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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (June 15, 1897)
Tk Dalles Daily Chronicle, f THE DAI.l.KS, Ail vertUlnjj Unlet. V Hh'A One Inch nr le In Dally ?l V Over two luehei uud under four inches 1 o Over four litche ami under twelve ltiehe T" Over twelve inohfc .' DAILY AND WKKKLY One inch or les. per inch. .. 50 Over one luuh and under four Inches - C" Over (nur inches and under twelve inches 1 Over twelve inches . ... .. I W Kits ON A l, MENTION Mrs. G. C. Bhikeley is spending si few days in Portland. Mnrrici'fc nnd Fiuquhnr McKsie of An-1 telopt; arrived in the city hist iiieht. J. B. Mnllny, deputy inspector of in ternal revenue, is up from Portland. Mrs. J. F. Chase and family returned last niu'ht from an outing at Hood Uiver. Miss Daisy Allaway came up from Euuene Saturday, to spend her vacation at hoiu-. Messrs. Carey Jenkins and Walter Van Duyn returned last night from Hood Ittver. Misses Allie Rowland and Cad Booth returned yesterday irom viiitinc Miss Fulton at Deschutes. Mr. T. 5. Hamilton, county commis sioner of Crook county, and "one of its leaning stockmen, is in the city. t Mrs. E M. Wilson was a passenger on the morniuL tram, going to Portland to attend the annual meeting of the Ore gon Pioneers. Mrs. Inez Filloon and Mr. C. E. Dawson went to Goldendnie this morn ing to. if pos-ible, organize a Circle of the Woodmen's order. Mr. Clarv, bank examiner, who has had charge rt The Dalles National hank for some time, turned the control of the same over to Receiver H. S. Wilson yes terday, and left for Portland this morning. Thin, Pale Child n One S4itisfuCtion in giving" Scott's Emulsion to children is they never object to it. The fact is, they soon become fond of it. Another satisfaction is because it will make them plump, and give them growth and prosperity. It should be given to all children who are too thin, or too pale. It does not make them over-fat. but plump. It strengthens the digestive organs and the nerves, and fur nishes material for rich blood Vc have a book telling you mere on the subject. Sent free for the asking. SCOTT 4c BOWSE, New York OLD-TIME Member SOUTHERN SPORT. WOMAN The Views of AS A MAHOUT. Driver of One nf th' Elephant. ' She can do her best work in the world by turning her own talents to account to smooth the path of a man whom she can sway and who has all the possibili ties before him. So when the woman does her utmost to use her brain in his interest, to attend to all tiresome details, o a. to leave him as free as possible from petty cares and worries. Then the man can concentrate the v.iiole of his energy in his work, and the woman's ambition i vicariously patisfied. She watches the friend, brother and husband, and feels, with a half-amused complacency, that but for her his end would never have leen attained. And this eternal watching and criticism develops in woman a greater power of knowing what men will do in particular circumstances. She has seen so often before that par ticular circumstances have particular efi. t in determining the actions of .the vorkrs. In the stress and hurry of the fight the man is not conscious which way the action is tending. He is absorbed in doing the duty immediate ly before him. The womun looking on coolly can say to him: "See, this line of conduet must lead to this and this fiOneequence; you have only to take ad vantage of it and your success will be assured." f It is therefore because woman is es sentially a looker-on that she is so in valuable as an adviser to man. To runny a great man the advice of an Egeria, even an Egeria of an obviously inferior intellectual caliber to himself, almost essential. She can watch and weigh the motives of his adversaries, she can calculate the probable effect of his own actions, and still more of his words, she can criticise his past decisions and indicate the best chance of success in the future. In fact, to be a v.oninr. i to to b a mahout a driver of elephants. The goad with which she steers The ani mal & iu her hand, but yet she knows, ns according to Mr. Isudyard Kipling every mahout knows, thut some day, sooner or later, the great bea.st will got beyond her control and may turn on hor with a terrible punishment for the insult of having kept him in subjection. Ear the ultimate force in life, physical strength, is against the woman as it is against the mahout. London Specta tor. I Hunting Club-, on Whom Illfr Fiue Wore Impo-ieil. Among the sports of olden times the hunting clubs were prominent eery- i where, says the Atlanta Constitution. In Camden county one of the mos' fa- i mot: of clubhouses in this country was built nt Bear Hammock and kept under the supervision of Gen. John Floyd. It 1 was there that the Camden Comity j Hunting club organized in 132. held its ; meetings, made its rules and imposed 1 its fines. The charter members of the c'ub were Charles II. Floyd. Richard Floyd, . Henry Floyd John Floyd. Ben Hopkins, j J. II. Uilworth, James Holzendorf, John Holzendorf, Alexander Holzendorf, P. M. Nightingale, William Berrie and J Elenrv du Bignon. Several members joined afterward. The club dress was ! i scarlet jacket and black pantaloons ; and a fine of 500 copper caps was iui- ' posed on Alexnder Hok'.endorf at cne meeting tor not having on the rerula- . tion dress. No member was to be ab- sent from the meetings unless by good j excuse, and James Holzendorf was fined l.OtX) copper cap for one absence, j After the day's hunt, sometimes with i the luck of 10 deer, an elegant dinner ; was served before dispersing. The 10th rule read: "Game is con- j ;idered by the club to be deer, bear, hogs, cows, bulls, wildcats and turkeys.'' ; Wild cattle and hogs abounded in he j woods in those days, the latter lh ing ' to an old age. which was told bv ihe . tusks, loner. sometimes eight, to ten inches PASSING Or THE FAKE AUCTION. One Kind of llusine. That 1 Happily anil l'frniunently Stupt-ucleil. "Where has the jewelry auctioneer rone? Up to three years aero there were at bnst a dozen places on the South side where a gaudy display of watches, diamonds and revolvers in Hie windows called attention to a scarce ly less loud auctioneer within. He stood on an flevation Iwhind the counter; he had "cappers" lxth inside and outside the place, and his sonorous tones weie ringing all the time. He watched the stream of passers-by on the street nnd "backed the play" of the capjers. II" 'old all manner of watches, and he al ways "got the best of it." As a rule, says the Chicago Post, these salesmen were excellent auctioneers and knew all the wiles of their crafr. lTp to two years ago some of rle-m were still running, but they gradual! v faded out. and now there is u-t one. with the trilling exception of a Satur day night fling in West Madison street They must do a good business, selling quantities of material at an excellej t price. But there was an end of aK tilings in their line and the jewelry auc tion has vanished. INSECTS. M. in: t'Isi.K tli.-cwered an animal cule that could run six Inches in a sec ond, anil calculated that it must move its legs no less than l.'JOO times in that brief period. Tin millers are greatly annoyed by worms which appear in the Hour from time to time nnd then mysteriously dis appear, without impairing the vnlue of the Hour. Lati!i:u.m: once cut oft' the antenna; of an ant. and its companions, evident ly compassionating its sufferings, an nointed the wounded parts with drops of lluid from their mouths. Tiir aphides are the milch kine of the ants, and are regularly approached' and milked by the latter. Ants have been known to keep the aphides in cap tivity, as cows are kept iu cities. GEMS OF THOUGHT. consists in virtue.- Don !ut Ilctrltiutlnii. "Bid you hear about Andy?'' asked ' one reminiscent westerner of another. "No? "Well. A ltd v made a strike of Nonn.iTV Quixote. Bkttkk not be nt noble. Tennyon. Mokkstv. prudence all than not be . wit and eivilitv NOTICE-SALE OF CITY LOTS. Notice is hereby given that by au thority of ordinance No. '292, which i the Common Council of Dalles sixty-live thousand dollar at Cripple Oitv April 10th, ISO", entitled, "Ah or Creek. As soon as he got the money , rlinnnce to nrovide for the sale of certain in his hands he went down to Denver I lots belonging to Dalles City," I will, on nnu tuew it in. Kuni. carils and fun. You know how it is. The morning that he woke up sober and found all his money gone he set out to punish himself by walking to Cripple Creek. He wouldn't borro-.r n cent. A fellow who was teniniiK fur me overtook him and offered "him a lift, but he wouldn't got in. a.nl he plugged along muttering to himself: Walk, curse ver, walk. Blow in your dust, will yer? Then walk, you fool. It'll do you good. No. ynu needn't stop at no spring. Ain't y.v.i drank enough? Go dry. you son of a ;-. I.'cht out and walk, von dr.rued jackass.' And he did." 0.H.& of true nobility.- Hi' CliarRiHl tlit- .lory. - . ' During the era of "reer.-truction" 1 in South Carolina one I'onpcy Smash, a coal-black negro, became a "trial j justice." It was not long before , tire the elements German Proverb. Chai'.actkk is not cut in marble, it is ' toward the adj'iinir.c room for consul not something solid and unalterable, i tation one of the lawyers interposed It is something living and changing, ! and said: "May it please you and mav become diseased as our bodies i vou have not charged the do. George Eliot. ( Whereupon Judge Pompey gathered Tin: face of a woman, whatever be the : himself up. and. with all possible dig force or extent of her mind, whatever ( nity. said: "(nn'men of dis jury, as be the importance of the object she s le fust time 1 have had you befo' pursues, is always an obstacle or a rea-1 rne. I eha'ge each one of you one dol ?on in the story "of her life. JInie. de ' lab ""d a half." stael. J bare Your Grain. Do vou want vour windows cleaned, Few realize that each squirrel de carpets taken up, beaten and re laid, or ! stroys $1.50 worth of cram annually, janitor work of any kind done by a i Wnkelee's Squirrel and Gopher Exterm- first-class man? If so, telephone Henry 1 ir.Jtor is the most effective and econom .Tnhnsnn nt. Parbina hnrW alinn I ICal 1)01-011 KnOWl). Saturday, the lolh dav of May, 1 597 , sell nt public auction, to the highest ' bidder, all the following lot? ana P'ns of lots in Gates nddition to Dalles Lity, Wasco count v, Oregon, to-wit : , Lots 9 and 10 jointly, in block 14; lots 17, S, 9 and 10, jointly in block 15: lots ,7, S, 9, nnd 10, jointly in block 21, known as butte; lots 10. 11 nnd 12, in, , nlock '27; lot 9 in block 'M ; lots 2, H, 4, '5, li, 7, S, 9, 10 and 11, in block 35 i lot" 2, ".. 4, S, 9. 1(1, 11 and 12, in block .'16; lots 3, 4. 5, 6, 7. S, 9. 10, 11 and ! 12, in block 37; lots 1. 2. 3, 4, 5. 6. S, ' 9, 10, 11 and 12, in block 42: lots 1. 2, 3, 4, f 9, 10 and 11. in block 43; lots 1.2, 3, "', 10, 11 and 12, in bloc 41, and lots , ! 1, 2. 3, 4, 5, 6, in block 4b. The reasonable value of sa . 'ots, for 1 less than which they will no i e sold, has been fixed i.r.d determine, ty the Common Council of Dalles City as fol-! lows, to-wit: Lots 9 and 10, in block 14. $150; lots I S. 9 nnd 10, jointly in block lo, s-jou; EMST T GIVES THE Choice of Transcontinental Routes -VI.V- Spokane Minneapolis St. Paxil Denver Omaha Kansas City Low Rates to all Eastern Cities OCEAN STEAMKRS LeiiTe I'ortlaDd Every Fire Days fur Pompey had a case before him. When g y aiu 10f jointly in the jury arose nnd began moving J ijO; lot 10, in block 27, ?225 ; r consul- , block 27, 225; lot 12. in blocK terposed 1 lot 9. in block 34, $100; lots 2, r honor. (9, 10 and 11, in block 35, each respect iurv." ivelv $100; lots 6 nnd 7. in block 35, block 21. SAJN Jb'HAlNUlSCO. GAT. lot 11, in ; 27, $300 ; j Fnr fuu ti0tnll cnll on O. K i Cn. s Accit 3, 4, O, S, Tho Dalle, or mldress W, H. HUKLBUKT, Gen. I'nss. Aet l'ortland, Oregon E. M'NEIM. President aud Mima er 'Phone 119. We sell Hoe Ma vs. alO-tf Cake soap. Pease & J cents. Agent. For sale Price reduced to 30 by M. Z. Donnell, ao-2m Subscribe for The Chrokiclk. owj flbout Your job piTiNO? doing all kinds card to a "We have the facilities for of Job Printing, from a visitinc catalogue, and we are after all the work we can do. We not only desire '.o keep busy, but would prefer to be rushed. Come in and compare our prices with that of any one, and compare quality of work. Let have vour next order. U; s? l?roi)i;le publistyi9$ $o. ennb reaneetivelv 125 : lots 2, 3, 4, S, 9, I ! 10 nnd 11, in block 36, each respectively ( j $1 00 ; lot 12. iu block 30, $125 ; lots 3, 4, Tlle New Tltlle Card 1 5, S, 9, 10 and 11, in block 37, each re- ..... .. , , , jsnectivelv .$100; lots fl, 7 and 12, hi: Lnder the new time card, which goes l block 37, each respectively $125; ; into effect tomorrow, trains will move as Hots 2. 3, 10 cud 11. in block ! follows : 41, wch . respectively $100; lots 1, y 4 t Spokane and Great North 7 and 12, in block 41, each respectively, . ' .un 1125; lots 3. 4. 5, S, 9, 10 and 11. in arrives at 6 p. in., leaves at0:0op.m. block 42, each respectively $100; lot c , No. 2, to Pendleton, Baker City and ! G and 12, in block 42, each respectively Union Pacific, arrives 1:15 a. ni., de- $125; lots 2 3,4, 5 9, 10 and 11, in j t T .20 ! block 43, each respectively 100; lotl.M in block 43, $125; lots 2, 3, 4 and 5, in , 3-from Spokane and Great North- i . . . ... 1 . . . . nr . . 1 ! n .tin .1 . j . n n- mock 4b, each respecti 'eiy fiuu; jois l em, arrives o:ou, ueparts a:aa a. m. and fi, in block 40, each respectively 1, from Baker City and Union Pa- x , -i i l -n i u ' citic, arrives 1 :20, departs 1 :25 a. m. Each of these lots will be sold upon ' . . ,' , the lot respectively, nnd noue of them1 8' - ami -4. moving east of The will be sold for a leas sum than the value Dalles, will carry passengers. No. 23 ; thereoi, as aoove stated. arrives at 0:30 p. m., departe 12:45 One-fourth of the price bid on any of , i i. ii t. ; ) ; .... .1... I P ill' I saiu lots snail ue pain in ciieu ai me 1 time of sale, and the remainder in three 1 equal payments on or before, one, two leaving here 0 :05 and three years irom tne date ot suiu j sale, with interest on such deferred pay-1 ments at the rate of 10 per cent per i annum, payable annually; provided' EAST and SOUTH via that the pavment may be made in full j at any time at the option of the pur- j fjlj gjfja R0Ute The said sale will becin on the loth rnv nf AInv. 1S97. at. tho hour of ' i o'slock n. m. of said day, and will con tinue from time to time until all of said lots shall be sold. Passengers for Heppner will take train p. m. OF THK- Dated this 13th day of April, 1897. GlUIEKT W. PlIKU'S, Recorder of Dalles Citv. For Sule. Lots 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 25. Apply tO Wj. iMIACEELroUU. THE NEW YORK WORLD THRICE-fl-WEEK EDITION. J 18 I'aces a Week. 156 1'aiiern a Year Southern Pacific Comp'y. Train leave and are duo to arrive at Portland. i-.. (HI r I f OVERLAND EX-) ' 1 press, Sulem, Kojio- ' , I I burg, Anhlaiiu, Sue-1 J nunento, Ogdeu.Sun i , Jl-t1 KranciNCO, ilojave, ('"J.rx A. M. Los AHKele!i,EI I'abn, i I ew orlemis una I jlEiirit J ,.., . , (l'.ofburg Knd way ntu t.JO A. 31. tlmj!) ' f Via Wnodburn fori iiniit- ' I Mt.Anpel, riilvLTton, i Sundiiv, ' vuc,oiriuBin:muiiu VNutrou M.;i0 P.M I).lilr except Suudayj. f7::) A. 31. mid Corviilltii stutloux I li Hi 1' M iMcMinnvUle M"" i'M- hvu.v stations way f 3:M l'-M, and t S:i5P.M I Dally. tDuuy, except bunaay. DIKING CARS ON OGDEN KOL'TE. C. W. PHELPS & CO, -DEALEIlt! IX- 1IU Oiih (iri'iit Trouble. An old bedridden ftshennan at a fashionable watering place was fre quently visited during his la.st illness by a kind-hearted clergyman, who wore one of those elohe-flttintr cler ical vest with buttons behind. The clergyman saw tho neur ap proach of death one day in the old man's face, and asked if his mind wi s jKirfeetlv at easj. "Oo ay, I'm a' rieh," came the fenble reply. "Vou are sure there is nothing troubling vou? Do not lc afraid to toll me." Tit old man .seemed to hesitato, and nt length, with a faint return of itni ination, said: "Weel, there's just ae thing that troubles me, but I dinnalike itt) speak o't." "Believe n.e, I am mfwt anxious to comfort you," re)lied the clergyman. "TeJl me what it is that troubles and perplexes you," j "Weel, sir, U'k just like thin," Mild the . old man, eagerly. "J eanna for tin life o' me mak' oot h x ye manaue Uu rot intu that westcoat " -Tit-7iit. ! fianiblliiK in India. ' J Amongst the Hindoo throughout the whole of India there is a holiday celebration in honor of I.ak.sluni, The goddess of wealth and good fortune, . whereon gambling i universally re garded as a religious duty. It is known j as the fentivnl of lamps, and on that da all eJusse indulge in games of chance with shellh. coins, curds, dice, etc., and the future of the individual, whether ! good or bad, is looked upon as a forecu.st of hih wealth or poverty during the en I suing year. Tho wunin tnke n most in teiifce interest in the proceedings nnd, if ' fortunate, expend their winnings in I . the purchase of sv.eet-meath nnd fruit;, as gifts to all their friends und rela tions, toys for the small children und fireworks for the boys. At Benares, their sacred city, as night approaches, , small earthen lamps, fed with oil, are kindled, making the outlines of every mansion, palnec, temple and minaret I visible. All vessels iu the rhcr are also i illuminated; so that the whole city b one blue of light. . Agricultural Implements. Drapers Manufactured and Repaired. Pitts' Threshers, Powers and Extras. Pitts' Harrows and Cultivators. Celebrated Piano Header. Lubricating Oils, Etc. White Sewing Machine and Extras. It stands fi ret nraong '"weekly" papers in size, frequency of publication and freshness, varietj and reliability of con tents. It is practically a daily at the low price o a weekly; and its vaet 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 newB columns. It is splendidly illustrated, and among Its special features are a fine humor page, exhaustive market reports, all the latest fashions for women and a lone j series of stories by the greatest living American and English authors, I Conan Doyle, .Terome K. tlernma, j Stanley Wfyiimn, Mary K. WUkliiH Anthony Hope, llret iiarte, Itramler Matthew, Etc. We offer this unequaled newspaper and Ihe Dalles T wice-a-Week Chronicle to gether one year for .00. The regular price of the two papers is ?3.00. IULL31AN BUFFET SLEEl'EKS AND riECOND-CLASS SLEEPING CARS Attached to all Through Trains. IJ. S. PCHR.VK, President. H. 31. Beam,, L'aabier, EAST SECOND STREET, THE DALLES, OR 7VL Z. DONNELL, P$ESCSlPTIOfl DRUGGIST TOILET ARTICLES AND PERFUMERY. I Soap Foam excels all other washing ' 1 n .i... compounds. a2.3m Qpp. A. M. Williams'ifc Co., THE DALLES, OR. first National Bank. THE DALLES - - - OREGON A (.leueral Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to Sight Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly remitted on dar of collection. Sisht and Telegraphic Exchange sold on New York, San Francisco and Port land. DIKECTOKS D. P. Thomphon. Jno. 8. Scuenck. Ed. M. Williams, Gko. A. Likbk. H. M. Bkai.l. Direct connection at san Kraucitco with Occi dental aud Oriental and racific mail steamship Hues lor JAl'A.N and CHINA, sailing dates on a plication. Kates and tickets to Eastern jKj'nts ana tu rojM;. Al.-oJAl'AN, CHINA, HONOLl'Ll and Al'STUALIA, can be obtiiined (row J. II. KIEKLAND, Ticket Agent. Through Ticket Olhee, 131 Third street, where throuch tickets to all point;- in the tastern Htutes, Canada and Europe can be obtained at lowest rutes from J. 13. KIKKLAND, Ticket Agent. All above trains arrive at and depart iron Grand Ceutral Station, Fifth nnd Irving streets. YAMHILL DIVISION. Passenger leiot, foot of JeBcrson street. Leave lor OSWEGO, dally, except Fundajr.ai 1 1. "O.W I'. b 10 a.m. Arrive at (and ll:yo p. m. on Saturday only, and b W a. m. u:au p. m. on (sunnuyii omy;. and oailv at 7:10 and &:Su a n 4:15, 0;;5jand7:5.p. m., (and 10a. ni,- and I'ortland Qiilly at I0nd&;a)a m. 6:10 p. m. on Sundays only). nnd 1:50. 15 ana Leave for Sheridan, week days, stl:S0p.ro Arrive ut I'ortland, 1):30 a. in. li.i.n tnr A 1 1 I II- .... MiinftuV. MYdneadftS' afld r. n i viui i Fri'lay at 9: A I It LIE on Monday, Wednttdajand lay at 9: 10 a. m. Arrive at roriiauu, dav, Thursday and Saturday at 3:0o p. m. Except Sunday. "Except caturduy. It. KOEHLEIl, Manager. E. V ROGERS, Asst. G. K. i FasS' Dalles Mow and A 5 STAGE LINE. nteloK Harry Liebe, PRACTICAL Watchmake rtJeweler Alt work promptly attended to. and warranted. 174 VOGT BLOCK. Through by daylight via Grass Valley, Kent and Cross Hollows. DOUGLAS ALLKN, The Dalle' C. M. HHITKLA1V, Antelope. Stages leave The Dalles from rmntllla nt 7 a. in., iiIho Irom Antelope at . "''"JtionJ Monday, Wednesduy and Friday. 'd made it Antelope for Frlueville, M touci iiolatH beyond. Cioae connections wade a Dalles with railways, trains and boom. Stages from Antelope reach The iu lief ' lu dayn, Thursdays and Saturdays at l.X P- BATKS or FAISK. Dulles to Deschutes do Moro. do Gross Valley . do Kent do Cross Hollows. Antelope to Cross Hollows do Kent do Grass Valley do Moro do Dctchueeo do Dalles j 25 300 1 1 K 300 3 . 1 500