The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, October 26, 1894, Image 4

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    CO
0 : ACI : RBO
lit.
Bran and Shorts (Diamond
Mills), $13 per ton.
Flour at Bedrock Prices.
Good Potatoes, 65c a sack.
Seed Wheat.
Chicken Wheat, 75c sack.
Choice Wheat, Timothy
and Alfalfa Hay.
All Goods Sold at Lowest
3". OES.OSS,
Telephone No. 61.
Do Caverly Wasn't Cholly Knock
nees boasting last night that he was
solid with Misa Gofast? Van Clove
Yes. De Caverly Well, it was true I
saw her petrify him with a look. Town
Topics.
SOMETHING UNUSUAL,
s a medicine, i9 Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery. And, because
f that, there's something unusual
In the way of selling it. 'Where
very other medicine of its kind
nly promises, this is guaranteed.
If it ever fails to benefit or oure,
you have your money back.
It's the only guaranteed remedy
or every disease caused by a disor
dered liver or impure blood. Dys--pepsia,
Biliousness, the most stub
born Skin, Scalp and Scrofulous
affections, even Consumption (or
iiung-scrotuia ) in its earnest stages,
. all are cured by it.
It purifies and enriches the blood,
'.rouses every organ into healthful
.action, and restores strength and
. -KTirrnr Tn l-miMinrr nn Tint.h flARn
and strength of pale, puny, Scrofu
lous children, or to invigorate and
brace up the system after " Grippe,"
pneumonia, fevers, and other pros
trating acuta diseases, nothing can
equal. the " Discovery." .
You pay only for the good you
get.
Mrs. Beedles Is your friend Swillem
a clubman in good standing? Old Bee
dles He is until after the dinner hour;
then his legs Rive out completely.
Town Topics.
There is no medicine so often needed
in every home and so admirably adapted
to the purposes for which it is intended,
as Chamberlain's Pain Balm. Hardly a
week passes but some member of the
family has need of it. A toothache, or
headache may be cured by it. A touch
of . rheumatisn. or neuralgia quieted!
The eevere pain of a burn or scald
promptly relieved andhe sore healed in
much less time than when medicine has
to be sent for. A sprain may be
promptly treated before inflamation sets
in, which insures a cure in about one
third of the time otherwise required.
Cuts and bruises should receive im
mediate treatment before the parts be
come swollen, which can only be done
when Pain Balm is kept at hand. A
sore throat may be cured before it be
comes serious. A troublesome corn may
be removed by applying it twice a day
for a week or two. A lame back may be
cured and several days of valuable time
saved or a pain in the side or chest re
lieved without paying a doctor bill. Pro
cure a 50 cent bottle at once and you
will never regret it. For sale by Blakeley
& Houghton Druggists.
May Do you allow anything mas
culine in your Ladies' Club? Miss Suf
frage Nothing but a quiet game now
and then for the cocktails and cigars.
Town Topics.
It Should Be in Every House
J. B. Wilson, 371 Clay St., Sharps
burg, Pa., says he will not be without
Dr. King's New Discovery for consump
tion, coughs and colds, that it cured his
wife who was threatened with pneumonia
after an attack of "la grippe," when
various other remedies and several phy
sicians had done her no good. Robert
Barber, of .Cooksport, Pa., claims Dr.
King's New Discovery has done him
more trood than anything he ever used
for lung trouble. Nothing like it. Try
it. Free trial bottles at Snipes & Kin-erelv's.
ft
tub..
Seed Rye.
Feed Oats. '
i -
Rolled Barley.
Poultry and Eggs bought
and sold.
Choice Groceries & Fruits.
Grass Seeds.
Living Prices.
Cor. Second and Union Sts.
NOTICE.
To All Whom it May Concern:
By order of the Common Council of
Dalles City, made and entered on the
3d day of October, 1894, notice is hereby
given that said City Council is about to
proceed to order and rgake the improve
ment in Tenth street in said City as
hereinafter stated and that the cost of
such improvement will be levied upon
the property adjacent thereto and "88 id
improvement will be made unless with
in fourteen days from the final publica
tion of this notice the owners of two
thirds of the property adjacent to said
street about to be improved shall file
their written remonstrance, against such
improvement as by charter provided.
The improvement" contemplated and
about to be made is as follows, to-wit :
To improve Tenth street by building a
sidewalk on the north side thereof, six
feet wide, commencing at the intersec
tion of Tenth street with Union street,
in said citv and running thence easterly
75 feet. .
Said improvement will be constructed
in accordance with the provisions of
Ordinance No. 270, which passed the
Common Council of Dalles City, May
lOthT 1893.
Dated this loth day of October, 1894.
Douglas S. Dtjfub,
Octl5-30 Recorder of Dalles Citv.
NOTICE.
To All Whom it May Concern:
By order of the Common Council of
Dalles City, made and entered on the 7th
day of September, 1894, notice is hereby
given that said City Council is about to
proceed to order and make a sewer
in the streets and parts of Etreets
as hereinatter stated and that the
cost of . such improvement will be
levied upon the property directly-bene'
fited therebv, as by charter provided
The improvement contemplated and
about to be made is as follows, to-wit:
To construct a terra cotta sewer com
mencing on Court street at low water
mark in the Columbia river, thence
southerly to Fifth street ; thence easterly
to Washington street; thence southerly
to Fulton street; thence easterly to
Laugblin street ; thence southerly to the
allev south of Alvord street.
Said sewer shall be of the following
size, to-wit:
From the Columbia river to Fourth
street, sixteen inches ; from Fourth street
to the corner of Washington and Fulton
streets twelve inches, and from said
point to the termination thereof eight
inches.
Said improvement will be constructed
in accordance with the provisions of
Ordinance No. 270, which paesed the
Common Council of Dalles City, May
10th, 1893.
Dated this 15th day of October, 1894.
Douglas S. Dufur,
Octl5-30 Recorder of Dalles City.
NOTICE.
To All Whom It May Concern;
By order of . the Common Council of
Dalles City, made and entered on the
3rd day of October, 1894, notice is here1
by given that said City Council is about
to proceed to order and make the im
provement in Union street, in said City,
as hereinafter stated, and that the cosl
of such improvent will be levied upon
the property adjacent thereto, and said
improvement will be made unless witn
in fourteen days from the final publica
tion of this notice the owners of two
thirds of the property adjacent to said
street, about to be improved, shall file
their written remoustrance against such
improvement as by charter provided
The improvement contemplated and
about to be made is as follows, to-wit:
To improve and grade Union street in
said city, thirty feet in width in the
center thereof, from the intersection of
Tenth street to Thirteenth Btreet ; thence
west one block to Liberty street ; thence
south one block to Fourteenth street ;
thence west on Fourteenth street four
blocks to Trevitt street; thence south
one block to Fifteenth street; thence
west on Fifteenth etreet two blocks ter
minating at the intersection of Fifteenth
and Mount Hood streets.
All of said improvement will be con
structed in accordance with the provi
sions of ordinance No. 270, which paesed
the Common Council of Dalles City May
10, 1893.
Dated this 15th day of October, 1894.
Dojjglas S. Dufub,
Octl5-30 Recorder of Dalles City.
Notice of Proposed Street Improvement
By order of the Council of Dalles City,
notice is hereby given that the portion
of the east side of Union street, com
mencing on the south line, of Fourth
street, Dalles City, and extending south
erly to where the north line of the alley
which forms the north line of the public
school grounds intersects said street,
said public school grounds being situ
ated on both sides of Union street be
tween said alley and the bluff, shall be
improved by the construction of a plank
sidewalk eight feet in width along the
east side of said etreet.
Dated this 20th day of October, 1894.
Douglas S. Dufuk,
. Recorder for Dalles Citv.
A WAR FOR LIFE.
Strofirgles of
the Indian to
Perpetuate
His Existence.
Whatever the Indian has been in the.
past, and in spite of his present condi
tion deplorable as it certainly is our
nation has still some time left to deal
with these people honorably and just
ly as- it- is the duty of a God-fearing
people to do, writes W. Thornton Park
er, M., D., in Home and Country.' They
will respond in time, but it is not to be
wondered at if they seem incredulous
at first. It is wicked to condemn them
as beasts fit only for extermination; im
prove them, educate them. 'This can be
done by dealing justly with them. No
words of mine can svmiciently condemn
the cowardly saying "that the only
good Indian is a dead Indian!"
An Austrian officer once said to me
that he considered the British soldiers
the bravest on the face of the earth
because "you cannot conquer them or
whip them, you must kill them." It is so
with-onr Indians, they neither give nor
ask for quarters; this is easily under
stood when we consider how they have
always been situated. .
It has been with them a war for life,
a struggle for existence, and disputes
have always been settled, man-fash-ion,
on the field of battle.
Those who know most about our na
tive Americans (our so-called Indians)
respect them most; those who have
lived longest with them love them
most; the most brutal and cowardly of
our frontiersmen hate them most, and
they have reason to do so. Indian char
acter is contradictory. They are brave,
but cautious and generous; dashing- in
attack, stubborn in defense; enduring,
patient, stoical, hardy; fond of feast
ing, but ready for days of marching
and fighting, with scarcely any nour
ishment, alert, unforgiving when
wronged, revengeful, cruel and treach
erous in war; lovinfr as friends, indul
gent and affectionate as parents; sym
pathetic in adversity, eloquent in coun
sel; by nature deeply and truly re
ligious.
Our native red Americans, unlike
those of . New Mexico and Central and
South America, are believers in God,
although they call Him the "Great
Spirit." They are absolutely free from
profanity and hypocrisy. In short,
they are the noblest race of aborigines
on the face of the earth.
SIGNING THE
DECLARATION.
Bothersome Flies Expedited
the Impor-
tant Proceeding?.
Jefferson was fond of telling- a story
which illustrates in a forcible manner
the importance that absurdly insig
nificant matters may sometimes as
sume, says the Philadelphia Press.
When the deliberative body that rave
the world the declaration of inde
pendence was in session its proceed
ings were conducted in a hall close to
which was situated a livery stable.
The weather-was warm, and from the
stable came swarms ,of flics that
lighted on the legs of the honorable
members, and, biting through the thin
silk stockings then in fashion, gave in
finite annoyance. It was no uncommon
sight, said Jefferson, to see a member
making a speech with a large hand
kerchief in hand and pausing at every
moment to thrash the flies from his
thinly-protected calves. The opinion
of the body was not unanimous in
favor of the document, and, under
other circumstances, discussion might
have been prolonged for days, if not
weeks, but the flies were intolerable.
Efforts were made to find ' another hall
free from the pests, but in vain. As
the weather became warmer the flies
grew worse, and the flapping of hand
kerchiefs was- heard all over the hall
as an accompaniment to the voices of
the speakers. In despair, at last some
one suggested that matters be hurried
so that the body might adjourn and
get away from the flies. There were
a few mild protests, but no one heeded
them, the immortal declaration was
hurriedly copied, and, with handker
chiefs in hand, fighting the flies as
they came, the members hastened up to
the table to sign the authentic copy
and leave the flies in the lurch. Had
it not been for the livery stable and its
inmates there is no telling when the
document would have been completed,
but it certainly would not have been
signed on the' Fourth.
SUBJUGATION OF WILD CATTLE.
How It Was Accomplished by Primitive
' Europeans.
The first and simplest use made of
the animals from which man derives
strength appears to have been brought
about by the subjugation of wild cattle
the bulls and buffaloes.
Several wild varieties of the bovine
tribe were originally widely dissemi
nated in Europe and Asia, and these
forms must have been frequent objects
of chase by the ancient hunters. Al
though in their adult state these ani
mals were doubtless originally intract
able, the young were mild-mannered
and, as we can readily conceive, must
often have been led captive to the
abodes of the primitive people.
As is common with all gregarious
animals which have long acknowledged
the authority of their natural herds
men, the dominant males of their tribe,
these creatures lent themselves to do
mestication. Even the first generation of the cap
tives reared . by hand probably showed
a disposition to remain with: their mas
ters, and in a few generations this na
tive impulse might well have been so
far developed that the domestic herd
was established, affording perhaps at
first only flesh and hides, and leading
the people who made them captives to
a nomadic life, that constant search for
f-resh fields and pastures new which
characterizes people who are supported
by their flocks and herds.
Good Feed.
An Englishman and a Scotchman
were walking in the fields together.
"Humph!" said the Englishman, "oats
are very well in their way. Now in
England we feed them to horses, but
here your men eat them." "Ay, ayl"
said the Scotchman. "And just see
what fine horses there are in England,
and what fine men there are in Scotland."
I
'Therrne Story . of a1 French" XJon-rtctT
.s- - . Toulon. .. ,
No criminal is altbgetliex.liardened;
springs of kindness and feeling for hi3
fellow-beings still exist within his
nature, if one could but find them. The
author of "".Secrets of the Prison-House"
tells q. true story of a French convict at
Toulon. '
Among the free laborers, who work
side by side with the prisoners, was an i
Italian who always treated them with
great kindness, and became in coni?- .
quenca very much beloved. One day, ,
however, the Italian seemed to be much
depressed, and he confided to his fellow-laborers
the fact that he was ter
ribly in want ;bf money. Not manjv
days after, one of the convicts escaped,
sought the Italian out at his home, and
said to him; . ,
"Now I give myself up to you. My
capture will bring you the reward of a
hundred francs, and that will help you 1
out of your difficulties.
, For a long time the Italian refused
to take advantage of the fugitive's self
sacrifice, but at length he yielded and
led back the prisoner.'
The wife of a well-known journalist
was roused one night, when she was
alone in the house, by sounds .which
convinced her that burglars must be
below. The courageous old lady rose
and went downstairs into the dining
room, where she found a man in the
act of rilling the sideboard. - He
promptly, knocked her down, but as
soon as she could recover herself she
got up and quietly took a seat. Then
she addressed the burglar.
"I suppose you have been driven to
these evil courses by want," she said;
"but why add cowardly violence to
your crime? You see I am an old
woman old enough to be your mother.
Is your mother still alive? Do you re
member her? What would you say or
do to a man who struck her in the face
and knocked her down?"
Her words had a marked effect on
the housebreaker. He was evidently
moved to the heart.
"Im sorry, ma'am," he said, "and
I'm ashamed of what I'm doing. I
won't take anything belonging to you
except this five-pound note. But -1
really am in desperate straits, and I
want money badly."
He emptied his pockets of the silver
he had taken, but with the full" con
sent of the old lady made off with the
five pounds. Some time afterward an
envelope reached her, addressed in a
strange hand, and in it was a five
pound note.
MAKING POETRY.
There Is Often Hard Worlr m Well mm
Inspiration.
There are yet some persons left who
fancy that poetry is the product of a
fine frenzy; that the poet of genius
awakes from a sublimated cataleptic
trance to fill page after page with ef
fortless beatitudes. A number of man
uscript sheets of Longfellow's "Ex
celsior," which may be found in Har
vard, should not only explode this
theory, writes a Boston correspondent,
but give hope to manv a discourasred
amateur. As Longfellow first con
structed the first verse of this poem it
ran:
The shades of night -were falling fast .
As through an Alpino village passed
A youth who, as the peasants sung,
Responded in an unknown tongue.
Excelsior.
This was manifestly weak, as the
only obvious reason why the Alpine
peasants sung was that they might af
ford a rhyme for the youth s response
in an unknown tongue. A second trial
at the. verse, however, not only failed
to improve it, but arranged it in such
form that it is difficult to believe Long
fellow guilty of the fault. The two
last lines of the verse were made to read:
A youth who bore a pearl of price,
A banner with the strange device.
lnere are not many, even among
the magazine poets of to-day, who
would consent to refer to a banner as
a "pearl -of price." But the poet had
by this time three lines to his liking,
and the substitution of "a youth who
bore mid snow and ice completed the
verse as it has been read and spoken
throughout the length and breadth of
the land. All of which goes to show
that the genius of the poet is in the
conception, and that the production of
the poem, bemg quite another matte;
3nt
lies solely in the direction of patie
labor.
TOLD BY THEIR DRESS.
The Womon of Different- Nationalities
Easily Distinguished.
You can tell at a glance the French,
woman from the American, the latter
from the English woman, and yet, says
the Paris-New York Herald, each wom
an is a perfect type.
The well-dressed Frenchwoman
wears a very large hat or exquisite
toque; her hiffon blouse has short
sleeves, and is made with turndown
collar; her gloves are very.long, reach
ing far above the elbow, and, although
white, are perfectly clean and fresh.
She has a waist at whatever sacrifice,
also hips. She wears a white veil,
which she never puts on, under her hat,
and when she walks, which is seldom,
it is on the tips of her toes.
The .well-dressed' English woman
wears in the morning a man's colored
shirt, with white collar, a man's neck
tie, a tailor-made white drill or holland
jacket and skirt, a pretty hat with flow
ers, with veil plastered over the face to
keep the fringe in curl.
She has a good figure and is very tall,
does not wear high heels and uses her
whole foot when walking.
The American woman is a combina
tion of these twq. With great acute
ness she selects the best points of each,
but you would never take her for any
body but herself. She is rather inclined
to the enormous hats of the French',
but she does not wear short sleeves
and low necks with them.
She is always appropriately dressed
and has a costume for every occasion
which always seems the very best
thing that she could have chosen. She
seems to have calculated aU weathers
and all occurrences with an eye to her
dress whence her success. '
OF HUMAN KIND.
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.
Strayed.
From the fair' grounds, one black
mare, white hind foot, small white epot
in forehead, and one light sorrel horse,
white hind 'foot, email white strip in
face and saddle marked, both branded
A on left stifle. Horse also branded A
on the right hind leg. A liberal reward
will be paid for information wnicn will
lead to their recoverv, by the under
signed. . A. S. Macaixistek,
Notice.
i
All city warrants registered prior to
January 2, 1892, are how due and pay
able at mv office. Interest ceases after
this date. 1. 1. Burget, City Treas.
Dated Dalles City, Auk. 1. 1894.
Another Call.
All county warrants registered prior
to January 1, 1891, will be paid on pre
sentation at my office. Interest ceases
after Sept.. 10th: Wm. Michell,
County Treasurer
. Miss Bay Do you believe in high
sounding names for girls? Mrs. Ray
Up to thirty ; after that age take any
thing you can get. Town Topics.
Put on Tour Glasses and Look at This
From $100 to $2,000 to loan. Apply to
UEO. W. KOWLAND,
113 Third St. The Dalles. Or.
rcMATSJIMMAfe
COPYRIGHTS. V
CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT? For a
prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to
nllJNN & CO., who have had nearly fifty years1
experience tn 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 OX iruwhn
ical and scientific books sent tree.
Patents taken through Munn te Co. receive
special notice in the Scientific American, and
thus are brought widely before the public 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, tiM a year. Single
copies, ti5 cents. Every number contains beau
tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new
houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the
'atest oins ana secure contracts.
M"- V- . -
I Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat-
ent business conducted for Modcr atc Fees.
Sour Office is Opposite O. S. patent Office
I and we can secure patent in less time than, those
remote from Washington.
z aexxa moaei, drawing or pnoio., vmn ucsciip
I tion. We advise, if natcntahle or not. free ol
i charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured,
t a pimui -r. "How to Obtain Patents," with
(cost of same in the U. & and foreign countries
sent free. Address,
C.A.SiOW&CO.
Ad. Keller is now
located at W. H.
Butts' old stand,
and will be glad
to wait upon his
many friends.
j aBBff.BiaBn
ill n j Mivi I ci
PaOKKSSIOISAL.
ATTOKNXY-AT-HW OtBCC
Ppurt Street, The Dalles, Oregon.
b. Durcrit. runt minm.
DUFCE, MENEFKE Attorneys-at-uv
Room 41 aud 4a, over Poet
nflre Building. Entrance on ashtnirfrm street
rhe Dalles. Oregon.
V 3. BENNETT. ATTORNEV-AT-U-.V. Of
Va flccln Schanno' bnililing, up stain,. The
Miles. Oregon.
J. B. CONDON. J. W. CONDON.
ClONDON & CONDON, ATVORNEY8 AT LAW
J Office on Court etreet, opposite the old
court house, The Dalles, Or.
B. S. HUNTINGTON. H. S. WXL80H.
HUNTINGTON cV WILSON ATTORSKY8-AT-uv
Offices, French's block over 'irst Na-
uoual Bank. Dalles. Oregon. .
w
' H. WILSON ATTORKKT-AT-LAW KOOmS
French fc Co. s bank building, Second
treer. t he Dalles, Oregon.
J SUTHERLAND. M. J C. M. ; F. T. M. C.
M. C. P. and S. O., Physician and Sur
geon. Rooms 8 and 4, cnapman block.
Residence Mrs. Tbornbury's, west end ol Second
street.
pR. ESHELMAN (HOMJCOPATHICJ PHTBICIAH
A-r auu OUKOKON. (. 811 answereu prvimpuiy
pro
ley or night, city oreonntry.
Office No. 86 and
wtf
I)
B. O. 1). DO AN IS. PHYSICIAN AND SUK-
ios. Offlco: rooms 6 and 6 Chapman .
fk. Residence: 8. K. e.-rner nourt and
'ourth streets, sec nd door from the corner
fflce hoars 9 to 12 A. M... 2 to & and 7 to i P. M
) !iIDDAlJL. Dentist. Oas given for the
. painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth
t on tiowed aluminum plRte. Rooms: Sign of
it (roiden Tooth. Second Street.
SOCIETIES.
YX7A8CO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. & A. M. Meets
T t first i
t and third Monday of each month at 7
P. M.
DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6.
Meets in Masonic Hail the third Wednesday
f each month at 7 P. M.
iTODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD.
JrX Mt. Hood Camp No. 59, Meets Tuesday even-
ngof each week in f raternity tian, at i :au p. m.
-lOLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 5, I. O. O. F. Meets
V ' every riiuuj cuuip v f -v v.va,
of P. hall, corner Second and Court streets.
sojourning brothers axe welcome.
L7RIEND8HIP LODGE, NO. ., K. of P. Meets
A H LI J VllVlt., J.UU . " . -" " ,
J.1,.nnn.hnMlna n.iTTif.r r1 fVin.t and RftfVinri
streets. Sojourning members are cordially ln-
VlteQ. n.UCIULVDIiaiT,
D. W.Vacbh, K. ol K. and p. u. J.
SSEMBLT NO. 4827, K. OF L. Meets in K
r of P. hall the socond and fourth Wednes
iavs of each month at 7:30 p. m.
WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCK
UNION will meet every Friday afternoon
st 8 o'clock at the reading room. All are invited.
FERN LODGE, DEGREE OF HONOR, NO.
25. Meets In Fraternity Hall, Second street,
every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. .
iUKS. JlAHIfi DU1UUB, i. ui XI,
Mrs. B. J. Russell, Financier.
rpHK DALLES LODGE No. 2, I.O.G.T. Beg
X ular weekly meetings Friday at 8 r. v., a'
b.. oi f. riau. j. a. wiuzlkb, (j. i.
DINSMORE PARISH, SgQ'y.
-pjSMPLB LODGE NO. 8, A. O. U. W. Meets
JL in Fraternity Hall, over Kellers, en Second ,
Treet, Thursday evenings at 7 :3U.
tj. x. e rr.xxir.JNB,
W. S Mtbbs, Financier. M. W
JAB. NE8MITH POST, No. 82, G. A. R. Meets
every Saturday at 7:80 r. x.t in the K. of P.
Ham
AMERICAN RAILWAY UNION, NO. 40.
Meets second and fourth Thursdays each
month in K. of P. hall. J. W. Biadt,
W. H. Jones, Bee y. pres.
B
OF L. E. Meets every Sunday afternoon in
the K. of P. Hall.
ESANG VEREIN Meets every
VT evening in the K. of P. Hall.
Sunday
B
OF L, F. DIVISION, No. 167 Meets In
K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednes-
lay of each month, at 7 :3U P. M.
"The Regulator Line"
Tie Dalles, Portlanrl aufl Astoria
Navigation Co.
THROUGH
Freigni ana Passenoer Line
Throneh 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.
PAS8KNUKK 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. Live stock shipments solicted.
Call on or address,
W. C. ALLAWAY,
General Agent-
THE-DALLES,
OREGON
J F. FORD, Evangelist,
Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes under date of
March 23, 1893: '
S. B. Msd. 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. 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, Mr. & Mrs. J. F. Ford. .
If yon wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and ready
for the Spring's work, cleanse your system with
the Headache and Liver Care, by taking two or
three doses each week.
. 8old under a positive guarantee.
60 cents per bottle by all druggists.