A FOOT-SOLD for Consumption is what you are offer ing, if your blood is impure. Con J sumption is simply scrofulous condi tion, with a slight cough or cold, is all that it needs a I ' w UCVCIU v. W r But just as . it I depends upon the i I I I blood for its origin, 1 Ml I ,.'oit depends upon V 1 - the blood for its cure. -ine surest remedy - for Scrof- : ttla in every form, the most effective blood-cleanser, flesh-Guilder, and strength - restorer that s known to medical science, is Dr. Pierce's G-olden ' Medical Dis covery. For Consumption in all its earlier stages, and for Weak Lungs, Asthma, Severe Coughs, and all Bronchial, Throat and Lung affec tions, that is the only remedy so unfailing that it can be guaranteed. If it doesn't benefit or cure, you have your money back. T7- r,-. i x or pciictt iuu pcniityjn' cure of Catarrht"Jt)oct6i Sage's CatajjKtSimedy. Its proprietoofer $5oo reward for J2incurable case of Ca- frh in the Head. Costs only 50 cents. A YEAR'S lMMIUEATION. The Numerous Arrivals on Our Shores in Twelve Months.'' .' All the Nation of Karth Contributing' Out Annual Growth The Coat tries Furnishing the Prin- - cipal Increase. ' THE FAR J EON ; CHILDREN. How They Amos a Joeph Jefferson, Then, -. Beloved Grandfather. i B. L. Farjeon, the novelist, is Joseph Jefferson's son-in-law: he lives in Lon don, has a lovely home, a charming fam-' ily, and he entertain3 delightfully. From all I hear, writes Eugene Field in the Chicago .News, I judpre that his three little children must be prodigies. . The youngest is named after his grandpa and he seems to have inherited his crand-. pa's fondness and facilitv for art. Curi ously enough he is the picture of Jeffer son having the same bright blue eyes, delicate features and . characteristic smile. The oldest boy I think his name is Frank is always saying and uotng orignt tmngs. A year ago Mrs. .Madge Kendall spent the day with Mrs. "IT1.. . : . 1 . auu. mo xwo lames enjoyed a gooo. oui-iasaioned gossin all the after noon; the way they, discussed and rriti. ficarl oil i . . I ! ir1,. . s s 8rap,y 1881, when the number of u4Jf Piaster i-ranK re- C(39,431,' and uuuidk riipa, 1 nave writ ten out with the type-writer all that mamma and Mrs. Kendall said day." And so the wretchod all the scandal and THE EMPEROR OF ETHIPOIT.. yestcr- child had gossip was reported ratn shocking fidelity, and mav be Mr. Farjeon didn't have a lovely time read ing it aloud to his astounded spouse. xhis experience taught Mrs. Farjeon serious lesson. A statement recently issued from the treasury bureau of statist:-.- shows the number of immigrants of different na tionalities arrived in the country during tne last fiscal year. The whole num bcr of arrivals was 555,436, against 451,219 during the fiscal year 1890 an increase, of, 104,877. The number arrived last year was greater than in any previous year since 1883, when the total was 008,852,' and it has been ex- ceeaea in only two otner vears in arrivals was in 1882, when' it was 788, 992. " " . Two things are to be . remarked with reference to these comparisons: First. that since 1885 the arrivals! rora Ovuada and Mexico have notiflseif included in the official . .reports; and, second, that since IS82 the Chinese have been ex cluded, Jby "law, and the government officials have been supposed to know that there were no arrivals from, the Km o v -c.-t, ' w '.. . I mm mere we luZZ, JZ n" Qren flowery kingdom. But there has been prevent, immigration from HOUSEHOLD BREVITIES. When cooking onions set a tin of vinegar on the stove, let it boil, and you will have no disagreeable smell. Crystal globes in colored or cut glass filled with long-stemmed roses are a lovely decoration for the lunch or tea table. The globes come- in ruby, sapphire and emerald tints, and usually rest on a mirrbr plaque. --Codfish croquettes Take equal parts of picked-up codfish (freshened in water) and fresh mashed potatoes; sea son with pepper, dip in egg, and roll in fine cracker meal and fry like oysters, making them in any shape preferred. In oyster stew or any thing where one wishes to use the liquor let it -come to a boil so as to take off the scum. Never boil oysters, as it toughens them, simply let them come to a boiling point It should simply boil around the edges. Sweietbread Sauce. Remove the TOugh skin from the sweetbreads and let stand in cold water twenty minutes. Cut In halves, then in quarters and sea son with salt and pepper, boil till ten der and put a tablespoonful each of but ter and flour in a frying pan and when hot put in the sweetbreads; stir until a light brown, which will take about ten minutes Yankee Blade. An experienced housekeeper says the best water tank is a stone jar one Of five or six gallons. This wl not mat, and is not affected by change of -temperature. Ice will dissolve in it without hurting it, and wator will stand Jn it, as it is changed, for years without rusting it Besides, clear, fresh water -will keep cooL in a closet or other shady place, in a stone jar better than in any other position. Crackling Pone. This is a Southern Tecipe: For a small pone take one quart of corn meal scalded with as much boil ing water as it will absorb, and allow it o cool until the hand can be used to mix into it one cupful of well-salted "cracklings" or scraps left from trying out lard. Wet the hands in cold water and pat the pone into a cake an inch thick on a pan. Bake in the oven. Jf ew England Farmer. Jellied Chicken. Boil the chickB till the meat falls from the bone, in as little water as possible; take it out and let it cool; chop and season with salt And pepper, then put It in a mold with a layer of hard, boiled eggs, either chopped or sliced; boil the water in which the meat was cooked until it is ha'f boiled away, add a tablespoonful of gelatine, and when it is dissolved pour over the " meat; this will be ready to use the next nay alter it is prepared; the eggs may bf omitted if desired. Detroit Free Press went with their mathor corio i r, . s- ' - or. me npQoot-mg. churches where the rector vfasan extreme ritualist Wearied i the ceremony, little Joe Farjeon finally whispered hoarsely to his mother, when the sermon was about half through "Come on, mamma, le's go; don't le's wait for the last act!" Ihe children write plays for their grandpa. . Very thrilling plays they are, too. Grandpa Jefferson enjoys them hugely, but ono day, while reading one one ol these productions, he stopped and as,ked: "Frank, what do all these blanks mean? There doesn't seem to be any sense at ail. ' "That's where you aro to swear, grand pa," explained the child.- "We left it blank on purpose, because we knew you couici ao it better than we could." . .; '-. Tlie tfii-Ht Wmtlivr i lerkr Sofar as is at present known, the first person who kept a record of the weath er was Walter Merle, lie did so for the years 1337 to 1344, and his manuscript on the -original vellum, still exists. Thanks to the courtesy of the oilieials of the Bodleian library. Mr. G. .T Symons has had this manuscript holo graphed, and reproductions of tho ten large photographs, with a full transla tion (the original is . in contracted .Latin), some particulars jis to Merle and a list of the subscribers are to be given in a handsomely printed volume. A fish The Speckled Clear. ueaier: mere aro smokers w- ior a cigar that has a smwtioj wrapper. I have been asked if that ort of a cigar is any better than one that isn't speckled. I don't know why it should be, except the wrapper. A Hpeokled wrapper indicates that the tobacco is the outside pieco of tho plant, and for that reason is better cured. The' outside piece is next to tho ground. The rains wash the sands against it, and in curing particles of tne sand adhere to the leaf and make the specks. Willis Making Fine tines. . . Barnes, of Charleston. Tn lias invented a little machine which is operated by clockwork, and marks: au tomatically, on glass, 50,000 lines on the space of an inch. The Chboniclk is prepared to do all kinds of job printing. PHILOSOPHY OF THE GIZZARD. How It Aids the Ostrich to Display Ex traordinary Digestive Ability. A fowl's gizzard, where so many lost articles turn up, is a curious trap as well as a necessary vital tvgan of the fowl. Diamonds, pearls, coin, buttons, tacks, orange peel anda about everything else, save dynamite, have been found in the gizzards of fowls. A study of the organ is interesting. , Experiments have dem onstrated that what may be called the gastric juice in fowls has not sufficient power to dissolve their food without the aid of the grinding action of the giz zard. Before the food is prepared" for digestion, therefore, the grains must be subjected to a triturating process, and such, as are not sufficiently bruised in this manner, before passing into the gizzard, are there reduced to the proper state by its natural action. The action of the gizzard is, in this respect, me chanical, this organ serving as a mill to grind the feed to pieces, and then, by means of its powerful muscles, pressing it gradually into the intestines in the form of a pulp. The power of this organ is said to be sufficient to pulverize hol low globules of glass in a very short time, and solii masses of the same sub stance in a few weeks. The rauiditv of ,ims process seems to be proportionate generally to the size of the bird. A chicken, for example, breaks up such substances as are received into its stom- . ach less rapidly than the capon, while a goose performs the same operation sooner than either. Needles and even lancets given to turkeys have been broken in pieces and voided without any apparent injury to the stomach. Ihe reason undoubtedly is that the larger species of birds have thicker and more powerful organs of digestion. It has long been the general opinion that from some deficiency in the diges tive apparatus fowls are obliged to re sort to tne use of stones and gravel in order to enable them to dispose of the food which they consume. Some have supposed that the use of stones is to sheathe the gizzard in order to fit it to break into smaller fragments the hard, angular substances which might be swallowed. They have also been con sidered to have a medicinal effect utners have imagined that they acted as absorbents for undue quantities of acid m the stomach, or as stimulants to digestion, while it has ever been grave- jy asserted tnat they contribute direct ly to nutrition. The Hartford Times claims that repeated experiments, how ever, nave established that pebbles are not at all necessary to the trituration of the hardest kinds of Substances which can be introduced into their stomachs; and, of course, the usual food oi iowis can be bruised without their aid. They do, however, serve a useful auxiliary purpose. When put in motion by the muscles they are capable of pro ducing some effect upon the contents of tne stomach, thus assisting to grind uown tne grain and separating its parts, tuiii me digestive lluid or gastric . comes iiiure Tez.zly vn oontact nothing to Canada and Mexico, and as a matter of fact a good many Chinese have found their way into the country. now mucii tne totals oi late years would be swelled if all the immigrants from these countries were included it is impossible to say. We know that from 1880 to 1884, both years inclusive, the arrivals from American countries varied from 03.000 to 127,000 and that since 1885 they have never much exceeded 5,000 as officially reported. The arrivals from China fell from an average of perhaps 15,000 for several years before 1883 to almost none since that year. It is per haps safe to say that 50.000 should be added to the figures of recent years on these accounts. But that addition would still leave last year far behind 1881 and 1882 in the number of arrivals. The principal increase last year as compared with the year before was from the . following countries: From Italy, 23,354; from Austria-Hungary, 14,861; from Germany, 21,122; from lius- sia, lncluthng Poland, 28,245. The arri vals from Italy were 75,143, which.was more than from any other one' country except Uermany. Never until 1880 did the arrivals from Italy much exceed 5,000 a y-.r. Since t!icn they have rap idly increased except -in the years IS, laoo and 1880. Ihe lminiirration frn Russia never reached 5,000 a year b once before 1882. . Last year it 47,401, and itcxcccded 30.000 in eaeti .if the two preceding years. Because of the persecution of the Jews it is likely wj u greater ncrealter. An Enlightened Prince Who Can Work and Who Frays Two Honrs Daily. Count Pietro Antonelli, a member of the Italian parliament, who has spent several years in Ethiopia and has been sent many times as Italian ambassador to Emperor Menelik, has given an in teresting account of that monarch in a recent issue of the Riforma of Borne, says the New York Tribune. -Menelik, says the count, who was married to the Princess Taitu in 1883, is now forty-eight years old. lie is a man of medium height and- powerful body, with dark-brown skin and coarse al though not irregular features. He is not naturally jcruel and the signing of ueain-warrants oiten maRes him sor rowful and reflective.- He understands " his people and is able to gain their love f and rule them wisely. Although lie now bears the title of emperor of - Ethipoit, commands an army of one hundred and thirty thou sand men with sixty thousand guns and displays at times oriental splendor, he is not ashamed to subject, himself to physical labor. He saws wood, makes house models and superintends the con struction of buildings. A short time ago a terrible disease carried away many of the oxen, and Menelik and his courtiers used rakes and spades in order to prepare the fields for the reception of the seed. - ; He worked also three months as a stone-mason on a church' which he or dered built not . long ago. He under stands the -main facts about railroads and steamships and the principles of telegraphy. 4 He would gladly acquaint his peoplo'with the technical advances in science and the arts, but his advisers will not consent to it Since the early '80's, adds the count, Menelik - has kept up his connection with Europe. In mercantile affairs he is the equal of experienced tradesmen. 1.1 diplomatic matters he well under stands the art of prolonging the discus sion until he has reached a decision. One who has to carry on business with him must be observant and attentive. m . , ... . ine emperor taKes great interest in European newspapers. He is fond of talking with Europeans, also, in order to increase his knowledge of Europe. ne always receives Europeans in a friendly and flattering manner. As a rule the emperor breaks his night's rest at three o'clock in the morning. He prays then for two hours. From five o'clock till seven he dictates letters to his secretaries.. At seven o'clock he receives his ministers and visitors of importance and listens to their reports of the state of the empire. He gives his orders for the day after the reports - and makes his appoint ments. During the day he also finds time to regulate watches, draw architi- tectural plans, give medicine to the sick and take care of his army. ilM's. TOO TRIED . BRUSS 1 AMP : FAILED TO FIXD A CUBE TOS RHEUMATISM.- LUMBAGO, SC3ATSCA, KIDNEY, LIVER and B LAD PER -COIV.PLASfJTS, DYSPEPSIA, LAME-BAG, L I 1 f in i nsui rllT" I IP18- SJU,DEK'S ELECTB!C EELT3i' E. SANDEN'9 ELECTRIC BELT whs feiectro Irlaitnetic SMiftpec. sory will euro without meilic-ine all or the above tHmtupi. 'riK.HihA puffer t from Nervous lebilitr Ijosnea. Drain. 1 ,at llanlmml. Ncr.Tonaeif. teleeplesanesst EPoor Memory, all Fema le Com. piainis, ana general m ncaltb. - tbe enacts of abuses, excesses, worry : or exposure, will and relief and Dromnt ' core in oar marvelous invention, which requires but a trial to convince the most skeptical, in Ignorance of ef fects yoa mav have rjnaulv rit-niixtd yoursvstemoznerveforcc&nd vltallti .-'! which is electricity and thoi 4 .caused your won kn pen orlackof force. i jruu refKive toui your system Til 4 Clements thus drained, which are re. - iiuireu lor viBuroasBirenirca, you will lemove the cause and health, strength and vigor will follow at once. This m out plan and treatment, and ws . WfrMO Pe book "THREE CX.A88b6s- shew,' ebouidbe read by every touhi, sniddle-aeed and old man. sent sealed, free. Dr. Band en's Electrio Belt is no experiment . as we have restored thousands to robust health and vuror, aft er all other treatments failed, as can be shown by hundreds of eases throughout thisand other 8tates,who would aladly testify, and from, mans I whom we have strong letters bearing testimony to their recovery after lining our Belt . WE HAVE CURED THESE WE CAN CURE YOU! rCUCDIL DFRILITV CIIPFn. I . baa Franolaeo. Cel.. Aairaat 14. T892, L vr. A. T. Sandra, Dear Sir : BaforeX used yonr belt u waa uvaotna mm toas visor, vrcat weaJKneea, and almost a oomplete loas of power. I would set up with 1 wry tlraa realms. Done aonins, eto.s since txalaff rur belt Ihiw had a new lease of lif X now enjoy fe batierthin 1 have for ton years pact. 1 have tne utmost ounodeooe in yonr treatment. You can pub lish thia st&tementtalao have others write or call on xne. Truly yours. . BOWEN, -JS and 28 Turk St. RHEUMATISM AND LAM ENS8 CURED. . . or. land, Oregon, April 18 18U2. lr. A. T. Sanden. Dear Sin I sot one c f your belts two webks ago for rheumatism, from which 1 suffered for several yeara. For the past six months 1 had rot beanabljtow rk- Your belt has plaoed me in almost perfect haul Lb in tbe two weeks Ihave used it. lean walk cnm.ortnbly, nnd feel like a new man r ensrally. r M. H. HUQHS3, Proprietor International Hotel. NERVOUS DEBILITY-LOSS OF VICOR. . . Tacoma VVaabu. October 24, 1832. Dr.A-T r an don. Dear hlr : i have b eacainityour Klectno belt for cenerai nervous (.ability, and to-da feel better than I have for five years. 1 ha7e trained 'it.- ' S. ITJETKA. la, vigor daily, and am strons in everypert.. 1UlAi Yj-rs gratefully. THE DR. - LAM E BACK AND RHEU MATISM. . . .Portland Oregon. September 88, 1891 Tr. A. T. Sanden. Dear Sir : Years of exposure and hard work, combined with the strain coming from the Jr of an engine, gave me a severe ease of lams back, from which I Buffered for sevanyeara. I was o bad that 1 oould not bend my back. ' W as all doubled up with it. I bought one of your belts. It helped me InMd of two days, and Ioontiuoed towrfirltfor four ' months, being perfectly cured. That was two years aao, and I am as well to-day as 1 aver was in my life. I know your belt well, and I know lots of p. e pie who hove been eared by it. Many others aeeJl it, and if they would trv it thav wonU fi.j 4. - j; j the best remedy in the world. I am located here permanently, and wt II be glad to talk with, an, ass wha wants to inquire abou- t BOBEBT B DBREL, Engineer Hotel Portland. ' 'LOST VITALITY AND STRENGTH. . Everett, tVach. June 18. JS92. D -. A.T.Hande-. Dear Sir - inoT weiring your b it I have been greatly benefited. I feel my old en- rwy 1.1 -t retarninc: and after a nnnth'a ,.m m v. belt 1 find mydelf twice as v gorous as before. My -memory is now nearly perfect, and each dor shows for the better. I f I much stronger tba before using the belt. Tours truly, BEMty C-TTUIT work or nte-v". t I w-ik parts, or v -) forfeit r giveu weaa mmi.Kaoi is a eompiece galvanic Dartery, made '.nto a oelt so or to be oasll worn dnrlne v elves sopthmi. pr .oneod qurwi; vimh ar instant, y icV. toroneh.-ut all v 'vKISi'JHj11 r.,uCKre "nJ' i 'S? !"" rotnejt!s, ui)vi tofcumr.te shrunken iiniba, or parts, t-e Plo'neT,'' 8ANDEKI SLKOTPSO'O. f?l r!tSt.. PCSHUiED, G7.G0H ' Kemoved to Corner Third and Washington Streets. ' , J (1 15) o) FIRST CLHSS MILITARY. RULE IN EUROPE. war 18 Considered Possible and r... Probalde at Any Moment. i.uropean civilization to-day is based on the idea that, war is not only an im minent possibility tmt a probability. and a -rort class m every country has Decn trained to look upon blood shed uinjj- as lib proper vocation. The prreat prizes aro reserved for soldiers; honors, mint , ijuaiLiun auu me monarch s uivor. pro to the sons of Mars. - The military Diniirei exceeds many times over does it exceed the appropriations for public ini-u-iietion. inc sa.a ry of a colonel is earned y but few professors, writes Vv. U. Thaver in the Forum. The cost of tho powder an.i shot wasted in Eu rope between any dawn " and dusk would prola.5y pay the runriinpr cx penser, or ail :.er puii.ic hospitals." In cucli fTOvernii.iit, whether it be consti tiitional or autocratic, the army may .'it.ii i:-utn ue saia to direct lo;;:a.atKn, iiii legislatures willingly or un- v-.lua-ly vote the appropriations demanded by the war departiacut. f !M 1 - , . . - jvi-u ix a, legislature dares to ques tion or protest it - is quickly fright ened into acquiescing1 by an alarm ing- renort from the minister for war. Thus the military claxs mtrol f-'ivernmcnt and has laws passed to suit itself, and pre ventu all atten.pts to cut down or to abolish its powers. It in timidates ' the state not less really. Liiouru imr, opcniy, than the pret- 'nan puard int:rr:dr.ted old Home. Kings and minister.-! Co i.ideed assure the pub lic mat iKey cinelly endi-acor and de sire to preserve peace, but in the next breath they call for larger. funds and more recruits. Kaisers meet and kiss each other on both cheeks: thev extol the sweetness of . brotherly .love: thev uttenu eac;i other s rrand maneuvers. and then they ir.troase the rarrisons aionj tneir respcftive frontiers. A strange method this for testifying to meir peaceaoic intentions! The SYRIAN First That WEDDING. . . Witnessed in A c;nrtoii! ,'line. . - l here is a silver mine near Sarhad, m iilutn territory, which lias a curi ous uistoi-y. lhree men were sent from th. t country to Cabul, the resi dence oi' I !. am jer, to be executed for an offense iiiu. t the state. They told the ameer that if he would let them off they would tell hiin where he could find abundant supplies of silver. The ameer deterred tho execution and sent them under guard to lUansham, where they went to work Ctizxmg. They and the men who were put to work with them dug for twenty days, finding nothing. the ameer s oliicer tjld them at length that they could dir; lor seveu days more and if they did not lind silver within that time the sentence of death would be carried out. The 'next day they came to a very rveh vein of silver, and now about a hundred men are employed in the mine, w.iich was visited last summer by an i:.. traveler . Thk Chronicle prints all the news. lias Been America. A Syrian wedclinrr, the first of thn kind ever witnessed in this country, was celebrated at St. Louis on a recent af ternoon, in accordance with the usarres that prevail in . Syria. In America it would be ' called a reception, but it differed from the ordinary receptions in that it was strictly, for Syrians. The groom was Ealel Wasoff and the bride was Adlaid. Miken. After being mar ried by a Catholic priest at St. Mary's church, the couple, in company with about seventy-five of their countrymen. men and women, proceeded to celebrate the event. There were beer, wine and eatables in abundance. A part of the programme was the spraying of perv fume from a cologne bottle over the crowd, every newcomer getting a sup ply of the odors in the face. The ladies ucaL-ui,, ui wnom mere was quite a number, indulged in a doleful chant in the Syrian language, which, lasted for a-couple of hours. . It was explained to a reporter as being a method of con gratulating the bride in her new state. The reception, lasted until late in the afternoon. Many of the participants who came from a Syrian colony in the neighborhood were unable to speak the English language. All present seemed to enjoy themselves. - . AN ARCHDUKE'S COLONYiX' p ni Jf: liv rxn ill "MI III CAN BE HAD AT THE ' - Vans His Efforts to Lead the Gypsies to the ways of Civilization. Archduke Joseph of Austria is little less eccentric in his tastes than the Archduke Johann, who married a cho rus girl and became a sea captain, or the Archduke Heinrich, who sacrificed his royal honors to wed an opera singer. The Archduke Joseph's . inclination, however, turns him to gypsies rather than to actresses, and his writings on gypsy, traditions, gypsy music and gypsy customs have secured for him a Ll-l. 1 - , ... . piace in tne zoiK-iore literature oi . 'ri,- . -,. a . r-r-, .-. . the checkered Austro-Hungarian em- re is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at its Jiooa Dire. ! ' r The CHRONICLE OFFICE Reasonably Haioous Rates. archduke's latest manifestation of his peculiar fondness for gypsies is an attempt to domesticate them, says the JNew York bun. lie got permission from Emperor Franz Joseph to form gypsy colonies, and to try to teach them the arts of agriculture and indus try, and then built sixty little cottages for as many families on his Alesuth es tate in Hungary. About two weeks ago Jie corralled a gypsy caravan and led it to his uninhabited village. He chose a strapping fellow of twenty-five for chief, or mayor, and had married to him by the pastor of Alesuth the prettiest girl in the caravan. The archduke himself gave the girl away, and a friend was the best man. In the subse quent festivities the archduke appeared in the lull attire of a gypsy chieftain, ano, according to custom, as the . man who gave the bride away, led the wed ding procession with a wreath, of flow ers on his head and a bamboo stick wrapped with gray cloth in his hand. Each family in . the new village has a cow and a pony and a quarter of an acre of ground. The archduke is about to erect a factory near the village, at which all who are not thrifty enough to support themselves without day labor may nnd employment. Should the col ony prove a success other caravans are to be captured by the archduke and lo cated in similar surroundings. His pur pose is to lead into ways of comfort and civilization the great horde of wander ing folk who pass all their time in mi grating in picturesque caravans from one end oi tne Austro-iiungarian empire to tne otner. .. . An Accidental Rennlon. For some time a young woman from Sweden had been looking for her sis ter, of whose whereabouts- she knew nothing except that she was somewhere in the United States. Finally, the other day, she drifted to Portland. Mb.. and inquiring for this sister mentioned name that sounded a little like Swift. So she was taken to the store oi Mr. Swift m that town, who, how ever, proved to be entirely ignorant of the girl's whereabouts. But while she was telling her story a man happened to be in the store who said he had a Swedish servant girl who might possi bly be able to help the inquirer. Tha denouement was quite dramatic, for the servant girl proved to be the long- iooKea-ior sister. " j Itinerant Dress Cleaners. a new female device for earning a livihood is that of going around to the nouses of society people and cleaning and repairing fine dresses that have been accidentally soiled or otherwise injured. The scheme was developed in Buffalo. There are some women who j leads on to fortune." v ' The poet unquestionably had reference to the Ciii-Oiit Sale I ftfr AT CR&NDA Who are sell In? these V' MICHKI.RACHr' H' BURGET'S, at Kreatly-reduced rates. UNION ST. THOSE WHO WISH Lime, Cement, PLASTER, LATH. PietciFe Frames, Glass, -ANI SUCH 4- Shafting, Pulley s, Belting, Engine and Boiler, -John Pashek, The Merchant Tailor, 76 Court Street, Next door to Wasco Sun Office. aCssVIIaa just received tbe latest styles in - Suitings for Gentlemen, and h-s a large assortment of For len and Amer ican Cloth b, whicb be oan finish To Order for those that favor him. . Cleaning and Repairing a Specialty. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. CALL AMD BEX Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat- ent business conducted tor moomatc Fees. Our Officc is Oppositc O. S. patent Office i and we can secure patent in less time than those . i t ,17 I. ' t Send model, drawiccr or ohoto with deserin- , tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. ' A PAsauirr. "How to Obtain Patents." with cost of same in the U. & and foreign countries i sent free. Address, C.A.SNOW&CO. Opf-. P-rrNT officc. Washington, D. C. - . Land Office, The Dalles, Oi.,f . . May ii, ibsh. Complaint having been entered at this office . by Johann O. Fischer sgainst tbe heirs at law of 4 William: M. Murpbv, deceased, for abandoning -bis Hornestead Entry, No.- 4571, dated October 1 12,1892, upon the Nj SEJ, and B14, See SI, Tp 1 N, tL 10 E, in Wasco county, Orvgon.witb a view to the cancellation of said entry; the said parties are hereby summoned to appear at The Dalles, Oregon, on the 14th day of July, .... 1894, at 9 o'clock: a. M., to respond and f nrnish. testimony concerning said alleged abandon ment. JOHN W. LEWIS, - june9 ; ' - Bbglster. FOH SALE OR TRADE . . A FINE IMPORTED French Perckron Stallion, Weight in good fleh 1,506 pounds, and Sure Foal ueicer. - mir sen lor casn or notes witn approved security, or will trade lor norses or catte. '. Address: Kerr & Buckley, . Grass Valley, Or, .A T have all they can attend to in this line