The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, July 05, 1897, Image 4

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    Tfcs Palles Daily Chronicls.
THE DALLES, ... OREGON
J
Advertising Kates.
Per inch
One inch or less in Daily 1 SO
Oyer two inches and under lour inches 1 00
Over four inches and under twelve inches . . 75
Over twelve inches SO
DAILY AND WEEKLY.
One inch or less, per inoh 12 50
Over one Inch and under four inches 2 00
' Over four inches and under twelve inches. . 1 50
Over twelve inches 100
I
Mr. J. C. O'Leary ia in the city.
Mr. Cua. Lord of Arlington spent
Sunday in the city.
Mr. Edwin Maya of Portland spent
Sunday in the city.
Mr. Fen Batty and Late Burham are
spending the Fourth in Portland.
Miss Allie Rowland left on the boat
for the Ainsworth camp at Mosier.
Mr. C. M. Cartwrignt add Ben Allen
went to Portland to take in the 4th.
T)r. Tl S. Parlow of Oregon Vity ar
rived on last night's Spokane train.
Mr. vv.'E. Sylyester ia spending a few
days with his daughter in rortlanct.
Mr. Geo. Yonne and family left on the
morning boat for Portland to celebrate
today.
Mr. Walter Davia, wife and danehter
of California are visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Win. Bigge.
Chris Schwabe, of Thb Chronicle
force, went to Portland Saturday to en
joy the celebration.
Rev. C. Nickelsen came op from Hood
River Siturday night and occupied tne
pulpit of the M. E. church laBt night.
Mr. E. A. Gerichten, formerly with
Farley & Frank, but now residing in
Portland, ia in the city visiting friende.
Dr. E. F. Donnelly of San Francisco,
accompanied by Misa M. Donnelly and
Mrs. Jas. Shultz of Denver, was in the
city yesterday, and left on the boat this
morning lor roruana.
Mr. Alfred Willey arrived from Chi
cago thi9 mormne, and intends remain
inz until after the wool season. Mr.
Willey ia representing a large Eastern
wool houee, and is here to buy wool.
Mr. F. A. Ernst, who represents the
Christian Endeavor or the Uhristian
church of this city, left for San Fran
Cisco this inorninir. After the conven
tion he will return to hia former home,
Quincy, Illinois.
Why Spain Has Failed in Cuba.
General Weyler should have subdued
the rebellion within ninety days. No
unprejudiced military authority who has
Btudied the two force3, and made due al
lowauce for the advantages possessed by
those who fight upon their native soil,
will disBent from this proposition.
There are Spanish generals in Cuba who
admit its trnth. There are others who
have returned disgusted to Spain be
cause their suggestions of plans. to end
the war were not allowed to be dis
closed at the Palace. A four months'
stay in. Cuba, beginning in January and
ending with April of this year, much ol
which time was passed in obserying the
forces in the field, haa resulted in the
conviction, on my part, that it has not
been the purpose of General Weyler to
find the rebellion. Conversations with
Spanish officers, from generals to cor
porals, showed that the same motives
that were evidently actuating the com
mander in allowing the war to drag
ale riff were prompting a large proportion
of the staff and line in carrying out the
policy of their superior. The recital of
a few experiences, the description of
actual conditions, an explanation of
methods employed, and an account of
the Door result achieved where success
was possible, will prove thia indictment
If it be admitted that General Weyler
baa the slightest military ability, the
situation in Cuba today will convict
him. Thoa. Gold Alvord, Jr., in the
July Forum.
Ironr Hundred Barrels Daily.
Practically all the wheat now coming
into Pendleton is shipped in oyer the W,
& C. R. R. line and is being made into
flour as fast as it arrives. The Pendle
ten roller mills are grinding about 2000
bushels of wheat every 24 hours, turning
out daily 400 barrels of flour. A year's
outtmt of thia one of Pendleton's mill8
would make a pyramid of flour about
the size of Mount Ilood and just aa
w hi te. Tribu ne.
"For three yeara we have never been
without Chamberlain'a Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy in the house,"
says A. H. Patter, with E. C. Atkins &
Co., Indianapolis, Ind., ."and my wife
would as soon think of being without
flour as a bottle of thia Remedy in the
Bummer season. We have used it with
all three of our children and it hits never
failed to cure not simply stop pain, but
cure absolutely. It is all right, and any
one who triea it will find it so." Fot
nale by Blakeley & Houghton.
Cash In Your Cheeks.
All county warrants registered prior
to Jan. 1, 1893, will be paid at my
office. Interest ceases after June 29,
1897. C L. Phillips,
County Treasnrer.
Poor Blood
is starved Wood. It shows itself
in pale cheeks, white lips, weak
digestion, no appetite, exhaus
tion, lack of nerve force, soft
muscles, and, chief of all, weak
muscles. Your doctor calls it
Anaemia. He will tell you that
the weakening weather of sum
mer often brings it on.
Scott'
S
of Cod-liver Oil with Hypo
phosphites, will make poor blood
rich. It is a food for over-taxed
and weak digestion, so prepared
that it can easily be taken in
summer when Cod-liver Oil or
even ordinary foods might repel.
SCOTT & BOwTME, J New York
For sal at 50c and $1.00 by all druggists.
Sopor's Baby Boy Found.
Portland, July 3. The body of Sandy
Soper's baby boy waB found today
buried in Montgomery gulch, Albina,
where Soper confessed he had placed it.
Soper waa recently arrested at Ash
land for murder committed in Missouri,
and taken there for trial. After mur
dering bis wife and two children in Mis
souri, Soper came to Portland, and mai-
ried again. His second wife, bore him a
son. Koper cusappearea irom roriianu,
takintr hia son with bim, and it now
transpires that he murdered this son
also. After he waa taken to Missouri he
confessed to the murder of the child, and
told where its body could be found.
Coal Market Demoralized.
St. Louis, July 3. The St. Louis coal
market was never in a more demoralized
condition, and some of the operators
welcome a strike, as a means of leading
up to adjustment of prices and placing
the market on a better basis. The St.
Louis market draws most of its bitumi
nous coal from the Central and Southern
Illinois districts, and, deapite the an
nouncement that the strike will go into
effect tomorrow, the operators do not
think their fields will be affected for two
weeks, and perhaps three.
Deafness Cannot bo Cured
by local applications, aa they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There ia only one way to cure deafness,
and that is bv constitutional remedies.
Deafness ia caused by an inflamed con
dition of the mucous lining of the Eus
tachian Tube. When thia tube is in
flamed you have a rumbling sound or
imperfect hearing, and when it is en
tirely closed, Deafness is the result, and
unless the inflammation can be taken
out and this tube restored to. its normal
condition, hearing will be destroyed for
ever: nine cases out of ten are caused
by catarrh, which ia nothing but an in
flamed condition of the mucous sur
faces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for
any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh)
that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh
Cure. Send for circulars; free.
F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, O.
f2T"Sold by Druggists, 75c. 6-10
Probably a Sympathetic Strike.
Altoona, Pa., July 3. Up to the
present time the miners of the Cambria
and Clearfield region have made no
declaration regarding the strike ordered
by the executive committee of the union
mineworkers. If the miners in this
region should strike, it would merely be
a sympathetic strike.
The Grandest Beinedy.
Mr. E. B. (ireeve, merchant of
Chilhowie, Va., certifiea that he had
consumption, waa given up to die,
sought all medical treatment that money
could procure, tried all cough remedies
he could hear of, but got no relief ; spent
many nights silting up in a chair; waa
induced to try Dr. KiDg'a New Discovery,
and waa cured by the use of two bottles.
For past three yeara baa been attending
to bueinea, and aaye Dr. King's New Dia
coverv ia the erandest remedy ever made.
aa it haa done so much for &m and also
for others in hia community. Dr. King's
New Discovery ia guaranteed for Coughs,
Colds and Cosumption. It don't fail.
Trial bottle free at Blakeley &Houghton' a
Dree store. (2)
Save Your Grain.
Few realize that each squirrel de
stroys $1.50 worth of grain annually,
Wakelee'a Squirrel and Gopher Externa
icjtor is the moat effective and econom
icai poison known. Price reduced to 30
centa. For sale by. M. Z. DonnelJ,
Emttis
'Agent.
nnn r; pi IT A TirUlYiAT i
yui!illii O lUAjUrlUlN.
An
Official Whose Duty It Is to
Throw Down a Glove.
A Chivalrlo Title WhlcU Has Been Held
by the Dymoke Family Ever Since
the Cays of Richard II Scott's
Description of the Challenge.
The death of Francis Dymoke, the
queen of England's champion, which
occurred at Horncastle recently, has
reminded the world that even in the
midst of the present prosaic and utili
tarian age one knightly office, at least,
is in existence, to contradict the asser
tion of Edmund Burke that "the age
of chivalry is gone." The late holder
of the ofiice was a Lincolnshire magis
trate and an ofQ'cr in the local militia;
the two previous ones were clergymen.
The ofuce is not. as it has often been
stated, hereditary to the Dymoke fam
ily, but is attached to the lord of the
manor of Serivelsby, which is held by
the ancient tenure known as grand
sereeantrv i. c, where one holds
lands of the sovereign by service which !
he has to perform in person. The serv
ice by which Serivelsby is held is thus
ti lit' I . i . . 1 ( 1 x ui k vi 11 a . i. 1 1 u ,
11,,. 4 ii,..n lr tlio viTior's i
champion."
The ehampionsnip has no salary at-
tached to it, for, thougli tne Dymoke
family hold Serivelsby on the feudal
tenure of performing this duty, they
have been owners of that manor for
upward of five hundred years, and they
obtained it, not by royal grant or out
of the public purse, but by marriage
with an heiress, the last of the proud
line of Marmion, granddaughter of
Philip de Marmion, a name which re
calls memories of chivalry and of the
poetry of Shakespeare and Sir Walter
Scott. There is no record of the office
under the Saxon kings, but, according
to the late Sir Bernard Burke, its du
ties were appended by William I. as an
honor to the old baronial house of
Marmyon, or Marmion, the ancient
owners of the manor of Serivelsby.
This manor, together with the castle
of Tamworth, had been conferred,
soon after the Xorman conquest, on
one Robert dc Marmyon, lord of Fon-
tenoy, in Normandy, on condition of
performing the office of champion at
the king s coronation.
The name of Dymoke i3 Welsh. .The
Dymokcs, or Dymocks for the name
is spelled both .ways claim a tradition
al descent from Tudor Trevor, lord of
Hereford and Whittington. and founder
of the tribe of the larches. The
chief himself had three sons, the sec
ond of whom, marrying a daughter of
the prince of North Wales, half a cen
tury before the Norman conquest, be
came tne ancestor ox one uavia ap
Madoc, who, in the Welsh tongue, was
styled colloquially Dai Madoc, the
word Dai being the short form of Da
vid. His son and heir was David ap
Dai Madoc. or David 1'ai Madoc, and
by the usual abridgement Dai Madoc
came in tr.c :'.ir e or. tiia to be pro-
noun2;l a:i or Uamec, the tran
sition from which to Diraoj or Dymoc,
and aain from that to Dimos or Dy
moke i.s easy aadobvious.
The first, then, of ti' Dymoke fam
ily who fulfilled his ofdee as champion
was '.Sir John Dymoke. knight, who
married Margaret lulio'.v in the reign
of Edward iil., and was present at the
coronation of Richard II. His claim
was disputed by Baldwin de l-'reville,
the lord of Tamwortli ca:;tlc, but after
deliberation it was found that the
right belonged to the manor of Seriv
elsby, as the caput baroniae or head
of the barony of the Marmion family;
and, as it appeared that the late King
Edward HI. and his son,
PV1 w;i Wl
prince of Wales, known as the black
prince, had often been heard to say
that the office was held by Sir John
Dymoke, the question was settled in
his favor.
The Gentleman's Magazine for 1821
contains a picture of the royal
champion, Henry Dymoke, in the act
of riding on his white charger into
Westminster hall, and throwing
down the glove or gauntlet of defiance,
supported on either side by the duke
of Wellington and the marquis of
Anglesej-. alrso on horseback, while
two heralds stand by on foot with
tabard 'and plumes. The pen'ovmance
of the champion on this occasion is
C. W. PHELPS & CO.
-DEALERS IK-
gricultura
Drapers Manufactured and Repaired.
Pitts' Threshers, Powers and Extras.
Pitts' Harrows and Cultivators.
Celebrated Piano -Header.
Lubricating Oils, Etc.
White Sewing Machine and Extras.
EAST SECOND STREET,
lnus described ly Kir V, alter Scott in a
letter to one of his friends:
"The champions duty was per
formed, as of right, by young Dymoke,
a fine looking youth, but bearing per
haps a little too much the appear
ance of a maiden knight to be the
challenger of the world in the king's
behalf. He threw down his gauntlet,
however, with becoming manhood, and
showed as much horsemanship as the
crowd of knights and squires around
him would permit to be exhibited. His
armor was in good taste, but his
shield was out of all propriety, being a
ound rondache, or Highland target, a
defensive weapon which it would be
impossible to use on horseback, instead
of being a three-cornered or leather
shield, which in the time of the tilt
was suspended round -the neck.
Pardon this antiquarian scruple,
which you may believe occurred to few
but myself. On the whole, this striking
part of the exhibition somewhat dis
appointed me, for I would have had
the champion less embarrassed by hia
assistants and at liberty to put his
horse on the grand pas, and yet the
young
lord of Serivelsby looked and
1 behaved extremely well."
I The last time the ceremony of the
a! n 11 An rm -nrn o nain!af) -kll 4- n?o is 0 t Via
coronation
of George IV., ' when
Henry Dymoke, the deputy of his
father, a clergyman, threw down the
gauntlet in Westminster hall. This
Henry Dymoke. soon after Queen Vic
toria's accession, was created a knight
as a recompense, it was said, for waiv
ing his claims to discharge the duties
of his ofiice at the queen's coronation.
Sir Henry was succeeded by his
brother, Kev. John Dymoke, and he by
his son, Henry Lionel Dymoke, whom
Francis Seaman Dymoke, just de
ceased, succeeded in 1S75. The pres
ent "champion"' is his only son, also
lamed Francis Seaman Dymoke.
ffastcd.
Aeents for "QuBen Victoria, Her
Reign and Diamond Jubilee." ' Over
flowing with latest and. richest pictures.
Contains the indorsed biography of Her
Majesty, with authentic history of her
remarkable reign, and full account of
the Diamond Jubilee. Only $1.50. Big
book. Tremendous demand. Bonanza
for agents. Commission 50 per cent
Credit given. Freight paid. Outfit
free. Write quick for outfit and terrl
tory. The Dominion Company, Dept
7, 35(5 Dearborn St.. Chicago.
juii22-lrn .
Keduced Rates.
Our steamer accommodation for Jnly
1st being sold, we are prepared to sell
round trip tickets to Portland, at one
fare for the round trip to parties wishing
to take advantage of the Southern Pa
cine reduced rates between Portland and
San Francisco. ' Extreme limit of these
tickets August loth. For further par
ticnlars call at ticket office.
ju28-lf E. E. Lvtlk.
bockien'a Annua salve.
The best salve m tne world for cuts,
braises, eorea, ulcers, salt rheum, fevei
aoree, tetter, chapped hands, chilblaine
corns, and all skin eruptions, and poai'
lively cures piiea, or no pay required
It ia guaranteed to give perfect satisfac
tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents
per box. For sale oy Blakeley and
Houghton, druuKiSta.
LOST
A gray mare, branded g" on left shoul
der. Was originally one of the O. S
Morgan band, and was raised on the
range adjacent to 3-Mile creek. Suitable
1 reward will be paid for the return of
said mare to
T. A. Hudson,
How to get rich.
$25 will earn you $7 weekly
With our plan of investment. You
cannot lose. Two men made $500 and
$000 last month on $25. You can do
likewise. If you don't invest, and keep
your money in your pocket, you will be
poor all your life. Try ua with $25, and
see what we can do. Absolutely no risk.
Write for particulara tp "Guarantee
Brokerage Co., offices 213 and 215 Byrne
building, Loa Angelea, Cal." j22-lm
lements.
THE DALLES, OR
tun
NOTICE SALE OF CITY LOTS.
Notice is hereby given that by au
thority of ordinance jSo. 292, which
passed the Common Council of Dalles
City April 10th, 1897, entitled, "An or
dinance to provide for thealeof certain
lota belonging to Dalles City," I will, on
Saturday, the 15lh day of May, 1897,
sell at public anction, to the highest
bidder, all the following lots and parts
of lots in Gatea addition to Dalles City,
Wasco county. Oregon, to-wit:
Lots 9 tod 10 jointly, in block 14 ; lota
8.. 9 and 10, jointly in block 15; lots
7, 8, 9, and 10, jointly in block 21.
known aa butte; lots 10, 11 and 12, in
block 27 ; lot 9 in block 34 ; lots 2, 3, 4, 1
5, 6, 7, S, 9, 10 and 11, in block 35;
lota 2, 3, 4, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12, in block I
36; lota 3, 4, o, o, 7. 8, 9. 10, 11 and
12, in block 37; lota 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 6, 8,
9, 10, 11 and 12, in block 42 ; lota 1, 2, 3,
4, 5 9, 10 and 11, in block 43; lots 1. z,
3, 7', 10, 11 and 12, in bloc 41, and lota
1, 2. 3, 4, O, 6, in D10CK 4t.
The rea8onable value ot aa.': ota, ior
less than . which they will no. i e sold.
haa been fixed und ' determines by the
Common Council of Dalles City as fol-
lowe, to-wit:
Lots 9 and 10, in block 14, fl50; lota
7, 8, 9 and 10, jointly in block 15, $200;
lota 7, 8, 9 and 10, jointly in block 21,
$200; lot 10, in block 27, $225-; lot 11, in
block 27, $22o; lot 12, in uiock z, fduuj
lot 9. in block 34, $100; lota 2, 3, 4, 5, 8,
9, 10 and 11, in block 35, each respect
ively $100; lota 6 and , in diock do,
each respectively $125 ; lota 2, 3, 4, 8, 9,
10 and 11, in block 38, each respectively
$100; lot 12. in block 36, $125; lots 3, 4,
8, 9, 10 and 11, in block 37, eacn re
spectively $100; lots 6, 7 and 12, in
block 37, each respectively io;
lots 2, 3, 10 and 11, in block
41, each respectively $100; lots- 1,
7 and 12, in block 41, each respectively
$125; lota 3. 4, 5,8,9, 10 and 11. in
block 42, each respectively $100; lot e ,
6 and 12, in block -42, each respectively
$125; lota 2, 3,4, 5,9, 10 and 11, in
block 43, each respectively $100; lot 1,
in block 43, $125; lota 2, 3, 4 and 5, in
block 46, each respectively S1UU; lota 1
and 6, in block 46, each respectively
$125.
Each of these lots win be sola upon
the lot respectively, and none of them
will be aold for a leas sum than the value
thereof, as above stated.
One-fourth of the price bid on any 01
said lots shall be paid in cash at the
time of sale, and the remainder in three
equal payments on or before, one, two
and three years from the date of said
sale, with interest on such deferred pay
ments at the rate ot lu per cent per
annum, payable annually; provided
that the payment may be made in fall
at any time at the option, of the pur
chaser. The said sale will begin on the 15th
day of May, 1897, at the hour of 2
o'clock p. m. of said day, and will con
tinue from time to time until all of said
lota shall be sold.
Dated this 13th day of April, 1897.
Gilbert W. Phelps,
Recorder of Dallea City.
DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP.
Notice 18 hereby given that the cin
der signed, J. E. Barnett and Dinatnore
Pariah, heretofore doing buainesa aa
Barnett & Pariah,, have thia day, by
mutual consent, dissolved. .
All accounts against eaid firm should
be presented to J. E. Barnett, and said
J. E. Barnett ia to collect all accounts,
notea and evidencea of indebtedness ow
ing to said firm'.
Dated at Dallea City, Wasco County,
Oregon, thia 17th day of June. 1897.
Dinsmobb Parish,
jun2o-4t J. E. Baknbtt.
for Sale.
New Maaailon eeparator, 24-inch cyl
inder, aa good aa new, having only
threshed 1000 bushels. Also Dingee
Woodbury 12-horae power. Price $300.
Call on or address
T. Balfoub,
jnl9-lm Lyle, Wash.
For Sale.
Lota A, B, K and L, block 30; A B,
block 72 ; A, B, C, D, E and F, block 82,
and A, B, C, D and E, block ?5. Apply
to Wm. Shackklford.
8. SCHENK,
President.
. M. Bball,
Cashier.
first Hational Bank.
THE DALLES - - - OREGON
A General Banking Basmesa transacted
Deposits received, subject to fcight
Draft or Check.
Collections made and proceeds promptly
remitted on uay oi collection.
Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on
New xork, San Francisco anc -ort-land.
DIRBOTOHS.
D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. 8chenc-,
Ed. M. Wim-iams, Geo. A. Likbe.
H. M. Beaix.
Harry Liebe,
PRACTICAL
Watchmaker Jeweler
All work promptly attended to,
and warranted.
174 VOGT BLOCK.
Notice.
Treasury Dbpartimkt,
Offick op Comptroller of Currency
WianlKBTOH. D. C June 5. 1897.
Notice is hereby Riven to all persons who may
have claims against "The Dalles National Bank'
of the city of '1'he Dalles, Oregon, that the same
must be presented to H. S. Wilson, receiver,
with the legal proof thereof, within three
months from this date, or they may be dis
allowed. JAMES H. ECKELS,
junl6-w3m-i Comptroller.
R1 Bali
TO THE
EHST!
GIVES THE CHOICE OF
TWO Transcontinental ROUTES!
GREAT
NORTHERN
RAILWAY.
OREGON
SHORT
LINE.
-VIA.-
Spokane
Salt Lake
Denver
Omaha
Kansas City
Minneapolis
St. Paxil
Chicago
Low Rates to al! Eastern Cities
OCEAN STBAMER9 Lcare Portland
EterT Vive Days for
SA3ST FRANCISCO, CAL.
For full details call on O. K & Co. s Agent at
The Dalles, or address
W. H. HURLBURT, Gen. Pass. Agt
Portland, Oregon
E. MVNEILL President aud Manager
TIME CARD.
No. 4, to Spokane and Great Northern arrives
at 6 p. m., leaves at 6:06 p. ra. No. 2, to Pendle
ton, Baker City and Union Pacific, arrlvesat 1:15
u m., departs at 1:20 a. m.
No 3, from Spokane and Great Northern, ar
rives at 8-30 a. m., departs at H:3. a. m. No. 1,
from Bakir City and Union Pacific, arrives at
3:5.3 a. m., departs at 4:00 a. in.
Kos. 23 and 24, moving east of The Dalles, will
carry passengerb. No. 23 grrlves at 6:30 p.m.,
departs at 12:45 p. m.
Passengers for Hcppner will take train leaving
here at G:05 p. m.
EAST and SOUTH via
The Shasta Route
-OP THB
Southern Pacific Comp'y.
Trains leave and are due to arrive at Portland.
,
f OVERLAND EX--)
rre&s, Salem, Rose
I bui'K, Ashland, Sac- I
j ramento, Ogden.Ban I
1 Franciseo, Mojave,
I Los Angeles, El Paso, j
I New Orleans and j
I East I
8:00 P. M.
9.30 A. M.
8:30 A. M.
Koaeburg and way hta
tions 4:30 P. SI
fvia WoodDurn tori
I Mt.Angel, 8ilverton, I
i West Scio, Browns-
I villt.Sprlngtield and i
" Daily
except
Sundays.
Daily
except
Sundays.
I Natron
17:30 A. M.
( Corvallis
and
way
and!
t 5:30 P. II.
t 8:25 P. M
I stations
JMcMiunville
way stations
t4:50 P.M.
Daily. fDaiiy, except Sunday.
DINING CARS ON OGDEN ROUTE.
PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPERS
AND 8ECOND-CLASS BLEEPING CARS
Attached to all Through Trains. -
Direct connection at fcan Franciseo with Occi
dental and Oriental and Poeilic innil steamship
lines for JAPAN and CHINA. Sailing dates on
application.
Kales ana ncaera 10 r.asiera pomus auu
rope. A1BOJAPA&, jhi;xa, mu-ul,l lu ana
AUSTRALIA, can be obtained Irom
J. ti. K.1KKLAJND, Ticset Agent.
Through Ticket Office, 134 Third street, where
through tickets to all points in the Eastern
States, Canada and Europe can be obtained at
lowest rates irom
J. B. K1KKLAM', xieaeiAgeni.
All above trains arrive at and depart from
Grand Central Station, Fifth and Irving streets.
YAMHILL DIVISION.
Passenger Depot, foot of Jederson street.
Leave for OSWEGO, daily, except Sunday, at
7:20 a. m.; 12:15, 1:45, 5:25, 6:45, 8:05 p. m.
(and 11:30 p. m. on Saturday only, and 8:40 a. m.
and 8:30 p. m. on Sundays only). Arrive at
Portland daily at 7:10 and 8:30 a m.: and 1:30,
4:15, 6:35 aud 7:55 p. m., (and 10 a. m , 3-15 and
5:10 p. m. on Sundays only).
Leave for Sheridan, week days, t 4:30 p. m
Arrive at Portland, 9:30 a. m.
Leave for AIRLIE on Monday, Wednesday and
Friday at 9:40 a. m. Arrive at Portland, Tues
day, Thursday and Saturday at 3:05 p. m.
Except Sunday. "Except Saturday.
R. KOEHLER,
Manager.
E. P. ROGERS,
Asst. ti. F. t Pass. AsTt
Dalles, Moro and Antelope
STAGE LINE.
Through by daylight via Grass Valley, Kent
and Cross Hollows.
DOUGLAS ALLEN, The Dalles.
C. M. WBll'ELAW, Antelope. -
Stages leave The Dalles from Umatilla House
at 7 a. m., also from Antelope at 7:30 a. m. every
Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Connections
made at Antelope for Prineville, Mitchell and
points beyond. Close connections made at The
Dalles with railways, trains and boats.
Stages from Antelope reach The Dalles Tues
days, Thursdays and Saturdays at 1 :30 p. m.
RATES OF PARR.
Dalles to Deschutes. 1 00
do Moro - J
do Grass Valley. ...... 2 25
do Kent ..-.... 8 00
do Cross Hollows 4 50
Antelope to Cross Hollows 1 50
do Kent 2 00
do, Grass Valley 3 00
do Moro - ? 50
do Deschuees u 00
do Dalles - 5 00