1j Mss My Chrcisie. THK UALLKb, OKEUOS Advertising Kates. Per inch One Inch or less in Dally . . .1 50 Orel two incbes and under four inches. .... 1 00 Over four Inches and under twelve Inches. . 75 Over twelve iuches ... ' 50 DAILY AND WEEKLY. . One inch or less, per inch ... ?2 50 Orer one inch and under four iuches 2 00 Orer four inches and under twelve inches:. 1 50 Over twelve inches 100 1-EKSONAL. MENTION. C. R. Snrrad, of Blaiock, Is a gueat at the Umatilla today. ynu-.s-mam Miss Lulu Chri9man went to Portland this morning to visit iriends. .wsii'3iS' Robert Watson, of Goldendale, is at tending to business in the city today. Fred Clarke returned last night from a two weeks sojourn in Portland and the onnd cities. Mrs. Frpd Fisher and daughter, Mi?? Edits, went to Portland on the Regulator this morning. Dr. G. A. Giesendorff, of Arlington, came down on the morning train, and is stopping at the Umatilla. Mrs. P. N. Dekum of Portland came up on the Regulator last evening. While here she will visit Mrs. S. L. Brooks. Mrs. Frank Menefee and children wert passengers on the local this morn ing for Fairview, where Mrs. Menefer will visit friends. Miss Grace Lauer, who for severalj mounts past nan ueru amying wuu iiei grandmother in Portland, returned home on the Regulator last evening. - Mr. A. J. Dufur of Dufur returned from Portland last night, where he haf been visiting his family, who at present reside in that place. Prof. Jones, of Vaghon college, was a passenger on the Regulator last night, lie is traveling in the interest of the college. Mre. G. C. Blakeley and Mi?s Rosi Jlicheil returned this morning from Baker City, where they have been at tending the meeting of the Press Asso ciation. Mr. and Mrs, Will Wright, of Lyle, tame up on the Regulator last night. Mr. Wright, who runs a sawmill near that place, reports that milling business is good this fall. . Mrs.T. J. Stufert and son, Razor, left Jor Portland on the Spokane local thip morning, where the little bov is to un dergo a conrse of treatment under I)r Dixon. on. 1 lor 1 Dwni hare some time lue m.tie fellow lias ird of hearing, and an opera lion may he necepsarv in his case. A ValuuMe Prescription. Editor Morrison of Worthington, led., "Sun," writes: "You have a valuable prescription in Electric Bitters, and 1 can cheerfully recommend it for Consti pation and Sick Headache, and as a gen eral system tonic it has no equal." Mrs. Annie Stehle, 2025 Cottage Grove Ave., Chicago, was all run down, could not eat nor digest food, had a backache which never left her and felt tired and weary, bnt six bottles of Electric Bitters re stored her health and renewed strength. Prices 50 cents and $1.00. Get a Bottle st Blakelev and Houghton's Drug t'tore. ' (9) Executor's Notice. Xotice iH hereby Riven that the undersigned ha been duly appointed and is now the quali lied mid acting executor of the last will and tes tament of Elizabeth J. Bolton, deceased. All ierwus having claims again&t said estate are notified, to present them to me, with the projier Vouchers therefor, at the ofhee of the county rlerk of Waeco County, The Dalles, Ortgon, within six months frcm the date hereof. Dntel September 10, 1W7. phVi 6IMEOX BOLTON, Executor. This Is Tour Opportunity. , On receipt of tea cents, cash or stamps, a generous sample will be mailed of the most popular Cutarrh and Hay Fever Cure (Ely's Cream Balm) sufficient to demon strate the great merits of the remedy. ELY BROTHERS, 1, 56 Warren. St.. New York City. Itev. Johr Peid, Jr., of Great Falls, Mont., mommended Ely's Cream Balm to me. I can emphasize his statement, "It is a posi tive cure for catarrh if used as directed." Rev. Francis W. Poole, Pastor Central Pres. Church, Helena, Mont. ' Ely's Cream Balm is the acknowledged core for catarrh and contains no mercury aor any injurious drug. Price, 50 cents. oison 0 Oin WrbUIIM ondary or Ter tiary BLOOB r OI SON permanently J co red in 16 to 35 days. You can be treated at 3 home for same price under same goaraa J ty . If you prefer to comehere we willoon. 11 '' tr&CtCODaTr&ilmAdfftnMlhntAlhlla . .. nocharfre. If we fail to core. If yon have taken mer iodide potash, and still have acbes and pirns. Mucous Patches in mouth. Sore Throat. Xfmplea, Copper Colored Spots, Ulcers on ny partorthe body. Hair or Eyebrows falllnor out, it Is this Secondary BjLoOI POISON we irurmntee to core. We solicit the most obsti nate cases and chullence the world for a case we cannot cure. This disease has always tallied the skill of the most eminent ph vsl ciaaj. S500,000 capital behind our nncondb sjonal (rasrasty. Absolute nroofx sent sealed on .imlicatkon. Address COOK REMEBT COZ Wl Uasanlo Xeoapla, CiXICAXaO, 1U. DR. GUNtTS IMPROVED A I 1 i ii :-ii vi r-. Om Pill fVil Dim A movement 01 t 00W-I9 Mch day is Decsssry far Malta TbAse pii'iH u0py wdv iae system lacks to Bak it regular. Thay cum Headache, brighten -he ' jaa. and oiear thaOi opleiioa better th&n roc me tics. mLi mail wmp free or fnll bar f"T 2rc. aerneitaer icnpe o aicKeo, To connoce you. ws LflODP r c. bold every . Ptulsdolvhia, Fs, . vcti, aim. tu. 1 nr n its & One of America's most fa- mous physicians says: "Scrof $ Ia is external consumption." S Scrofulous children are often S beautiful children, but they lack nerve force, strong bones, f stout muscles and , power to w resist disease. For delicate children there is equal to no remedy Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil with Hypo- phosphites of Lime and Soda, J It f Jits out the skin fev outtino- vu good flesh beneath it. It makes the cheeks red by making rich $ $ blood. It creates an appetite w tor food and cives the bodv W power enough to digest it. iSc w crnTT'C T7..i fl sure you get SCOTT S Emul- (t sion. . v jt ' 50c and $1.00 ; all druggists. $ SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, New York. $ SAN DIEGO OARSWOMEN. Four Girl Make a. Record for Savlasjr Twenty Livei. In February, 1891, four girls of San Diego, Cal., formed a boat club, and borrowing1 a butcher's bumbont started merrily off to race with, the well equipped rowing clubs that practice all the summer through upon, the sapphire crescent that curv es toward Coronado's golden beach. At first people smiled a little at the idea of four young girls going in. for the muscular exercise, but now that these young women have made a record by saving 20 lives the Zlac club is recog nized everywhere in southern Califor nia. The name means nothing, but the girlish whim of the oarswomen, Zulette J,arnb and L.ena Polhemus with her two llsters, Agnes and Carrie for it is (formed of the first letters of their Chris- Htian names; but the club has come to stand for something on the coast and its members wear decorations more hon orable than medals for race winning. After the club was formed a rig-id set of rules and regulations were framed and constitution adopted. Every can didate for membership was required to pass a severe physical examination, in which a swimming contest was a con spicuous feature.. Other clauses were unique, and one of the "shall nots" has necessitated a. revision of the member ship roll, as it. prohibits marriage or matrimonial intentions among the crew. The Sari Diego Rowing club, one of the leading organizations of the coast, tendered the Zlacs the use of a six-oar single-scull barge, in which they be came' very proficient, racing against time on Ladies' day, July 5, 1894, and breaking all previous coast records. On that day the Zlacs also distinguished themselves by saving four of the crew of the yawl Teaser, which capsized dur ing the regetta. The club records show that since the,n more than 20 persons have been rescued from drowning by the Zlacs, and it is a notable fact that there never has been the slightest ac cident to mar the other side of the ledger. The Zlacs after a time decided to build their own barge. The splendid eight-oared racing barge Zlac was launched August 3, 1890. It cost $600 complete, and was all paid for by the girls, none of whom is wealthy. On August 7 the . Zlacs raced the Nereid crew of eight, beating them over a mile course by one boat's length, and on September 13 a second victory was recorded against a picked crew from all the clubs, the prize being a splendid Frenoh mirror now in us in the Zlac clubhouse. On March 25 of this year occurred the great race between the Zlacs and Columbias for the pennant of the -United States coast defense vessel Monterey and the championship of the coast. Roth crews rowed six-oar barges over a course of 0,000 j'ards straight down the bay. The presence in the harbor of six of Uncle Sam's big war ships, commanded by Rear Admiral Beardslee, and a whole ballroom full of gallant naval officers, lent an added interest to the occasion. Chicago Journal. 'I'ne Kepatailon of Boston. . . The discipline of the older section of the country is not much more severe than that of the newly-settled regions, where they think the easterners are absurdly finical and only a shade less fussy than the English. A hotel clerk beyond the Missouri once advised ' a Bostonian in a friendly spirit never to register from Boston. . "Why?" the innocent Bostonian in quired. "Because," answered the clerk, "out here we always give a man from Bos ton the poorest room in the house. We know he is going to kick, anyhow, and so we give him something to kick at." Boston Globe. - ' Nebraska corn for gate at the Wasco warehouse.-- Best feed on earth. m9-tf GUI NOTICE SALE OF CITY LOTS. Notice ia hereby given that by au thority of ordinance No. 292, which passed the Common Council of Dalles City April 10th, 1897, entitled, "An or dinance to provide for the sale of certain lots belonging to Dallea City," I will, on Saturday, the 15lh day of May, 1897, eell at public auction, to the highest bidder, all the following lota and parts of lots in Gates addition ' to Dalles City, Wasco county, Oregon, to-wit: Lots 9 and'lO jointly, in block 14 ; lots 7, 8,' 9 and 10, jointly in block 15; lota 7, 8, 9, and 10, jointly in block 21, known as bntte; lots 10, 11 and 12, in olock 27 ; lot 9 in block 34 ; lots 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11, in block 35; lots 2, 3, 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; lota 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 9, 10 and 11. in block 43; lots 1. 2, 3, l 10, 11 and 12, in blocU 41, and lots 1, 2. 3, 4, 5, 6, in block 4b. The reaeonable value of sa.'i lots, for less than which they will no i-e sold, has been fixed and 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 10, jointly in block 21, $200; lot 10, in block 27, $225; lot 11, in block 27, $225; lot 12, in block 27, $300; lot 9, in block 34, $100; lots 2, 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, 10 and 11, in block 35, each respect ively $100; lots 6 and 7, in block 35, each respectively $125; lots 2,3,4,8,9, 10 and 11, in block 36, each respectively $100; lot 12, in block 36, $125; lots 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, JO and 11, in block 37, each re spectively $100; lots 6, 7 and 12, in block 37, each respectively $125 ; lots 2, 3, 10 end 11,. in block 41, esch 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 s 6 and 12, in block 42, each respectively $125; lots 2, 3,4, 5,9, 10 and 11, in block 43, each respectively $100; lot 1, in block 43, $125; lots 2, 3, 4 and 5, in block 40, each respectively $100; lots 1 and 6, in block 46, each respectively $125. Each of these lots will be sold 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 bid on any of paid lots shall be paid in cash at the time of sale, and the remainder in three equal pavments on or before, one, two and threo years from the date of said sale, with interest on such deferred pay ments at the rate of 10 per cent per annum, payable annually; provided that the payment may tie made in fnll at any time at the option of the pur chaser. . The said sale will begin 011 the 15th day of May, 1897, at the hour of 2 o'slock p. m. of said day, and will con tinue from time to time until all of said lots Etiall be sold. Dated this 13th day of April, 1897. Gilbert W. Phei-ps, . " Recorder of Dalles City. NOTICE. To ALL WHOM IT MAY COXCEKS : By order of the common council, of Dalles City, made on the ,19th day of September, 1S97, and entered of record in ttie records of Dalles City on the 2Gth dy of September, 1897, notice is hereby given that the following crose walks have been declared dangerous by said council on said 19th day of September, 1S97, and the said council will proceed to make the improvements as herein after stated, on said streets, or parts of streets declared dangerous, after fourteen days after the first publication of this notice, to-wit, September 30th, 1897, and the costs of such improvements of all such cross walks, and of each of them, will be charged and levied npon the property abutting, as by charter provided. The cross walks declared danzerous and about to be built are as follows, to wit : - 1. To build a cross walk on the ast 9ide of Fedeial street, across Second street. ' -. - 2. To build a ctoss walk across Jef ferson street on the north side of Second street. 3. To build a cross walk across Court street on the north side of Second street. 4. To build a cross walk across Wash ington street on the south side ol Fourth street. 5. To build a cross walk across Jef ferson street on the south side ot Second street. 6. To build a cross walk across Laughlin street on the north, aide of second street. . 7. To build a cross walk across Second street on the east side of Court street. S. To build a cross walk across Third street on the east side of Federal street. All of said cross walks will be built and constructed fn accordance with the provisions of the charter and ordinances of Dalles Citvl ; Dated this 28th day of Sept., 1897. Roger B. Sinnott, e30-ol3 Recorder of Dalles City. AH OREGON KLONDIKE. " Do you want money? If so, catch on to this. A 7-year-old orchard, twenty acre tract, seventeen acres in choice fruits, bearing trees, new house of six rooms, barns, outbuildings, etc., all new ; two horses and harness, two wagona, 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. t Croup Quickly Cared. Mountain Glen,' Ark. Oar children were suffering with cronp when we re ceived a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy.. It afforded almost instant re lief. F. A. Thornton. This celebrated remedy is for sale by Blakeley & Hough ton. - " ; Subscribe ';; 'X'f- twice. -A-v.:; FOR THE I A , J FOR THE GMHOHlGIiH -And reap the benefit of the following - CLUBBING RATES; ; :.: : I CHRONICLE and N. Y. Thriee-a-Week World,. . i $2 00 CHRONICLE and N. Y. Weekly '.Tribune ;1 75 CHRONICLE and Weekly Oregonian . V 2 25 CHRONICLE and S. F. Weekly Examiner ... 2 ,25 WORLD TRIBUNE OREGONIAN EXAMINER G. W. PHELPS & CO. -DEALERS IN- Ipciritural 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. BLAKELEY 175 Second Street. Country and Mail Orders will receive prompt attention. ' r ' PHESCHlPTIOfl DRUGGIST TOILET ARTICLES Z, DONNE Opp. A. M. Williams & Co., BISHOP SCOTT ACADEMY - PORTLAND OREGON. ' POUNDED 1870. " 'A Board in and Day School for Boys, Under Military Discipline. . . i The 20th year under the present management begins Sept. 14, 1897. This institution is thoroughly equipped for the meutal, social, physical and moral training of boya. A thorough preparation for any college or scientific school. Graduates at present in Tale, West Point, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, State Universities of California, Ore gon, Pennsylvania. Stanford and McGill.v During vacation visitors welcome trom 9 to 12 a, m. For catalogue and other information, address the Principal, J. W. HILL, SI. D. Portland, Oregon. Postoftloe drawer 17. WANTKO. Upright and faithful gentlemon or ladies to travel for responsible estab lisned house in Oregon. Monthly $65 and expenses. ' Position steady.' Eefer erence. Enclose eelf-addreseed stamped envelope. The Dominion Company, Dept. H., Chicago. - o5-15 TOUR GREflT PAPERS pleme THE DALLES, OR Sc HOUGHTON The Dalles, Oregon ATTD PERFUMERY. THE DALLES, OR. To Cattlemen, Butchers and Others.' Wanted To pasture for two months, 100 head of stock on the overflow bottom lands at Lyle. Wash. Magnificent feed. For particulars apply to T. Baifouk, spl 1-tf - Lvle, Wash. Try Schilling's Best tea, and baking powjar nts. THE OTOE Sifiu FROM THE DALLES TO PORTLAND. PASSENGER RATES. One way r,. ....... ...$1,50 ... 2.50 I Bound trip i,::. FREIGHT V RATES ARE DOWN. The Steamer IONE leaves The Dalles on Tuesdays,-Thursdays and Sat urdays at 6:30 a. m. Office in the Baldwin Building, foot of Union street. For freight rates, etc, call on or addrees V J. S. BOOTH. Geri. Agt., The Dalles, Oregon. an ORTHERN Sleeping Cars Dining Cars : Sleeping Car ST. PAUL " ' MINNEAPOL1 DtTLUTll, ; FAKGO . . GRAND FOR - ' CBOOKSTON WINNIPEG HELENA an BUTTE Elegent Tonirist TO Through Tickets CHICAGO WASHINGTON PHILADELPHIA 'KW YORK : BOSTON AND ALL . POINTS BAST and SOUTH For information, time cards, maps and tickets, cal on or write to - . . . . W. a ALLAWAY. Agent, ' The Dalles, Oregon A. D. CHARLTON. Asst. G- P. A., : . 255. Morrison Cor. Third. Portland Oregon ifuo . TO THE ERST! - GIVES THE CHOICE OF ' -J ' TWO Transcontinental ROUTES ! GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY. OREGON SHORT LINE. -VIA- Spokane Salt Lake Minneapolis Denver St. Paul Omaha Chicago Kansas City Low Rates to all Eastern Cities OCEAN STKAJIEK8 Lcstc . Portland . Every PItb Datya for SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. For full details call onO.E A Co. s Agent at The Dallea. or address W, H. HCBLBORT, Gen. Pass. Agt Portland, Oregon TIME CARD.; No. 4, to Spokane and Great Northern arrives i- 1 . f . Vn O ..- Pnnill.. Bb u p. tit,, leaves fc o.iu f - iu. a, w . ton. Baker City and Union Pacific, arrives at 1:15 a m., departs at 1:20 a. m. No 8, from Spokane and Great Northern, ar rives at 8-80 a. m., departs at s:35 a. m. No. 1, from Baktr City and Union Pacific, arrives at 3:55 a. m., departs at 4:00 a. m. Nob. 23 and 24, moving east of The Dalles, will carrv passengers. No. 23 grrives at 6:30 p.m., departs at 12:45 p. m. '. -. . i ... Passengers for Heppner will take train leaving here at 6:05 P. m. y PACIFIC RY. -.- s Pullman