SOMETHING UNUSUAL, ' s a medicine, is Dr. Pierce'a Golden Jledical Discovery. And, because f that, there's something unusual in the way of selling it. Where every other medicine of its kind only promises, this is guaranteed. If it ever fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. It's the only guaranteed remedy for every disease caused by a disor dered liver or impure blood. Dys pepsia, Biliousness, the most stub . born Skin, Scalp and Scrofulous affections, even Consumption ( or Imng-scrof ula ) in its earliest stages, all are cured by it. It purifies and enriehes the blood, rouses every organ into healthful action, and restores strength and vigor. In building up boh flesh .and strength of pale, puny, Scrofu lous children, or to invigorate and brace up the system after " Grippe," Dneumonia. fevers, and other pros trating acute diseases, nothing can equal the " Discovery." You pay only for the good you get. 0FTiH Easily, Qntckfy, Permanently Restorttf. WEAKNESS, NERVOUSNESS, DEBILITY, and all the train of mvW from early errors or later excesses, tbe results of overwork, sickness, worrr.eto. Pull strength, development and tone given to every organ and portion of tbe body. Simple, natUTalmethods. Immediate Improvement een. Fallnre Impossible. 2,000 references. Book, explanation and proofs mailed (sealed) free. ERIE MEDICAL CO. BUFFALO. N. Y. THOSE WHO WISH Glass, Lime, Cement, PLASTER LATH. Picture ppames, AND -such As- Shafting, Pulleys, Beltufg, Engine and Boiler, CALL AND SEE 3E3L. C3-XjE3ST3ST, "The Regulator Line" Tie Dalles, Portland and 'Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH FieigHt and Passenger line Through Daily Trips (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a. m., connecting at the Cas cade Locks with Steamer Dalles City. Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland (Yamhill st. dock) at 6 a. m., connect ing with Steamer Regulator for The Dalles. PASSENGER BATES. Oneway.-.. Bound 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 5 p. m. live stock shipments solicted. Jail on or address, W. C. ALLAWAY, General Agent. B. F.XAUGHL.N,:!!! General Manager. THE DALLES, OREGON VIM WILD CAMELS IN , AMERICA. A Herd of. More Taau Sixty Kosmiut the Arizona Ieaert. The camels that were broughl to this country before the war, to be used by our army as draft animals in the de serts of . the southwest, are still to be seen or rather their descendants roaming the sands of Arizona, between Yuma and Ehrenberg on the north and south and Wickenburg and the Colorado river on the east and west. The herd has increased to more than sixty, al though many of the animals have been taken away by circus men and others have been killed by prospectors. As "ships of the desert" they were a fail ure, the pebbles and rocks of the foot hills proving too hard on their -feet, which became, so sore that they were finally turned loose to shift for them selves. In those days there were no white luen to speak of in the region of the Arizona desert, and the wanderers had nothing to fear from Indians, who superstitiously gave them a wide berth. Not so the prospectors when they came. Their high spirited little mustangs were so often stampeded at the sight of the long-necked and unwieldly beasts that the riders found it convenient to take a shot at them whenever opportunity of fered. A prospector, writing of his first experience with the expatriated camel, says: "We were coming through a vast expanse of grease weed, almost as high as my head, when suddenly the burro popped, raised his head, and gave a snort that could have been heard half a mile. I thought it must have been In dians, and, throwing a cartridge into my Winchoster,.took cover in the brush. Peering over t Tie top of the wheels I soon saw the camels coming with their peculiar, swinging trot, showing only their heads and humps above the brushy That burro evinced more life than I had ever seen him show before, and I do not think any horse in the country could have outrun him. My pack broke in the first one hundred yards, and meat, beans, coifec and tools wore scattered for five miles. The camels went on their way, and it was several 'years until I saw them again, when one of them was captured and brought into Phoenix, where it finally died." He thinks the government ought to take some steps to protect the camels against malicious injury by trappers and prospectors. FUTURE SPEED OF STEAMERS. Will Tic Regulated by the Material Out of Which Ships Are Built. It must be remembered that increased speed is not simply a question of more power relatively to displacement, but that each shape of vessel has a speed to which it is especially adapted, and that any attempt to drive it beyond that speed would lead to a great expendi ture of power with little useful result, as the energy would be chiefly ex pended in raising waves! It is found by experiment that for ordinary speeds the resistance of the water to the pas sage of the ship through it is propor tioned to the square of the speed, and, as the work to be done is equal to the resistance multiplied by the velocity, it follows that the power needed to propel a ship varies as the cube of the sp eed. For higher speeds it varies at a higher power than the cube, which can only be ascertained by experiments with actual ships or with carefully-prepared models. , It can also be shown that the power required for propulsion varies approximately as the cube root of the square of the displacement. ' These points must be carefully re membered iii considering the possibili ties of still further increased speeds, and they shQW the necessity for increas ing the size along with the speed. If anything .like the present speed had been attempted with vessels of the size which were common on the Atlantic thirty or forty years ago, the Scottish Review says, the size of engines re quired, and the extra expenses involved, would have reduced the earning power of the ships very much, and possibly in many cases made it disappear, but re membering the second of the above mentioned points, namely, that the power required varies as the cube root of the displacement squared, it is evi dent that the proportion of power to tonnage will decrease considerably as the sizes of the ships increase, and con sequently that it will be more eco nomical to propel a large ship at higher 6peed than a small one. The future development? of the steamship, how ever, depends on conditions about which it is impossible to say anything very definite. The materials of con struction have been changed from wood to iron, and from that again to steel. We cannot foretell the possibil ities of bronze, manganese, aluminum and other metals. JUBILEE. POSTAGE STAMPS. They Will Illustrate the Discovery of America by Columbus. Third Assistant Postmaster General Hazen, ' pursuant to the recommenda tion of the chiefs of the post office de partment, has caused to be issued a cir cular to all countries composing the postal union, inviting them to make an exhibit at the world's fair, Chicago.- It is expected that the postal exhibit of this, as well as that of foreign coun tries, will be very complete. Mr. Hazen is preparing designs for a set of stamps to be issued by the post office depart ment in honor ol the four hundreth an niversary of the discovery of America by Columbus. One of the scenes to ba illustrated undoubtedly is the landing of Columbus. The convent of La Eibida, where Co lumbus was housed just before his de parture from Spain, on .his voyage of discovery, may be the chief figure of another. The head of Columbus will decorate one of the stamps, probably the two-cent stamp. ' It is not the in tention of the department to retire per manently the current issue of stamps, but it is likely that the issue will be suspended for a year, and that at the end of that time the dies and plates for the jubilee stamps will be destroyed, and the old-dies and plates will be de livered to the contractor- again. The intention ' now is to have only one por trait on any of the stamps, that of Co lumbus. . Gen. Hazen expects to have them on sale January 1. "', UNCANNY. COCO DE MER. I Is sv Double (nisnnt That Grow STo. Itocly Knows Where.' After years of vain " negotiations the Royal Botanical society of London has at last obtained a. specimen of that rarest of oriental rarities, the coco de mer, or' double coaoanut. . For hundreds of years, and eveni in the year iMfcJ, the origin of the ' coco de mer is a mystery that is yet to be explained-. It is unknown to cocoannt growers and' gatherers, and, according to creditable testimony, has never been seen except when washed upon the shores of some tropical country by a mighty storm. Lilly, the famous as trologer, owned a small cne.andCamac, ot ruris, another. To these uncauny nuts the ignorant masses of the seventeenth century at tributed many of the supernatural feats said to have been performed by their owners. They were and are sup posed to have wonderful powers in the way of curing diseases. At pne time it was reported that there was a species ( of cocoannt tree growing on the. island ot oepcnelies wmeli grew nothing but these wonderful nuts. Williams, - E. N., exploded the story and the coco de mer is still a mystery. Persons who sympathize with the afflicted will rejoice with D. E. Carrof 1235 Harrison street, Kansas City. He is an old sufferer from inflammatory rheumatism, but has not heretofore been troubled in this climate. Last winter he went up into Wisconsin, and in con sequence has had another attack. "It came upon me very acute and severe," he said. "My joints swelled and became inflamed ; sore to touch or almost to look at. Upon the urgent request of my mother-in-law I tried Chamberlain's Pain Balm to rednce the swelling and ease the pain, and to my agreeable sur prise, it did both. I have used three fifty-cent bottles and believe it to be the finest thing for rheumatism, pains and swellings extant. For sale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists. Ix Canada- thej, prefer to fly their carrier pigeons from the east and not from the west, as is the custom in the United States. Hitherto A,he longest distance flown from the east in Canada has been three hundred miles. Deafness Cannot be Cured By local applications, as they cannot reach tbe diseased portion, of tbe ear. There is only one way to c$re Deafness, and that is by constitntional remedies. reafnesa is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of ' the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condi tion, bearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which 'is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (.caused by catanh' that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O- ' SPSold by Druggists, 75c. Mr. IIolikswobth has given to Birmingham some rentable houses, simply, as an endowment for a city. The town council accepted, with the hope that this "will be the first of a long line of such gifts." It Should Be in Every House J. B. Wilson, 371 Clay St., Sharps burg, Pa., says he will not be without Dr. King's New Discovery for consump tion, coughs and colds, thai it cured his wife who was threatened with pneumonia after an attack of "la grippe," when various other remedies and several phy sicians had done her no good. Kobert Barber, of Cooksport, Pa., claims Dr. King's New Discovery has done him more good than anything he ever used for lung trouble. Nothing like it. Try it. Free trial bottles at Snipes & Kin ersly's. Large bottles, 50c. and $1.00. The Santa Fe railroad is -running regular banana trains out of Galves ton in connection with the fruit steam ers from Central America. Bucklen's Arlnca Salve. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fevei sores', tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and . posi tively cur 68 piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale Dy Snipes & Kin ersly. ' - ' Alexander the Great had a hereditary tendency to drunkenness that embit tered his whole life. His father was very intemperate. ooMttonRoot COMPOUND. A recent dlseorery try aa old physician. Successfully used monthly bv thousand of Ladies. Is the only perfectly safe and reliable medicine dis covered. Beware of unprincipled druggists who offer Inferior medicines In place of this. Ask for Cook's Cotton Boot Compound, tab no substi tute, or Inclose $1 and 6 cents in postage In letter and we will send, sealed, by return maJU Pall sealed particulars la plain envelope,' to ladies only, 2 stamps. .Address Pon LI It Company. No. 3 Fisher Block. Detroit, Mich. Sold in The Dalles by Snipes & Kineraly. The regular subscription price of the Weekly Chronicle- is $1.50 and the regular price of the Weekly Oeegonian is $1.50. Anyone subscribing for The Chronicle and paying for one year in advance can get both The Chronicle and Weekly Obegoniax for $2.00. -' All old subscribers paying their subscrip tions for one year in advance will be en titled to tne same oner. " Haworth, printer, 116 Court St. tf Fishes That Breathe It is well known, says tlie Xew York Independent, that . the . garpike, often rtees to the surface and" breathes tlie air .direct, as it has a pneumatic duct con necting the throat with the air blcdder, Few. if , any of the modern lung fishes inliale the air direct. It is probable that the pirarucu of the Amazon, which has a large, lung-like swimming blad der,, breathes air in this way; while in southern Florida we were told that the jew fish, or tarpon, rises to the surface every few minutes to breathe, and that it has an air bladder eighteen inches lonjp. .-...",". Look at This. All count v warrants registered nrior to May 1, 1890, will be paid at my office. Interest ceases after tbe 21st inst. Wm. Michell, County Tress. " Dated May 19, 1894. . ; 2m.- ; .t-Etoetrio Bitters. " This remedy is becoming so 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 kidneys, will remove pimples, boils, salt rheum and '. "other affections caused by impure blood. Will drive malaria from tbe 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 Dome at Snipes & .hunersly s. " HOTICE. . . : . To Whom it Hay Concern: Notice is hereby given that by order of the common council made and en tered on tbe 3rd day of May, 1894, 1 was authorized and directed to advertise the matters substantially contained in the docket of city liens of the assessment of property for the construction of an 8 mch terra cotta sewer in Lincoln street as v provided bv special ordinance No, 285, which paesed the common council of Dalles City March 12th, 1894, and was approved Dy the mayor March 13th, That the assessments which have not been paid upon tbe property as now ap pears in said lien docket are as follows : JLots 8 and 9, block 1 Trevitt's Ad dition, Capt. McNnlty $49 30 J lxta 4, 6 and b, block 1, Trevitt s Addition, Mrs. Marv Booth... 73 95 Lot 3, block l,Trevittfs Addition, J. L. Thompson 24 65 Lots 1 and 2 and bK of 3, block 5 Trevitt's Addn Catholic church 123 25 Lot 8, block 2, Trevitt's Addition Mrs. T. W. Sparks 24 65 Lot 4, block 4, Trevitt's Addition, Mary Bonzey . 24 65 That unless within five days from the final publication of this notice, to-wit, Monday, May 28th, 1894, as required by Sec. 74 of the charter of Dalles City, said sums above mentioned are not wholly paid to tbe city treasurer and a duplicate receipt therefor filed with tbe recorder of Dalles City, the council will order a warrant for the collection of tbe same, to be issued by the recorder and directed to the marshal. Dated at Dalles Citv. Oregon, this Sth day of May, 1894. JJOUGLAS o. DUFUK, m8-14fc Recorder of Dalles City. Rheumatism -Lumbago. Sciatica, Kidney Complaints, Lame Back, &c D.1. SANDER'S ELECTRIC BELT With Electro-Magnetic SUSPENSORY. latest fsttents i imk jnproTeveiu I Wttl cure without medicine all Wirtim reaultlnj? from OT-er-t&xAtiou of brain nerro forces i xoenea or lndis eretion, as nervous debility, BleepleeBneas, languor, rheumatism, kidney, liver and bladder complaints, lame back, lumbago, sciatica, all female complaints, general ill health, etc. This electric Belt contains Wonderful In promaenU over all others. Current is Imtantly felt by wearer or we forfeit 6,000.00, and will core all of the above diseases or no pay. Thou inds have been cured bv this marvelous invention after all other remedies failed, and we give hundrecU of testimonials In this and every other state. Our Fewerfal bprmd KLKCTRIC SUBPENROBY. the rrrutest boon ever offered weak men, FitKK with 1 Belt. Uealtk and Tlfftraw Streavth GVARA5TKKD la SO t 90oa Bend for Ulua'd Pamphlet, maileC taeaied. free 8ANDEN ELECTRIC CO., Ko. 179 Klrat eii-eet, JOIKXXAJtf M OJEUU Removed to comer Third and Washington streets, Portland, Or. - J. F. FORD, EYaielist, Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes under date of . March 23, 1893: S. B. Med. Mfg. Co., Dnfur, Oregon. '. Gentlemen : On arriving home last week. 1 found all well and anxiously awaiting. ' Oar little girl, eight and one-half years old, who had wasted away to 38 pounds, ie now well, strong and vigorous, and well fleshed up. S. B. Cough Cure has done its work well. Both of the children like it. Yonr S. B. Congh Care has cored and kept away all hoarseness from me. So give it to every one, with greetinge tor an. wishing you prosperity, we are Yours, Ms. & Mrs. J. F. Ford. If yoa wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and read; for the Spring's work, cleanse your system with the Headache and Liver Cure, by taking two or three doses each week. Sold under a positive guarantee. . 60 cents per bottle by all druggists. COPYRIGHTS. CAW I OBTAIN A PATENT f For prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to MlINN & CO., who have had nearly flfty years' experience In the patent business. Comnmnlca tlons strictly confidential. A li an dboo k of In formation concerning Patent, and bow to ob tain tbem sent free. Also a catatogneolmeohAn. leal and scientlfio books sent free, i Patents taken through Mudd St Co. receive special notice in the Scientific American, and thus are brought widely before tbe public with, out cost to tbe inventor. This splendid psner. Issued weekly, elesantly illustrated, has by far tlie largest circulation of any scientific work tn the world. a year. Sample copies sent free. Building Edition, monthly, i.50 a year. Single eqpies.25 cents. Every number contains beau tiful plates, in colors, and pbotograpba of new bouses, witb plans, enabling builders to show too latest designs and secure contracts. AdUi ess AtUNN & CO, New York. 361 Bboaswat. Hew York -AND- The Wasco County, The Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the head f 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 ia 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 v 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. Its climate delightful. ' Its pos sibilities incalculable. Its resources unlimited. And on these .' :orner stones sh stnHK. - Wie the Train stops at THE DALLES, get off on ie South Side - 1 JiEW COliUJVTBm HOTELi. This large and popular House does tlie principal hotel business, ' ,,: and is prepared to .furnish the hest Accommodations of any House In the city, and at the low rate of . ' ' $1.00 per Day. - pirst Qlass Teals, 25 Cerpts. Office for all Stage I,lnes leaving; The Dalles for all ' ' ' ',. points In Kaatern Oregon and Kastern Washington, la this Hotel. Corner of Front and Union Sts. ''KThere is a tide in the affairs leads on TU a vA , iimhiIamoKN. Ur Ma.AA 4-a -'7 - ;" Cliiidiii Snip. W&$ -a Frtm & Hauls at CRANDALL Who are selling those goods MICHELBACH BRICK, D. BUNNELL. Pipe WfliR Tiij Bepaiis MAINS TAPPED UNDER PRESSURE. 7 Shop on Third Street, next door west of Young & Kuss Blacksmith Shop. ' ' Tribune ; ijniG Oregon, T. T. NICHOLAS, Propr. of men which, taken at its jtooa to fortune." 7 7- BUR GET'S. out at greatly-reduced rates. . - - UJffiON. T. '.