TO STOP THE PROGRESS of Consumption, you will find bat one guaranteed remedy Doctot Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. In advanced cases, it brings comfort and relief ; if you haven't delayed too long, it will certainly care. It doesn't claim too much. It won't make new lungs nothing can ; but it will make diseased ones sound and healthy, when everything else has failed. The scrofulous affection of the lungs that's caused Consumption, like every other form of Scrofula, and every blood-taint and disorder, yields to the " Discovery." It is the most effective blood - cleanser, strength -restorer, and flesh -builder known to medical science. In all Bronchial, Throat and Lung Affec tions, if it ever fails to benefit or cnre, you have your money back. A perfect and permanent cure for your Catarrh - or $500 in cash. This is prom ised by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. A Funny Ache. "I flon't think I ever realized just how many different kinds of aches a human being could have," said a young father, '.until I became acquainted with my boy. He's about seven now, and a good healthy boy, too, but a list of his aches and pains would fill a book. His latest ache is the heel ache; he told his mother the other day he had the 'heel ache.' This was something entirely new to both of us, and we both thotight ' it was rather funny; though possibly it may not seem so to older parents." Yaxo Vu, the Chinese minister at Washington, is, cutting a very wide sTxriLt.h. . His costume, carriage and mansion outshine those of any . other diplomat. - Kenneth Baieniore had the good for tune to receive a small bottle of Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera, and Diarrhoea Remedy when three ..members of his Jatnily were sick with dysentery. This one small bottle cared them nil and he had some left which he gave to Geo. W. Baker, a prominent merchant of the place', Lewiston. X. C., and it cured him of the same complaint. When troubled with dysentery, 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 introduction and use lias made it very popular. 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by Blakely & Houghton, drupgists. ' Enky one who will allow himself to run after vain misterys will soon loze hiz konfidense in truih, and very likely bckum either a bawling fanat ' ick, or a pitiable lunatik. My boy was taken with a disease re sembling bloody flas. The first thing I thought of was Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Eemedy. Two closes of it' settled the matter and cured him sound and well. 1 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. Koach, 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 noDo. "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 Eemedy," 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. - Johann Strauss, the celebrated com- . poser of waltz music, is shortly to cele- orate nis artistic jubilee in Vienna, lie made his debut in 1844 at the head of a dance band in the gardens at tached to a Viennese restaurant. Bncklen's A.rlnc 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, jor money refunded. Price 25 cents per box.. For sale Dy Snipes & Kin ersly. It costs Great Britain SttO.OOO 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. To prevent the hardening of the sub cutaneous tissuea of the scalp and the obliteration of the hair follicles, which cause baldness, use Hall's Hair Re-newer. NUMBER NINE IN MYTHOLOGY. What a German Professor Has to Bay of Three Times Three. ' It is not often that a single figure has enjoyed the distinction of being the subject of long study and investi gation on the part of a German univer sity professor. But "The Number Nine" is tho title of a long and learned article in a recent edition of "Am Ur quell," by Prof. Reinhold, at present rector of the University of Berlin. "In early times," writes the professor, "the first uneven number (3) and its mul tiple (9) were considered of especial importance, likewise all numbers which contained 9. Heathen philoso phers, or Christian mystic writers, the legends of nations, the religions of modern peoples, all go to prove the holiness or sanctity of the number 9. In ancient Germanic life, in poetry, in religion and law, the number 9 is met everywhere. It still has its influence in German customs and German belief. In the Scandinavian mythology we find groups of nine walkyries, nine dises, nine giant mermaids or women of the sea, nine mothers of the god HeimdelL nine virgins of the Menglod-Freyja and i nine dwarfs. In the middle ages nine heroes were usually grouped together, as is to be seen on the beautiful foun- : tain at Nuremburg and the llanse i salon of the Cologne city hall. In the ! poetry of. the fifteenth cenfury groups of nine arc favored. Proofs of this are to be foind in the festival plays, Nos. ! 38 and 47 of the Keller collection, and in the poem: 'The Nine Poor Wander ers" of Hans achs. There were nine judges in Icelandic and Germanic law, known as 'the nines.' In Lucerne there existed until 1795 the nine men who sat in judgment on ordinary police cases. Ninechildren were formerly looked on as the ideal number for a family. Even animals arc named in old tales in groups of nine. In a German fairy tale nine birds quarrel ovev the wish in;? clock. They say in Tysol: "When nine parents meet there is a. witch among' them.' AVe also find nine a favored number for those people who make a sacrifice of human beings and animals." SACRIFICES TO THE SEA. Mystic Rites or Indians in 1'ropitiation ot the Great Spirit of tho Waters. To the adventurous globe trotter who has climbed the rock path to the sailor's church of Notre Dame d-j la Garde, dominating the Phenieia n port of Marseilles, the potent influence of sacrifices and offerings for perils passed and to come must be no old story, says Lieut. J. D. Jerrold Kelley, in describing "The Superstitions of the Sea," in the Century. There is a pathos, even for the world ly, in the quaint ships and galleons, in the rusting marlinspikes and shattered tiller heads, swinging to the mistral, in reverential offering before the shrines. These graces after danger, these insurances against evil to come, circle the world. No people have es caped the influence of such hopes and thanks. Our Indians were fettered by them, and no ceremonious offerings were more common than those which went to appease the angry Spirit of the Waters. On tne upper tributaries of the Mississippi, the Indians, with oc cult rites, gave tribute of tobacco from a beetling cliff to the Great Spirit of the River, and to the winds that smote the waters with blasts from the cav erns of the jealous gods. Algonquins in the north, Aztecs, sons of Atahualpa and Marco Capac, in the south all blew incense out of their pipes, and strewed upon the currents and tide ways just such offerings of tobacco as, in our more subjective days, we give with lost meanings to the minor gods who rule the man's hour in our feasts. A DOLLAR IN THE WALLET. It Is an Influence That Lends a Charm to Lift-. The stars they shine serencr and with greater luminosity when a fellow isn't struggling with his impecuniosity. The lofty sky is bluer and the meadow grass is greener, and the ills of life are fewer, and our life itself serener; and we feel a glorious courage and the fates cannot appall it when we ieel the solid backing of a dollar in our wallet. Oh, the quiet air of twilight is more brightly biminiferous, and the incense from the flowers is more sweet and odoriferous; and the zephyrs blow more sweetly and our food is more nutritious, and we're conscious more completely thatour breakfast is de licious; and we feel that life's no fizzle, as the pessimists miscall ' it, when we have the satisfaction of a dollar in onr wallet. All our woes are less appalling and our joys are less ambiguous, and all life's happy meadows are so lush-like and irriguous; for a glass of pure, cold phospha tastes as sweet as balm of Gilead, and brown bread is like am brosia Homer tells of in the "Iliad;" and we feel that life's a poem mauger what the cynics call it, and we feel su premely blessed with a dollar in .our wallet. STRONG MEN OF OLD. In the Good Old Days There Were Lots ol Brawn and AInscle to Be Found. Philip, count of Kirchberg, was so strong that he could drive a nail into the wall with one of his ff. iigers, says the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. A Span iard named Pedro, who emigrated to Naples in 1555, drove nails into the wall with his forehead. Potowka, a Polish colonel, mashed horseshoes with his hand. Valentine EinsiedeL count of Schwarzenberg, and Curtof Leut zow, a Mecklenburg nobleman, did the same thing with ease. The latter could carry a tun of wine and throw silver coins with such force against an oak tree that the edge imbedded itself in the bark. Frederick of Hazstein, who lived at Limburg in 1363, could lift an aum (forty English gallons) of wine and drink from the bunghole. .Tobann, count of Ziegenhain of Hessia (1455), pushed aside six aums of wine, wagon and all, which obstructed the road over which he was riding. - Count Siegmund of Burgstall, carried seven adults on his shoulders and walked about with them for several minutes. " . ... 3eiv: Yorfc Ueefcly Iri tONLY SHERIFF'S SALE. Notice is hereby given, that under and bv vir tue of a writ of execution issued out of the Circuit Court of the Htate of Oregon for Wasco Countv, on the 10th day of July, 1894, upon a judgment given mid rendered in said Court undCHUseon the 2d day of March, 1S94, and enrolled and dock eted therein on the 5th day of March, 1894, 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. I). Taylor, or so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy f aid judgment and costs, I did on the 20th day of July, 18!H. levy upon the property hereinafter described as the property of said de fendant, O. D. Taylor, and will on Thursday, the 13th day of September, 1894. " at the hour of ten o'clock A. M., at the court 1 house door in Dulles City, in su!d Wasco county. Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bid der for cash in hand, ail the r ght, title and in terest of the said O. D. Taylor, in and to the said premises, which lie had on said 5th day of Aiarcn, isy-1, or oas Kiuee acquired, or so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy said judg ment of 1575.00, with interest at 8 per cent, and the further sura of J2C..00 costs and disburse ments, and the costs and expenses of this writ. - ine louowing is a description 01 tne 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: 1. The south half of the northeast quarter the northwest quarter of the northeast quarte-, and the northeast quarter of the northwest quarj ter of section 28 in townshiD 1 north, range 1c east, Willamette Meridian," in Wasco county, Oregon. 2. Lots 7 and S, in block 24, in Bigelow's Bluff Addition to Dalles City, Wasco county, Oregon. ;:. Tbat certain plucc called the McDonald place, the same being the property conveyed to O. D. Taylor by F. A. McDonald and wife, and being more particularly described as follows: Commencing at a point in the north boundary line of Neyce & Gibson's addition to Dalles City, one chain nnd fifteen links easterly from the northwest corner of said Neyce Sc Uibson's addi tion and Tunning thence easterly along the said north boundary line of Neyce & Gibson's addi tion, two hundred and ten feet, more or-less, to the western bovyidary lino of a lot of land conveyed by James Fulton and wife to- Priscilla Watson by a deed bearing date the 27th day tff February, 188U. recorded on page 211, Book G of Records of Deeds of Wasco county; thence northerly and along Siiid western boundary line of the said lot conveyed to Priscilla Watson, and production or continuation thereof to a point where the line so continued would intersect tbe 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 tbe 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 Wcntworth Lord to the place of beginning, excepting therefrom a strip of land thirty feet in width off the east Bide of said tract, which has been conveyed to Dalles Citv for street purposes, said land lying and be ing' in Dalles City, Wasco comity, Oregon. Dalles Citv, 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 2l8t day of July, 1894, upon a decree given and rendered in said court on the 7th day of July, 1894, in a cause wherein G. V. Bolton was plain tiff and Emily B. Rinehart and Bayre Rinehart, 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 me to satisfy the sum of 21SO.0O, with interest thzreon at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum from said 7th dav of July, 1894, and 1220.00 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 property, all of the right, title and interest of said defendants, Emily B. Rinehart, Bayre Rinehart, Earle Rinehart, Carl Rinehart and Phillip Rinehart in nnd to lots "G," "H" and "I," in Dufur's Grand View Addition to Dalles City, in Wasco County. State of Oregon, accord ing to tbe official plat thereof as the same ap pears of record within and for said Countv and State; 1 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 hand, all the right, title and lntsrestof the said defendants in and to the above named and described premises or so much thereof as may be necessury t satisfy the sums abora named. Dalles City. Oregon, July 23d, 1891. . 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 for Wasco County, in a suit therin pending wherein E. L. Smith is plaintiff and M. V. Harrison, Sophia M. Harrison, James W. Smith, John Klosterman, E. S. Larseu, doing business under the name of E. S. Larsen & 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 business under the firm name of Murphy, Grant & Co., Garretson, Woodruff, Pratt Company, a corporation : CM. Henderson Sc Co., a corporation ; A.S.Bennett and E. A. Bartmes are defendants, on tho 25th day of July, 1894, 1 will sell a Pnblio Auction to tho 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 Baid 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, twonty-seven and twenty-eight in block four of Waucoma Addition to tbe town of Hood River; also lotsxne and two of block four in W'inans 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 6t . Sheriff of Wasco County, Or. bone -$1. "The Regulator Line" Tie Dalles, MM ani Astoria Navigation Co. ' . THROUGH Fiew and Passenger LiaB 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 et. dock) at 6 a.m., connect ing with Steamer Regulator for The Dalles. rABSSKOEK RATES. 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 mast be delivered before' o p. m. .Lave stoctc stupments soiictea. Call on or address, W. C. ALLAWAY, General A cent. B. F. LAUGHLIN, General Manager. TH E-DALL.ES. OREGON J. F. FORD, Evamelist, Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes -under date ol " March 28. 1893: S. B. Mud. 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 33 pounds, is now well, strong and vigorous, and well 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 greetings for all. Wishing you prosperity, we are Yours, Mb. & Mas. J. F. Ford. If you wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and read; for the Spring's work, cleanse your system with the Headache and Liver Cure, by taking two or three doses each week. ' 8old under a positive guarantee. 60 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 , largest house moving outfit in Eastern Oregon. Address P.O.Box 181,The Dalles D It. A. DIETRICH, Physician and Surgeon, DTJFTJR, OREGON. . tf All professional calls promptly attende o, Qay and night. aprl ". . Er 2 I 1 ' r""V' "I ' I iHQ I HSU QC? lt)sl 0 Iff tra nil il (fjQ ff Iff Mill 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, ijriiiiam, a large part ol Urook, Morrow and Grant counties, as well as Klickitat and i other re- : . l. ti. .Vn 1. -.i it. 1 . giuuo uuiiu ui j. tie .xaiies, ueiiutj it is me oesi medium for advertisers in the Inland Empire. The Dally 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 TH EC H RON. CLE rxflxe Dalles, Oregon. "There is a tide in the affairs of wen which, taken at its yUoa .V,':'-'.--" leads on to fortune." ' -The poet unquestionably had reference to the at CRANDALL Who are selling these goods ' f MTCHELBACH BRICK, :IRSTCLKSS pfo) 0! lo) 111 0 0 f7 CAN BE CH RO N ie Reasonably New - Umatilla - House, THE DALLES, OREGON. SINNOTT & Ticket and Baggage Office of the 17. P. E. R. Company, and office of the Western ' . Union Telegraph Office are in the Hotel. Fire-Proof Safe for the Safety of all Valuables; -r i nrt-nom ' 1 TlTr 'I "mTXTTPQrp - TT "VT'Tj'T . . TXT . YYDTPnn"KI D. BUNNE Pino Wo H in lepaiis anj aoofiiig UATNS TAPPED Chop on Third Street, next door west of Young & Kuss' - Blacksmith Shop. PUBLISHING CO., orlorel &. BURGET'S, out at greatly-red ucod rates. - - fTXIOX ST. nnf liU t."'-3 ji Jt S 1 ill HAD AT THE L E O FF I C E Ruinous Rates. FISH, PROP'S. UNDER PRESSURE.