their attention to the residence of S. L. Brooks, Judge Bennett, Smith French and others painted by Paul Kref t.( Snipes & Kinersly are agents for the above paint for The Dalles. Or. ' . Don't Forget the t--srj.-.V'f'CI;rH I . JF aa.aa Wimw yv ; MacDonalJ. BE- Props.; -ii THE BEST OF - :rr: and Cipre ALWAYS ON HAND. Heal -Estate, :tf iMr and Loan 'jii'i . : agency.,; :..:. f'-V.f i : J.n ... ....... ,r -.I-,K.,v..V( l.'., .. '. ... ' -V ' Opera House Bloek,3ct St. T'. r f it . r rj ' Chas. Stubling, nt a p. -. r j j raQraipTa or th . New Vogt Block, Second St ; . -WHOLESALE AND RETAi: Liquor ." Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON DRAUGHT. Health is Wealth ! ( Dr. E. C West's Kkevb nb. Brain Tbbat xent, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi ness, ConvulsionB, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervou Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in in sanity and leading to misery, decay and death, Premature Old Age, Barrenness, .Loss of Power in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhoea caused by over erertion of the brain, self abuse or oyer' indulgence. Each -box contains one month's treatment, fl.00 a box, or six boxes for fo.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. a? WB GUARANTEE- SIX BOXES To cure any, case. . With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by $5.00, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effect a enre. Guarantees issued only by . ,. (. BLAKELEI.& HOCOHTONi ' , Prescription Drug-gists';' "- 175 Second St. " ' The DU, Or. Ti'.'t innn Lifliiors d. E. BYAiD & (JO., f'-:'J',lr.i, A w. ' H'; ifLri c .. 1 BIIA1M I ' '! ' Middle Valley, Idaho, May 15, 1891. Dr. Vandebpool: Your 8. B. Headache and Liver Cure Bells well here.. Everyone that-tries It comes for the second bottle. People are com ing ten to twelve miles to get a bottle to try it and then they come back and take three or four bottles at a time. Thank you, 'or sending -duplicate bill as mine as displaeed. Respectfully, ., M. A. FLETCHER. For sale by all Druggists. 3X is here and has come to stay. It heroes to win its way to public favor by ener gy, maustry and merit: and to this end we ask that you give it a fair trial, and it satished with its support. The four pages of six columns each; will be issued every evening, except Sunday, and will be delivered in the city, or sent by mail for the moderate sum of fiftj cents a month. Its- Obi will be to advertise the resources of the city,;aiid adjacent country, to assist in developing pur industries, in extending and opening up hew channels; for pur trade, in securing an open river, and in helping THE iALLES to take Her prop er position as the LMd i Ci ty of- TM;papeft both daily and5 Weekly; will .betjdejecleiit in;; .dUtips, '; .and in its criticism of political J matte in its handling of local ajrs,' it will be . ;; juE ria lo cal, news; and we ask that your criticism of;oW;9$jectaA tHe consents of tlie" paperanfr 'n rash assertions of outside parties. ivS :u V) THE WEEKLY, sent to any Mdress for " $i.50 per: year. itwillibbntairiL from four ; to six i eight CQlumn,:pages;; and we shall -endeavor to: make s it the equal of the bestr ' Ask your Postmaster for a copy, or add Office N,:V.,Qprf Washin Sts. .! r, I " a I' - : TJie Grate City , of the Inland s Empire is situated at ' the head of navigation on the Middle Colnmbia, and is a thriving, prosperous city. ' , TERRITORY. f ,x' ' It is the supply city for. an, extensive an4.1r.ich agri cultural ,an . grazing country, its trade reaching as farjr3outh as Summer Lake, a distance of over fwc -hundred.miles, .j ; ,; : : - fTHE XARGfpST WOOL' MARKET, vr. Therit grazijig country along the eastern slope of -the tthe.. Cascades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheep, the w-oolfmMch!&i6s market here. The - Dalles is 'the largest' original ' IwopT ""hipping point in , ; America, aDout 5,000,000 . pounds being sMpp..l-t;.y.ear'?irv.4:. t ? a The; salinon. fisheries are tWp hest ouiifiQqlumbia, yielding .this, yearja. revenue, of. $1500)00. which can. ahd twill be more than doubled in the-near future. --The products of the beautiful Klickital -valley findl market herer.and ; te"counjtry;south and east has this; year filled i&? arehQuses a-Qd'.aU' available storage places to overflowing with their products. ' 5 !; .;:!' ' its;,weal,th . .'. . : . h . liis,the jcieci''fBe on th,c6atand its money; is scattered over and, is being, usfed'tq develop, more, farming country than is tributary to any other city in Eastern Oregon; ; .... -..v..--v ; , It?, situation is unsurpassed! ' Its climate delight ful! Its possibilities incalculable ""lis resources unlimited!- And on these corner stones she stands. Bnra course a generous eets Easter n .0 regon . Daily