JL FULL STOMACH n- ought to cause you no discomfort what f ever. If it does, inougn it mere s any trouble after eating take Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They're a perfect and con- venient vest-pocket remedy. One of these tiny, sugar coated, anti - bilious granules at a dose regulates and cor ' recta the entire sys tem. Sick or Bil ious Headaches, Constipation, Indi gestion, Bilious At tacks, and all de rangements of the liver, stomach, and bowels are pre vented, relieved and cured. They're the smallest, easiest to take, cheapest and best. They're guaranteed to give satisfaction, or money is returned. ' Which is the best to try, if you have Catarrh a medi cine that claims to have cured others, or a medicine that is backed by money to cure you ? The proprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy agree to cure your Catarrh, perfectly and per Ttiancntly, or they'll pay you $500 in cash. , While coon hunting1, John Rider, of Dutchtown, Mo., lost an eye in a very peculiar way. He was g-oinffup a tree, in search of a coon, when an owl flew down and tore out his eyeball with its claw. Kenneth Bazemore had the good for tune to receive a small bottle of Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera, and Diarrba-a Remedy when three members of his lamily were sick with dysentery. This one small bottle cured them all and he had some left which he gave to Geo. W. Baker, a prominent merchant of the place, Lewiston. N. C, and it cured him of the eame complaint. When troubled with dyeentery, diarrhoea, colic .or cholera morbus, give this remedy a trial and you will be more than pleased 'with the result. The praise that natur ally follows its introdaction.and nse has made it very popular. 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by Blakely & Houghton, -druggists. Statisticians say that the increase of wealth in the United States during the last thirty years is without parallel in the history of the world. My boy was taken with a disease re sembling bloody flax. The first thing I thought of was Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Two doses of it settled the matter and cored him sound and well. I heartily recom mend this remedy to all persons suffer ing from a like complaint. I will an swer any inquiries regarding it when stamp is inclosed. I refer to any county official as to my reliability. Wm. Roach, J. P., Priinrov, Campbell Co., Tenn. For sale by Biakely & Houghton drug gist. A little knowledge wisely used is better than all knowledge disused. Excessive labor is wrong, but judi cious labor is the safety valve of life. "I know an old soldier who had chronic diarrhoea ot long standing to have been permanently cured by taking Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy," says Kdward Shum pik, a prominent druggist of Minnea polis, Minn. "I have sold the remedy in this city for seven years and consider it superior to any other medicine now on the market for bowel complaints." 25 and 50 cent bottles of this remedy for sale by Blakely & Houghton drug gists. Walter Bksant, among- other rea sons for his opposition to woman suf- frage, says that men hare to do the conquering, the defending and the pro viding, and they ought to do the gov erning. JBucklen'n Arnic Smlve. , The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fevei sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Snipes & Kin ersly . ' He They met at the seaside. Then commenced an acquaintance that would soon have ripened into love; but " She "But what?" He "They mar ried." Vojnie. Ayer's Ague Cure never fails to neutralize the poisons of malaria, and eradicate them from the system. This preparation is purely vegetable, contains no harmful ingredients,' and,' if taken according to directions, is warranted to cure fever and ague. . Try it. ' ( Cord Wood. We again have an abundant supply of dry fir and hard wood for immediate . delivery at the lowest rates, and hope to be favored with a liberal share of the trade. Jos. T. Peters & Co. Get Tour Money. All county warrants registered prior to August 1, 1S90, will be paid on pre sentation at my office. Interest ceases after July 12th. Wm. Michell, County Treasurer. A WONDEEFUL STATE. Points About California and Her . Amiable People. Plenty of Iiarn Sights - for the Tourist "But He Mast Pay Well to See Them Wbere the Zones Are Very Close Together. Take your average Californian and you will find him' to be an amiable creature. Distance lends no enchant ment in his case. You have got to meet the fellow on his own soil to get thoroughly acquainted with him and learn to admire all the good traits he has stored away in his weU-nourished frame. There is nothing mean or small about the average Californian, says . the Chicago Herald. He lives weU, sleeps well and dresses in good taste. He likes legitimate sport and is a keen critic at the theater. He doesn't nourish a throbbing love for China men, and he looks with suspicion on bank notes and gold and sUver certifi cates. He, prefers to collect and pay his debts in coin, and considers a penny as a sort of tramp in our monetary sys tem. It rains in San Francisco during the winter months .not every day. per haps, but possibly nine or ten times a week. But the average Californian doesn't appear to notice the precipita tion until he meets a friend from the cast. Then he . begins to , apologize something after this fashion: "How 'do you like this country? Ever in California before? . This rain is something unusual. Thursday was as clear as a bell. Sorry it is so disa greeable. Spring is quite as backward this year as some merchants I .know are in their payments." , Then you laugh and stoop to let the water run off your hat. . . "But," the average Californian will continue, "this fog in the morning means a clear afternoon. Never knew it to fail. Will you bury your beak in a glass of wine?" . There is the apologetic humanitarian for you. You can find him almost anywhere in San Francisco. He knows that fogs and rainstorms are - as preva lent in his town during the months of November, December, January and February as they are in the web-footed state of Oregon. Yet when approached by the tourist he manifests the most acute astonishment at such climatic eccentricities. So thoroughly addicted is the average Californian to this harm less and amusing form of tergiversa tion that he at once impresses you with the belief that he actually thinks he is telling- the truth, and that the doleful surprise he manifests is thor oughly conscientious. Things grow very large the moment you leave the Mojave desert, with its bristling, stunted palms and miles and miles of sage brush. Just take a ride with a Los Angeles man through the San Gabriel .valley, if you doubt this, assertion. Let him do the talking. He is sure to keep you thinking. This is about the way he rattles along: "Peach trees? No; that's a prune orchard. Why, last year Mr. So-and-So gathered sis' thousand tons of prunes off these trees. Why, sir, the crop was so heavy that he had to hire men to saw off the branches to pre serve the trunks of the trees. Oh, but this country is a-coming. You can"t stop her. Just look at these moun tains. They are fifteen miles from town and you can't touch the land for less than five hundred dollars an acre. Look at that dirt. Raise anything here. This soil is blacker than Puget sound and richer than Baldwin. It's a great country. Why, it's different from anything on earth. Here , the squirrels build their nests in the ground and rats live in trees that shed their bark .instead of their leaves. See that orchard over there? Fifteen years ago it was covered with sage brush. Now there arc eighteen thou sand orange trees in that tract of land, and the fruit the wind alone blows off would pave every road and path in Golden Gate park. What do you think of our women? Not so pretty as they are in 'Frisco, eh? I will tell you why. It's the climate. Up there they have more moisture in the air and that softens the complexion, ncre it's dry the year round and that .is why ,the faces of our women look harsher. But it's a good country, isn't it? What do you think of it anyhow?" And so this man of Los Angeles will talk and talk until the sun. goes down in the ocean with a sizzle. But Cali fornia has everything to brag about, and the visitor can afford to stand this good-natured hyperbole. The state is bigger than the combined area of the commonwealths of New York, Penn sylvania, Vermont, New Hampshire and Delaware. It is a thousand miles long. From the Mexican - line - to the boundary of Oregon .the distance is as great as that which separates New York city from Chicago. It is a state where the zones are so closely wedded that the visitor may pick straw berries one moment and half an hour later enjoy a sleigh ride on the flat top of a mountain. It is a land filled with flowers, fruits and birds, and just enough snow and ice to drape in glit tering passementerie the purple peaks and savage cataracts to the north. Qaeer Uses of Fans. There are many curious uses of fans in Japan. The umpire at wrestling and fencing matches uses a heavy one, shaped like a huge butterfly, the han dle being the body, and rendered im posing by heavy co.-ds of silk. The various motions of the fan constitute a language which the wrestlers fully un derstand and appreciate. Formerly in the time of war the Japanese comman der used a large fan, having a frame of iron covered with thick paper. In case of charge it could be shut, and a blow from its iron bones was no light affair. One notable variety of fan is made of waterproof paper, which can be dipped in water, and creates great coolness by evaporation, without wet ting the clothes. The flat fan, made of rough paper, is often used as a grain winnow, to blow the charcoal -fires and as a dustpan. ' ; eu York Weekly Tribune 4I-ON SHERIFF'S SALE. Notice Js hereby riven, that under and bv vir tue of a writ of execution tamed out of the Circuit Court of the 8tate of Oreeon for Wasco Countv. on the 10th day of July, 1894, upon a judgment given una renaerea in saia ;ourc ana cause on the 2d day of March. 1H94. and enrolled and dock eted therein ou the .rth day of March, 18M, in a cause wherein Joseph A. Johnson was plaintiff and O. D. Taylor was defendant, and to me di rected, and commanding me to levy upon and sell the property of the said defendant, O. D. Taylor, or so much thereof as mav be necessary to satisfy told judgment and costs, I did on the 20th day of July, 1891, levy upon the property iicreiuuiwr uoicnoca as me property ot saia ae fendant, O. D. Taylor, and will on Thursday, the 30th day of August, 1804, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M at the court house door in Dalles City, in said Wasco county, Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bid der for cash in hand, all the r ght, title and in terest of the said O. D. Tavlor, in and to the said premises, which be had on said 5th dav of March, 1894, or has since acquired, or so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfv said 1udcr- m cut of $1575.00, with interest at 8 per cent., and the further sum of 126.00 costs and disburse ments, and the costs and expenses of this writ. The following is a description of the property above referred to, and which will be sold at the time and place and upon the terms and condi tions above mentioned, to-wit: i. xne soutn nait ot the northeast quarter, the northwest auarter of the northeast nuarter. and the northeast quarter of the northwest quar ter of section 2S in township 1 north, range 10 east, Willamette Meridian, in Wasco count", Oregon. 2. Lots 7 and S, in block 24, in Bigelow's Bluff Addition to Dalles City, Wasco countv, Oregon. .,. xuai ixriam mace caiiea tne lcuonaia place, the same beirie the nrooertv conveved to O4 1. Taylor by F. A. McDonald and wife, and being more particularly described as follows: Commencing at a point in the north boundary uue 01 neyce k ijidsoii s aaaiuon to uanes city, one chain and fifteen links easterly from the nortnwest corner ox saia ieyce v uiDson s addi tion and running thence easterly along the said north boundary line of Nevce & Gibson's addi- tion,two hundred and ten fcet,more or less, to the western boundary line of a lot of land conveyed by James Fulton and wife to Priscilla Watson by a deed bearing date the 27th day of February, itu, recoraea on page m, hook o ot Kecoras of Deeds of Waseo county; thence northerly and along said western boundary line of the said lot conveyed to Priscilla Watson, and s production or continuation thereof to a point where the line so continued would intersect the southwestern nounaary line of street laid out by the authori ties of Dalles City and called Fulton street, if said southwestern boundary line of said Fulton Btreet were produced ana continued to such in tersection; tnence inn right nne to and along the said southwestern boundary of Falton street to the point where the same intersects the east ern boundary line of the land owned by Wont worth Lord ; thence southerly along the eastern line of said land owned by Wentworth Lord to the place of beginning, excepting therefrom a strip of land thirty feet in width off the east side of said tract, which has been conveyed to Dalles City for street purposes, said land lying and be ing in Dalles City, Wasco countv, Oregon. Danes uity , Oregon, J uty iv, 1S94. jul21-5t T. J. DRIVER, Sheriff of Wasco County, Oregon. SHERIFF'S - SALE. Notice is hereby given that under and bv virtue of an execution, issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Wasco County, on the 21st day of July, 1894, upon a decree given and rendered in said court on the 7th day of July, jro-t, iu k cause WDurcui it. .v. Doiuia was plain tiff and Emily B. Rinehart and Sayre Kinehart, Earle Rinehart, Carl Rinehart and Phillip Rine hart, minors, by their guardian ad litem, W. H. Hobson, were defendants, and' to me directed and delivered, and commanding-roe to satisfy the sum of $2180.00, with interest thereon at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum from said 7th dav of July, 1894, and 1220.00 attorney's sloes and I3S.15 costs of suit and accruing costs, by selling, in the manner provided by law for the sale of real property, all of the right, title and interest of said defendants, Emily B. Rinehart, Sayre nineiiart, r.arie itinenari, van Aineaari ana Phillip Rinehart in and to lots "G," "H" and "I," in Dufur's Grand View Addition to Dalles City, in Waseo County. State of Oregon, accord ing to the official plat thereof as the same ap pears of record within and for said Countv and State; I will on Thursday, August 23d, 1894, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m., at the court house door in Dalles City, in said County and State, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash in nand,-all the right, title and intsrestof the said defendants in and to the above named and described premises or so much thereof as may oe necessary to sansiy tne sums abova named.- Dalles City, Oregon, July 23d, 1S94. T. J. DRIVER, Jly26-St. Sheriff of Wasco County, Oregon. SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of an execution issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Wasco County, In a suit therln pending wherein E. L. Smith is plaintiff and M. V. Harrison, Sophia M. Harrison, James W. Smith, John Klosterman, E. B. Larsen, doing business under the name of E. S. Larsen fc Co., John G. Miller, Emanuel Miller and James B. Watt, partners doing busi ness under the firm name of John G. Miller & Co., John Murphy, Adam Grant, J. D. Grant and J. T. Ford, partners doing bnsiness under the firm name of Murphy, Grant fc Co., Garretson, Woodruff, Pratt Company, a corporation ; CM. Henderson & Co., a .corporation ; A. S. Bennett aud E. A. Bartmes are defendants, on the 25th day of July, 1894, 1 will sell a Public Auction to the highest bidder for cash in hand, at the Court House door in Dalles City, Oregon, on the first day of September, 1894, at the hour of 2 o'clock in the afternoon of said day, all of the right, title and interest of each and all of the above named defendants 111 and to the following de scribed real property lying and situate in Wasco County, Oregon, to it: All of lots one, two, three, four, twenty-five, twenty-six, twenty-seven and twenty-eight In block four of Waucoma Addition to the town of Eood River; also lots one and two of block four in Winans Addition to the town of Hood River; also block two and lot one in block four in the town of Parkhuist. ' ' . T. J. DRIVER: jy28 5t . .. Sheriff of Wasco County, Or. - . SI. 75. "The Regulator Line" Ttte Dalles, Portlantl anil Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Freigot ana Passensef Lies Through Daily Trips (Sundays ex cepted) between, The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a. m'., connectingat 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. u . PAB8ENGIK KATES. 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. Shipments for Portland received at any time day' or night. Shipments for way landings must be delivered before 5 p. m. Hive stock shipments solicted. Callon or address, . ... : W. C. ALL A WAY, General Agent. B. F. LAUGHLIN. General Manager. THE-DALL.ES, ' , OREGON - J. F. FORD, Evaielist' Of pea Moines, Iowa, writes nnder .data ol ' March. 23, 1893: . . S. B. Mkd. Mfg. Co., . ... Dufur, Oregon. Gentlemen: ' ' ' ' " On arriving home last week, I found all well and anxiously awaiting. Our little girl, eight and, one-half years old, who had wasted away to 38 pounds, is now well, strong and vigorous, and well fleshed up. 8-B. Cough Core has done its work well. JEtoth 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 greetings for all; 'Wishing yon prosperity, we are . t Yours, . . Mb. A AIrs J, F. Tobd. -. If yon wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and ready for the Spring's work, cleans your system with the Headache and Liver Core, by taking two or three doses each week. . . .. . Sold under a positive guarantee, .-: SO cents per bottle by all druggists. House Moving! Andrew Velarde IS prepared to do any and all kinds of work in his line at . reasonable figures. Has the 1 largest house moving 'outfit in Eastern Oregon, Address P.O.Box ISl.The Dalles J)R. A. DIETRICH, Physician and Surgeon,-' DUFTTR, OREGON. gJ3 - All professional calls promptly attends o, day and night. t . aprM ri I''''''-'" : iDiriiciD THE CHRONICLE was established for the ex press purpose of faithfully representing The Dalles and the surrounding country, and the satisfying effect of its mission , is everywhere apparent. It now leads all other publications in Wasco, Sher man, Gilliam, a large part of Crook, Morrow and Grant counties, as' well as Klickitat and other re gions' north , of The Dalles, hence it is the best medium for advertisers m the Inland Empire. "The Daily Chkonicle is published every eve ning in the week Sundays excepted at $6.00 per annum. The Weekly Chronicle on Fridays of Qach week at $1.50 per annum. For advertising rates, subscriptions, etc., address THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO., Tne Dalles, Oregon. 'There is a tide in. the affairs Uads on to fortune." The poet unquestionably had reference to the Clsii-0i! Sale ol m- ' - ".' ; ".'-'- !.-,,, .. ... - - ...... i't, , T .. j ivt - ": - Forfiiim k Carpels at C Ft A N DALL Who are selling these goods M1CHELBACH BRICK. FIRST (7h ol- Ft) CAN BE I III Pi CHRON I CLE O FFICE treasonably New - Umatilla - House, THE DALLES, OREGON. SIN IMOTT & Ticket and Baggage Office of the U. P. ' Union Telegraph Office are in the Hotel. ; Fire-Proof Safe for the Safety of all Valuables. LARGEST ; AND : FINEST B. BU f!ME Pipe loif H MATNS TAPPED Chop on .Third Street, '"next door west of Young & Hues' . . - Blacksmith Shop. .'"'' :" n SI of men which, taken at its fiaoa & BURG EX'S, out at greatly-reduced ratesr - UNION ST. CLHSS Jt "Vr JL mm JL HAD AT THE fuinoas Hates. FISH, PROPS: R. R. Company, and office of the Western ,: HOTEL : IN -i OREGON. jBi t -: UNDER PRESSURE.