The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, August 03, 1891, Image 3

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    The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
Published Dally, Sunday Excepted.
BY ' '
THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO.
Corner Second and Washington Streets, Tbc
Dalle, Oregon.
Term of Subserltlon.
PsrYear
Per month, by carrier .
Single copy
.6 00
50
- J
TIME TABLES
Kallronds.
BAST BOUND.
No. J, Arrlvea 12:45 M. Depart 12:65 A. M.
- K, " 12: 1ft P.M. " 12:35 P.M.
win bound.
No. l. Arrives 4:40 A. M.
"7, '" 5:15 P. M.
Departs 4:50 a. m.
" 6:30 F.M.
. Two loc freight that carry passengers leave
. one for the west at 7:45 A. M., and one for the
eaatatn a. m.
. . ! STAGES. ' , ...
For Prineville, via. Bake Oven, "leave daily
except Sunday) at A. M. .. ' ?
For Antelope, Mitchell, Canyon City, leave
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, at 6 a. m.
For Dufur, KJiiRsley, Waniio, Wapinitla, Warm
Springs ind Tygh Valley, leave daily (except
Sunday) at 6 A. M. .
For Goldendale, Wash., leave every' day of the
week except Sunday at 8 A. M.
Offices fur all linen at the Umatilla House.
Post-Office,
omci hooks t
General Delivrey Window 8 a: -in. to 7 p. m.
Honev Order " 8 a. in. to 4 p. m.
Bunday i. D. .. ..8. m. tolua. m.
CLOBINT OF M AliS . .
By trains going East . .9 p. ni. and 11 :45 a. m.
" " West 8 p. m. and 4:45 p.m.
Stage for Goldendale 7:30 a.m.
. "Prineville 5:30 a.m.
"Dufurand warm Spring. . .6:30 a. m.
" f Leaving for Lyle A Hartland. .5:30 a. m.
" ; " Antelope 5:30a.m.
Except Sunday.
Tri-weekly. Tuesday Thursday and Saturday.
" Monday Wednesday and Friday.
MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1891.
METEOEOLOGIOAL EEPOBT.
Pacific Rela- D.t'r 58 State
Coast BAB. tive of 2. of
Time. " Hum Wind 3 Weather.
8 A. M 30.00 67 80 8. W. PtCloudy
SP. M 30.00 74 51 West Clear
Maximum temperature, 7fi:
perature, 64.
minimum- tem-
WEATHBU PROBA1I1LITIK8.
Thk Dalles, Aug. 3, 1891,.
Weatlter forecast till IS m
, .Tuesday; fair.- Nearly sta'
ary temperature.
FAIR
The Chronicle is the Only Paper in
The Dalles that Receives the Associated
PressDispatcb.es.
LOCAL BREVITIES
Mayor Mays returned from Portland
yes terday.
Dr. H. Logan returned from Portland
on the noon train today.
New timothy hay is selling in Prine
ville at eight dollars a ton.
W, Vanderpool of the S. B. Manu
facturing Co., is in the city.
Senator Mitchell expects to visit the
Cascade Locks tomorrow in company
with Major Handbury.
M. Caranaugh, "Envoy Extraordinary
of Queen Victoria," Calcutta, India is
registered at the Umatilla house.
It is unlawful to kill or have in one's
possession game of any. kind, in this
state, during the present month.
Mrs. Simon Mason of Wamic came
into town last Saturday to obtain med
ical advice and was the guest of Mrs. A.
M.Walker.
Up to the hour of going to press today,
twenty-one new names were entered on
the subscription list of the daily and
weekly Chronicle. , -
The portage railway commission con
sisting of Governor Penhoyer, Secretary
of State McBride and State Treasurer
' Metcham paid a visit of inspection to
the Cascade Locks last week.
Several cases of diphtheria are reported
in Crook county. Two children of John
Savage, Who lives two miles from Prine
ville, have died, and another was dan
gerously ill, at last accounts. .
Mr. V. H. Mo.Atee, son of Mr. Ben
C. McAtee who has been at South Bend,
Wash., since the first of May, passed
. through the city today on the way to his
home in Tygh Valley. He has come
back to stay.
' The Milton Eagle says that there is no
word iu the English language to rhyme
with music. The Eagle is away off.
We have a man in this county whose
name, is Busic. And for anything we
know .he's fond of music. - How is that
for a starter?
The Walla Walla Journal lately said
of a visiting base ball nine that they
played like Chinamen," arid some of the
papers up that way are real mad about
it, and yet we presume not a man of them
except tne Journal man, ever saw a
Chinaman play base ball.
Dealers in cigars would do well to ' re
member that according to a law passed by
the last congress any persson who sells
- cigars to a customer, in any other way
than from a properly stamped box,
leaves himself liable to a fine of $100.
Handing cigars to a customer in a -glass
or on a plate or tray or laying a handful
before him, from which to make his
selection, is a breach of section 2602 of
' the revised statutes of the United States
Nineteen persons were - arrested . in
Milton last Monday charged with crimi
nal trespass, alleged to have been com
mitted on the property of J. B. Mahana.
In 1889 the plaintiff constructed a dam
In the Walla Walla river which the de
fendants, a short time ago destioyed,
claiming that they had a prior right to
the .water and that they were damaged
by the obstruction which turned an over
plus of water away from the main chan
nel of the stream.
Mrs. Frank Menefee returned from a
four week's visit 'to Portland, Saturday.
Mr. J. J. Filbin, late of the Sunday
Bystander, Butte,' Mont., has taken
charge of the Chbonicle office, as fore
man. ' 1 ' -. .
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Wells of Sherar's
Bridge, who have been in the city for
the past week, left for home thi after
noon. " Two hobos and one drunk were the
fruit of the labors of Con Howe last
night. The drunk alone paid his fine
and was discharged.
Mr. C. L.v Phillips has the thanks of
the editor of the Chbonicle, for a nice
mess of trout which be brought with
him from Hood River.
A carload of beef cattle belonging to
E. J. Cooper, of Union , was . fed today
at the slock yards. They will be shipped
this evening to Portland.
- Mr. and Mrs. C- L. Phillips and Mr.
Gefl.' Joles and Mra. .Frank Taylor re
turned from the Joles Camp, Hood River,
Saturday. They report having had - a
fine enjoyable time. . . . -.
, A friendly trial of speed was made .
last Saturday, on the race track, between
the horses of Messrs. Schenck, Thomp
son, Webster, Savage, Garretsou, Toiri
Ward and F. B. Wyers. These are some
of the fastest horses in Eastern Oregon.
Thompson's Anita has a record of 2:37,
Tom Ward's pacer can go like Sam
Hill, Garretson's can trot in less than
three minutes ;v yet Boney Wyers came
iu second best, .i That is Boney says so,
but the story lacks a whole lot of confir
mation. , . ; , '
The Fobs i I Journal says that itearhs
from good authority that the U. P. com
pany has put a force of men to work dig
ging for coal on Butter Creek and that
every 'available man in the vicinity is
being hired and sent to the mines. The
company has long had an eye oh Butter
Creek to which place it will not cost
much to build a road from Heppner. It
has already spent a tidy sum of money
in searching for coal at that place and
the Journal fears that the new move
ment may delay the development of the
Fossil mines. ' . ,
Mrs. Slusher of Dufur is in the city.
Deputy Sheriff J. H. Phirman returned
yesterday from a seven day's trip to
Harney county. He brought with him
a young fellow about sixteen years of age
well known in' the Tygh country, named1
William Jordan, son of Jim Jordan, for
merly a rancher on Jordan Creek.
Young Jordan is charged with having
stolen a horse from William Floyd and
another from Gabriel Deckert. He was
arrested within thirty-five miles of Burns
just as he was saddling a horse to go fur
ther south. He was to have an " exami
nation before Justice Schutz this after-
on.
Last week Ed. Mills, the gentlemanly
bookkeeper of Filloon Bros., packed his
valise for a trip to Collin's Landing and
left it in the office, ready to take it with
him on the boat next morning. During
Mr. Mills' absence from the office, Jno.
Filloon and A. C. Sanford managed to
crowd into it a lot of old greasy castings,
two old tobacco pipes without stems, a
pair of superannuated shoes, a few
cigar stubs, a dried out plug of tobacco
that had been kicked around the office
for the past two years, a lot of last year's
almanacs, and a miscellaneous assort
ment of advertising cards, dodgers etc.,
the whole weighing about fifty pounds
extra. Ed. innocently carried the valise
to tha boat and at the end of the trip
packed it about a mile to the camp and
never discovered the joke till he opened
his valise in the presence of Geo.
Filloon.
Senator Watkins is making a record
for himself, as a hunter, at the Joles
Camp, Hood River. A few days ago, as
he wandered through the surrounding
woods he saw a wild cat about 75 yards
ahead of him. Hesitating a little, as a
careful hunter will, he saw it move and
presently blink one of its eyes, as if to
say "come on George." The senator
drew a careful bead and blazed away.
When the smoke, had cleared off the cat
was etill there and the senator suppos
ing it was dead walked toward it as he
drew his clasp knife with the intention
of skinning it. ' What was his surprise
to find that the cat was nothing but the
stump of a pine tree and the eye that
blinked so wickedly was simply a hole
that a woodpecker had made in it.
An attempt was made last ' night to
blow open the safe of Mr. J. T. Peters.
By some . means the would-be safe
cracker got the outer door of the safe
open, and filling the key ' hole with
powder attempted to destroy the lock,
in this however he signally failed as
the lock ' remains uninjured. An at
tempt was also made to drive a punch
through the steel plate of the inner door,
but no harm was done beyond a few
shallow indentations. The whole work
bears evidence of having been clumsily
done-and the contents of the safe re
main uninjured beyond the fact that
the edges of some papers were slightly
scorched with powder. It was a fruitless
attempt anyhow, as there was no money
in the safe beyond a little change. Mr.
Peters desires the Chbonicle to an
nounce, for the benefit of. future safe
crackers, that he never . keeps any
money in the safe. He deposits his
money in The Dalles National Bank and
when any comes into . LL hands after
banking hours he puts it in the Umatilla
house safe. To - these two places safe
crackers are politely referred. -
Engineer Jac Rochford, of the run
between Ashland and Dunsmuir, on the
Oregon and California railroad, lost his
1 ife last Wednesday in a rather unusual
manner When about two-thirds
through the 1200-foot tunnel, near the
summit of the Siskiyou mountains, the
train, a double header, broke in two. A
temporary coupling was made of chains
which broke almost immediately. Roch
for was on the first engine. There . was
very little draught in the tunnel and
what wind . there was blew the thick
smoke of a fresh green fir wood fire into
Roch ford's cab. The result was that
both he and his fireman were completely
asphyxiated. They were not missed off
the engine till the train backed out of
the tunnel. It was fifteen or twenty
minutes before they were found and by
that time Rochford was dead. One of
bis arms had been severed from his body
and he had bled to death. The fireman
was dragged out unconscious but has
since recovered.
Joe Sylvester, familiarly 'known as
Buckskin Joe, ou old-time acquaintance
of the people of The Dalles arrived in
town yesterday from California, coming
by the way of the Siskiyou pass and the
Barlow road. '. Joe" is. representing the
San. Francisco firm of Coburn, Teyia &
Co., manufacturers' agents and commis
sion merchants.' : Joe travels in royal
style, sure enough. "-. He'-'has a light
wagon painted a wine color and -striped
with gold. On the side of the " "wagon',, is,
painted in shaded gold letters ihe name
of the firm with the' words JiSapolioi, C.
& ' S. and Peerless . Axle Grease and
Alfred Wright's Fine" Perfumery." He
drives three handsome horses two greys
and a bay. The bay is a magnificent
Kentucky horse named Barney which
Joe delights to ride, without saddle- or
bridle and. 'which "he .has several times
refused $1000 for."." He is a fine intelli
gent animal and performs a number of
amusing tricks. Each horpe-is clothed
with a blue cashmere blanket on each
side of Which is wrought, in white wool
letters the legend "Sapolio." ' The har
ness is silver mounted, each saddle sur
mounted with three silver "bells, and
each horse besides carry s a set of sleigh :
bells. A red plume waves from each
horse's head and the whole is as tasteful
and imposing an outfit as one could,
well rind. Joe went, today, over to
Goldendale, to remain till Wednesday,
when he will return and parade the
streets of the city.
1'ap C'Uandler on a Bicycle..
Bicycle riding is still the rage, and
Pap Chandler has got the craze in its
worst form. Regretting that he had no
opportunity for taking lessons from Mr.
Fee and Joe Fitzgerald he- has placed
himself under the tutelage of John
Filloon and A. C. Sanford and this morn
ing he made his first mount in the ware
house of Filloon Brothers. To sa v that
it was a success is to put it mildly. The
bicycle a safety was leaned up against
a post in the warehouse, and a step lad
der placed by the side of it. Pap man
aged to "roll on" as his instructors put
it, when relating the circumstance to a
Chbonicle reporter. Then Pap shut
his eyes and ground his teeth while his
tutors held the machine firm against the
post and then Pap "rolled off" and thus
ended his first lesson.
Buck skin Joe the king of the cow
boys has arrjved in this city and will be
out on the streets with his three. horse
tandem-educated team next Wednesday.
He represents Coburn, Tevis & Co., of
San Francisco, Enoch Morgan Son's
Sapolio and the celebrated C & S Axle
grease and various other lines- of goods
which have taken the lead everywhere
he has been. He will give all his old
time friends a call. Joe is well known
in these parts. Be on the look out for
him. - '
The complete development of Oregon
as a stace demands three things above
all others. First, the fullest establish
ment of irrigation systems wherever pos
sible.' Second, the opening of the Col
umbia river ; and thirS the opening up
of the interior by the completion of the
Oregon Pacific and the construction of a
railway diagonally across the state from
Pendleton to the California line. When
these are attained full measure of pros
perity will come to this land so rich in
soil and so favored in climate and not
before. Pendleton Tribune.
The little 3-year-old son of T. C. Shaw,
of Corvallis, built a little fire in his
father's barn. As the flames went leap
ing up the haymow the little fellow un
concernedly walked out and explained,
that he didn't intend to build such a
large fire. Although somewhat expen
sive to Mr. Shaw, the child will Drobablv
never forget the truth of the old familiar
maxim that "Great oaks from little
acorns grow."
-m Teachers will bear in mind that the
time for holding the quarterly examina
tions has been changed from the last
Wednesday to the second Wednesday in
each quarter. The examination, there
fore, for this quarter will begin August
12th. Tboy Shelly.
Superintendent.
Money to Loan.
$100 to $500 to loan on short time.
Bayard & Co.
lO.OO Reward.
Lost, a diamond scarf pin the above
reward will be paid by returning to C.
E. Haight. , , -; . : ;
Persons leaving the city for a summer
outing can have the Chbonicle sent to
them without extra charge.
CBBOKICLB SHOItT STOrg.
Blackberries, three boxes for twenty
five cents at Joles Brothere. .
For headache use S. B. headache cure.
For coughs and cold use 2379."
For physic always nse S. B. headache
cure. .
Use Dufur flour. It is the best.
2379 is the cougli syrup for children.
For O. N. G. diaarhoea S. B. pain
cure is the best thing known.
Get me a cigar from that fine case at
Snipes & Kinersley's.
For ice cream cramp use S. B. pain
cure.
For 4th of July colic use S, B. pain
cure.
Chas. Stubbling has received a car
load of the famouc Bohemian Deer which
be has now at retail at ten cents a glass
or twenty-five cents a quart. This beer
is guaranteed to be an eight month's
brew and is superior to any ever brought
to The Dalles.
. Bids' will be received at the office of
Hugh Glenn up till the first of August,
for the hauling of 150 barrels, more or
less, of cement, from the cars to the new
reservoir on the Mespue place. ; . -
Ask your grocer for Dufur flour.
For 4th of July colic use S. B. pain
cure. :
The celebrated Walter H. Tenny Boston-made
mejis' and boys' fine boots
and shoes in all styles, carried by The
Dalles Mercantile company at Brooks
& Beers old stand. . -
For 4th of July oolic use S. B. pain
cure. - - . t
.' Long Ward offers for sale one of the
beat farms of its size in Sherman county.
It consists of 240 acres of deeded land at
Erskinville. There is a never-failing
spring of living water capable of water
ing five hundred head, of stock daily.
Tne house, which is a large store build
ing with ten rooms attached alone cost
$1700. A blacksmith shop and other
buildings and the whole surrounded by a
good wire fence. Will be sold cheap and
on easy terms. Apply by letter or other
wise to the editor of the Chbojhcle or to
the owner,. VV. L. Ward, Boyd, ,-Wasco
county, Oregon.. ... . . . .'
PreparlntT For'Hot Weaihir.
The following telegram from' White
wright, Texas, indicates that the people
in that vicintty do not intend to be
caught unprepared : . ..
;" Whitewkight, Texas, June 2, 1891.
Chamberlain & Co., ties MoineSylowa: '
Ship us at once one gross Chamber
lain's Colic, Cholera and , Diarrhoea
Remedy, 25 :eut size, and two dozen 50
cent size. ' We are entirely out and have
had nearly forty calls for it this week.
' " Q. Y. Rathbun & Co.
This is just such a. medicine as every
family Should be provided with during
the hot weather. It never fails and is
pleasant to take. For sale by. Snipes &
Kinersly, . -- ; :- :,-
From San Antonio. -
Aug. Hornung, a well known manu
facturer of boots and shoes at 820 Nolan
St., San Antonio, Texas, will not soon
forget .his experience with an attack of
the cramps which he relates as follows:
"I was taken with a violent cramp in the
stomach, which I believe would have
caused my death, had it not been for the
prompt - use of Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera, and Diarrhoee Remedy.' The
first dose did me so much good that I
followed it up in twenty minutes with
the second dose, and before the doctor
con Id get to where I was, I did not need
him. This remedy shall always be one
of the main stays of my family.'-' ; For
sale by Snipes & Kinersly, .druggists.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.
. When Baby was aick, we gave her Castoria.
. When, she was a Child, she cried for Castoria,
When she became Hiss, she clung to Castoria,
When she had Children, she gaTe them Castoria
To the Public.
.Caddo Mills, Texas, June 5, 1891.
From my own personal knowledge, I
can recommend Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Kennedy for
cramps in the stomach, also for diarr
hoea and flux. It is the best medicine I
have ever seen used and the best selling,
as it always gives satisfaction. A. K.
Sbebbill, 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale
by Snipes & Kinersly, druggists.
KOTICK. "
R. E. French has for sale a number of
improved ranches and nnimproved
lands in the Grass Valley neighborhood
in Sherman county. They will be sold
very cheap and on reasonable terms.
Mr. French can locate settlers on some
good unsettled claims in the same neigh
borhood. His address' is Grass Valley,
Sherman county, Oregon. -. . .-
Twenty Dollars Reward.
Parties have been cutting the supply
pipes above the city between the flume
and the reservoir, thus doing much dam
age; This must be stopped and a re
ward of $20 is hereby offered for evidence
that will lead to the conviction of per
sons doing the same." By order of the
Board of Directors.
. HOI THERE)
I will give 50 cents for each cow im
pounded between the hours of 8 o'clock
p.m. and 7:30 o'clock a. m., found at
large about my premises. Put them in
boys, bring marshal's certificate and get
your money.. x.. a. jjufuk.
Notice. .. v
City taxes for 1891. are now -due.
Dalles City tax assessment is now in mv
hand and will be held in my office for
sixty days. Sixty davs from date, July
18, 1891, city taxes win De delinquent.
, ,- -0. KlNEBSLY,
City Treasurer.
. Notice.
All city warrants registered prior to
. , n J . oon -11 i 3 ' t
CKJtouer 'ora, loon, wm ue paiu 11 pres
ented at my omce.
Interest ceases from and after this date,
The Dalles, Or., July 10th 1891.
O. KlNEBSLY,
... City Treasurer. ;
- ESTRAY NOTICE. -
- i -
A RED COW WITH WHITE SPOTS. 8WAL-
Xs. low fork in each ear but no brand, is In my
pasture on Mill creek. The owner can have her
by paying for pasturage ana advertising.
W. BIROFELiD.
WE ARE IN IT!
75 pair of Misses Shoes worth $2.25 for SIM
100 Corsets worth $1.25 for 50 cents. V
OUR ENTIRE LINE OF -
DRESS GOODS AT ACTUAL COST.
A. M. WILLIAMS & CQ
The. Northwestern Life Insurance CoM
OF MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN.
Assets over $42,000,000.00. ' -
' Surplus over $6,500,000.00.
: ' ; . '" I
Prof. E. L. Shuey, ' Laookda . Hbiokts, Spbimopislo', O., June 15, VSil. ' ' '
Dayton, Ohio. ' '
t,ufllt':7'?f!png.toyouTTtoT. " statement of the facts concerning; ray experience
with the Equitable Life Assurance Society of New York in their late settlement with me, wmW
?tbliiKithC earl.yKP,'"V)f i??1' mJ e being 56 years, I took out a Ten-Payment Ufe VoliCTt.
i,Vi?'?-pSoS5eir.re,i-'Yr ontlnf Hii,n' for WfiOO. My premiums during the perfo
amounted to 37,512.0O. The Tontine period expired early In January of the present yearTindtfciS
Company then offered me the following terms of settlement;''
FIRST A paid up policy for..,.., K. . . .-.. .'.: S40.000 00
And Cash . .-.v..-. : . . 9 751 60
SECOND A paid up policy for. ..... . "...'.' . ."' 54 '600 00
, THIRD Surrender my policy, and receive in cash 36',46 m
H' w,?"ji,uttJ MiUfl.Lw1"1 the results "J my investment that I chose the third, cash, propose
Hon, but when I so decided, the company, through several of its representatives, labored to indues
me to take pne of the other forinH of settlement, but finding that I was determined to surrender the
policy and take the cosh, they finally instructed me from the home office to .and policy and receipt.
t fi im2n4t' 36'49b-?9. th?r State manager in Cleveland, and he would remit me the amount
Ifollowed their instructions and sent the policy and receipt through my oupk in Springfield to on
correspondent in Cleveland, only to have ft returned from the Cleveland Bank with the information
that the State manager of the Equitable states that he "had not sufficient funds to meet it." This)
forced me to return it to the New York office, and compelled me to wait some twenty days after
maturity before receiving final settlement. ' '
I have given no statement endorsing the Equitable, or expressing my satisfaction with their
settlement with me. On the other hand I have positively refused to do so. The fact that my re
turns were f 1,01d.20 less than my total investment renders further comment unnecessary.
, During the time I carried the Equitable policy and up to the day when they submitted the
ab jve proposition to me, I was kept In total ignorance of the condition of my investment.
. , m"rk contrast with this has been my experience with the Northwestern, in which in ISO.
I took a Ten-Year Endowment Policy, Ten-Year Tontine, for 1 10,000, that company having front
... niwi u uiciuuiiuiuuiu "i fcue surplus on my policy over tne signature
thoir actuary; so that while my policy has not yet matured, and will not until next year, I ha
the satisfaction of knowing that at maturity it will net me from 4,000 to 5,000 more than the fi
of the policy calls for. Very truly yours, .
' . . : We have thousands of comparisons with all the leading Life Insurance Corn
parties Of the United States. Full information furnished upon application to
" i " T. A. HUDSON,
1 ! Associate General Agent.
JOHN A. REINHARDTr
Special Agent, The Dalles, Oregom.
MAYS & CROWE,
(Successors to ABRAM3 it STEWART.)
Zletailers and T o"fc"fcei- lxx
Harffware, - Tinware, - Graniteware,- wooflsnware,
SILVERWARE, ETC. .
-: AGENTS
"Acorn," "Charter Oak" "Argand
STOVES AND RANGES.
Pumps, Pipe, Plumbers' and Steam Fitters' -Supplies,
Packing, Building Paper, ' ' .
SASH, DOORS, SHINGLES.
Also .a . complete stock of Carpenters', Blacksmith's , and
Farmers Tools and Fine Shelf Hardware. ;
-AGENTS
The Celebrated R. J. ROBERTS "Warranted" Cutlery, Meriden Cutlery
u.aoieware, tne " yuicK jvieai' gasoline stoves, -tjrrana tii stoves
and Anti-Rust Tinware.. '.
All Tinning, Plumbing, Pipe Work and Repairing
, -will "be done on Short Notice.
174, 176, 178. 180 SECOND STREET,
jtfeu . Columbia jiotel,
THE DALLES, OREGON. .
Best Dollar a Day
First-Class Meals, 25 Cents.
First Class Hotel in Every Respect.
None but the Best ofVVhite Help Employed-
T. T. Nicholas, Ptop.
-: DEALERS IN:
Hay, Grain and Feed.
No. 122 Cor. Washington and Third Sts.
H. C. NIELS6N.
Clothicpand Tailor,
BOOTS AND SHOES,
tyats ai?d Qaps, JrupKs, ilalises,
CORNER OF SECOND AND WASHINGTON STS., THE DALLES, OREGOH
ROSS HITCHEXXL
FOR THE
99
FOR-
THE DALLES, OREGON.
House on the Coast
aid Fancy GiocBiies,