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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 12, 1891)
DON'T INVITE SORROW. SUFFICIENT UNTO THE DAY IS THE EVIL THEREOF. Dr. Taluiage I'reactien a Powerful Ser mon on the Insanity of Borrowing Trouble It Has Wrecked Many a. Life. The Lord Will Look Oat for You. Brooklyn, Aug. 10. Dr. Talniage has returned from his western tour reinvigo ratexl in healtu-and cheered by the hearty and enthusiastic greetings he has received in the numerous cities he has visited. Thousands of persons who have read his sermons in their local newspapers have struggled to get within sound of his voice wherever he has spoken. His sermon this week is on the very common and foolish habit of borrowing trouble, and his text is Matthew vi, 34, "Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof." The life of every man, woman and child is as closely under the divine care as though such person were the only man, woman or child. There are no accidents. As there is a law of storms in the natural world, so there is a law of trouble, a law of disaster, a law of misfortune; but the ma jority of tue troubles of life are imaginary, aud the most of those anticipated never come. At any rate, there is no cause of complaint against God. See how much he hath clone to make thee happy; bis sun shine filling the earth with glory, making nun now ior tne storm and halo for the mountain, greenness for the moss, saffron - for the clnml Mlwl rrvstnl fnr thn KSllnn. and procession of bannered flame through the opening' gates of the morning, chaf finches to siug, rivers to glitter, seas to cnant, and springs to blossom, and over- - powering all other sounds with its song. and overarching all other splendor with its triumph, covering up all other beauty with its garlands, and outflashing all other thrones with its dominion deliverance for a lost world through the Great Redeemer. I discourse of the sin of borrowing trou ble. first;, such a habit of mind and heart is wrong, because it puts one into a des pondency that ill tits him for duty. I planted two rose bushes in my garden. The one thrived beautifully, the other per ished, i found the dead one on the shadv side of the house. Our dispositions, like our plauts, need sunshine. Expectancy of repulse is tne cause or many secular and . religious failures. Fear of bankruptcy has up tor n many a fine business and sent the man dodging among the note shavers. Fear of slander and abuse has often invited all the long beaked vultures of scorn and backbiting. Many of the misfortunes of life, like hyenas, flee if you courageously meet them. FOKCK HAPPINESS TO COME. How poorly prepared for religious duty is a man who sits down under the gloom of expected misfortune! If he pray, he . says, "I do not think I shall be answered." If he give, he says, "I expect they will steal the money." Helen Chalmers told me that her father, Thomas Chalmers, in the darkest hour of the history of the Free Church of Scotland, and when the woes of the land seemed to weigh upon his heart, said to the children, "Come, let us go out and play ball or fly kite," and the only dif ficulty in the play was that the children could not keep up with their father. The McCheynes and the Summerfields of the church who did the most good, cultivated sunlight. Away with the horrorsl they distill poison; they dig graves, and if they could climb so high, they would drown the rejoickigs of heaven with sobs and wailing. You will have nothing but misfortune in the future if you sedulously watch for it. How shall a mau catch the right kind of fish if he arranges his line and hook and bait to catch lizards and water serpents? Hunt Tor bats and hawks und bats and hawks you will find. Hunt for robin redbreasts and you will tind robin redbreasts. One night an eugle aud au owl got into fierce battle; the eagle unused to tho night was no raatcii ior i owl, winch is most at home in the darkness, aud the kiug of the air fell helpless; but the morning rose, aud with it rose the eagle; and the owls and the night hawks and the, bats came a sec ond time to the combat; now, the eagle, in the suniiglit, with a stroke of his talons and a great cry. cleared the iir, and his enemies, with torn feathers and splashed witli blood, tumbled into the thickets. Ye are the cuildreu of light. In the night of despondency you will have no chance against your enemies that flock up from beneath, but, trusting in God and stand ing in the sunshine of the promises, you shall "renew your youth like the ealc." tiikick ai;e dlksmmss a-im.km v. Again, the habit of borrowing trouble is wrong because it has a tendency to make us overlook present blessing. To slake man's thirst, the rock is cleft, and cool waters leap into his brimming cup. To feed his hunger the fields bow down with bending wheat, and the cattle come down with full udders from the clover pas tures to give him milk, and the orchards yellow and ripen, casting their juicy fruits into his lap. Alas! that amid such exuber ance of blessing man should growl as though he were a soldier on half rations, or a sailor on short allowance; that a man should stand neck deep in harvests look ing forward to famine; that one should feel the strong pulses of health inarching with regular tread through all the avenues . of life and yet tremble at the expected as sault of sickness; that a mau should sit in his pleasant home, fearful that ruthless want will some day rattle the broken win dow sash with tempest, and' sweep the. coals from the hearth, and pour hunger . into the bread tray; that a man fed by him who owns all the harvests should ex pect to starve; that one whom God loves and surrounds with benediction, and at- cuua yviuu augenu escort, ana novers over with more than motherly fondness, should , be looking for a heritage of tears! Has God been bard with thee that thou shouldst be foreboding? Has lia stinted thy board t Has he covered thee with rags? Has he spread traps for thy feet, and galled thy cup, and rasped thy soul, and wrecked thee with storm, and thundered upon thee with a life lull of calamity? If your father or brother .come into your bank where gold aud silver are lying about you do not . watch them, for yon know they are honest; but if an entire stranger come by the safe you keep your eye on him, for you do not K.uow uis uesigns. oo some men treat God; not as a father, but a stranger, and act suspiciously towasd him, as though thej were afraid he would steal something. THANE GOD FOR WHAT TOU HAVE, ft, in hifrh tima i-j-t , 1 ui.ro n .vni. ! - . i for your present blessing. Thank him for your children, happy, buoyant and bound ing. Praise him .for your home, with its fountain of song and laughter. Adore him for morning light and' evening shadow. Praise him for fresh, cool water bubbling from the rock, leaping in the cascade, soar ing in the mist, falling in the shower, dash ing against the rock and clapping its hands jn ti'f tempest. Ixve him for the grafts that cushions the earth, and the clouds , that curtain the sky, and the foliage that I waves in the forest. Thank him for a Bi ble to read, and a cross to gaze upon, and a Saviour to deliver. Many Christians think it a bad sign' to be jubilant, and their work of self exam ination is a hewing down of their brighter experiences. Like a boy with a new jack knife, hacking everything he comes across, so their self examination is a religious cut- ! tin to pieces of the greenest things they can lay tneir nanas on. rney imagine they are doing God's service when they are going about borrowing trouble, and bor rowing it at thirty per cent., which is al ways a sure precursor of bankruptcy. Again, the habit of borrowing trouble is wrong because the present is sufficient ly taxed with trial. God sees that we all need a certain amount of trouble, and so he apportions it for all the days and years of our life. Alas for the policy of gather ing it all up for one day or year! Cruel thing to put upon the back of one camel all the cargo intended for the entire cara van. I never look at my memorandum book to see what engagements and duties are far ahead: Let every week bear its own burdens. WHY BRING NEW SOKROWS? The shadows of today are thick enough, why implore the presence of other shad ows? The cup is already distasteful, why halloo to disasters far distant to come and wring out more gall into the bitterness? Are we such champions that, hayjng won the belt in former encounters, we can go forth to challenge all the future? Here are business men just able to man age affairs as they now are. They can pay their rent, and meet their notes, and man age affairs as they now are, but what if there should come a panic? Go tomorrow and write on your daybook, on your ledger, on your money safe, "Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof." Do not worry about notes that are far from due. Do not pile up on your counting desk the financial anxieties of the next twenty years. The God who has taken care of your worldly occupation, guarding your store from the torch of the incendiary and the key of the burglar, will be as faithful in 1891 as in 188L God's hand is mightier than the machinations of stock gamblers, or the plots of political demagogues, or the red right arm of revolution, and the darkness will fly und the storm fall dead at his feet. So there are persons in feeble health, and they are worried about the future. They make out very well now, . but they are bothering themselves about future pleuri sies and rheumatisms and neuralgias and fevers. Their eyesight is feeble, and they are worried lest they entirely lose it. Their hearing is indistinct, and they are alarmed lest they become entirely deal They felt chilly today, and are expecting an attack of typoid. They have been troubled for weeks with some perplexing malady, and dread becoming lifelong invalids. Take care of your health now and trust God for the future. Be not guilty of tho blasphemy of asking him to take care of you while you sleep with your windows tight down, or eat chicken salad at 11 o'clock at night, or sit down on a cuke of ice to cool off. Be pru dent and then be confident. Some of the sickest people have been the most usefuL It was so with Payson, who died deaths daily, and Robert Hall, who used to stop in the midst of his sermon and lie down on the pulpit sofa to rest, and then go on again. Theodore' Frelinghuysen had a great horror of dying till the time came,, and then went peacefully. Take care of the present and let the future look out for itself. "Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof." ItOBS CS OF Wn AT STRENGTH WE HAVE. Again, the habit of borrowing misfor tune is wrong because it unfits us for it when it actually does come. We cannot always have smooth sailing. Life's -path will sometimes tumble among declivities and mount a steep and be thorn pierced. Judas will kiss our cheek and then sell us for thirty pieces of silver. Human scorn will try to crucify us between two thieves. We will hear the iron gate of the sepulcher creak and grind as it shuts iu our kindred. But we cannot get ready for these things by forebodings. They who fight imaginary woes will come, out of breath, into conflict with the armed disasters of the future. Their ammunition will have been wasted long before they come under the guns of real misfortune. Boys in attempting to jump a wall sometimes go so far back iu order to get impetus that when they come up they are exhausted; and these long races iu order to get spring enough to vault trouble bring us up at last to the dreadful reality with our strength gone. Finally, the habit of borrowing trouble is wrong because it is unbelief. God has promised to take care of us. The Bible blooms with assurances. Your hunger will be fed; your sickness will be allevi ated; your sorrows will be healed. God will sandal your feet and smooth your path, and along by frowning crag and opening grave sound the voices of victory and good cheer. The summer clouds that seem thunder charged really carry in their Iwsom harvests of wheat,, and shocks of corn, and vineyards purpling for the wine press. The wrathful wave will kiss the feet of the great storm walker. Our great Joshua will command, and above your soul the sun of prosperity will stand still. Bleak and wave struck Patmos shall have apocalyptic vision, and you shall hear the cry of the elders, and the sweep of wings, aud trumpets of salvation, and the voice of Hallelujah uuto God forever. PLACE VOUU TRUST IX GOD. Your way may wind along dangerous bridle paths and amid wolf's howl and the scream of the vulture, but the way still winds upward till angels guard it, and trees of life overarch it, and thrones line it, and crystalline fountains leap on it, and the pathway ends at gates that are pearl, aud streets that are gold, aud temples-that are always open, and hills that quake with perpetual song, and a city minelinor for ever Sabbath and jubilee and triumph and coronation. Let pleasure chant her sire; song. ' Tis not the song for me: To weeping it will turn e'er long. For this is heaven's decree. But thcro's a song the ransomed sins. To Jesus, their exalted kinfr, ... With joyf nl heart and tongue. Oh, that's the Bonn for me! Courasre. mv hrnt.hprl Tho fot h l - ' . ' j ' m.mmv &mvu-w. u-wG9 not give to his son at school enough money to last him several years, but, as the bills ior tuition ana ooara and clothing and boolcs come in. nnva ikam n.i .,-11 C -I wuv.ua. u Xw. UU Will not give you- grace all at once: for the future, but will meet all your exigencies aft thpv mmn ThpntiivK - - . IT J " " "fa xuov I'1 ay ci , trust him. Put evervt-hinc in ClrUVa kn A and leave it there. Large interest money to pay will soon eat up a farm, a store, an estate, and the interest on borrowed troubles will swamp anybody. "Sufficient anto the day is the evil thereof." Pope, who was un. epicure, would lie in bed for days, at Lord Bollngbrook's, un less he were told that there were stewed lampreys for dinner, when he rose instantly and came down to the table. Tkaocbt She Ymm Shot, but She Wasn't. Even the saddest accident is pretty sure to be the moving cause of one or two more or less amusing incidents, and Tuesday nignb-s gasometer explosion was no ex ception to the rule. The story is worth telling as illustrating uu'inutgiDuuoo can do. A prominent young Rochester physician had a call that night that nrrnniswl to keep him out late and his wif sat up for him, getting more and more nervous as the slow hours lagged by on leaden feet, alter tne manner of ladies so engaged. At midnight there came a step up the walk, up the side stoop, eveu to the office dnnr. Mrs. Doctor thought she recognized it as ner nusDann'B, and without any precau tionary "Who's there?" or "Is that you?" threw the door wide open. i Here was u man there aud be was not her husband. He was a big burly fellow: uis late wre w;ia. seemea to her a mur- uerous expression; his right hand was raised and pointed toward her in what seemed to her a threatening attitude. "Murderer," "revolver," "shoot," were the words that best represent the impression produced on her. She drew back to close the door, aud that very instant came the sharp sudden explosion a mile away. That was enough. The chain of suggestion was completed. Her imagination, directed by having heard gunshot wounds profession ally discussed, caused her to feel a sharp burning pain pierce her shoulder, and with a scream, "I'm shot! I'm shot!" she stag gered into the hall. The mau, uaturally, ran for dear life. Mrs. Doctor dropped into a chair and screamed for help. Her brother ran to her assistance. With a last effort she raised herself from the chair, reeled toward him, and fell fainting in his arms, gasping out just before she lost consciousness: "Joe, he's killed me. Break it gently to Tom." It came near being a matter mere serious than funny, for when the fainting spell was. over it was no easy matter to convince the lady that she was unhurt and quiet her nerves.. And now in one physician's family the principal topic for wonderment is whether Mrs. Doctor's nervousness thwart ed a genuine burglarious attempt, or Whether some innocent visitor, seeking in stant relief for some suffering member of the family, is wondering why Dr. doesn't exercise proper supervision over women he is treating for acute mania if he will keep them in his own dwelling. Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. A Gallic Find in Denmark. An antiquarian find, which will excite interest all over Europe, has lately been made in Rcevemose peat bog, near Hobro in Jutland, Aalborg Amt. The objects are all of silver, the principal piece being a very large basin, on which have been fas tened plates of silver hammered out with figures of men, women and animals. The basin is twenty-six Danish inches in diam eter, but scarcely eight inches high. One or two pieces are apparently wanting; but it is hoped they will turn up when the moss is minutely examined. The eyeholes of the figures are now empty, but had evidently been filled with colored glass. One of the plates, which is nearly seventeen inches long, shows war riors, with helmets and other ornaments. One figure is a god with a wheel at his side, and on another are two elephants. A third shows a horned god in a sitting pos ture with his legs crossed orientalwise. All these have apparently nothing to do with northern mythology, as was at first su pposed. The whole find has no w reached the Danish national museum, and we see that these pieces belong to the god lore of the Gallic peoples. The god with the wheel, for instance, is the Gallic sun god. The whole is the work of a Gallic artist at that early period when the Roman and Gallic peoples first came in contact. Al lowing time for these things to wander so ir norm, me uate would seem to be, as regards Denmark, the first century before Christ. Other things belonging to this Gallic group have been found previously iu this country. The total weight of precious metal hitherto exhumed is about twenty Danish pounds. Academy. The Human Mechanism. Just as every well regulated system of transit possesses' telegraphic communica tions and in places automatic switches and signals, so all parts of the human mechan ism are controlled by nerves, the head cen ter being iu the brain and numerous sub-sidisiry-praces situated in various parts of the body The organism has advantages over all ordinary systems of transit mas much iis tho arrangements for automatic communication are more complete and numerous than any transit system pos sesses. And very fortunately is this tho case, since all the vital functions, including circulation, respiration and digestion, might otherwise cease to lie perfotaned. , The mechanism being complete and the food supply sufficient, tho growth of tho body depends on the multiplication of cells. As to the origin of cells opinions differ, the German school holding that each new cell proceeds from a prior cell, while the French school declares that some cells are produced spontaneously from the plasma Certain it is that in tho lymphatics the white corpuscles of the blood are found in abundance, the same that are found in the living plasma and are always numerous in the vicinity of wounds where repairs have to be made. . - Further, where anything serves to check the flow of this white blood, either by ef fecting the nerves that control the lymph atics and lacteals or these organs directly, bodily growth is checked. To some such influence we attribute the diminutive stat ure of the "Liliputians." Xew York Times. Where the Line Was Drawl. What a mystery is woman ! How tender, liow gentle, bow forgiving! Like a moss rose, her love sheds its delicious perfume over her husband's heart aud home. She loves for the sake of loving, and where she has once given her heart there it stays, and all the personal abuse and bad treatment heaped upon her by the object of her affec tion only causes her to worship him with increased davotion. as" the violet, when crushed under foot, gives forth a sweeter fragrance. . But there are some things which a hus band can do to this mysterious creature that will turn her love to hate and make her fly off iu search of a sharp, nx or a le gal separation. A woman in Illinois has created a mild sensation by suing her hus band not. for a divorce, but for her false teeth, whicu he took away when she in sisted upon biting him. Galveston News.' Saved Her Stock in Trade. . "'Yes, nearly everything I had was burned,' said a clever American girl who was a visitor in an English country house where there li:u) been a disastrous fire. "I lost all my gowns, but I saved one thing, I am thankful to say, ami that is my American accent, and. after all," she continued laughingly, "that is really my stock in trade over here." Xew York Tribune. ODDS AND ENDS. Mrs. i-Joyd Brice wears what are proba bly -the handsomest set of turquois in New York. Take egg stains from silver bv rabbin? with a wet rag which has been dipped in, common taole salt. The juice of half a lemon in a teacup of strong oiacK cotlee, without sugar, will often cure a sick headache. A fly lays 320 eggs during a summer. The progeny of a single fly may from June l to toept. 30 exceed 2,000,000. . The Arabian year is a lunar one, and in tne course or thirty-two years each month runs througn all of the seasons. There are plenty of good fish always in the sea, but thousands of worthy inland people can never get to the seashore. Bills are now posted in Paris by ma chinery, which is sfyd to be an improve ment on me nana ana pastepot system. Lady Randolph Churchill Is the only American woman who has' been honored by the queen with the Order of the Crown of India. Maxims which seem truisms in their ap plication to the conduct of others are apt to-escape us altogether in their bearing on our own. To take rust out of steel rub it over with salad oil and in forty-eight hours rub with unslaked lime, finely powdered, until the rust disappears. The empress of Austria is as busy as a schoolgirl with her linguistic studies, and as interested as a land reformer in her ag ricultural projects. " Pure Olive Oil from California. The convention of olive oil producers, recent.lv flsivnililn in this ifw tnAi. -i j - .u wu.a a de cided stand for pure, homemade oil. This suwu was not uuten a aay too soon. When a few months ago some official tests were made of the purity of olive oil it was found that some brands, or rather certain lots, had already been adulterated. The temptation is very strong to keep a spuri ous article on the market. Cottonseed oil and some other vegetable oils will always be cheaper than pure olive oil. The im ported article is continually sold at a lower price than that produced at home. The area suited to olive culture in this country has never hppn n(v.nf flb,in ."...KV.J UU.USH In general terms it may be said to include me country on tne western side of the Sierras, below 42 degs. of latitude, down to and including parts of Arizona and New Mexico. Beyond this territorial area it is not Drobable that t.hp nlivAwill m9lron,TiAi, of a figure. Indeed, there is a strong proba bility that for at least a whole generation the only state in the Union that will get much commercial prominence for the pro duction of the olive will be California. xne growers who have already become Droducers here are ninnwra liirm..haWia have been rtlAntMi Almrwf. o fraalv 1 the last two or three years as apple or plum orcnaras. me area or olives not now in bearing is greater than that in fruitage. The planting will go on in coming seasons, because there is satisfactory evidence that the business will be a paying one. The convention has now established the very Conditions of SU CC(SR mnrArfiul flpHnn curing a perfect guarantee of the purity of oil pruuuceuiaumionua. ' Qld People, J. V. S. is the only Sarsaparilla tliar ld or feeble people should take, as the mii: tal ihUbsU which is iu every other Sarsaparilla thai. .vetno-,r of, is under certain conditions knotvu to be emaciating. J. V. S. on the contrary is purely vegetable and stimulates digestion and creates new blood, the very thing for old, delicate or broken down people. It builds them r.p a:id prolongs their lives. A case in point : Mrs. Belden an estimable and elderlv lady of 610 Mason St., S. F. was for months declining so rapidly as to seriously alarm ber family. It got so bad that she was finally afflicted with fainting spells. She writes: "While In that dangerous condition I saw somo of the testimonials con cerning J.V. S. and sent for a bottle. That marked the turning point I regained my lost flesh and strength and have not felt bo well In years." That was two years ago and Mrs. Belden is well and hearty to-day, and still taking J. V. S. II you aro old or feeble and want to be built up. Ask for &Uy Sarsaparilla . Most modern, -most effective, largest bottle. Same price, t.1.00, six for $5.00. For Sale by SNIPES & KINERSLY. THE DALLES, OHECiOX. A Severe Law- "'mm The English peo ple look more closely 'to the genuineness . of these staples than we do. In lac, they have a law under "Which they make seizures and de stroy adulterated r products that are tiff what they are represented to be. Under .hU s.tatute thousands of pounds of tea have teen bai-ned because of their wholesale adul- . ligation. - Tea, by the" way, is one of the most notori '.:i !y n .'.ul:crated articles of commerce. Not t:mio are the bright, shiny green teas artiB-e;-.diy colored, but t'hnui-and of pounds of , -iij I: :iiu for tea leavi-s are used tortrell xUe bulk of chi-ap tea : ash, sloe, and willow '--.'v.-H Im'Itis thoso ino.it commonly used. l, sweepings f r. m tea wareh .ucs are foiored and sold as tra. Even exhausted tea k-aves ga:he:ed from (he tea-houses are kept, t:iei, and made over i:ini li;d their way into t:io heap teas. Tue EuU.i'a ffovynniat attempt! toslamp thU out by but no tea is too lu'irf ru -, a:;d tho resnl; i., Uiat ,prol)bly ilia J. or.! t loamiBed by any uatiou are those .'ous-imcd in Amerieo. teech's Tea is presented with the guar nn y that i Is uncolored and unadulterated? in fact, the sun-cured tea leaf pure and sim ple. Its purity ii;.; ires superior strength, about one third less of it being required for an infusion thancf the atiflcial teas, and its fragrance and exquisite flavor is at once ap parent. It-will be a revelation to you. In order that Its purity and quality may be guar anteed, It Is sold only In pound packages bearing this trade-mark : BEECHvi. TEA SUN ) 'Pure As Wdhood: Price 60c per pound. For sale at , XjjsXo Butler'i THE DALLES, OREGON. The Dalles 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 trial, and x if satisfied with its course a generous support. Tfcie Daily four pages of six columns each, will be issued every evening excent Sundav and will be delivered in the city, or sent by mail for the moderate sum of fifty cents a month. Its Ob jeets 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 I i: n;.. r Luaumg uny 01 The paper, both daily and weekly, will ue maepenaent m politics, and in its criticism of political matters, as in its handling of local affairs, it will be JUST. FAIR AND IMPARTIAL. We will enedavor to sive all t.hp lo cal news, and we ask of our object and course, be formed from the contents of the paper, and not from rasn assertions ol 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 your Postmaster for THE CHRONICLE PUB. CO. Office N. W. Cor. Washington and Second. Sts Health is Wealth ! Db. E. C. West's Njebvb akb Brain Trkat must, a 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, 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 exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. 11.00 a box, or six boxes for $5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WE 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 cure. Guarantees issued only by BLAKKIEY4HOBOHTOS, Prescription Drnggrists, 175 Second St. The Dalles, Or. The Dalles , GigaF : Factory, FIRST STREET. FACTORY NO. 105. PT?J A pD of the Best Brands VL x JAjk manufactured, and orders from all parts of the country filled on me snortest notice. The reputation of THE DAIXES CI GAR has become firmly established, and the demand for the home manufactured article is increasing every day. A. VLRICH & SON. jjUttWM"1: MJigTH f ATM ENT- GWGle tr . tasiern uregon. that von t fTi t.i n.i am of the best. Ask a copy, or address. Cleveland, Wash., June 19th, 1891.) S. B. Medicine Co., Gentlemen Your kind favor received, and in reply would say that I am more than pleased with the terms offered me on the last shipment of your medicines. There is nothing like 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., ' M. F. Hacklky. Phil Willig, 124 UNION ST., THE DALLES, OR. Keeps on hand afull line of MEN'S AND YOUTH'S Ready - Made Clothing. Pants and Suits MADE. TO ORDER On Reasonable Terms. ' Call and see my Goods before Durcliasing elsewhere.