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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 19, 1891)
ALL MEN MAY BE GREAT THE WORLD WILL NOT KNOW IT, BUT' ALMIGHTY GOD WILL. Sr. T. Ia Witt Talinace Tell or Things Which Men and Women May To Save a Human Soal for Hearen and the Lord. OcEAX GlioVE, Ji. J., Aug. 23. This is camp meeting Sunday at Ocean Grove. Its celebration is always regarded as the great event of the year at this famous religious -watering place. This year the attractions of its observance have been enhanced by . the presence of Dr. Taltnajje, who preached this afternoon in the Auditorium. Every seat was filled and every inch of standing room in '.he aisles was occupied, "and the greatest enthusiasm prevailed. It is esti mated that fully fifteen thousand persons were able to hear the doctor, and many others were deprived of that privilege. His text was Daniel xi, 32, "The people that do know their God shall be strong and do exploits." Antiochus Epiphaues, the old ' sinner, came down three times with his army to desolate the Israelites, advancing one time -with a hundred and two trained elephants, swinging their trunks this way and bhat, and sixty-two thousand infantry and six thousand cavalry troops, and they were driven back. Then, the second time, he advanced with seventy thousand armed men, and had been agaiu defeated. Buttbe third thne he laid successful siege until the navy of Rome came in with the flash of their long banks of oars and demanded thnt the siege be lifted. And Antiochus piphanes said he wanted time to consult with his friends about it, and Popilius, one of the Komau embassadors, took a stall and made a circle on the ground around Antiochus Epiphanes, and compelled him to decide before he came out of that circle; whereupon he lifted the siege. Some of the Hebrews had submitted to the invader, but some of them resisted valorously, as did Kleazer wheu he had swine's flesh forced into his mouth, spit it-out, although he knew he must die for it, and did die for it; and others, as my text says, did exploits. ALL HAVE THKEE OPPORTUNITIES. An exploit I would define to be an heroic act, a brave feat, a great achievement. "Well," you say, "I admire such things, but there is no chance for me; mine is a sort of humdrum life. Jf I had an Antio chus Epiphanes to (igbt, I also could do exploits." Vou are right, so far as great wars are concerned. There will probably he no opportunity to distinguish yourself in battle. The most of the brigadier gen erals of this country would never have been heard of had it not been for the war. Neither will you probably become a great inventor. Nineteen hundred and ninety nine out of every two thousand inventions found in the patent office at Washington never yielded their authors enough money to pay for the expenses of securing the patent. So you will probably never be a Morse or an Edison or a Humphrey Davy or an Eli Whitney. There is not much probability that you will be the one out of the hundred who achieves extraordinary success in commercial or legal or medical or literary spheres. What then? Canyon have no opportunity to do exploits? I am going to show that there are three oppor tunities open that are grand, thrilling, far reaching, stupendous and overwhelming. They are before you now.' In one, if not all three of them, you may do exploits. Tine three greatest things on earth to do are to save u man, or save a woman, or save a child. During the course of his life almost every man gets into au exigency, is caught between two fires, is ground between two millstones, sits on the edge of some preci pice, or in some other way comes near dem olition. It may be a financial or a moral or a domestic or a social or a political exi gency. You sometimes see it in court rooms. A young man has got into bad. company and he has offended the law, and he is arraigned. All blushing and con fused he is in the presence of judge and Jury and lawyers. He can be sent right on ia the wrong direction. He is feeling dis-. graced aud be is almost desperate. Let the district attorney overhaul him as though he were au old offender; let the ablest attorneys at the bar refuse to say a word for him, because he cannot afford a considerable fee; let the judge give no op portunity for presenting the mitigating circumstances, uurry up the case and hus tle him up to Auburn or Sing Sing. If he live seventy years, for seventy years he will be a criminal, and each decade of his life will be blacker than its predecessor. In the interregnums of prison life he can get no work, and he is glad to break a window Class or blow up a. safe or play the high wayman so us to get back within the walls where he can cet something to eat and hide himself from the gaze of the world. HK MIGHT HAVE BEEN SAVED. Why don't his father come and help him? His father is dead. Why don't his mother come and help him? She is dead. Where are all the ameliorating and salutary in fluences of society? They do not touch him. Why did not some one long ago in the case understand t hat there was an op portunity for the exploit which would be famous in heaven a quadrillion of years after the earth has become scattered ashes in the last whirlwind? Why did not the district attorney take that young man into his private office and say: "My son, 1 see that you are the victim of circumstances. This is your first crime. You are sorry. I will bring the person you wronged into your preseuce, and you will apologize and make al l the .reparation you can, and I will give you another chance." Or that young man is presented in the"' oogrftroom, and he has no friends present, An'd' lie judge says, "Who is your counsel?" And he aa--swers, "I have none." Aud the judge says, "Who will take this young man's case?" And there is . a dead halt, and no one offers,- and' after awhile the judge turns to some attorney, who never had a good case in all Uns, life and never will, and whose ad vocacy would be enough to secure the con demnation of innocence itself. And the professional incompetent crawls up beside the prisoner, helplessness to rescue despair, where t here ought to be a struggle among all the !est men of the profession as to who should have the honor of trying to help that unfortunate. 'How much would such an Attorney have received as -his fee for such an advocacy? Nothing in dollars, but much every way in a happy cotiscious- - ness that would make his own life brighter, and his own dying pillow sweeter, and his . own heaven happier the consciousness that be had saved n man ! , DESTHUCTIOK IS BEFOHE HIM. So there are commercial exigencies. A very late spring obliterates the (remand for spring overcoats and spring hats and spring apparel pf all Korts. Hundreds of thousands of people's;-, "It seems we are going to have no spring, and we shall go straight out of winter into warm weather and we can get along 'without the usual spring at tir?." Or there is no autumn weather, the heat plunging. into the cold, and tbe usual ! clothing which is a compromise between summer and winter is not required. It makes a difference in the sale of millions and millions of dollars of goods, and some oversanguine young merchant is caught with a vast amount of unsalable goods that will never be salable again, except at prices ruinously reduced. The young merchant with a somewhat limited capital is in a predicament. What shall the old merchants do as they see the young man in this awful crisis? Rub their hands and laugh and say: "Good for him. He might have known better. When he has been in business as long as we have he will not load his shelves in that way. Ha! Ha! He will burst up before long. He had no business to opeu his store so near to ours anyhow." Sheriff's salel Red flag in the window: 'How much is bid for these out-of-fashion spring overcoats and spring hats or fall clothing out of date? What do I hear in the way of a bid ?" "Four dol lars." "Absurd; I cannot take that bid of four dollars apiece. Why, these coats when first put upon the market were offered at fifteen dollars each, and now I am offered only four dollars. Is that all? Five dollars do I hear?. Going at that! Gone at five dollars," and he takes the whole lot. The young merchant goes home that night and says to his wife: "Well, Mary, we will have to move out of this house and sell our piano. That old merchant that has had an evil eye on me ever since I started has bought out all that clothing, and he will have it rejuvenated, and next year put it on the market as new, while we will do well if we keep out of the poor house." The young man, broken spirited, goes to hard drinking. The young wife with her baby goes to her father's house, and not only is his store wiped out, but his home, his morals and his prospects for two worlds this and tbe next. And devils make a banquet of fire and fill their cups of gall, and drink deep to the health of the old merchant who swallowed up the young merchant who got stuck on spring goods and went down. That is one way, and some of you have tried it. SAVE HIM IN THIS WORLD AND THE NEXT. But there is another way. That young merchant who found that he had miscalcu lated in laying in too many goods of one kind, aud been flung of the unusual season, is standing behind the counter, feeling very blue and biting his finger nails, or looking over his account ' books, which read darker and worse every time he looks at them, and thinking how his young wife will have to be put in a plainer house than she ever expected to live in, or go to a third rate boarding house, where they have tough liver and sour bread five mornings out of the seven. An old merchant comes in and says: "Well, Joe, thiB has been a hard season for young merchants, and this prolonged cool weather has put many in the dol drums, and I have been thinking of you a good deal of late, for just after I started in business I once got into the same scrape. Now, if there is anything I can do to help you out I will gladly do it. . Better just put those goods out of sight for the present, and next season we will plan something about them. I will help you to. some goods that you can sell for me on commission, and I will go down to one of. the wholesale houses and tell them that I know you and will back yon up, and if you want a few dollars to bridge over the present I can let you have them. Be as economical as you can, keep a stiff upper lip, and remember that you have' two friends, God. and my self. Good morning!"' The old merchant goes away and the young man goes behind his desk, and the tears roll down his cheeks. It is the first time he has cried. Disaster made him mad at everything, and mad at man and mad at God. But this kindness melts him, and the tears seem to relieve his brain, and his spirits rise from ten below zero to eighty in the shade, and he comes outof the crisis. About three years after, this young mer- f cnant goes into the old merchant's store and says: "Well, my old friend, I was this morning thinking over what you did for me three years ago. You helped me out of au awful crisis in my commercial history. I learned wisdom, prosperity has come, and the pallor has gone out of my wife's cheeks, and the roses that were there when I courted her in her father's house have bloomed again, and my business is splen did, and I thought I ought to let you know that you saved a man!" In a short time after, the old merchant, who had been a good while shaky in his limbs and who had poor spells, is called to leave the world, and one morning after he had read the twenty-third Psalm about "The Lord is my shepherd," he closes his eyes on this world, and an angel who had been for many N years appointed to watch the old man's dwelling, cries upward the news that the patriarch's spirit is about ascending, and the twelve angels who keep the twelve gates of heaven, unite in crying down to this approaching spirit of the old man, "Come in and welcome, for it has been told all over these celestial lands that you saved a man." . THE WORLD AGAINST A WOMAN. There sometimes come exigencies in the life of a woman. One morning a few years ago I-saw in the newspaper' that there was a 3'oung woman iu New York whose pocketbook, containing thirty-seven dol lars and thirty-three cents, had been stolen, and she had been left without a penny at the beginning of winter in a strange city, and no work. And although she was a stranger, I did not allow the 0 o'clock mail to leave the lamppost on our corner without carrying the thirty-seven dollars and thirty-three cents, and the case was proved genuine. . Now,. I have read all Shakespeare's trage dies, aud all Victor. Hugo's tragedies, and all Alexander " Smith's tragedies, but I never read a tragedy more thrilling than that case, and similiar cases by the hun dreds and thousands in all our large cities. Young women without money and with- . out home and without work in the creat . maelstroms of metropolitan life. When I such a case comes under your observation, how do you treat it? "Get out of my way.. We have no room in ourvestablishment for any more hands. I don't believe in women anyway. '-'They are a lazy, idle, worthless set. John, please show this per son out of the door." Or do you compliment her personal ap pearance and say things to her which if any man said to your sister or daughter you would kill him ou the spot? That, is one way, and it is tried every day in the large cities, and many of those who adver tise for female hands in factories and for governesses in families have proved them selves unfit to be in any place outside of hell. But there is another way, and I saw it one day in the Methodist Book Concern in New York, where a young woman ap plied for work, and the gentleman in tone and manner said in substance: "My daugh ter, we employ women here, but I do not know of any vacant place in our depart ment. You had better inquire r.t such and such a place, and I hope you will be successful in getting something io do. Here is"my name, and tell them I sent you." ; ' The embarrassed and humiliated woman seemed to give way 'to Christian confi dence. She started out with a . hopeful look that I think must have wou for her a place in which tc earn her bread. . I rather think that considerate and Christian gen tleman saved a woman. New York and Brooklyn ground up last year about thirty thousand young women and would like to grind up about as many this year. Out of all that long procession of women who march on with no hope for this world or the next, battered and bruised and scoffed at, and flung off the precipice, not one but might have been saved for home and God nud heaven. But good men and good wom en are not in that kind of business. Alas for that poor thing! NothiDg but the thread of that sewing girl's needle held her, and the thread broke. A CONTRAST. ' I have heard men tell in public discourse what a man is; but What is a woman? Until some one shall give a better defini tion, I will, tell you what Woman is. Di rect from God, a sacred and delicate gift, with affections so great that no measuring line short of that of the infinite God can tell their bound. Fashioned to refine and soothe and lift and irradiate home and so ciety and the world. Of such value that no one can appreciate it, unless his mother lived long enough to let him understand it, or who in some great crisis of life, when all else failed him, had a wife to re-enforce him with a faith in God that nothing could disturb. Speak out, ye cradles, and tell of the feet that rocked you and the anxious faces that hovered over you! Speak out, ye uurseries of all Christendom, and ye homes, whether desolate or still in full bloom with the faces of wife, mother and daughter, and help me to define what woman is. But as geographers tell us that the depths of the sea correspond with the heights of the mountains I have to tell you that a good womanhood is not higher up than bad womanhood is deep down. The grander the palace the more awful the conflagra tion that destroys it. The grander the steamer Oregon the more terrible her go ing down just off the coast. Now I should not wonder if you trem bled a little with a sense oL responsibility when I say that there is hardly a person in , this house but may have an opportunity to save a woman., ft may in your case be done by good advice, or by financial help, or by trying to bring to bear some one of a thousand Christian influences. If, for in stance, you find a woman in financial dis tress and breaking down in health and spirits trying to support her children, now that her husbandis dead or an invalid, do ing that very important and honorable work but which is little appreciated keeping a boarding house, where all the guests, according as they pay small board, or propose, without paying any board at all, to decamp, are critical of everything aud hard to please, busy yourselves in try ing to get her more patrons, and tell-her of divine sympathy. Yea, if you see a woman favored . of for tune and with all kindly surroundings finding in the hollow flatteries, of the world her chief regalement, living for her self and for time as if there were no eter nity, strive to bring her into the kingdom of God, as did the other day a Sabbath school teacher, who was the means of the conversion of the daughter of a man of immense wealth, and the daughter resolved-to join the church, and she went home and said, "Father, I am . going to join the church, and I want you tocome." "Oh, no," he said, "I never go to, church." "Well," said the daughter, fif I were going to be married would you not go to see me married?" And he said, "Oh, yes." j "Well," said she, "this is of more impor tance tnan that." So he went and has gone ever since, and loves too. , I do not know but that faith ful Sabbath school teacher not only saved a woman, but saved a man. There may be iu this, audience, gathered from all parts of the world, there may be a man whose be havior toward womanhood has been per fidious. Repentl Stand np, thou master piece of sin and death, that I may charge youl As far as possible make reparation. Do not boast that you have her in your power and that she cannot help herself. When that fine collar aud cravat, and that elegant suit of clothes comes off and your uncovered soul stands before God, you win be better off. if you save that woman. ' YOU MAY SAVE A CHILD. ' There is another exploit' you can do, and that is to save a child. A child does not seem to amount to much.. It is nearly a year old liefore it can walk at all. For the first year and a half it cannot speak a word. For the first ten years it would starve if it had to earn its owu food. For the first fifteen years its opinion on any subject is absolutely valueless And then there are so many of them. My, what lots of chil dren! And some people have contempt for children. They are good for nothing but to wear out the carpets and break things' and keep you awake nights crying. Well, your estimate of a child is quite different from that mother's estimate who lost her child this summer. They took it to the salt air of the seashore and to the tonic air of Ihe mountains, but no help came, and the brief paragraph of its life is ended. Suppose that life could be restored y purchase, how much would that be reaved mother give? She would take all the jewels froin her fingers and neck and oureau and put them down. And if told that that was not enough she would take her house and make over the deed for it, and if that were not enough she would call in all her investments and put down all her mortgages and bonds, aud if told that were not enough she would say: "I have made over all my property, aud if I can have that child back I will now pledge that I will toil with my own hands and carry with my own shoulders in any kind of Iiard work and live iu a cellar and die in a garret. Only give roe back that lost dar ling!" ' - . ;: . I am glad that there are those who know something of a value of a child. Its possi bilities are tremendous. What will those hands, yet do? Where will those feet yet walk? -Toward what destiny will that never dying soul betake itself? Shall those lips be the throne of blasphemy or benediction? . Come, chronologists, and calculate the decades on decades, the cen turies on centuries, of its lifetime. Oh, to' save a child! v Am I not right in putting that among the great exploits? . But what are you going- to do with those children who are worse off than if their father and mother had died the day they were bom? There are tens of thousands of such. Their parentage jyas ajraiiist them. Their name is against them. The Ktructure of their skulls is .against r.hstii. Their nerves and muscles contaminated by the inebriety or dissoluteness of their par ents; they are practically at their birth laid out on a plank in the middle of the Atlan tic ocean, in - an equinoctial file-, aud told to make for shore. What to do with them is the question often asked. . There is another question, quiu; as perti nent, and that is. What are they Voing to. do with us? They wilt, ten or eif. en years from now, have as. many -u s ;:s i he same number of well born children, and they will hand this land over to .anaruiiy and I political damnation just as sure as we neg iect them. Suppose we each one of ns save a boy or save a girl. You can do it Will you? I will. K.NOWGOD AND BE STRONG. How shall we get ready for one or' all of these threes exploits? We shall make a dead failure if in our own strength we try to save a man or woman or child. But my text suggests where we are to get equip ment. "The people that do know their God shall be strong and do exploits." We must know him through Jesus Christ in our own salvation, and then we shall' have his help in the salvation of others. And while you are saving strangers you may save some of your own kin. You think your brothers and sisters and children and grandchildren all safe, but they are not dead, and no one is safe till he is dead. On the English coast there was a wild storm and a wreck in the offing, and the cry was, "Man the lifeboat!" But Harry, the usual leader of the sailor's crew, was not to be found, and they went without him, and brought back all the shipwrecked people but one. ' . By this time Harry, the leader of the crew, appeared and said, "Why did you leave that one?" . The answer was, "He could not help himself at all, .and we could not get him Into the boat. " "Man the life boat!" shouted Harry, "and we will go for that one.'' "No," said his aged mother, standing bv. "vnn mush nnt m t Ta your father in a storm like this, and your ututuer m went on six years ago, and 1 havn not-, hpnnl n x.n-.1 fmm 1X711 : i ' - . . . v. . . um 1 1 111 Blum llfj left, and I don't know where he is. poor hi, anu x cannot let you also go, for I am old and dependent on you." His reply was, "Mother, I must go and save that one man, and if I am lost God will take care of you in your old days." Th lifpiwinf-. nnt. nnf. and Bfi., 1 - uw.a Ull QTT1U1 struggle with the sea they picked the poor Save his life. ATirl sttaytri fni. Via . 1 . VA. VU? DUU1 Vf And as they came within speaking dis- utuce, narry cnea out, vve saved him, and tell mother it. wna tiini. wsn rtu yes, my friends, let us start out to save duiuc kjuxz IUr Lima anu lor eternity, some ltl(in uimAvninan tnm n V. ; 1 .1 A n .1 1 , ..vuauu, ctvujo Liiiiia. OUU YY LIU knows bnt it may,, directly or indirectly, be- mo aaivHuun oi one oi our own kindred, and that will be an exploit worthy of cele bration when the world itself is ship wrecked, and the sun has gone, out like a spark from a smitten anvil, and all the stars are dead! How to Parity Water. .A saturated solution of permanganate of potassa will -speedily cleanse foul water. About a teaspoonful to a hogshead should be used. Another method is to put a tablespoonfui of pulverized alum into a hogshead of water and stir the water well. The impurities fall to the bottom and the water will soon possess nearly all the clear ness and freshness of the finest spring water. Exchange. Celebrities are not always most proud of that which has made them famous. Thack eray was at least as proud pf his indifferent pencil as of his powerful pen. Boswell, undoubtedly, was prouder of the visit to Corsica and the acquaintance with Paoli that made him ridiculous than of the "Life of Johnson," which has handed his name down to posterity. SICK Head- Aches. 3 . Sick-headaches are the outward indications of derangements of the stomach and bowels. As Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparilla is the only bowel resiiJafiug preparation of Sarsaparilla, it is seen why it is tho only appropriate Sarsaparilla in nii-k-Uradaobes. It Is not only appropriate; it is an iihtiolutu cure. After a course of it an occa sional .lose at intervals will forever after prevent return. J no. St. Cox, of 73G Turk Street, San Francisco, w rites: . " I have been troubled with attacks of sick-houduche lor the last three years from one to three time u week. Some time ago I bought two bottles of Joy's Vegetable PursapariUa and have only Inn 1 one attack isitice and that wa on tbe second ilay after I hesnn using it." JiiiiV Veetab8e UJJ Q Sarsaparilla For Sale by SNIPES St K1NERSLY. THE DALLES, OREGON. A Revelation. Few people know that the bright bluish-green color of the ordinary teas exposed In the windows is not the nat ural color. Unpleasant as the fact may be, it ii nevertheless artificial; mineral ' coloring matter being used for this purpose. The effect Is two fold. It not only makes the tea a bright, shiny green, hut also permits tbe mse of" off-color " and worthless teas, which, once under the green cloak, are readily worked off as a good quality of tea. An eminent authority writes on this sub ject: "The manipulation of poor teas, to give them a'finer appearance, is carried on exten sively. Green teas, being in this country especially popular, are produced to meet the demand by coloring cheaper lack kinds by glazing or facing with l'runsian blue, tumeric, gypsum, and indigo. This methprl it to gen- -erol that very Utile genuine uneolored green tea U offered or tale." - . It was the knowledge of this condition cf affairs that prompted the placing of Ileeeb's . Tea before the public. It is absolutely pure and without color. Did you ever see any genuine uneolored Jar-an tea? A.-k your grocer to open a package of Beech's, and you will see it, and probably for the very first time. It will be found in color to bo just be tween the artificial green tea that you have been accustomed to aud the black teas. It draws a delightful canary color, and is so fragrant that it will be a revelation to tea- ' drinkers. Its purity' makes it also more economical than the artificial teas, for less of It is required per cup. Sold only in pound packages bearing this trade-mark : BEEC ure'AsrfJBilflhood: If your grocer does not have it, he. will gel -U for you, rxiceeoo per pound. For sale at Leslie Sutler's, THE DALLES, OREGON. Ha: TEA - SUN tub Dalles cuticle : . Jjp : is here and has come to stay. It hopes v 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 if satisfied with its course a generous support. ... ; .- The Daily four pages of six columns each; will be issued every evening; except Sunday, andwill be delivered in the city, or sent by mail for the moderate sum of fifty cents a month. Its Objects 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 enedavor to s:ive 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 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. GO. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second. Sts Health is Wealth ! Dr. e. c. West's Nerve and Brain Treat mint, 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 Powei 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. $1.00 a box, or six boxes for 15.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. TVE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by us for Bix boxes, accompanied by $5.00, we wifi send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money If the treatment does not efl'ec' a cure. Guarantees issued only by I1LAKELEY Sc HOTGHTON, Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. The Dalles, Or. Phil Willig, 124 UNION ST., THE DALLES, OR. Keeps on hand a full 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 nurchaaiiig elsewhere. of the best. Ask a copy, or address. s B Cleveland, Wash., ) June 19th, 1891. S. B. Medicine Co., Gentlemen Your kind f a vcjr received, and in reply would say that I am more than pleased with the terms offered rne 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 fiave had no complaints so far, and everyone is ready with a word of praise for their virtues. Yours, etc., M. F. Hacklev. The Dalles Gigar : Factory, . FIEST STREET. FACTORY NO. 105. 7T?J- A'TG of the Be8t Brands VJL VJ xXVlO manufactured, and orders from all parts of the country filled on the shortest notice. - The reputation .of THE DALLES CI GAR has become firmly established, and the demand for the home manufactured article is increasing every day. A. ULRICH & SON.