THE WEAKEST SPOT In your whole system, perhaps, is the liver. If that doesn't do its work of purifying the blood, more- 1 , T i .1 . irouuies come nom n man you can fcmember. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery acts upon this tveak spot as nothing else can. It rouses it up to healthy, natural action. By thoroughly purifying the blood, it Teaches, builds up, and invigorates every part of the system. For all diseases that depend on the liver or the blood Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Biliousness ; every form of Scrofula, even Consumption (or Lung-scrofula) in its earlier stages ; and the most stubborn Skin and Scalp Diseases, the " Discovery " is the only remedy so unfailing and effective that it can be guar anteed. If it doesn't benefit or cure, you have your money back. On these terms, it's an insult to your intelligence to have something else offered as " just as good." Dr. Saga's Catarrh Remedy by its mild, soothing, cleansing and heal ing properties, perfectly and perma nently cures Catarrh in tho Head. FAST SKATING IN HOLLAND. TTli Dutchman Doesn't Look Aandsome, N But He Goes a Lively Gait. . The average Dutchman of the south, though he can skate very well, looks -rather foolish on the ice. His short legs and wide breeches are admirable ad juncts to his nose, his thin, cocked toeard and the lumpishness of his ex pression, says Chambers' Journal. To be sure, this breadth makes him look important, but if he were less muscu lar it would be a sad hindrance to him in battling with the wind, which in win ter is apt to make skating in one di rection something of a trial. Tbe Fries lander, however, is taller, better pro portioned and in all rcspcct.3 a hand some fellow. The yellow beev J he some times wears seems to put him at once on a footing of affinity with the other members of that . respectable Anglo Saxon family to which we ourselves be long quite as much as his provincial speech and his blue eyes. He is a most masterful creature when once he has put on those quaint, old-fashioned skates of his, and thinks nothing of making a score of miles from one vil lage to another before you and I are ont of bed. As for the cold, what cares lie for it? He knows he must rely on that lusty circulation of his to keep . him from being benumbed, though he clothe ever so lightly, and seems more regardful for his head which a seal skin cap takes care of than of his well-shaped body. A Friesland canal in winter is as lively as anything can "be. Tho ice may not be very "erood. or of unquestionable strength,- but no sooner are the boats penned in and the broken pieces of ice sufficiently welded to allow him to skate between- them than the sport . begins. It is a feat of honor to be the first in the district, to cross the canal when the wintry season is in its youth. .tne name ol the bold lad is remem be red for a week or two, and I have nc doubt his pluck stands him in ; good stead in the esteem of the cherry cheeked damsels of his province, whose eyes dance past one so brightly when the ice festival is in full swing and journeying is ail acme on skates. . OFFICES ODDLY WON. The Applicants Attracted Notice by Doinf " Eccentric Things. ' "People sometimes obtain work from Uncle Sam . in peculiar ways," says the , San Francisco Argonaut. "Not so very long ago a poetess of fashion in a f ai western state became an office-seeker, adopting a novel method of pursuing her object. She appealed to a Unitec States senator, bombarding himwitr poetry by mail. ' Once a week regularlj he received from her a long letter in tht shape of a poem. Sometimes, he gol two a week. The poetry was probablj the worst that any poetess of passior lias ever produced. "At first he paid no attention to it Taut at length it began to prey upon hif mind. When this sort of thing hac gone on for five or six months he be came desperate. So finally he wrote tc lier, saying: 'Your poems have proved to me that you are unfit for any public office. Nevertheless, if you will cease writing and sending them to me I wil" get you a job. And he did. It is re corded that a man, appointed sixth ' auditor of the treasury, subject to ex amination, was asked to state the. dis tance of the moon from the earth. Hii written answer was simply: 'Not neai enough to affect the functions of i sixth auditor.,' He passed. Tobacco Cfaerm(f naiul ' Says a tobacconist in the Boston Sat trrday Evening Gazette: "For a long time the old American habit of tobacco chewing has been on the decline. Near ly half the men used to chew years ago, but very few if them do it now. The calls for a plug of chewing tobacco lasted all day long, but you will wait an hour now before you hear such a ealL It was not only the wort j-a.raen who indulged in the habit but also the swells and the business people. The Southerners were, nearly all eh ers and so were the Ve-torTf ' 'nit the quid has gone out oj fauii.on uure." WHAT IS REAL LAC t? a Question Fnt to tho Appraisers or tbe New. York Custom House. A curious question has just been set tled by the board of appraisers of the custom house of New York, says an ex change. The question is as to what constitutes lace in what the' distin guishing mark of lace, as different from other thin fabrics, consists. It arose from a large importation of dress goods in what is called "nets" or drapery laces. If these were true laces they were subject to a higher duty than if they were simply thin fabrics. It was claimed by the importers that true laces are edgings in narrow widths, used for ftouncings and ornamentation, but that wide nets when sold by the yard and sewn up into gowns are not laces but dress goods; "like silk or any other -fabric. Thus the question arose as to all those diaphanous fabrics of which evening gowns are made are those lace or are they not lace? What constitutes lace, anyway, the material of which it is woven, the way in which it is woven or the decoration ? A great deal of patient groping about after information was necessary before these be wildered men could find their way in the clear light of the knowledge of those things in which- women live .and move 'and have their being. But they did get into it at last, and this is the decision they set down, by the light of which any woman will be able to tell at once whether she has true lace in her possession or not. The one char acteristic of lace that distinguishes it from all other fabrics lies not in the material of which, it is made,"-because that may be 6ilk or linen or cotton. Neither does it lie in the decorations that are wrought upon it, because the same needlework is often put . upon other fabrics. But the one characteristic' of lace .the real laceness, so to speak lies in the way in which the net itself is woven. "The hexagonal mesh," says the report of the authorities, "is the essential feature, as it is the distin guishing characteristic of lace, the process f its formation being akin to knitting, as it is the antithesis of weav ing. The presence of the hexagonal mesh in a textile fabric is conclusive of the fact that it is a lace." . Clearly this gives a woman exact data from which to build up her knowledge of laces. The hexagonal structure or lace mesh is what makes lace, whether the fabric is wide or narrow, finished or unfinished at the edge. This makes lace of all the nets used for gowns or trimmings, if they have the open-work structure. Chiffon is not lace, but fish net and Brussels net arc. Tulle is lace, but the sheerest mull is not. The face veilings are properly' lace veils, except the grenadines, which are not, no matter how, heavily they may be edged. ISLAM'S GREAT WOMEN. Moslem Women Who Compare Favorably . with. Europeans. In the early centuries of Islam, almost until the extinction of the Sara senic empire in the east, says' the Nineteenth Century, women continued to occupy as exalted a position as in modern society. -Zobeida, the wife of Horun, plays a conspicuous part in the history of the age, and, by her virtue as well as by her accomplishments, leaves an honored name to posterity.' Humieda, the wife of Frauk, a Medenite citizen,' left for many years the sole guardian of her minor son, educates him to become one of the most distin guished juHs-consuls of . the day. Sukinah or Sakina, the daughter oi Hussian. and the granddaughter of - Ali, was the most brilliant, most accom plished, and most' virtuous woman of her "time "la dame des dames de son temps, la plus belle, la plus gracieuse, la plus brilliante de qualites," as Perron calls her. Herself no jnean scholar, she prized the converse of learned and pions people. Buran, the wife of the. Caliph Mamun; Ummul-Fazi, Mamun's sister, married to the eighth imam of the house of Ali; Umm-i-Habil, Mamun's daughter, - were all famous for their scholarship. In the fifth century of the Hegira, the Sheikha Shuhda, designated Fakhrun nissa ("the glory of women"), lectured publicly at the Musjid-i-Jama of Bag dad to a large audience on literature, rhetoric and poetry, says a, writer in the Nineteenth Century. She occupies in the annals of Islam a position oi equality with1, the most distinguished ulemas. What would have befallen this lady had she. flourished among the fellow-religionists of St. Cyril can be judged by the fate of Hypatia. Possi bly she wojild have been torn to pieces by enthusiastic Christians, ..but - she would to a certainty have "teen burned as a witch. -".Dzat-ul-Hemma, corrupted into Dzemma, ''the lion heart," the heroine of many battles, fought side by side with the bravest knights. ' It is a calumny, therefore, to say that the ' Islamic . system has lowered the status of women. .The teacher who, in an age when no country, no system, no community gave any right to women, maiden or married, mother or wife ' who, in a country where the birth of a daughter was considered a calamity, secured to the sex rights which are' only unwillingly and under pressure being conceded to them- by the civilized na tions of the nineteenth century de serve the gratitude of humanity. If Mohammed had done nothing more his claim to be a benefactor of mankind would have been indisputable. Even under the laws as they stand at present in the pages of the legists the legal po sition of Moslem females 'may be said to compare favorably with that of Euro pean women. . Antiquity or the Med Dun. One of the earliest and most, rmuoy ng of insects is that ' midnight ma-.-auder, the bedbug. An English nat xralist has discovered proofs that thU domestic pest was quite common ia the armies of the world at leat onr- linn dred and ttveuty years before the Chris jian era, and that he was ever a ses rover, as the fleets of that day had theii ambers stocked with this breed of noc "Airnal prowlers. ., . Te Chkoniclb ia prepared to do all kinds of job printing. " : " USEFUL? MEMBEES,"- rhe Toes May Be Trained to Serve as Fingers. Fax-ions Purposes to Which They Are f Sometimes Applied Something About -- the Feet of the Different ; Nations. f . j' f" It is astonishing to what uses the feet rod toes could be put if necessity arose for a full development of their powers. There is a way of educating the foot, as well as the hand or the eye, and there is no telling what an educated foot can be made to do. In the time of Alexander, says the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, the great warriors wero taught to draw their bqws with, their feet, as well as their hands, and this is done at the present time by the Hock Veddahs, of Ceylon. Nearly all aborigines can turn their toes not only to good but- to bad ac counts. This is especially true of the "natives of Australia, who, while they are cunningly diverting your attention with their hands, are busily engaged committing robberies with their toes, with which they pick up small articles" as an elephant would with his trunk. So, also, the Hindoo makes his toes work at the loom, using them in his weaving operations with almost as much dexterity as he does his fingers. The Chinese carpenter when he is planing a piece of wood always holds it with his feet. He also turns a grind stone and does many other kinds of work in the same manner. . The Banaka tribe, the most famou3 canoemen on the West African coast, will impel their light canoes with great velocity over the waves, and ,at the same time use the feet to bail out the water that happens to be lashed over the sides of the light craft. If from any cause a Banaka breaks or loses his oars he throws his legs over the sides of the boat and propels it almost as fast with his feet as he could with the pad dles. M. Dueornet, who died in France in 1862, was born without' arms or hands. He had the eye of an artist, and not withstanding his great misfortune actu ally studied painting and exhibited many fine productions wholly executed with his toes. The feet of Thomas Roberts, the arm less' huntsman, once in the employ of Sir George Barlow.were made to serve in the place of hands. Roberts manu factured most of the instruments which de used while on 'the chase and could shoot or throw with as much precision is the average hunter in possession of both arms and hands. The same may be said of William Kinstone, an Englishman who kept his yvra accounts, shaved and dressed him self, saddled and bridled his horse, threw sledge hammers and did other seemingly impossible things with his toes. . . As to national characteristics in feet, it may be said that the French foot is narrow and , long; the Spanish foot is small and elegantly curved thanks to its Moorish blood corresponding to the Castilian's pride of being "high in the instep." . , ' ', The Arab's foot is "proverbial for its high arch. ;; The Koran says that a stream of water can run under the true Arab's foot without touching' it. The foot of the Scotch is high and thick; that -of the Irish flat and square; the English short and fleshy . . When Athens was in her zenith the Greek , foot was the most perfectly formed and exactly proportioned of that of any of the human race. ' Swedes, Norwegians and, Germans have the largest feet; .Americans the smallest. Russian toes are "webbed" to the first joint; Tartarian toes are all the same length. ' - LIFE ON ;THE MOON. MCoplc!investl8ratlon Ieads to the Be. , lief That Our Satellite Is Inhabited. It does not seem improbable that in the course of events the earth and the moon may become more intimately ac quainted. . A few years ago scientists held the theory that the moon was a dead planet, without atmosphere, and consequently uninhabited. This theory has recently been entirely controverted. The work began by Prof, llolden at the Lick observatory pon Mount Hamilton has been steadily continued, and the photographs taken by him 'and his as sistants have revealed certain facts hith erto "unknown. '.', Photographic observations show a perfect map of the moon, and upon the summit of one of the highest mountains is a white spot which -has the appear ance of glacier, proving the presence of atmosphere and making ' the theory of the habitableness of the moon tenable. It is claimed by Prof. Holden that by a continuous series of photographs ho is able to detect ' any -changes upon the. surface of ' the moon, and that a build ing fifty feet in height would cast an appreciable shadow, says the Chicago Graphic. . - . If the moon is inhabited' the f act will certainly be discovered sooner or later, but the question of the establishment of communication is still -unsolved, al though in the face of the scientifin acmevements of the last century we will not predict that it is unsolvable. , 'Man-Eating Wild Men. . In the celebrated "Travailes". of Ed ward Webb (1590) are dozens of stories that would make Joe Mulhatton turn green with envy. One of the most cele-' brated of these is his story of tho wild men of Prester John, which is as ' fol lows: "In the court of Prester John there is a wilde man, and another in the high street of Constantinople, whoso allowance is every day a quarter of raw mutton; and when any man dyeth for some notorious offence, then they are allowed every day a " quarter of man's flesh, , These . wilde men are chained fast to a post every day, the one in Prester John's court, the other in tho high street of Constantinople, each of them having a man tell about their shoulders, and all over their bodies they have wonderful long hafre. . They ars chained by the neck lest they speed ily devour ali that cometh within their reach, - EDUCATION AND LEARNING. A Leading English Educator joints Out the Difference Between Them. ; "People have a peculiar notion of what constitutes an ' education," said Prof. John Cochran, one of Great Brit ain's leading educators, who is making a tour of the United States, to a Globe Democrat man. "I have seen many an educated man who couldn't tell an ad verb from a proverb, a green' root from an ellipsis- And I have seen men who had taken all the 'varsity degrees so profoundly ignorant that a Digger In dian might pity them. Too many men forget that a school, whether it be the log cabin affair of the American wilder ness, with its three Rs and a bundle of birch rods, or the proudest continental university, but furnishes him with tools with which to dig for knowledge on his own behalf but puts him in the way of securing an education. A man does not learn Greek, Latin, French or German for the sake of knowing those lan guages, but to secure the key to the casket -in which is locked the wisdom of Socrates, the eloquence of Cicero, the reflections of Montesquieu and the phil osophy of Kant. If the key is never ap plied, if the treasure is not appropri ated, knowledge of these languages is as worthless, so far as learning is con cerned, as the gun' of Mark Twain's Arab prdtector,. which was. never load ed. A gentleman was recently bemoan ing to me that he was uneducated; I questioned him, and. found that he had read and digested everything in the English language worth . knowing. Shakespeare and the Bible, Milton and Adam Smith, Browning and Herbert Spencer were as familiar to him as the face of his wife. ' He was a mining en gineer, and knew more about geology than half thn professors of that science. He was a prosperous merchant, conver sant with the laws of trade; a banker, who had' made a practical study of finance; a politician, who had studied men and measures so accurately that he became the recognized leader of a great party. But he .had never attended school had never stood -np and par roted a lesson to a professor, and there fore believed himself ignorant. I said to him: 'My dear sir, you are one of the best educated men I ever . met. I wish that yon would open a school for teach ers and impart to our public educators a. portion of your knowledge. V They would be then better able to earn their salaries.'" . . ' THREE KINDS OF RUBIES. The Oriental Is taost-jfalnavble mnd Is of Arterial Blood Color. . There are three kinds of rubies the oriental ruby, the spinel ruby and the balas ruby. The first is the only true one, according to the Jewelers' Review. The latter differ considerably in com parison from the first. .The true is composed almost exclusively of alum ina. In the latter are onlv seven-tenths, ui aiumina, tne remainder being chiefay magnesia. The color, moreover, is due partially to the oxide of chromium, a substance of which' the genuine ruby has not a trace. In commerce the balas ruby has much inferior value to the spinel. This is generally of a vivid poppy-red color; the balas is of a violet rose, although Pegu has furnished white and white violet spinels, - and Suder mania even bluish gray ones. It can be seen at once, therefore, how extremely erroneous would be a classification of gems by color or general appearance alone. The primitive form of the spinel ruby is like that of the diamond, eight sided, which distinguishes it at once from the oriental stone. The color of the genuine ruby is that of arterial blood, or pigeon's blood, as it is called. It is extremely hard and after the sap phire is the hardest'of the corundums, which renders it difficult to understand why the earth so rarely gives it up. Its tint is as beautiful by artificial light . as by day, and its powers of refraction so great that ancient belief credited it with power of emitting light. The an cients even supposed that it would shine through clothing with undiminished power. , The largest ruby known is one men tioned by Cbardin as having been en graved with the name of Sheik Sephy. Another noble ruby is in possession of the shah of Persia. Its weight is put at one hundred and seventy-five karats. A third, belonging to the king of Usapar, was cut into a hemispherical form, and in 1053 was bought for thir teen thousand eight hundred and sixty six dollars. A ruby possessed by Gus- -tavus Adolphus, and presented to the czarina at the time of his journey to St. : Petersburg, was the size of a small ! -ho'c arm J HALF FARE FOR PREACHERS. Western Railroads Are Glad to Encourage' Humanizing Gentlemen of the Cloth. "We are only too glad to give the preachers a half -rate," remarked a western railroad official to a St. Louis Chronicle reporter. "The eastern roads don't do it, but ' every road in the west does. No consideration of sentiment prompts us ,to it, either,. I 'can assure you. It is strictly in the line of busi ness. We have found out that where there are the most preachers there are also the most - people of industry and productive thrift. There are . vast stretches of waste places in the west, which; when built up by the kind of people who encourage the -growth of a wholesome religious sentiment, will add immeasurably to our revenue. For that reason I had rather give a pass to the humblest preacher than a half-rate to the superb Ingersolh I have noticed that as the preacher has pushed his way westward the frontier has receded, until now there is none of it left. He is now taking the byways and the paths and the wilderness is disappear ing and the barren prairies are blos soming with crops. .So you see that, from a business standpoint, it pays us to encourage him to travel about by allowing him a half-rate fare. It is dif ferent with the eastern roads. All of their territory is developed to its fullest capacity, and they can't hope for in creased productiveness through" the preacher's ministrations. Therefore, they treat him like all other ( passen gers, and don't give him a half rate." SMK- YOU- TBiEQ .vBBUGS -.AMP- FAILS TO FIXD A CUIUS KOR ' . RHEMftlAT.SWV LUMBAGO, SOsAYICA, KiDKEY, LIVER and BLADDER COMPLAINTS, DYSPEPSIA, LAME-BAGEGc I !vDH. SAXDEII,SELECTB!QBELTp j 3M i oar 200 laft-e book "tTHHEIS CIAS8E5oxr tIMfi"f should be read by eTery yon he, inioaioas;el ana oia man, wub Btnueu nco, mr oaiittcu Aivcinv uv sak"1 iiuom, - as we have restored thousands to robust health and Tiffor, after all other treatments failed, as can be shown by hundreds of cases throughout this and other States, who would sladly testify analrom m&nf of whom we hare strong- letters bearing testimony to their recovery after using oar Belt WE HAVE CURED THESE WE CAN CURE YOUI rrureii hprii itv CUPEb . ban Francisco, Cal., August 14, 1890. ? Sr. A. T. Sand en. Dear Sir : Before! used your belt S was troubled with lost visor, vital waaknaw, and almost a oomplete loss of power. 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I have gained . in vitrar dn.il v. and am ttronv in amrr utrt. S Yjurs gratefully, QHAS. L.TTETKA. THE DR. SAN DIE N fa a oompletocalvanic baftery, made Into a belt so a iyob poowicie-, r iunou vurreur-s winra are uietsm.y re;'. tnro'itfn'd& an wuk parts, or wexorroil 5,000. Itbaan Improved Kluctrio bupeLfory tne. rreatett boon ever given wuakmfn,aaa In warrant it 1 1 f n nnv n f t h r'i.iVi rrn?r. it,.- j Refunded. , They ore irmdedinfc m-js a to iret SAN DEN SLECTR5C Removed to Corner Third 1 n FIRSTCLHSS 0 a I V) CAN BE HAD. AT THE, CH RON I CLE OFF! CE treasonably There is a tide in tke affairs ' leads on The poet unquestionably, had reference to the ill-IM M 0! MWm k Cartels at CRAIMDALL Who are selling those goods l IOH KljRAOH BRICK. THOSE WHO WISH, Glass, Lime, Cement, . PLASTER. LATH. . Picture Frames, buch As- Shafting, Pulleys, Belting, Engine and Boiler, CALL, AHD?BEK Caveats, and Trade-Msrks obtained, sad U Pat ent Dusiness conducted sor moderate fees. - and we can secure patent in Jess time than those remote from Washington. Send model, drawing or photo with descrip tion. We advise, ii patentable or not, iree of charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. ' A Pamphlet, "How to Obtain Patents,'.' with cost of same in tbe U. & and foreign countries sent free. Address, - c. a. snow & co. Otp. patent Orncc. Washington, D. C. an DR, HAN DEN'S El EC TIM" C BELT with Electro Matrnetic gucpes- ' orF will euro withoac medicine all of tbe abovo troubles. These who suffer from Nervous ltbilityy Incases, .Drains, Iot Itlanliood Nervoatifets. MeepleNanessp jroor memory, an remaivom .incif ana general til nenim, effects of abuses, excesses, worn expo sore, will find relief and prompt in our marreioas invention, reanlres but a trial to oonTinco moat skeptical. In Ignorance of ef . a won mar have umiulr drained . juui a j Bioui ui w luiuaaiiu v (mm j N2y which Is electricity and thui -?a! caused yonrweakncsBorlackof force. elements thus drained, which are re quired for vigorous strength, you will temovtb0 cause and health, strength ami Tttfor will follow at once. This . m otnr plan and treatment, and w smBrajifoA as. aim fir raftind Binnav LAME BACK AND RHEUMATISM. Dr. A. T. 8 an den. Dear Sir Years of exposure and - hard work, combined with the strain oomlng from the jar of an engine, gave me a severe ease of lams back, from whion x suffered for seven years. I was o bad that I could not bend my back. Was all doubled up with it. I bought one of your belts. It helped me inside of two days, and I continued to wear it for four months, being perfectly cured. That was two years ago, and I am aswel to-day as lever wasin my life. I know your belt well, and I know lota of people who have been cured by it. Hsny others need it. and If they would try it they would find it the same as I did the best remedy in the world. I am located here permanently, ana wl 1 1 be glad to talk with ttj one who j wants to inon're abou- i. ( DAUUDT t TT T 15 TJ T W 1 -rTA L J t MVUXU A " " """H r,ss ff fr "', i-OS7 VITALITY AND STRENGTH. Ev-itt, aKh, June 18, 1802. D-. A. T. Sands-', Dear Sir ince wearing your b It 1 -have been trraatlv benefited. 1 fal aM mu trey fa-t returning; gud afu.ra moutli's i e of the belt I find myself twice as v gorous as before. My memory is now nearly perfect, and each clay shows for the better using the belt. 1 i ii mucn stronger ma hofnm Yours truly. HiiY fcv'HULTJL ELECTRIC BELT to be easily worn dnrlrn? work or atav : -ji J ft . . f ahinnlr(..l 1 m 1 , f nH 1VT nnc jFtjipei J f ?7nasnf3tj ir yonn, , rairtdle-a.jl.lorol(i and Washington Streets. b. it Httinotis Hates. of men which, taken at its Jiooa to fortune" BURGET'S, out at greatly-reduced rates. - FNTON ST. John Pashek, mi it i j m ! m mmwm mm, wrt n i a nn s wr -a ir i- fx m r vi , 76 Coavt Stpeet, - j . Next door to Wasoo San Office. CeVHas ust received the latest styles In Suitings for Gentlemen; and hs a large assortment of Foreign and Amer ican Cloths, which he can finish To Order for those that favor him. - . - . '.' Gleaning and Repairing a Specialty. NOTICE tfOR PUBLICATION.) Land Oftick, The Dalles, Or.,) May 11, 1894. J Complaint having been entered at this office- by Jobann u. Fischer against tne neirs at law of wlllfnm M Unmhv. riemttuuttl. for abandon! nor his Homestead Entry, No. 4571, -dated October ' 12, 1892, upon the Hl4 and NU 8W, Sec 31, Tp 1 N, K 10 E, in Wasco county, Oregon, with a view to the cancellation of said entrv : the- iiftid nartiea are herebv summoned to anoear at Tbe Dalles, Oregon, on the 14th day of July, 1894, at 9 o'clock &. If., to respond and furnish, testimony concerning said alleged abandon ment JOHN W. LEWIS, June 9 " Register. FOR SiUiE OR THADE A FINE IMPORTED Frencl Fercleroii Stailion, Weight in good flesh 1,506 ponnds, and Sure Foal - Getter. ' Will sell for cash or notes with ' approved security, or will trade for horses or catte. Addrea,: Kerr & Buckley, , , ' Grass Valley, Or.