ill THE DALLES "WEEKLT CHRONICLE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1892 The l'eekly Chroniele. OFFICIAL PAPER OF WASCO COUNTY. . Entered at the Postoffioe at The Dalles, Oregon, a second-clasa matter. . . -V- " SUBSCRIPTION RATES. " ' BY MAIL (FOOTAGE PREPAID) IM ADVANCE. Weeklv.l year........... 1 SO " 6 months. 0 75 " ' 3 " 0 50 Doily, 1 year.-. .'. ... .... . .. .'. : 6 00 ::' o mouths.:.,:..'...'. soo ;." per. ." ' ;...;.... 050 'AddresBallconiniunieation'to"TnE cllROX; .JCLE,";Tho Dalles, Oregon. " V ..- ' SUN -INJ) RROTUKltr ..' ".it is- announced jfrom ;KewOrjeans ' that -Colored ineh ill be admitted fo ile..- Pixon'-Skelly prize - fight today. ' This is nn inuovatiaii, as no colored mun y has been admitted to the club before. ' i'A special gallery for them will be -pro-; 'vided. ' While every one is glad to see the colored man secure equtf) rights, with the white man,' and as Mr. Lincoln , put it, "bo the equal of thewhite man if he can," this privilege ut New Orleans can scarcely be considered an unselfish concession to universal equality on the part of the managers of the fight, ' It appears from the dispatch that a lot of colored sporting men with money 'to bet were headed for New Orleans, but hear- . ing that they would not bo admitted to the light were about to change their .minds and, remain at home. Really, it would seem as if the "man and brother" ' .had not gained very much by getting permission to bo present at the fist fight. There seems to be no foundation for "the story that representatives of the ' Chinese government have been to Waeh- ' ington within the last two weeks to en--. gage legal assistance to test the valadity of L the "-Chinese exclusion act in the : United States courts. The story is .dis credited at the Chinese .legation and the '. .state department. - Jt is hard to under stand how representatives of the Chinese .government could have been landed in ; '' this country except ' ou credentials .' through 'the state department and' a --permit from the treasury department. No permit has been issued. "The story probably had its origin in the visit of . the two Chinese citizens of San Fran-' cisco to Washington a short' time ago iu tli) interest of a eitc for a Chinese thea tre at the Columbus fair, details of which appeared in dispatches . Washington at the time. I--:-. The action of the Great Northern in notifying the .transcontinental .aBsociar tion of ..its intention to withdraw from that organization lias created considera ble stir among railroad men all over the country v. From reports received from several of the great cities it would seem that those in ,A REMARKABLE MINERAL A late issue of Iron, describing a min eral recently found in great abundance in this region, says: "Litho-carbon, which is a mineral somewhat resem bling asphalt, is the most remarkable 0:,; nnrtorotanH : mlner.l of ite class known. It iaclaim- " , ... ... . .-. ... the true .meaning of this action are unanimous in the opinion that it bodes no 'good or the association or for the othec transcontinental lines. The New York Herald predicts tiiat it means a dissolution of the association and proba bly great loss to the opponents pi Hill's road; The withdrawal will necessitate a reorganization pr abandonment of. tin- association. Not an official oT h trans continental line can be found in Chicago who believes the- association .cttuld.be. reorganized. '", They all contemplate withdrawinj: .their membership ami leaving the Southern' Pacific, to fight . il outialone" with its Pacifi Wail steam ship .subsidy, an almost hand to baud fiirht with California." Except for the western-' freight . there ib no -railroad association m the west with Btrengtli enough to enforce its decisions'. Accord' ing 'to railroad officials the time is not jet 'ripe for the establishment of new associations.. If the important meeting in Chicago today reconciles . existing rfifl'erences amonir. western lines rates will bo maintained, it is believed, until the enormous' tonnage now awaiting shipment ' is forwarded.: When the roaJs begin fighting for theeavingp the necessity lor a gooa association win uc come so apparent as to lead to the for mation of one like, that proposed by Judge Springer, each of the members to be bound by money penalty not to break tho rules, ed that it makes a perfect insulator, that as a paiut it will resist heat or gases of any kind ; - that it is capable of being rolled into a tissue free from odor, and practically; lndestructioioi when em ployed in the production of mackin toshes, canvas belting, waterproof tents', etc It possesses peculiar powers, ena tiling it to enter and fill the pores of iron and steel, rendering -these metals Tm pervious to acids, etc. It. is also said to make common., leather waterproof, and it can be applied to: wood-pulp for the transformation .'of that material. into what locks ami acts like ebony or born The saturation of a ship's , plates with hot litho-carbon frustrates the attacks of barnacles, and the plates will neither riist nor foul.' A portion of the' smoke stack of the steamer Dean Richmond where the heat, through the use of a I'lower, rises to 800 Fahr., was painted with litho-cnrbon 'several months- ago, tnd remains undisturbed and unblis tered, whilo other parts of "the vessel have necessarily been painted many times.. A piece of sheet-iron, covered with litho-carbon japan, is stated. to have been subjected to an actua' heat .f 415 Fahr., without crack or blister, and remained sortenaciuus that the iron conld be bent at any angle without dis turbing the glossy surface. For varnish ing railway and private carriages, paint ing iron "bridge?, roofs, steamships, ": .-T' ' . -... . ;.''.. C ""-"''' "'It maJc-e f me ' tired t People ask me is marriage a fail ure? ' Of course 't'aint ; s'poso I don't lenow my biz -what am I here for?" ' If tho women only keep;- healthy they keep in ?- uooa -j spirits and cupid is in demand.' Let every enfeebled woman know this- there's a remedy that'll -euro her, the proofs positive. - . , Here's the proof if - it doesn't do. yon good within; reasonable time, report the fact to. its makers and getv your money back 'without , & word but;.you won't dd'itl Tho remedy, is Dr. Pierce's Favor ite Prescription and it has proved itself tho right remedy in . nearly every case of fem3lo weakness. .-. It'Ss not a miracle. . It won't euro every thirig but it has done more to baild up enfeebled and broken-down' wo men than any other medicine known. The existing rivalry between Knnte Nelson, the nominee for governor of the Minnesota' republicans, and Igna tius .Donnelly, the' champion of., the peonies' nartv. results'from their old- time rivalry in the Minnesota state senate more - than a- dozen years ago. They, were continually at war on points of narwamentarv urocednie, and as Donnelly was even then' a recognized authority in that line, it nettled him to be outwitted, as be freauentlv was, by- the'-., keen-minded little ' Norwegian. Oncpohit raised by. Nelson against the Baconiart sage was so knotty that ii gave the lieutojiant-ROvernor a tnree davs' search of the books before he from could dccide it. ' His final decision wae against Donnelly, to the great amuse ment of the entire 6tate. . ' houses, etc., 'thi material acts. as an in sulator, arid-it is reported that it will neither crackVnor blister under any known -atmospheric temperature.. At .Treat heat litho-carbon will soften, but it will not take fire at any. point. If all that we Hear er this mineral be true, it will forni one of the most widely useful substances or its class known The New York World wants to know who is the most remarkable woman in this country. Erery: married man can answer that - question -withour-a mo- uibnt's hesitation. - Work is to begin on the great Boyer ditch, in Umatilla county, soon. The large grading outfit which has been em ployed on the irrigating ditch in Yakima county will be ,used. The company propose irrigating 10,000 acres of land in the Hudson bay country, .water being " taken from the Walla Walfa rivef at- a f ".point near the Newcomb bridge. From 4,000 to 5,000 acres of this land in the eastern end of Umatilla count' is now of desert character; hardly worth ten cents an acre;" but if irrigated will-be able to produce an abundance of cereals and fruits, and wili afford an opoortu : nity for creating numerou? pleasant Homes. The Nation will applaud Dr. Jenkins for bis action yesterday, in notifying the agents of the mercenary and venal Hamburg line that he had received no--tification that, although three steamers were sailing from Southampton, thev wero getting their provisions at Ham burg, and that, if such was the case, he should detain them at quarantine for at least ten days.'notwithstanding the fact oi ttieir not having sailed from an in fectcd port. A delicate point in patent law was il luminated recently by" Justice Cave, in IiOndon, in a suit brought by a manu facturer of souvenir spoons against a ri val. Each maker had ornamented his spoons witli a representation of West minster abbey, and the learned justice decided that there could be no infringe ment of patent if the abbey was repre sented or see n from different pointsof The peoples party of Ohio, in conven tion assembled, demands that the gov ernment devot3 1(500,000,000 for the im provement of public roads. This would seem to indicate that if the peoples party ever gets into power at Washing ton, a billion-dollar congress will be but a trifling affair. - This information is of no use to bach- elors, but' Mrs. Hannah Dober, mother of five little Tacoma Dobers, has in Tented. a machine that bathes, rinses, v drips, dries and spanks the entire Dober brood simultaneously, by the simple - turning of a crank. " Those talented campaign orators who are about to begin their career of devas- tation, might make a telling point by Announcing to their audiences whether the price of campaign oratory bas gone up or down, as a result of the high tariff. - . Western magistrates refused to marry a boy of 16 to a widow of 40 with thir teen -children, and they did perfectly -right. Thirteen is an nnluckly number. President Harrison's letter of accept ance is the onlv campaign aoeiimeni It is practically. the agony and their checks displaying the blush which followed upon the first needed in this canvass, unanswerable. One clear idea as ex pressed in the paragraph discussing; the repeal of the tax on state bank issues, sets .at treat the results sure to follow trusting the democratic party with the control of the government, as they are pledged to a policy which would flood the countrv with .a enrrenev of which the denomination of the' bill would be no indication of. its value. 11 pa Thut Always Kuiso a Laagb." .To few of U3 is it given never to make a slip of thotonguo. On the contrary, most people have some unpleasant mem ory or other of some dreadful mistake. they have fallen into, and even although years may have passed since the fatal moment when their lips betrayed them, they are still unable to recall the cir cumstances without again experiencing The busiest of the administration of ficials in Washington is Secretary El- kins, . who, Eince Mr. Blame s retire ment from public life, is the center of a whirlpool of politicians and placemen. When ho is in the city his office is crowded with visitors, as numerous, as ever cooled their heels in a prince's ante room. Mr. Elkins has Mr. Blaine's in valuable faculty of, remembering names and faces, and his callers depart soothed by the agreeable reception, if not satis fied in attaining the object of their visit. Thirty-five years ago last Saturday Dr. John McLougblin died iu Oregon city, the most prominent figure in the early history of Oregon and the north west; a man of noble qualities whose deeds smoothed the way for the Oregon pioneers. Dr. McLoughliil's tomb is marked by an insignificant slab. There is no question but that greater honor is due this wise and sturdy benefactor, of early settlers. - . The Tirojectors of the artesian well enterprise at La Grande have flattering prospects that their highest hopes will be realized. At a depth of about 320 feet water was struck which raised in the, pipe to within two feet of the sur face. Tho pipe was driven down to another clay formation, and it is the belief that an ample body of water will soon be reached. Belvia Lockwood has been talkiDg of peace before the international peace congress in the hall of the Swiss parlia ment. - Yet she proposes to come back home and enter the raging presidential conflict only to add intensity to its bitterness and to give more lurid tone to its wildness. The old side-wheel steamer Goliah, which was brought to this coast in 1849, is still in use on the sound as a towboat. She still has her original machinery, which is in good condition. , , , One way for Canada to avoid getting into broils with Uncle Sam is to become his fiancee at once. The present affair is very like a lovers' quarrel. . - ;. Up to date the only torchlight proces sion that has taken part in tho national " canvass is that supplied-by the fervid -fcretoric of the Hon. Henry Watterson. It is noticeahle that the campaign managers are capable of supplying their own rainbows this year' without the aid of the rainmakers. ' - " - An -effort will be made by. a-rich Anglo-American syndicate to buy a ton of coal to exhibit at the Chicago worlds They gerrymander so frequently in the state of Ohio that is really not safe for a congressman to die. discovery of the slip. Take a few exam ples to illustrate what we have ad vanced. It was -but a very small and even insignificant change of a letter which rather spoiled the impressive elo quence of a preacher, who, warning his audience against idolatry, in place of Bow not thy knee to an iu61, made a false step and said, "Bow not thine eye to a needle." In the same way the young clergyman with the correct Oxford pronunciation in giving the hymn, ''Conquering Kings," merely stumbled over the. first vowel, but being unable to save himself was hurried over the precipice and 'startled his congregation, with the announce ment, "The hymn tonight will be Kin quering Congs, Kinquering Congs.'" Much the . same ' was the pitfall into which a reverend gentleman walked when in place of saying "Behold the fig tree, how it withereth away," by a simple transposition of two letters he asked his audience to "Behold the wig tree, how u fithereth away." London Tablet - The 6ad Part of lit. A good soul in Ohio absolutely wor ships Dickens, even going so far as burn ing a candle before his portrait. She reads nothing but Dickens, and when he came here to read she wrote to inquire whether he'd visit the west Receiving a reply in Dickens own handwriting, her j oy knew no bounds. Her hero could not . leave the east, therefore she deter mined to go to New York. Jones, the husband, demurred, but upon being wakened one night with the threat that if he did not give her money to travel like a-Christiarv she would walk, Jones succumbed. Mrs. Jones went to New York, had a private inter view with Dickens, attended his read ings, and returned home more rabid than ever. When the news came' of Dickens' death Mrs. Jones was inconsolable. Not long after Mrs. Jones' sister died, but owing to the illness of this sister's hus band, whom she was obnged - to nurse, Mrs. Jones could not attend the funeral. When the rest of her family returned they found Mrs. Jones reading "Pick wick" to the sick and bereaved man. ' As a relative approached ' the bed,1 Mrs. Jones burst into tears, exclaiming: "The saddest part of it all is to think that dear Sarah died before I had . finished reading 'Martin Chuzzlewit' to her; and now shell never, never know how it ends! Oh, it's too bad!" Kate Field's wasmmrtmu - CHRISMAN & CORSON, -.DEALERS IN --- ilcAreigs: 1. Flour. Grain -Fruit nnri Mill FpppI i . ; highest Cash price paid for produce. COK. WASHINGTON. AND SECOND ST. THE DALLES, OREGON The Dalles Mercantile CO., . JOBBEHi ASD' rjKM. GenerfaJ iMerchandise ;vIh ?odsvC6tiinr, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Boots, . vvC.-'C; joes,.;.IIatg,. Caps ifroceries,- Hardware, ' - ----- - r 390 to 394 Second St. The Dalles,' Or; OUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the8tate kj of Oregon for Wasco County. Martha Collier, Plaintiff', vs. W. B. Collier, de- To W. B. Collier, the above-named defendant: In the name of the State of Oregon, yon are here 1-y required to appear and answer toe com plaint filed against you in the above-entitled suit, on or before the first day of the next egular term of the above-entitled court; and if you fail to so answor, for want thereof, the plaintiff wil apply to the court for the relief prayed for in her complaint, to-wit: The dissolution of the bonds oi matrimony now existing between yon. una piainuu ana toe custody ot ine younger child of plaintiff" and defendant, and for such other relief as may be meet with equity. This summons is served upon you y publica tion thereof by order of the Hon. W. . Brad shaw, Judge of said Circuit Court, datod at chambers on the 22d day of August, 1892. 8.aiW7llU.7 ; Attorneys for Plaintiff. OREGON'S SHOWING AT "CHICAGO NEXT "STEAR Remains in doubt, but there is no question - atxmt trie Portland Industrial Ex position which opens Sep tember 21st and closes October 22d, being the best Exposition ever held on the Pacific Coast. So far as Oregon is concerned it will be the forerunner of the Exposition . at ; Chicago in 1893. The principal attrac tions are the 'magnificent American Band of Providence, R.' I. . An art Collection valued at $350,000, and" em bracing some oi - the greatest pictures owned in the United: States. Immense Horticult ural and Agricultural exhibits, the result of the combined efforts of almost every , county in the state, i A mineral ex hibit exceeding all former years. A Stock Department showing tremendous progress. To these are added a larger number of exhibits than ever before; including a magnifi cent electrical display under the combined Thomson-Hous ton and Edison Companies. All manufactures in full oper ation. Government 'models of Battle Ships. The wonderful- Hall of Mystery. The marvelous "Little World," the product of a mechanical' genius; all interspersed; by novelties incident to the pop ular special "days. Every thing new and nothing dead. Greatly reduced rates on all transportation lines.-. 7; - THE IMLl.FS, OKKGON:, ' SI N NOTT & FISH, PROP'S. Ticket and Bajfgafre Ofliee of tbe U. I. U. R. Company, and office of the Western ' Union Telegraph Office are iuTthe ' Hotel". - " -''.': . Fire-Proof Safe for; the Safety of; all Valuables. - - . ' : '. - : ..'-. . - ... : - v LARGEST : AND :. FINEST ; .HOTEL' : JN :-OREGON NEPTUMSH A VJNG Pi RLORS AND Bi TH ROOMS. ; FRAZER & WYNDHAM; Proprietors.. At the old stand of R. lusher. no Front St., The Dalles, Oregon. SKI B B E'tHO TEL.. z. "W. Xj. sbxbbx:, Annie Wright Seminary, Boarding and Day School for Girls. 'ropr. I - ffZi -fSiJ A fltfRoM " alii s -g-- I ; -; , j Mr Ifefig-MtMi mmU ells s : i - 'k m 1 HORSES J. S. COOPER, Corner Barn, Union Stock Yards, Chicago, Illinois. The Largest and Only Strictly Commission Dealer in Horses in the United States. flinth Yeap begins Sept. 8th 1892. - For Admission, Apply to the Principal. - Mrs. Sarah K. White, Aonle Wright Seminary, TACOMA. - - WASH. St. Mary's Academy. THE DALLES, WASCO CO., OR. 1 A SCHOOL for young ladies, under the direction ox we f-isicrs oi me uoiy ' .Names oi Jesua and Mary. Board and tuition, per term, in advance. . fK 00 Entrance fee (to be i-ald but once) SOO Drawing and painting, per term 800 MuBic, per term 15 00 Bed and bedding ...-........""8 00 Teletrraphy, Stenography and Typewriting ex tra. Plain and Ornamental Needlework, Ger man and French languagea taught free. For further particulars addres - ' BX8TKK BCFEJUOB. Reopens the firrt Monday in September. , B.2fiwStdlt 1 Couimeiicing the 3rd of August and every month throughout th year will hold Special Extensively Advertised Sales of 3AESTeRN RRNGE HORSES; " '''.' - tf ' INational Live Stock Bank, Chicago, 111. ' n '"".. " Reference : Chicag0 Nat5oDai Bank, Chicago, III. Wflte fOF PaitlCUlarS. DEALER IN- Hay, Grain, Feed & Flour. : ' HEADQUARTERS FOR POTATOES! TERMS STRICTLY CASH. It behooves everyone, especially the workingman, to buy where he can buy the cheapest and can get the most For his hard earned money. - We solicit a sliare of ,four patronage. Cash paid for eggs and poultry. : All goods delivered free and promptly Corner Union and Second streets, The Dalles, Oregon.