HIGH LIVING, if you keep at it, is apt to tell upon the liver. The things to prevent this are Dr. Pierce's Pleas ant Pellets. ; Take one of these little. Pellets for a correc tive or gentle laxa tive three . for a cathartic. They're the smallest, easiest to take, pleasantest and most natural ia the way ' they ' act. They do permanent fx good. Constipation, .. . Indigestion, isnious Attacks, Sick or Bilious Head ache, and all derangements of the liver, stomach,- and bowels, are prevented, relieved, and cured. They're guaranteed to give satisfaction in everv case, or your money is returned. The worst cases of Chronic Catarrh in the Head, yield to Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. So certain is it that its mak- ers oner a;oo reward lor an incurable case. I TOYS OF PRINCES SOLD. i - They Bring High lrices at Auction. Es pecially Napoleon's Wooden Horse. " Old toys so very seldom Burvive the rough Work their youthful possessors eive them that if any do weather the storm they become extremely valuable. K collection of old playthings, many of which belonged to royal children, was ately sold at the Hotel Drouot. Some of them brought high prices. For irfstance, a little doll, rather less than a foot long, but clad in a panoply at steel and armed cap-a-pie, perfectly modeled, and made at the period when Louis AlII- sat on the throne of France, sold for C15 francs. Even this price was exceeded by that paid for a tiny set of carriages carved in wood and accompanied by an escort yt little wooden soldiers, made when Napoleon I. was first consul, which brought 1,000 francs. A miniature kitchen was interesting as being an ex act model of those in, use in the time of Louis XVL A little jointed doll, six teen inches in length, ana dressed in a broche silk Watteau costume, brought . 110 francs, while the kitchen was only valued at 840 francs. A doll, still dressed in the original faded brocade silk, which had belonged to Marie An toinette as a child, was sold for 1,800 francs. A roughly made wooden horse, with a broken nose and ' one leg miss ing, authenticatedas having belonged bo the great Napoleon when he was a baby, went for 2,000 francs. - Exchanges" In En gush Journals A peculiar feature of the English woman's journals is the "exchange" solnmn, wherein the woman who has a "silver fox muff, boa and Medici col tar," and on account of going intc mourning desires to exchange it for a Persian lamb collar and muff, makes it manifest. One lady offers in this col umn a "lovely Persian kitten; exchange to the value of one pound; honey want ed. " Another offers to exchange a pair " of exquisite Dresden china candelabra for "anything useful." Magazines and reviews are also proffered in exchange for other magazines and books. The woman who is tired of her parrot will give it in exchange for the pug that , some other woman is equally tired oi petting. Plants are offered to obtain poultry in return, and everything but husbands and deformities are adver tised. . . " MEN AND THEIR WIVES. The Striking Contrast Sometimes Seen Between Them. What a contrast there is in the gen eral appearance of some men and their wives. Some of them look as if they had made a mistake and gobbled up a woman that ought to have been some other man's wife, and some women a good mimy women look like victims of some kind of a mistake. It is not un common, says the Chicago Herald, to see women dressed with all respect to the latest designs sent out by Worth or Felix, while the husband seems grate ful that ho has enough money left to buy even "misfits." This attracts no particular . attention, but one's heart will get to aching for the little pallid faced and meek-looking woman who wears a plush cloak and alapaca dress, while the husband is radiant in fresh new suits, tan-colored gloves, .silk hat and red rose in buttonhole. I .spent an hour in with the pale-faced woman and radiant husband yesterday. , It was in a steam car. There were four chil dren with them, the oldest about six years. The wife had on, in addition to the plush cloak, a rusty black hat and ' gray veil. The children were- dressed beautifully. How they loved her! One little . fellow came back to kiss her about twice in five minutes. It was Oh, mamma, isn't that lovely?" and "How long will it be before we are there, mamma?" and "Are you glad we are going?" and "Dear mamma." She gave them some fruit. They would not eat it until mamma had a "bite. " The father was radiant, and dignified and grand. He never . got a kiss, nor a "bite," nor a glance from those four children. He paid their fare and looked out of the window. He had his fine clothes, but the mother-was rich in all the love that could fill little hearts. FAIR. California midwinter Interna- ) tionai. Exposition Department v op Publicity and Promotion. ' j The California Midwinter Interna tional Exposition is now npon the last mouth of, its existence. '.The grand closing demonstration of the exposition will take - place Wednesday, July 4, when the city and comity of San Fran cisco will unite with the exposition man agement in the celebration of the na tional holiday, such as has never before been seen on the Pacific Coast. There will be at least 20,000 people in the pro fession that will march through the streets of San Francisco, " and that will wend its way out through the beautiful Golden Gate Park into the grounds of the wonderful exposition which has been the scenes of so many grand dem onstrations during the past six months. There will be a grand program of out door exercises at the Recreation grounds. As has been stated in this correspond ence, there was some doubt about the date of the official closing of the exposi tion. The six months from the date of the actual opening will not expire until Jnly 27, but since the. six months legal duration of the exposition expires on the first of July, it has been thought best to let the FourthoFJuly celebration be the closing official demonstration, though the gates will be kept up, and a 25-cent admission will probably be charged dur ing the month of July, even though the removal of the exhibits and the tearing down of some of the buildings will then be in progress. Some of the concession aires have manifested their determina tion to stay on the grounds as long as there are likely to be any people at all, and everybody will concede that there will be something of an exposition as long as the sideshows remain. What is to become of the magnificent buildings which have proven so much more attractive to the public than the exposition management dared to hope ia still an open question. Director General de Young, acting for the executive com mittee, has offered to the Golden Gate Park commissioners the two buildings known as the Fine Arts building and the Administration building. The first is offered to be used as a permanent mu seum for San Francisco. It is a durable fireproof structure and will withstand the tempered elements of San Francisco for many, many years. As a work of architectural art, it is conceded to be more than satisfactory, and will cer tainly make a " beautiful permanent monument of the exposition itself. It is proposed that the park commissioners shall use the Administration building as a headquarters for the commissioners, and as a place of public convenience for visitors to the park. An offer has also been made in this connection for the preservation of the Liberal Arts building-as a place for the holding of big conventions, as a place for the band to play in on inclement oc casions, and as an immense ballroom or assembly hall for gatherings which are frequent m cities as large as San Fran' cisco, and yet for which there has been no place available. The offer of the Di rector General of the Fine Arts building and of the Administration building pro vides that they shall be given to the park commissioners free of expense, but in order that the Liberal . Arts building shall be secured to the city and county, under the direction of the park commis sioners, it will De necessary to raise a fund, inasmuch as the accrued profits will not warrant the executive commit tee in making so munificent a gift. The other buildings will undoubtedly be torn down some time during July, or a start will at least be made bn the demolition. The grand court -with its staircases, its pavements, and its land scape gardening will accrue to the park, and all the roadways which have been built will necessarily be undisturbed. The Horticultural building and the Me chanical Arts building were not intended for permanent structures, and will have to be removed. So also with the hun dreds of other smaller buildings in which the concessionaires have made or lost money, as the case may be. The elec tric tower will probably prove to be a bone of contention. Several people are endeavoring to secure it as a permanent concession in the park, and if the com missioners can see their way clear to en ter into an arrangement the tower will stand, though it must necessarily be shorn of its electric lighting and its mammoth search light. There still remain between now and the close of the exposition a number of very interesting days of celebration. The present week has been particularly prolific in this regard. It began with Italian day on Sunday, with Monterey county day on Monday, colored Ameri can day on Tuesday, state of Maine day on Wednesday. On Friday, June 8, horticultural day was celebrated by the planting of a tree on the east side of the Dine Arts ouuaing, tne tree being s Mission Olive of the old San Diego stqck, and the park commissioners have under taken to preserve it as a memorial of this, day at the exposition. On Satur day .all Sacramento county contracted to visit the exposition in a body, and the same day and evening "a day and night in Japan" was celebrated under the aus pices of the Japanese concessionaires and the Japanese residents of San Fran cisco. . This celebration included a feast of lanterns in which nearly ten thousand Japanese creations of light played a prominent part, and in which the entire population of San Francisco revelled by virtue of the custom then and there popularized of carrying lanterns in the hand. On Sunday, June 10, the Germans own the exposition. Dxring the rest of the month there will be the Hawaiian day, the Swiss day, the Scotch day, the commercial travelers' day, a Spanish day, and days celebrated under the aus pices of counties which have not yet -come forward for recognition j to say nothing of the grand double celebration by the Chinese contingent on the 15th and 16th of June. The work of these official letters hav ing been accomplished the Department of Publicity and Promotion will discon tinue its weekly epistle. CALIFORNIA'S TAKE CAR O' YERSELF." The Solicitous Injunction of the Sierra Swine-Herder. In "Mountaineering in the Sierra Nevada" Clarence King relates that he came one night to a camp-fire under a group of pines. A little way from th." lay a confused mass or old ana half-bald buffalo robes and comfort ers, and outstretched on this was a fam ily with their feet to the fire. The fam ily consisted of mother ana latner, two small children and a huge girl. . 'You seem to have a pleasant camp spot here," was my salutation. - The old woman answered sharply: 'They's wns, and then again they's better." - : . . "Does well for our hogs," inserted the old man. "We've a band of pork that make out to find feed." Oh! How many have you?" I asked. "Nigh three thousand." "Won't you set?" asked madam; then, turning to the daughter: "You, Susan, can't you try for to set up, and not spread so? - Hain't you no manners, say?" At this the massive girl got herself somewhat together, and made room for me, a courtesy which I declined, however. "Prospectin'?" inquired madam. "t say huntin'," suggested the man. "Maybe he's a cattle feller," inter rupted one of the children. "Goin' somewhere, ain't yer?" was Susan's guess. . - -y I gave a brief account of myself, sat isfying all but the old woman, who ev idently classified me as not up to her standard. Later she turned and said to me: . ? ' , ' "I allow you've killed your coon in your day?" 'No, ma'am," 1 said. ".Now you speak of it, I realize that I never have killed a coon." I realized, too, that this fatal admis sion must lorever lower me in ner eyes, and I observed that even Susan and her father were somewhat stag gered. After a sojourn of several days among them, X took leave of the fam ily. The father, and Susan accom panied me for a distance into the for est to inspect the hogs. As we were parting the old man said with evident embarrassment: "YouM take care o yerself, now, won't you?" I tried to convince him that I would. A slight pause. "You'U take care o" yerself, won't you?" I was about to reply that he might rely on it, when he added: "Thet thet thet man- what gets Susan lias hal t the hogs!" Then, turning away, he spurred his pony, calling out: "Take good care o yerself!" A COLOR-BLIND DIPLOMAT, But Bis Illusion Did Not Extend to the Vonnir Lady's Mother. society oi the highly proper sort is laughing in its voluminous sleeve at an adventure which befell a handsome nobleman attached to one of the for eign legations. , The young man, it ap pears, is not averse to admiring femi nine beauty, and it is said that when he visits the theater he takes a seat in the front row and fixes his eyes on the fair portion of the audience, says the Washington Post. - It is only natural that a man with such splendidly soulful eyes and lux uriant mustache as the baron's, should inspire reciprocal esteem in many of the weaker 'sex, and is acquainted with many damsels to whom he has never received a formal introduction, The other day he espied, an exceed ingly pretty brunette whom he immedi ately wanted to meet the worst way the world. When she discovered his admiring glances she drooped her lids in that coquettish way which bespoke a similar desire on her part. The attache is up to such demure lit tle idiosyncrasies and in less time than it takes to tell it he was chatting with her. Her mental brightness was even more pronounced than her per sonal attractiveness, and he was smit ten. - She refused his invitation to luncheon, however, and would not even let him walk home with her, but she said he might call and meet her mother, and in case the latter was fa vorably impressed with him he could continue his visits. This was a new type of the American girl to the diplo mat, so he rapturously applauded her eminent good sense and straightfor wardness, and made an engagement. in pursuance of her remarks, for the very next night. He was so anxious to make a good appearance that he primped for half an hour before the legation pier glass and ruined a dozen neckties before he tied one of the proper terra cotta shade. Then he sallied forth on con quest bent. He reached his latest inamorata' residence and a bright mula tto boy an swered the bell. In answer to his in quiry if Miss So-and-So was at home, the youngster replied that "sister" was in the parlor. The peculiarity of, this remark didn't seem to strike the foreigner, who had been tripped up so many times by - American idioms, and he entered. . ' His ideal and a portly yellow woman were in the apartment. "My mother, Mr. " began the girl, but the caller had fled. Nero had an opera glass, or, at least what is described by Pliny as a clear white gem, through which he was ac customed to watch the fighting "of the gladiators. The principle of the lens not then' being known, the stone was believed to possess a magical quality. Ice one to two inches thick will bear men, two inches thick will bear in fantry, four inches thick will " bear cavalry and light -guns, six inches will bear teams with moderate loads or heavy field guns, and eight inches teams with heavy loads. . fnt r " introduced a,".: a,u The vwuoum p Lion four million pounds. now amounts to The Chronicle prints all the news. I Howvcad to our hearts are some 'scenes of our 1 childhood, As our recollections present them to view: The use of the switch that was brought from the wiiawood. And various uunishments most of ns knew. But sadde-t of all is the thousrbt of the Dill box. idh moiner Drought out men sne inougm we were m, ! the griping, the aching, the twisting and I torment , - Wrapped up in the horrible old fashioned pill. But that's all done away with. . To regulate the stomach, liver and bowels Dr. Pierce'a Pellets excel. You'll ex perience no pain, no discomfort, no bad results. Children take them as readily as peppermint drops. Its thousands of cures are the best advertisements for Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. 50 cents : by druggists. Lord Roberts says that the Army Temperance- association - in- India,' which began in 1888 with 10,000 mem bers, has increased over 20,000 mem bers this year. K Grippe. .Daring the prevalence oi tne grippe the past seasons it was a noticeable fact chat those- who depended npon Dr. Jving'a JNew Discovery, not only had a peedy recovery, but escaped ail of the troublesome after effects of the malady. This remedv seems to have a peculia power in effecting rapid cures not only in cases of la grippe, bat in all diseases of throat, chest and lungs, and has cured cases of asthma and bay fever of long standing. Try it and be convinced.' It won't disappoint. - Free trial bottles at Snipes & Kinersly's drug store. A suit brought by the brother of the founder of the Magazin du Louvre, in Paris, shows that the business is val ued at $17,500,000. : ' The nip of a poisonous snake is bat a slight remove from being more danger ous than the poison of scrofula in the blood. Ayer's Sarsaparilla purifies the vital fluid, expels all poisonous . sab tan ces. sand supplies the elements of life, health and strength. "The Regulator Line" Tie -Dais, Portlani aid Astoria - Navigation Co. THROUGH FreigHt anil Passenger Line Through Dailv Trins (Sondavs ex cepted) between The Dalles and Fort-1 land. steamer regulator leaves inei Dalles at 7 a.m.. connecting at the Cas cade Locks with Steamer Dalles City. I Steamer Dalles City leaves .Portland (Yamhill st. dock) at 6 a. m., connect ing with Steamer Regulator for The Dalles. raSSKNOKK KATES. One way Bound trip. Freight Rates Greatly Reduced All freight, except car lots, will be brottght through, with out delay at cascaaes. Shipments for -Portland received at any time day or night. Shipments for way landings must be delivered before 5 p. m. .Live stock shipments eolicted. Call on or address, . W. C. ALLAWAY, nerl Agent. B. F. LAUGHLIN, Oencrnl Muicn. THE-DALLES. Oregon J. F. I0BD, Evamelist, Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes under date ol March 23. W98: S. B. Msd. Mfg. Co., Dufur, Oregon. Gentlemen : On arriving home last wees., I founo all well and anxionnly awaiiie. Out little girl, eight and one-half years old who bad wasted awav to 6 pounds. i now well, strong and vigorous, and we I fleshed up. S. B. Cough Cure has done its work well. ' Both of the children like it. Your S. B. Cough Cure has cured and kept away all hoarseness from me. So give it to every one, with greeting for all. Wishing yon prosperity, we are Yours, Me. a Mrs. J. t. roED. If you wish to feel frebh anai-heerral,aud read; for the Spring's Wjik, clenuee your system with the Headaoha and liver Cuni. by taking two ot three doses eaeb week. Bold under a positive guaraatea. SO cents per boHla by all drogirUta. . House Moving! Ancjrew Velarde IS prepared to do any and all kinds of work in his line at reasonable figures. Has the - largest house moving outfit in Eastern Qregon. Address P.O.Box 181,The Dalles ev York Weekly Tribune us-AND' oanes uq oiionie 41-ON J PIRST I J) : t..r P n D1! ill 111 ill a - 111 fo) Hi) CAN BE c H RON ICLE OFFICE treasonably 'There is a tide in tlie affairs of. men which, taken at its JieoA ' leads on to fortune? ' The poet unquestionably -had reference to the ClsiHilSi -m For at CRANDALL Who are soiling those ' goods v THELBACH . BRICK, THOSE WHO WISH Glass, Lime, Cement, PLASTER, LATH, Picture Frames, lmchijsibhy SCCH AS- Shafting. Pulleys, Belting, Engine and Boiler, , CAI.li - AND BEX JE3l. G-Xj IE IlSr iN" Caveats, and Trsde-M arks obtained, and all Pat ent business conducted for Moderatc Fees. Ou Office s Opposite O. S. Patcwt office and we can secure patent in less tune than those remote from Washington. - Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. a BinuLrr. "How to Obtain Patents," -with cost of some in tbe U. S. and foreign countries sent tree. Aoaress, C.A.SR30W&CO. Opp. patent Office, Washington, D. C. SI. CLHSS nil IF 0 HAD AT THE Huinoas Rates. & BURGET'S, out at greatly-reduced rates. . - - TJJCTON . ST. ' ' John Pashek, The Merchant Tailor, 78 Coovt StMt, Next door to "WaBoo Sun Office. XrHaw 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. - - , Cleaaiug and Repairing a1 Specialty. JJOTTCE FOB PUBLICATION. . Laud Office, The Dalles, Or., Mav 11. 1894. J Complaint having been entered at this office; by Jobann G. Fischer against the heirs at law ot HI nil illiam M. Murnhv. deceased, for abandoning his Homestead Entry, No. 4571, dated October 19. 1SCW nnnn KU RKl- And 1 ai . Tt i N. Bin v. In Waako countv. Oregon.with a view to the cancellation of said entry; the aid 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 furnish testimony concerning said alleged abandon ment. JOHN W. LEW18, ;; june9 . "V Register. FOR SALE OR TffADE A FINK IMPORTED " Frencl Percleron Stallion, Y Weight In good flesh 1,506 pounds, and Sure Foal iietter. wiu sen ior caan or nowa mm approved security, or will trade ior noises or caiie. Address: Kerr & Buckley, Grass Valley, Or. - HhR-HflKB JL. . .