I: A I B D Bran and Shorts (Diamond Mills), $12 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 iT. 2E3I- Telephone No. 61. of McKay, Ohio, is of the opinion that there is nothing as good as children troubled with' colds or croup as Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. He has need it in his family for several years with the best results and always kept a bottle of it in the house. Aiter having la grippe he was himself troubled with a severe cough. He used other remedies without benefit and then concluded to try the children's medicine and to his delight ft soon effected a permanent cure. 50 cent bottles for sale by Blakeley & Houghton Druggists. Maggie Has he proposed yet?- Daisy No, but last night he asked me my opinion of flats, and I said I adored them, especially the cute little onee, and I know by the way he smiled that he'll pop within a week. Brooklyn Eagle. Marrelohs results. From a letter written by Rev. JF. Gun derman, of Dimondale, Mich., we are permitted to make this extract: "I have no hesitation in recommending Dr. King's New Discovery, as the results were almost marvelous in the case of my wife. While I was pastor of the Baptist .Church at Rivers junction she was i brought down with Pneumonia succeed ing La Grippe. Terrible paroxysms of - coughing would last hours with little in terruption and it seemed as if she could mended Dr. Kingis New Discovery ; it was quick in its work and highly satis factory in results.'.' Trial bottles free at : KnirtPN Ar. TCiniarslv'fl Timer Sfni-o Pdcf. 1 w - "fe TUncle Josh Did any of them robbers -nit n hnU. nf vaw whan vnn in Npw York? Uncle Si No, by gosh ! Every time I eeen one of them p'lice I dodged nto a hallway or somethin'. Indianap olis Jonrnal. Four KlgT Successes. Having the needed merit to more than made good all the advertising claimed for them, the following four remedies have reached a phenominal sale.. Dr. King's New Discovery, for consumption, Coughs and Colds, each bottle guaranteed Electric Bitters, the great remedy for Liver, Stomach and Kidneys. Buck len's Arnica Salve, the best in the world, and Dr. King's New Life Pills, which are a perlect pill. All these remedies are guaranteed to do just what is claimed for them and the dealer whose name is attached herewith will be glad to tell you more of them. Sold at Snipes & Kinersly's Drug Store. Notice of Proposed Street Improvoment 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. Dufuk, Recorder for Dalles Citv. Yesterday afternoon between the courthouse and Newman's store, two notes. One made Jan. 1, 1893, due one day after date; amount $124, payable to Martin Wing,, signed by Steve wing. One dated March, 1893, amount $100, payable to F. H. Woodcock, signed by Mike Kened and George Miller. Finder, will please leave them at the 8herifTs office. nl4-d2wl Cord Wood. We again have an abundant supply of dry fir and hard wood for immediate delivery at the lowest rates, and hope to be fayored with a liberal share of the trade. Jos. T. Pbtkbs & Co. Ton. Alexander B. Stephens. I ocasionally use, when my condition requires it, Dr. Simmons Liver Regula tor, with good effect. Hon. Alex. H. Stephens." ' Wanted. s Some good second hand harness. Must be cheap Cash. Address, W. X. this office. Mi Seed Rye. Feed Oats. Rolled Barley. Poultry and Eggs bought and sold. Choice G-roceries & Fruits. Grass Seeds. Living Prices. Cor. Second and Union Sts. ANCIENT STATUARY. Tbe Enormous Cost of Some Historic Pieces. The famous Colossus of Rhodes, which has been described so often by gleaners of the curious that the subject is- becoming' threadbare, cost 300 '"tal ents," a sum equal to about S375.000 in United States currency. This sum is a trifle, however, when compared to the price paid for a colossal statue of Mercury, which was made for the Gaulish city of Averni by Zelodorus. The artist was engaged upon this great work for ten long1 years, and the total cost to the city would equal $1,775,000. What the gold and ivory statue of Athena, in the Parthenon, or the cele brated "Olympian Zeus," both of which were made by Phidias, cost is not stated by any of the ancient or modern au thorities, but that it was enormous may be inferred from statements made be low: Athena was arrayed in drapery made of pure hammered gold weighing 40 talents. The coin value of this won derful drapery at the United States mint to-day would approximate S5SO,000 Of the Olympian Zeus it has been sai( that "it was a monster idol of gold am ivory worth more than the cash asset of many modern kingdoms." The hea of this great image was covered witl locks of pure gold, each weighing sij minae, or about the value of 825,000 ii modern gold coin. A Big Corn Yield. The largest crop of corn ever pro duced on one acre, according to tht Charleston News and Courier, was that raised by a farmer in Marlboro county, S. C, in 1892. A prize of one thousand dollars was offered for the largest yield on an acre, and this farmer chose a piece of worn-out piney woods, sandy land, to which he applied more than a thousand dollars' worth of fertilizers. The season was favorable and the cul tfvator was kept going almost con stantly. The stand became so thick and heavily burdened with ears that fences had to be built to sustain it. When the crop was gathered it meas ured within a peck of two hundred and fifty-five bushels and carried off the prize, which the farmer richly deserved, for it takes a valiant man to spend more than a thousand dollars to enrich a single acre. location of the Memory. The memory remains intact and in perfect working order in cases where the left side of the brain is badly dis eased or even if portions of it have been removed.' From this the natural inference is that the right side of the brain is the seat of that most remark able faculty. Lieut. Brady, who lost a portion of the right side of the brain from a gunshot wound while in Assam, where two-thirds of the officials are negroes, suffered a remarkable lapse of memory. After he had fully recov ered he knew and could call by name all his white associates, but the ne groes, whom he formerly knew as well as the whites, were "perfect strangers to him. A Happy Settlement. The late Lord Denman, on being re minded by a hatter that a small ac count was "overdue," visited the shop and gave the manager a legal reply to the request for payment. "You state," he said, solemnly, as he stood over him, shaking his finger at him, "that this account is overdue. Remember that a bill of exchange or bill of acceptance may become overdue, but a trades man's account never. A gentleman pays when he thinks he will or when he has the money. But to show that no ill-feeling exists, I will pay the ac count and take another hat." " Bscklen'i Arlncm Salre. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever Bores, 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 & Kin ersly. - Notice. All city warrants registered prior to January 2, 1892, are now due and pay able at my office. Interest ceases after this date. 1. 1. Bueget, City Treas. Dated Dalles City, Aug. 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. THJ he Chronicle prints the news. LEAVES NO MONUMENT. The Vanishing American Indian Has Done Nothing to Benefit Mankind. A recent brief announcement, un noticed by many, had ' an important bearing on the "Indian question," or on the duration of that question, says the Kansas City Star. It was, seem ingly, that the last mounted soldier of the United States army had been ordered out of the Indian Territory, something that had never before happened. Ever since the white man landed on the shores of what are now the United States a white man with a gun has been watching the Indian. The first semblance of an army was raised to fight Indians; almost the first structure raised on the shore was a fort for pro tection against Indians; so, for two hundred years and more as the Indian has fallen back, the soldier and the fort have moved with him.' Then the white man moved around to the west ern ocean and. the western shore, to Oregon and California, and began to push the Indian to the eastward, fort and soldier and settler altogether press ing on. Now the Indians moved back from the Atlantic and Pacific to the great central plains seem surrounded, and now comes the order to take off the guard. "He can neither fight nor fly" is the idea of this order. "He must be a 'good Indian' now. The troopers can unsaddle and take a long rest from now on." Does not this re ally look as if we were approaching the last hour of the last Indian? In truth, the original "real" Indian, absolutely unchanged by contact with the white man, has gone now except in the far deserts and mountain fast nesses. In 1846, Francis Parkman tells us in the "Oregon Trail," he saw Indians who had not emerged from the "stone age," and used imple ments and weapons such as may have been used by people before Noah's flood. But could such Indians be found now? Certainly not in the region where Mr. Parkman found them. El derly people who visit the "Wild West" show make mild complaint that the Indians who do the best they can to look "natural" do not look like the Indians of forty years ago. That In dian has, somehow, "passed on." This much is certain, that the "last Indian" will be, in every sense of the word, the "last." He will leave noth ing behind him to mark the place he occupied in the world no history; neither monument. Books there will be and museums and "collections," but none by him. Should an Indian be come so learned and accomplished as to write a history he would become a white man. Many white men have followed him, studied him. Learned men from foreign countries have jour neyed here for such purposes, but who of all of them has learned the secret of the Indian's heart? To do that it would be necessary to become for the time an Indian to "put yourself in his place;" and what white man has ever done that? The Indian has no record, or it is as if whispered to the winds or committed to the leaves that fall or to the water that runs away. The Indian rears, while he is an Indian, no habitation that endures; when it is gone there is nothing but a ring on the ground that the rain washes away, lie throws up no highway; bis narrow path through the grass lasts no longer than the buffalo's road to ford in the stream. So there must come a time when, leaving no trace behind, he shall pass out of this world, when the "last Indian" shall go like the mist. A COURT BALL. Brilliancy of the Scene as Depicted by an American Visitor. Never shall I forget the sight which greeted me as we entered, writes Win nifred Grant, in Home and Country. A long walk between two lines of people led to the further end of the room, where I saw a slender man, in the uni form of the Austrian hussars, and a sweet-faced lady in a court costume that fairly blazed with jewels, sur rounded by ladies and gentlemen in waiting, all gorgeously attired. The brilliancy of the countless crystal gas lights from the huge chandeliers, the superb uniforms, wealth of sparkling jewels on all sides, and the magnificent gowns, all completed a "picture of daz zling beauty, never to be forgotten. I was dimly aware of the fact that the countess had again given our names to some official, who repeated them to the master of ceremonies, handing him the cards. Not visiting cards, mind you, but huge things with Our' names so clearly written as to defy mistake. We had dropped our trains on entering the room, and they were immediately spread out to their full width and length by ushers with long wands. Then we slowly marched up the room, and after our names had been announced to their majesties, we each stepped forward and courtesied, or bowed, almost to the floor. Then we backed away, keeping our faces toward the royal party, until we reached the end of the room, where we stopped to breathe for a minute. ' I had been pre sented, and lived, and was grateful. Presently there was a movement in the lines of guests, and at the same moment a hidden orchestra began a majestic polonaise. The guests moved towards the sides of the room, leaving the center cleared, and, headed by two ushers with staves, the royal party slowly marched around the ballroom and then retired. His majesty's ball had been formally opened. An Ancient H anting: Ground. There is still a deal of good hunting on the Delaware peninsula, although the region -has been steadily shot over by a sporting population for the last two hundred and fifty years. Dela ware has stringent game protective laws, and in the west county of the state there are great swamps that still harbor a considerable variety of game. The same is true of several of the Maryland eastern shore counties, and the two Virginia counties have prob ably as good aquatic hunting as is to be found anywhere on the Atlantic coast short of a few almost inaccessible p;ita north and south. , Mexican 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, AH 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; LinLjsent conquers Pain, Makes flan or Beast -well 'again. "The Regulator Line" The Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH FreigQi ana Passenger Line Through Daily Trips (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port 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 Tbe Dalles. 1-A88ENOKR ICATKH. 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. C. ALLAWAY, General Agent THE-DALLES. OREGON J F. FORD, Evangelist, ; Of Dec Moines, Iowa, writes under date ot March 23, 1893: S. B. Mkd. Mfq. Co., Dufur, Oregon. Qentlemen : , On arriving home last week, 1 found all well and anxiously awaiting. Our Llittle girl, eight and one-half years old, who baa was tea away to 3a 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. fe Mrs. J. F. Ford. If you wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and read; for the Spring's work, cleanse your system with tbe Headache and liver Cure, by talcing two ot three doses each week. Bold under a positive guarantee. 1 60 cents per bottle bv all druggists. Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat ent business conducted lor Moder atc Fees, Our Office is Opposite U. S. patent office and we can secure patent in less time than those remote from Washington. Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. A PAMPHLET, "How to Obtain Patents," with cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries sent tree. Address, C.A.GnOWdCO. Opp. Patent Office. WasHiNGTow. O. C. A WINTER'S . . .. ".. . - - GREAT VALUE FOR LITTLE MONEY. lew York Weetdy Tribune, ' ' . a twentv-page journal, is the leading Republican family paper of the United States. It is a NATIONAL, FAMILY PAPER, and gives all the general news of the United States. It gives the events of foreign lands in a nutshell. Its AGRICULTURAL department has no su perior in the countrv. Its MARKET REPORTS are recognized au- , thority. Separate departments for THE FAMILY CIRCLE, OUR ! f YOUNG FOLKS, and SCIENCE AND MECHANICS. Its HOME i AND SOCIETY columns command the admiration of the wives and ' daughters. It general political news, editorials and discussions are comprehensive, brilliant and exhaustive. : ....... A KPF.CTAT. fiONTR. A C!T nMpa THE WEEKLY CHRONICLE for ONE YEAR FOR ONLY $1.75, OabiIx in Advanoe. (The regular subscription for the two papers is $2.50.) SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME. ' Address all ordeis to Write your name and address on Room 2, Tribune Building, New York City, and a Bample copy of THE NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE will be mailed to you. . When the Train stops at THE DALLES, get off on the South Side AT TM H&W COLiUjVlBlfl HOTELt. -O0- ' ' ' This large and popular Eonse does the principal hotel business, and is prepared to furnish the Best Accommodations of any HouBe In the city, and at the low rate of $1.00 per Day. - pirst . Office for all Stage Lines points In Eastern Onion In this Hotel. Corner of Front and Union Sta. 33- STST. VuSLTJ Successor to Paul Kreft fc Co. . DEALER IN DATMTC HTT Q And the Most Complete and WALL PAPER, PRACTICAL PAINTER and PAPER HANGER. None but the best brands of J. W. MASURY'S PAINTS used in all our work, and none but the most skilled workmen employed. Agents for Masury Liquid Paints. No chem icel combination or 6oap mixture. A first-class article 'in all colors. All orders promptly attended to. . Store and Faint Shou corner Third and Washington Sts., The Dalles, Ores-ou "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 . at CRANDALL Who are selling these goods MICHELBACH BRICK, What? D. BUNNE Pip worn, Tin Bepaiis anfl Hoofing MAINS TAPPED UNDER PRESSURE. fT '11-11 ftf.raOCiT. tdt. ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY NEWS OF THE WORLD FOR A TRIFLE. na tn nffflr thin enlAnriii? innrnil and CHRONICLE PUBLISHING- CO. a postal card, send it to Georee W. Best. Qass T)eals, 25 Cer)ts. leaving: The Dalles for all and Eastern Washington. T. T. NICHOLAS, Propr. Am Tl ACC Latest Patterns and Designs in WALL PAPER & BURGET'S, out at greatly-reduced rates. - - UNION ST. Hand-Corded Corsets, Health Reform Waists, Nursing Corsets, Misses' Waists, Children's Waists, Shoulder Braces and Hose Supporters made to order. Where? At the Pacific Corset Company's Factory, north east of the sFair Grounds. It desired each garment will be fitted before being finished. Call at the fac . tory and examine our goods, or drop a card in the office, and our agent will call and secure your order. ( "wit1 ixroaf- rf Vrvnno & lT 11 mm Blacksmith Shop. 1