The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, March 06, 1894, Image 2

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    The Mes Daily Chronicle,
OFFICIAL PAPER OF DALLES CITY.
iMD WASCO COUNTY. .
8UB8CRIPTION BATE8.
IT KAIL, FOSTAGS PKKPAID, IN ADVANCE.
Weekly, 1 year...: 1 SO
- It rannYhi . ' 0 75
0 50
Dally, 1 year..
" 6 months
. 6 00
. S 00
per " 0 50
Address all communication to " THE CHRON
ICLE," The Dalles, Oregon.
- Post-Ofllce.
OmCI HOUR8
General Delivery Window 8 a. m. to 7 p. m.
Honey Order " 8 a, m. to 4 p. m.
Sunday i D. " 9 a. m. to 10 a. m.
cLOsma o kails
trains going East 9 p. m. and 11 :45 a. m.
" " West. .....9 p. to. and 5:30p.m.
Stage for Goldendale : 7:80 a. m.
" " Prineville '. 5:30 a.m.
" "Dufuraud WarmBprings. ..5:30a. m.
" tLeaving lor Lyle fe Hartland.. 6:30 a.m.
" " " J Antelope 5:S0 a. m.
Except Sunday. 1
Tri-weekly. Tuesday Thursday and Saturday.
I " Monday Wednesday and Friday.
TUESDAY,
MAR. 6, 1894
"The story has been circulated that
Secretary of State Greeham, immediately
after his appointment to his 'present
-position, gave notice that.be would no
-longer accept the pension he has been
drawing since the war. The reason was
stated to be that he wished to have his
acts harmonize with the anti-pension
views of the administration of which he
is a member. Now comes an emphatic
refutation of the story. The second
deputy commissioner of peneione, Mr.
Bell, states positively that Gresham does
not intend to release his pension, nor
refund any pension money that he has
drawn. "He considers it an honor to be
an honor to be rewarded by his govern
ment for a wound received while fight
ing in its defense,", concluded Mr. Bell.
So it thus appears that the reports con
cerning his giving np his pension are a
bit of demagogic clap-trap,, intended to
harmonize him with the mossback anti
pension democrats.
The best authorities on the tariff are
not always the men who say the most
about it in public, and a great many of
the cleverest speeches delivered on the
floor of the senate are not written by the
men who deliver them. There are in
deed few ready tariff debaters in the
senate and the running discussion of the
Wilson bill will be confined to five or
six men. The other senators will guard
local interests and make set speeches.
The senators who will be heard most
frequently are Vest, Mills, Jones, of
Arkansas, McPherson and Harris on the
democratic side; Aldricb, Allison, Sher
man, Teller and Lodge on the republi
can. Then there are Stewart on the re
publican side and Call on the democratic
side, who will be on their feet as fre
quently as the rules of the senate per
mit, chiefly because they like to talk.
Senator Sherman is pre-eminently fitted
to go into a tariff discussion. He has an
"awkward" memory, which is of great
value to the republican side in the tariff
discussion.
CURRENT PRESS COMMENT.
Queen Lill, of Hawaii, is not the first
woman that Grover Cleveland has left
worse off than when be found her, if re
ports ' are true. Pomeroy's Advance
Thought.
As a showing of what the democratic
administration has done for the business
of this country, the Boston wool sales
ior last week were 1,485,200 pounds,
"against 3,805,000 for the corresponding
week of last year. This is one industry
which has been especially attacked by
the free trade theorists and deficiency
makers in congress. -
Judge Bartlett caused his court to take
its rightful place as the conservator of
.justice by his imposition of a six-years'
sentence on John Y. McKane, convicted
of election frauds. Judge Bartlett re
marked, before sentencing him, that his
crime was "a serions one, and one that
demands an emphatic sentence; the
penalty should be so severe as to express
due condemnation, while not so severe
as toexpreES sympathy." Every honest
citizen will applaud this sentiment, and
and indorse the sentence. '
O. W. O. Hardman, Sheriff of Tyrel
Co., W. Va., appreciates a good thing
and does not hesitate to say so. He was
almost prostrated with a cold when he
procured a bottle of Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy. He says : "It gave me
prompt relief. I find it to be an invalu
able remedy for coughs and colds." For
eale by Blakeley & Houghton,' drug'
gists. x .
The roasting which professor Lee Fair
child, formerly of Pullman, received in
the San Francisco Examiner at the
hands of Ambrose Bierce was provoked
by the professor's first act on landing in
San Francisco. On reaching a hotel he
registered as ."Lee Fairchild, formerly
of the Seattle Telegraph, and friend of
Ambrose Bierce." This signature was
" called to Mr. Bierce's attention and made
him futious.
t '.
Mrs. Emily Thome, who resides at
Toledo, Washington, says she has never
been able to procure any medicine for
rheumatism that . relieves the pain so
quickly and effectually as Chamberlain's
Pain Balm and that she has also used it
for lame back with great success. For
eale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists
Ask your dealer for Mexican Silver
Stove Polish. ;
SAVED BY A EAT.
Thrilling Experience In a Gavin?
Arizona Mine.
That Rodent Barrows His Way to an Im
- prisoneoMixie Surveyor. In This Mmn
,ner Supplying; Him with the
, Needed Air. .
"You were asking about that stuffed
rat in my room," said Prof. Churchill,
the mining expert, to a New York Sun
man. "The story concerns an expe
rience that made jny hair curl. I was
once retained to report upon the work
ings of a mine called the Little Whoop
Up, in southern Arizona. On an ad
joining claim was another mine called
the Atlas. A dispute arose. The Atlas
people claimed that the lower tunnel
of the Whoop Up had been bored into
their ground and a half million in
ore taken out. The first thing to do
was to make a survey of the Whoop
Up, and, of course, the Whoop Up peo
ple objected. Finally an order for the
survey was secured from the court and
Dr. John R. Parks and I were sent to
make the survey. There are tricks in
all trades, and the Whoop Up superin
tendent knew a few. When we reached
the mise he said the tunnel weJ
wished to explore was in a dang'erous
condition. There had been a cave, the
timbers were rotten, and so on. It
meant a ten to one chance that we
would be crushed if we tried it. Of
course, we classed him as a liar, though
he turned out to be right.
"We worked our way in the tunnel
until wc ran against a jam of fallen
timbers which were sound and were
plainly arranged to stop our progress.
Parks went back for an ax, while I
worked at the roof with a pick to dis
lodpe the center pieces. I succeeded
and had climbed " half way over into
the other side of the tunnel when there
came a terrific crash of loose ore from
the roof. It fell on both sides of the
timbers, pinning me in a hole which
would have been a grave right there
but for a few sticks which held the
mass of ore above. The place was
barely large enough to move in, and I
knew it was certain death in a few
hours unless Parks could dig me out.
Even then I believed I was gone,' for i
did not know how much ore had fallen.
In a few minutes .the air got heavy,
and my eyes began to feel drowsy, and
it seemed like the roof and sides of the
hole were closing it . on me. This op
pression and drowsiness increased until
I was forced to hammer the sides of the
place with my fists and head to keep
awake.' Still not a sound could I haar
from - the outside, and only the slow
crumbling of ore from above. The
foul air was getting into my brain, and
I think I was actually insane with the
fearful dread of being buried alive.
Anyhow, I remember of -dropping to
the floor of the hole, and giving a few
faint shouts which echoed back into
my ears.- I had given up all hope, and
was almost swooning when I heard a
strangle scraping sound above me. I
yelled, but received no answer, and
then I threw my body against the walls
and tried to pick out the ore from be
tween the lodged timbers. Still came
the queer, scraping noise which seemed
to come nearer and nearer and sounded
not unlike the steady grinding of a'
saw. It seemed to last for hours,
though it could hardly have been a
minute after when a bit of earth
dropped to my feet from the upper end
of the wall, and along with it came a
big frray mine rat, who saved my life,
for he had left a clear hole for his trail,
and through it came a breath of fresh
air that gave life to me. The fellow
had bored his way from the shaft side
of the cave. I stayed there two hours
after that, until Parks found the cave,
got help, 'and got me out without
breaking the air hole. I '.caught the
gray rat, too, and kept him well fed
until he died, and wouldn't ttike a lot
of money for his skin now. " ' wf!j
NAPOLEON WAS IN SING SING.
Locked Up by a Keeper While on m Visit
of Inspection in 1K37.
. It is not .generally known to the
world at large, says the New York
Times, that Emperor Napoleon III. of
France was once behind the bars in
Sing Sing prison. In the spring of
1837 Prince Louis Napoleon, afterward
Napoleon III., emperor of France, made
a visit to Washington Irving at Sunny
side, a little north of Irvington-on-the-Hudson,
accompanied by a young
French count,' and escorted by Anthony
Constant, of Hastings. Prince Napo
leon expressed a desire to visit the
prison at Sing Sing, and Mr. Constant
drove him there7; Upon arriving at the
prison the party was welcomed by War
den Rowel,- who, after taking them
into his apartments, explained the
means that had been attended with
the most successful and beneficial re
sults in the government of the prison.
The warden told the prince, who had
been an interested listener, that he
had a convict in the prison, a French
man, who was an old soldier, claiming?
to have fought at Waterloo and to have
been in several battles with Napoleon,
the first emperor. . The prince natural
ly asked to see the man. The. warden
then explained that the prisoner was
in a dark cell for misconduct; that it
was contrary to prison rules . io take
him out, but as the guests were going
to visit the cells ' he would open the
door of the Frenchman's cell. '
Then all followed the warden down
the stairs and across the keyroom and
th narrow passasres to the sralleries.
where the cells were and are to this
day. He paused at the second cell on
th right hand tier of the main gal
leries and unlocked and opened the
door: Jjouis JNapoleon stepped inside.
The warden, with a merry twinkle in
his eye, turned the key and locked him
in. It was too pood an opportunity- to
be lost. The gentlemen were amused
and brimming over with fun, when
after a momentary detention,7 the door
was opened and the noble Frenchman
joxned them once more. They all en
joyed the joke except the subject of it.
His sallow "countenance reddened per
ceptibly .for a time and then ha joined
.in the laugh raised at his expense.
Endersby Jottings.
Endkbsby, Wasco Co., Mar. 5, 1894.
Special Correspondence.
School meeting today.
; - Mr. Bingham of Dufur delivered a
valuable eermon at the Grange hall yes
terday. -
Farmers are still waiting for dryer
weather to finish their epring plowing,
as the soil is damper to a greater depth
than for many years.
There is a series of revival meetings to
be held at the ' Lower 8-Mile school
house during the week under the able
leadershipof Rev. J. W. Jenkins of The
Dalles.' Mr. Bonny, of Wamic will re
lieve Mr. Jenkins upon the former's ar
rival Friday. '
W. A. Burt Campbell and Allen Fligg
of Endersby have just returned from the
mountains where they have been look
ing after the former's traps. They re
port many encounters with the wild
denizens of the woods that were found
ensnared in the trap. The region of
Badger Lake is very mountainous, con
sequently they encountered difficult
traveling, which was made much worse
by the depth of some seven feet of snow.
The enow shoes that they $ook with
them proved valuable, as otherwise
traveling would be impossible. Burt
captured a huge beaver in this vicinity a
few days ago that tipped the scales at
some fifty pounds. - This-is the largest
specimen of the beaver family that has
been known to be captured in this
neighborhood up to date.
G. R. C.
: Congres vF 11 Impruv Spellng.
The United Seates senit is not going
tojje cast in the shade by the hous with
its Bland senyerage bill and mobokrasy
howl. The senit will reform the world's
epeling. A bil has bin introdused. It
adopts the changes promulgated by the
British and American filologic societies,
which ar wel ilustrated herewith. Sins
the birth of the star-eyd godes of reform,
no more unik reform has bin sugestd
than this. The Benit wil undoutdly
divid honors with the hous in coraling
the curiosity of the country.
Taks fu examples. By dropping silnt
"e," we sav t'im to the extnt of abot 5
pr cent to ech sentns beans "e" is such
a comn letr. - By . droping . "a" from
"ea," as in fethr, evn the foren born
wil no fouetically what yu men
when yu spek of -the gel us . wif
using a lethr strap, upon her betr
haf. Wun may spek of buty, hart, luv,
and the lik in a tung which a dozn pepl
of difrnt rases may undrstand by a simpl
foneticism. By droping silnt consonants
in our writn lacgwaj, we cud shortn our
dets and the eb of the tid, remuv dout
about the tonography of batls, ripls.
fihgrs and tbums, and not be kept dam
or sukum to the eubtl makinashuns of
pedagogs. Sum of the speling which we
learn in scul is enuf to mak wun'S
etuinak ake. The aoverln pedagog has
crost the Rubicon at last and lookt upon
tonography frotn a sensibl point of vew.
The senit has found its sfere, un
shethed the sithe of reform and with
filoEofy and grim huror pichd the tuf
eilabls, -which so . long hav mad
our tung tne laung ' stok of
the wurld, out of the windoz of the
capitl. Senatrs ar no gucl'at curensy
and tarif legislashn, but when it cum 8
to impruving the English langaj they ar
hevy, as witnes ther efrts in another
colm in detal. We ' adopt the changs
with plesur, with gratr plesur to our
selvs perhaps than to our redrs. If the
chang is sudn and surprising, the redr
has wun coneolashn. it is artisticaly
corekt. It is more redal and pictureak
than the president's Hawyun mesic
abo.ut Llliwakalony ot the bandwieh
Hinds. J.et us hav the chang at wuns.
Minneapolis Tribune.
State of Ohio, City op Toledo,) '
Lucas County.
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he
is the senior partner of the firm of F. J
(Jhenev s Jo.. doing Dusmess in tne
uity oi xoieao, county ana state aiore-
said, and that said hrm will pay tne sum
of One Hundred Dollars for each and
every case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by the use of Hall's Cataeeh
(Jure. Jb rank j . uheney.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in
my presence, this 6th day of December,
A.-D. 1886. . A. VV. brLEASON,
fsEAL.l Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally
and acts directly on the. blood and mu
cous surfaces of the system. Send for
testimonials, free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, 75c.
A New York wif was granted a di
vorce because the husband threw the
baby at her when she hit him with the
coal bucket for spitting on the stove.
High Living,
if you keep at it, is apt to tell upon the
liver. The things to prevent this are
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. Take one
of these little pellets for a corrective or
gentle laxative--three for a cathartic.
They are the smallest, - easiest to take,
pleasantest and most natural in the way
they act. They do permanent good.
Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious At
tacks, Sick or Bilious Headache, and all
derangements of the liver, stomach and
bowels are prevented, relieved and
cured. They're guaranteed to give sat
isfaction in every case or your money is
returned. '
The worst cases of Chronic Catarrh in
the Head yield to Dr. Sage's Catairh
Remedy. So certain is it that its mak
ers offer $500 reward for an incurable
case. ' ". .;
City Warrntu,
All those holding city warrants of date
prior to September 1st, 1891, will be paid
on presentation at my office. " Interest
on same ceases after this date.
I. I. Burget,
City Treasurer.'
The Dalles, dr., Jan. 8, 1894.
Plants for Damp Ground
People who are unfortunate enough
to live in damp houses, particularly
near undrained land, are apt to think
that there is no help ' for them save in
removal. ; They are mistaken. Suc
cessful experiments have shown that
it is quite possible to materially im
prove the atmosphere in such neigh
' borhoods in a very simple manner by
the planting- of the laurel and the sun
flower. The laurel gives off an abun
dance ' of ozone, while the' "soulful
eyed" sunflower is potent in destroy
ing the malarial condition. These
two, if planted on the most restricted
scale in a garden close to. the house,
will be found to speedily increase the
dryness and .salubrity of the atmos
phere, and rheumatism, if. it does not
entirely become a memory of the past,
will be largely alleviated.
Ten days loss of time on account of
sickness and a doctor bill to pay, is any
thing but ple'asant'for a man of a family
to contemplate, whether he is a laboref,
mechanic, merchant or publisher. Jas.
0. Jones, publisher of the Leader,
Mexia, Texas, was sick in bed for ten
days with the grip during its prevalence
a year or two ago-. Later in the seaeon
be had a second attack. He says : "In
the latter case I used Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy with considersible suc
cess, I think; only being in bed a little
over two days. The second attack I am
satisfied would have been equally as bad
as the first but for the use of the remedy."
It should be borne in mind that the grip
is much the same as a very Severe cold
and requires precisely the earns treat
ment. When you wish to cure a cold
quickly and effectually give this remedy
a trial. 25 and 50 cent bottles for eale
by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists.
'Visitor Tommy, I wish to ask you a
few questions in grammar. Tommy
Yes eir. Visitor If I eive you ' the sen
tence, "The pupil loves his teacher,"
what is that? Tommy Sarcasm. Texas
Sittings. - . '" ' .
Electric Bitters.
This remedy is becoming bo well
known and so popular as to need no
special mention, All who use Electric
Bitters sing the same song of praise.
A purer medicine does not exist and it
is guaranteed to do all that is claimed.
Electric Bitters will cure all diseases of
the liver and kidueys, will remove
pimples, boils, salt rheum' and other
affections caused by impure blood,
Will drive malaria from the system and
prevent as well as Cure all malarial
fevers. For cure of . headache, consti
pation, and indigestion try- Electric Bit
ters. Entire satisfaction guaranteed, or
money refunded. Price 50c and $1 per
bottle at Snipes & Kinersly'e.
J, F. FORD, Evangelist, :
Of Des - Moines, Iowa, writes under date ol
March 23, 1893:
S. B. Med. Mpg. Co.,
Dufur, Oregon.
Gentlemen :
On arriving home last week, I found
all well and anxiously' awaiting. . Our
little girl, eight and one-half years old,
who had wasted away to 88 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, . Mb. & Mrs. J. F. Ford.
If yon wish to feel fresh and cheerful, andready
for the Spring's wore, 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 druggists.
NOTTCE FOR PUBLICATION.
- U. S. Land Office, The Dalles, Or.,)
' Feb. 26, 1894. (
Notice is hereby given that the following
named settler has filed notice of his intention to
make final proof in support of his claim, and
that said proof will be made before the register
and receiver of the U. 8. Land office at The
Dalles, Or., on April 17, 1894, viz:
Oliver M. Bonrland,
Hd. No. 3775, for the SEf NWJ, SEU SW and
XA HK4, Sec 7, To 2 8, R 14 E.
He names the following witnesses to prove his
continuous residence upon and cultivation of
suid land, viz: '
J. A. Gulliford, Dufur, Or.; Legrand Holgate,
Boyd, Or. ; King Montgomery, T.- C. Fargher,
Dufur, Or.
mar3-aprl4 JOHN W. LEWIS, Register.
SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of aa execution and order of sale
issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon for Wasco County, upon a decree and
judgment made, rendered and entered by said
Court on the 16th day of February, 1894, in
favor of plain till', in a suit wherein Maximilian
Vogt-and Philllpine Chapman were plaintiffs,
and Augustus Bunnell, John K. Foster and Da
vid Robertson, rmrtners as Foster & Robertson.
"and Mrs. D. E. trice were defendants, and to me
directed and delivered, commanding me to levy
upon and sell all the lands mentioned and de
scribed in said writ, and hereinafter described, I
did on the 1st day of March, 1894, duly levy
upon, and will sell at public auction to ithe
highest bidder, for cash in hand, on Saturday,
the 31st day or March, 1894,
at 2 o'clock Jn the afternoon ot- said day, at the
front door of the County Court House in Dalles
City, in Wasco County, Oregon, all of the lands
and premises described in said wiit, and herein
described as follows, to-wit: -
The south half of those certain lots known as
the Biekle lots in Trevitt's Addition" to Dalles
City, on the road from said city to the U. S. Gar
rison as formerly travelled, and being the same
property conveyed by Griffith E. Williams and
wife to said A. Bunnell, by deed duly recorded
at page 353 of Book "E" of deeds for Wasco
county, tjregon, ana wnicn are particularly ae
scribed and bounded as follows, to-wit: Com
mencing on the east line of Liberty str.eet at a
point on said line 170 feet southerly from a point
on the t-outh line of Fourth street where the
same is intersected by said east line of Liberty
street: thence southerly alone said east line of
Liberty street 60 feet; thence easterly and at
right angles wun saia nrsc line 1U4 leec: thence
northerlv and parallel with said east line of Lib
erty street 60 feet; thence westerly to the place
of beginning; said premises being in block "D,"
Trevitt's Addition to Dalles City, Wasco county,
Oreeon. together with the tenements, heredita
ments and appurtenances thereunto belonging
or in anvwise appertaining: or so much thereof
is shall be sufficient to satisfy the sum of ?1124.40,
with interest thereon at the rate of 8 per cent.
per annum since tne lbtn aay oi reoruary. i!;
$100 attornev's fee, and $37.20 costs in said suit,
together with costs of said writ and accruing
costs of sale. , T. A. WARD,
1 - Sheriff of Wasco County, Oregon.
Dated at Dalles City, Or., March 2d, 1S94.
mcliS'.vot :
ffe Yorfc Ueeltly
-AND-
4iO NLY
D . B UN iM
Pipe
wo
rR, Tia Bepairs aiiff Roofing
MAINS TAPPED
Shou on Third . Street, next door west of Young i Kuss'
Blacksmith Shop. ;
- v - ' ' -
Wasco County,
' The Gate City of the Inland Umpire is situated: at the head
of navigation on the Middle Columbia, and is a thriving, pros
perous city. . ' . . '
ITS TERRITORY. '
It is the supply city for an extensive and rich ' agricultural
and grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer
Lake, a distance of over two hundred miles.
- The Largest Wool Market.
The rich grazing country along the eastern slope of the Cas
cades furnishes pasture' for thousands of sheep, the wool from
which finds market here. . ,
The Dalles is the largest original wool shipping point in
America, about 5,000,000 pounds being shipped last year.
ITS PRODUCTS. ' " .'
The salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, yielding
this year a revenue of thousands of dollars, which will be more
than doubled in the near future.
. The- products of the beautiful Klickitat valley find market
here, and the country south and east . has this year filled the
warehouses, and all available storage places to overflowing with
their products. ' 5
ITS WEALTH.
It is' the richest city of its size on the coast and its money is
scattered over and is being used to develop more farming country
: than is tributary to any other city in Eastern Oregon. - -Its
situation is unsurpassed.' Its "limate delightful. Its-pos-.
nihilities incalculable. Its reso'jrcs unlimited. And on thes
. ornr'tne8 sttnds. ' , ', . -
, SHERIFF'S SALE.
Notice is hereby riven that by virtue of an ex
ecution issued out of the Circuit Court of the
state of Oregon for wasco county, in a suit
therein pending wherein W. A, Miller is plain
tiff and K. P. Reynolds is defendant, to me di
rected, and commanding me to sell the real
property hereinafter described, to satisfy the
sum of 1290.00 and interest thereon at the rate
of eight per cent per annum from September 22,
1S'J3, ana tne sum oi s,wu.w auu xiiusivb.
thereon at the rate of eight per cent per annum
from the 20th day of March, 1893, and the further
sum of 300.00 attorneys fees, and the further
sum of $22.00 costs, adjudged to the plaintiff and
against the defendant in said suit, I will on the
- the 13th day of March, 1894,
at the hour of 2 o'clock p. m.. at the front door
of the County Court House in Dalles City, Ore
trnn. full Rt rmhlic sale to the hiehest bidder, for
cash in hand, all of the following described real
property, to-wit: l ne Bouta nait oi tne Boom
west auarter. the northeast Quarter of the south
west quarter, and the southwest quarter of the
southeast quarter of ' Section 28, Township 1
North, Range 13 East, W. M., containing 160
acres, and the north half of the northeast qnar
tpr.i.hA nnrthpjust nuarter of the northwest Quar
ter and the southeast quarter of the northeast
quarter of Section 33, Township 1 North, Range
13 ,ast, n. m., containing iw acres, w mmwj
said sums ana aecruingcosts.
T. A. Wabd
JlOwtd - Sheriff of Wasco Coun.y.
Wasco Warehouse Go.,
Receives Goods on Stor
age, and Forwards same to
their destination.
Receives Consignments
For Sale on Commission.
tates Jeasonble.
MARK GOODS ;
"W . w . Oo.
THE DALIES, OK
I iibune
$1.75.
UNDER PRESSURE.
Oregon,
Guardian's Notice. -
Notice is hereby triven that the uudersigned
has been appointed by the County Court of
Wasco County, Oregon, guardian of the person
and estate of Lars Larsen.
All persons having claims against said Lars
Larsen are notified, to present the same with the
proper vouchers to the undersigned, at the office
of Mays,- Huntington St Wilson, within six
montns irom tne aate nereoi.
Dated at Dalles City, this 6th day of Jan., 1894.
J10w5ptl - . W.T.WISEMAN.
XN T Ti l Times makes it all the mor
I ill L necessary to advertise. That is
I I J what the most progressive of our
I J business men think, and these same bus
iness men are the most prosperous at all times.
If you wish to reach all the reople in this neigh
borhood you can't do better than talk to them,
through the columns of the Dailt Chkoniclk
It has more than double the circulation ol any
other paper, and adveitis ng in it pays big
COPPER
RIVETED Manufactured by
LEVI STRAUSS & CO.
San Francisco, Calif.
Every
.Garment
Guaranteed.
FOh SALE BY
Clothin
PEASE & MAYS,
; THE DALLES, OREGON. "