r , on THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25. 1896. MENTION. Monday. . ' Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Hartley came up from Hood Eiver today. Mr. Hiram Mitchell, son of the sena tor, spent Sunday in this city. Mr. Hugh Glenn has returned from Astoria, to remain nntil after Thanks'; , giving. '' Register Moore of the Land office, who has been on the sick list for several days is again at his post. Mr. Grant Mays went to Portland to day, where his brotner, Ed, will join him on a trip to San Francisco. . Mrs. Geo. P. Jones and daughter of Prineville are visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Moore. They are on their way to the Willamette valley. , Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Crowe left for Portland yesterday, and will take the steamer, tonight for Oakland, Calif., where thev will visit for a few weeks be fore going 'to Southern California. They will return about the first of the year. I Tuesday. Mr. D. H. Scars of Hood Klver is in the city. Miss Mabel Sterling returned last night fr&m Portland. Mr. and Mrs. John Lenz came up from Hood River last night. Hon. C. M. Cartwright arrived from Prineville yesterday evening. Mr. A. J. Borie, the genial superin tendent of the O. K. & N., is in the city. Eddy Michell went op to Coluoibus last night to attend the funeral of his grandmother, Mrs. Pierce, which occurs today. Mr. A. J. Briehain ol Dnfur made us a pleasant call today. We note that de spite all our fatherly advice, he is still an ardent Bryan man. ' Mrs. Sboemake of Centerville, Wash., who has been in the hospital at Port land for two or three weeks, came up on tbe Dalles City last night and left for home this morning. DIED. At Mosier Saturday, November 22d, after a long illness, Samuel Evans, aged about 72 years. Mr. Evans and his wife came from the . East last spring and located at Moeier n account of their son, Lee, living there. He leaves his aged wife two sonp, Xee and Ira, and. two daughters, Mrs. Frank Hunter and Mrs. Graham, all at present residing at Mosier. Another son was killed at the Johns mill about six years ago. Funeral at Mosier todav. - DIED. At White River, Washington. Nov. 20th, Julius Mess. . Deceased was a brother-in-law of Henry Klindt, and will be remembered by old-timers of The, Dalles. MABKIKD. At Dnfur Sunday, the 22nd inst., Mr. Fa k Bolton and Miss Minnie Heialer, Justice Bngham performing the cere mony. BORN. In this city, Nov. 21st, to the wife of Chas. C. Cooper, a daughter; The Spanish Students. There is a genuine treat in . store for lovers of good music. . The manager of the Vogt opera bouse has secured the celebrated Spanish Students, an excel lent company of vocalistBts and instru mentalists. They need but little men tion, being well and favorably known to the music-loving public- ' The advance sale opened today at noon. The sale will be enormous, and those who contemplate going will do well to call early and secjire a seat be fore they are all gone. A. J. Francis of this company was out yesterday a short time with the guarantee list and the ale' was Bimply remarkable. Tickets 75 cents and $1. ' On sale at the Snipes Kinersly drug store. Our first Love. The Regulator Thursday made the ran from Portland tb the Cascades in three ' hours and thirty-seven minutes, running time. . The distance is 71 miles, and about 60 miles of this was np stream, the last six miles against a very strong cur Tent. It is safe to say that she pushed along at the rate of more than 20 miles an hour. She will have her new steam steering gear in shape to work tomorrow, and when she gets her . new boilers we doubt if there is a boat on the river that can keep in sight of her. It is noticed, too, that she is steady as clock work-in the rapids below the locks, scarcely a tremor being felt aB she . plows through the whirling rapids. Somehow, despite the fact that the Dalles City bears the name of onr town, and has done as much as the Regulator towards solvingonr freight problem, we all cling to the good boat that dally landed at our wharves. She was tangible, always in evidence, and came to be looked upon as onr own first and only love. Thankglvlng; Service. There will be service in St. Paul's . church, Union street, on Thanksgiving day, at 10:30 a. rri., with a " sermon, by the rector on "The Origin and History of Thanksgiving Day". It is expected ' that the music wilf be in keeping with the day. All are most cordially invited. A well known lady of our city has do ' nated a most beautiful piece of embroid ery, which is now exhibited and being raffled,1 in Snipes & . Kinersly's store. The proceeds are to go for benevoleniob ' jects in our own city, and. the chances . are being sold at a rate that shows- we know a pretty thing when we see one. - .- Clark, tbe East End jeweler, makes a specialty of fine watch repairing. Call and see him. PERSONAL Signs and Token. The squawk of the fearsome Shanghai and the excited "turk" of the vasty gobbler are loud, frequent and familiar sounds betokening tbe arrival of Thanks giving. It is a great day for the yqung eters with its glad visions of mince pies, full of raisins and things, or the single standard and seductive gold-filled arti cle yclept "punkin ;" its accomplished dream of the nose-tantalizing turkey, flat on his big big back with his well browned drum sticks tuckedsnugly away beneath the folds ot his rotund abdomen and his corrugated wings trussed artis tically by his juicy sides, while down in his bold the odoriferous cargo of dressing strains at the confining strings that close the after-gangway and anguish to poor their richness out before the bright eyed little ones. Near by the incarna dine cranberry gleams and glows . in translucent splendor; tbe gravy' boat loaded to its gunwales sidles up to the steaming anil butter-crowned mashed potatoes; the white-stalked celery lifts ltB crisp and verdant tops way up yon der; the brown mound of plum pudding, conglomerate formation of the .geology of the kitchen but enough. Imagin ation runs riot with ub, and so we can only give vent to our peut-up feelings in reiterating Ynm 1 Yum ! Land Office Business. . The following business was transacted in the land office today : Isaac Penrose madecash entry of .nw sec 3 tp s of r 18 e and se sec 33 tp 1 n e 18 e. John C. TJren made cashentry of lots 1, 2, 3 and 4 and sw ne' sec 7, tp 1 s ofrl9e. Robert A. Murray made cash entry of nwJi Bee 35, tp 1 n of r 18 e, and s sw) and b4 sec 27 tp 1 n of r 18 e, A committee of the "Mercy and Help" department of the Epworth League will be in waiting at the Methodist church Wednesday evening and Thursday morn ing to receiving donations of any kind which will be useful to tbe needy. Such donations will be promptly delivered to deserving persons. Hncklen'o Arisen salre. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fevei sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains. corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cures piles, or no pay required It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by B'akeley and Houghton, druggists. Di-Dl." The announcement that the Cambridge Variety Company proposed to devote their last night of their stay in Adelaide to a benefit to the charming little Ade laide danseuse, Addie Favart, secured for tbe performance the largest house of the season. The beneficiary received a great ovation from tbe large audience, and after her first song "Dt Di," the lit tle actress was fairly smothered with a shower of flowers and tributes of affec tion of more intrineic value. Adelaide Register, Nov. 26, 1895. . There's more clothing poor soap than by actual free alkali rots them. pure- ' destroyed by wear as the Hoe cake' is ly24-ij Notice of Final Settlement. . . . . ; Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, tbe duly appointed, quahfl d a-d acting admin istrator of the estate of Anns Francis Carlson, deceased, has filed his final account and report in said estate, and that Moi.day, the 4th day of January, 1897, at the hour of 2 o'clock p. m. of said day, at the Conntv Court room of the Connty Court House in Dalles City, Wasco County, Ore gon, has been fixed Tnd appointed by the Hon orable County xiurt as the time and place- for hearing said final account and report. All per sons are hereby notified and requir-d to ap ear at said time and place and shuw cause if any there be why an order of this Court should not be msde approving sid final account and dis charging the said administrator fiotn further acting undrr said trust and exonerating his bondsmen from further liability thereunder. Dated this 23d day of .November, 1896. n25-5t-i FRANK MK.nEFEE, Administrator of the Estate ot Anna F.ancis Carlson, Deceased Notice to Contractors. The undersigned will receive bids for the con struelion of a water ditch 7000 Jeit long. 1000 feet is mostly loose rock work; some blastiiiK Balance sciaper work. Ditch to be five feet wide on bottom, and two feet deep. Twelve miles from The Dalles. For further particular, ad dres, M. J. CUCKKRLINE, n25 2wl-lt Boyd, Oregon. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. . Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, administrator of the estate of Theodore von Bor stal, deceased, has filed his filial account as such administrator, and that the 5th day of January, 1897, at 2 o'clock p. m. has bten fixed by order of of tbe County Judge a the time for hearing any objections to said account and settlement there of. All ieirs creditors or other persons Inter ested in said est te are duly notified to file their objections to said account, if any they nave, be fore said date. Dated this 24th day of November, 1896. -- . GEO. VON BOKSTEL, Administrator of the Estate of Theodore von Burstel, deceased. n2d-i T-GOLD BUT NO FOOD. Experience of nn Amateur Pirate on the Chinese Coast. It has surely fallen to the lot of few men to come near starving to death in a land of plenty, with over $000 in gold in their pocket nay, by reason of that very fact. I had shipped at Kangoon on board a steamer bound for Shanghai, says a writer. When I signed she was flying Jardine's flag at the main, but 1 believed she carried the ensign of every nation and half the house flags of the world in her-signal locker." An opium smuggler I was prepared to find her;, that her chief business on the waters was piracy of the vilest sort and unre deemed by a glint of romance came upon me certainly as a revelation. - We attacked no ships, as far as I know, but, handled with marvelous skill and knowledge of the intricate coast navigation, she would run in after nightfall among the rocks and banks where one would expect a sampan to take the bottom, while shrieks, flames, the report of firearms and clash of steel would testify to the descent tf my de lectable shipmates upon one or another of the numerous fishiuir villages which fringe the shores of the China sea. After four months' duress I struck a blow for liberty: My little hoard Of morphia jealously guarded toward this eventuality deepened the narco tism in which tbo whole crew, lay steeped after a ghastly debauch as we rode at anchor, and, forsaking all my goods aud chattels and seizing in lieu such moneys as I could find, I dropped into the dingey and pulled off, shoeless, hatless, arrayed only in a shirt, trousers and belt containing the above named sum (close on 200), hoping to reach A German gunboat which had been sight ed in the offing earlier in the day. ' But the night was thick and in less than an hour I found myself close in shore. The question of what to do was speedily settled by the boat capsizing among the breakers, leaving me no al ternative but to land. Day was break ing and I lay till next morning in a tomb cut above the road in the hillside, and for the next three weeks I nearly perished for lack of nourishment, not daring to exhibit a gold piece, for I had no weap on and would! certainly have been robbed and murdered. I would gladly have thrown away all but one piece, but there was no single small coin in the sum total, and the re sult would have been the same. Though a good walker 'at that age (I had made a record of 20 miles not long before and could cover 300 a week without a blis ter) I accomplished no more than 200 miles in 22 days traveling only by night and, hiding in tombs or ditches all day, often rushing back to my last deserted lair in terror of the advancing sun when no suitable place of conceal- ment hove in sight. With paddy and plantains snatched precariously here and there I managed to exist during those awful . weeks. Chan-Chan is not regarded as a terres trial paradise by those . Europeans whom fate malign has compelled to. sojourn there, but Walhalla was never hailed with greater ecstacy by the world-worn pilgrim than was that ce lestial sink by myself. Toward the 20th day the smell of meet cooking ab solutely overcame me one morning, and, at the peril of my life, I emerged into the light of day, and laid felonious bands and teeth on what I believed was a part of a baked cat, in the tempo rary absence of the legitimate landlord thereof. London Standard. BRIGGS' MULE HAS MYOPIA. Some Queer Mistakes He Makes Around Bis Master's Barnyard. Stories have ben told of .horses with snakes in their eyes and horses with watch eyes," or an evil eye, a blind eye. and a vest amount of information has been printed about pink eye, but it is doubtful if any authentic history has been-written of the peculiarities of the animal owned by Col. HaydocV Briggs, of New Jersey, whose banyan whiskers were recently described and illustrated. It is afflicted with myopia or near-sightedness. "I reckon that the reason fur it," said Col. Briggs, "is that my horse is a mewl. Can't see a fence till he get his nose within three foot of it, aud then he shies. Mistakes the pig pen for the bom an tries to git in with the hogs. Stumbles over the pasiiure fence and stubs his nose, which makes him kick. Drinks out o' the milk pail 'cause he thinks it's water, and gen'Ily makes an all-round' mewl fool of Lis seflf. ' "Leastwise," added Col. Brings,' "that was the sitiwation up to three months ago, when an idee strikes me, wVch I mentions to ' Maria that's Mrs. Briggs. 'Ef you need glasses to' read the newspapers, says 1 to Maria, that mewl needs glasses to see whether he's eatin' oats or sawdust,' and I got him fitted, an' he's got to I ike 'em so he won't stir a peg without, 'em." Col. Briggs' spectacled mule is 'the wonder of all thit section, of New jer sey o round Scnttleville. The lenses.are octagonal in shnpe and are in heavy leather frames, which are 'strapped to the fide straps of the bridle. They r.re so adjusted that the animal gets a perfect vision while looking. aheod or sideways. When, first put on they opened up such an unexpected vista that the mule backed into a well snd had to be hauled out with a derrick. But as soon as he got accustomed to them he .brayed loud and long every time they were taken ofi. "People kin laugh." said Col. Briggs, "but I don't keer. Ef I had a near-sighted oyster and wanted to put ppees on him I'd do i, an' let 'em laugh till they busted." N. Yi Mail and Express. Wanted. Two bright lady representative, tor light, refijied work. Good pay and good position open if Bnccessfnl. Call at room 4, Umatilla, house, from 5 to 8 p. m.. - No, more BOILS, no more PIMPLES Use Kinersly's Iron Tonic. Th Snipes Kinersly Drug Co. Telephone No. 3. "Big as a u n For 10 cents, you get almost twice as mudh "Battle Ax" as you do of 1 other high grade goods. Before the days of "Battle- Ax" consumers paid JO cents for a small plug of the same quality Now, "Battle Ax" Jiigh est Grade, twice the quantity That s true economy. A Get x E ' U a urn m l iuur u 1 Christmas I i i.ittc - a two ounce bag, and two coupons inside each four ounce bag of Blackwell's Durham. Buy a bag of this celebrated tobacco i and read the coupon I which gives a list of val uable presents and how to get them. Mev York Weekly Tribune ' "' v'- With the close of the Presidential Campaign THE TRIBUNE recognizes tbe fact that the American people are now anxious to give their attention to home and business interests.' To meet this condition, politics will have far less space and prominence, until another State or National occasion demands a renewal of the light for the principles for whichTHE TRIBUNE has labored from its inception to the present day, and won its greatest victories. Every toRRibl effort will be put forth, and money freely spent, to make THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE pre-eminently a National Family Newspaper, interesting, instructive, entertaining and indispensable to each. member of the family. We furnish "The Chronicle" and N. Y. Weekly Trib une one year for only $1.75.' Write vonr name and address Tribune O.ffice. New York City, and a sample copy of The New York Weekly Trib une will be mailed to you. " JobvPmnting U II Barn Door' Many thousand dollars worth of valuable articles suitable for Christmas gifts for the young anjd old, are to be given to smokers of BlackwelPs Genuine Durham To bacco. You will find one coupon inside each i FOB , Farmers and Villagers, FOB . Fathers and Mothers, FOB Sons and Daughters, ' FOB : ' 1 AH the Family. on a postal card, send it to Geo. W. Best, at this Office B refill run n nn n II "The Regulator Line" The Dalles. Portland ani Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Freigni anti Psssenger LinB Th company's elegai.t steames give daily service (Sundays excepted) between Tiie JJailca ana f ortland. Steamer "Regulator"' leaves The Dalles on Monday, Wednesday ami Friday at 7:30 a. m., arriving in Portland at 5 p. m. Returning leaves Oak-street do:k on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 6:30 a. m., arriving' in Tbe Dalles at 5 p. m. Steamer "Dalles City" leaves The Dalles on Tuesday, Thursday and Satur day at 7:30 a. m., arriving 'in Portland at 5 p. m. Returning leaves Oak-street dock on Monday, Wedueadavand Friday at 6:30 a. m., arriving in The Dalles at 5 p. m. PASSENQKR KATES: One way . ' : $2 00 Round trip 3 00 Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. Shipments for Portland received at any time. Shipments for way landings must be delivered before 5 p. m. Live stock shipments solicited. For rates call on or address W. C. ALLAWAY ' Oenaravl A (ant THE DALLES. - OREGON BUORTHERN ill PACIFIC RY. s Pullman Elegent Tourist feleeping Cars Dining Cars Sleeping Cars 8T. PAUL MINNEAPOLIS DCLTJTH MUGO jfj ( AND FOBKI CHOOK8TON WINNIPEG HELENA and BUTTE Through Tickets CHICAGO WASHINGTON PHILADELPHIA FIW YORK ' BOSTON AND ALL POINTS EAST and SOUTH For information, time cards, maps and Uckata, cat on or write to W. C. ALLAWAY. Agent, Tbe Dalles, Oregon A. D. CHARLTON. Asst. Q. P. A., 265. Morrison Cor. Third. Portland Orefon EM STI GIVEB THE Choice of Transcontinental Routes -VIA- Spokane Denver Omaha Kansas City Minneapolis St. Paul Low Rates to all Eastern Cities. OCEAN BTBAMEBS Lmn Portland Everv F1t Days for SAN FRANCISCO, CAX. For fall details call on O. It 4 Co. 'a Agent Tna Dalles, or address W. H. HUBLBUBT, Gen. Psss. Afrt; . Portland, Orego n E. M NEILL President and Manacer. New Schedule. Train No. 1 arrives at The Dalles 4 :45 a. m., and leaves 4 :50 a. m. Train JNo. 2 arrives at rne iaues lu :! p. m., ana leaves iv.zv p. m. Train No. 8 arrives at The Dalles 11 :55 p. m., and west-bound train No. 7 leaves at 1 p. m. Train 23 and 24 will carry passengers between Tbe Dalles and Umatilla, leav ing TbrTJalles at 1 p. m. daily and ar rivptat Tbe Dalles 1 p. m. daily, con necting with train Nos. 8 and 7 from Portland. E. E. Lttlk, . Agent. There's no clay, flour, starch or other worthless filling in "Hoe Cake" and no free alkali to barn the hands. Jly24