II w HELP IS WANTED hy the women who are -ailing and Buffering, or weak and exhausted. And, to every such woman, help is guaranteed by Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. For young girls just entering womanhood ; - women at the critical " change of life " ; wo men approaching confinement; nurs ing mothers ; and every woman who is " run-down " or overworked, it is a medicine that builds up, strength ens, and regulates, no matter what the condition of the system. It's an invigorating, restorative tonic, a soothing and bracing nerv ine, and the only guaranteed rem edy for " female complaints " and weaknesses. In bearing-down sen sations, periodical pains, ulceration, inflammation, and every kindred ailment, if it ever fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. Dr. Sage's Remedy promises to cure your Catarrh -permanently. Whilk coon hunting, John Rider, of Dutchtown, Mo., lost an eye in a very peculiar way. Tie was going-up 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 Diarrhoea Remedy when three members of his iamily 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, Lewis ton. N. C, and it cured him of the eame compiaint. 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 thst natur ally follows its introduction and use has made it very popular. 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale 'by Blakely & Houghton, druggists. Ehky one who will allow himself to run after vain misterys will soon loze hiz konfldense in truih, and very likely bekum either a bawling fanat ick, or a pitiable lunatik. My boy was taken with a disease re sembling bloody flux. The first thing I thought "of was Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Two doses of it settled the matter and cured 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. Win. Roach, J. P., Primroy, Campbell Co., Tenn. For sale by Blakely &. Houghton drug gist. The total amount of Peter's pence collected for the pope's jubilee is about $150,000. It is shortly to be presented to the pope. "I know an old soldier who had chronic diarrhoua ot long standing to have been permanently cured by taking Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy," says Edward 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. Johanh Stbacss, the celebrated com poser of waltz music, is shortly to cele- , orate nis artistic jubilee in Vienna. He made his debut in 1844 at the head of a dance band in the gardens at tached to a v lennese restaurant. Bneklen'a Arlnca Salve The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fevet 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 oy . Snipes & Kin ersly It costs Great Britain 820,000 to scrape the barnacles off the bottom of one of its big men of war and repaint it, and this has to be done twice a year in the case of nearly every vessel. See the World's Fair for Fifteen Cents - Upon receipt of your address and fif teen cents in postage stamps, we will - mail you prepaid our souvenir portfolio ' of the world's Columbian exposition, the regular price is fifty cents, but as we want yon to have one, we make the price nominal. ' You will find it a work of art and a thing to be" prized. It con- - tains full page views of the great build ings, with descriptions of same, and is . executed In highest style of art. If not satisfied with it, after you get it, we will refund the stamps and let you keep the book. AddreES H. E. Bccbxen & Co., Chicago, 111. A DESPOTIC RULER. Tne Stomach Hot Easily Dethroned When . Once It Obtains Mastery-. One of the greatest misfortunes that can happen to a man in his barthly ca reer is to" discover that he has a stom ach. He may know it .theoretically or recollect the lessons in physiology of his schoolboy days, but according to the San Francisco Chronicle, when he finds out by actual, personal experi ence that he. has a stomach he is to be pitied. The whole science of gastrono my and it is a science has been de vised and perfected for the benefit of the men who have made this discovery. All the studies of the whole glittering galaxy of gastronomists, all the" culi nary triumphs of the great restaurants in the capitals of the world, are due to the simple fact that men have found out that they have stomachs, and that that organ, when once discovered, must be petted and flattered and soothed and kept in good humor to prevent its revolting and creating rev olution and civil war. It is safe to say that the primitive man never knew that he had a stomach. It has been reserved for civilization to make the discovery, and it is by no means a fore gone conclusion that civilization should pride itself upon having done so. The maxim that one never en joys, a good dinner until after it has been eaten is a refinement of modern and degenerate days, containing much sound philosophy from a certain standpoint, but that standpoint is a fictitious and mistaken one. There is no natural reason why a dinner, good or bad, should be enjoyed. The one object of eating is to satisfy hunger, and that being done, the dinner should be forgotten. It is only the im perious and arbitrary stomach which insists upon a further recognition of its claims, and it is only huma.n weak ness which submits to its demand. A modern philosopher, in terse though inelegant diction, has laid down this maxim, which is almost idiomatic: "You must down your stomach or your stomach will down you." There is more in this than will meet the eye of the casual reader. The stomach may, as certain of the ancients believed, be the real seat of the emotions, passions and affections, bnt we make a great mistake if' we subordinate the ego to a single organ, and especially to one which is'only toojreadytojpresume upon the favor shown it and the license given it. Healthy children know noth ing about their stomachs, except that they ache sometimes if called on to do double duty, and there is nothing so healthy and happy in the world as a healthy child. If children of a larger growth could but ignore the gastric organ or forget it, dyspepsia would be come a lost disease, and all the evils that follow, in its train would disap pear. DOES NOT LIKE CEREMONY. The Sultan of Turkey Receives Visitors In Stmplo Style and T.icrlits Their Cigarettes. The correspondent of an English pa per was recently accorded an interview by the sultan of Turkey, and was sur prised at the noticeable lack of cere mony with which he was received. When the newspaper man entered the royal presence he found his majesty standing ready to receive him. The descendant of Mahomet II. and of Selim had no rich turbans, no jeweled robes, no ornaments, nothing that dis tinguishes princes from ordinary peo ple in the east, except the true orna ments of the noble and well born, po lite bearing and refined expression. He appeared a perfect European prince, if anything politer and simpler than ordinary men. His majesty has even cast off the aigrette which his predecessors wore with the fez. There were no intricate ceremonies to be gone through as at the reception of the great mogul or at other eastern courts. There were no attendants present as are invariably to be seen in the private rooms of eastern princes. "Sentiment and tradition," says the correspon dent, "compelled me to do homage to the caliph like an oriental, with a bow. As soon as the formality was gone through his majesty shook hands, took his seat and desired me to be seated. The sultan was dressed plain ly, wearing no orders, stars or decora tions of any kind. , He is very fair, has a round head plentifully covered with grizzly gray hair, and possesses strik ing features." The interview was of the most chatty and friendly charac ter, the sultan showing marked ac quaintance with literature, especially that of the east, and his information on general subjects is extensive. When the correspondent arose to take his leave the Turkish ruler put his hand on the visitor's head and gave him by that act the caliphal blessing. With the multifarious duties that he has to perform his majesty prays, according to . the Mohammedan cus tom, five times a day with the regular ity of a clock. He fasts for thirty days during the month of the Rama dhan. He abstains from all kinds of alcoholic beverages and from gamb ling. He patronizes religious and moral institutions not only among his own people but among all the Moham medans of the world. Moreover, he does not confine his charity to the poor and needy of his own religion, but, ac cording to the dictates of the Koran, he helps the deserving irrespective of their religious beliefs. He allows tol eration to the highest degree, and is himself anything but a bigot. He is a great patron of learning of all kinds. A Wonderful Tunnel. The cities of Worsley and St. Helens, in north England, - are sixteen miles apart, yet they are connected by the most wonderful canal in the world. A tunnel has been cut through the great vein of coal which underlies the whole of Lancashire, and this, filled with water from the drainage trenches of that great system of mines, makes : a remarkable underground canal, in which the water is constantly five feet deep. This canal is provided with a regular system of coal boats, which are constantly moving thousands of tons of the bituminous fuel between the two cities. v,. 1! eu York Weekly 4KDNLY SHERIFF'S SALE. Notice la hcrphv tlven. that under iinrl liv vir tue of a writ of execution issued out of the Circuit Court of the State ot Oregon for Wasco County, on the 10th day of July, 1894, upon a judgment given and rendered in said Court and cause on the 2d day of March. 1804. and enrolled and dock eted therein on the 5th day of March, 1894, in a cause wherein Joseph A. Johnson was plaintiff ana i . u. i ay ior was aetenaani, ana 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 may be necessary to satisfy. aid judgment and costs, I did on the 20th duy of July, 18M, levy upon the property hereinafter described as the property of said de- lenuam, u. r. rayior, ana will on xnursaay, the 13th day of September, 1894, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M at the court House door in Dalles City, in gala asco 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. I. Taylor, in and to the said premises, which he bad on said 5th day of Marcn, 1894, or has since acquired, or so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy.said judg ment of 71575.00, with interest at 8 per cent., and the further sum of 726.00 costs and disburse ments, and tne 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 nlare and noon the terms and condi tions above mentioned, to-wit: 1. The south half of tne northeast quarter, the northwest quarter of the northeast quarte-, and the northeast quarter of the northwest quar ter of section 28 in townshin 1 north, range 10 east, Willamette Meridian,' in Wasco county, Oregon. 2. Lots 7 and 8, in block 24, in Blgelow's Bluff Addition to Dalles City, Wasco county, Oregon. 3. That certain place called the McDonald place, the same being the property conveyed to o. D. Taylor by V. A. McDonald and wife, and being more particularly described as follows: Commencing ut a point in the north boundary line of Neyce & Gibson's addition to Dalles City. one chain and fifteen links easterly from the northwest corner ot saia JNeyce & (iibson s addi tion and running thence ea-terly along the said north boundary line of Neyce fc Gibson's addi tion, two hundred and ten feet.more or less, to the western boundary line of a lot of land conveyed by James Fulton and wife to Priseilla Watson by a deed bearing date the 27th day of February, 1880, recorded on page 211, Book G of Records of Deeds of Wasco county; thence northerly and along said western boundary line of the said lot conveyed to Priseilla Watson, and production or continuation thereof to a point where the line so continued would intersect the southwestern boundary line of street laid out by the authori ties of Dalles City and called Fulton street, if said southwestern boundary line of said Fulton street were produced ana continued to such in tersection; thence in a right line to and along the said southwestern boundary of Fulton street to the point where the same intersects the east ern boundary line of the land owned by Went 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 latvi-thirf y 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. . Dalies City, Oregon, July 19, 1894. jul21-5t T. J. DRIVER, Sheriff of Wasco County, Oregon. SHERIFF'S SALE. Notice Is hereby given that under and by virtue of an execution, issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Wasco Countv, on the 21st day of July, 1894, upon a decree given and rendered in said court on the 7th day of July, 1894, in a cause wherein ft. V. Bolton was plain tiff and Emily B. Rinehart and Bayre Rinehart, Earle Kirajhart, Carl Rinehart and Phillip Rine hart, minors, by their guardian ad litem, W. H. Uobson, were defendants, and to me directed and delivered, and commanding me to satisfy the sum of $2180.00, with interest thereon at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum from said 7th day of July, 1894, and $220.00 attorney's fees and $38.15 costs of suit and accruing costs, by selling, in the manner provided by law for the sale of real nrooertv. all of the Tlcht. title and interest of said defendants, Emily B. Rinehart, Sayre Kinenart, .arie itinenart, i;ari Kinenart ana Phillip Rinehart in and to lots "G," "H" and "I." in Dufur's Grand View Addition to Dalles City, in Wasco County. State of Oregon, accord ing to the official plat thereof as the some ap pears of record within and for said County and State; I will on Thursday, August 23d, 1894, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m., at the court house door iu Dalles City, in said County and State, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash in hand, all the right, title and interest of the said defendants in and to the above named and described premises or so much thereof as may be necessary tj satisfy the sums abovo named. Dalles Citv, Oregon, July 23d, 1894. T J. DRIVER, jly26-5t. Sheriff of Wasco County, Oregon. SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of an execution issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon lor W asco t ountv, in a suit tberin pending wherein E. L. Smith is plaintiff and M. V. Harrison, Sophia M. Harrison, lames W. Smith, John Klosterman, E. 8. Larsen, doing business under the name of E. 8. Latsen & Co., John G. Miller, Emannel 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 business under the firm name of Murphy, Grant & Co., Garretson, Woodruff, Pratt Company, a corporation ; C M. Henderson & Co., a corporation ; A.B.Bennett and E. A. Bartmes are defendants, on the 25th dav of July. 1894, 1 will sell at Public Anction to the highest bidder for cash in hand, at the Court House door in Dalles City, Oregon, on the first aay ot septemDer, is, at tne nour ot a o clock In the afternoon of said dav. all of the rieht. title and interest of each and all of the above named defendants m and to the following de scribed real property lying and situate in W asco County, Oregon, to wit: .- ' . All of lots one, two, three, four, twenty-five, twenty-six, twenty-seven and twentv-eicrbt in block four of Waucoma Addition to the town of Hood 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 Parkhurst. T. J. DRIVER, jy28 5t Sheriff of Wasco County, Or. i ribune - $1.75. "The Regulator Line ' Tie Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Freloni ana Passenoer Line Through - Daily Trips (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Fort 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. PA89ENOIB RATES. Oneway 2XX) Round trip 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 muBt be delivered before 5 p. m. Live stock shipments solicted. Call on or address, W. CALLAWAY, General A rent. B. F. L.AUGHLIN, Oenerml Manager. THE-DALLES. OREGON J. I MD, aienst, Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes under data ol March 28, 1893: S. B. Mud. Mfg. Co., iutur, Oregon. Gentlemen: .-, . : On arrivine home last week. I fonnd all well and anxiously awaiting. , Oar little girl, eight and one-half years old, who bad wasted away to 88 pounds, is now well, strong and vigorous, and well fleshed up. 8. 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 greetings for all. - WiBhing you, prosperity, we are Yours, Ma. & Mas. J. F. Four. If yon wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and ready for the Spring' work, cleanse your ay stem with the Headache and Liver Care, by taking two or three doses each week. Bold nnder a positive (ruaxaatee. GO cents per bottle by all druggist. House Moving. Andrew 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 Oregon. Address P.O.Box 181.The Dalles J-B. A. DIETRICH, Physician and Surgeon, DUF0B, OKEGON. ggf All 'professional calls promptly attends o, day and night. aprH Isi and fflridy 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 in the Inland Empire. The Daily Chronicle is published every eve ning in the week Sundays excepted at $6.00 per annum. The Weekly Chronicle on Fridays of each week at $1.50 per annum. For advertising rates, subscriptions, etc., address THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. ''There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at its Jtooa , . leads on to fortune? . The poet unquestionably had reference to the at CRANDALL Who are selling these goods M1CHELBACH BRICK, FipST CD o) ji)) R f M CD CAN BE CHRONICLE O FFICE Reasonably New - Umatilla- House, THE DAIXES, OREGON. SINNOTT &, FISH, PROP'S. Ticket and Baggage Office of the TJ. P. Union Telegraph Office are in the Hotel. Fire-Proof Safe for the Safety of all .Valuables. ; LARGEST ; AND : FINEST : HOTEL : IN : OREGON. V':':PvMUiS!'N;E; Pip foil, Tin Repairs MAINS TAPPED Shop on Third Street, next door west of Young & Ku' Blacksmith Shop. Dalles, Oregon. : & BURGET'S, out at greatly-reduced rates. . - . , . ' UNION ST. . CLHSS 0 C3 ' 111 rn hum HAD AT THE Huinoos Hates. R. B. Company, and office of the "Western UNDER PRESSURE. ailoofiiio