t4J
.1' .
Rmding In Bed.
It la a widespread belief that to read
while in a lying position is hurtful to the
eyes, and is therefore a dangerous lux
ury. As a rule, some truth can be sifted
oat of every popular saying. More or less
Influenced by the superstitions which seem
a part of our very organization, we have of
ten abused this privilege, quieting our con
science by a kind of mental protest. Ex
periencing no inconvenience from the en
joyment of reading in bed, we came to the
point of questioning the truthfulness of
the adage, however hoary with respecta
bility age has made it.
A reporter got the opinion of the surgeon
in charge of the Presbyterian Eye, Ear and
Throat. Charity hospital on the matter.
"Injury to the eyes in reading," he said,
"conies not from the position of the body,
but from the way in which light falls upon
tho book. Provided the open page receives
tbe light, and at the sarrte time the eyes
Are shielded from the direct harsh rays,
reading can be indulged in to any extent
when the body is in the recumbent posture.
Ho one questions this when, during their
Mmmer outing, they stretch themselves on
the turf or in a hammock, under the shade
of a friendly tree. Why should they ques
tion it when they lie on a soft couch at
tome?
"The straining to sight comes from the
improper illumination of. the printed sur
face; as, wheu persons read in bed from a
distant gas jet, which throws the light on
the back of the book, and necessarily into
the eyes of the reader, while the page pe
rosed is in shadow. If the gaslight in
the center of the room or at the bureau is
good and tbe reader reverses the pillow to
the foot of the bed, so as to have the light
fall ou the open book, no more harm can
come to the eye from the recumbent pos
ture than from reading at a table with the
light overhead.
"The popular saying of our grandmoth
ers that reading lying down was injurious
originated at a time when 'artificial light
was proverbially indifferent, and when the
neuter table oil lamp was the only light
fit for reading purposes. . The tallow dip
substitute, placed on a table at the side of
the bed, should have been classified with
moonlight reading, which no sensible per-
son should ever be guilty of." Baltimore
. American.
Tho Future of Cassia.
Russian refugees in Paris are in general
people of a kindly and humane temper and
certainly not naturally inclined to violence.
They give the impression of being represen
tatives of a race worthy of a very high civ
ilization, and which is nevertheless gov
erned like the degenerate races of the east.
There is au evident discrepancy between
the laws and the men. No force can pre-
Tent this state of things from falling into
ruin. And certainly this immense, empire,
these 130,000,000 of inhabitants, this slow,
sure and indomitable propaganda repre
sents a mysterious and terrible force a
force that will surely astonish the world
and have an extraordinary influence upon
the destinies of the European race.
The world has there an incommensura
ble unknown quantity, an epopee in, the
cerm, which will be the astonishment of
nr eons, terrible perhaps, or consoling and
prolific, as considerable as the prodigious
dissemination of Europe in America, as
far sounding as the French revolution.
Bat in what form and in what cortege of
bloody or pitiful events will it be devel
oped? This is the secret of the future, the
enigma of the great Sphinx, which none
shall guess and none shall read until af
ter! J.- H. Rosny in Harper's.
World's Fair Notes.
Dr. Nardyz, a Pittsburg physician, is at
work upon an immense papier mache
model of the human heart for exhibition
at the World's fair. It will be three feet in
liameter.
The Catholics have chosen a committee
to supervise the making of a national
Catholic educational exhibit at the expo
sition. Many prominent Catholics . are
Bnueii interested in the enterprise.
There is a possibility that the visitor to
the exposition may see the' celebrated
Spitzer art collection, the most compre
hensive collection of European art in the
world and valued at above (4,000,000.
Two complete palace railroad, cars, of
tie Pullman style, are to be hewn out of a
monster redwood tree that stands In the
forests of Tulare county, Cal. it is a stu
pendous undertaking, but when it is com
pleted it will furnish the World's fair with
one of its most interesting exhibits.
An appropriation of $150,000 has been
made by the exposition directory, for tbe
expense -of the ceremonies attending the
dedication of the, buildings, Oct. 13, 1692.
The ceremonies will be extended through
several days, and some 45,000 militia and
United States troops, it is expected, will
participate.
- Does Tlila Mak You Feel Cool?
Owners of wagons of every description,
and who wish they had sleighs instead
when snow is on the ground, wiU be inter
ested in the special construction of sleigh
runners just patented. The parts are de
signed to be readily separated or put to
gether without the use of tools, and may
be conveniently carried .in the vehicle to
which they are to be applied. Besides the
usual tires, the runners have each a side
shield, extendingsligbtly above the surface
of the runner, aud in the runners are set
threaded blocks, in which are removably
secured, by means of thumbscrews, the
tower mis -of .-wrought iron legs, bent iu-wardly.tn-iheSr
upper portions to nass clear
of the hub ; '' . .' . . . , i '
ThW;jti4i hers 'can be-removed from a
Vehicle in a lew minutes. Should the sleigh
ing become poor, or they can be as readily
applied when desired. Should the wagon
be too heavy to poll into position on the
runners, to . make the attachment- the
Miunibscrews securing one of each pair of
legs may be removed, allowing the cross
bars to drop down, when the horse may be
employed to pull the vehicle on the run
ners. New York Journal.
A Story About Mozart.
" Here is a - story about Mozart which we
do not remember to have heard before. The
great man was paying a visit to. a mon
astery, 'and during mass was tortured by
-the playing of a ludicrously inefficient
organist. At di n ner the prior asked Mozart
how he liked tbe organist's performance.
"He plays in quite a Biblical fashion.''
said Mozart. " -j,
"What do you mean?" . ,.
! "His left hand does not . Jfnoy - what his
right band doetb.? - ; , '
Average Wages of Laborer.
, Based upon tbe estimates furnished b;
the superintendent 6 the . census: bureau,
the average wages of laborers in the man
" nfacturing industries of the United States
are a few cents less than (411 each yearly.
Taking into consideration the large pro;
portion of women-, children -andnskiileti-that
are employed, this is not a very bad
showing for American labor in the opinion
at American Cultivator.
Girl and m Coal Chats.
i : - we naa more iun tasc winter man yon
could shake a stick at," said a pretty little
friend of mine who is puzzling her dear
little brain over all the isms and ologies
that are taught at Sage college, the female
annex to Cornell university.
: "I wouldn't tell you about it for the
world if school wasn't out and everybody
gone away. But mind, if you print a word
of it I will never speak to you again.
"You know most ef the girls at Sage are
serious, solemn things, who seem to think
that the chief end of life is to beat the boys
and take all the prizes. I don't. I prefer
to have the boys take the prizes and then
take me. Then it is all in the family, don't
you see? But the girls ain't all prigs and
digs. Some of them are lovely that is,
I mean real jolly and full of fun.
"We had some of that kind there last
winter, and poor Mrs. Hooper, the matron,
was almost driven wild by them. You are
supposed to be in your room at a certain
hour, and not think of poking your nose
out till morning. Bless your heart, do yon
think a real, live girl, filled with the love
of nature and fond of studying astronomy
in companies of two is going to put up
with any such imprisonment. We that
is to say, they didn't last winter, but
found some means of escape, and had lots
of good times sleigh riding with the boys.
"The leakage of students was discovered,
but how did they get out? That was the"
question. Poor Mrs. Hooper sat up at
nights and watched. She had insomnia with
thinking. She actually lost flesh with
worrying, for she was afraid that there
might be some horrid story get into the
newspapers, don't you know.
"At last the mystery was solved, and
what do you think it was? The coal chute
that ran down into the cellar! This was
the way hat the girls got out.
"Did they nail it up? Well, I should say
so! So that impending tragedy ended hap
pily. But don't you dare to print itl"
New York Herald.
- The French Colony of Algeria.
While a number of the leading European
governments have recently adopted the so
called colonial policy as a means both of
increasing their national trade and of pro
viding an outlet for their people, experi
ences which have recently been brought 'to
light in France would indicate that a
colonial policy may be an exceedingly ex
pensive luxury for a nation to adopt. -
In a recent debate in the chamber of
deputies on the government of the colony
of Algiera the calculation was made from
official reports that in the last forty years
that colony had cost France, over and
above the income received therefrom, quite
$800,000,000, and what is more, the annual
costs at the present time are even larger
than in previous years.
It might be'said that these large outgoes
were no more than France was justified in
sending for the purpose of providing a de
sirable outlet for her people; but, although
Algeria is a remarkably fertile country and
offers many opportunities, it doos not
seem to attract the French colonists. The
total population of French origin is only
260,000, while there are an equal number, of
white people not of French nationality.
These latter have, by the - local laws, ex
emption from taxation granted tbfim that
the French colonist is not accorded, and,
what is more, the rate of taxation upon,
the 3,000,000 or more natives is several
times greater than upon the French col
onist or foreign resident.
The French will not settle in Algeria as
colonists, although large numbers visit the
country each year as tourists, which would
seem to prove that unless a nation has an
aptitude, for colonization and this was no
doubt what the French possessed six or
eight generations ago when they settled
Canada it is useless for it to spend money
and exhaust an effort in acquiring and at
tempting ' to develop the waste places on
earth. Boston Herald.
. A Cheap Method for Coloring; Glass.
Some of the German porcelain and glass
manufacturers are now using a new color
ing material, capable of being "fixed''
without fire. In carrying out this process,
ordinary water colors are used, these be
ing rubbed down with a certain mixture,
consisting of two solutions,- compounded
in definite proportions, one of them being
composed of 100 parts of a syrup of potas
sium water glass, to which has been added
ten parts of a lead acetate solution fifteen
parts lead acetate in 100 parts of water
and stirred by an air stream until well
mixed; the other solution is a mixture of
fifty parts of borax dissolved in 100 parts
of warm water and twenty parts of glyc
erin. ; ; '" -.- .
Sixty parts of the first described solution
are mixed with forty parts of the second,
and .with . this mixture the colors are
rubbed down. . For .thinning purposes wa- -ter
and the first named solution are mixed
well together in equal parts. After the
products have been painted they are placed
in a bath composed as follows: One part of
borax is dissolved in twelve parts of water
and mixed in a gutta percha vessel with
fifty parts of hydrofluoric- and ten parts of
sulphuric acid. On the immersion vof the
articles some ten minutes in this bath
they are washed in clean water, and the
color appears as if burned in. New York .
Sun. - - .
How Louis Kapoleon Died.
. A telegram from Borne has announced
the publication of a "Life of Prince Napo
leon" which is likely to create some sensa
tion in the political world. There is an
earlierwork which, though- it ;does not
b&r the signature of Prince Napoleon, was
undoubtedly inspired by him of which a
few stray copies have reached England. It -is
called "Le - Prince Imperial," and pur-.
ports to be written by D'Herisson. - It is
aimed against tbe Empress Eugenie, whom
it savagely pursues from her birth to the
downfall of tbe empire an event directly
attributed to her influence.
There is a long chapter describing the in
trigues that went on around the deathbed
of tbe emperor. It will be remembered '
that at the time of his death t'bere was a
report that that event was due hot to the
effects of the operation which Sir Henry
Thompson performed, but to an overdose
of chloral. This singular book, certainlv
written with intimate knowledge of the
inner circle or imperial affairs, confirms
this report. Napoleon Ed, it says, took the
chloral, fell asleep and never woke again. :.
London Cor. Liverpool Post.
Little Danger from Water Poisoning-.
In Glasgow the practice of supplying
houses from cisterns is comparatively rarer -and
should be entirely abolished when the
additional aqueduct, now in course of con-! .
struction between Loch Katrine and the
city, is completed. Taking all things Into
consideration, it seems clear that the dan
ger from lead contamination, if it exists at
all, is not-such as to cause public alarm.
The appearance of an occasional doubtful
I case of poisoning is very different from the
teatensive epidemic?, xcl&rtyr l-aceable to
the water supply, which have at various
times occurred at Sheffield, Bradford and
other towns. London Engineering.
ODDS AND ENDS.
'- Japan has built its first factory-for the
manufacture of woolen goods. -.
Beware of the vicious man who proposes
to reform his life on the installment plan."
The manufacture of cotton goods in the
island of Ceylon has made remarkable
progress."
The life insurance policies in force upon
the lives of the citizens of Pennsylvania
amount to over $448,000,000.
Sparrows have become such a nuisance in
some parts of Germany that a reward is
offered for their destruction.
The governor general of India receives -a
salary of $350,000 a year and extras which
increase the amount to $500,000.
It ' is estimated that 20,000 horse power
will be required for the electric, lighting
plant of the Columbian exposition.
Old newspapers torn in small pieces and
wet in water softened by the addition of a
little ammonia are excellent to wash lamp
chimneys.
Can any one tell why it is that when a
woman is being weighed she smiles, while
a man having his weight ascertained al
ways looks serious? -.
The Greeks sacrificed many dogs in hon
or of Hecate, because by their baying the
phantoms of the lower world were sup
posed to be disturbed. , .( , - :
The output of cigarettes throughout the
country for the month of March amounted
to 250,501,860 against 154,234,800 during the
same month of last year. ""
The Coreans are the largest eaters known.
Their stomachs are generally abnormal in
size, and the one possessing the largest is
generally considered the richest. -
Baron de Rothschild has a collection of
postage stamps that is valued at $40,000.
He is also a prominent and enthusiastic
member of a Paris philatelist society. . .
A Church Flooded with Money.
Who ever heard of a church being flooded
with honey? The very idea sounds ridicu
lous, and in any other place than Califor
nia would excite only a smile of incredu
lity. We have all heard about places that
"flowed with milk and honey," and meta
phorical references to the "droppings of
the sanctuary" are familiar, but it has re
mained for a swarm of bees to make literal
facts of these familiar metajihors.
It appears that a lot of vagrant bees,
while in search of a suitable home, found
an admirable location in the loft of an
Episcopalian church in Tulare county.
Here, having an abundance of space, they
increased and multiplied, and at the same
time laid in a large store of honey. Great
white combs were attached to the rafters
overhead, and were built downward and
added to- until hundreds of pounds of
sweetness were hidden away in the delicate
white waxen cells.
" -One contingency, however, was not pro
vided against, and, indeed, was ' not ex
pected. The normal temperature in the
contracted proportions of the loft was of a
character admirably suited for the best ad
vantage of the bees, and had that tempera
ture continued this story would never have
been-written. . - -
It is almost unnecessary to remind' read
ers that a week or two ago California was
visited with something bearing a remark
able likeness to a sirocco. In a word, it
was hot deucedly hot. .
' In the loft of the 'church,- where the bees
were holding high carnival, the tempera
ture rose and rose until it reached the
melting point. Wax gave way beneath the
torrid heat, and now, down the rafters,
along tbe scantlings, over the laths and
down the joists began to flow streams of
liquid . sweetness. They found crevices
here and there, and soon altar, pulpit,
chancel, furniture, prayer books and all
the belongings of the interior of the sacred
edifice were treated to such a deluge as the
world had never seen.
Efforts were made' to stay the sticky tide,
but these were only partially successful,
and before anything could be done the in
terior of the church was a sight to behold,
and damage had been done that required
expense and hard work to remedy. San
Francisco Chronicle.
Baby's Foot Is Like a Monkey's.
"How many people have ever taken no
tice of a baby's foot, except to- admire its
pinkness and prettiness?" said a- well
known scientist. - "And yet to the anato
mist it is a revelation. Take, for exam
ple, the tootsies of a child of ten months
that has never walked nor stood alone.- It
has a power of grasping to some extent
and is used instinctively like a hand. - The
great toe has a certain independent work
ing,, like a thumb, and the wrinkles of the
sole resemble those of the palm. These
markings almost entirely disappear after
the pedal extremity has come' to be em
ployed for purposes of support and loco
motion. "The hands aud feet of a human being
are strikingly like those of the chimpan
zee in conformation, while the gorilla's
resemblance to man in these respects is
even more remarkable.: The higher apes
have been classified as 'quadrumana,' - or
'four handed,' because their hind feet are
band shaped; but ' this designation Is very
improperly applied, because the ape's pos
terior extremities are not really hands at
all. They merely look like hands at the
first glance, whereas in fact they are bnt
feet adapted for climbing. The big toes
cannot, be 'opposed' to the other toes as
thumbs are to the fingers, but simply act
pincerwise for the purpose of grasping.
"Now, funnily enough, the Infant's' feet
have this same power of grasping pincer
fashion, and the action is performed in
precisely tbe same way. Advocates of evo
lutionary theories take this to signify that
the human foot was originally; utilized for
climbing trees also before the species was
so highly developed as it is now. Also they
assert-that the fact that the art of walking
erect is learned by the child with such dif
ficulty proves that the race has only ac
quired it recently." Washington Star.
I.Nr'hy Does the Sun Continue to' Burn?
Thousands of curious and ingenious the
ories have been brought forth to account
for -the. fact that the sun, although he . has
whirled his 'burning disk across the heav
ens for untold ages, continues to burn
without being consumed or his bulk being
lessened in the least. . Some learned men
affect to' -believe that the -great orb is a
monstrous ball of gas, but even a great
ball of gas would be consumed in its ut
most atom in the course of a few thou
sand years. Others pretend to believe that
its fires are kept up Uy the remains of
wrecked worlds which are constantly fall
ing into its depths, but even - this seems far
from probable, not to say a purely absurd
conclusion.
' In giving his opinion on the last conten
tion, one of the most eminent astronomers
of the day has figured that a mountain
range consisting of 176 cubia miles falling
into the sun would only be sufficient to
maintain the' present heat Mr a single sec
ond; a mass equal to that of our earth
would engender only enough of heat to
last ninety-three years. New .York Tele
s People Who Soil Beoks. .,,
Librarians are not the only ones who
complain of persons who habitually soil
books loaned to : them by thumb stains
and marginal penciling. , That habit is
the heaviest cross imposed on dealers in
rare and expensive books. , It is a prac
tice with such dealers to send such books
out for inspection when requested by
those to whom, the dealer thinks there, is
a chance to make a sale. - Valuable books
h orten suiter from the practice. . Samuel
J. Tilden, while a good buyer of books,
was also a great offender in this respect.
He thought nothing of keeping a book
for weeks, making dealers send to him
for it several times, and finally returning
it thumbed and dog eared, with a mes
sage that he did not want it. On the
whole, booksellers lost nothing through
Mr. Tilden. for he did not spare money
when a book caught his fancy, and his
library contained many treasures, but at
times his whims' were costly and vexa
tious to those who tried to please him.
Dealers' say that there are many men in
this city now to whom his habits seem
to havA hem. trari ami Hud. "Naur - VnvV
. Funeral Services Interrupted.
During a funeral the other day at Ev
ansburg, near Norristownsome one told
the minister conducting the religious
services that the. funeral director was in
waiting outside. The dominie took the in
formation as a piece of officiousness on the
part of the undertaker, and stopping short
in his remarks put it to a vote of the
mourners whether he should proceed or no.
No one voted, and the minister cut the de
votions off short. "The wearer of the gown
sought the undertaker out later on and
gave him a most orthodox piece of his
mind. Scranton (Pa.) Truth.
Paper Bleaching by Electricity.
Very satisfactory results are now being
obtained by some of the English paper
manufacturers in bleaching paper by elec
tricity, the process rendering the paper
perfectly white without in the least injur
ing its strength. This process in question
depends on the use of a solution of mag
nesium chloride, which is decomposed by
the action of a strong electric current into
chlorine and oxygen on the one hand and
into magnesium and hydrogen on the
other. . Plates of platinum are used as
electrodes. New York Sun.
Demands of the Seashore.
A little girl spending the summer at the
seashore wrote, a few days ago, the follow
ing touching appeal to her father in the
city: "Dear Papa Can't you send me one
dollar, or half of it? lni so hard up for
it now. There's a cent for one thing here,
five cents for another, one cent for some
thing else. Then there's merry-go-rounds,
toboggans, popcorn balls,' etc. Sister, got
the money out of her dime bank, so she
has plenty. Please send me one dollar.
Your loving daughter." Philadelphia
Ledger. . .
The crucifix which Columbus wore
when he discovered America is reputed
to be in the. keeping of .the Sisters of
Loretto, at Durango, Colo.
Head
Aches. Sick-headaches are the outward indications of
derangements of the stomach and bowels. ; As
Joy's Vegetable Sarsa pari 11a is the only bowel
resisting preparation of SarsaparUla, It is seen
why it is the only appropriate SarsaparUla in
ii l:-!ief(luches. It is not only appropriate; it is
n:i absolute care. After a coarse of it an occa
sional dose at intervals will forever after prevent
reiarn. ' .
.Ino. M. Cox, of 735 Turk Street, San Francisco
writes: I have been troubled with attacks of
tick-headache for the last three Jean from one to
thrcso times a week, - Borne time ago I bought two
bottles of Joy's Vegetable S&raaparilla and have
only had one attack sinee and that was on the
nevoR.! day after I began using it."
fiii' a Vegetable
UU V SarsaparUla
For Sale by SNIPES & KINERSLY.
THE DALLES, OREGON.
A Revelation.
. ..lew 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 is nevertheless
artificial; mineral coloring
matter being ased for this
'purpose. - The effect Is two
fold. " It not only makes the
- tea a bright; shiny green, bat also permit the
: -ase 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 alflner appearance. Is carried on exlen-.
; lively. Green teas,' being in this country
especially popular, are produced to meet the
demand by coloring cheaper b'-ack kinds by
glazing or facing with Pruxsiaa bine, tumeric,
gypsum, and ludigo. TIU method U so gen
' eral that very Utile genuine nncvlored green tea
if offered for tale." '
It was the knowledge "of this condition, of
affairs that prompted the placing of Beech's
Tea before the public. . It is absolutely pure
and "without color. Did you ever see any
genuine uncolored .Japan tea? Ask your
grocer to open a package of Beach's, and yon
will see it, and probaUy for the very first
. time. It will be found la color to be Just be---
tween the artificial green tea that you have
been accustomed. to and tbe black teas.
It draws a delightful canary color, and is so
fragrant that it will be a revelation to tea-.
drinkers. Its parity makes it also more
economical than the artificial, teas, for lesi
of It is required per cup. Sold only In pound
packages bearing this trade-mark; ' -
BEEEKit- TEA
.' 2-
i.i i If yoar grocer does not have -it, ha will gel
.It. for you.- XttceCOo per pound, fox sals at
Iieslle S-ix-tioxr'js,
' THE DALLES, OREGON.
SiGK
The
Dies
3jG
is here and has come to stay." It hopes
to win its wav to -niihlin fa-am Tvu-
gy, industry and merit; and to this end
we ask that you give it a fair trial, find
f satisfied with its course a generous
support.
The
four pages of six columns each, will be
issued every evening, except Sunday,
and will he delivered in the citv. or sent
by mail for the moderate sum of fifty
cents a montn.
Its Ob
will be to advertise
city, and adjacent country, to assist in
developing pur industries, in extending:
and opening up new channels for our
trade, in securing an open river, and in
neipmg THE DALLES to take her prop
er position as the
Leading City of
The paper, both daily and weekly, will
be independent 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 enedayor to give all the lo
cal news, and we ask that your criticism
of pur object and course, be formed from
the contents of the paper, and not from
rash assertions of outside parties.
THE WEEKLY,
sent to any address for $1.50 per year.
It will contain from four to six eight
column pages, and we shall' endeavor
to make it the equal of the best. Ask k
your Postmaster for a copy, or address.
Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second. Sts
Health is Wealth !
' Da. E. C. Wkst'b Nsbvk jlnb Bbaiw TaaaT--ifaNT,
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 nusery, 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. $1.00 a box, or six boxes
for 16.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price.
' WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES
To cure any case. With each order received by
ns for Bix boxes, accompanied by $5.00, we will
send the purchaser our written guarantee to re
fund the money if the treatment does not effec
a cure. Guarantees issued only by
BLAKELET HOUGHTON,
- Prescription Drwgjrlsts,
175 Second St. , .. The Dalles, Or.
Phil Willig,
124 UNION ST., THE DALLES, OR.
Keeps on hand a fall 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
snjchasLng elsewhere.
Daily
the resources of the
Eastern Oregon.
Cleveland, Wash.,- - )
June 19th, 1891.)
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. Hacklet.
The Dalles
FXEST STBEET.
FACTORY NO, 105.
ftr A "D Q of the Best Brands'
VAVJTx.X0' manufactured, and
orders from, all parts of the countrynilled
on the shortest notice.
: The reputation of THE DALLES CI
GAR has become firmly established, and
the demand for the home - foa-nuf actured
article is increasing every day. -
A. ULRICH & SON.
S
Giqaf
Faetopy