TO SmP THE PROGRESS of Consumption, you will find bat - one guaranteed remedy Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. In advanced cases, it brings comfort and relief; if you haven't delayed too long, it will certainly euro. It doesn't claim too much. It won't make new lungs -nothing can ; but , it will make diseased ones sound . and healthy, when everything else lias failed. The scrofulous affection of the .Jongs that's caused Consumption, like every other form of Scrofula. and every blood-taint and disorder, yields to the "Discovery." It is .he most effective blood - cleanser, strength -restorer, and flesh -builder known to medical science. In all Bronchial, Throat and Lung Affec- ' tions, if it ever fails to benefit or care, you have your money back. A perfect and "permanent cure for your Catarrh or $500 in cash. This is prom ised by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Easily, Qolckly, Permanently Restored. WEAKNESS, . NERVOUSNESS, DEBILITY, and all the train of arils from early error or lmter exoesses, tee results of overwork, sickness, worry, eto. Full strength, development and tons given to very organ and Sortion of the body. Imple. naturalmstnods. Immediate Improvement seen. Fell are Impossible. 2.000 references. Book. explanation and proofs mailed (sealed) tree. ERIE MEDICAL CO. BUFFALO. N. Y. . THOSE WHO WISH Glass, Lime, Cement, PLASTER LATH. Picture Frames, -such As- Shafting, Pulley s, Belting, Engine and Boiler, CALL AND SKE "The Regulator Line" Tie Dalles, MM aM Astoria Navigation Co. THEOTJQH Freigni aua PEssengsr Llus Through Daily Trips ( Sunday b ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves Tbe 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. . PA8BENOER BATES. 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. -;: . Shijjments for Portland received at amy time day or night. Shipments for way landings must be delivered before 0 p. m. Live stock shipments; solicted. Call on or address, .. ' W. C; ALLAWAY, general Agent. B. F. LAUGH LIN. - ; General Manager. ' THE DALLES. OREGON I TWO SPORTSMEN'S LUCK. One Get Deer Without Trying and. One ' Can't Even See Them. He had just returned from a deer shooting' trip and vias telling about a handsome buck which he had shot, says the New York. Tribune. He was not "poBinjf" as a great deer-hunter, for, as he said: "It's all lock with me. I first went after deer three years tlgo. On the morning after I reached the camp in the mountains we drew lots for our rainways. I got only a fairly decent one It was very cold that morning', and I stood back to a tree trying to keep warm by smoking and shrinking up in my big mackintosh. For an hour I had heard the dogs barking up on the hill- They did not seem to get much nearer until suddenly they were right upon me. From the woods down to the water there was a clearing for a dis tance of one thousand yards. In an in stant my fine fellow struck the clear ing. He was . making for the water, running magnificently, with ' his head up and his horns tossing. ' I felt just one fierce thrill and then I tried for him. ' I had him as soon as he reached the water. The uext year I was in a boat when I saw my buck. The hounds had driven him to the water, and be was swimming straight down-stream. I started to row after him, and then seeing that it was useless to try to get nearer with my heavy boat, I" tried for him at long range. He turned when I hit him and swam toward the bank. . 1 fired again and waited for him. He was a tremendous, fellow, lie came out with his two feet on the bank, and as he lifted his quarters heavily I got him. This year I got a good runway, and on the second day saw my buck chased in to the water. ' It was a little long range, but I had a fine chance and secured him with three shots. So you see luck counts for something- Another man in the party agreed with the speaker perfectly. "I have gone out for deer," he said, "every fall for seven years. I suppose I have spent several thousand dollars on my deer- hunting.' And how many deer do you think I have shot? Not one. We have a fine camp. Everyone else in our party always gets a deer. The men give me the best runways and the best hounds, and yet I have never shot a deer. Do you think that is bad luck? Well, I'll tell you something else. In all those seven years spent in camp, de spite all the favors shown me, I have never had the good fortune even to see a deer on my runways. And if after the first story and mine you will not agree with me that 1 am an unlucky deer-hunter, I'll give up." Everyone agreed with him, and yet he says he' is eointr out a train next fall for the deer which he never sees. PIGEONS FOR NAVAL USE. They Will Be Made Part of the Service I the United States. The United States practice ship Con stellation, which recently sailed on the cadets summer voyage, had aboard a number of homing pigeons, to be used as means of communication between the ship and points ashore. The birds will be liberated at intervals and are expected to bring official messages from the practice vessel to the naval acade my, where a loft or cote has recently been established, says . the Baltimore Sun. If the experiment should prove suc cessful the government would prob ably find it profitable to the' navy to encourage the homing pigeon service with the""small appropriation needed to carry out the plans of the projectors of the enterprise. At present the facilities for training birds at the naval academy are limited, no government appropria tion being available. At Fortress Monroe, the first stopping place of the ship, it is possible several trained birds from Baltimore. Phila delphia and New York will be taken aboard and dispatched with..informa tion from the cruising grounds. The headquarters at Washington will also be posted of the whereabouts of the vessel through winged messengers from that city. A lot of the birds to accompany the ship willi.no doubt be sufficiently trained toward the close of the voyage to be useful in conveying messages ashore. The practicability of the homing pigeon service has been satisfactorily tested by communications , with the ships of war -anchored off Annapolis and from vessels plying between Balti more, Annapolis and other points. . If these experiments should be successful they will demonstrate the possibility of a vessel cruising along the coast at a distance of over one hundred miles, where no other means of communica tion would be possible, to be kept in constant intercourse with the shore. This promp service, -it is claimed, would be a crreat advantage to the gov- ! erament. Ths experiments will be con ; tinned during the entire cruise of the j ship and will be watched with unusual ONE OF THE MYSTERIES. Something About Sound That Cannot Bs Understood. "I am an old man," he said slowly to a Memphis Appeal-Avalanche reporter, "and I've lived a long time longer than most men who have lived as long as I have, for there's mighty little - in this world that I oughtn't to know that I don't knows but there is one thing I don't know,' and I've been trying to learn it for fifty years, more or less." "What's that?" interrupted Gamaliel, who is but a bee inner. . - Japaaeve Oaths. "7 A' Japanese journal. Vlcseribing the manner of swearing witToecs in native courts, r.sys that the Japanese hold a man's senl much more sacred than his word. Ueneo his oath is -written out and road to him in open court, after which he affixes his soa.1 to it. Like wise lJi"i testiiaonyi after it ia in, is re duced to writing by the clerk, read to the witness, who mal;e3 any corrections in it that, he sees fit, after -which he is requesteci to" put hia aer-l to it- before he leaves the court. This method of taking evidence consumes some time, but it leaves no room for stenographer's errors. QUEER WITCH STORIES. Some People Who Still Believe In TYitch- - -.craft. What funny stories come out of Berks county. Pa., about witches and witch doctors, - and . those who enjoy them most are the educated Berks county people, who laugh at the superstitious fears of foolish and ignorant neighbors. ( Not long ago the members of a family in one of the country districts were all taken sick, and the first tiling the head of the family did was to consult a witch doctor, who told him the sick people were bewitched. He was told to drive a nail in the sill of his barn door," witb- a single blow of the hammer, three mornings in succession. He did this. but it i not staled that the sick people got well. The man insists, however, that the woman who bewitched his fam ily was killed by the nails he drove into the sill, and as un old woman in the neighborhood happened to give up the ghost his superstitious neighbors agree with him that lie has killed a witch. In another township a young girl who was in love with a country youth went to a witch doctor for a love-powder to give the young man that would compel him to reciproc ate her affection. . She got the powder, but in giving it secretly to the young follow she incautiously made known her desire that he should marry her, whereupon he seized hu. hat and fled out into the wide, vide world, and he hasn't been heard from since. - . . ' To Monut a- Coach. . '"I'hi.iv tK KiiiVLi a rlifrVrenco " said a I man on the piazza at a Clare raoat tea a few days ago. in the way a woman mounts or descends from- a coach or drag. There is a certain .'.kill about it which comes only from considerable practice. A woman in America scarce ly gets enough experience to acquire this, but many American 'women who have coached a great deal in Europe show this schooling at once. She should use only one hand to touch the coach and the other should rest on the shoul der of the groom or the gentleman who is assisting her. Above all, she should show and know no fear, a condition of confidence .that is rarely acquired ex ;ept after many mounts." WALLED LAKE OF IOWA. Nearly Three Thousand Acres of Water Inclosed by a Natural Boundary. The vast region which lies to the west of the Mississippi river is well provided with wonders in the shape of natural and artificial curiosities. Devil's tower, Spirit lake, Christ's table, the Red Snow mountain, the geysers of the Yellow stone park, besides many minor oddi ties, beinsr among- the number, but none nas a more widespread lame loan tne 1 wonderful "walled lake" in Wright county, Iowa. ' The ; lake occupies a ground surface of two thousand eight -hundred acres,' and its entire surface is from four to ten feet higher than any point of land in the immediate vicinity, the waters being kept in bounds by an immense natural or artificial stone wall composed of bowlders estimated -to weigh from one hundred pounds up to three tons each. . In some places, where two or three of the larger stones lie close together, the interstices are chinked with smaller bowlders so evenly and in such a workmanlike manner as to preclude all idea of its be ing the work of other than intelligent beings. Originally the wall was from ten to fifteen feet in height, very broad at the bottom and taperang up to an av erage of four feet at the top. Some 'scientists argue that the wall is the re sult of "consecutive freezing of the wa ters of the lake that the action of the ice cn the sides of ,the embankment forced the stones into their present po sition. The Philadelphia Press says that those who take this view of the matter have failed to notice that, al though there is plenty of stone in Vright county, there is absolutely none within a radius of ten miles of the lake Those who believe the work to have been done by prehistoric man claim that at one time the vicinity of the Jake wa strewn with bowlders (as is most oi northern Iowa, having been one of the regions that was covered with the de bris of the glacial age), but that they were all gathered up by the busy beings of long ago and fashioned into the wall which causes so much amazement ir. the Hawkeye of to-day. OLD LONDON CHURCHES. The Pestilential Airs with Which They Are Filled. - The church of St. Mary Woolnotli. which stands out conspicuously at the King William street corner of Lombard street, London, says the News of that city, was closed ten months ago, and it is clear from the statement of the rector that the step was not premature- It has been his unhappy lot to be often startled in the course of his. services by a loud, yet muffled sound, evidently is suing from the vaults under the church. As these vaults are now "hermetically sealed" the phenomenon may well havu excited the imaginations of timid mem bers of the congregation. Mr. Brooke, however, recognized the noises only too welL They were caused by the falling of leaden coffins, sometimes from a height of ten or twelve feet, in conse quence of the moldering away of the coffins of oak and elm on which they had been piled. It would be well if the evils of this relic of our barbarous system ' of intramural interment had ended here. Unfortunately the process of "hermetically sealinir," according'to Mr. Brooke's evidence before ' the con sistory court . of St. Paul's cathedral,, haa- beenv anything but "hermetical." Mr. Brooke declares that for years near ly every official had died from the ef fects, direct or indirect, of the unendur able smell. V -. - Arthur Btratham, the counsel repre senting the parish, stated that one thousand six hundred and eighty -onv adults and ' four hundred and twenty two children had been deposited in this horrible receptable between 17C0 and lSJa.. In the latter year, according to Mr. Stratham, the vault was closed for burials; but these burials in St. Mary Woolnoth, if burials they can be called were -continued for at least twelve years after the latter date.. . It Should Be In Eiery House J. B. Wilson, 371 Clay St., Sharps borg, Pa., says he will not be without Dr. King's New Discovery for consump tion, coughs and colds, that it cared 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. Robert Barber, of Cook sport, Fa., 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 & Kia ersly'a. Large bottles, 50c. and $1.00. MULTUM IN PARVO. , Eettkb were it to be unborn than to be ill-bred. Sir W. Raleigh. The acts of this life are the destiny of the next. Eastern Proverb. " Pmovekbs the wisdom of many and the wit of pne; EoTd John BusselL . -.' . VOTIVE. ;" To Whom it Slay Concern: Notice is hereby given that by order of the common council made and en tered on tbe 3rd day of May, 1-894, 1 was authorized and directed to advertise the matters substantially contained in the docket of city lien of the assessment of property for tbe construction of an 8 inch terra cotta lewer in Lincoln street as provided by special ordinance No. 285, which passed the common council of Dalles Citv March 12th, 1894, and traa annrnvs-rl hv the mavor March 13th. 1894 That the assessments which have not been paid upon the property as now ap pears in said lien docket are as follows : Lots 8 and 8, block I Trevitt's Ad- dition, Capt. McNulty ...... . . $49 SO Lots 4, 5 and 6, block 1, Trevitt's .. Addition, Mrs. Mary. Booth ... 73 95 Lot 3, block 1. Trevitt's Addition, J. L. Thompson r. . . 24-65 Lots 1 and 2 and iW 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 nnless within five days from the final rmblication of this notice, to-wlt. Monday, May 28th, 1894, as req aired by Sec. 74 of the charter of UaUes Uity, said sums above mentioned are not wholly paid to the city treasurer and a duplicate receipt therefor filed with the recorder of Dalles City, tbe council will order a warrant for the collection of the same,' to be issued by the recorder and dhected to the marshal. Dated at Dalles City, Oregon, this 8th day of May, 1894. . Douglas S. Durca, mS-14t V Recorder of Dalles City. Rheumatisms Lumbago Sciatica, Kidney Complaints, Lame BacK, ac 03, SASCEH'S ELECT3IS BELT With Eleotro-Maenetto 8UBPENSORY Latest Patents I Ueet lritswu I Win cure without medicine all Wiahsiw respiting from orrrr-taxatlou of brain nerve foreest excesses or India. . crptlon, as nervous debility, sleeplessness, languor, rheumatism, kidney, liver and bladder complaints, lame back, lumbago, aotatlca, all female complaints. Seaeral 111 health, etc This eleetrlo Bert contain r.SernU laiprmaMsCs OTer all others. Cnrrent is blatantly felt br wearer or we forfeit 000.06. and Will cure all of the above diseases or no pay. Thou. u.nds have been cured by this marvelous invention after all other remedies failed, and we sire hundreds ef testimonials in this and every other state. Oar Pewerfel hqmrt EXBCTRIC BUWKTROKT. the aretest boon ever offored weak men, FKBK with aq Unit aad npmu Mraavll, OCAm2llTKBO la SO ta SO ers Send for IUus'd Pamphlet, roaiW .sealed, free SANOEN ELECTRIC OO., OTo. IT Kirs SU-eet, IOKTXiaVK OBE. Removed to corner Third and Washington streets, Portland. Or. J. F. FORD, EraapUst, Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes March 38. 1W8: nnder date 01 S. B. Med. Mfg. Co., Dufnr, Oregon. Gentlemen On arriving home last week, 1 found all well and anxionsly awaiting. Oar little girl, eight and one-half years old, who bad wasted away to 38 pounds, is now well, strong and vigorous, and well fleshed up. S. B. Cough Care has done its work well. Both of the children like it. Yonr S. B. Congh Care has cared and kept away all hoarseness from me. 80 Rive it to every one, with greetings for all. Wishing yon prosperity, we are Yours, Ma. & Mb3. J. F. Fokd. If you wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and ready for the Spring's work, oleanae yonr system with the Headache and liver Cnro, by taking two 01 three doses each week. Sold under a positive guarantee. 60 eonta per bottle by all aruggirts. COPYRIGHTS.- CAW I OBTAIN A PATENT For prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to MUNN fc CO., who have bad nearly fifty years' experience In the patent bosiness. Communica tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of In formation concern ingr Patent and bow to ob tain them sent free. Also a catalogue OammbaD teal and scientillo books sent tree. Patents taken throosh Huso ft Co. reoalre special nottoeinthe Acientifie American, and tons are brought widely before tbe public with uufc net tj luh inventor, i uia spienaia paper. issued weekly, elegantly Illustrated, has by t largest circulation of any scientino work in th rartna world. . S3 a ye cauipio iDle eoDles sent free. - Hniimrur Rviiti tion. monthly, 2.60 a year. Btngto eooles. oenta. Kverv number enntalna bean. tlful nlates. In colors, and DbotOffranhs nl plates. In colors, and pbotoeTaphs of new nouses, with plans, enabling builders to snow T ha latest desiens and secure oontracta. Address MUNN & CO, w Yoiuc, 361 BuucwiT. House Moving! Andrew Velarde IS prepared to do any and all kinds of work in his line at ' reasonable figures, ' - Has the largest honse moving outfit . in Eastern Oregon. Address P.O.Box 181. The Dalles ew; srvfri' Hew Yor AND- HE 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. It is the supply city for an extensive and rich agricultural and grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer liake, 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. . ' - v 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 mora than doubled in the near future. . x . 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.- ,v . - ; ' . . . ' .. - 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 inoalculn'uli-- Its resouroes unlimited. And on these -orner "tont-a li-"Mii'lii. v : . When lis Tain stop at THE DALIES, get off on the Scott Side . flE W COliU WSIR HOTEIi. .y,; : : ' : . : -of . . ;- - ..- -.- . -. . , ,.--.(, This large and popular Hooee doe fie principal hotel business, and is prepared to furnish the .vt Accommodations of any - House in the cityi and at the low rate of '. $1.00 per Day. - pirst Qlass Teals, 25 Cepts. OfBoe for ali Stae Xlnes lea vln a The Dalles for all points in Eastern Orefsa and Kastera Washington, ' lathis Hotel. Comer of Front and Union 81a. 'There is a tide in the affairs - leads on The poet unquestionably, had reference to the. Clsii-Oit o! at CRANDALL & BURGET'S, Who are selling those goods outsat greatly-reduced rates;' MICHELBAOH BRICK. D . B UIM N Pipe Worfc, ti MAINS TAPPED Shop on Third Street, next door west of Young & Kusa' ; Blacksmith Shop. , . Tribune Oregon, T. T. NICHOLAS, Propr. of men which, taken at its JiooA to fortune" ' UNION 8T. UNDER PRESSURE. , ;