its Dalles Sly; ChSmiele. TBI DALLES OREGON THURSDAY MAY 5, 1892 Two Kintln of Courage. ' . In some of the everyday occurrences of courage than men. . You can see that on the "Ij". cars if yon use your eyes. When . a. man retains his seat while n wranan -endeavors to maintain her balance by Hanging to a etrap in Front of him, be ; generally makes a pretense of not seeing ' Iter. If he has a paper with him he will appear to be absorbed in- its perusal. If he cannot avail himself of that conven ient screen, he will pre tend to be en gaged in snch deep meditation as to be oblivions tn all thn.t is smi-net nn nrnnnrl him. In one way or another he will be tray the fact that his conscience is mak- -- ing a coward of him and that he is try ing to cheat it. . v . . . " 1 1 is very different with the average 'rwvwnun . X7 hA f llat fnta ' tnnnli' ill li a "L" cars hasn't seen her often drop- her child into a seat that lias just been va ' cated, while women in various stages of weariness are standing np all around ; Iter? She has paid no fare for, the child; she could very well continue to hold it in her lap; she knows that she is making some woman stand who. would other wise get a seat. But is she abashed? Does she act as if she were ashamed of herself? Does she seek to avoid the glances that are bestowed .upon her by r hiding her face behind a newspaper? ..Hot a bit of it She doesn't let her con science make a coward - of . her. She looks the people about her square in the eyes without flinching. . She says, or rather seems to Bay, "Well, I know that you don't like it; but what are yon go ing to do about it?" If this isn't moral courage what would you call it? New York Herald. ' - A Good Day' Find. t ' Some years ago a plowman at work in Cornwall had the good fortune to strike a kind of urn and scatter a number of coins, which on examination proved to be Roman, many of them of .the time of the first emperor. ' They were of various sizes, and generally in a state of good preservation. The man collected about 1,600 of them, and, as he was ignorant of their value, disposed of them at a penny apiece; but undoubtedly at that rate he would be well satisfied with his day's work. London Tit-Bits. How the Gadfly Lays Its Egg. An insect known in the west as the gadfly attacks Tiorses, laying its eggs on the animals. The horse licks itself and conveys the eggs to its stomach, where " they are hatched, the worms clinging to the stomach walls. Very often they "bore through the stomach and kill the horse. Washington Letter. Tha Placa for Wiokad Boys. . . The bad little boys will relish this: "Henry, you are such a naughty little fel low that you are not fit to sit with those good boys on the bench. rv Come np here ; and sit beside me," exclaimed an exasper ated teacher. Once a Year. . . - ' " ' ' " ;."Wu. " .- v 1 ---. V A girl to da general house work, apply to Mrs. tiugn eraser. , - FOR SALK. At a bargain,' A lot of store shelving. Apply at this office, v ' 4-27dt( First-class job work can be had at the . i W A OG V. L . Z 1 vawnivui ivy u uuiuv uil OUUI b uufclvt; ttuu at reasonable prices. t . JERSEY 'BULL-"St. Lambert --The thoroughbred Jersevbull St. Lam "bert, will stand for the season at the Co lumbia Feed yard. For service apply to .Lsvia ueorge. - z.zaaiwim " Ew mad Laqibi rar Sale. ',.' I have 1 ,400 ewes and lambs for sale cheap. Call upon or address B. S.; Kel- say, Kent, bnerman - county, Oregon -- r 4-23-lmd&w A Wora to the Wise, . , ..The best business opening and' chance ' to make money in the state, is lying idle at Dafur, Or. A store 32x60 well fur- uuuunK wmmaaiiv, x or eaie or rent cheap. Let us hear from you. '.. Address me a. u. mea. Mig. uo., or A. J Brig ham. Dnfur. Or. NOTICK. '" Parties , holding claims against W. 8. Cram are notified topresent them to him at Once, at the OnlnmhiK f!Tilv Vtkntroro and all thosA indahtAl am iwinAatMl tn settle at the same place, as I have sold out xoy ouBineeB ana want to close np . iay accounts. .Kespectiuuy,- - . ;.4-6dw4w , ...... W. 8. Cham. NOTICB. ' 1 All Dalles . City warrants registered prior to September 1, 1890, will be paid if presentc-a at my omce. interest ceases from ana after this date. Dated February 8th, 1892.. . . . .. ' O. Kiner8lV, tf. - Treas. Dalles City. Dissolution Notice. partnership heretofore existing between William Floyd, & A. Byrnes and Stacy Shown, under the firm name of Byrne, Floyd & Co., in Dalles City, Or., has this day been dissolved by mutual consent. -;Thj.lulAtnAaa. will la - . . .... . vvu.iuucu tt Ua old stand, by William Floyd and Stacv i. 1 ;n i -f 1 , . duuwu, nuui pay aii diiis aaa collect Dated April26, 1892. : Stacy Bhowk. Dlaawlntloa Notlca. ' The copartnership betofore existing wk-wcu t7. jr.ficuui auft u IX . ijauer, : doing business in The- Dalles under the firm name of French. k Lauer, .has- been dissolved by mutual consent. I The busi ness will be conducted at the- bid stand First street, by.nij.sil. Lauer who has purchased the same, and will collect and Signed: , ' - Fkksch & Lavish. 4-14-dlm . TOWERS RICHLV LINED- WIT H GOLD. Wealth ta tha Old Cbiianeya. Waera the Bonanza Ores Ware ReBned. : .. , i ' For nearly a quarter of a century two tall towers liave stood at the foot ' 61 Hyde street, near Leavenworth, almost on the edge of the beach. One rises to a height of 110 feet and the other reaches more than fifty feet in the air. They are both very broad and. thick, and they have brick enough in them to construct several buildings. . ;"; : . . ; , . - They are relics of the flush . old .days of the Comstock mining era, when Flood, O'Brien, Fair and others banded together and erected tho famous Selby Smelting and Refining . works. There, from the bonanza days of 1860 to as late as -1885, the great : chimneys belched forth fire and smoke, i They never stop ped. Wreaths of flame and volumes of soot circled in the air over the domes at night time, while .hundreds of men toiled in and about the works, cutting and iBhoyeling vpre and slag,; molding .bars of bullion- anj refining it to pure silver, gold, lead and copper. ' " , In 1883 the Selby company concluded to move its works. It was known that the old underground fine that connected the furnaces with thfe chimneys, as well as considerable of the ground all about, 'was permeated with gold and silver set tlings and solicLAnetaL. On the advice of a skilled European expert the com pany dug np the ruins as well as a large amount of soil to the depth of five or six feet. and transferred it by tons to the new works at Port Costa, There the stuff was run through the works, and it is said realized not less than $500,000. Selby & Co. did not dream that in the towers which were left standing and in the million tons of - slag and ' mineral permeated soil much wealth remained. The ground was sold and nothing was thought about it for a long time. Some time ago W. B. Clnff, the well known merchant and "politician of this city, acquired .the ground on which the old works and the present slag pile and chimneys remain. - It consists of ' five fifty-vara lots, or 2 acres.: Meantime he had several experts make examina tion of the brick towers and - the sur roundings. They reported that the metal and black dust of the towers was a veritable mine of wealth, and that the grimy matter that filled the interstices and in . one form or another permeated the brick reeked with valuable minerals." Also that the gray slag which- had been carted away from the blazing furnaces in primitive days contained large quan tities of gold and' silver and should be worked over. Promptly thereupon Mr. CI off secured the silver and gold lined towers and the debris. He is said to have paid $40,000 for the chimneys alone. His object is to work them up and get the money out of them. ' "I do not think I will have any trouble in getting -the gold, silver and other mineral out," he said ' yesterday. " "It was on the advice of an English expert that Selby & Co. took a lot of the debris to Port Costa, and -I am informed they got over $500,000 out of that. 'Several skilled , .mining " men . have come . tome lately and offered to buy me out or work the chimneys, sbjg. and soil on aper centage. I have not closed with any body and do not think Tshall. There is an immense amount of slag there. In some places it is 200 feet deep. It all contains golcL, silver and lead, with some copper, ": I have. had. the ground assayed around 'there,' too, and it all shows np well. In some places it is very rich. -, Mr. duff's intention is to tear down the great towers, which have so long been-' landmarks in the. history of the city, and which can be seen for miles out at sea and in other directions, and wrest from them their gold and silver lining. San Francisco" Examiner. 7 A Vndgre's Jocose Retort. .' 1 i . . . "I think the late Judge'- Devens," said Mr. Arthur Macy to me the other day, "'was the greatest after dinner speaker I ever heard. " I .remember a striking in stance of his readiness in jocose - retort. He made a five minute -speech at a club dinner, and in the course of his remarks he established his claim to his- place at the dinner by instancing his : authorship of a large volume that was made up of tragedy and comedy and of many start ling phases some dramatic, some ludi crous, some pathetic tof human life and nature. - "The book was the 143d volume of Massachusetts laws. " Immediately a member was on his feet -and thanking the judge. v "He had been on a jury once, and the! justice who was trying the case said that a verdict should be rendered .unhesitatingly in accordance with a de cision that was contained in that very volume of which the judge had just .spoken. The verdict was' rendered im mediately and the juryman secured a good night's rest, for which he was thankful to Judge Devens and his book. "Without a ; moment's hesitation, Judge-Devens replied.!'!! the gentle man will imitate the example of the jus tice of whom he speaks, and peruse the entire volume that I. have spoken of, I assure him' that he will secure many a good night's rest' "Boston Globe. : A Klsb bat ITnapproaeiiable Coutry. There are said to be five counties in Missouri and eleven in Arkansas, com prising a strip' of country 125 miles square, that have no railroad communi cation with the outside world, and are yet . wonderfully rich in tine ore. This section -of the country lies south and west of the Memphis railroad, north and west of the Iron Mountain, south and east of . the St. Xbnisand San Francisco and north of the Arkansas river. - The zine-caxbonates''of this region yield 63 per. cent. And. the "jack" 60 per cent, of V'MtoSvnitrlZt - v yif A ' traveler, Mr. W. E. Winner, of Kansas City, says that "he found in the: mountain" care even larger , than the Mammoth cave.' .The manner of life.of the people is extremely primitive; J- They live in log houses' without windows. Bacon is their main staple of diet and tobacco heii? ibijly solace. ; They, seldom work sa long as" they have food and. to bacco in the house.But they are virtu ous, peaceable and., kindly disposed to' the stranger Pittsburg Dispatch. V- ' " - ; . ..--" .-." i - - k F- M. 8ALYER, Civn,EsoiNKERiNG. Survey-1 ing, and Architicture. The Dalles, O1..J: j DE. ESHELMAN (Homoeopathic; Fkt8iciah and Burgeon. Calls answered' promptly, day or night, city or country. Office No. 36 arid 37 Chapman block. wtf DR. J. SUTHE BLAND Fkllow ofTbikttt . Modica! College, and member of the Col .ege of Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, Pby iician and Sirrgeon.- Office i rooms 3 and 4 Chap man blocls.' Residence; Judge Thornbury's Seo ud street. Office hours: 10 to 12 a, m., 2 to 4 tnd 7 to 8 p. in. DK. O. 1. DOASK PHYSICIAN AND RUB gkon. Office;- rooms 6 and 6 Chapman aloe. Residence No. 28, Fourth street, one t.lock south of Conrt House. Office hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 5 and 7 to i P. M. - DS1DDAIX Destist. Gas given for the painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth set on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of the Golden Tooth, Second Street. B.B.DUFUR. GEO. ATKISg. nuSIKIHim. DUFUR, - WATK1N8 &. MENEFEK ATTOBr BTS-iT-tAW Room No. 43, over Post Office Building, Entrance on Washington Street The Dalles, Oregon. . W- H. ; WILSON ATTOKHBT-AT-tAW Rooms - 62 and 65, New Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. . . - V3. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of- See in 8c han no's building, np stairs. The Oalleg, Oregon.. .... ... P. P- MATS. B. S. HUKT1K6TOM. ' St. 8. WILSON. MAYS; HDNTINGTON -WILSON ATTOB-TJBVs-AT-LAW. Offices, French's block over First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. SOCIETIES. A" SSEMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF L. Meets ln-K. of P. hall the second and fourth Wednes days of each month at 7 :30 p. m. w ASCO LODGE, NO. 15," A. F. & A. M. Meets nrsi ana inira Monaay ol each month at 7 DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6. Meets In Masonic Hall the third Wednesday MODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. Mt. Hood Camp No. 59, Meets Tuesday even ts cava wi in me a. oi f. ilaii, at 7:30 P. K. "COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 6, I. O. O. F. Meets V eIeW ""y evening at 7:30 o'clock, In K. of P: hau, corner Second and Court streets. Sojourning brothers are welcome. H. Ciavoh, See'y. - H. A. Buxs,N. G. FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9.. K. of P. Meets every Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in Bohanno s building, corner of Court and Second uraus. ovjourning m earners are cordially In-vlted- . -- - " W. 8. Cbam, D. W.VABBB, K. of R. and 8. C. C. Y7 OMEN'S CHRI8TTAN TEMPERENCE T f UNION will meet every Friday afternoon 0uvuKKMfcuinwuiignnDi. are invited. mFVPI.w T rnv vn o . - tt tt. .r at K. ef P. Hall, Corner Second and Court ' - . - - - George Giboms, ' W. 8 Utxks, Financier. - M. W. TAB. NE8MITH POST, No. 32, G. A. R. Meets HalL B OF IV E. Meets everv SundnT' Rftomvin n nESANO - VEREIK Meetsr every Sunday -aaaB u sw VI (. UUI. B-fl? I E. DIVISION, No. 167 Meets in the ,K. of P. HaU the first and third Wadnes- THE CHCltCHKS. OT. PETER'S CHCrcH Rev. Father ninm. O 6EB8T Pastor Low Mass -every Sunday at T . T r I 1. If A .n.nA . . . . . . m. uigu n iv:u a. m. -vespers at 7 r. at. ...... . A DVENT-CHRISTIAN CHURCH.' Preaching a. m. and 7 p. m. Sunday school immediately STjPAUL'S CHURCH TjBion Street, opposite Fifth. Rev. EU D. Suteliffe Rector. Services every Sunday at 11 Ai m. and 7:30 r. u. Sunday School 9:45 A. . Evening Prayer on Friday at tMRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. Tit. I lob, Pastor. Morning servioes every Sab bath -at the academy at 11 a. m. Sabbath School immediately " after morning services. Prayer meeting Friday evening at Pastor's resi dence. Union services in the court boose at 7 r-. jn. . . .... CONGREGATIONAL' CHURCH Rot. W. f! Cobtis, Paston Services every Sunday at 11 a. K. and 7r., Sunday School after morning vMtwc ouBUKcnvuiuiiui inviteu. eeata iree. If : E. CHURCH-iRev. A C. Bpbkcek. nastor. lvXa Services every Sunday morning. Sunday is extenaea oy oota pastor ana people to all. YOUft ATTEJ1TI0J1 Is oalled to the fact that Dealer in Glass, Lime, Plaster; Cement and Building Material of all kinds. -Carrie the Finest Line of To be found in the City. 72 LUashiiigton Street. oVSO Second. Bree V Ti Bailesf Or. This well known stand, kept by the well known W.--H. Butts, long a resi dent ef Wasco county, has an extraordi nary fine stock of ". . -i'.V .'- - ; Sheep Herder's Delist and Irish Disturbance. ' In fact, all the leading brands of fine. AVin8 Liquor; ami Cigars. Give-the old man a call and you will ome again. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. Hugh Genn Old papers, nice and clean, for sale at this office.- They are useful for many y"ing8.; .. Radical English FukIUoiis lton't Go. "The recent refusal to sanction with the customary- " prompt enthusiasm sev eral of - the most radical changes in the regime that nave been made of late years by London swells has had a decidedly discomfiting effect upon our English cousins. - Their confidence of leadership has received naturally a severe shock in consequence. . From . all accounts the London swell mob is passing through a period of experimentalism. As a result men's fashions abroad have , not been so unsettled in fifty years . . The heavy swells continue gropins: aimlessly after the "elusive Innovation. For their 'independence , at this time, therefore, Americana have cause for self congratulation the - more , particularly so on account or .- the , very; divergent xharacter of some - of . the foreign ultra speculations. .Advanced, copies of the recent London fads in coats and top coats, had they, been tried suddenly on the New-York public, would have creat ed almost a riot in the streets. The Eng lish swell, be it known, can. dress him self up as his-fancy dictates-and the yeomanry makes no outcry. . . . . Mow that we have thrown off the shackles of slavish emulation and blithe ly accept or reject what we want, or what does not appeal to the sense of the fitness of things, the : English fashion framer will come down from his oracu lar eminence and in the future po6e with ameliorated . despotism in the - light of guide, . philosopher and friend. .. I am aware . that . the sentiments above set forth would, have' been regarded a few years ago as rank heresy, but they veri fy the aphorism of Brer Babbit that "the world do move." Clothier and Furnisher.- :' - . -. - ' v" STIPATION. Afflicts half the American .people yet there i only one preparation of Sarsaparilla that acta on the bowels and reaches this important trouble, and that is Joy's Vegetable Barsaparilla. It re lieves it in M hours, and an occasional dose prevents return. Te refer by permission to O.K. Elklngten, 125 locust Avenue, San Fraocisco; J. H. Brown, Petaluma; H. B. Winn, GearyCourt, Ban Franclsco.'and hundreds o others who have used it in constipation. One letter is a sample ol hundreds. Elklngton, writes: "I have been for years subject to bilious headaches and constipa tion. Have been so bad for a year back have had to take a physio every other night or else I would have a headache. : After taking one bottle f J- V. 8. ; I am In splendid shape. ' It baa dona wonderful things tor me. People simHarly troubled should try it and be convinced." Sp Vegetable Sarsaparilla Most modern, mist .effective, largest, bottle, ssme price, 11.00, su lor . For JSale by SNIPES KINERSLY : ;THB DALtES.'OKEGON. - ' Law. ' tit English pee-: plelook more closely 'to the (eanineness . oi thesis staples than " -OTP do. : Tn ffiAf . thmr -'' , fJ '- have law- under ; aetzares - and V : de stroy " adulterated products ' that are not what they are represented to be. Under this statnte thousands of pounds of tea have . beou burned because of their wholesale adul- : teratioa. .J ' . ' .J..... -f-.. . . ' Tea, by the way. Is one of the most notort ; ously adulterated articles of commerce. Mot -alone are the bright, shiny green teas artifl- . 'ieW' colored, but thousands of pounds of suln-tkute-i for tea leaves are used to swell the bulk ol cheap tea; ash, sloe, and willow . leaves being those most commonly used. - Again, sweepings fr.'ui lea warehouses are colored and sold as tr a. Even exhausted tea . leaves gathered from the tea-houses are kept, . dried, and made over and find their way into -the clicnp teas. A, .: , .'".. ' The Eugli&h goverunieut attempts to stamp this out by. confisreii- n; but no tea is too ; poor fur U'. gr.d the remit U. that probably . the poom.t teiisu.ed by any u at ion are those ' consumed iu America. :. lieec-h's Tea to presented with the guar aury that it is uncnlorcd and unadulterated; , in fact, the' sun-curea tea leaf pure and aim- . pie. , Its purity insures superior' strength, about one third less of it being required for au infusion than of the a-tiflcial teas, and its fragrance and exqniI flavor is at once ap . parent It will be a revelation to you. I ..order that its purity and quality may be guar . an teed, it is sold only in pound packages -bearing this trade-mark 1 ' BEECHM; TEi VuroAsiCfiilahbod: WeetOoperpesnd,! Tor sales . ; Loalio J3xxtl.ox' - THE DAltES, 0ESQ09. oil Ix.Xsike lias Arisen -.-i From the AsliesI uTbe Bestauranteur Qaii Opened the . -; r.-- UllN STEEET-" -..". Where he will be glad- to.Bee any and ' all . - of his old'patrbns. ..; . Open day' sjg : twenty -five cents. . GOM Joy A Severe f Still Deek , Btackweirs '. Bull Durham i ;; ; Has been the recognized standard of Smoking Tobacco . for over 25 years. Uniformly good first. Bright, sweet and fragant we invite the : ' - - most fastidious to test its pecuUar excellence. ' Blackwell's Doriuun Tobacco Co., Durham, N. C : DEALERS IN: Hay, Grain .' - Masonic Block. Corner Third ind Pipe Wott, Tin MAINS TAPPED UNDER PRESSURE. Shop on Third Street,- next door west of Young & KusV Blacksmith Shop. O v THE DALLES; OREGON. . Best Dollar a'Day House on the Coast! First-CIass Meals, 25 Cents. First Class Hotel irT-Every Eespect. '.4 ; ; - vNgne jbut the Best of White Help Employed. T. T; Nicholas, Pvop. DEIilQBntlTIB State, District aRd County TICKET. For Supreme Judge. . ' '.' Alfred S. Bennett. ,-. For Attorney General, . George E. Chamberlain. 'For Member of Congress, " .. 2d District, James H.. Slater. - ,--.'-.. . 1 For Circuit Judge, . V" ' 7tn Dietrict - ":' . ' . W. L. Bradsha-w-. - ; - For Prosecuting Attorney 7th District, . - J. F.; Moore. For Member Btate Board Equalization, 7th District,. . . William .Htigh.es. For Joint Senator, 17th District, Sher man and Wasco counties, . ; ;. J. A: Smith, : of Sherman.' For Joint Senator, 18th District, Gilliam, Sherman and Wasco counties, -. G. Rinehart, - . - '. - i. ' . of Gilliam.. For Joint. Representatives," 18th Bepre sentative District Sherman and - . Wasco counties,... H. E. Moore; : S. P.Blythe Vat County Judge, - , ? GEORGE C. BLAKELEY. . For County cierk, ..: r j . ;j JAMISB.CROSSEN. "For County 'Sheriff, ,: - : . ' . THOMAS A, WARD. - : , . - For County Treasurer, " WILLIAM K. CORSON. , '"F'or County Aeseseor, . .:" . , GEORGE T, PRATHEB. ; '. - For County Surveyor ' . . . . F. S. GORDON. : " " -For School Superintendent, F. PP FITZGERALD. .. .. For County CommiflBioner, - ' JAMES DARNIELLE. For County' Coroner. ' JOHN W. MOORE. 4-21 td . . Ofnci WORLD'S FAIN --:' '. r'-. - Sept is, 1893 BLACKWELL'S DURHAM , TOBACCO CO., Durham, N. C Gentlemen: fl . We have Smoked up all the Tobacco at the World's Fair," and have, unanimously awarded the Gold Medal for Smoking Tobacco to .BLACKWELL'S Bull jurham -" Congratulating you on your success. we remain Yours truly, . a . -.COMMITTEE. and uniformly - t G and Feed. "-.'-' V ourt Streets, The Dalles.Oregon. af ioli : Jf CZNUINS T " I MIES Repairs plumbia otel, DEPUBLI0Q1I and County TICKET. - For Supreme Judge, P. A. Moore. - For Attorney- General, Iiioner R. Wehster. v ' For Member of Congress, 2d District, W.R.; Ellis. '' -- For Circuit Judge, .- ' - 7th District George Watkins. For Prosecuting Attorney, ' -7th District, - W. H. Wilson. " For Member. State Board Equalization J ohn L. Luckey. v For Joint Senator f I7th District, consist - ing of Sherman and Wasco Counties, ; I .H, "SlMcDaniels; For Joint Senator, 18th District, consist- . vji nii.m, uuci uiau nuu : " i Wasco Counties,, W. W. Steiwer. 1 . For Jeint Representatives, 18th Repre - j sentative District, consisting of . . Sherman and Wasco " Counties,. - -. E. - N Chandler, T. i. uoon. : .- . ,; For County Judge, ' - ".' C. N. TIIORNBUKY. : - For, Cotfnty1 Clerk: - , J. M. HUNTINGTON. ror county fonerui, C P, BALCH. I- For' County ' Commisflioner, . - -H. A. LEAVENS. For Coraty Treasurer, . WM. MICHEUUi.. "' For County Bseg'eoT, " JOEL W: KOONTZ. " .- i .- . .- i .' - , For County .School Superintendent,. TROY. SHELLEY;. .-. r For County Surveyor, , ; e. f. sharp; ; .'; ih Fot Cotintjr -Coroner, ,v N. M. EASTWOOD. ,4-l6tf . - -: . ' - . State. District