The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, July 18, 1891, Image 4

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    'CM 3
'ICTD4V T3TTT "Dt?,1ri?T?Ii'Tl' to kill you. 'I know it. I cannot u n- blew and pmnrrre ycro, and tmke from 700 th
'VJAJttAI DUl IlEAAJj V EOLEj LI dertaDd how the fcoafc eoQld liv one Jiour 1 accursed appetiteaad hasten tb day when we
OR. TALMAGE
NECESSITY
PREACHES ON THE
OF A REDEEMER.
ty, Pathoa ud Comfort Found In
1 Fifty-third Chapter of iMlmh Bow
Wfcy Hn Mud Sheep G Aatrajr.
Wkomnr Will. Lot Rim Com.
) BBOOSU.TK. Jane 28. Dr. Talmage's eer
11111 today is of so decidedly evangelical a
.oaaracter aa t prove conclimively that
While so many eminent preachers of the
aay are drifting away from the old fash
ioned Gospel he remains firm in the paths
of wthodoxy. His subject is "Astray, bat
Becovered," and his text, Isaiah liii, &
"AJ1 we li ke sheep have (one astray:
and the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity
ruaalL" .
Within ninety years at the longest all
who bear or read this sermon will be in
eternity. During the next fifty years you
will nearly all be gone. The next ten yearn
will cat a wide swath among the people.
The year 18U1 will to some be the finality.
Soch considerations make this occasion ab
sorbing and momentous. ' The first half oi
Bty text is an indictment, "All we lik
sheep have gone astray." Some one tutys
""Can you not drop the first word? That i
too general; that sweeps too great a circle.
Some man rises in the audience and be
looks over on the opposite side of the bouse,
and he says: "There is a blasphemer, and I
voders land how be has gone astray. And
there in another part of the house is a de
traoder. and he has gone astray. ' And
-there is an impure person, and he has gone
hall be ah living, happily together Thh4
will be my dally prayer, knowing that he has
said, "Come onto me all ye that labor and are
heavy laden, and I will give yon rest. From
your loving wife, . . Maby.
"And so I wandered on and wandered
on," says that man, "until one night I
passed a Methodist meeting house, and I
said to myself, 'I'll go in and see what they
and I got to the door, and they
were singing:
All may come, whoever will.
Sit down, my brother, and look at home.
My text takes us all in.- It starts behind
she pulpit, sweeps the circuit of ' the room
and comes back to the point' Where it
-started, when it says: "All we like sheep
have gone astray." I can very easily, under
stand why Martin Luther threw up hie
hands after be had found the Bible and
riedout, "Ohl my sins, my sins," and why
the publican, according to the custom to
this day in the east, when they have any
great grief, began to beat himself and cry
a he smote upon his breast. "God be mere!
fnl to me a sinner."
XIXCSTRATIOX FROM THE SHEPHERD'S LIFE.
. I was, like many of you, brought up in the
oantry, and I Know some of the habits oi
beep and hi w they get astray, and what
say text me:m when it says, "All'we like
sheep have k. me astray." Sheep get astray
ta two wayn. itber by trying to get into
ether pastun-, or from being scared by the
dogs. In the former way some of us got
.astray. We thought the religion of Jesus
Christ short, commons. We thought there
was better pHHturage somewhere else. We
' thought if we could 'only lie down on the
hanks of distant streams or nnder great
oaks ' on the other side of some hill we
Might be better fed.
We wanted other pasturage than thatj
which God through Jesus Christ gave our j
soul, and we wandered on and we wan-1
dared on, and we were lost. We wanted
bread and we found garbage. The further J
we wandered, instead of finding rich pas
tarage, we found blasted heath and sharp
er rocks and more stinging nettles. No
pasture. ' How was it in the worldly
(roups when . you lost your child? Did.
they come around and console you very,
arachf Did not the plain Christian muu
who came into your house and sat up with
yoar darling child give you more comfort
than all worldly associations? Did all the
on vi vial songs you. ever heard comfort
you in that day of bereavement so much
aa the song they sang to you, perhaps the
'very song that vjs sung by your little
ehikl the last Suobath - afternoon of her
JUef
There is a happy land, far, far away, ' '
Where saints immortal reign, bright, bright
as day.
Did your business associates in that day
mt darkness and trouble give you any enpe
ial condolence Business exasperated you,
business wore you out, business left you
limp as a rag, business made you mad.
You got dollars,1 but you got no peace.
God have mercy on the man who has noth
ing but business to comfort him. The
world afforded you' no luxuriant pastur
age.. A famous English actor stood on the
stage impersonating, and thunders of ap-
,ylause came down from the galleries, and
TatoV thought it was the proudest moment
. ,-of all his life; but there was a man asleep
. just in front of him, and the fact that that
',anan was indifferent and somnolent spoiled
,;. all the occasion for him, and he cried,
. . "Wake up! wake up!"- .
, So one little annoyance in life has been
in .that?, chopped sea. Bujt I do hot "kfcow j
by what -proces;.you 'got astray; som in 1
one way. and some in another, and if you
bould really see the' position some of you I
occupy before God this morning, your soul f
would burstwinto an agony of tears and '
you would pelt the beavens with the cry. i
"God have mercy I" Sinai's batteries have !
oeen unlitnoerea anove your soui. ami at ; are doing.'
times you nave neara 11 bounuen ue
wages of sin is death.' "All have sinr.eil
ana come snort ot tne glory or ioa. ny,- This man receives Door sinners tilL
one man sin entered into the world, and And , dropped tn6re wbere r wa8
death by sin; and so death passed upon al , and j -God have mercy,' and he had
men, for that all have sinned.' "The soul . mercy on mfL My home is restored, my
that sinneth it shall die.' 1 wifj M day lonK dnliog work, my
When Sebastopol was being bombarded, ehildren out a long way to greet me
two Russian frigates burned all night in 1 home and my household is a little heaven,
the harbor throwing a glare upon i be I wui tU foa what did til this (or m. It
trembling fortress, and some of you are wa8 the trnth thftt thia day you proclaim,
standing in the night of your soul's trou 0n him tbe bad uj.j the ininjty of
ble. The cannonade and the connaura ns a j
tion, the multiplication of your sorrows! the drunkard and the outcast. ""
and troubles I think must make the wiiis Yonder U a woman who would say: "I
of God's hovering angels shiver to the tip,; wandered oflr trom mv father's . house; 1
But the last part of my text opens a door heard the 8torm that pelts on a lost Bona
wide enough to let us all out and to let all 1 my feet wero blistered ou the hot rocks. I
heaven in. Sound it on tbe organ with all j went OI, MIld on, thinking that no one cared
the stops out. . Thrum it on the hrps 1 for my(oa when one night Jesus met me
with all the SLrings atune. With all the and he MiA. .poor thing, go homel your
melody possibWt the heavens sound it to j fatber jg waitinK for- you, your mother is
the earth and let the -earth tell It-to .he; waitm(? for yon- tIo ho thingl'
heavens. ".The lxrd hath laid on him the . And , wft, wcak and j waf
iniquity of us all." I am glad that 1 Je too weak to repent, but I- just cried out;'!
prophet did not stop to explain whom be , gobbed out my sins and my sorrows on the'
meant by him. Him of the inanswr. ahoulders of him of whom it is said, the
him of the bloody sweat, him of the reur hatn iaid on him the iniquity of us
rection throne; him of the crucifixion n - .
agony. un mm ioe iirn natn- laia i ne,
iniquity of us all."
CHRIST COMES TO THE FAXXKN. .
- "Oh," says some man, 'that is hot gener-v
ous, that is not fair: let every man carry
his own burden and pay his own debts." :
That sounds reasonable. If I. have an !-:
ligation and I have tbe means to meet it. ',
and I come to you and ask you to settle '
that obligation, you rightly say, "Pay your j
own debts." If you and I walking down
WlwlesalE and Retail Dromists.
mi
alles etiioRicle
-DEALERS 1N-
There is a youny; man who would say;
"I had a .Christian bringing up; I came
from the . country to city life; I started
well; I had a good position, a good com
mercial position, but one night at the tbe1
ater I met some young men who did me no
good.. They dragged me all through the'
sewers of iniquity, and I lost my morals
and I lost my position, and I was shabby
and wretched. I was going down the
street, thinking that no one cared for ma.
Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic
PAINT
Now is the time to paint yonr house
and if you wish to get the beet quality
and a fine color use the
Sherwin, Williams (Vs Paint
For thoBf 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 Kreff. '
nipes & Kinersly are agents for the
above paint for The Dalles. Or.
the street, both bale, hearty ana well, l ask j. when a young man tapped me on the
you to carry me, you say, and say rightly, shoulder and said, 'George, come with me
"Walk on your own feet!" But suppose ; and t do yoa good.' I looked at him
you and I were in 'a regiment and I was to see whether he was joking or not I saw
wounded in the battle and I fell uncon- ! he na In earnest and I said- 'What An von
acious at your reet wicn gunsnot iractures ;
Health is Wealth !
and dislocations, what would you.dof . You
would call . -to" your comrades saying,
"Come.-aad '-help, this man is helpless;
bring the ambulance:, let us take him to
tbe hospital," and I would be a dead lift
in yonr arms, and you would lift me from
the ground where I had fallen and put me
in the ambulance and take me to the hos
pital and have' all kindness shown me.
Would there be anything mean in your.lo
ing that? Would there be anything De
meaning in my accepting that kindness!1
Ob, no. Vou would be mean not to do it.
That is what Christ does.
If we could pay our debts then it would
be better to go op and pay them, pay in ir,
"Here, Iord, here is my obligation: liere
are the means with which I mean to settle
that obligation; now give me a receipt:
cross it all out." The debt is paid. Bnt
the fact is we have fallen in the battle, wt
have gone down under the hot fire of oar
transgressions, we have been wounded by
the sabers of sin, we are helpless, we art
nndoue. Chjst- comes. . The loud clung
mean, sir? Well,' he replied, 1 mean if
you will come to the meeting tonight I will
be very glad to introduce yon. I will meet
you at the door. Will you comer' Said I,
I will.'
"I went to the place where I was tarry
ing. I fixed myself up as well as I could.:
I buttoned my coat over a ragged vest and
went to tbe door of the church, and tbe
young man met me and we went in; and
as I went in I heard an old man praying,
and be looked so much like my father I
sobbed right out; and they were all around
so kind and sympathetic that I just gave
my heart to God, and I know this morning
that what you say is true; I believe it In
my own experience. 'On him tbe Lord
bath laid the iniquity of us all."'
Oh, my brother, without stopping to look
as to whether your hand trembles or not,
without stopping to look whether your
hand U bloated with sin or not, put it in4
my hand, let . me give you one warm,
brotherly, Christian grip, and invite you
j right up to. the heart, to the compassion,
to tne sympatny, to tne paraon 01 mm on
1B. . C. West's Nerve anb Brais Tbkat-
mknt, s guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi
ness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia,
Headache. Nervous Prostration caused by the use
of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental De
pression, soiteniog ot roe urain, resulting in, in
sanity and leading to misery, decay and death,
Premature Old Age, Barrenness, liws of Power
in either aex, Involuntary Losses und Spermat
orrhnea caused by over exertion of the brain, self
abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains
one month'tftreatment. $1.00 a box, or six boxes
for 15.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt ot price.
WK GUARANTEE SIX BOXES
To cure any case. With each order received by
us for six boxes, accompanied by $5.00, we will
send the curchaser oar written guarantee to re
fund the money if the treatment don not effect
care, uuar&nieca lssuea only oy
BLAKELEV A HOUGHTON,
Preaerlptien Dragglsta,
175 Second St. Tbe Dalles, Or.
heard in the sky on that Christmas night whom the Ixird had laid the iniquity of us
all. Throw away your sins. Carry them
no longer, 1 proclaim emancipation this
morning to all who are bound; pardon fqr
all Bin, and eternal life for all the dead, r .--Some
one comes here this morning, and
I stand aside. He comes np these steps;
He comes to this place. - I must stand
aside. Taking that place he spreads abroad
his bands, and tbey were nailed; Yon see
the ambulance. Clear, the way for the Son '
of God. He comes down to bind up the !
wounds, and to scatter the darkness, and
to save the lost. Clear tbe way for the Son
of God.
Christ comes down to see us, and we are
a dead lift. He does not lift us with the
tips of his fingers. He does not lift us with
one arm. He comes down upon bis knee, ' his feet, tbey were bruised. He pulls aside
ana then witn a dead, lilt he raises us to the robe and shows you his wounded heart.
honor and glory and immortality. "The I say, "Art thou weary!"" "Yes," he says,:
Ltoro hath lata on him the iniquity or us "weary with the world's woe." I say,
all." Why. then, will no man carry his! "Whence comest thou?" He says, "I come
sins!' You cannot carry successfully the ' from Calvary." I say, "Who comes' with
smallest sin you ever committed. You thee?" He says, "No one; I have trodden
might as well put tbe Apennines on one , the winepress alone!" I say, "Why comest
shoulder and the Alps on the other. How , thou here?" "Oh," he says, "I came here
much less can you carryall the sins of your to carry all the sins and sorrows of -the
lifetime! Christ comes aqd looks down in : people.', . , ' . . -
your face and says: "I have come through - And he kneels and be says; "Put on my
an tne lacerations or these cays and through ' shoulders all tbe sorrows and all the sins.
ail the tempests of these nights. 1 have; .And, conscious of my own sins first,.! take
come to bear your burdens, and to pardon . 'them and put them on the shoulders of the
your sins, and to pav
I them on my shoulder;
your debts. Put
put them on my
.store pervading to your mind than all the
brilliant congratulations and successes.
'Poor pasturage for your soul you found in
this world. Tbe world has cheated you,
the world has belied you, tbe world has
misinterpreted you, the world has perse
cuted you. It never comforted you.-. Qh!
this world is a good rack from which a
horse may pick bis hay; it is a good trough
from wbicb tffe swine may-crunch their
mess; but it gives but little food to a soul
-Mood bought and immortal
What is a soul? ' It is a hope high as tbe
throne of God. What is a man You say.
"It is only a man."' It is only a man gone
overboard in business-life; What is a manf
The battle ground of three worlds, with his
bands taking hold of destinies of light or
darkness. A man I No line can measure
him."; No limit can bound him. The arch
angel before the throne cannot - outlive
him. The stars shall die, but he will watch
their extinguishment. The" world will
burn, but be will gaze-on .-the conflagra
tion. Endless ages will march on; he will
watch the procession. A. man I The masterpiece-
of God Almighty. ; Yet you say,
"It is only a man." Can a naturelike that
tte fed on husks of the wilderness! '
Substantial comfort' will not grow v. '
On nature's barren soil;
. All we can boast till Christ. we know
Is vanity and toil..; r ,
THOSE WHO ST RAT' IK -TROUBLE.
Some of you got astray by looking fot
- better pasturage; others by being scared of
the dogs. Tbe hound gets o.i into the
pasture field. The poor things hy in every
direction. In a few moments tbey are torn
-ef the hedges and they are plashed of the
ditch, and the lost sheep never gets home
unless the farmer goes after it. There ia
. jaothing so thoroughly lost as a lost sheep.
Jt may have been in 1857, during the finan-1
cial panic, or during tbe financial stress in a
the fall of 1873, wheu you got astray. You '
almost became an atheist. . You said,!
"Where is God, that honest men go down
and thieves prosper?" You were dodged j
' -of creditors, yon were dogged of the banks.
- yoa were dogged of worldly disaster, and
some of you went into misanthropy, and
- some of yoa took to strong drink, and oth
rsof you fled out of Christian association,
and yoa got astray. O man! that was tht
. last time when you ought to have forsaken
' God. '. : . . V
Standing 'amid the foundering of yout
earthly fortunes, how could you get along
without a God to comfort yoa, and a God
heart.'.' "On him the Lord bath laid the
iniquity of us all.";
NO REST TOR THE WICKED.
Sin has almost pestered the life oat of
some of you.' At times it has made you
cross and unreasonable, and it has spoiled
the brightness of your days and the peace
of your nights. There are men who have
been riddled of sin. The world gives them
no solace. Gossamer and volatile tbe world,
wbild eternity, as they look forward to it,
is black as midnight. They writhe under
the stings of a conscience which propones
to give do rest here and no rest hereafter;
and yet they do not repent, they do not
pray, they do not weep. They do not real
ize that just the position they occupy is
the position occupied by scores, hundreds
and thousands of men who never found
any hope.
If this meeting should be thrown ppea
and tbe people who are here could give.
their testimony, what thrilling experiences
we should hear on all sides! There, is a
man in the gallery who would say: "I bad
brilliant surroundings, I had. the best edu
cation that one of the best collegiate insti
tutions of this country : could give, and 1
observed all the moralities of life, and I
was'self righteous, and I thought J was ail
right before God as I am all right before
-men; but the Holy Spirit came to me one
day and said. 'You are a sinner;? tbe Holy
Spirit persuaded me of the fact. While I
had escaped tbe sins against the law of tbe
land I had really committed the worst sin
Son of God. I say, "Canst thou bear any
more, O Christ?" He says, "Yea, more."
And I gather up the sins of all those who
serve, at these altars, the officers of the
Church of Jeshs Christ I gather ' up all
their sins and. put them on Christ's shoul
ders, and I say, "Canst thou bear any
more?" He says. "Yea, more." Then 1
gather up all the sins of a hundred people
in this house, and I put them on tbe sboul
dera of Christ, and I say, "Canst thou bear
more?" - He says, "Yea, more." And
gather up all' tbe sins of this assembly, and
I put them on the shoulders of the Son of
God and I say, "Canst thou bear them?
" Yea," be says, "more!" ' i;-
BE HATH BORNE OUR TRANSGRESSIONS'.
But he is departing. Clear the way for
him, the Son of God. Open the - door and
let him pass out... He is carrying' our sins
and bearing, them away. We 'shall ' never
see them again." He" throws them" down
into the abysm, and yon hear the long re
verberating echo 'of their fall.--"O him
I, the Lord bath laid the iniquity of usialL
Will ..you let him take away your- sins to
day? :, Or dp you say, "I will take -charge
of them , myself; I will fight my own bat
ties;,. I. will risk . eternity on my own ac
count?".' A clergyman said in his pulpit
one Sabbath,' "Before next Saturday night
one of this audience will have passed ' out
of life." A gentleman' said to' another
seated next ta him: "I don't beliepe it; . 4
mean to watch, and if it doesn't bgme true
by next Saturday night I shall .tell that
clergyman bis falsehood." The man seated
hi-t. to him aniH. "Pnrhana it will be vonr-
:.- . i j : : I. - m clf " "Oh nn . .-t.ht nr.hfr iwnliAd-
iunu cTcrmiuuiiwvuQ uriviuK mca ui i - - " -- i . -
the Son of God from my heart's affections. 1 "hall live to bean old man,".. That, night
And I saw that my hands were red with be breathert bis last.- ,. . ..
the blood of the Son of God. and I besan to F .Today tbe Saviour calls. ' All may .come.
nrav. and oeace came to mv heart, and I ' God -never pushes a- man. off. God never
know bv exnerience that what Von sav this destroys anybody. . The man jumps off. It
mornincr is true. 'On him the Lord hath is suicide soul , suicide if the man per
laid the iniauitv of us all '" i ishes, for the invitation is, "Whosoever
Yonder is a man who would saT: "I was will, let him come." Whosoevzr, wboso-
the worst drunkard in New York; 1 went
from bad to worse: 1 destroyed myself, I
destroyed my home; my children cowered
when I entered the house; when they put
np their lips to be hissed I struck them;
when my wife protested against the mal
treatment, I kicked her into tbe street. 1
know all tbe bruises and all tbe terrors of
ever, whosoever! In this day of merciful
visitation, while many are coming into
tbe kingdom of God, join the procession
heavenward.
Seated among us during a service was a
man who came in and said, 1 don t Know
that there ia any God." That was on Fri
day night. I said. "We will kneel down
a drunkard's woe. I went on farther and Bnd "find out whether there is any God."
further from God until one day I got a let
ter saying: -
"Mr Dear Husband I have tried every
way, done everything, and prayed earnestly
and fervently for your reformation, bnt it
seems of no avail. Sihceoor little Henry died,
with the exception of those few happy weeks
when yoa remained sober, my life has been one
of sorrow. Many ef the nights I have sat by
tbe window, with my face bathed in tears,
watching for your coming. 1 am broken
hearted, I am sick. Mother and father have
been here frequently and begged me to come
home, bat my love for yoa and my hope for
brighter days have always made me refuse
-to deliver you, and a bod to belp you, ana t them. That hope seems now beyond realiza
i God to save you? You tell me you hav tion, and I have returned to them. It is bard,
been through enongh business troubl : al- and I battled long before doing it. May God
And in tbe second seat from the pulpit we
knelt. He said: "1 have found him. There
is a God,- a pardoning God. I feel him
here." ' He knelt in the darkness of sin.
He arose two minutes afterward in the lib
erty of the Gospel; while another sitting
under the gallery on Friday night said
"Mv oDDortunitv is gone: last week
mieht have been saved, not now: the door
is shut." And another from tbe very midst
of tbe meeting, during the week:, rushed
sat of the front door of tbe Tabernacle.
laying,. "I am a lost man." ."Behold? tbe
Lamb of God who takethaway the sin. of
the world." "Now is 'the' accepted time,
IJnw ia tha dav of salvation." "It is ui
minted unto all men once to die, and after.
bat the judgment!"
I. d. iMRTLgEM,
DEALER IN ',
SCHOOL BOOKS,
STATIONERY,
ORGANS,
PIANOS,
WATCHES,
JEWELRY.
Cor. Third and Washington Sts.
' E. BlD (10.,
Real Estate,
Insaranee,
and Itoan
AGENCY.
Opera House &loek,3d St.
is here and has come to stay. It hopes
to win its way to public favor by ener
gy, industry and merit; and to this end
we ask that you give it a fair triai, and
if satisfied with its' course a gener6us
support.
The Daily
four pages of six columns each, will be
issued every evening, except Sunday,
and will be delivered m the city, or sent
by mail for the moderate sum of fifty
cents a month.
Its Objects
- . A'
will be to advertise the resources of the
city, and adjacent country, to assist "in
developing our industries, in extending
and opening up new channels for our
trade, in securing an open river, and in
helping THE DALLES to take her prop
er position as the
Leading City of Eastern Oregon.
The paper, both daily and weekly, will
be independent in politics, and in its
criticism of political matters, as in its
handling of local affairs, it will be
JUST. FAIR AND IMPARTIAL
We will endeavor to give all the lo
cal news, and we ask that your criticism
of our. object and course, be formed from
the contents of the paper, and not from
rash assertions of outside parties.
THE WEEKLY,
sent to any address for $1.50 per year.
It will contain from four to six eight
column pages, and we shall endeavor
to make it the equal of the best. Ask
your Postmaster for a copy, or address.
THE CHRONICLE PUB. CO.
Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts.
HURRAH !
v.- . FOR 7
if yoa get Uolic,' Uramp, r xnarrnoea or
the Cholera Morbus the S. B. Pain Cure
is a'etire cue. - - .-, I
The 4th of July !
If yoa need the' Blood and -liver
cleaneed yoa will find 'the 8. B. Head
ache and Liver Cure a perfect remedy
For sale by all druggists. ;.
GE
MY AN
Chas. Stubling,
rxonuBToa op th
New Yogt Block, Second St
i. -r--:WOLESALE AND RETAIL
Liquor "." Dealer,
- - I I 'll
MILWACKEE -BEER ON DRAUGHT.
EE DALLES.
IS
The Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at
the head of navigation on the Middle Colum.'bia, and
a xnrrving, prosperous cixy.
..., ITS TERRITORY.
It is the snrply city for an extensive and rich agri
cultural an . grazing country, its .trade reaching as
far sofuth as Su-mmer Lake, a distance of over twe
hundred miles. . r ," ;
THE LARGEST WOOL MARKET.
The rich grazing country along the eastern slope,
of the the Cascades furnishes pasture for thousands .
of sheep, the "wool from "which finds m arket here.
The Dalles is the largest original -wool shipping :
point m America, about 5,000,000 pounds being
shipped last year.
ITS PRODUCTS. .
' The salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia,
yielding this year a revenue of $l,500,000"which can ,
and will be more than doubled in the near future.
" The products of the beautiful Klickital valley find
market here, and the country south and east has this
year filled the -warehouses, and all available ; storage
places to overflowing -with their products. .
ITS WEALTH
It is the richest city of its size on the coast, and its
money is scattered over and is being used to develop, ,
more farming country than is tributary to any others
city in Eastern Oregon. ?V-.-:-
. Its situation is unsurpassed! ' Its ; climate delight
ful! Its possibilities incalculable! - -Its resources un
limited! And on these corner stones she stands.
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