Ths Dalles Dafly Chre&isla. Ill K DALLES, OREGON Advertising Kates. Per inch. One inch or less lu Daily $1 SO Orer two Inches and under four incbos 1 00 Over four inches and under twelve inches. . 75 Over twelve inches 50 DAILY AND VIBXLY . One inch or less, per inch f 2 50 Over one inch and under four inches 2 00 Over four inches and under twelve inches . . 1 50 Over twelve inches 1 00 1'KRHONAl. MENTION. Archie Barnett left for Huntington last night to remain some time. Mr. D. C. O'Reilley, superintendent of the Columbia Southern is in the city. Mr. Polk Mays and family came down from Wuliowa'last night to visit rela tives. Mr. E. M. Shutt came in from Antel ope yesterday and went to Portland this morning. Messrs. W. A. B., George and Charlie Campbell and Houier Angell returned last night from a surveying expedition. Mr. .1. W. Jackson and wife, former residents of Oregon, but who have been East for two or three years, arrived here yesterday. Mr. Jackeon is a railroad man and will take a position with the U. ti. & Sim Mrs. Mary C. Bills of Hosier, grand mother of Mrs. Bnttain and .Henry Bills, who has. been sick for sometime, is very low and her death ia expected at any moment. Both the grandchildren named are with her. Miss Irene Oallison, who resides in Southern Oregon, but who taught echool at Hood River for a year or more, was in the city last evening, leaving for Echo, Umatilla county, on the morning train, fthe will teach there the coming winter. Mr. Julius Wiley, wife and children, who have been visiting relatives in As toria, arrived home last night, and Mr. Wiley will begin his duties as night watchman tonight. They had a delight ful visit, missed all the hot weather, and are glad to get home. What happier combination than that could any one wish? SHEEPMEN'S SUITS DISMISSED. But They Mast Be Careful in Pasturing Stock on Reserves. Acting under instructions from Attorney-General McKenna, United States Attorney Murphy yesterday dismissed seven suits against sheepmen who have been enjoined from driving and pastur ing their herds upon the Cascade forest reserve. The defendants were under or ders to appear, and show cause why the injunctions should not be made perma nent ; but the cases were held in abey ance pending contemplated legislation, which, when it was enacted, rendered further proceedings in the cages neces sary. Consequently, the suits have been diemiesed. The names of the de fendants are as follows : Tygh Valley Land & Livestock Company, John Sherar, John Karlin, A. S. and C. H. Roberts, William Wiley, E. A. Griffin and Thomas Harris. ' The dismissal of the suits will be very gratifying to the de fendants; but the order for the dismissal is accompanied by the following extract from the act passed June 4, 1897, to which the attorney-general calls the at tention of all sheepmen : 'Owners of sheep are required to make application to the commissioner of the general land office for permission to pasture, stating the number of sheep and the location on the reserve where it is destined to graze. Permission will be refnsed or revoked whenever it shall ap pear that sheep are pastured on parts of the reserves especially liable to injury, or upon and in the vicinity of the Bnll Run reserve, Crater lake, Mount Hood, Mount Rainier, or other well-known places of public resort, or reservoir sup ply. Permission will also cease upon proof of neglect as to the care of fires made by herders, or of the violation by them of any of the forest reserve regu lations." Tuesday's Oregonian. A Fine School. St. Mary's academy for ladies, located in this city and under the direction of the Sisters, is one of the best educational institutions on the coast. The building is of brick, large and well ventilated Besides the regular studies, especial ef fort is made to instil into the minds of the pupils a desire to form their hearts to virtue, and to fit them to be true and noble women. Gratuitous lessons are given in all kinds of plain and fancy needle word, knitting, embroidery, etc Pa pile will receive the same watchful care that would be given them by con ecientious parents. It is in fact an ideal shcool and a pleasant borne. Those who have girls to send to school should write to St. Mary's academy for terms. tf. Bneklen'o Arinca naive. The best salve in tne world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rhenm, fevot sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblaina corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cui8 piles, or no pay required It is guarac. teed to give perfect satisfac tion, or mt r.ey refunded. Price 25 cents - per; box. For sale oy Blakeley and Houghton, druggists. TO SAVE GRASS. Horses Are Killed by the North west Ranchmen. Sale for the Animals, and Their Flesh In Fed to the Hose A Per plexing Problem to Solve. The interesting' news comes from the city of Butte. Mont., that in several parts of that state horses are so nu merous and there is so little use for them that they are being killed by ranchmen and their 'flesh fed to hogs as food instead of corn. Iu Mad ison county several horse meat canning establishments are now in operation, and the product is said to be shipped east and then to Europe. Horses can be bought for three dollars a head or even less when purchased in large num bers. These facts suggest the inquiry as to what is to become of the horse. With the introduction of electricity on street car lines, where, until a few years ago, horses were practically the sole motive power, and with the ever-increasing use of the bicycle, -there seems to be less use for the horse than ever. This use of electricity nd .bicycles makes it probable that horses will be bred in very small numbers hereafter. In the states of Montana, North Da kota, Idaho, Washington and Wyoming hundreds of thousands of dollars have been invested in cattle, sheep and rses. Jarge herds .were formerly ruiMi from Texas ana tne soumwcsi tli fatten on tne nutritious grasses to found in the states named, but the constant increase in the number oi cat tle, especially those of the half-breed variety, has also caused a reduction in their value. - - - The establishment of canning fac tories in' Madison county, Mont., where horse meat is put up is not the first ex periment of the kind in the northwest, in 1895 it was made in Portland, Ore., where horse meat was .canned and shipped to France. It was found, how ever, that the enterprise did not pay. the demand being insuflU-ient, while packers of beef refused to add horse meat to their line of trade because of the prejudice which would arise. Ueports from Madison county state also that horses in some instances are driven into corrals on the ranches, killed and the bodies dragged out into the fields, where the hogs can devour them. It seems almost incredible that this should be the case, but it has come to be a matter of self-preservation with the owners of large grazing districts, where there was thinner that the horses would eat up all the grass, thereby leavir.g no fodder whatever for beef cattle. The few horse canning estab lishments in that part of the state can not, of course, use up all the horses that are offered to them; hence it be comes necessary to kill the animals and dispose of them in the manner stated. It is not only the half-breed horses that are found to be a drug on the mar ket, but such fine stock as Clydesdales and coach horses are being offered bj" ranchmen there for very small figures. One ranchman in Mauison county is said to have a herd of f,700 horses of Clydesdale and Xorman stock which he is willing to dispose of for $15 a head. He is unwilling to sacrifice his stock for canning purposes, although the herd is eating the grass required for the grazing cattle and sheep. The cattle herds in the northwest are numbered by thousands, the prices for which are ridiculously small. The feed on the ranges is not increasing, while the cattle are, thus making the problem of finding feed more difficult. Those immense herds roam the prai ries of North Dakota, Washington, Mon tana avid Idaho. The Montana advices referred to state that those persons who have established the hortsc canning factories believe that their project will be successful. There :;roins to be little likelihood, however. that much, if ai:v, horse meat will be sold in the United Stales. N. Y. Her ald. Remarkable Cure of Chronic Diarrhoea. In 1862, when I served my country as a private in Company A, I67th Penn sylvania Volunteers, I contracted chronic diarrhoea. It has given me great deal of trouble ever since. I bave tried a dozen different medicines and several prominent doctors without any permanent relief. Not long ago a friend sent me a sample bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, and after that I bought and took a 50 cent bottle ; and now I can say that am entirely cured. I cannot be thankful enough to you for this great Remedy, and recommend it to all suffering veter ans. If in doubt write to me. Yours gratefully, Henry Steinberger, Allen town, Pa. Sold by Blakeley & Hough ton. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy always affords prompt relief. For sale by Blakeley & Hough ton. . - Do you want your windows cleaned carpets taken np, beaten and re laid, or janitor work of any kind done by first-class man? If sotelephone Henry TAnnaAti a Patriftfl' Va rKar eKnn UVII UCUII V .sk n.UB ism. su OUVpi 'Phone 119. alO-tf Creamerv potatoes; lemons, etc., at Maier & Benton's al-tf butter, . sweet SUBSCRI TWICE I''- A J CHR And reap the benefit of the following CLUBBING RATES. CHRONICLE and N CHRONICLE and N CHRONICLE and Weekly Oregonian . 2 25 CHRONICLE and S. F. Weekly Examiner 2 25 WORLD TRIBUNE OREGONIAN EXAMINER We now have for sale at our County, Oregon,. 260 head of THREE-QUARTER-BREED Also fiffv'bead of THOROUGHBRED SHROPSHIRE BUCKS." The above Bucks are all large, fine fellows, and will be sold to the sheepmen of EaBtern Oregon at prices to 6uit the times. The thoroughbreds were imported by us from Wisconsin, and are the sires of the three-quarter-breeds. Any information in regard to them will be cheer fully furnished by applying by letter to the owners, EIDGEWAY, OREGON". C. W. PHELPS & CO. -DEALERS IN- Agricultural 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. AH OREGONKLOMKE. Do yon want money? If so, catch on to this. A 7-year-old orchard, twenty acre tract, seventeen acres in choice frnite. bearing trees, new hinae of fix rooms, barns, outbuildings, etc., all new ; two horses and harness, two wagons, one road cart and one cow. Will sell at a bargain and on easy terms. Call on or address C. E. Bayard or Chas. Frazer, The Dalles, Oregon. Tbe merchant who tells 3 be has something else as good as Hoe . 1 (soap ia a coodjman to keep away fro. 1.. a2-3m OHlGLiE Y. Thrice-a-Week World $2 00 Y. Weekly Tribune 1 75 FOUR GBEflT PfiPERS ranch, near Ridcewav, Y asco : SHROPSHIRE : BUCKS Implements. THE DALLES, OR Electric Bitters. Electric Bitters is a medicine suited for any season, but perhaps more gener ally needed when tbe languid, exhausted feeling prevails, when the liver is torpid and sluggish and the need of a tonic and and alterative is felt. A prompt nse of this medicine has often averted long and perhaps fatal bilions fevers.- No medi cine will act more snreiy counteracting and freeing the B.vsteia Ircu. ."ae malar ial poison. Headache, Indigestion, Con stipation, Dizziness yield to Electric Bit ters. 50c and $1.00 per bottle at Blake ley & Houghton's drug store. 1 Nebraska corn' for sale at the Wasco warehouse. Best feed on earth. m9-tf NOTICE-SALE OF CITY LOTS. Notice ia hereby given that by au thority of ordinance No. 292, which passed tbe Common Council of Dalles City April 10th, 1897, entitled, "An or dinance to provide for the sale of certain lots belonging to Dalles City, i win, on Saturday, the 15lh day of May, 1897, sell -at public auction, to . tbe highest bidder, all the following lota and parts of lots in Gates addition to Dalles City, Wasco county, Oregon, to-wit: Lots 9 and 10 jointly, in block 14 ; lots 7, 8, 9 and 10, jointly in block 15; lots 7, 8, 9, and 10, ' jointly in block 21, known as bntte; lots 1U, 11 ana iz, in block 27 ; lot 9 in block 34 ; lots 2, 3, 4, 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10 and 11. in block 35; lots 2, :., 4, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12, in block 36; lots 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12. in block 37 : lots 1. 2. 3, 4. 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12, in block 42 ; lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 9, 10 and 11, in block 43; lots l. z, 3, l 10, 11 and 12,Mn blor". 41, and lots 1, 'Z. 3, 4, o, 6, in Dlocic 4b. The reasonable value of ea.l lots, for less than which they will no. i e sold, has been fixed nr.d determineu by the Common Council of Dalles City as fol lows, to-wit: Lots 9 and 10, in block 14, $150; lots 7, 8, 9 and 10, jointly in block 15, $200; lots 7, 8, 9 and 1", jointly in diock .at, $200; lot 10, in block 27, $225; lot 11, in block 27, $220 ; lot iz, in diock z. jouu; lot 9, in block 34, $100; lots 2, 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, 10 and 11, in block 35, each respect ively $100; lots o ana , m diock oo, each respectively $125 ; lots 2, 3. 4, 8, 9, 10 and 11, in block 36, each respectively $1 00 ; lot 12, in block 36, $125 ; lots 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, 10 and 11, in block 37, each re spectively $100; lots b, ana x, in block 37, each respectively $125; lots 2, 3, 10 and 11, in block 41, each respectively $100; lots 1, 7 and 12, in block 41 , each respectively $125; lots 3. 4, 5,8,9, 10 and 11. in block 42, each respectively $100 ; lot a , 6 and 12, in block 42, each respectively $125; lota 2, 3,4, o, , to ana n, in block 43. each respectively $100; lot 1, in block'43, $125; lots 2. 3, 4 and 5, in block 46, each respecti vely iuu ; lots i and 6, in block 46, each respectively $125. Each of these lots will De sola upon the lot respectively, and none of them will be sold for a less sum than the value thereof, as above stated. One-fourth of the price Dia on any oi 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 tbe rate of 10 per cent per annum, payable annually; provided that the payment maybe 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'slock n. m. of said day. and will con tinue from time to time until all of said lots snail be sold. Dated this 13th day of April, 1897. Gilbert W. Phki.ps, Recorder of Dalles City , S. Schbkk, President. . H. M. BKiLL, Cashier. First Kational Bank. THE DALLES - - - OREGON A General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, suoject to bigni Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly remittea on aay oi collection. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on uew iurK, oau fiauwuw in land. DISEOTORS D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. Sohknck. Ed. M. Williams, Gko. A. Libbb. H. M. Bbaix. Harry Liebe, PRACTICAL Watchmaker Jeweler All work promptly attended to, and warranted. 174 VOGT BLOCK. Dalles, Moro and Antelope STAGE LINE. Throueh br daylleht via Grass Valley, Kent ana cross uouows. DOUGLAS ALLEN, C. M. WHITELAW, The Dalles. 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 FARE. Dalles to Deschutes . 1 00 do Moro 1 50 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....: 8 00 . do Moro 8 50 do Dcschuees 4 00 do Dalles 5 00 Executor's Sale. Pursuant to an order of the County Court pf the State of Oreon for the Wasco County, made and entered on 3d day of May, 1897, in the matter of the estate f James McGahan, deceased, directing me U sei e real property belonging to the estate of eeeased, I will, on Satur day, the 5th day ''me, 1897. at the hour of 2 o'clock p m.,. . ourthouse door in Dalles City, Oregon, : nblic sale,' to the highest bidder, all of :- owing described real prop erty belonging to said estate. o-wlt: The Southwest quarter of Section tight, Township One South, Kaug Fourteen iast W. M., con- "S! aCrCS B. r. GIBON. zecutor. nOORTHERN PACIFIC RY.; s Pullman Elegent V ' - " Sleeping Cars Dining Cars ; Sleeping Car eT. PA IT I. MINKEAl'OLI DULCTH FA it GO GRAND FOB CBOOKSTON WINNIPEG HELENA an BUTTE Tourist 4 TO Through Tiekets CHICAGO WASHINGTON PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK. BOSTON AND ALL POINTS EAST and SOUTH For Information, cal on or write to time cards, maps and tickets, w. c. ALLAWAY. Agent, The Dalles, Oregon D. CHARLTON. Asst. G. P. A., 255. Morrison Cor. Third. Portland Oreson TO THE EKSTI GIVES THE CHOICE OF TWO Transcontinental ROUTES ! GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY. OREGON SHORT LINE. -VIA- Spokane Salt Lake Denver ' Omaha Kansas City Minneapolis St. Paul Chicago Low Rates to all Eastern Cities OCEAN STKAMKKS LeiTe Portland Bverr F1t Days for SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. For full details call onO.E & Co.'s Agent at The Dalles, or address W. H. HURLBURT, Gen. Pass. Agt Portland, Oregon A. L. MOIILER, Vice President. TIME CARD. No. 4, to Spokane and Great Northern arrives at 6 p. m., leaves at 6:05 p. m. No. 2, to Pendle ton, Baker City and bmon faclUC, arrives an: is a m., departs at 1:20 a. m. No S, from Spokane and Great Northern, ar rives at 8-30 a. m., departs at 8:35 a. m. No. 1, from Bakir City and Union Pacific, arrives at 8:55 a. m., departs at 4:00 a. m. Nos. 23 and 24, moving east of The Dalles, will carry passengers. No. 23 grrivesat 6:30 p. m., departs at 12:4o p. m. Passengers for Heppner will take train leaving here at 6:05 p. in. TrIS NEW YORK WORLD TflRICE-H-WEEI( EDITIOJL 18 Faces a Week. 1S6 Papers a Tear It stands firetmong "weekly" papers in size, frequency of publication freshness, .variety and reliability of con tents. It'is practically a daily at the low price o a weekly; and its vast list of subscribers, extending to every state and territory of the Union and foreign coun tries, will vouch for the accuracy and fairness of its news columns. It is splendidly illustrated, and among Its special features are a fine humor page, exhaustive market reportB, all the latest fashions for women and a Ion series of stories by the greatest living American and English authors, Conan Doyle, Jerome K. Jerome, Stanley We;mUj Mary E. tVilklns Anthony Hope, Bret Barte, Breeder Hstthewl, Ete. We offer this unequaled newspaper and The Dalles Twice-a-Week Chronicle to gether one year for $2.00. The regular price of the two papers is $3.00. DR. B ' W 9 J. JiOs.. j w. PriM (111 oI?g1k .