THE BEST FAMILY fcEOiCINE She Has Ever Known. Words of Pralsa from a New York Lady for AVER'S Pii "I would li'.i'J t' add my testimony t that of others who li.ive used A.icr's Pills, ami to suy thut 1 lmv liikcu liii'.ui for many years, ami always ih-rii'etl Iti best results from lltc-ir use. For stoiii acli ami liver trouliies, uiitl for th i-i'n-Of lieaiitir.lic CMiisetl by these, ilermi': -meuts, Aycr'H fills ciiimot In: rrnmN-il WHEAT CLIMBING UP. Prospects, that Farmers Will let Real ize 76 Cents Per Bushel. .- J. H MITCHELL OF OREGON. - J ' . f It "'i; Vlieii my fiiemls nU mt wltnt is t' i best renin! y for disorders ft tl.i: s-- i: -ach, liver, or bowels, my invari.il answer is, Ayer's Pills. Taken in fri: sou, they will breal: tip a cold, jirevent. la grippe, check fever, and regulate the li;;cstivo organs. They are easy lo take, and are, indeed, the best all-round family medicine I have ;ver known." Mrs. JIay Johnson, 3C8 Eider Avenue, New York City. 0j & lias 2( PILLS H;sct Honor Aysrs Sareapanlla Cures all Elood Disorder. at World's Fair. PERSONAL MKSTlps. to- Mr. Enpert left for Lyle today. Mrs. Hembold took the local train day for home. Mrs. Capt. Donovan left for the Locks thib morning. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Sherar were in the city yesterday. Mias Copple of Hood River returned home this morning. Mr. Andrew Dufur of. Dufur left this afternoon for Portland. Mr. D. Gorman, of the Dispatch, went to Portland this morning. Mr. W. P. Vanbibber went to Port land on the local train today. . Mrs. Sam Wilkinson took the Regula tor for Portland this morning. Mr. A. A. Bonner was a passenger on -the outgoing local this afternoon. Mrs. Samoi and daughter, Flor ence, left this iprning for Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Okssfield and Mrs. . O. McCoy left last OTght for Grants. Mrs. Henry Pliirman was a passenger on the Regulator this morning tor Port land. Mr. Troy Shelley arrived in town last evening, leaving for. home this after noon. Mr. Henry Boren, of the Oregon Meat Market, went to White Salmon this morning. ', W. H. H. Dufur and Geo. W. John ston of Dufur attended the political speaking last night. Mrs. E. J. Robinson, having sold her home near the garrison, left for Hood River yesterday to reside.' Mr. -Alfred Kenned v and daughter. Mrs. Behnake, of Vallejo, Cal., are here on a visit to relatives and mends ' Mias Anna V. Tarbelli'an experienced hat trimmer, arrived last nieht from .Portland and will accept a position with Mrs. M. ifi. Jingga. Miss Susan Chase arrived last night from Portland, where she has been ex a ruined for defective eyesight by an occu- list. Her left eye is the most affected, while her right eve is but slightly so. She will resume her studies in schoM, as it is thought that with care, her sight will not suffer further deterioration. ' The farmer will be rejoiced to hear that wheat is climbing op by leaps and bounds. The market has at last been struck with a sudden, but stable, up ward tendency, for which there are rea sons eassly . assigned. Buyers are al ready out throughout Wasco and Sher man counties, and. traveling far and wide, anxious to secure' all they can' at present prices, knowing that the market is on a rapid rise. No one can predict when the top price will be reached, but it appears at present as though 75 cents per bushel will easily be reached before many months.: Sherman county wheat sold in.Tbe Dalles yesterday tqr 50 cents, and Walla Walla sold in Portland at 60 to 631 - . .'" ; ,- : There seems to be a tremendous short age in the old countries, late dispatches stating that bread riots have already oc curred in eome places across the sea. The eonthern part of Russia is now in a state of actual famine, caused by a fail ure of croDs, and the bread product is conceded to be shorter than for. many years. Arrivals in Europe of 1700,000 bu. from other countries only sufficed for ten days', consumption. An Associated Presa'dispatch from San Francisco yes terday tells of an advance of six cents in one day at San Francisco." The dispatch reads as follows : San jjbancisco, Uct 1. Today was a great day for wheat. . Prices went up from $1 to $1.20 a ton, or fully $6.since the movement began some weeks ago. The figures tonched were the highest at tained since January last. At that time they went booming on a prospect ive demand from' Australia, bub specula tion overshot the mark, and a decline soon followed. This time, the advance is predicted upon a shortage of exporta tion 8 to the United Kingdom, and thus far is supported by the London and Liverpool markets. For all this, a cer tain timidity exists among dealers. Prices went shooting up so fast today on reports from Chicago that many opera tors feared to follow, and . a bear move ment at the citv on the lake met a re sponse in ban Jbrancisco, though the market remained unchanged abroad. Still, even the reaction was slight. . The result of the day was a gain of from 5 to 6l cents a cental, and meant a great many thousands of dollars to all who took advantage ot the up movement. flour advanced side by side with wheat, and there was a scramble among the trade to buy on the upward market. The advance1 was 20 cents a barrel on all kinds. Taken wii-h an -advance of 15 cents on Tuesday and of the same amount just a week before, this is an in crease of 50 cents a barrel in nine days, or about 14 : per cent over the prices that then ranged. , . Continued from third page. Piano Tanlug. ,w. s. Geary, the well known piano- tuner, is in the citv. i Leave orders at either music store. 2t Low ltates for September 25 th. For train No. 1, Sept. 25th, and train No. . 7, same date, the O. R. & N. Co, will sell tickets to Portland and return at the extremely low rate of $3.15, good to return until Sept. 27th." ... 18-dt25 E. E. Lytle, Agent Hop Gold beer is the queen of. the table beers for the family. Stabling & Williams are agents for the same, Try it. " - s241w Female Help Wanted. t . WANTED-i-Red-beaded girl and white horse to deliver premiums given away with Hoe Cake Soap. Apply to any where. '' ? . Take your watches, clocks and jewelry repairing to Clark, the East End jeweler. " Anheuser beer on draught at the Mid way. .' THE CHURCHES- Methodist church, Rev. ' J. H; Wood pastor Services as follows : Sermon by the pastor at 11a. m. and 7 :30 p. m. ; class ' meeting at 10. a. m.; Sunday school following morning service; meet- ng of Epworth League at 6:30 p. m. You are cordiallv invited. The Congregational church, corner Court and Fifth streets Sunday services as usual : At .11 a. in. and . 7 :30 p. rn. worship, and. s sermon by the pastor, W. C Curtis. Sunday school immediately after the morning service. Meeting of the Young People's Society of Christian Endeavor at 6:30 p. m.. Topic, "Why I believe in the atonement;"' Heb. ix:ll- 28. All persons not worshipping else where are cordially invited. " Elder .- Skaggs ' will preach at the Christian church this evening. Subject, "Joseph a- Type of Christ." Subject tomorrow at 11 a. m., "The Accursed Thing in the Camps of Israel," Joshua vii :1 Lord's day evening at 7 :30 p. jn. "Delivery of Israel," Exodus xiv:l-31. inere will De preaching every evening next. week, at the Christian church. Subjects "Bible Path from Creation to the Cross." All are invited.' Lutheran church Services will be held tomorrow at the court house. Sun day school at 10 a. m., preaching at 11 a m. inere win ce a merman service in the afternoon at S. Evening service at 7.:30. The reasons for the change of lo cation from the Baptist church are that the hours for service of the two congre gations conflict. It is desirable that the proper hour for service be observed.'and a second reason . is that the Baptist cnurcn contemplate. an evening . service at the same hour of the Lutheran eel vice. "The officers Of the church wish to thank the ' officers of the Baptist church for courtesies extended in giving them the use of their church, and it is hoped that' the attendance will not fall short because of ihecbange of location. It is the Intention .of the 'Lutherans to build a church of their own in the near future. ;.- Otto 'Birgfeld is now ready to supply amilies with the celebrated Garnbrinus keg. or . bottle beer, 'delivered free of charge . to any part of ,tbe city. . Tele phone 34. ' .,'1 ' - One, or two gentlemen may secure room in private family, with or without board. Address . L. : E. A., Lock box 221. '' ' ; " ; sep25-dl w at the Jacobsen Bargains at pianos Book & Music Co. and for the fourteen years following ex ports over imports amounted to $1,450. 000,000 and-industry and prosperity again reigned. When the Republican party took hold of the greatest rebellion of modern times it graDpled it courage ously and successfully. The war cost 1,000,000 precious Uvea and ten thous and millions of -money, and when it was concluded there was a great - national debt to pay of three thousand million dollars. In twentv-eight years of power it had fl ,900,000 ,000 of this debt paid. Interest rates of 12 per cent , onder Buchanan fell to 2 percent under Harri son. The Republican partv not onlv did this, but it made millions and millions of dollars of paper money equal to gold. . , .: This," said the' senator, "brings me to the financial question, and on this I claim to stand whero .l have always stood. I have nothing to take back, and if any one in the audience can point to one of my speeches a whole speech and charge me with inconsistency I want him to do it now, and I will have some thing to say about the railroad to Mare, too. The Republican party, : from its birth up to the present time, has never desired nor advocated as a permanent policy, the single gold standard. It has always advocated the bimetallic etan dard both gold and silver. The Demo cratic party, never did anything for sil ver, and the Republican party has done a great deal. The Republican platfoi m of 1896 merely assumes a fact that we have the gold standard. ? But it pledges itself to re-establish the bimetallic standard, and there is only oneway to do it by international agreement with the leading commercial nations of the world,- and the party pledges itself to do all in its power to bring it about by an. international agreement. It is no difference where I stand. I am not an issue. We are trying to elect a presi dent and we are going to doit. (Tre mendous applause). But I claim to stand with my party even on the finan cial question. I have always contended that if there was any chance to settle the financial question by - international agreement, that is the way to do it. said last January that there was no more chance of securing - an inter national agreement than there was of building -a railroad to the planet Mars'. That was true when I said it The conditions are different now. Then Uleveiaaa was in power and lie nad no desire to bring this end about. He stands unequivocally for the' mainten ance of the single gold standard. On the other hand Bryan proposes to es tablished the bimetallic policy without this agreement. It ' cannot be done, Therefore neither wing of the Democrat ic party has a feasible remedy. Th only way to get it Is through the Repub. lican party, which pledges itself to do all In its power to promote an interna tional agreement. England is now mak log a move to tms end. JNever since 1816, when England ' first adopted th gold standard, has it showed a disposi tion to adopt bimetallism until March 17th last, when the house of common passed two resolutions, the first that.ow ing to the instability of the relative value of gold' and silver since 1873, it has proved injurious to the interests of the country. The second that we urge upon the government the advisability of doing all in its power to secure by internation al agreement the free coinage of "both gold and silver. When these resolutions were presented to the Cleveland admin istration it stood mute. If the Repub lican administration bad been in power at this time we may have succeeded." One of the strongest points scored by Senator Mitchell was bis delineation-of the wonderful and unexampled pros perity of 1892, under Harrison, and the fearful distress and "disaster of 1893 under Cleveland, while the same finan cial policy was in effect throughout both years. . 1 ne eenator than Toiiowed with an earnest appeal to his silver Republican friendB that in view of the pnncip'es of reciprocity, of protection, and with th chance of securing an international agreement, is it not better lo stand by the old party and tbeold b'anner, instead of turning their backs to it to go off with one wing of the - Democratic party 7 1 conclusion the senator called for an ex pression of sentiment Of the bouse by asking an who proposed to vote the Re publican ticket to stand up a,nd give tnree rousing cheers for McK.tnley. Al most with one accord, and. like a hug wavej men and even women- and child ren arose and . swelled the volume of sound to a mighty roar, while the senator with an expression of great gratification m his eyes, -bowed r3peatedly to the en tbusiastic audience, and the great meet ing was ended.. Senator Mitchell was - possessed v of noticeable hoarseness from . making many speeches of late wnich . at times inteifered with his clear enunciation. He took the night train', for. Pendleton where he will speak tonight. Chairman L. E. Crowe was also indisposed and was with considerable effort he was able to be present, bat he did not betray his indisposition - and made a thoroughly neat and pleasing speech ot introduction ijiiiiniiiu 7 , A very smooth article.' 1 u 1) 1 Dont compare "Battle Ax" H with low grade tobaccos compare W 1 "Battle Ax" with the best on H the market, and you will find you B g get for 10 cents T almost twice as g g much "Battle Ax" as you do of g g other high grade brands. g 1111 III IIIIIEIIIlllllEI I MSI.lIIlTIIIllIEIliai.EIIlIIIIIIIIIIf If IIlIIIIZIlISlllII!! IXIl i' ' 7 t' i i To B e Away i P this year, in valuable articles to smokers of BSackwell's . Genuine -J j The Best SmoklngTobacco Made Tobacco H i You will find one coupon in- side each. 2-ounce bag, and two a coupoas inside each- 4-ounco g bag. Euyabag, read the coupon s and sea how to get your share. TM Re 1 J F uiaiorine Tte Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation Co. Eicursii Rates TjumlDer, Building Material and Boxes Traded for Hav. Grain, Bacon, Lard, &c. ROWE & CO., . ; The Dalles, Oregon ipes-K'nersly. Drug Co. , PaintSi Paper, . Etc. Drugs 129 Second St; THE DALLES; - - OR ' Subscribe for Thk Chbokici-b and get the news. ' DOORS, WINDOWS, SHINGLES, FIRE BRICK, FIRE CLAY, LIMii CEMENT, "Windo w-Glas s and Picture Moulding ZE3Z. C3- Zj IH3 1ST 3ST .Money! Money! Money! 'To pay Wasco countv warrants regis tered prior to' July "3, "1892. Interest ceases after May 15, 1896. . C. I"Pnir,i.iPSt- myl8-tf . County Treas -to PorHann Exposiiion ROUNE Including admission to the Exposition: Three-day limit ... Ten-day limit Thirty-day limit . .:.$2.25 ... 2.50 ... 3.00 Tickets must be purchased at office. Regulator leaves at 8 a. m. W. CALLAWAY General Agent THE DALLES. - OREGON " ' EKST! . GIVES THE Choice of Transcontinental Routes -VIA- Spokane Minneapolis Denver Omaha St. Paxil Kansas City Low Rates to all Eastern Cities. OCEAN ; STEAMERS Leare Portland Kverr Vive Pays for SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Forull detalln call on O. K. & Co. 8 Aeent Tba Dalles, or address VV, H. HDELBUET, Gen. Pass. Agt ' Portland, Oregon E. M'NEILL, President oud Manager. New Schedule. Effective Tuesday, April 7th, the fol lowing will be the new schedule: lrain P.O. 1 ai rives at The Dalles 4 :50 a. m., and leaves 4:55 a. ru. Train No. 2 arrives at The Dalles 10 :40. p. m., and leaves 1(1:45 p. m. lrain JSo. 8 arrives at fho Dalles 12:05 p. m., and west-bound train No. 7 leaves at 2 :30 p. tn. lrain 23 ana 24 will carry passengers between The Dalles and Umatilla, leav ing The Dalles at 1 p. m. daily" and ar riving at The Dalles 1 p. m. daily, con necting with train Nos. 8 and 7 from Portland. , . E. E. Lytlk, Agent. QflORTHERN j PACIFIC RY. n s Pullman Eleg.ent Tourist TO Sleeping Cars Dining Cars Sleeping Cars ' ST. PAUL. MINNEAPOLIS DULCIU MBGO GRAND FORKS -CBOOKSTON WINNIPEO - HELENA and BUTTE . Thitough Tiekcts CHICAGO WASHINGTON ' PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK BOSTON AND ALL POINTS EAST and SOUTH For Information, time cards, maps and tickets, cal on or write to " . : . . . W. C- ALLAW AY. Agent,' . ' , ... The Dalles, Oregon A. D. CHARLTON.' Asst. G. P.' A., ' 255, Morrison Cor. Third. Portland. Oregon