The Most Stubborn0 Skin and Scalp Diseases, the worst forms of Scrofula, all blood - taints and poisons of every name and nature, are utterly rooted out by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery. For every disease caused by a torpid liver or impure blood, it is the only remedy so. certain and effec tive that it can be guaranteed. If it fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. Eczema, Tetter, Salt-rheum, Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles, Enlarged Glands, Tumors, and Swellings, and every kindred ailment, are completely and permanently cured by it. To every sufferer . from Catarrh, no matter how bad the case or of how long standing, the proprietors of Dr. Sage's . Catarrh Remedy say this ; "If we can't cure it, perfectly and permanently, we'll pay you $500 in cash." Sold by all druggists. Manager I've got a play now that will take the town. Beats "Ibsen" all hollow. Friend What's it about? Manager In the first act all the charac ters are anarchists; in the second act they all become theosophists ; and in the third act they all die of the black plague. New York Weekly. Deafness Cannot be Cured By local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure Deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect bearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and -this tube restored to its normal condi tion, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (.caused by. catarrh) -that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Mother I have just heard something that you ought to know. Your father tells me. that your husband is hopelessly involved. Married daughter Isn't that lovely ! Now, maybe he'll make over all his property to me. New York Weekly. Strength and Health. If you are not feeling strong and healthy, try Electric Bitters. . If "la grippe" has left you weak and wear", use Electric Bitters. This remedy acts directly on liver, stomach and kidneys, gently aiding those organs to perform their functions. If you are afflicted with sick headache, you will find speedy and permanent relief by taking Electric Bitters. One trial will convince you that this is the remedy you need. Large bottles only 50c. at Snipes & Kinersly's drug store. ' ' Dinks According co some of the scientists, the human race is gradually becoming smaller. Strange, isn't it? Dank s I donno. People have got to adjust themselves to the modern fiat some way. Buffalo Courier. While in Chicago, Mr. Charles L. Kahler, a prominent shoe merchant of Des Moines, Iowa, had quite a serious time of it. He took such a severe cold that he could hardly talk or navigate, but the . prompt use of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy cured him so quickly that others at the hotel who had bad colds followed his example and- half a dozen persons ordered it from the near- . est drug store. They were profuse in their thanks to Mr. Kahler for telling' them how to cure a bad cold so quickly. For sale byBlakeley & Houghton Drug gists. V Mr. Youngwife Really, my dear. this tastes very good. But what is it? Mr. Youngwife I don't know, it came packed in a can, and the label boiled off in the hot water before I noticed itf. Truth.- Bnoklen'i Arincm Salve. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, soresulcers, 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 A Kin ersly. : , - f or Colic and Grabs In my mules and horses, I give Simmons Liver Regulator. I have . not lost ne I gave it to. E. T. Tatxoh, Agt. for Grangers of Ga. The sad man at a game of poker is the man to watch. Dallas News. FOSSIL BOTANY IN THE EAST. One Hundred and Fifty Specimens of Plant Deposit Found In Pennsylvania. Underneath the great bed of cannel coal, three miles below Darlington, making' the floor of the coal mentioned, is regarded by the Pittsburgh Dispatch as one of the most varied paleobotanical deposits known to science. No other single locality " in this or any other country has ever contributed such a collection and such a variety of the preglacial, or, it may be said, the car boniferous botanical flora, as has come from this coal floor. The material in which these remarkable fossil imprints occur is a dark, sandy shale, and to say that the stratum is filled with plant re-, mains is giving the fact only mild ex pression. The richness and rareness of this plant deposit will be understood when it is stated that more than one hundred and fifty varieties of speci mens have been found, some entirely new to science and such as have never been found elsewhere, and all this on an area of only from two to three feet in thickness, from which the super abundance of this early flora may at once be inferred. The first vegetable form- that is undeniably that of a mush room was .here discovered, and so anomalous was this as to the associated formations that it was made the sub ject of a paper read before the Ameri can Philosophical society. This remarkable locality is not con tent only in vying with the world in the richness and rareness of botanical finds, but a crustacean of a rare type is also in the collection from these shales. This is a' form allied to Eurypterus, and in honor of I. F. Mansfield, the owner and enthusiastic and indefatigable collector of these specimens, the new fossil creature has been called Dolichopterus MansfieldL A matter of scientific interest as re lated to this shale is the fact that the material that entered into this cannel coal formation was not produced from the bed on which it rests, the myriads of plant specimens affording an abund ance of negative testimony. Dr. New berry, a former Ohio state geologist, has suggested that the cannel coal owes its origin probably to the drifting of a carboniferous mud into some quiet lagoon. Probably a quiet settling of sedimentary matter would bet ter express the 'process, for, it must have had a most quiescent action that so evenly and gently pressed down the delicate plant life so as to preserve aU the fine minutae in the imprint. ' This Darlington district will become a bo tanical Mecca for students of paleo botanical science. CODDLED CODFISH. Lifted from the Water, Stuffed with Edi bles and Returned to the Pool. At Logan, near the mull of Gallo way, there is a most interesting tidal fish pond. A rent in the cliffs facing the Irish channel admits the salt water through a narrow fissure, protected by a grating, into a circular rock basin, some thirty feet in diameter and twen ty feet deep. The cliffs rise high all around; stone steps descend on one side to a ledge leveled into a footpath at the water's edge. No sooner does the visitor's footfall resound on the stairs than the green water, hitherto motionless and apparently lifeless, be comes peopled with large brown fish, rising from the depths, gliding and dashing about in a great state of ex citement. These are cod, lythe and saithe, which, caught on lines in the sea, have been transferred to this pond to be fattened for the table. They are fed daily by the keeper, says the Na tional (English) Magazine, and experi ence has taught them to connect the sound of footsteps with their meal time. Formerly a clapper used to be rung to summon them, but this was no more than a trick of the stage; the footfall on the stone is quite enough to awaken them to activity. Most of the cod, be ing deep water fish, become totally blind in captivity from excess of light, but they become so tame and accus tomed to their keeper as not only to feed out of his hand, but some of them allow themselves to be lifted out of the water. One may witness the strange sight of a huge cod, more than an eU long, dangled on the knee like a baby, hist mouth stuffed with mussels and limpets, after which he is returned to the water with a mighty splash. On the table these fish, thus tended and fed, prove much better than fish brought straight from the open sea. SOME WATERLOO INVENTIONS. Famous Sayings with Which We Are Fa' miliar Declared Unauthentic Although the newspapers often print paragraphs about familiar phrases and their misplaced authorship, the mis takes, as a general rule, continue to be made. There is that story of Welling ton at Waterloo, which originated, ac cording to the Buffalo ..Courier, with Alison, the historian. The French hav ing at last broken, so the tale goes, the "Iron Duke" cried to his reserves: "Up, guards, and at them!" In the face of frequent denials by Wellington himself that he ever gave such a com mand, it is repeated to this day as a historical fact. An artist once went to the duke and begged to be allowed to paint him in the very attitude he took when he uttered those stirring words. "Go to the devil!" said the duke. Again, a dowager asked him if he really did say: "Up, guards, and at them!" To this the duke replied: "I couldn't have said it, madame; it would have been absurd. What I probably did say to my staff officers was some thing like this: . 'Gentlemen, you will now move upon the enemy's right.' " Almost everybody believes that it was Napoleon who said: "God always fa vors the heaviest battalions." As a matter of fact, Tacitus was the first who is known to have used the phrase, and Voltaire and Mme. Sevigne uttered it in .exactly the manner credited to Napoleon. That other familiar one: "The r guard dies, but never surren ders," was attributed . to Cambronne, who was made a prisoner at Waterloo. It was actually invented by Bouge mont, an author of witty 6ayings, two days after the fight. .. -. AN IMPRESSIVE TRAIT. A Queer Man Who Blade a Friend by Be spect for His Mother. During my bohemian days it oc curred that I sat in an nuptown cafe with the sort of a man whom this inci dent will reveal, says a writer in the New York Press. j A wild-looking, unkempt chap, gaunt, shabby, with a four days' growth of beard, rushed in, looked wildly around and then hurried over to my compan ion and took him aside. As a result of their conversation the man with me turned to me and said in a whisper: "I am going to ask you to loan me two dollars, but don't you do it." Then he asked me and, I refused the loan,- and the gaunt man went unstead ily out. : "Queer duck, that," said the man at the table with me; "always getting into scrapes, ' taking out opera com panies and leaving them stranded. The last scrape he got into was in Montreal. He telegraphed home: 'I am in jail on a technicality, but don't tell mother.' That struck me as very funny, 'Don't tell mother.' But he was always an ill-balanced ass, anyway." Now the thoughtf ulness of his moth er in the young man who wanted to borrow two dollars struck me as a rather deserving trait, and I left my companion abruptly and followed him out. I saw enoughof him to convince me that he was not a man of business, and not even an admirable character. However, 1 loaned hini the two dol lars. Since then he has been consider ably in the public view in many ups and downs. But he is now coming home from the other side as the im presario of a lot of Continental stars. I wish him well. Like Mark Twain I love a man who never shakes his moth er. This one's name is Robert Grau.. AMERICAN RICE PAPER. The Chinese Tree Is Now Successfully Grown in Florida. The rice paper tree, one of the most interesting of the flora of China, has recently been successfully experiment ed with in Florida, where it now flour ishes with other subtropical and Ori ental species of trees and shrubs. When first transplanted in American soil the experimenters expressed doubts as to its hardiness, fearing that it would be unable to stand the winters. All these fears have vanished, however, and it is now the universal opinion that it is as well adapted to the climate of this country as to that of the famed Flowery Kingdom. It is a small tree, growing to a height of less than fifteen feet, with a trunk or stem from three to five inches in diameter. Its canes, which vary in color according to season, are large, soft and downy, the form somewhat resembling that noticed in those of the castor bean plant. The celebrated rice paper, the product of this queer tree, is formed of thin slices of the pith, which is taken from the body of the tree in beautiful cylinders several inches in length. , The Chinese workmen apply the blade of a sharp, straicht knife to these cylinders, says the St. Loui3 Republic, and, turning them round either by rude machinery or by hand, dexterous ly pare tho pith from circumference to center. This operation makes a roll of extra quality paper, the scroll being of equal thickness throughout. After a cylinder has thus been pared it is un rolled and weights are placed upon it until Wie surface is rendered uniformly smooth throughout its entire length. . It is altogether probable' that if rice paper making becomes an industry in the United States these primitive modes will be done away with. HE HAD FOUND IT. And Knew Just Exactly How Machine Poetry Was Ground Out. The young man and the young wom an from half a mile beyond the timber line came hesitatingly into the office, arid the young man inquired if they could look 'round a bit and ' see how a newspaper was made.' Of course, per mission was granted at once, and a guide was furnished to do the honors. They went everywhere, and, on the principle of saving the best till the last, they wound up in the editorial rooms. About the first thing that attracted their attention in that department was a smooth-looking young fellow busily at work on a typewriter. The young man left his fair companion in the hands of the guide and sidled over to the writer. He had no idea what it was, but in a minute or two he noticed the written page as it slowly emerged from the roller, and he beckoned hasti ly for the girL to come over, says the Detroit Free Press. "I say, Maria," he said, as he caught her by the arm and dragged her closer, "look at that, will you?" , "What is it?" she asked. "You've heard tell of the machine poetry they have in the newspapers, haven't you?" She nodded. "Well," he explained, "that's what they make it on. Yon watch the young feller awhile and see how fast he can turn it out," and they stood by the busy writer so long that it almost gave him a conniption fit, and then broke him all up by asking him if he couldn't give them a sample to take home with them. " . They Must Cure. - Medical skill is at a rather low.ebb throughout Russia, and not without cause. An American physician, tempt ed by the enormous fees so frequently paid by the nobility, went to St. Pe tersburg and within a year had a lu crative practice. Then he was called in to attend a baron who was suffering from lung trouble. The doctor gave his patient the best of care and skill, but the baron died, and the widow promptly sued the doctor for damages for unskillful treatment. The unlucky American was sentenced to pay a fine of one thousand roubles and undergo an imprisonment of thirty days. Under the circumstances it is not surprising that the. physician left Russia as soon as he got out of jail, and nothing could tempt him to return. SUPERSTITIONS OF THE TURKS. They' Are Not Contaminated by Western Civilization. The superstition of the Turks is no where so apparent as in their fear of the "evil eye." Jugs -placed around the edge of the roof, or an old shoe filled with garlic and beets (blue glass balls or rings) are a sure guard against this illusion. Whenever a pretty child is playing upon the street the passer by will say: "Oh, what an ugly child!" . for fear of inciting the evil spirit against its beauty. The peasant classes in .Turkey are, of course, the most superstitious, because they are the most ignorant. They have no educa tion whatever, and can neither read nor write. Stamboul is the only great city of which they know. : Paris is a term signifying the whole outside world. An American missionary was once asked: "In what part of Paris is America?" Yet it can . be said that that they are generally honest and al ways patient. They earn about six to eight cents a day. This . will furnish them with ekmek arid pilaff, and that is all they expect. They eat meat only on feast days, and then Only mutton. The tax gatherer is their only griev ance; they look upon him as a necessa ry evil. They have no idea of being ground down' under the oppressor's iron heel. Yet they are happy because they are contented and have no envy. The poorer, the more ignorant a Turk is the better he seems to be. As he gets money and power, and becomes "contaminated" by - western civiliza tion he deteriorates. FAST TIME BY A MOOSE. The Speedy Animal Outruns a .Railway Locomotive in a Four-JUUle Dash. Anyone who thinks a moose can't travel at a pretty lively gait is very much mistaken, remarked a St. Paul man to the St. Louis Globe-Democrat the other day. I used to be a loco motive engineer up in the northern part of my state, and one day I had an opportunity to test the speed of this animal. I was running a light freight train, and in coming around a curve "saw a big moose standing directly on the track. As soon as the animal saw the engine he took to his heels right down the path between the rails. For about four miles we had a perfectly straight track, and as I had hoard of the great speed of this animal I de termined to test its ability. The gait of the moose was a sort of trot, such only as a moose can exhibit, his paces being about two rods in length. At first it was only a little jog, but as the engine began to gain speed the moose let himself out.- Faster and faster sped the engine, but still the fright ened moose trotted in the van, and all the mysterious power, of steam could not prevail upon this monarch of the forest. At last, after we had covered the four miles, turning a curve, we came , upon a gang of . section hands who were fixing the track. The sight of these men . frightened the moose from the track and he was soon lost to view in the forest. "The Regulator Line" Tie Dalles, PortlanS and Astoria Navigation Co. --' THROTJG-H ' ' -; Freigiit aufl Passenger Line " Through Daily Trips (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port lands Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a.m., connecting at 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. PA8SENOKK KATKS. Oneway.. .$2.00 Kound trip ..... , . . 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. Live stock shipments eolicted. UaU on or address, W. C ALLAWAY, General Agent. B. F. LAUGH LIN, . General Manager. THE-DALLES, OREGON J P. FORD, Evangelist Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes under date ol March 23, 1833: S. B'.'Mbd. 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. Fobd. 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. ' Sold under a positive guarantee. " ' 60 cents per bottle by all druggists. .vi6U YO 4KD NlY lily artfcti 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 - -i a. .Li it vi:t ,ui i i vxiiuib counties, as weu a,s rsni;iLa,L aiiu. uuiei ,xe- ,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. , , '' .- .'.' . .. ' ' . , ' 1 or .advertising rates, subscriptions, etc., address THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO., Tile Dalles, Oregon. 'There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at its JUOQ ..- leads on to fortune" The poet unquestionably had reference to the CliJ-Oiii Si at CRANDALL Who are selling those ccods "MIO'HKI.BAOH BRICK;' D. BUNNELL, Pipe Won, Tin Bepaits aim Hoofing MAINS TAPPED UNDER PEESSURE. , Chop on Third Street, next door west of Young & Ross Blacksmith Shop. THE CELEBRATED COLUMBIA BREWERY, A f I V g-mm m : - fir T 9 This well-known Brewery is now turning out the beat Beer and Portei east of the Cascades. The latest appliances for the manufacture of good health fol Beer have been introduced, and ony the first-class article will be placed oa he market. ... r( Weekly Tribune &1.T5.& TrrO c noro Fiite! Carpels BURGET'S, out at xreatly-reduced rates. I'NIOK ST."