mm A LONG PROCESSION of diseases start from a torpid liver ana impure blood. Dr. .fierce s Golden Medical Discovery cures ev ery one of them. It prevents them, too. Take it, as you ought, when you feel the first symptoms (lan guor, loss of appetite, dullness, de pression) and' youH save yourself from something serious. In building up needed flesh and trength,' and to purify and enrich the blood, nothing can equal the "Discovery." It invigorates the liver and kidneys, promotes all the bodily functions, and brings back health and vigor. For Dyspepsia, " Liver Complaint," Biliousness, and all Scrofulous, Skin and Scalp Dis eases, it is the only remedy that's guaranteed ' to benefit or cure, or the money is refunded. A BiNQiXG noisk in the ears, head ache, deafness, eyes weak; obstruction of nose, dis charges fall ing into throat JT0 toms of. Ca tarrh. There's a medicine that will cure you, no matter how bad your case or of how long standing. That's Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Hatterson I hear your boy is Btudy . ing nnder a tutor preparatory to entering college. How is he getting on? Catter son Great, old man. In the last three months he has increased three inches around the chest. Judge. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronpunced it a local disease, and prescribed local rem edies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it in curable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only -constitutional cure in the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops - to a teaspoon ful. It acts directly on the bloodjand mucous surfaces of the system. ' They offer one hundred dollars for any -case it fails to cure. Send for circulars .and testimonials. Address. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. X"sld by Druggists, 75c. She Do humorists ever make a joke at their own expense? Humorist The first few thousand are at their own ex pense. After that they get paid for them or give it up. Truth. Specimen Cases. S. H. Clifford, New Casfjel, Wis., was troubled with neuralgia and rheumatism, his stomach was disordered, his liver was affected to an alarming degree, ap petite fell away, and he was terribly re duced in flesh and strength. Three bot tles of Electric Bitters cured him. "Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, 111., had a running sore on his leg of eight years' standing. Used three bottles of Electric Bitters and seven boxes of Bucklen's Arnica Salve, and his leg is sound and well. John Speaker, Cata waba, O., had five large fever sores on his leg, doctors said he was incurable, one bottle Electric Bitters and one box Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured him en tirely. Sold by Snipes & Kinersly. Wife That new girl sleeps like a log, and I never can get her up in the morn ing. Husband (struck by. a bright idea) Let the baby sleep with her. Good News. . 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.. ' "She just dotes on. poetry." "She does? Then I think I'll try my luck with her, for if she loves poetry she isn't looking for a man with money." New York Prees. Bucklen's Arlnca Salve. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever 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 Dy Snipes & Kin erslv ' Another Call. i All county warrants registered prior to January 1, 1891, will be paid on pre sentation at my office. Interest ceases after Sept. 10th. Wm. Michkll, County Treasurer. VARIETIES OF COURTSHIP The Antique, the Progressive and the Ephemera. . A Chaperon. Gives Rome Interesting Ob servations Upon the Workings of - ' - the Tender Passion in Tonng Girls of To-Day. "You see," said the chaperon of a quartette of lively girls at Long1 Branch, says the Chicago Inter Ocean, "there are now three kinds of court ing the antique, the progressive and the ephemeral. Odd, isn't it, where the heart is concerned? Both the an tique and the ephemeral kind are found among the old girls and boys and the debutantes, while the progressive sort is confined mostly to those' who have been in society a half dozen sea sons or less. "The antique ; is the kind which has for its password one life, one love. The ephemeral lends to the fancy of the hour without further reflection. The progressive is one with which we have to deal in answering the query: 'Where are the old f avorities, and why are the younger set so popular?' "It is most natural that the matured bachelor and the rosebud should enjoy each other's society. This is epheme ral, no responsibility, no care; but the rosebud has a decided advantage over her courtly gallant; for, while she is becoming skillful in the use of Cupid's weapons, he is losing time and ground and some day will awaken to the truth that he is growing old, bald and ridiculous.- "What does the young girl see in her old escort? Mostly attention, which is very flattering to her in her first season out. And the bachelor what does he see in her? He is lonely. The women of his set have disappeared somewhere, and he is willing to buy candy, kiss lap dogs, do anything to be entertained and entertaining. In this capacity the bachelor is a most useful member of society. He has even been known to walk around with grandmamma and to carry the mar ried sister's baby and luggage to the train. "Progressive courtship is curious. When a young woman begins to enter tain serious thoughts of her future, whether 'in choosing a profession, a business or a husband, she rises above driftwood and marks a tree that will shelter her. Her time, also, is a con sideration. She cannot waste years dallying with an old beau, a perennial. "These perennials are many of them good souls, nice for escorts, but not up to date enough for ideal husbands. So the marriageable women, those who can preside with dignity over neat homes the belles, in short, of past seasons leave the ranks and form new ties. "When a young woman becomes in different to parties, likes distant friends, protracted visits and can't be located, keep a sharp lookout among the marriage notices. The out-of-town men secure most of the home prizes. The only chance for home bachelors is to emulate the example of the girls that is, to go out of town, too, where they are not known as everlastings. "Suppose, however, that they can not give up the old favorites; suppose that there is a great tugging at the heart when they think of losing them. In such cases, if the men value their happiness and wish 'to wager on their chances, they must become specialists in love and ply their skill increasingly as the summer season approaches. 'Good by, sweetheart!' if said idly, will be detected by no one more quickly than by the young lady herself, and the chance will be greatly in favor of that London, Philadelphia or Balti more man." COMEDY BY THE SEA. The Forward Kollt Garrulous Mothers The Conceited Dancer. It's good fun to sit apart and notice the people at swell summer hotels, though sometimes it's a little sad, too, says an eastern' correspondent. The forward folk, who try to get ac quainted with each newcomer of pre tentious appearance, and who gets dropped as frequently as they are taken up, are amusing, as the newly rich, who fancy the ready road to elegance is gained by assuming a fierce haughti ness, the maintaining of which makes them as uncomfortable as it does their inferiors. The garrulous mothers who have to talk all day long about the charms and perfections of their daughters are pretty trying. Then there are the two or three lonely creatures who have drifted in somehow and are out of their element, and are quite conscious of the fact. They mournfully sit out the concerts and eat their meals almost tearfully. There are, as a rule, so few men at the summer resorts that the few who linger longer than over Sunday get so swelled with their own importance' that they are unbearably saucy. 'At the hop the other night I noticed that the manner of the dancing men was as full of conceit as is a pudding of plums. They lounged up to a girl, held out their arms, smiled - a sickly smile, as' who should say: "I'll give you a turn or two, poor thing. " I'd cling to the wall till I took root before I'd dance with them, but girls aren't all alike, and the conceited chaps had only to "drop the handkerchief." Great Temples of India. Mayalipmam, India, has seven of the most remarkable temples in the world, each of these unique places of worship having been fashioned from solid granite bowlders. Some idea of their size and the task of chiseling out the interior may be gleaned from the fact that the smallest of the seven is twenty-four feet high, seventeen feet long and twelve feet wide. Travelers who have carefully examined them are of the opinion that it took centuries of work to carve those graceful edifices, from native rock. FUN "WITH A SEA TURTLE. An Experience That iKatted Some lroflt to the Old Sea Captain. . ' "I am reminded. said an old coast ing captain to a Washington Star man recently, "of an experience I once had with sea turtles on the edge of the gulf stream, about sixty miles from -Hatteras. I was -part owner and cap tain of the Mary Lyle at that time, and was coming up from Savannah with a half cargo of rice, when, one morning, the lookout yelled to me to come up on deck and look a.t the sea turtles. When I got up and looked over the rail, the whole ocean, as far as I could see ahead of us, was covered with turtles. They were tremendous fellows, and were paddling along' lazily in the op posite direction to that in which we were going. It didn't take us long to rig up a windlass and tackle and begin pulling some of the old fellows aboard We picked the biggest, as the came, and in the course of three hours we had caught twenty-six, about all that we could handily dispose of about the ship. ' Only nine of them lived until we reached New York, and we sold them for good prices. The shell of one tLat weighed four hundred and seven ty pounds is now in front of an eating house on Houston street, New York. . I would hate to say how many turtles were in sight of the Mary Lyle that day, for fear somebody might think I was fish-yarning, but they come by us steadily for five, hours, and when we got well into the school it extended as far as the eye could reach on all sides, ' and there was a turtle to about every forty square feet of water, and I didn't see one that weighed less than one" hundred and fifty pounds." DEADLIEST KNOWN POISON. Shophanthldin, from an African Plant, an Atom of Which Is Dangerous. To the best of our knowledge, says the Brooklyn Eagle, the most deadly poison is that which was discovered by Prof. Frazer, of Edinburgh, Scotland, and known as shophanthidin. He sep arated it from the- African poison plant, shophanthus hispidus, by means of ether and alcohol. As little as a one-thousand-millionth partof an ounce of crystallized shophanthidin produces a distinctly injurious effect upon the heart, and a very small quantity is fatal. Another deadly poison is cyano gen gas, the principal ingredients of hydrocyanic or prussic acid. At ordinary temperatures it is sim ply a gas, but can be condensed by cold and pressure into a thin, colorless liquid and becomes a solid at thirty degrees Fahrenheit. The inhalation in its gaseous state of a most minute quantity would cause instant death. One of the. most deadly poisons is arseniuretted hydrogen, or arsenic, which is formed by decomposing' an alloy of arsenic and zinc with sul phuric acid. It is a colorless gas, pos sessing a fetid odor of garlic, and acts as a most deadly poison. Adolph Ferdinand Gehlen, a chemist, born about 1775 at Butow, in Pomer ania, was the discoverer of it. While experimentine with it at Munich, on July 15, he inhaled a single bubble of the pure gas and died in eight days from the effects. The accident oc curred through his smelling at the joints of his apparatus to discover a flaw. Others engaged in chemical operations have died from the effects of this poison in three days. ' EXTRA POLITE. A .French Count Who Could Not Be Oat done in Gallantry. Frenchmen of the old school did at times tremendously polite things, such as breaking their necks to pick up a lady's fan, or setting fire to a house to dry her when caught in a shower of rain, or running through the body any one who should dare to say that her foot was large or her nose red. In our days Frenchmen are not such idiots, and yet they sometimes do exceeding ly foolish things in the polite line. This story, for example, is related of a Count de Lecouiteux. In descending the staircase of the opera one night a lady of his acquaint ance had a lace dress - of considerable value torn by a man treading on it. After an exclamation of impatience she turned to the count and said: "Have you a pin?" "Madame," he said, "I don't carry a pincushion, but here is one," and he drew from his breast a valuable diamond. "Sir,", said the lady, nettled probably by his retort about the pincushion, "I cannot accept a diamond from you." "Well, then," returned he, "here is a pin without a .diamond;" and breaking off the jewel he threw it out of the window and pre sented the simple pin. On an Indian Hunting; Tour. The most exciting and by far the most interesting hunting expeditions I ever went on, said Capt. M. P. Wallace, an ex-army officer, to the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, "were those with the Indians while I was stationed on the plains. The consummate grace and skill of the men and the speed and agility of their ponies were well dis played on such occasions as these. Fre quently the hunt would be signalized by some daring- feat of bravado. On one occasion I saw an athlcjic young Indian ride his horse up close to the side of a big buffalo bull and spring from the horse on to the back of the buffalo, ride the savage creature several hun dred yards, and then with his knife give it its death stroke." Lived a Lifetime In Twelve Tears. " The most remarkable instance of rapid growth was recorded by the French academy in 1729. It was a boy six years of age, five feet six inches in height. " At the age of five his voice changed, at six bis beard had grown, and he appeared a man of thirty. He possessed great physical strength, and could easily lift to his shoulders and carry bags of grain that weighed two hundred pounds. His decline was as rapid as his growth. At eight his hair and beard were gray; at ten he tot tered in his walk, his teeth fell out and his hands became palsied; at twelve he died with every outward sign of extreme old age. Mustang Liniment for Burns, Caked & Inflamed Udders. Piles, Rheumatic Pains, Bruises and Strains, Running Sores, Inflammations, Stiff joints. Harness & Saddle Sores, Sciatica, Lumbago, Scalds, Blisters, Insect Bites, ... . ; All Cattle Ailments, All Horse Ailments, All Sheep Ailments, Penetrates Muscle, Membrane and Tissue Quickly to the Very Seat of Pain and Ousts it in a Jiffy. Rub in Vigorously, Mustang: Liniment conquers Pain, Makes flan or Beast well again. "The Regulator Line" lie Data, Portland aod Asteria Navigation Co. THROUGH Freigai ana Passenser Line Through Daily Trips (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Fort land. 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. PA88KNOKK 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 6 p. m. Live stock shipments solicted. Call on or address, W. CALLAWAY, General Aent and Acting Manager. THE-DALLES, OREGON J F. FORD, Evangelist, Of Des Moines, Iowa, write under date ol March 23, 1896: S. B. Med. Mfg. Co., Dufur, Oregon. Gentlemen : On arriving home last week, I found all well and anxiously awaiting. Out 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. 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 td feel fresh and cheerful, and read; for the Spring's work, cleanse your system with the Headache and Liver Cure, by taking two 01 three doses each week. Sold under a positive guarantee. SO cents per bottle by all druggists. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. U. 8. Land Office, The Dalles, Or.,( August 11, 1894. t Notice Is hereby given that the following named settler has filed notice of his intention to make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be made before the register UDd receiver of the U. 8. Land office at The Dalles, Or., on bspt 28, 1894, viz: Alvln B. Lake, H. E. No. 4512, for the NW, NEJi, Sec. 35, SWJi, SEJi and EJ, 8W Sec. 26, T 4 S, R 11 E. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultivation of said land, viz.: J. R. Woodcock, I. D. Driver, 8. G. Ledford, of Wamic; T. J. Driver, of The Dalles. J AS. F. MOORE, , Register. Hew "Yorff fteldy Tribune -AND FIRST a!) li CAN BE 1P1 pi CHRONICLE OFFICE Reasonably When the Train stops at THE DALLES, get off on the South Side AT TM flEW COLtUjVlBm HOTELi. This large and popular House and is prepared to furnish House in the city, and at the $1.00 per Day. - pirst Office for all Stage Lines points in Kastern Oregon In this Hotel. Corner of Front and Union Sts. "There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at its flood leads on to fortune." . The poet unquestionably had reference to the J ClosiM-Oiilalfi bp- at CRANDALL Who are selling these goods MICHELBACH BRICK, D . B U M W . ic. L. L , . Pip Wort Tin Bepairs aqfl Sooni MAINS TAPPED UNDER PRESSURE. Shop on Third Street, next door west of Young v Kusi' Blacksmith Shop. lav Lniu. iiiAUL. mnruvs r COPYRIGHTS. CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT ? For a prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to M U N N cte CO.. who have had nearly fifty years' experience In the patent business. Communica tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of In formation concerning Patents and bow to ob. tain them sent free. Also a catalogue ol mechan ical and scientific books sent free. . Patents taken through Mann ft Co. receive special notice in the Scienttne American, and thus are brought widely before the publlo with out cost to the Inventor. This splendid paper, issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far the largest circulation of any scientific work in the world. S3 a year. Sample copies sent free. Building Edition, monthly, tlso a year. Single, copies, 23 cents. Every number contains beau tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the latest designs and secure contracts. Address ttUNN CO Mew Yoiik. 361 Bboabwat. CLHSS m if I 1 11 -f HAD AT THE Ruinous Rates. -ovo- does the principal hotel business. the .Best Accommodations ot any low rate of . Qass Teals, 25 Cci?t6. leaving; The Dalles for all and Eastern Washington, T. T. NICHOLAS, Propr. & BURGETS, out at greatly-reduced rates. - - UNION ST. Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat ent business conducted for moocratc Fits. Oun Officc I Opposite o. S. patcht ornee and we can secure patent in less time than those remote from Washington.'- Send model, drawing or photo., with description.- We advise, if patentable or not, free of charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. a uaaii - "How to Obtain Patents," with cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries sent tree. Address, - - c.A.srJow&co. Opp. Patent office, Washington. D. C.