The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, October 27, 1894, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    rhhl ! My 1
a
Bran and Shorts (Diamond
Mills), $12 per ton.
Flour at Bedrock Prices.
G-ood Potatoes, 65c a sack.
Seed Wheat.
Chicken Wheat, 75c sack.
Choice Wheat, Timothy
and Alfalfa Hay.
Alt Goods Sold at Lowest
3T. 3E2E. CiriOSS,
Telephone No. 61.
Aunt I hear you are going to marry
Jenkyna, my dear. He is a foolish young
man ! Niece I haven't met a wise one
yet, aunt. It seems to me that as soon
as they grow wise they leave off marry
ing ! H alt-Holiday.
THE WAT SHE LOOKS
troubles the wo
man who is deli
cate, run-down, or
overworked. She's
hollow - cheeked,
dull - eyed, thin,
anda pale, and it
worries her.
Now, the way
to look well is to
be well. And the
way to be well, if
you're any such
woman, is to faithfully use Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription.
That is the only medicine that's
guaranteed to build up woman's
strength and to cure woman's ail
nents. In every " female com
plaint," irregularity, or weakness,
1 and in every exhausted condition of
the female "system if it ever fails
to tenefit or cure, you have your
money back.
For overworked, " worn - out,"
"run-down," debilitated teachers,
milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses,
-M shop-girls," house-keepers, nursing
mothers, and feeble women gener
ally, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip
tion is the greatest earthly boon,
being nnequaled as an appetizing
i cordial and restorative tonic.
Tf vnn'rfl siiffep.
-$T ing from Catarrh,
ine proprietors ji
Dr. Sage's Catarrh
Remedy ask you to
try their medicine.
Then, if you can't
be cured, they'll
pay you $500 in cash. ,
Bird-dealer I feel bound to tell you,
sir, that the parrot which you have se
lected is a terrible swearer. Customer
All the better ; I will let him do my
telephoning for me. Mount Vernon
Echoes.
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 Borne member of the
family has need of it. A toothache or
" headache may be cured by it. A touch
, of rhenmatisiu or neuralgia quieted.
- The severe pain of a burn or scald
promptly relieved and the sore healed in
ranch less time than when medicine haa
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 iB kept at hand. A
-"ore-throat may be cured before it be
me serious. A troublesome corn may
toe removed by applying it twice a day
' lor a week two. A lame back may be
cored and1 eeveral days of valuable time
eared or a par in the side or chest re
lieved without paying a doctor bill. Pro
core a 56r cent bottle at once and you
will never regret it. For eale by Blakeley
"Jfc Houghton Dr uggists.
Mosers What's the complexion of
- your politics? Tubers (with his mind
-absorbed in recalling the lovliness of the
Jady candidate Blonde. .
1 It Should Be In Every HoaM
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
alter 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.
Kinc's New Discovery has done him
more good than anything he ever used
Jor lung trouble. Nothing like it. -Try
it. Free trial bottles at Snipes & Kin
crsTy's. .-
IK. - 3k
m
Seed; Rye. ,'; . " .
Feed Oats.
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 tbe 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 make tbe 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 ssid
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 city and running thence easterly
75 feet.
Said improvement will be constructed
in accordance 'with the provisions of
Ordinance No. 270, which passed tbe
Common Council of Dalles Citv, 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 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 streets
as hereinafter stated and that the
cost of such improvement will be
levied upon the property directly bene
fited thereby, 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
Laughlin street ; thence southerly to the
alley south of Alvord street.
Said ae'wer 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. f
Said improvement will be constructed
in accordance with the provisions of
Ordinance No. 270, which passed the
Common Council of Dalles City, May
10th, 1893.
Dated this 15th day of October, 1894.
Douglas S. Dufur,
Oetl5-30 Becorder 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 or October, 1S94, notice is here
by given that said City Council is about
to proceed to order and make the im
provement in Union street, in Baid Citv.
as hereinafter stated, and that the cost
of such lm prove nt will be levied upon
the property adjacent thereto, and said
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
tneir written remonstrance 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 street ; 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 street 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 passed
the uommon council ot Dalles City May
10, 1893.
Dated this 15th day of October, 1894.
Douglas S. Dufub,
Octl5-30 Becorder of Dalles City.
Notice or 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 street.
Dated this 20th day of October, 1894.
Douglas S. Dufur,
Becorder for Dalles Citv.
WASTE OF FOOD BY AMERICANS.
People from Europe Astonished by Our
Careless Table Methods.
An English' health' journal expresses
great surprise at the quantity of food
eaten by American against English
laborers. It is very curious to see how
different foods preponderate in differ
ent industries. The textile worker in
Europe will have 95 pounds of meat
per annum for every 100 traits of con
sumption, or, say, a quarter of a pound
of meat a day, while steel workers in
dulge in 114 pounds for every 100 units.
On the other hand, the weaver con
sumes more flour than the steel work
er 275 pounds per 100 units instead of
208 pounds. lie also , takes about 71
pounds of sugar more per 100 units,
and a dozen more eggs; of butter, lard
and tea both take about the ' same,
though both in tea and coffee the
weaver a little exceeds the other. That
is, in the calling which demands the
gTeater muscular exertion, a greater
amount of nitrogenous food is required.
On the European continent the con
sumption of meat by workers is much
less than in Britain. Even in the iron
industry the German is little more ex
travagant than the English weaver,
while the Frenchman consumes only
57 pounds and the Belgian 55
pounds. On the other hand, the latter
consume more flour and eggs, more
than twice as much of each. Their
consumption of coffee, too, is large 14
pounds and 19 pounds rcpectively, tc
the Englishman's 3J pounds;, but i
must also be taken in the reckoning,
that tea does not appear in their ac
counts. But all these figures pale be
fore the statistics of food consumption
in America.
The Illinois iron worker manages tc
consume 303 pounds of meat per 100
units, and-though this is excessive, 200 M
pounds are put down as the average of
Pennsylvania, 197 pounds for Ohio,
187 H pounds for West Virginia and 155
pounds for Tennessee. The average
consumption of flour for the states is
about 250 pounds, but voracious Illinois
again comes to the fore with 3GG
pounds, and sugar, butter and eggs are
everywhere more lavishly used than in
Europe. Here, as in Europe, iron and
steel industries are found to be more
self-indulgent than any other trades,
but the expenditure here is far above
that of even the most extravagant
workers of Europe. Much of the food
accounted for in these figures is actual
ly consumed, but a large margin must
be allowed for what is wantonly de
stroyed, and when the history of the
waste of food products in the United
States comes to be written it will con
tain some startling and not altogether
pleasant reading.
THE SAMOYEDS.
Esquimaux Who Are I-ow Down in the
Order of Intelligence.
The reindeer Lapps and the Samoyeds
stand, in intelligence and morale, at
the two extremes of the Esquimau
group the Lapps at the top, the
Samoyeds at the bottom. These latter
have no reindeer nor any other de
sirable possessions. Virtually, they are
beggars, yet they serve to show some
thing of the habits and -character of
the people they represent. They are,
as one would expect, small in stature.
I do not think I have seen a man more
than, say, five feet two inches in height,
says a writer in Longman's Magazine.
Their faces are very flat, and they
have the slitlike eyes of the Mongol.
Often it is impossible to distinguish
any eye at all, but simply a slit, only
just not closed up. The specimens
here, even young men and girls, suffer
much from blindness. Whether this is
due to snow, or whether hereditary, I
am unable to say, but their eyes turn
white, as if with a form of glaucoma.
In person and habits they are dirty in
the extreme. They live in skin-covered
wigwams, which are very simply made.
The reindeer skin with the hair out
side is stretched over poles, at the
apex of which a hole is left perhaps
for escape of smoke, though I saw no
fires burning in any of the wigwams.
Inside is a confused heap of men, wom
en, children, kins, food and dogs lit
tle mongrel dogs," that creep around
your calves in a doubtful kind of way.
Every spring, about May, a great
northward migration of these people
takes place. It is then that they scat
ter themselves about the Petchora and
Pustosersk districts and along the Si
berian coast, many of them passing up
to the Yalmal peninsula and Waigatz
island, where are their places of sac
rifice, adorned with . skulls of polar
bears, and their ancient centers of re
ligious observance.
' When a Samoyed dies, he is buried,
and with him is left sometimes his
sleigh and always some small domestic
articles, such as food vessels. Norden
skiold supposes that these are intended
for his use in the future life. It may
be so, but I fancy we are sometimes in
clined to attribute to such observances
a significance they do not possess. The
custom of leaving offerings at the grave
of the'departed is a very universal one,
and need not necessarily imply more
than respect and regret.
Kept for Four Centuries.
A curious story, illustrative of the
perservative properties of carbolic acid
gas, or "chokedamp," comes from
China. In the province of Anhui a party
of .miners opened an ancient shaft,
where, according to the official records,
a terrible catastrophe had occurred
four hundred years ago. When the
miners entered they came upon the
bodies of one' hundred and seventy
miners, who had perished in the mine,
lying where they had been overtaken
by the deadly gas four centuries back.
The corpses to the eye were as though
of yesterday, quite fresh-looking and
not decayed in any way. The faces
were like those of men who had just
died. On an attempt being made to
move them ontside for burial, they one
and all crumbled away, leaving noth
ing but a pile of dust and the remnants
of the stronger parts of their clothing.
Tne miners, terrified, fled from the
spot, and though there were valuable
deposits of coal in the shaft, nothing
would induce the superstitious men to
rct-ra to tV.oir work.
THE NATIONAL i-LOWER.
How the Rose of Sharon Became the
Rose of lngland
" That .tie-rose is the national flower ;
of England, and was accepted as such
alie conclusion of the wars of, the
roses, when the red rose of Lancaster
and the. white rose of York were united
by the marriage of the representatives
of the two warring houses, most read
ers of history know. Hoiv' this flower
came to be the badge if f either house,
net many people even guess. The few
students who suppose they know its
history say that the white rose came
to the house of York through the fam
ily of Clifford, whose device it had long
been, and beyond whom it cannot be
traced. The red rose, it is supposed,
dates back to Eleanor of Provence,
queen of Henry III., and was her per
sonal device, assumed for love of the
beautiful Provence roses of her native
duchy, and transmitted to her descend
ants of Lancaster.
But in the recently published life of
Dean Stanley, a devoted student of
historic traditiqns, a new and pic
turesque origin is assigned to the na
tional flower. He gathered the story
while visiting in a chateau in the little
town of Provins, France, and believed
it to be correct. According to it, the
red rose of England " was never a
Provence rose, but instead was a rose
of Provins.
The chateau of Provins belonged
centuries ago to the counts of Champagne-,,
and in the time of the Fourth
Crusade one of these counts, called
Thibaut the Troubadour, became a
crusader and visited the Holy Land.
On his return he brought to his wife
a rose-bush with a splendid bright
crimson flower the rose of Sharon
and this was plante'd in the castle gar
den, where it grew and flourished.
Soon it spread to neighboring gar
dens, and the town became famous for
roses. Wreaths for the great church
festivals were made from these roses
from the Holy Land; they were used to
grace all gala occasions, and the good
French housewives even turned them
to more practical account. They made
such an appetizing delicacy from rose
leaves, put up with sugar or sirup, that
its fame spread far beyond the imme
diate neighborhood, and it commanded
a ready sale throughout the entire re
gion under the name of Conserves de
Roses de Provins.
A generation later the prosperity of
the town received a sad shock, and the
preserving industry no doubt suffered
with the other industries of its citizens.
Provins had a mayor of such oppres
sive views on the labor question that
he ventured to ring the great curfew
bell, which ended the working day, an
hour later than had been customary.
This the work-people would not en
dure. They mobbed the unpopular
magistrate, and killed him in his own
house. They did not stop to consider
the possible consequence of such an
act. The line of the counts of Cham
pagne had become extinct, but Blanche,
the widow of the last one, had married
Edmund .Crouchback, first carl of Lan
caster, who . promptly undertook to
punish the unruly inhabitants.
lie maac sucn navpc tnat. the town
never recovered from it, and had even
to submit to having a new bell made
and named Guillonette, in honor, of the
murdered mayor, Guillaume. This
bell, after six centuries; still rings the
curfew in Provins every night. When
Edmund went back to England, leav
ing misery, poverty and terrified quiet
behind him, he carried home, says
Dean Stanley, two relics.
"One was the yard measure which,
for many years, was in France peculiar
to Provins; the other was the crimson
rose, which through him became the
rose of Lancaster."
The heraldic rose of England is still
of blended red and white, significant
of the union of the two great houses;
but as Lancaster was victorious in bat
tle, so also is the red rose the victor in
popular favor, and it is of that, not of
the stifE parti-colored rosette of the
British coat-of-arms, that we think as
the emblem and flower of the nation.
The old French crusader's holy rose,
the rose of Sharon, the rose of Provins,
has become the rose of England.
A Fishy fitory. .
Pyeng Yang, a city in Corea, was
founded three thousand and sixteen
years ago. It is known as the well
less city. Within its walls is not a
single well and all the water of the
city is carried up by watermen from
the river which washes its southern
wall. Tradition shows that his has
always been so, for it is said that when
a Chinese general besieged it two thou
sand years ago, believing that he could
compel its inhabitants to capitulate by
cutting off their water supply, he was
led to give up the attempt because the
soldiers on the walls took fish scales
and went through the motions of the
bath, and the scales, glittering in the
sun, looked in the eyes of the aston
ished besiegers to be drops of water.
Exchange.
A Pompons Little Chap.
Alfonso, king of Spain, is now a lit
tle more than eight years of age, and a
pompous little chap he is, which is not
to be wondered at when Spanish eti
quette is considered. His slumbers are
watched throughout the night by the
Monteros de Espinosa, a body of men
who for four hundred years have en
joyed the exclusive privilege of guard
ing the king or queen from sunset to
sunrise. They are bound by tradition
to be natives of the town of Espinosa,
and must have served with honor in
the army. They lock the palace gates
with much ceremony and solemnity at
midnight, and open them again at seven
o'clock in the morning. Naturally,
Alfonso thinks he is a great little man.
Some Names Not Allowable.
A . workingman of Dresden lately
proposed to register his new-bora child
as Robespierre Danton. The registrar
declined to put down so revolutionary
a name, and the father refused to reg
ister the child ,at all, except by num
ber. The matter was taken before the
courts, the workman was fined, and
the decision given that in monarchial
states such' names are not allowable.
Mexican
Mustang
Liniment
for
Burns, .
Caked & Inflamed Udders.
Piles,
Rheumatic Pains,
Bruises and .Strains,
Running Sores, .
Inflammations,
Stiff joints, .,J
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 spot
in forehead, and one light sorrel horse,
white hind foot, small 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 which will
lead to their recovery, by the under
signed. A. S. Macallisteb,
Notice.
All city warrants registered prior to
January 2, 1892, are now due and pay-
able at mv office. Interest ceases after
this date. 1. 1. Bdbget, City Treas.
Dated Dalles City, Ausr. 1. 1894..
, Another Call.
All. county warrants registered prior
to January 1, 1S91, will be paid on pre
sentation at mv office. Interest ceases
after Sept. 10th. Wm. Michkll,
County Treasurer.
He You saw some old ruins while in
England, I presume?. She Yes, in
deed ! And one of them wanted to
marry me. Brooklyn Life.
Put on Tour Glasses and Look as This,
From $100 to $2,000 to loan. . Apply to
iiKO. W. ROWLAND,
US Third St. The Dalles. Or.
ww Lri I u. i iinuL MWr3 m
. jT r n r-, i i j -r r-,
uuriruunigi
CAW I OBTAIN A PATENT t For
Prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to
M V NN fc CO., who have bad nearly fifty rears'
. experience in the patent business. Communica
tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of In
formation concerning; Patents and bow to ob
tain tbem sent free. Also a catalogue of mechan
Ical and scientific books sent free.
Patents taken through Hunn s Co. reeetra
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 too
world. S3 a year. Sample copies sent free.
Building Edition, monthly, tiM a year. Single
copies, 25 cents. Every Dumber contains beau
tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new
houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the
latest dwlwTis and secure contracts. ,--s?
Mr"-. V v- . . t,t- ...
Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat
ent business conducted for modem ate Fees.
Our Office is Opposite O. S. patent office
and we can secure patent in less time than those
remote from Washincrton.
Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip
tion. W. ariviiu. if no f nTM or not. free OX
charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured.
A Pamphlet, "How to Obtain Patents," with
cost of same in the U. & and foreign countries
sent free. Address,
C.A.SNOW&CO.
Ow "itsmt Orno: vashinctct r. c.
Ad: Keller is now
located at "W. H.
Butts' old stand,
and will be glad
to wait upon his
many friends.
W - -
PBOFK3SIONAL.
H
H. RI D DE LL attorn K y-at-La w Office
Court Street, The Dalles, Oregon.
S. B. DUTUR. FRANK KINIFII.
1-vCFUR, A MENKKEE Attokmk ys - AT
U law Rooms 42 and 43, over Post
tfi- Building, Entrance nn Washington Street
rhe Dalles, Oregon.
V S. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-La-.V. Of
.V. flee In Sehanuo' building, np Ktxin.. The
il i. Oregon.
J. B. CONDON. J. W. CONDON.
CONDON & CONDON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Office on Court street, opposite the old
court house. The Dalles, Or. -
B. 8. HUNTINGTON. H. 8. WTXJSOZf.
HDNT1NGTON Jt WILSON ATTORNS YB-AT-law
Offices, French's block over Irst Na
tional Bank. Dalles. Oregon. .
vv
T H. WILSON ATTORN! T-AT-LAW ROOmS
French A Co. s Dana ouiiaing, oecona
street. The Dalles, Oregon.
J SUTHERLAND, M. D., C. M. ; F. T. M. C.
. M. C. P. and S. O., Pnysiclan and Sur
geon. Rooms 3 and 4, Chapman block.
Residence Mrs. Thornburv's. west end of Second
street.
DR. ESHELMAN (Homeopathic; Phtbiciab
and Surgeon. Calls answered promptly
lay or night, city or country. Office No. 86 and
'Chapman block. wtf
I)
8. O. D. DOAN K FBTSICIAM AND SOB-
sson. Office: rooms 5 and 6 Chapman
ti.rt-k.- Residence: S. K. earner Court and
fourth streets, sec nd door from the corner
ySLce hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to & and 7 to 8 P. M
I -v rilDDALL Dxntist. Gas given for the
I f painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth
ct mi nowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of
sf Golden Tooth. Second Street. .
SOCIETIES.
WASCO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. & A. M. Meets
first and third Monday of each month at 7
r. 9t.
DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6.
Meets in Masonic Hall the third Wednesday
f each month at 7 P. M.
XfODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD.
.1 1 Mt. Hood Camp No. 69. Meets Tuesday even
ing of each week in Fraternity Hall, at 7:30 p. m.
COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 6, I. O. O. F. Meets
every Friday evening at 7:80 o'clock, in K.
of P. hall, corner Second and Court streets.
Sojourning brothers are welcome.
a. Plough, Bec'y. H. A. BILI.S.N. G. '
FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P. Meets
every Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in,
Schanno'B building, corner of Court and Second
vtreets. Sojourning members are cordially in
vited. W. L. BRADSHAW,
D. W.Vaube, K. of R. and B. C. C. ;
t 88EMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF L. Meets in K
A. of P.'hall the second and fourth Wednes
lavs of each month at 7:30 p. m.
WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE
UNION will meet every Friday afternoon
at g 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.
Mrs. Mamie Briggs, C. of H.
Mbs. B. J. Russell, Financier.
rpHB DALLES LODGE No. 2, I. O. G. T. Reg
1 nlar weekly meetings Friday at 8 P. K., a'
K. of P. Hall. J. S. WWZ.LEK, C. T.
Dinsmorb Parish, Sec'y. .
-piMPLE LODGE NO. 8, A. O. U,W. Meets
1 in Fraternity Hall, over Kellers, en Second
treet, Thursday evenings at 7:30.
C.F.STEPHENS,
W. 8 Mtkbs, Financier. M. W
J AS. NESM1TH POST, No. 32, G. A. R. Meets
every Saturday at 7:30 r. M., in the K. of P.
Rail.
AMERICAN RAILWAY UNION, NO. 40.
Meets second and fourth Thursdays each
month In K. of P. hall. J. W. Ready,
W. H. Jones, See'y. Pres.
B,
OF L. E. Meets every Sunday afternoon in
the K. of P. Hall.
GESANG . VEREIN Meets every Sunday
evening in the K. of P. Hall
B
OF L, F. DIVISION, No. 167 Meets in
K.. of p. ii all tne nrst ana tmra weanee-
lay of each month, at 7 :80 P. m.
"The Reffulator Line"
Tie Dalles, Portland ani Astoria
Navigation Co.
1ft
Tt I III III . 1 TT1 ' T I m
us
THROUGH
Prepay PasseisrLiES
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 st. dock) at 6 a.m., connect
ing with Steamer Regulator for Tbe
Dalles.
PA HHENGEK BATES.
Oneway ..2.00
Round trip 8.00
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, Evanplist,
Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes under date of
March 23, 1893: ,
x
S. B. Med. Mfg. Co., . .
Dufur, Oregon. . .
Oentlemen :
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. 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. Wishing you prosperity, we are
Yours, Mb. & Mb3. 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 Cure, by taking two Of
three doses each week. "
Sold under a posive gtiaraatee.
50 cents per tx! ! or all druggists.
J.