The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, February 24, 1894, Image 6

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    THE WAT SHE LOOKS
' Jtn troubles the wo-
overworked. She's
hollow - cheeked,
dull - eyed, thin,
and -pale, and it
worries her.
' Now, the way
to look well is to
be well. And the
way to be well, if
vou're any such
woman, is to faithfully use Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription.
That is the only medicine that's
guaranteed to build up woman's
strength and to cure woman's ail
ments. In every "female com
plaint," irregularity, or weakness,
and in every exhausted condition of
..me lemuie tjysLdii n cv
to benefit or cure, you have your
money back.
For overworked, " worn - out,"
" run-down," debilitated teachers,
milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses,
shop-girls," house-keepers,, nursing
mothers, and feeble women gener-
11 "T T:'o Ti'iiirnmtfl Ppftflftrin.
aiuji -L iCltC a ..
- tion is the greatest earthly boon,
being unequaled as an appetizing
cordial and restorative tonic.
If vou're suffer
"ing from Catarrh,
thp proprietors of
Dr. Sage's jatarrn
Remedy ask you to
try their medicine.
Then, if you can't
be cured, they'll
pay you $500 in cash.
"EH
Easily. Quickly,
Permanently Hectored.
WEAKNESS,
NERVOUSNESS,
DEBILITY,
and all the train of evils
from early errors or later
excesses, the results of
overwork, sickness,
worry.eto. Full strength,
development and tone
given to every organ and
gortion of the body.
Lmple, natural methods.
Immediate ImproTement
seen. Failure lmnosRibla.
2,000 references. Book,
explanation and proofs
mailed (sealed) free.
ERIE MEDICAL CO.
BUFFALO. N. Y.
9he specific and universal opinions, condensed.
an as ioiiowb:
I "You deserve great praise, and the gratitude
rf the reading world that portion of it, at least,
that Is fortunate enough to read THE GREAT
Hi VIDE. - Having, a field entirely its own, it is
intensely American in cast and character."
i U is useless for us to say, the illustrative
features and typography are superb equal in
quality and unusualness to the fascinating and
strange contents that fill our columns.
i TEN CENTS a copy; ONE DOLLAR a year.
.Tour newsdealer has It, if not, send to
THE GREAT DIVDE, Denver, Col.
Replcan County Coratioi
A Republican Convention for the County of
Wasco, Stnte of Oregon is called to meet in
Dalles City, in Fiiid county, on Vedne6duy, April
th, 1893 at 10 o'clock A. M., for the purpose of
nominating rundidutes for the following county
offices: One County Commissioner, County
Clerk, County Sheriff, County Treasurer, County
.Assessor, Couniv School Superintendent, County
Coroner and County Surveyor; and slso preenct
officers for the teveral precincts, and eight dele
gates to the Stnte Convention, and to transact
such other business ns may properly come before
Kuch convention. The convention v ill consist
of C7 delegates chown by the several precincts,
and the several pTccincts of the couuty ill be
entitled to representation in said convention as
follows: - v ,
Bigelow 6 Trevitt , 6
East Dalits... ti West Dalles 5,
M osier 2 Fills 4
East Hood Kiver S West Hood Hiver 4
Baldwin : . .2 Eight Mile .' '. . .2
Columbia 2 Deschutes 2
Nansene. S Dufur , 4
Kingsley... ...8 Tygh 2
Wamic. .'. .3 Oak Grove 2
Bake Oven 2 Antelope 4
The same being one delegate at large from each
precinct and one delegate for every 25 votes, and
one for every fraction over one-half of 25 votes
cast for the Republican legislative ticket at the
election in June, 1892.
Primaries to elect the delegates in each of the
several precincts will be held on Mnrch 28, ISM.
In East Dalles rrecinct the polls will be located
at the Wasco Warehouse, and Frank Laughlin,
F. Cretghton and D. H. Roberts will act a judges
at said election; in Bigelow Precinct the polls
will be located at the office of Wm. Michell, and
Chas. Cooper, C. J. Crandall and Tom Joles will
act as judges at said election; in Trevitt Fiecinct
the polls will be located at the County Court
room in said precinct, and J. S. Fish, C. E. Bav
ardn dCL. Hhillips will act as judges f said
. election; in West Dalle Precinct the polls will
be located at the City Mills, and J. W. Marquis,
T. A. Hudson and A. A. 'Jrquhart will act as
judges at said election. The polls iu each of
aid four precincts will be kept open from 12
o'clock M. to 7 o'clock P. M. for the reception of
votes; the polls in each of the other precincts in
unjwuui; wiu un luvaicu at iu uuu piture HI
the hour of 1 o'clock P. M., and will be conduct
ed in the usual manner for holding primary
elections. B. S. HUNTINGTON,
Ljuinoin nepuoucan uouniy committee:
JUDD 8. FISH,
- Secretary Republican County Committee.
feb'24-td
YOU NEED ANY JOB
"KlNTlN(i, KO MAT
. TER HOW MUCH OR
HOW LITTLE, GIVE
THE CHRONICLE JOB
DEPARTMENT YOUR
PATRONAGE AND BE
HAPPY. YOU WILL
GET THE BEST, AND
THE BEST 13 GOOD
ENOUGH FOR 'ANY
BODY. USE LOTS OF
PRINTER'8 INK AND
BE PROSPEROUS. .
F
UTAH'S INDIAN LANDS.
Immense Reservations Which. Citizens of
. the Territory. Want Opened.
The Wintah and Uncompahgre In
dian reservations, which Delegate Raw
lins is endeavoring' to have opened for
settlement this winter, comprise some
of the richest agricultural and mineral
lands 'in the territory- There .are
about five million acres, probably one
fourth of which ' is available for agri
cultural and grazing purposes, and
two hundred aad fifty thousand acres
for agricultural purposes alone. There
is an abundance of good water availa
ble for irrigation and for mining.
The reservations are owned by'about
two thousand Indians, who have never
attempted to cultivate those portions
that are tillable and who still live in a
state of savagery. So far their pos
sessions . have not been encroached
upon, though they have long been cov
eted. .The miners and prospectors can
not long be withheld, for rich minerals
are known to abound there,and neither
fear of Indians nor the power of the
federal government will prevent the
prospectors from examining and sam
pling the mountains.
The citizens of Utah reason' that this
country should hot be given over ex
clusively to a few -well fed, lazy In
dians, when it is capable of being
made rich in farms, villages, railroads,
factories and mills. They hold that,
with allotted lands, surrounded by
civilizing influences, these Indians may
become good citizens of the : United
States, which they certainly are not
now. They claim that the theory of
sending a few white men among them
to teach them how to farm and read
and tend stock i s a false one; that only
by contact with the whites and with
different surroundings can they ever
be reclaimed. '
There is no attempt to rob the In
dians or to drive them out. The prop
osition is to give them farms in sever
alty, which will all bo under . ditches
constructed by white men, and thus
they will have - practical teaching and
readv markets. Mormons and gentiles
are a unit upon the question of utiliz
ing these reservations.
BEWITCHING ORIENTALS.
Modern Ruths, or the Damsels of the
; ' Jadean Hills.
A correspondent ' of the Washington
Star has been "doing" the Holy land,
and is filled with admiration for the
damsels of . Bethlehem. In a recent
letter he writes: - "I don't wonder that"
Boaz fell in love with Ruth. The
Bethlehem girls are among the beau
ties of the east and you will find more
pretty girls in the hills of Judea than
in the same amount of territory any
where else the . world over. A ship
load of these Bethlehem maidens, if
they could be transported to the great
northwest, would capture the bonanza
farmers of. the Dakotas just as Ruth
captured this great land owner, Boaz.
and when they came back to Washing
ton as senators' wives, they would be
the belles of the capital. These Beth
lehem maidens are fair skinned and
bright eyed. They have' straight, well
rounded forms, which they clothe in
long dresses of white linen so beauti
fully embroidered in silk that a single
gown requires . many months of work.
This dress is much like an American
woman's nightsrown, without the frills
and 'laces. It falls from the neck to
the feet, and is open at the front in a
narrow slit as far down as a modest
decollette dress. Over this gown they
wear sleeveless cloaks of dark red
stripes, and the head they cover with
a long shawl of linen embroidered
with silk. Each girl wears her dower
on her person in the shape of a neck
lace of coins, and the forehead of each
maiden is decorated with a crown of
coins, some of which are silver and
others gold."
. THWARTED LOVERS.
They Decide Upon a Strange Test of Each
Other's. Endurance.
The strangest test of will power and
endurance ever made, said a resident
of the City of Mexico to a Globe
Democrat man, was. in Mexico, the
characters participating being a Mex
ican girl and an American man. They
were lovers, and. the girl's parents re
fused their consent to any union, in
sisting that she should marry a wealthy
Mexican suitor. At the suggestion of
the -girl they agreed to die together,
and to test the strength and endurance
of each other's love they chose a means
of suicide unlike any ever dreamed of
before. Food and fruit were placed on
a table in the center of a room occu
pied by both, the girl having escaped
from her home, but being unwilling to
el6pe with, her lover. It was agreed
that they should starve to death with
plenty before them, and should either
succumb to nature and partake of the
food then both were.released from the
bond of death, but there should be an
everlasting separation. For twelve
days they endured the pangs of hun
ger without a murmur of a thought of
wavering from their purpose to die to
gether. The twelfth day the father of
the girl discovered her whereabouts,
and, breaking the door, they were car
ried out, too faint to stand alone. It
took them several days to "recover their
strength, and when they did they were
married. -r
OF GENERAL INTEREST.
Before the Mohammedans took pos
session of Arabia nine-tenths of all
female children born were immediately
buried alive. ' '" -
Nearly 10 percent, of the yield from
last year's cotton crop in" the south is
from cotton-seed' oil, once thrown aside
as useless refuse , ' . . -
There is a tradition that in the time
of Creen, king of Thebes, an ivory nil
ometer, with cubits and digits of ham
mered gold, was used. . ;
It has been declared by Dr. Ross, a
Nova Scotian mining expert, that Wy
oming is richer in minerals than any
other state in this country.
Ask your dealer for
Mexican Silver.
Stove Polish.
Poison the squirrels.
Sure Shot at -
Snipes & Kinersly's-
FROM THE; ORE,
Some of the Processes in Steel and Iron
Manufacture. - '
Iron-making is a kind of cookery on
a huge scale. The earthy impurities
must be "roasted" or. melted out from
the iron ore; the , necessary carbon
must then be properly mixed in from
the fuel, or the unnecessary carbon
burned out. This is of manufacture,
says R. R. Bowker in Harper's Maga
zine. A wrought-iron bar or plate is
always obtained from a puddle ball, an
aggregation of grains of iron in a
pasty, semi-fused condition, inter
spersed with a greater or lesser
amount of cinder or slag. Under the
powerful action of the rojls the grains
are welded together, and a large
part of the cinder is squeezed out, but
enough remains interposed between
the iron granules" to prevent them
from welding thoroughly and forming
a homogeneous mass. The welded
lumps elongate under the process of
rolling, and the resulting bar resem
bles a buncn of iron fibers or sinews
with minute particles of slag inter
spersed here and there. Such iron
varies in , resistance according to
whether the power is applied with or
against the fiber. Steel is the result of
a fusing process.. It may be crucible,
Bessemer, or open-hearth steel, but in
all cases it has been cast from a thor
oughly melted and fluid state into an
ingot mold, where it solidifies and is
ready for subsequent treatment, such
as hammering or rolling. The slag
being lighter than the steel, it rises on
top of the melted bath; and does not
mingle with the metal, which remains
clean and unobstructed, and, after be
ing cast into the mold, cools into a
crystalline homogeneous mass in
which no amount,of rolling can devel
op a fih.er. Thus steel possesses a
structure more regular and compact
than wrought iron. Its resistance to
strains and stresses is more equal in
all directions, and its adaptability to
structural use is vastly increased.
China's Array. . ,
The regular army of China is said to
consist of 323,000 men. Besides this,
the emperor's army, there is a national
army of 650,000 men, who are- paid
about SI a month, but in consideration
of this munificence are required to feed
themselves. The cavalry receive S3 a
month, feed their own horses and, if
lost or killed, are required to replace
them out of the pay given by the gov
ernment. Ten days loss of time on account of
sickness and a doctor bill .to pay, is anyr
thing but pleasant for a man of a family
to contemplate, whether he is a laborer,
mechanic, merchant or publisher. Jas.
0. Jones, ' publisher of the Leader,
Mexia, Texas, was eick in bed for ten
days with the grip"during its prevalence
1 a year or two ago. Later in the season
he had a second attack. , He eays: "In
.th latter case' I used Chamberlain's
Con th Remedy with considersible enc
; cess, I think, only-being in bed a little
'j over two days. The second attack I am
j HatisHed would have been equally as bad
; as the tirst but for the useof the remedy."
It should be borne in mind that the grip
is much the same as a very severe cold
and requires precisely the same treat
ment.' . When you wish to cure a cold
! quickly and effectually give this remedy
a trial. 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale
by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists.
Evex potatoes deserve to be guarded
against rough handling. For best keep
ing and 'non-sprouting we keep them
dry. . . .
Iteware of Ointments fur Catarrh that
Contain Mercury, '
i As mercury will Burely destroy the sense
j of smell and completely derange the
j whole system when entering it througH
the mucous surfaces. buch articles
should never be used except on pre-,
scriptiorfs from reputable physicians, as
the damage they will do is ten-fold to
the good you" can possibly derive from
tbeni. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufac
tured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. O.,
contains no mercury, and is taken in-,
ternally, acting directly npon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system. . In
buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you
get the genuine.' It is taken internally,
and. made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J.
Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
sQVSold by druggists, price 75c. per
per bottle.'
wood's iiiosriioriJVJi
The Great EnslUb Remedy.
Promptly and fjermanently
cores all forms of Acinous
WccOcncMM, Emissions, Sptl iw
otorrhea, Xmpotcncy and aU
effect of Abuse or Excesses,
Been prescribed over SS
ears in thousands of cases;
tforc and After.
druggist for Wood's Phosphodinet If he offers
some worthless medicine lu place of this, leave his
dishonest store, ' Inclose price In . letter, and
we will send by return null. Price, one package,
&l;stx,6S. One tout please, etxvrttl ours. Pamph
let In plain sealed envelope, 2 oents postage. '
, Address .- The W-ood Chemical. Co..
121 Woodward avenue, Detroit-. lUch.
Bold in The Dalles by Snipes Klnersly. -
Petroleum, by a course of experi
ments made by the Prussian govern
ment, has proven a reliable- scale pre
venter in steam boilers.
A Million Friends.
A friend in need is a friend indeed
and not less than one million people
have found 'just such a friend in Dr.
King's New Discovery for Consumption,
Coughs, and Colds. If you have never
used this Great Cough Medicine, one
trial will convince you that it has
wonderful . curative powers in all
diseases of Throat, Chest and Lungs.
Each bottle is guaranteed to do all that
is claimed or money will be refunded.
Trial bottles free at Snipes.& Kinersly's
drug store. Large bottles 50c and $1.00.
For Sale..
- A. good milch cow,' gentle acd 'easy
milker, also horse,., buggy and harness,
good family horse and a tioe roadster.
Address C. J. Coatswobth,
lw . City.
THE TOWERS OF SILENCE.
Revolting Method of the Parsees of Dls
. . . . posing of their Dead.
The Parsees will not burn or bury
their dead, because they ' consider a
dead body impure, and they will not
suffer themselves to defile any of the
elements. They therefore , expose
their corpses to vultures, a method re
volting, perhaps, to the imagination,
but one which commends itself to all
those who (are acquainted therewith.
And, after all, one sees nothing but
the quiet, white-robed procession
(white is mourning among the Par
sees) following the bier to the tower
of silence. At the entrance they look
their last on the dead, and the corpse
bearers a caste of such carry it
within the precincts and lay. it down,
to be finally disposed of by the 'vul-'
tures which crowd the tower. Mean
while and for three days after the
priests saj constant prayers for the
departed, for bis soul is supposed not
to leaye the world till the fourth day
after death. On the fourth day ' there
is the Uthanna ceremony, when large
sums of money are given away in mem-
ory of the departed. The liturgy in
use ' is a series of funeral sermons by
Zoroaster. Of superstitions the Par
sees have had more than they retain.
Connected with burial is the popular
conception as to the efficacy of a dog's
gaze after death. Dogs are sacred and
supposed to guide the souls of the dead
to Heaven and to ward off evil spirits;
hence it is customary to lead a dog in
to the chamber of death, that he may
look at the corpse. before it is carried
to till tcjf.v-r.
" The experience of Geo. A. Apgar, of
German ValleyN. J., is well worth re
membering. He was troubled with
chronic diarrhoea and ' doctored for five
months and was treated by four differ
ent doctors without benefit. He then
began using Chamberlain's Colic, Chol
era and Diarrhoea Remedy, of which one
bottle effected a complete cure. . It is
for sale by Blakeley & Houghton, drug'
gists. . ; .'
The cathedral tower in Berlin was
blown up (or rather down) with dyna
mite a few days ago while the kaiser
looked on from a neighboring- castle.
A new and more magnificent structure
is to take its place. -.
Deserving Praise'
We desire to say to our citizens, that
for years we .have been selling Dr.
King's New Discovery for Consumption,
Dr. King's New Life Pills, Bucklen's
Arnica Salve and Electric Bitters, and
have never handled remedies that sell as
well, or that have given such' universal
satisfaction. .' . We do not . hesitate to
guarantee them every time, as we stand
ready to refund the purchase price, if
satisfactory results do not follow their
use. There remedies have won their
great popularity purely on their merits.
Snipes & Kinersly's druggists. ' -
"TheRegnlator Line"
Tie Dalles, Portland ani Astoria
- Navigation Co.
. THROUGH
Freigit and Passepr Line
Through Tri-Weekly (Sundays ex
cepted) between The Dalles and Port
land. Steamer Regulator leaves The
Dalles at 7 a. m., .. ' i
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays", .
connecting at the Cascade Locks with
Steamer Dalles City. Steamer Dalles
City leaves Portland (Yamhill st. dock)
at-6 a. m., .-
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturd ay,
connecting with Steamer Regulator for
The Dalles.
rABSENGEK RATES.
One way. .
Round trip;
,,..'.$2.00
... .. 3.00
freight Rates Greatly Reduced.
All freight, except car lots,
will be brought through, with
out delay at Cascades.
Shipments for Portland received at
any time day or night. Shipments for
way- landings must be delivered before
o p. m. live stock shipments solicted.
Call on or address, "
W, C. ALLAWAY,
, Oenerai Agent.
B. F. LAUGHLIN,
- General Manager.
THE DALLES. - OREGON
COPYIUGHTS.
CAW I OBTAIN A PATENT? " For
prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to
MINN Gc CO. who have had nearly fifty years
experience tn the patent business. Communica
tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of In
formation concerning Patents and how to ob
tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of m,fthfw
Ical and scientific books sent free.
Patents taken through Mann ft Co. receive
special notice in the Scientific Amerieno, and
thus are brought widely before the public with
' out cost to the inventor. This splendid paper.
Issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far the
largest circulation of any scientific work tn the
world. S3 a year. (Sample copres sent free.
Bail dinar Bditioivinonthly. S2.dua year. Single
copies, cents. Every number contains beau
tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new
houses, with plans, enabling hull decs to show tho
latest designs and secure contracts. Address
MUiNM & CO., 2ew York. 3til B boas WAT
ACAVtfllO.inftULmAKKS
Rheumatism;
Lumbago. Sciatica
Kidney Complaints,
Lame Beck, &Cm
03. SASDEN'3
iTBIC BELT
With Electro-Magnetic SUSPENSORY.
rKBM i Aefc jnprtTCHenii ft
Win care without medicine aU Yfvmkaem resulting1 from
overtaxatiou of brain nerve forces t excesses or tndis
cretion, as nervous debility, sleeplessness, languor,
rheumatism, kidney, liver and bladder complaints,
lame back, lumbago, sciatica, all female complaints,
sreneral ill health, etc. This electric Belt contains
WomtorftJ iauiwBanu over all other. Cnrreut is
instantly felt by wearer or we forfeit $&,0OO.O0, and
will cure all of the above diseases or no par. Thou
Cnds have been cured by thla marvelous invention
after all other remedies failed, and we trive bundredfl
of testimonials in this and every other state.
Our PowernU In promt BLECTK1C SCSPKJf SORT . the
crretest boon ever offered weak men, FRKB wttk si)
Belt. Health aa Vigor a Stress GUARaKTKKD la GO ta
Odv Send forlliua'd Pamphlet, mailed, sealed, free
SANDEN ELEOTRIO CO..
fcTo. ITS l- SU-eet, JH&XXAJKjai 0,
Removed to corner Third and Washington
streets. Portland. Or.
YOUR ATTEJITIOJI
; Is called to the fact that
Hugh Glenn,
Dealer in Glass, Lime, Piaess. Cement
and Bnildiag Material of all kinds.
. ' . -' -
Carrlco tie rine.t Line of .
Picture
v "
To be foang in the City.
72 tUashington Street
THE
Daily Evening Chronicle Is recognized
as essentially the home paper for the
Dalies t;itr louts' iiniir This is not a bad
reputation. Borne M ll IVl l. 2.000 of our best
citizens watch the columns of this pi n TJ LTD
daily for the spieiest local news. It fn r i,J"V
succeeds in gleaning The field, and hence grows
in rjonularitT and lmnnrtAnw. TnV it RviiU.
you who don't; try some of its premium oilers.
CAM BE,
R O N I C
Reasonably .
ELEC
FIRSTCLKSS.
"'5) ' " : cr?
rM pi n M 1
m
rifv III " " "" Bttfa
When the Tram stops at THE DALLES, get off on the South Side
T THE i---- ,
JiBW COLtUlVlBlfl HOTEli.
This large and popular House it the principal hotel business,
and is prepared to furnish t)e Best Accommodations of' any
House in the city, and at thu low rate of....
$1.00 per Day. first
Office for all Stage -T.Ine
. points In Sasterm Oregon
' In tnla Hotel.
Corner of Front and Union Sta.
There is a tide in the affairs
leads on to fortune." ; , . . "
The poet unquestionably had reference to the
E
at CRANDALL
Who aro selling; those goods
MJCHELBACH BRICK.-
osiDo-Ont Sale il i-
D. BUNTS!
Pipe WorK, Tin Repairs ag goofing
MAINS TAPPED UNDER PRESSURE.
Shop 00 Third Street, next door, west of Young & Kusa'
, Blacksmith Shop.
TUB stDWiBgjreeiiflSB.
Having enlarged our Floral Garden and in-
POTTED PMJlTS, fJOSES, &e,
We wish to announce, In addition, to the - '
public, that we have made a specialty of
Pansy Plants and' FoFget-Jffe-Nots,
VMcli e Will sell at seasonable Prices. .
We al have n fine selection of Dahlia Bulbs,
which -for beauty are unexcelled. We ore pre-
pared to furnish on short notice Cut Flowers
lor wedding parlies, socials and funerals.
- MRS. A. C. STUBLINC & SON.
J. F. FORD, EYaielist,
Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes under date of
, March 23, 1898:
S. B. Med.' Mfg. Go., -
Dufur, Oregon.'
Gentlemen.'
On arriving home last week, I found
all well and anxiously awaiting. Oar
little girl, eight and one-half years old,
who had wasted away to 38 pounds, is
now well, strong and vigorous, and well
fleshed up.. S. B. Cough Cure has done
its work well. Both of the children like
it. Your S. B. Cough Cure has cured
and kept away all hoarseness from me.
So give it to every one, with greetings
for all. Wishing you prosperity, we are
Yours, Mr. A Mbs. J. F. Ford. .
If you wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and ready
for the Spring'! work, cleanse your system with
the Headache and Liver Cure, by taking two or
three doses each week. . -
Sold under a positive guarantee.
50 cents per bottle by all druggist.
! Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat- j
ent business conducted for Moderate Fees, j
!oun omee is Opposite U. S. patewt Office
i and we can secure patent in less time than those J
remote from Washington.
t Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip- i
Ition. - We advise, if patentable or not, free of J
i charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. J
t a PiuHji w-r. "How to Obtain Patents." with i
(cost of same in the V. & and foreign countries j
sent ircc Aaoxess,
C.A.SHOW&CO.
HAD AT THE
LEO F F ICE
Humous Rates.
Qass Ieals, 25 Ceijts.
leaving; Th Dalles tor all'
and Kastern Washington,
T. T. NICHOLAS, Prppr.
of men which, taken at its Jiooa
& BURGET'S,
out at greatly-reduced rates.
; - CXION ST.
nre i caricts