The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, March 08, 1894, Image 2

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    The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
OFFICIAL PAPER OF DALLES CITY.
AMD WASCO COrMTT.
SUBSCRIPTION BATES.
T MAIL, POSTAGE FBKFA1D, IS ADTAKCX.
Weekly, 1 year... 1 60
6 months. . 0 75
8 , 0 50
Dally, 1 year. 6 00
" 6 months....' 8 00
per " 0 60
Address all communication to " THE CHEON
ICLE." The Dalles, Oregon.
Post-Office.
OFTICB BOUKS
General Delivery Window.' 8 a. m. to 7 p. m.
Money Order " 8 a. in. to 4 p. m.
Sundays Ti. 9 a. m. to 10 a. m.
N. ' - CL08IKO OF KAILS
trains going East 9 p.m. and 11:45 a. m.
" West 9 p. in. and 5:30 p.m.
Stage for Goldendale 7:30 a. m.
" " Prinevillo. .6:30 8.01.
"Dufursud Warm 8prings. ..5:30a. m.
' " Leaving for Lyle & Hartland..6:30a. m.
" " " J Antelope 5:30 a. m.
- "Except Bunday.
Tri-weekly. Tuesday Thursday and Saturday.
I " Monday Wednesday and Friday.
THURSDAY,
MAR. 8, 1894
A TR0CI0 US DEALING.
The following vigorous open letter was
addressed to William L. Wilson, M. C,
by Henry Carey Baird, of Philadelphia,
Feb. 2d, tending to show that political
economy, as taught in schools and col
leges, is a lamentable failure when tried
in practice :
"By the papers of this morning I see
that on the passage of your tariff bill
you were actually carried in triumph on
the shoulders of two dignified national
legislators. In my opinion, this triumph
of yours will be short lived, for yon have
committed a, great wrong against the
American people, and I would not for a
million of dollars be in your place with
all of your responsibility upon my con
science. "When, too, it is considered that Pres
ident Cleveland, Vice-President Steven
son, the democratic United States sen
ate, the democratic house of representa
tives, Mr. Speaker Crisp, and Mr. Wil
son, chairman of the committee on ways
-and means, all owe their present posi
tions and power to the fact of the over
throw of our institutions during the past
twelve or fifteen years in at least eight
of the states lately in rebellion, this con
duct of yours and your followers in the
house of representatives at a time when
the people of the United States are in
such dire distress, such a state ot des
peration, seems especially atrocious.
.'For more than six and thirty years I
have been an ardent student of economic
questions and an observer of economic
facts, and long since did I make up my
mind that of all the institutions in the
country the college was the one which
exerted the most pernicious influence.
The culmination of your work, a college
president, seems to confirm, justify and
finally clinch this judgment of mine."
Let none but the best men be nomin
ated, and then Oregon will give the
country such an object lesson in June
that the Cleveland party will groan in
anguish of spirit.
There is a mortal authority against
which Gladstone is powerless, and that
is his physicians. The grand old man
has seryed his, country too faithfully and
long to allow him to have his way, and
perforce he has been obliged to keep his
bed by the pill-rollers.
Every republican ought to get in and
join the McKinley Club, and when there
are no clubs 'organized should go to
work and form one. There is not a pre
cinct in Oregon but the republicans
ought to organize and get in and show
their colors and .down the Wilson free
trade worshippers. Pulverizing the
Grover power is the watchword.
CURRENT PRESS COMMENT.
Lillian Russell again denies her re
ported engagement to Sandow, the
strong man, and Sandow is non-committal.
Miss Russell, by the way, is in
fringing upon one of Mrs. Frank Leslie's
copyrighted, advertising expedients.
Pennoyer is out as, a full-fledged pop
ulist candidate for president. As Mr.
JPennoyer owns a sawmill, he has the ad
vantage of being able to say a great deal
and saw wood at the eame time. Here's
hoping Sylvester will get his party nom
ination. Spokane Review.
The chief embarassment the Rebub
licans had to contend . with tinder the
Harrison Administration was a $105,000,-
000 surplus. The chief embarrssment
the Democrats have to contend with nn
der the Cleveland Administration is a
$75,000,000 deficit.
. The foot ball mania has seized upon
the women, a game having been played
between the members of the fair sex at
San Francisco the other day. The spec
tacle was decidedly novel, such a display
of hosiery and underwear never before
.. having been witnessed outside of a dry
goods store.
Mr. Cleveland's reign over the demor
cratic mudsills and administration cuck
oos is drawing swiftly to an end.- With
all the advantages upon his side he has
been twice whipped in fair combat by a
man who brought to the encounter only
his lance and the superior cunning of
his brain.' Reverse the. conditions put
Hill in the White Honse and Cleveland
in the senate, and the contest would not
be worth passing interest.
THE COCOANUT TREE.
it
Furnishes Food, Shelter ' and
Employment to. Thousands. '
some Interesting Facts Concerning- the
Bearing; or the riant on Planta
tionsIts Principal
Products. " .
This palm does not grow spontane
ously on Key West or on any of the
other Florida islands, as the violent
north' winds' which often prevail in
winter reduce the - temperature of
southern Florida too' low for this heat
loving tree, although when planted
and cared for while young it grows to
a moderate. size on the keys, and some
times bears fruit; otherwise the nuts
which are cast vipon those shores by
the gulf stream would have produced
plants that would gradually have cov
ered them, for it is in this way that the
cocoanut has been able gradually to
spread over all the sandy coral shores
of the tropics of the two worlds. The
place of its first home is uncertain. It
was believed by the younger Candolle
to have first appeared on some of the
islands of the Indian archipelago,
whence it was carried either by ocean
currents or by man to the southern
coast of Asia, "east tropical Africa, and
to the islands and shores of Pacific
tropical America. Undoubtedly it was
brought by man to the West Indies and
Brazil after the discovery of America
by Europeans, although it has now so
spread, through the action of ocean
currents" or by the agency of man, that
it has every appearance of being in
digenous on the shores of east tropical
America.
The cocoanut palm, says Garden and
Forest, is a magnificent plant, well
named "a prince of the vegetable
kingdom," with tall, slender columnar
stem eighty or a hundred feet high,
and rich pale yellow-green leaves
which are thirty or forty feet long, and
flutter and rustle with every breath of
wind.
The cocoanut grows only near the
shore, where its roots, penetrating the
sandy soil, may drink freely from clear
underground springs. Of all trees it
is the most useful to man, furnishing
food, shelter and employment to hun
dreds of thousands of the hurnan race.
In tropical countries, especially in
southern India and Malaya, the cocoa
nut supplies to whole communities the
chief necessities of life. Every part is
useful; the roots are considered a rem
edy against fevers; from the trunk
houses, boats and' furniture are made;
the leaves furnish the thatch for
houses and the material from which
baskets, hats, mats and innumerable
other articles are made; the network
of fibers at their base is used for
sieves and is woven into cloth; from
the young- flower stalks a palm wine,
called toddy, is obtained, from which
arrack, a fiery alcoholic drink, is dis
tilled. The value of the fruit is well
known. From the husk, which ' is
called coir, commercially, cordage,
bedding, mats, brushes and other ar
ticles are manufactured. . In the
tropics, lamps, drinking1 vessels and
spoons are made from the hard shells.
The albumen of the seed contains large
quantities of oil, used in the east for
cooking and in illuminating; in Europe
and the United States it is often made
into soap and candle3, yielding, after
the oil is extracted, a refuse valuable
as . food for cattle, or as a fertilizer.
In some parts of the tropics the kernel
of the seed forms the chief food of -the
inhabitants. The cool, milky fluid
which fills the cavity of the fruit when
the nut is young affords an agreeable
beverage, and the .albumen of the young
nut, which is soft and jelly like, is nu
tritious and of a delicate flavor.
As might be expected in the case of
a plant of such value, it is often care
fully and extensively cultivated in
many countries, and numerous vari
eties, differing in the size, shape and
quality of the fruit, are now known.
The cocoanut is propagated by seeds;
the nuts are sown in nursery beds, and
at the end of six or eight months the
seedlings are large enough to plant.
The plants are usually set twenty-five
feet apart each way in carefully pre
pared beds filled with rich surface soil.
Once established, a plantation of co
coanuts requires little care beyond wa
tering, which Is necessary in its early
years to insure a" rapid and vigorous
growth. In good soil the trees usually
begin to flower at the end of five or six
years, and may be expected to be in
full bearing in from eight to twelve
years. Thirty nuts from a tree is con
sidered a fair average yiela, although
individual trees have been known to
produce an average of three hundred
nuts during a period of ten years. An
application of manure increases the
yield of the trees, although probably
the value of the additional crop ob
tained in - this way is. hardly large
enougn to justify much expenditure.
' Olass Blowers.
Many attempts have been made to
supplant the glass blowers by ma
chinery, but up to this time none
has attained commercial importance.
Either the cost of production has been
found to be higher than by the
time-honored - method or the ware pro
duced was not of a quality up to the"
demands of the market.. This is more
especially the case in the kinds of bot
tles used to contain effervescent
drinks, which must be capable of with
standing a pressure of several atmos
pheres without failure. - This, in fact,
is the critical point in the. automatic
manufacture of bottles, since the dif
ficulty ' has always been" to obtain a
distribution of the glass forming the
walls of the bottle as uniform as in
the handiwork. The attempt has been
made to press the body and bottom
separately and to unite the two by
fusing them together, but the bottles
made in this manner were very heavy
and of poor appearance. The bottle
machine invented by Ashley, in Eng
land, aroused much interest arid was
.much talked of, several companies be
ing formed to engage in bottle manu
facture by this method, bat none, if
they " still survive, has succeeded in
putting any great amount of ware on
the markets of the world. .
MACHINES FOR BUSINESS.
An Office .Containing Appliances for Rapid
' Communication. .-
"The desk of' a business man nowa
days is quite a mass of machinery,"
said the manager for a commercial
firm to a Washington Star writer. "Ob
serve this one of mine for example.
"To begin with, here - is a phono-1
graph, into which I dictate all my let
ters. Afterward a young woman who
acts as my amanuensis takes the
cylinders and copies them off. For
communication '-. otherwise than by
writing, I have at my hand a small
stand which supports a telephone. It
is ornamental" and movable. I put it
out of the way or set it in front of me,
according to my convenience.
"With this little instrument I can
talk from my desk: with all the world.
It is a long distance telephone", and
with it I can call up Boston as easily as
Baltimore. Besides, I have at my
other elbow a similar contrivance for
communicating with the various rooms
under my superintendence in this
building. At a moment's notice I can
make connection with any one of them
by sticking the plug into the proper
place In this circuit board.
"My desk is a center to which ever
so many wires run for a score of dif
ferent purposes. Some of them fur
nish me with electric lights. Others
give power to my electric fan. Over
head you will notice a clock, which at
noon every day is corrected by elec
tricity from the naval observatory. Sly
office is a nest of machines and wires,
the latter, reaching out to the utter
most ends of the earth. For, by means
of this telegraph sounder at my left
hand, I can transmit, intelligence to
Europe, to India, to New Zealand, or
to Ilong Kong. It is not without rea
son that this is called the age of me
chanical civilization."
- McClnre's Magazine. (
'A more notable magazine in the names
of its contributors than the March
McClure's, has rarely come from the
press. Kipling, Herbert Spencer, Robert
Louis Stevenson, Conan Doyle,- and
Octave Tbanet certainly make a. list
that it is hard to equal. - And what is
more to the point, the contributions are
quite as distinguished as the contribu
tors. In fresh ness and importance of
imformation Miss Ida M. Tarbell's ac
count of the scientific method of identi
fying criminals in France must be pro
nounced the leading article of the num
ber. It is illustrated from photographs
especially provided by M. Bertillou, the
inventor of the method. ' The subjects of
the "Human Documents", portraits are
Andrew Lang, J. T. Trowbridge, and
Renan. -
Mrs. Emily Thorne, 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
sale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists.
Another Mystery Solved.
A Southern- man says that the Rev.
Mr. Jasper of Richmond, who believes
that "the sun do inove," is the author
of an original and unique explanation
of the story of Jonah and the Whale. It
is as follows: "Dat country war a sea
shoah, an' de hotels dey was named
after de . tings ob de sea. Dah was de
Sailors' Rest, de Mariners'' Retreat, de
Seafaring Man's Home an' a lot ob sich
places, jest as yo' kin fin' 'em at Nor
folk now. Among dese places was one
called 4e Whale's Belly Jonah come
along an' he didn' hab no scrip in his
purse. He stayed dar tree days, and
when de landlady found he didn' had
no money she spewed him out. It is
gib to us to show how when we don't
treat a man right kase he's pore we may
be kickin' an angel unaware. " '
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
sale by Blakeley & Houghton, drug
gists. - -
Prize Definitions of ''Honeymoon. :
Recent competition in an English
paper called for the best definition of
"honeymoon." Here are those reck
oned the best : "A duet not necessarily
a harmony." "A curtain raiser.'.' "A
poetical preface to. a volume of prose."
"Cupid's last carnival." "The mirageB
at the entrance of matrimony." ' "Ar
cadia united," "Commences with il
lusions, ends with disillusions." . "The
lull before the storm." Out of a long
list the only . two definitions conceived
in a genial spirit were: "A preliminary
canter" and "Sweetness and light for
two." " ' , .
State of Ohio, City of Toledo,)
. . .Lucas County. ) ea
Fbank J. Cheney makes oath that he
is the senior partner of the firm of F. J.
Cheney & Co., doing business in the
City of - Toledo, county and .state afore
said, and that said firm will pay the sum
of One Hondked. Dollars for each and
every , case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured-by the. use of Hall's Catarrh
Cube. - Frank J. Cheney. ,
Sworn to before me and subscribed in
my presence, this 6th day of December,
A. D. 1886. . - A. W. Gleason, .
seal. 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. :
. . If you wish to see a fine assortment of
oranges, lemons and bananas just call
and see the display at H. H, Carbpbell'e,
next door to the postoffice
There are too many signs, "Closed at
4 o'clock," and "Closed on Saturdays,"
etc. This country needs to wake up
from such slotbfulness and push ahead.
The calamity howlers have had their
way too long depressing business when
there should be prosperity. Let there
be honesty and faithfulness in business,
and confidence will soon be restored
without regard to the McKinley bill, the
Wilson bill, the eilver bill, or anything
else bil-iou3 which is readily dissipated
by Simmons Liver Regulator. It starts
the liver going and sends out all the bile
in one's nature, gives a healthy spleen,
active brain, cheerful spirit, and that
confidence in . the future business pros
perity which Zeilin & Co., proprietors
of this medicine, must have caught.
They are paying their advertising bill in
advance. Telegraph.
-i r- . .
COMPOUND.
A recent discovery by an old
physician. Successfully used
pwnthly by . thousand of
Ladies. Is the only perfectly
safe and reliable medicine dis
covered. Beware of unprincipled druggists -who
oiler inferior medicines in place of this. Ask for
Cook's Cotton Root Compound, take no uwf
rute, or inclose $1 and O cents in postage in letter
and we will send, sealed, by return mall. Full scaled
particulars in plain envelope, to ladles only. 8
ptamps. Address rone. Lily company. "
.: Ko. S Fisher Block. Detroit, llicu.
Sold In The Dalles by Snipes dfc Kinersly.
- The postoffice department has a print
ed circular to send to correspondents
who write to ask how much the govern
ment pays for cancelled stamps. This
became necessary on account of the large
number of people who seem to think
that there is value in such stamps. '
Xa Grippe.
During the prevalence of the grippe
the past seasons it was. a noticeable fact
that those who depended upon . Dr.
King's New Discovery, not only had a
speedy recovery, but escaped ail of the
troublesome after effects of the malady.
This remedy seems to have a peculiar
power in effecting rapid cures not only
in cases of la grippe,. but in all diseases
of throat, chest and lungs, and has cured
cases of asthma and hay fever of long
standihg. - Try it and be convinced. It
won't disappoint. Free trial bottles at
Snipes & Kinersly's drug store. - t
. Taken Up. .
One red cow about 6 or 7 years old,
has a swallow fork mark in right and
crop of the left ear. Also one roan
heifer, ear marks - the same as the cow.
The owner can have them by calling on
me and paying charges.
August Long been,
j24wlm. Kndersby, Or.
J. F. FOBD, Evanffelist,
Of Dcs Moines, Iowa, writes under date o)
March 23, 1S93:
S. B. Med. Mfo. Co.,
Dufur, Oregon.
Gentlemen: '
On arriving home last week, I found
all well and anxiously awaitinz. Our
kfit'tle girl, eight and one-half years old,
f l 1 j Aj x no a
wiiu ijbu w tta lku away wj oo puuuus, le
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 you wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and ready
for the Spring's work, cleanse your syBtem with
the Headache and Liver Cure, by taking two ot
three doses each week.
Sold under a positive guarantee.
60 cents per bottle by all druggists. '
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
U. S. Land Omci, The Dalles, Or., J
Feb. 2e. 1894.
Notice is hereby given that the following
nanted settler has filed notice of his intention to
moke filial proof in support of his claim, and
that said proof will be made before the register
and receiver of the UJ 8. Land office at The
Dalles, Or., ou April 17, 1894, viz:
Oliver M. Boarland, .
Hd. No. 3775, for the SEU NWJi, NEJ4 SWJi, and
WU SFAi. Sec 7. Tt 2 S. H 14 E.
He names the following witnesses to prove his
continuous residence upon and cultivation of
sam land, viz:
J. A. Gulliford, Dufur, Or.; Lepra nd Holgate,
Boyd, Or.; King Montgomery, T. C. Faigher,
Dufur, Or.
mar3-aprl4 JOHN W. LEWIS, Register.
SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of an 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 plaintiff, in a suit wherein Maximilian
Vogt and Phillipine Chapman were plaintiff's,
and Augustus Bunnell, John it. Foster and Da
vid Robertson, nartners as Foster & Robertson.
and Mrs. D. E. Price were defendants, and to me
airectea ana aeu verea, commanaing 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 the
nignesi Diaaer. lor casn in nana, on baturauy,
the 31st day of March, 189r
at 2 o'clock in the afternoon ot said day, at the
iront Qoor oi tne county court House in Dalles
City, in Wasco County, Oregon, all of the lands
and premises described in said writ, and herein
described as iollows, to-wit:
The south half of those certain lots known as
the Bickle lots in Trevitt'a Addition to Dalles
City, on the road from said city to the U. 8. Gar
rison a formerly travelled, and being the same
property conveyed by Griffith E. Williams and
wife to said A. Bunnell, by deed duly recorded
at page 853 of Book "E" of deeds for Wasco
county, Oregon, and which are particularly de
scribed and bounded as follows, to-wit: Com
mencing on the east line of Liberty street at a
point on said line 170 feet southerly from a point
on me fcoutn uue oi r ourui street wnere ine
same 4s intersected by said east line of Liberty
street; thence southerly along said east line of
Liberty street 60 feet; thence easterly and at
right angles with said first line 104 feet: thence
northerly 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,
Oregon, together with the tenements, heredlta
ments and appurtenances thereunto belonging
or in anywise appertaining: or so much thereof
is shall be sufficient to satisfy the sum of $ 1124.40,
with interest hereon at the rate of 8 percent,
per annum since the 16th day of February. 1894;
$100 attorney's feet, and $37.20 costs in said suit,
together with costs of said writ and accruing
costs of sale. T.A.WARD,.
. - Sheriff of Wasco County, Oregon.
Dated at Dalles City, Or., March 2d, 1894.
mchSwot
fc York Weekly Tribune
-AND-
LY
D. BUNIM
Pipe Woii Tin; Bepairs
MAINS TAPPED UNDER PRESSURE.
Shop on Third Street, next door west of Young Kuss'
' Blacksmith Shop. ;
"Wasco County,
The Gate City, of .the Inland Empire is situated at the head
of navigation on the Middle Columbia, and is a thriving, pros
perous city. ,
ITS TERRITORY. V
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. . ,
i 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 rinds 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. , ' - .
- 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. Irs climate delightful. Its pos
sibilities incalculable. Its resources unlimited. And on these
corner. "tones sl st inls. .
SHERIFF'S SALE.
Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an ex
ecution issued out of the Circuit Court of tbe
State bf 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 $290.00 and interest thereon at the rate
of eight per cent per annum from September 22,
1893, and the sum of $2,400.00 and interest
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
. . tbe 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
gon, seU at public sale to the highest bidder, for
cash in hand, all of the following-described real
property, to-wit: The south half of the south
west quarter, 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 quar
ter, the northeast quarter of the northwest quar
ter and tbe southeast quarter of the northeast
Suarter of Section 83, Township 1 North, Range
3 East, W. M., containing 160 acres, to satisfy
said sums and a a cruing costs.
T. A. Ward
JlOwtdv - 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.
Hates Heasonble.
MARK GOODS
W. "W- Oo.
' THE DALLES, OR
i . -
ag flooring
Oregon,
Guardian's Notice.
Notice is hereby given that the uudersigned
has been appointed by the County Court of
Wasco County, Oregon, guardian of the person
and estate of tars Carsen.
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 & Wilson, within six
months from ths date hereof.
Dated at Dalles City, this 6th day of Jan., 1894.
J10w5ptl W. T. WISEMAN.
T T T I Times makes it all the mor
J ill L necessary to advertise. That is
I I U what the most progressive of our
1 business men think, and these samebus
lnuia man nT-ot.liA tnrist nmRTtemus at nil timpjL
If you wish to reach all the reople in this neigh-
DOrnoou you call t uu uemc nion uu& w Uiciu
through the columns of the Daily Chboniclb
It has more than double the circulation of any
other paper, and adveitis ng in it pays big
COPPER-.
RIVETED
Manufactured by
LEVI STRAUSS & CO.,
San Francisco, Calif.
Every ;
Garment
Guaranteed.
FO& SALE BY
THE DALLES, OREGON. . "
Clothm
1
V.