The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, August 13, 1891, Image 4

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    double PHOTOGRAPHS.
Vetsiada of Maklat; a Vlgnn Appear tst j
Different Positions oa One Plato. j
The making of double pictures on one ;
negative plate has been practiced by j
photographers for tome time. It has
been supposed that they were made by j
using reflections from mirrors to double I
the object to be photographed. . Doubles ;
may .be made that way, bqt the refleo-1
tion of tho glass always shows, while j
the figures are lnvanaoiy aistortea. J.ne
' most common way of making successful .
doubles is to extend the reach of the
lens with a small box rf tho same depth
' of the focal depth of the lens. The in
" side of the box should be smooth and
blackened a dead black, to prevent its
appearance in the picture. -
The front of the box Is then divided
equally by two small doors or flaps. - In
making the exposure open one flap, draw
the slide from your plate holders and ex
pose the plate. Then replace the slide,
close the door that was open, let the per-'
eon being photographed change position,
open - the door that was closed on the
first exposure, leaving1 the other one
closed, focus the object, draw the slide
again and expose the plate again, and
you have the same person in two differ
ent attitudes in the same negative, with
out any lino of demarkation showing in
the background.
Captain John N. Biker goes further
than making doubles. He makes triples,
quadruples or any number wanted, in
the most grotesque and ghastly forms,
on one plate. His system of making
doubles on the same plate is more com
plicated than the one described. It is
done by placing a kit or shutter over the.
plate in the holder and exposing a part
at a time. .' '. .'.' ' , v '.-
The kit is hinged in sections, the upper
corners opening like little doors to the
side. Decapitated heads are taken by
opening the doors and just' exposing the
part of the' plate directly . behind, on
which the head has been focused. - After
these exposures have' been made the
doors are closed and the subject is fo
cused with outstretched hands. After
proper focusing, the kit, except the
upper corners, is drawn away and a fall
exposure made.
A few days ago Captain Biker walked
into the house and tossed an envelope
into Mrs. Biker's hands. On opening it
he found a picture of the headless body
standing upright with arms outstretched,
and in each hand a platter on which lay
a ghastly .head his own.
Captain Biker said that while he had
known for many years the secret of
making the pictures, he now desired to
show simply what really is behind the
making of alleged spook and spirit pic
tures. The secret of making the pictures
has been known for many years also by
Professor George B. Cromwell.-'-New
York Sun.
An Improremant In Tunneling;.
. The frequent and serious difficulty ex
perienced in the operations of tunnel
ing, namely, the subsidence of the sur
face after the completion of the work,
has lately been found to be preventable
by a simple system resorted to by a Lon
don contractor, by the use of which no
ground outside the actual section of the
subway in hand need be disturbed. The
system in question comprises a series of
steel bars placed side by side with the
excavation so as to form a complete tem
porary lining and support to the roof,
and within this series of bars the perma
nent brick arch of the tunnel is built.
The bars used in this work are ten feet
long, six inches wide, and two inches
thick, being provided at their edges with
longitudinal grooves, by means of which
each is linked to the next one in such a
way as .to admit of separate longitudinal
motion, and yet to prevent lateral sepa
ration. . The bars are inserted in the
same manner, as well as supported, as
ordinary tunnel bars, the ground being
excavated, only the exact section of the
tunnel, pins the trifling thickness of the
bars.
After the brickwork has -been built
within them the bars are separately
pushed forward by jackscrews as the
-earth is excavated for the succeeding
length. The bars are provided with longi
tudinal tubular cavities, through which
grouting or other filling material may be
introduced from time to time to fill
the epace left vacant by the advancing
bars between the top of the lining arch
and the earth above and Around, this
preventing Any subsidence. New York
Maine Female Travasp.
A city female tramp of giant stature
is annoying some of our western Maine
towns. She comes to the farmhouses,
generally after dark, and begs to be al
lowed to stay all night. Her request is
'generally granted, though unwillingly,
for her person is very repulsive. She
always carries several large bundles cov
ered with a waterproof. . In one of them
are a clean dress and whole shoes which
she saves to put on in Boston. They are
too good for tramping in Maine.
To all appearance she hasn't a relative
in the world, and prefers this roving life
to any kind of labpr, for she is frequent
ly offered a chance to do housework at
farmhouses, but always declines. Once
. she did work for a day or two, but de
clared she'd rather walk and beg. She
expects to go to the poorhouso, but not
-- until she can no longer travel. It is said
that to hear her talk without looking at
-her -one would imagine her -a lady, so
correct is her language. Lewiston Jour--naL
v " ' ' ' '
Proving; an Old Proverb.
Ancaens, king of the Leleges in Samoa
(an island in the Grecian archipelago),
planted a vineyard; and so heavily did
he oppress his slaves that one of them,
it is said, prophesied to him that he
would never live to taste the wine there
of. When the wine was made - be sent
for his slave and ' said. "What do you'
think of your prophecy now?" The slave
. made snswer, "There's . many a dip
t twixt the cup and the lip.- ;The words
were scarcely uttered when Ancseus was
informed that' a wild boar bad broken
into his vineyard and was laying it
waste. Ancaaus, setting 'down .the cup
un tatted, hastened to attack and drive
out the boar, but he was killed In the
encounter. Detroit Free Press.
WHERE BEAVERS LIVE.
KILGORE'S BIQ FARM INHABITED BY
. . ; BEAVERS FOR MARKET.. .' . !-.
One Jaaa Wb Hope to Grow Rica Oat
ef the Scarcity of Sealskins A Queer r
Kind of tin Stock to Raise Bcarm ,
Are aa Social aa Pis. - ' - !
"You have never heard of Dick Kil-J
gore's beaver farm? That's queer." The
speaker was old "Mud Cat" Williams, !
who has been a fisherman in the south
east Georgia streams for forty years.
"Dick's going to make a pile of money,"
he continued. : i ;
- -"You see, Dick has about 200 beavers,
young and - old, but there are not more
than twenty to be killed for their skins
this year. It's a new industry, an ex-,
periment with him, and he don't want to j
kill any except the surplus males for the
present. But suppose yen go out with
me and see the farm." j
' A drive of ten miles through the
swamps along Briar creek and -the Kil- '
gore place, or Beaver Dam Hollow, was
reached. ' ' : - j
-'Now, here's the farm," said Williams,
pointing to tire-creek, across which every I
few yards were rough dams, and above
them, in . the - almost still water, . were .
mounds of earth, rocks and sticks com- j
ing out a few feet above the surface of ;
the water. '-.: . !
"You know beavers don't show them-1
selves much in the day. They do their r
work at night. Dick owns about-1,000 '.
acres running up and down the creek.' He
has the land posted and keeps everybody
on, dux it ib not rencea. jrences wouia not
keep the beavers in, but there is no dan
ger of them going off, for this is a nat
ural home for them, and every beaver
here knows old Dick. He feeds them
every night, and they come, when lie
calls, like hogs." ;
Kilgore has been a - farmer down, here
for vears. and beavers have- been in the
creek for all time, but it was not until !
recently that he began to protect and j
care for them with a view to making:
beaver raising a regular business. It!
will be a profitable business, for the
scarcity of sealskins has increased the
value of beaver skins, and they will con
tinue to increase year by year. A few
years ago beaver skins sold as low. as
four dollars per skin, but they - should
now bring at least ten dollars each. .
VALUE OF. BEAVER 6K2XS.
Beaver skins sent to London and prop
erly dyed a seal brown are splendid imi
tations of the eaL The seal fur, you
know, is naturally a gray. The reason 1
say send Deaver skins- to London is -. be
cause that is the only place in the world,
it seems, that furs can be properly dyed.
However,' the fur of the beaver is natu
rally a reddish brown, and is a beautiful
fur. '.
The beaver is a queer little animal.
'When full grown it weighs from fifty to
sixty pounds. Its hind legs are. its prin
cipal propellers both when in and out of
the water. The hind feet are webbed
and the front ones have claws,, which are
about as convenient to the beaver as a
monkey's hands are to him. - They can
carry stones and sticks about in them
with ease. In the water - especially a
beaver can carry a quantity of freight,
for he swims with his hind feet and
carries his load in his mouth.
Just after dark Mr. Kilgore went down
to the edge of the stream to feed, the
beavers. :
"I don't often feed them in the sum
mer," he said, "for they get all they
want along the banks of the stream.
They eat bark- off- the trees, and at this
season there "is an abundance of fresh,
tender bark and grasses and roots. In
the winter they lay up a supply of food
for themselves along-the banks and in
their holes in the dams, which they build
of roots and sticks and stones. I feed
them nearly all the time in winter, when
they flock together and unite in building
; dams, but in summer they scatter every
; fellow for himself and I only call them
i up occasionally; j ust enough to keep them'
tame. As they are scattered off for
miles around, but few will come to a call
, for food." - .
j . HOW THE BEAVER WORKS.
. But there were a dozen romping about
in the stream then, and in a few minutes
- quite a number had gathered. Among
I them were a score or more little fellows
i born only a month ago. :The females have
! from two to six young each annually,
' And as a conseqnence the families in
i crease very rapidly.
I A mixture of green food and a little
! grain was thrown out on the ground to
i the herd of little animals,, and they
' scampered around and picked it up like
so many hogs. Some of them would
- gather up an ear of corn or a young corn
stalk and dive off with it into the stream.
They were tame, but, like hogs, would
j scamper off if you tried to catch one.
I A beaver seems to be. almost human
in intelligence. ; ; They actually - gnaw
down young trees, drag them into a
stream and let them float down, swim
ming with them to the place they want
to build a dam. Then they will drag'
stones and roots and sticks and grasses,
ana lnaeea everyunng usea to aam a
stream, until' they have practically as
substantial a dam as a man could con
struct. They do this to make the water
above deep enough to sport in and placid
enough to build their homes of sticks
and mud in, which, are very warm' and
comfortable in winter and large enough
for a family of eight or ten.
i The beaver's principal tool in building
these homes is his taiL . The tail is a
scaly, trowel shaped appendage About
ted inches long and Your or five inches
broad."' The beaver's main strength is in
the tail. : He- can take up soft mud on
it, place it against the sticks and stones
used to build his home, and pat it do wn
with the tail as firmly and as well Jad a
'man could: do the work with a trowel.
' Besides its fur, which is the main reve
nue: " frora 'the beaver;- it furnishes cas
toreum, a product used in medicines,
- and its flesh' is" ar food that when, prop-
. erly prepared is delicious. Bascom (Ga.)
Cor. St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Qaesttoa. -
The boundary line between the United
States nd.. thf . -British y posseesioDA. in-
North America, once more threatens to
become the subject of international dis- !
pute, conference and arbitration.- A half 1
century ago-Fifty-four Forty or Fight"
was a campaign cry,- and the- coming
controversy , begins, at that. line... from
which President Polk retreated, the once
northern boundary of -Oregon 'territory -being
the sonthern boundary of our ter
ritory of Alaska. The discussion of the
ownership of Bevillagigedo, Pearse and
Wales islands, and of the line of ;the
Portland canal, will rival the contest
over San Juan island and San Bosario or
De Haro straits, decided in favor of -the
United States, by the emperor of Ger
many as arbitrator, in 1873. .- . ,v
. Each year that the boundary line' be
tween Alaska and British Columbia re
mains in question increases thd difficulty
of determining it. Each year- settle
ments are increasing in numbers, more
private interests are involved, and -the
region in dispute becomes more valuable
to each claimant. There is great indif
ference to the question. on our side of the
line, but in the Dominion it is well- un
derstood, -and ' parliament and - public
opinion have taken their stand. " Cana
dian maps now differ from the United
States maps of that northwestern region, !
and this boundary question promises to
provoke more international bitterness
than the- present Behring sea dispute.-r-Century.
; - -... - ' -;'..' -
: Returned After Thirty Tears. - -
The return to Milwaukee of Eyrie A.
Sidley after an absence of forty-one years
is to his relatives almost as if the dead
had come to life. , ; The father of Mr. Sid
ley was a physician and druggistin Milwaukee-
in the forties. Kyrle Sidley
spent most of his youth in the east, but
was in Milwaukee during the year 1849.;
The next year .he went east and shipped
as a sailor. . :
In 1861 Mr.-Sidley went to Australia.
For some time his relatives heard from
bun regularly suddenly the--corre
spondence ceased, and for thirty years
he was mourned as dead. As was after-,
ward learned Mr. Sidley. lost everything
by fire, the addresses of his relatives, be
ing destroyed. .The families had moved
and his letters did not reach their proper
destination. Likewise Mr. Sidley had
moved and the letters sent by his fam
ily failed to reach him. - '-.
Three years ago he employed a lawyer
to' find his relatives, and after a few.
months he was in communication, with
them. This year Mr. Sidley, now sixty
two years of age, decided to visit his
relatives in Milwaukee, and he arrived,
there this week frora Australia. : He
found two of his sisters living there, and
a brother came from New York to meet
him. After his visit Mr. Sidley will re
turn to Australia. Chicago-Tribune.
Bfosquitoes In Parii.
. Mosquitoes are, I venture to say, for.
the first time within the memory, of the
oldest inhabitant, a plan of many
parts of Paris. - The dan iess of the
spring is said to be tho ra.r a why -tfiey
nightly buzz, bite and leave faces .and
hands covered with hard,- red blotches.
But 1 believe the true cause is the whole-:
sale destruction of Seine fish when the
icefloes in that river were .being dyna
mited last winter. .. .
- 1 never .suffered so much in warm
weather in any part of the south, of
France from mosquitoes as I have done
this week. If one sits by a lamp near
an open window along many of the bou
levards a swarm of them assails one.
The mosquito bednet not being used in
Paris, one ties down at night unprotect
ed,' and is- liable to rise in the morning
with a disfigured face in a state of pain
ful itchiness. Paris Cor. London News.
" Home Is Where the Heart Is.
A small family, consisting of man,
wife and baby, is living in a big dry
goods box in an open field just off Mount
ain street, near the division line between
Worcester and Holden. The woman is
twenty-one years of age and her .babe
seven weeks. She says about a year and
a half ago she married Joseph - Pitts a
farm ' laborer, at CJreendale. The baby
was born in a boarding house, and she
and Pitts have been living, together with
the infant, in the dry goods box for two
or three weeks. Pitts hires , the .land,
and the woman says he intends to put
up a better shelter. She has a brick
fireplace outside the box, where she does
cooking. Joseph -Pitts; the .husband, is
a -cripple and - -walks with two - canes.
The- marshal says there . is no -'call- for
police interference. The woman ..'is sat
isfied with her lot, and the baby, seems
healthy. Worcester Spy, ' i,
A Queer Ocean Chase.
- The ocean tug -Britannia is -engaged in
a chase after a Maine vessel that is float
ing on the- ocean with. (20,00ft worth of
mahogany in her hold. iThat ; vessel is
the Wyer Q.' Sargent, owned by William
U-. Gowerj of Sedgewick, and abandoned
in a storm last March, when about eighty
miles off Hatteras. . Since then , she., has
drifted over 2,000 'miles, crossing the
gulf stream three times. "At one period
of her wild cruise she went 500 miles in
twenty-two days. . When last sighted,
June 19. a part at least of. 'the , cargo
was yet on board. Philadelphia .Ledger.
. A new system of protection for gun
ners in exposed places on men-of-war in
action is to be adopted by the navy de
partment a wire webbing made of in
tertwining spirals , remarkably flexible
and strong. It resembles somewhat the
old fashioned chain , armor of the Cru
saders' time, and curtains of- this ma
terial will be used to protect -gunners
behind shields from' fragments of ex
ploding shells.
The Chillian war has had a very serious
effect on the English, hatmakers who
supply the majority of Chilians.- The
latter have been so busy fighting that
they have had no time to attend to their
sombreros. , ,
' A- fly-wheel weighing over- twenty
tons, and twenty feet in diameter, with
a 43-inch face, is a casting of no mean
measurement. Such a one was recently
cast in Massachusetts.
" " FIFTY ' YEARS Afc07 ; r--'""-" -!
. "'. . t 't .' . . !'T; :-t:: -i.v ',
rrts Afty, yean aso,.Aear iJohn. jost fifty jtsrs
' agn; - ,""..',- '... ' ,
Seems like twaa only yesterday 1'neardyoU
' .teUxneso: -,, , ; , ,., .
I)o t remember sarin' yesJ Weil, John. .irere
' Renin old -'- ' .''. -
And trimly now, and I ain't sure mjr memTry 3s
.soboldv - ' - . :
And yet, I spose i miut a said a thins or two
. in play. ' ,
For yon were rather sassy. John, a goiti home
, that day. , . ; .. ;
Just think! tis fifty rearadear John, Just fifty
years ao,
Hence yon and me stood np afore old Parson
Ganderblow , , -..i , .
Aird.aa4d we'd have each other-, shore! for bet-
ter or forwosa. - , a
Did ever 1 get sick of It? Now. John, dont
, . make-a fas : - .- . .. '
"Bout, no thin', for 1 -low thar's times a bad
trade turns to good.
When men's wives nuss their patienceas Chris-.
- tian people should. ;; ; ' . :
In all tnesenps and downs, dear John, aenee
fifty years ago - - - ... . .. , , . .. .
We joinedoor hearts and hands, the Lord alone
. can fully know - .
What' you have been to me, John, or I-have
, been to you: . -.'
. f or lie sees,, though oft we've stumbled, that
. ' our poor old hearts are true,' ' -
And that I, . will be, thinking of ypa, John, as
- ... you will bethinking or, me
When bur 4Bf ty yearsbelow have long been
lost in eternity.- r,; -
- " ' Browne Perriman in ilauxee Blade. '
ODDS . AND ENDS. -
The coffee palaces of ? Melbourne are said
to Mine finest lit the world. : ,
It in said to oo6t,10,OD0 to gild.the.dome
of the state house in Boston, r.
There has ,beed a steady rise in the av
erage age at which men and women marry
ever since 1873. -. . : . ; ... .. j . : . '
Giermany's production of silver in 1890
was 770,000 pounds, about 9 per cent, of the
world s product.
In 1871 the G. A. R. could claim only 30,
000 members, but in 1879. .It had increased
to almost 400,000.
: The first dictionary was.compiled .by Pa-.
outabeV a learned Chinaman, who lived in
the year 1,100 B. C. - .- f -
' To foreive when we have forgotten is
easV; to. (orrive when we know we can
never forget is noble. - ;
Don't rob your wife all her lifetime in or
der to make some provision for her in case
you snouia- oe arst taken away. , . ..
-. Twenty thousand words havd been added
to the. English. language in the department
of biology since. yawns discoveries.: .
. It la no unusual thing for a vessel, plying
' between Japan and San Francisco to bring
1,000,000 fans as a single item of its cargo.
The New York end of the -Brooklyn
bridge . projier is founded on bed rock; the
tirooklyn end oi the. DriaRe proper rests on
.clay..,.. .. : . . . . . .
'. Ribbons to hold fans are fastened to the
shoulders with a bow, and are long enough
- to fall nearly to the ground, the fan being
carried m the hand, .i.'ia 'In 'w; j ,
' Sir .William Thomson, condetons- the sin
Rle wire- system of electric, lighting on ship
board, on the ground. that, in spite of every
care the compasses are affected.- -
In just 2 hours J. V. 6V relieves constipation
and sick, headaches, ' Alter .it gets the system
undef control an occasioiial dose prevents return.
We refer by permission to W. H. NarshalljSrans.
wi,ck House, Si K; .Qef, 4-Wemer. KJ1 California
8L, 8. Ti M. C. Meivin,' 138 .Kearny .SU S. F.
and many. other! who have found relief from
constipation and sick headaches. G.rY. Vincent,
of 6 Terrence Court, 8. F. writes : "1 snt 60 years
of age and have been -troubled with constipation
for 25 years. I was recently Induced, to .try. Joy'
Vegetable Ssrsaparilla. I , recognized. In it at
once an herb that the Mexicans used to give us
In .the early BO'S for bowel troubles. (I came to
California in 1889,) and I knew It would help me
and it has. For the first time In years I cattslQcp
well and sny system is regular and In splendid
condition. The old Mexican herbs in thii remedy
are, a certain cure in .cotutlpaUon and. bowel
Vegetable
w Sarsaparilia
A
Revelation.
-Few, people know that the
Wi, bright bluish-green Color pt
. V. WlnM .... . .v.l I.
the, -windows is not the nat
: oral Color. vVir'easant as ,-the
tecjtmsv.be. Jt J nevertheless
artlflcia': . .luineral .ioloxing
matter lir.j? used for this
urro-e- ) The -effect .is. two
ioid.. It .not only makes the
. tea a bright, shiny green, but also permits the
tue of " off-color " ar.d worthless teas, which;
: once under- the- jrreen cloak,, are readily
wqrked.ofr.ai a good quality of tea,.
An em' urn t authority, writes on -th's &ub
lect: The manipulation of Jror tea?, t ' Kive
them afiner aiteamnce.lj c :;r cil on exten
sively. Green xead, beiTiff. in ...his c untry
especially popular, are i r -oui c h io meet the
demand by coloring rhea i-r bwli ViJrisby
" glazing or facliig-w'th fruKKinl iuo.tdn eric,
gypsum, and indigo; .Tlii j4ri.. U. to' gen
eral that very lit'.lc grnui.ic mtcuiort ' grccm tea
i offered for tale."
It was the knowledge c f this couditinn rf
affairs that prompted the p'.ac : gof Beech's
Tea before the public. . It is ah.-olitt:ly pure
and without -color. i:id you ever j-cs .any
genuine uncolored 3a err- tea? Ai-k your
gricer to open a faka e uf lit-ech's, and you
will, see il. and probacy (or . the very first
time. . It wlltbe fou;rd i c-tor to be, Jutit De
tween the artificial et-n lea that you iave
. been ascu.-itt-mel to a- 1 t.':c taek'-teas, .-- - . ..
: Itlrawa.h'liih. fnl anu Vf olor, and is so
fragrant t,.at, it wi-1 b a icvelatiou to tea-
drinkers.. Its. purity makes- it also .more
. economical than,,the ar.iuiial leu, for leu
of it is required pereop. . -.Sold only la poand
packages bearing this trade-mark:
"Pure As -GSildhood:
Just
m
'if your grocer does not have It, he wili gel.
. It for' yon, 1 Fiice60o per pound.' For sale at
Loslie Butler,
' THE DALLES, OKEGON.
iJ ..'iiVVl
t naiies
i. I v.-r . :-i'.:r.iC,'s i'
is here and has come
o win its way to, public fe.vor by ener
gy, lnaustry and merit; and to this end
we ask that you give it a fair trial, and
ii saxisnea wixn its
support; :
4f.
The
bur pages of six columns each, will be
ssued' eyery evening, except Sunday,
and will be deliyered
by mail for the moderate sum of iift3
cents a month.
Its
will be to advertise
Obi
city, and adjacent, country, to assist in
developing our industries, in extending
aiid ojpenirig up new channels for our
trade, in securing an open river, and in
helping TBCE B AIjLiES to take her prop
er position as the ;
Lrading;b of
The paper both daily and weekly, will
be independent in
criticism of political matters, as in its
handling of local afiaifs it will be
JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL
We will endeavor to give all the lo
cal news, and we ask
of our 6bj ect and course, be formed frbih
the contents of the
rash assertions of outside parties.
I 4
sent to any ad&ress for $1.50 per year.
It will contain from four to six eight
column piages, and we shall endeavor
to make it the equal of the best. Ask
your Postmaster for
THE CHRONICLE PUB. GO.
...... r... f. r" o - :."'' 1 '" ' " ' ' '
Office, N . W. Co r. Wash
--DEALER IS-
SCHOOL BOOKS,
r . ' ' STATldlVERy, -
organ's; V
-iy'Viifos' ' ' - .
X) : : s ':tches,
. .'..:''-;. ! e wblrv.
' Cor. Thirii and Washington Sts, '
, '. 'Cj?AirD,v?a8h., ,
, - ; ' ...June 19th, 189I.j -
S, Medicine Co,,) ' t-" '. ;':
; GsNTEBMEN-YoTn: kind favor received
and in reply nould "say hat I am more
than' pleased with- the. terms offered me
on the last shipment of your medicines.
There is nothing Kte them ever intro
duced In this" country, especially for La
grippe and kindred complaints. I have
had no complaints so far, and everyone
is ready with a word of praise for their
virtues. Yours, etc.,
a, M. F. Hacklby,
I. Xl. IG1(ELEM,
wm
- ' ' '..:-;-rrt t-j.t
to stay. It hopes
course a generous
in the city , or sent
the resources of tlie
Eastern Oregon.
politics, and in its
that your criticism
paper, and not from-
a copy, or address.
i h gto n and Second Sts.
SIHPE8 & KDiHiSLT,
Mqlesale aid fietail Drnjaists.
-DEALERS IN-
mpdrled, Key West ani Domestic
PAINT
Now, is the time to' paint ' your house -
and if ydu-Vwish to ge't'-theTest quality
and a fine color use the
Sherwin, 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 8. L. Brooks,
Judge' Bennett, Smith' French and others
painted by. Paul Kre'ft. , . v
Snipes & Kinersly, are agents for the
above paint for The Dalles. .Or. i :
Daily
W. H. NEABEACK,
' " PROPRIETOR OF THE
Granger FeedYard,
THIRD STREET.
. . .f At Grimes old place of bnstpess.) ,
Horses fed to Hsy or Osts st the lowest possi
ble prices. Good care given to animals left in
my charge, as I have ample stable room. Give
me a call, and I will guarantee satisfaction.
W. H. NEABEACK.
V)
i