) H - . V ' ' i ii I r i ' 1 r-' ' i I SATURDAY.. ..DECEMBER 25, 1896 ITEMS IN BRIEF. - (From Saturday's Dally.) Work of repairing the canal and locks at Oregon City was completed ' yesterday. r" The people of Dufur will have a onion Christmas tree in the Methc- dist church, says the Dispatch. - - For Christmas send views of Colum bia river sceuery to your friends ia the East. A large assortment at Mrs. Herrin's gallery, 12i cents each. ... The O. R. & N. Co. reports a con aid. ' erable increase in business as com pared with that of a year "ago. Both through and local traffi is increasing. ' Farmers throughout Wasco county ; have pleasant smiles on their faces, and well they may,- for the abundant -; showers of late assure them of abund ant crops next year. , - - - The streets of The Dalles have pre- r seated a livelier " appearance ; today than during anyjday for the past three weeks, and merchants report trade to have been fairly good. No fault could be found with ihe Cascade Locks edition of the Orego nian except the colored lithograph, which has rather the appearance of baying been prepared by ametuers. Two fellows who had been imbibing too freely were before Recorder Phelps this inorning. One was fined 85. - which he paid, and the other was fined : $10 and is at presnet sawing wood for -the city. . - The Woodmen Circle entertainment committee have made a slight change in their program, and will give a first : class entertainment on New Year's 'night at trie Vogt, followed by a social V "hop. Remember the date. " t Last evening George Ernest Stewart 'waa Informed by telephone message ;from Hood River that his cousin, a " daughter of B. F. Miller, was danger- - ously ill, and not expectea to live. 7 Mr. Stewart went to Hood River on 'his morning's train. --- - - "Thn thlavea who robbed the Oregon City postofflce Thursday night got awif with $2784.61 in stomps ' 624.92 in cashr - belonging to the gov ernment, besides $9 belouging to tne aoiatjinfc " twatmastr. Three notes amounting to about $500 belonging the postmaster were also taken, .. to , The Crescent City, Cal., News says that a salmon was caught in Elk river last week having a copper tag fastened to its tail bearing the inscription: "a. B., Rogue River.'.'. Lester Bray was the captor. The Wedderburn Gazette ! has made inquiry but can find no ODe that knows of any such tag ever bein put on a salmon io Rogue river. Vtvat-AWTiiv afternoon JV D. Baker fillnoed and fell on the walk la front a. M. Williams & Co's store, and hmlrn his left thitrb. Mr. Baker Is rlnrla. having h&l the same limb broken when a boy, and not having good use of the limb was the cause of - ihe accident. He was taken to Mrs DW hotel and placed under the . treatment of Dr. Holllster, : : NextMondav Fred W.Wilson and Ed. Wingate will leave for the Sand wich islands, taklne- passage on toe teamer Monmouthshire. They ex pect to remain on the islands four or six weeks, though may remain longer. - -Their tnanv friends here wian tnem '. pleasant journey and safe return, and trust they will not be so favorably im- pressed with Hawaii as to want to per- manently locate there. Pilferers about Dufur appear to con - alder Harrison Dufur a sort of general benefactor? and of late have been "help- ine- themselves very freely to his goods He informs the Dufur Dispatch that he has been relieved, without any re - turn therefor, not even the thanks of ' the appropriators, of between 50 and 60 boxes of apples, two pairs of blankets that cost him $9 per pair dozen jars of fruit and 3 dozen cans of same, and his potato bin and hay mow have also been perceptibly lowered The culprit who attempts to get away from Nighlwatchman Wiley must indeed be fleet footed. This was demonstrated last night, when Mr. Wiley lead a wrong doer to the city bastile, and while he was unlocking the door the fellow started to run. He had not proceeded far when the night- watchman overtook and nunea mm into the street, and for a time It was a ouestion whether the officer had cap tured his man or a quarter section of mud. This morning Constable ar rested and brouerht into town L. Fran cisco, a county charge,' who for some time past .has been cared lor at tne poor farm. Mr. Cushing, who has charge of the farm, had been instructed to make Francisco work or leave the farm. He refused to do either, and becoming very troublesome, Mr. Cush ing had him arrested. . Francisco was taken before Justice Filloon this after- noon on . a charge of ; assaulting : Mr. Cushing and was fined420. Not being able to pay the fine He was remanded to jail. v . ; Oakesdale, wash., :has a populist mayor, with a will of his own. The city marshal became intoxicated the other night and held up two young men and a young lady returning from choir practice. He drew his revolver, commanded the trio to bold up their hands, and gave them a lecture on keeping such late hours. . One of the young men was a feon of the mayor. Mayor Williams and his two Bona went down town immediately after, found the marshal in a saloon)tookhis"gun', and-shield from him, and put hioi in the city "cooler." The next morning r the office of marshal was declared va 1 cant. . tr prom Monday Dally. - " '' ' " - Mrs. A. K. Dufur, of Dufur, ia in the city. ,.; t . . . j Judge John Fulton and wife,' of Biggs, were in the city yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. A.,.M. elsay returned home from Portland Saturday evening. Hon. Henry Blackman, collector of Internal revenue at Portland, is in the dty.i-li- J - - Allie Henderson spent Sunday In the city, and returned to Lyle this morning. A Bittingin was a passenger on the Begnrator this morning going " to ' Portland. ' " William Whitaker, a prominent merchant of Baker City, died very -suddenly just after entering bis store in that city last Saturday morning ' Mr. and Mrs! E. Al Adams, who have been visiting at Hay Creek, arrived in the city : yesterday and will leave tonight fortheiy home at Spokane. r,.i,. r.u.v la liable to be atoiost de populated ere long.' since the papers of that place are advocating that all per sons who have no visible means of sup port be forced to depart. Messrs. John Sommerville and J. P. Van Houten arrived last evening from Hay Creek. They report a very pleas ant winter so far in Crook county. Grass is growing rapidly, and sheep on the range are getting all the ieed necessary. The German b:irque,Potrimpos,went arouud at Pacific Park, seven miles north of Ilwaco, last Saturday. The vessel was under charter to the Port land fiouriner mills. It is thought the ship can get off the sands without material damage. Indications are favorable that Cas cade Lode, No. 303, B. P. O. E., will become the possessor of that white deer vet. The lodne has passed reso lutions thanking Mr. Klnnersly for the donation, and about all that Is possibly left for Mr. K. is to buy the deer and make the presentation. Four teams running away at one time made things lively on Second street this morning. Charles Cath- cart's dray team started the ball roll ing, and as it passed d in the street every team that could tret a fair start joined in the race. Fortunately no material damage was done. ' Saturday evening a number of th friends of Fred Wilson and Ed Win- gate gave them a farewell supper at the Umatilla House, after the session of the Elks had closed. It was an im promptu affair, nevertheless was a pleasing farewell to the young men who left today for Honolulu. Mr. Herrick, proprietor of The Dalles cannery, came up from below last night, and returned to Portland this after noon. Mr. Herriok reports having had a good run of fish , at ; Aberdeen the oast season, and having put up a large amount of salmon in his cannery at that place. He will return here in few weeks to put his cannory in shape for the spring run. Hush Glenn is again in the city, having come up from Astoria to spend the holidays with his .family. Mr. Glenn says work is progressing on the Astoria & Columbia River Railroad, and at present he is giving work to all who applv. The principal work on thn road at present is in rock, and this can be prosecuted in spite of the un favorable weather. . This morning Ed Wingate and Fred W. Wilson left on the Regulator for Portland, and Wednesday morning will board the steamship Monmoth nhirw for Honolulu. A "number of their friends were at the boa't to see them off, and wish them a pleasant journey. They will probably be ab sent from the city for two months, they expect to spend a month or six weeks on the islands. James Shaw, proprietor of the Dallas woolen mills, is in the city, and today had a conference with a committee of the Commercial Club with reference to establishing a woolen mill at this place. Mr. Snaw has been looking toward The Dalles for several years as a suitable place for starting a woolen factory, and is still convinced it is the best locality in the Northwest. An Opportunity for The Dalle C. J. Crandall, the well known archi tect of this city, is in receipt of a letter from the East Portland Mill & Fixture Co., stating that the company desires to move its plaining mills and sash and door plant, consisting of some 28 machines, from Portland to some point in the interior, and inquiring about the outlook for establishing a business in The Dalles. Certainly there is an opening here for - such an industry. While the planing mills of J. T. Pet rs & Co. are well equipped and are doing a thriving business in this city, they are not prepared for turning out all kinds of work, hence thousands of dol lars are sent away each year for sash and doors, moulding and boxes that had as well be manufactured here. Most assuredly there is an opening in The Dalles for such a plant as th Portland company his, and its location in this city would be a valu able addition to the manufacturing industries of the city. Mr. Crandall has referred the letter to the Commer cial Club, and no doubt some action will be taken to induce the company to locate their plant in JThe Dalles. Absolutely pure, perfectly harmless and invariably reliable are the quali ties of One Mimute (Jougn (jure, .it never fails in colds, croup and lubf troubles. Children like it because : it is pleasant to take and it helps them Snipes & Kinersly Drug Co. ; . F - i (lightly Mixed. ' The peace officers of the city were kept busy Men 5ay endeavoring to get matters straighted out between Thos. J. Reed, of Spokane, and Albert Pucb, the man who was arrested here last Friday morning on a telegram from Spokane. Reed claims Puch is guilty of selling stolen goods, but the facts seem to be that be bad furnished Puch goods to sell on conl?umen, and that the latter had gone beyond the limits agreed upon. Reed arrived here with out either warrant or requisition papers, hence Puch was discharged from custody.- When he was released he had Reed arrested for false im prisonment, but the change was not sustained and Reed was discharged Reed then had Puch rearrested on a charge of larceny. Will Kick the Pigskin. A number of our young -men have determined that The Dalles shall not be behind other cities in any respect and have organized a football 'team, which is about all that is necessary to bring us up to the standard in athletic sports, since we have 'baseball players and bowlers galore, besides the cham pion hose team of the Northwest coast. Our football kickers will have their first practice on the fair grounds next Sunday, and have arranged with the Portland high school team for a "kick oft" on New Years day. The person nel of The Dalles team is as follows : , . F. Snipes, center; J. MaloneyWght guard; J. Elton, lelt guard ;-.U Jen kins, right tackle; V. Schmidt, left tackle; G. Dufur, right end; C.Burget, left end; B. Barrett, quarter, captain; J. Clyatt, right half; R,. Fisher, left half, manager; H. Clyatt, half back. Kew Freight Tariff. The opening of the locks has cut off the expense of the transfer at Cascades, and in line with the former policy of the D. P. & A. N. Co. to give their patrons the benefit of all possible re ductions in expenses; by giving them a reduced freight, the company will, on January 1, 1897, put a reduced tariff in to effect. The Regulator company pursues a live and let live policy in all its transactions, and ia indeed one of the most popular transportation lings in the Northwest. - . - j..-v TCn mnrA ROTLs. no more PIMPLEST use Kinersly Iron Tonic The Snipe hicersly vrag tjo., xeiepnone no.s WITHOUT A THKlMtK. A King Who Was Without EOQOf In His Own Country. History In Brief of the Ite Count Paris His Services as a Volun teer in the United States Army. Louis Philippe Albert, Comte de Paris, whose death occurred recently, writes Pierre Cominges in Golden Days, claimed to be the king of France. He was, however, never on the throne and never acknowledged king in France. The monarchical governments of Eu rope, as a rule, professed to believe that he really was king, but, of course, to preserve- their friendly relations with the republic, they were forced to recognize the president as the chief ex ecutive of that country. Nevertheless, Louis Philippe was re garded as a king by quite a strong par ty, who will now turn to his son, Louis Philippe Robert, a young man of twenty-five, who is very much in earnest in his pretensions to the throne of France. Comte de Paris was born in Paris on August 24, 1838, and became, by the death of his father in 1842, the imme diate heir to the crown his grandfather, Louis Philippe, had picked up when Charles X. dropped it in his flight from Paris, after the "Three Glorious Days" of July, 1830. When he was ten years of age Comte de Paris was, with his grandfather, King Louis Philippe, driven from France by the revolution of 1848 - Though too young to remember his father's death, Comte de Paris doubt less always remembered the scene when his brave mother took him and his brother to the chamber of deputies, only to escape therefrom at the peril of their lives. After many dangers, the fugitives succeeded in crossing the frontier, and went to live at a country house belonging to the grand duke of Saxe-Weimar. The exiled king and queen reached England, and there the ex-king died in 1850. Ever afterwards Comte de Paris has occupied the position of pretender to the French throne. O He has lived a very quiet life, en livened by very slight conspiracies, none of which involved any very dan gerous schemes, and as a result he has been very little before the public eye. The only time, indeed, when he came very prominently before the world was in 1801, when, accompanied by his brother. Due de Chartres, and his uncle, Prince de Joinville, he came to America and offered his sen-ices as a volunteer to aid in the preservation of the union. Gen. McClellan, then com mander of ythe army of the Potomac, made him and his brother officers on his staff, with the rank of captain. John Jacob Astor, whose name will always be a synonym for millionaire in the United States, was also on the staff of the general. Both the distinguished foreigners were obedient, well-behaved and thoroughly acquainted with the duty of their positions. Combe de Paris was repeatedly intrusted by Gen. McClellan with important and dangerous commissions, which he fulr filled with credit and ability. For more than a year the comte partici pated in the varying fortunes of the army of too Potomac, accepting no pay for his services. France began shortly after this to in terfere in Mexican affairs, and there arose a coolness between this country and the comte's, which led to the comte 's resignation, lest he might be called upon to fight his own people. He therefore resigned his commission, , in spite of Gen. MeClellan's efforts to re tain his services. . The overthrow of Napoleon III. and the downfall of the second empire at last enabled the comte to return to France. The third republic, very soon after it was established, fell into the hf of a Coalition of royalists, who permitted the Orleans princes to return to their native land and restored them their estates, which had been confis cated by Napoleon III., with forty mil lion francs as an indemnity for the deprivation of their revenues. The comte received his share, and also his ancestral estate. For awhile it seemed very probable that the monarchy would be restored; but, as the partisans of the other plaimants refused to help them, the French people at last got tired and became-for the most part good republic? ans. In 1873, when it was too late to do any good, all the claimants to the French throne, except the Bonapartists, recognized the comte as de jure king of France. . , A royalist demonstration in 1886 led to the exile of the comte and all mem bers of bis family. He took up his residence in England, apd from that country issued mani festoes declaring that the men who were ruling France had lost the confi dence of the people, and the only sal vation of the nation was to restore the monarchical form of government. ' The new head of the French royal bouse Louis Phillippe Robert is quick, intelligent, active, energetic, passionately fond of movement, and uncompromising in the expression of" his thoughts and feelings. In dispor sition and temperament he is singu larly unlike his father, who was one of the best informed men living, a deep thinker and a scholar. : - What influence the new pretender Will exert on the destinies of France eannot be guessed, but the probabil ities are that, like his father, be will live and die a mere pretender a king without a throne or a crown. ' . - i . i COURAGE IN SURGERY. . Way xperleneed Practitioners Are Cool While Operating. An old surgeon, engaged for the mo ment in dissecting a cold roast quail, and making, it must be confessed, only an indifferent job of it, had been lis tening incidentally to the conversation of his table companions who were dis cussing the calmness and nerve dis played by the average practitioner dur ing surgical operations, says the New York Herald., Both " agreed that the poise and coolness shown by-surgeons jit times were extraordinary and hard to understand. "Now, - friends, if you will permit me," interrupted the surgeon at this point, "I would like to tell you that there is nothing extraordinary about ). The 'nerve,' as you call it, of the surgeoq uuder such circumstances is the rnost natural thing in the world. It is not a display of calmness which has been put on for that occasion, or an exhibition of courage summoned pp for an unusual emergency, but simply the normal demeanor of a practical, matter-of-fact man who knows, what he has to do and bow he is going to do it. . "The trouble with many people who marvel at what they call a surgeon's courage is that they fail utterly to comprehend the conditions under which he performs his work. They imagine that he is experimenting, or that he doesn't know his ground, or that he will cut something -that he ' ought not to cut. Nothing could be further from the facts. No movement in science or mechanics is preceded by a more accurate foreknowledge of its results than the average -operation in surgery. There is no such thing as guesswork about it. . The operator knows ho is performing an operation which is based upon an exact science. He follows rules which apply to all cases, and is secure in the confidence that causes which have produced cer tain effects in given instances will do so in all others. - I "Why, then, should there be any need in his work for extraordinary courage? There are cases, of course, so critical or so unusual as to excite even the calmest and most self-con-tained operator, and when these are under treatment the surgeon's powers of self-control are frequently taxed to their utmost limit To the man who. In such a case, can tb reiS without a tremor, when life itself de pends upon the accuracy and delicacy of his touch, we must award the praise due to real heroes. But in the aver age case, say of amputation or of skull fracture involving cranial operations, the surgeon neither needs nor possesses rnnrA than lhr nmir&ire of an intelli gent, sincere man, who knows his duty and has learned now to periora it. Hia ff.hni'nl knowledue of anatomy and its methodical habit of work ac custom him to conditions which alarm and excite non-professional minds, and he goes about his task with a certain quiet, vigorous, assertive confidence in the result of his movements wnicn tne observer is quite likely to mistake for a marvelous courage summoned up for that particular occasion. It is courage nt a Art.ain sort. I confess the cour age of absolute confidence in the in fallibility of the science ne .repre sents." ALI-BEN-ALI, THE COBBLER. Bow He Lost Bis Wives and Bis Faith at the Same Time. Ali-Ben-Ali was and is a renegade. He believes in three gods, and drinks spirits of wine, corn and rye. He also believes that women have souls and that, while there are many houris in heaven, there are more in hell. When the muezzin calls to prayer he puts his thumb to his nose and spreads his fin gers out, which is his Turkish way of expressing derision. Once upon a time he owned seven slaves, four of whom were white. Great men were his friends. Now he cobbles shoes, says Vance Thompson in the New York Ad vertiser. He might have been a happy man to this day had it not been for that devil of an Alcibiades. Ali-ben-Ali was sit ting on his feet, looking through the open door out on the blue waters of the Bosporus and the low sandy shore beyond when the Greek came up. He was a low-browed Greek. He was peddling slippers with long red points which curled over like rams' horns. Ali was absorbed in thinking of his seven female slaves. He kicked the Greek in the back violently two or three times, but otherwise ignored his presence. The subtle Greek departed. Under his low brow he devised this revenge. He wrote a letter to the sultan. "We'll see about this," said the sul tan. "Mesrour, off with Ben Ali's head and bring me his seven nice wives." ' Mesrour returned in half an hour, the 6even slaves, of whom four were white, trailing after him. "Ben Ali is dead," he said. Mesrour lied. Ben Ali, by bribes, bad secured his escape and, disguised as a bale of tobacco, was stored away in a hold of a vessel bound for New York. He is in New York now to prove that this tale is no lie. He cobbles shoes. At times he drinks strong spirits. Then he curses the com mander of the faithful and Alcibiades. the low-browcd Creek. The sultan is a Mohammedan, and him Ben Ali curses; the Greek is a Christian and is cursed of Ben AIL MEXICAN TRAIN ROBBERS. Dlas -Set a Thief to Catch a. Thjef a Soon pop Kid of Them. Apropos of the recent train robberies in this country, a western railroad man suggests to the New Orleans Times-Democrat that we should adopt the Mexican plan of dealing with them, which proved so effective there. Mexico offers great advantage over this country for train robbing, - It is thinly settled; the land is out up with mountains, offering hiding places for . the robbers and a safe retreat; its peo ple are not so advanced in civilization as ours, and there is a much larger dancerous element, ex-bandita and revolutionists, to whom train robbing would come as a natural trade. The railroads, moreover., are. a new ipptitU; tion, and it was natural to suppose that train robberies would be numer ous. During the first extension of our railroad system into Mexico they were so frequent that a passenger thought himself lucky to get from the Rio Grande to Mexico without several stoppages from these "knights of the road." Detectives, bloodhounds and other means of suppressing the evil were tried, but with little more Buccess than in this country, when President Diaz, on the old theory of "set a thief to catch a thief," hit upon the happy idea of utilizing the bandits and railroad robbers to protect the roads by organizing them into a police force known as the rurales, or rural guards. He had some of the men who were suspeotod of this business sum' moncd beforo him and offered them an opportunity of entering the govern ment service as mounted police, and told them that if they did so he would furnish them with fine uniforms, im proved firearms and the best horses that could be bought, but if they did not be would have the soldiers hunt them down, . They knew that Diaz was a man of his word, and - they- en tered the government service, and, being daredevils, as ' far as courage is concerned, and thoroughly acquainted with ' the ways and methods of the train robbers, to whom they showed no mercy, they very soon suppressed these j robberies. When a train was held up ;:the rurales,' who knew every moun tain recess, never stopped until they had hunted down the last robber. The plan worked splendidly, and there is to-day less interruption to railroads in Mexico than in this country, although the chances for robbery are so much better there, TO flGHT FOB CUBA. Company Being Organised In Boise City . ' for That Purpose. It is learned that a movement is on foot here for the organization of company of volunteers to assist the Cubans, says the Boise Statesman. Ai it is necessary to avoid a collision with the government over the neutral ity laws, it is essential to conduct any such enlistment with great Becrecy It is not known who is at the head o! the movement. ' A prominent man in Boise who has an enviable record for courage, gained during frontier ex periences in the early days, has stated that he intended to go with the party In this connection it may be stated that a non-commissioned officer at Boise barracks, whose term is about to expire, has recently received a letter from the Cuban junta in New York makiner him an offer to enlist. ' He states that the junta has evidently se cured a list of all those in the army whose terms of service are about at an end and who have such records as to commend them to the revolutionists, Efforts are being made to induce these men to enter the service of the Cubans, A Fine Edition. The Cascade Locks edition of the Oreconian is at hand. It is a 32-page edition, and is replete with statistical information concerning Oregon. A full page is devoted to The Dalies, in which are illustrations of the Wasco county court house, St. Mary's acade my, the Vogt block, A. M. Williams & Co's store, French & Co's bank: building and Pease & May's store, also pictures of ex-Governor Moody, Judge Bradshaw, Judge Mays, S, L, Brooks and D. M. French, The de scriptive article concerning The Dalles and vicinity Is well written and is re plete with information concernlngathe city and country tributary to it. The edition throughout is a credit to the Oregonian and is a splendid advertise ment for the state. r Soothing and not irrltatlng,strength ening and not weakening, small but ffectlve such are the qualities of De Witt's Little Eirly Risers, the famous little pilL Suipe & Kinersly Drug Co. RKSOUKCKS Or THE OALI.ES. It is One of the Largrst Shipping Point no the Paeille Coaxt. The Ca,-cadn Lock edition of the O egonian gives some interesting figures concerning iho resources of The Dalles and the amount of busir.es transacted here, from which i!io fol lowing are taken. Tho litpires aro not absolutely accurate, being rather an underestimate in referi-nco to many commodities, though theyservetopive an idea of the immense business doue in this city, and its importance as a shipping point: While the exact figures aro not at tainable, a conservative estimate of the number of c:ittlo shipped from this point each year shows that th3 grar.d total reaches the handsome sum of 20( carloads, or about 5500head. To thi should be added 220 carioads of sheep and 60 of hogs. It is' estirnite:l thtt the cattle and sheep shipped annually from the country tributary to The Dalles will amount to 2i,(W0 of the former, and more than 200,OCO of the latter. It is hard to estimato the atnouut of woo) grown in this country, f r that from Morrow, Grant and Crook coun ties finds market at Tha Dallp", Wasco's county sent, : id contiJcrub'.e comes from Klickitat c.-iunty, Wsh., on the north. It is probably in the ueighborhood of 2,000,000 pound. The D lies i? the treatost wool shipping point in the United States; that is, there is more wool gathered here from first hands. The amounts will run from 4,500,000 to 8,0O0,CO0 pounds, or 03 an average about 300J tons. The wheat shipments from The Dalles is no small item. Besides all the wheat raised in Wasco county, a considerable amount is brought from Sherman and Klickitat counties. Last year's shipments amounted to over 600,000 bushels. As we have shown, the wool and salmon industries yield annually from $750,000 to $1,000,000. The stock ship ments?, which include, of course, the country south of us and not in this ciunty, will amount to 8500,000 more, and our wheat will swell this to a grand total of $2,500,000. Yet, notwithstand ing the vast total, the fact is plain tha in a few year9 one other ipflustry, at present in its infancy, but a growing giant, will yield a revenue far greater than that from all other sources com bined. That is the fruit industry. Wasco county, although only a few yearj ago not ranked as a fruit jro. ducer, stands today confessedly the best fruit county in the state. The climate and rainfall are perfect for the growing of winter apple?, and thi frrtt will eventually place her in the frjnt rank financially. if of Over Frty xsars. An Old and Well-Tried Rem edy. Mrs. Wmstow's Soothing Syrup has been used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teething, with perfect 9uccss It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy lor oiarrnoea. pleasant to the taste, bold by drug gists in every part ot the wond, Twentv-five oents a bottle. Its valu 19 uncalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind. . Eastern Oregon Good Knonffh. Messrs. Peery Rerd,Rennick Jesse anl Ben Jones, of Crook county, who left here last month with 300 head of ctttle for Omaha, returned on Sunday morning 'd train. They not their cattle through in (tooj condition, and found a roidy salo for theTi within three hours after they were unloaded. Cat tie of all kieds were in good demand la Omaha, and the prices obtained t'lere paid them well for shipping. They say, while business appears to be good in the cities in Nebraska, the farmers are by no means prosperous. and the masses of the people are in straightened circumstances. The peo pie here 1 o are complaining of hard timrs, they say,do n it realize the mean i-ig cf the term,. Thousands of eople in and about Omaha aro living fron hand to mouto, aiv unable to get work, and have no visible means of support. While there i9 an apparen abundance cf everything, an immei.se crop ha.ing been harvested, still there is want and poverty on every band. All these gentlemen are satisfied that Eastern Oregon is good enough for them, and they are satisfied to cull home. CONDITION OF TRADE. The Past Week Ha Been Dull Through out the Nation. Bradstreet's report review of th condition of trade for the week says Wholesale trade continues of smaller volume than expected, practically the uly activity in the wholesale line. jeing in grooerles, candles, fruit- ind nutt. Tbe weather interferec .vitn seasonable business which ai nany centers is smaller than in pre seeding years, in that a larger propor tion of purchases are of a cheap gradt of goods. The downward tendency o prices pointed out a fortnight ago it continued. This includes quotation? for hides, which caused boot and shoe job dealers to restrict purchases, an ticipating cuts in prices " for shors steel rails, steel billets and Bessemer pig-iron. Cotton, too is lower on con fidence of a larger crop tha i expected; 'For Charity Saffereth Long." Mrs. Laara C. Phoenix, Milwaukee, Wis. "Matron mf m JteneeoCeMC Hmm and knowing the good Dr. Miles Nervine has dona me, my wish to help others, over comes my dislike for the publicity, this letter may give me. in Nov. and Dec. 1893, IM tmmuitem hud th "XcSrijme." and I was one of the first. Besoming duty too soon, witt the care of ao many sick, I did not regain my health, and in a month Jf (teeaifte ea debilitated mud nerrsws froin sleeplessness sod the &aJt4 made on nj vitality, that it was a question if I could go on. A' dear friend advised me to try pr Mife? Jteert Servinc I took a bottles and am happy to say. I am to tiotter health than nvav. I still continue JB omasfenof km, mm m tcmrv food, as my work Is very trying A letter ad dressed to Milwaukee, Wis, will reach me." Jane C IBM. . Has. Laura O. Phoekix. Dr. Miles Nervine a sold on a positive Karantee that the first bottle will benefit, idrnggists sell it at tl. 6 bottles for S5, or It will be sent, prepaid, on receipt of price by the Dr. Miles Medical Co, Mkhart, ind. Dr. Miles' Nervine Restores Health prints cloths, as the products of that staple, and bocausa of the large stock ... f.. ... ., of the same, bt-.-ady or practically un- . J 1 f , ! changed quotations are reported for j pork, lard, conee ana sugar. There were 350 business failures re ported throughout the United Suites this week. 22 fewer than last week, and 26 less than in the corresponding week one year ago. As compared with the liko week in 1894, this week's total shows a g;iin of 50, ami with the cor-j responding week in 1S93, the gain is six. Iu tbe third week of December, 1892, there were CI fewer failures than ' this week. ! wumtn nu iitnuuu, What One of the l air Sex Remembered oi the World-Famous Battle. "In my early days I knew a lady who happened to be in Urussels that memor able June," said Mrs. Newton Cross land to the New York Commercial Ad vertiser man. "She was then newly married and only twenty-three years of age. So little certain of victory did the English on the spot feel that her hus band insisted on her dressing like a Normandy peasant, thinking such a costume would be a protection "Vividly have I hoard her describe the parting she witnessed at the door of the hotel where she was staying and the despair of wives who were left be hind wives soon to be widows "Very graphically, too, did she de scribe the next day's events, ' when women many of whom, too agitated to change their attire, were still ele gantly dressed made their way some how to the field of battle, returning in the army wngons, sup-iortin? the heads of the wounded on their knees, bathing their brows and Mnding up their wounds, while a steady rain poured down on the faces begrimed by powder, which yet allowed their pallor to be seen. "I once met at a dinner the widow of an officer I forget the name whe fought at Waterloo, and the lady narrated her experience of the 'after battle' scene. For some reason she had to cross the field of Waterloo, which was still strewn with the dead, and for this purpose she was blindfolded and placed on horseback, the teed being led by a trooper. "She held a handkerchief to her nose steeped, I think she said, with vinegar and not until she had reached ar; acclivity nearly a mile from the scene of carnage was the ban.laju removed from her eyes. Then she looked back The field of Waterloo appeared like a field of tombstones, for the bodies were all stripped of clothing and sbont white in the sunsliiuo like stones. The camp-foil owiujr ghonls bar1 done their work effectually." WITHOUT A NAVY. Kingdom of nelglim Has a Water Front, But No Ships of War. No ii. citation has been extended to, the uaval authorities of one neighbor ing country to participate in the festiv ities at the opening of the ship canai between the North sea and the Baltic, which are to attract the armed ships of various European and American governments. That country, says the New York Sun, ia Belgium, and it is peculiar amon, European countries haying a water front from 4 he fact that it has no navy. This is the more remarkable when it is considered that Belgium includes within its borders, cuio of the oldest harbors in Europe Antwerp which, at the aonith of its commercial success, had as many as 3,000 ships. The com merce of Antwerp is still considerable, and a fair share of it is. done with the United States. When the war of 1S30 culminated in the independence of Belgium from the rule pf i th? Netherlands, the two Gauntries were so divided that Holland had the larger share of the seacoast line, and Belgium had a larger measure of the inland country. Holland re tained all the colonial possessions ft the two countries, and, in order to keep up connection with them and protect them from hostile assaults, the navy was maintained by Holland. Belgium, having no foreign colonies to protect, was under no obligations to maintain a navy. Holland has now A considerable navy, having 100 ships and 7.500 sailors., but Belgium is able to get along without any navy at all, though the Belgium army, on a peace footing, is 2,000 men stronger than the Butch army, and, on a war footing, has 100,000 men more. FOR AN UNSPOKEN SPEECH. Tha Irish Patriot Jailed for Words He Didn't ay. A member of the Land league was sent from Dublin to a certain district to get up a meeting and make a speech, says a foreign exchange. Cm reaching the town where the meeting was to be held, the speech- maker met a friend, and, both being genial feUows, they retired to a public house and had something, l lien tney began talking over old-time rem iniscences, and the first thing the land leaguer knew was that the attendant had come in to light the lamp. "Great eoodness! ho said, "1 was sent down from Dublin to get up a meeting here, and now it is too late." i'Oh, well, it doesn't matter," said the Other. "Yes. but it does matter," said the organiser, "I have to report to my su perior that tbe meeting was held." "Oh. that's all right," said his friend. "Here, yon write out a speech and 1 will send It to the local papers, who will print it just as if the meeting was held, then the folks in UuDlin won't Know the difference." This.- was quickly dono. and the speech that was never delivered ap peared the next day in the papers. The fun of the thing comes in over the fact that the leaguer was arrested and was sentenced to four months in jail for a speech thathencver delivered, ai a, meeting that was never held UtNtKOUb IU LESS EPS. The Sues Canal Company- Provision for the Aged Engineer and His Family. It is truly characterretieof the warm hearted and -forgiving nature of the average Frenchman, says the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, that not a word of protest should have been raised any where against the grant by the Suez Canal company of an annual allowance of about twenty-four thousand dollars to the De Lesseps family, even those whose entire fortunes had been swal lowed up in the disastrous Panama enr terprise expressing their satisfaction at the measures thus adopted to pre serve their illustrious compatriot from Want, Notwithstanding all reports to the contrary, the De Lesseps had actually been reduced to penury, and their situation was most precarious. Not only all the shares which Ferdi nand de Lesseps possessed in the Suez Canal company, but even his fees as director, the annuity assigned to him personally by the company, and all the money he had been able to lay aside, were attached by the liquidators of the Panama bankruptcy. The only re sources that remained at the disposal of the countess were the house which she owned in the Avenue Montaigne and the Chateau de la Chesnaye, both of which were more a source of ex pense than of economy, and were mortgaged up to the very hilt besides, ith the object of averting, all dan ger of seizure by the creditors of the count the allowance just granted by the Suez company has been made in favor of the countess and of the thir teen children of the count. The two eldest of these are Charles and Victor, who are the sons of his first wife. Of the eleven children of the present Countess de Lesseps three are serving in the army, one is married to that Count de Gontaut-Biron whose fin an-. cial difficulties were a themo of much discussion in the Parisian press two years ago, aud the remainder are still dependent oq their father and mother for care and maintenance. Meanwhile the grand old Frenchman, now in his eighty-eighth year, passes bis exist- ence in a sort of semi-somnolent con- . . , , . , , , , , dition in the arm chair, which he only leaves fop his He can no longer walk, he has become stone deaf, and when he is not gazing in silence at his children he reads newspapers, care being taken to select those which con- tain no uncomplimentary references to I his name. Having lost ell notion of time, those placed before hiin are most ly of dates four.and five years ago. when he was still in the heyday of his glory, and when the press, still richly subsidized by the Panama managers, was never weary of referring to him as "the greatest and most illustrious of all Frenchmen." To this day no one, not even the countess, can say with any degree of certitude whether he has any knowledge or even inkling of the misfortunes that have overtaken himself and his son Charles. At any rate, he has given no evidence thereof, and there is a gen eral disposition to hope that his once grand intellect passed into its present somnolent state in such a manner as to have spared him any such sorrow. WEBSTER'S LEGAL EARNINGS. A Little Leather-Covered Book That Gives His Receipt. One of our correspondents has been so lucky as to fall in with a little leather-covered book, like those of bank depositors, which contains Dan iel Webster's autograph record of his legal receipts. This chronicle, says the New York Evening Post, fills twenty-eight pages and extends a little more than from 1833 to 1836, inclusive. The first entry, dated September in the .former year, is of S-0, and the second is of 20, for retainers on the New Hampshire circuit. The first fee of 81,000 was paid in May, 1834, by a Mrs. Badger. Services regarding Cil ley's will commanded $800. The total amount for the first year was footed up as $13,140, with the remark: "Septem ber 3, 1834, thus done and concluded." A similar summing up appears at the close of each other year. The second total is S15.1S3.74; the third is 831,793. The first entry of $3,000 was in 1835, March 7; the first of 83,000 December 7 in the same year. The last payment was in respect to Florida land. The largest single honorarium was 87,500. In February of the fourth year $5,000 is set down as bestowed in a case of Trin ity church (New York). In turning over this record leading metropolitan and even provincial lawyers are astonished that Webster, already twenty years in Boston, so undervalued his services. He learned better at last. When Rob ert C. Winthrop looked up the earliest date he said: "That's just the time I was ending my studies in Webster's office," and the chirograph led him to add that Webster never wrote a firm hand. Nobody has surveyed the relic with more interest than Dr. O. W. nolmes. Among other things he said 4 Had the influx been ten-fold, Web ster's purse would have remained empty still. Had its capacity received like the sea, whatever entered there vtould have runoff like water from tha back of a duck." Latest Style Lowest Profits : In Mens and Boys : Clothing, Dry Goods KENS FUF.MSH'UGS. : HONEST VALUES IN : : Boots and Slioes c. F. STEPHENS 134 Second Street. Next rtoor to the Dalle National Rank i A Nl'A' w UNDERTAKING 5k establishment 'eairi; Prinz & Nitschke DUUU HI FURNITURE AND CARPETS Ve have Med to our bukineM a compute Under taking K$tt.b shment, and at w are la no wtjr eoooected with tbe UtJarUera" Troit, our tree will be low accordiurly. -TO TBI GIVES Th. Cioxfi of Two ' -reo toenta Routt VIA SPOKANE EISKEAPOLIS S.PATI VIA" I NVoR OtfAEA Al D Low Rates to All Eastern Citiei OCKAN STEAMERS leave Ave days lor Portland every m FRANCISCO. CAL. For full details call on the O. R. & N. Agent it THE DALLES, or address K. MrNElLX, President ana Manager. W. H. HTTRLBTJRT. Gen. Pass. Aift.. Portland, Oregon New O. K. a M. Schedule. Train No. 1 arrives at Tho Dalles 1:45 a. M.. and leaves 4:50 A. M. - Train No. 2 arrives at The Ealles 10:15 P. v.. and leaves 10:20 P. H. Train No. 8 arrives at The Dalles 11:50 a. M.. and west-bound train No. 7 leaves at 1 P. si. Train 23 and 24 will carry paseD(r rs between The Dalles and Umatilla,, eavina- The Dalles at 1 r. M. daily rEd j-rivin? at The Dalles at 1 P. M. daily. tonnectiner with train Nob. 8 and. 7 Yqm Portland. E. E. LYTLE, Agent. Washington Real Estate.... A number of choice trrcts of AgTicnliural Land, bolh in pro -ed and unimproved, for s.'Ie on easy terms: in Yakima county. ...Every Pieci: is a Bargain... B rae o( the trar will be be tr-Tlfd, fir cattle or sheep. . . Address, J. 7T. WHTERS, Zi'Ia. Yak'ma County, Wash. 8 obodrneedaaveireuraira. oetur.miiea aln Jrlilo xroni uxuaa'1A w. --- nothing butthe GENUINE Vhen yes cars " f g.3 - ' Qjt AfDILfiND COMpLtfE l!N; TSu LL KINDS CP rUEL AT. PRICES FROM TJ 75.00 Mf ft r i era riAM . M 'X X 13 NOST Cr - cr Lowes Kn a r mm EMGLISMUSINESS .Vliuba1 '.C. . " SjV iimmm, mm PORTLAND. BUSINESS BRANCHES. . BOOKKEEPING, SHORTHAND, TELEGRAPHY. BOARDING DEPARTMENT'0 LAMES yp olumbia Packing CORNER THIRD BEEF, VEAL, Mil ITJN, PORK AND LARD. Cured and sati-a;e3 of ORDERS DEUYEO TO ANY PART OF THE CITY . - lIIOiK 31 Z F. MOODY ep' Commission aid Forwarding Merchant 391. 393 KND 395 SECOND STREGT. (Adjoining Railroad .Derot.) Consignments Solicited Prom t attention will by pill to thosa THE CELEBRATED Columbia mwr AUGUST BUCHLER, Prop. This well-known brewery is now turning out the best Beer ami Porter east of the Cascades. The latest appliances for tho manufacture of good healthful Beer have been introduced, and only the first-class article will be East-Second Street The Dalles, : Oregon. You will And one ooupon inside each two ounce bac and two coupon lmldo each four ounce bag-ofBhtckweira Durham. Buy a bag of this celebrated tobaeoo and read the ooupon which (Ives a list of valuable prosenu and how to get them. v 4 iiLrrTP AHjSC.f' p:c - - ', nv rs ;: . , m. m wmmA tUi EkaaskJ Vtt w I .f." OREGON Full English Course. french and german.' e-vK-v ii Uonipaiw AND WASHINGTON" Dried Meats Al C Kinds : : who rtkvor'ma with thalr patronage rewery placed on the market " ' " 1 - - ' V- - K - V : - ; - r