GO VOL. V. THE DALLES, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1893. NO, r8. ir M A. M . W COLUMBIA GANDY FACTORY Campbell Bros. Proprs (Snccfsssrs to . J. Cram.) . . Manufacturers of the finest French aua Home Mads Kaat oIFortUiad. CftBfaruUh any otthwx good t WhotafJ la xry styiei Ice Creant aricf: Soda Water; 104 8eoonStreet.'The Dalles.. Or. The Dalles FIHST STKBI HM.. FACTORY ITO. 105. rTf A po of the Best Brands Vi.vXixiA0 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. the Dalles ' AND . - Prineville Stage ,.. Line J. D: PARISH, Prop. XeaTeaTbe Dalles at 8 a. m. Brery day and ar Tiwem at PrineTille. in thirty-si hours. Leave Prineville at 5 a. m. every 0y and, arrives at The Dalles in thirty-six tours. - Carries .lhe,;U. .S,"MaaPasseDgws vi Express , - Connect at PriD-ille with Stagei from Eastern1 ani Southern Or- - sgon, Ijorthertt Ualuornia.ana all. Interior Point. Also makes close connection at The Dalles witit trains trom Portland ana au eastern points. . enmoBs ttiftrs. ' - ' : ' -.' rim-class-coactM iiiJ'tDrsa iisfil' , turea matter LastM wltl care.' All venous wishinz nasssre must waybill at of- flees e4ore-.taking- passage) others will not be reoely pi. Express must' be wayhllled at offices th Stage Co. will not be responsible. The - company will take no risk on money transmit ted.. 1 articular, attention riven- to delivering express- matter at. Prineville and all southern points in Oregon, and advance charges, will be pata Dy we company..' - 8TAOB OFFICKR; M. fMelael Co. 8tov. Cmstills Raws , FrUMTUls. Tka PaUM. Gidar FaetoFy 1u .ra-W lossemersn I L L 1 A M S &. GO. FSEflCJi 8t CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GKNERAL BANKING BOB1NE8B Letters of Credit issued available in he Eastern States. Siehl" . Exchange and - Teleeranhic Transfers soldon New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San. Francisco, Portland Oregon, Collections, made at all points on fav- orabM terms.--.-. - x s. ecasKca, - rl. M. Bat i.i, Cashier. rreaioent. -- ' CHE DALLES, - OREGON A General Banking Bosiness transacted , Deposits received,' subject to Sight . Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly remitted on day of collection. ' . Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on New York, San Francisco and Port- , land. ; DIRiDOTOKS. . D. P. Thompson. Jno. 8. Schkncau Ed. M. Wuxiams, Gko. A. Likbs. H. M. Bball. THE DALLES Rational Bank, Of Dalies city, or. President " - -Vice-President, Cashier: - - - Z. F. Mooot Chahlbs Hiltos - M. A. Moodt General Banking Business Transacted!. Bight Exchanges" Sold on ' NEWjtYORK, SAN FRANCISCO, CHICAGO and PORTLAND, OE. ; Collections made on favoreble terms at alt accessible points.' . v - Six 3?er Cent Interest. Six Years' Money to Sinking Fund- or Building and Loan: Plans The Hew England national . . ;- BiiilrJirig, Loan & Investmenrfiss'n; uregonian BuiiaingPortiandtOr. JOEL G. KpONTSyAGENTr 3?laLe'J. Dalles, Orespn. jSCTl -'ant'Addresa tlief Fortlttiiet. Offlice: iOOlSn "The Regulator Line" Tie Dalles, Porflaiii ail Astoria Navigation Co. THROTJQH ReitanHPassciei line Through dally service' (Sundays ek cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a. m. connecting at Cascade Locks with . steamer Dalles , City. Steamer -Dalles- City leaves. Portland (Yamhill street dock) at . a. m, con-; necting with steamer Regulator for The Dalles. rASBBNOKB BATES. One way Round trip; 12.00 .... 3.00 Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. Shipments received at wharf any time, day or night, and delivered at Portland on .-arrival. - Live stock shipments solicited. . Call on or address. . , ' ' - W. C.ALLAWAY ' General A(t. B. F. LAUGH LIN, : 1 General Manacer. " THE DALLES. OREGON PHOTOGRAPHER. First premium "at the" Wasco county fair lor best portraits and views. Time, and May be. Paid On oc Before Maturitj. Lo SOME OF THE BILLS Passeci t'y Tbe Recent Session ' of The .' .. Orepn Scions. A LIST OF THE SENATE BILLS. They Are Now Being Carefully Ex amined by. the Gov "ernor ' 60 Cross, to fix salaries of sheriffs, recorders and clerks. '. ' 205 Woodard, recording of wills. 86 Gates j to protect game, fish and wild fowl. . . 217 Willis for lighting state buildings and purchasing electric plants. 114 McGinn, repealing state board of charities. . 45 Willis, amending code relating to jurors. . 1 01 Weatherford, consolidating school districts in cities. - . r-. ' 208 Alley, for the propagation of sal mon in the Siuslaw. . - 142 Blackmau, pertaining to elec tions. 192 MatJ ock, for branch insane asyr lum in Eastern Oregon.' i ' 27 Blackburn, to regulate the amount of money paid on insurance policy. 70 Bancroft, providing for issuance of bonds for street improvement. 209 Myers making ' counties liable for damages by reason of defective roads or bridges. 37 Blackman, to amend code relating to persons who cannot testify. 59 Dodson, fixing -time for.' holding circuit court in the sixth district. 109 Blackman, for efficiency of deaf mute school.- " . : , - 29 Butler, to amend, code, estates in dower; ' . .: - r- : ' . 22 Bancroft, to defin and punish ob structionists. 128 Cross," collection and return of taxes, i Denny To enable married women to convey real estate. 140 Denny, distribution of personal property. 24 Cross, fees of assessors. . 55 Bancroft, to build,' arid furnish schoolhonses. 159 Willis, satisfaction of mortgages when foreclosed. 108 Myers , for fish and game wardenl 799-Gates, relief of J J. Hembree. -. 145 Hayes, authorising county courts to offer' rewards for criminals. "" 23 Myers, to provide for filing chat tel mortgages. .125 Hirsh, for advancement of reform school. 118 Cross, to provide for laying oat and constructing county roads. . The house bills will be printed to morrow. ' t- .-j. -7. vi .. ' '-..--v, ,i- " Kcw Assessment Tax Km. Telegram. House bill No. 343, which, was intro duced by ; Representative ' Manley, of Alblna." and has become a law, is claimed ' to make some ' excellent pro visions in connection with making as- eesaments and of collecting and paying taxes, c- i.- u 4 iy y ii-v The first section provides that in the assessment and tax rolls of the several counties ia ' additioft ' t6 ' the columns elsewhere provided, there shall be added four, columns one of which sball.be beaded "Cities;" one'Schobt Districts," one "Ata't City Tax," and one "Amt School Dist. Tax"; and it shall be the duty of the several county xaasei8sor8,' in making their assessments, to enter op posite each item of property assessed, in its; appropriate column,' the' name of the city.or incorporated town and the Dum ber of the school district in. which each item of property assessed '.is 'assessable. In preparing the tax rolls in the' sev eral counties after the several assess ments therein )iaye been finally equal ized, it shall be the duty of the clerks of the county, courts in, the several" counties i r-ttH ROTaE1 Baking Po wHer xeeetls all oHiers " JLif in-IfcaVenmg povver; piinty and wholesorriehess; and is used generally in!familiesr exclusively in the most cgfeifed1 itoriy1 and! ;NSyy,,anHvKefeVa the2 best and finest' food'; -is required. -: . iThe United States Q&Bt& ts& jf&j-. XBulIetm - i. '& stow the Royal Baldng Powder sri-io ' r to compute tbe aggregate ' value" of all the assessable property in each of the incorporated towns or cities and in each of the several school , districts in each county, and to compile the same upon a page or pages of the roll in each county, showing the names of the incorporated towns or cities arranged alphabetically, and the number of the school' districts arranged coneecutively, with' the aggre gate valuation of the assessable property in each town or city and of each school district shown opposite to the name or number thereof respectively. ' All the taxes hereafter levied ' by any school district. or incorporated town or city ehall be levied upon the property therein respectively assessable upon the valuation of such property as shown by the assessment roll last compiled -before the levy is made in the county in which guch school district or incorporated town or city is included; and it shall bo the duty of the clerk of the county court in each of the several counties, upon ap plication of the clerk or board of school directors of any school district and of the recorder, auditor or clerk, common council or board of directors, or trustees of any incorporated town or city, to fur nish a certificate under the seal of the county court showing the' aggregate val uation of the assessable property in the school district or incorporated town or city from which' such application' ehall have been made. It shall be the duty of each school district and each incorporated town and city to notify, in' writing, the clerk of the county' court in the county within which the school district, town or city is respectively situated, of the rate' per cent of the tax levy made by it on or before the first day of February in each year, which notice shall 'be kept on file- by tbe several clerks and remain a part ot the records of the office. ' - Section 6 provides that all such taxes shall be collected by the. same officer in the same manner and at the same time as taxes for county purposes are col lected, It shall, be the duty of the tax collector to "pay to the county treasurer in his county as often as once a week all taxes 'collected, and he shall inform the treasurer whenever he pays over .to him any of the money - so - collected what amounts thereof are to be credited to the several funds 'for which they" are respectively collected, taking the re ceipt' of the treasurer in triplicate for the amount paid into each fund, one of which receipts for each" fund he shall retain,' file one with the clerk of the county court and furnish one' to the school district, town or city for which each of such amounts are so paid in. ; -The treasurer shall keep the moneys Teceived from' the tax collector in sepa rate funds, and shall, pay oyer to the several school districts, towns .or cities, upon demand made by them, the amounts thereof to which they are re spectively entitled, taking their receipts therefor. .,.."''.'''";- . All laws providing for assessors in or assessments of property by any school district, incorporated town or city j and all laws in conflict herewith be and the same are hereby repealed. , ' , ' A. Fake Earthquake Story. St. Paul, Feb. 20. The terrible earth quake reported as having done so much damage in. .Yellowstone Park" see.ms to have been confined to the brain of a fake fiend, for the - whole story; is denied by the "men in charge, of the buildings in the" park." The." only-1 excuse for such a Lstory, : they state,' is the fact that the boiling springs at Norris Basin ' over flowed, leaving some mud on the roadway-.. - '""" ''-. V ' '- Choking, sneezing and 'every other form of catarrh in the head, is radically fared by Dr. Sage's Catarrh .Reuiedy. Fifty cents: . Sold. by;: druggists every-' Where.- . ".-., ,. i . WOOD, ' WOOUk'WOOD. " i- Best grades of oak'fir,J ani slab cord woodat lowest-market rates at Jos. T. Peters & Co.' (Office Second and Jeffer son' streets,) y -;'- '-- - ' . . Call and see. our $24.80 Britanhica en cyclopedias .. . THE MOJAVE DESERT. A. TlTld Description of It by a Private . Correspondent. An extract, which we are permitted to take from a letter from Norman C. Wilson, who is collecting plants and specimens for the Botanical gardens at Berkley, Cal., gives ns a glimpse of the "Maiove Desert," which may not be un interesting to our readers. He says: "As I came rolling across the desert, a little over a week ago, I thought of my prom we to-give yoa some description of it " and, between spells of reading '. '.Nature's Serial Story," I looked out upon one of the strangest sights I ever beheld. The Mojave Desert is not "barren. There is a kind of "grease-wood" and "creosote bush," which divide the honor with the cactus family of clothing the desert in a Bombre and fantasticdrees. Neither is it level, but is relieved by mountain rangee, the very climax of rug-redness anduse- lessness. There is one redeeming fea ture about the whole scene. Never have I seen such atmospheric effects in color ing, and never have I Been such ragged crags, such heaps of rocks, in such, fan tastic shapes, such barrenness spread over a growth of shrubs, such seeming utter worthlessness, to need the kindly touches of a wonderful atmosphere, to lend some beauty to mountain and valley scenery. In tbe foreground, supposing that we are iii the middle of a plain, the ground presents a yellowish, clayey color, set off with the gray and brown, in many shades, of the desert shrub, cacti (one variety) loom up in places, almost like stunted pines,' the tops more rounded out, and not so tall. In other cases, they seem to obey no order or law of nature but to be fantastic. , So stretches the plain for miles and miles. We come tot. a glistening lake, it reaches away for miles in front and to right and left, but as ' we dash into it,' the only spray is sand. It has a bluish look, and reflects the sunlight as though it were water, but the sand holds full sway and is col ored by deposits of alkali, bard blue, glistening and" to the weary, water; starved traveler merciless. Yet it is a lake, a great lake I Again we lose all plant life, miles of rock, and it seems to have been tamped down, so smooth is its surface-. The - color here is. brown deepening to black.' It seems as though afire had sweptover the whole expanse, spreading a thin' layer of pitch over rock and' pebble, which has Lnce petrified and become a part of the. 'rock itself, but looking away in tho distance, who can paint with brush or pen, the won derful changes from terrible ugliness to surpassing beauty, can give the touches which clothe the desert in beau tiful mystery, the vast, the ugly, the deadly, yet beautiful unexplored, mys terious desert? Surely not the "col lector" in overalls plucked too soon, reddened boots, -shabby hat and coat, and unshaven chin, who is taken for a "'tramp" wherever-he goes..- Such des ultory thoughts ran through my mind. as 1 crossed tne aesert. i nave since explored it enough to find that its mys tery is chiefly death and desolation, that its poetry ' and " beauty on more close acquaintance", are but - the. luring forces that draw men on to destruction the" most terrible. ''-' '- -' . - : .It's sometimes said patent medicines are for the ignorant. .The doctors foster this idea. "Tbe peopled" we're told, 'are mostly ignorant when it comes to medical science." Suppose they, are I What a 'sick, man needs is not knowl edge, but a. cure, and. a medicine that cure is the- medicine for the sick." Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures the "do believes" and the "don't be lieves." . There's no hesitance about it, no "if" nor "possibly." ..It says :"I can cure you, only do as I direct." Per--haps it fails occasionally. The makers hear of it when . it does, lecause. they never keep the money when the medi cine fails to do good. : Suppose the doc tors went oh that principle.. (We beg' the doctor's pardon. It wouldn't do!) The opportunity to get the encyclope dia will soon close. : .