THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE. SATURDAY. JUNE 5, 1897 U1 The Weekly GhroMele. VHB D.tLLK9, OJlBOOIC PERSONAL JfJESTION. Wednesday." Eobt. Mays, Jr., returned yesterday Irom a trip to Portland. ; Messrs. Ed M. Williams and Job n . "Weigel went to Portland yesterday. - . " XST T nVn.t MI..... .m4.ai1 n from - Mitchell last niebt. and will remain here a day or se.. He brooght Mrs, KTm atA want In, - Portland last night to visit friends., ' ' .: Thursday. . . Mrs. P. M. Dekntn and Miss Lavilla .. Ha mason of Portland are the guests of Mrs. W. Lord. ,-; , ' Mrs. W. W. Brown, whose borne is at spend a week with friends. . Mrs. Kobt. Mays. Jr., who has been - visiting ner sieier, jura, nmm miwucu, - - i . r 11 . I. In Portland, retarned to this city yes , , terday. .., ; . -T ' . F. S. Fisher, one of the noted football - vlavers of Stanford university, arrived - in the r.itv last nitrht and has accented a position witn pease x Mays. Hon. Sol Smith, at present at Cath lamet, bnt formerly of Goldendale, ar rived last night from down the river and left for uoldendale this morning. Mr. J. C. Lonegan, the Spokane cattle buyer, retarned from Crook county this a'ternoon. He has arranged for start ing 4,000 head of cattle from that sec tion for tbe East at once. They will be : driven to .Huntington and then snipped on the cars. , , Friday. . . :,. Bert Rogers of Antelope Is visiting ia ' the city. Bishop Earl Cranston left for Portland this morninu. Mr. William Harder, general agent for the Great Northern, was in the city last bavs been visiting in the city, will re turn to Portland tomorrow. Mr. C. M. Beason, the cattle buyer of Ogden, was in the city last night.'leav ing for Portland this morning. . Captain Edwards, inspector of hulls, accompanied y his wife, came up on tbe Regulator last night, returning this morning. Among tbe passengers on the Regn la tor last night, were Chief Train Dis patcher Campbell ot the O. R. & N. , Ilis wife accompanied bim, and tbey re tarned this morning. . - . Heavy Dina to Crop In the Middle - States. Heavy fro6t occurred .the .past two ' mornings over the greater part of the Northwest, says a Chicago dispatch. Snow and freezing weather are reported from northern Wisconsin and Minne sota, with much damage to vegetables and small fruits. Tbe Wisconsin Straw lip rru rrnn mav hd. tntal lnea Corn in Northern and Central Illinois ! ifl rpnnrf lfl tn ViA nt. inirn n f-l.A fvof Potatoes were killed at some points and must be replanted. Iowa reportB indi cate considerable damage to corn, pota toes and fruits. Southern Michigan and Northern Indiana also report much injury by frost. " ' Dispatches from St. Paul say.reports from 100 points in West Minneeota in dicate that last night's frost was the most severe in many years. Ice formed in several localities. The weather was cloudy in Northern Minnesota and North Dakota - and tbe result was not disastrous. .In Southwestern Minnesota all the strawberry crop, jubt coming to the berry, is a complete loss. Tbe re ports agree in saving that the crop is also probably . completely ruined. ' Flax and barley are damaged. '' v .Large and Small Soldiers., " ;.- The emperor of Germany has just placed upon the wall of his study a proud. It is a portrait, half life r.ize, of the big-jest ami the smallest soldier of the Prussian army standing side by side. The former is Private Pritzchan, of the first regiment of the Prussian guard. lie stands (5 feet T;"X inches in Ms boots, and when he presented him- sen as jjusscmon lor examination a N special apparatus had to be. provided with which to tauo his waist measure. iiis brcacIUi is in proper proportion tc his height The smallest soldier is the ' hereditary prince. . The picture is a (unique one, showinjj a veritable giant. juiie equaj. 10 any - mac njruro . in 'Grimm's Tales," -or -other books of fables, and by his side a soldierly Lill vutian. '- ; - . . ' ' -' ' Beware uf Strangers. " . '. It ia curious bow people can make mistakes. A short time ago a young lady not very many miles from Canemah, was troubled with a boil about three- fourths of an inch above the elbow of her knee.' It grew so bad that she thought it necessary to call a doctor, bnt as tbe. family doctor was a single man, she shuddered at thethought of showing the boil to bim. Tbe mother suggested one of tbe other resident physicians, a good old married' man, but the father kicked... He said it would make the young doctor mad.' Tbe young lady saw a way out of the difficulty.' She reported that one of those traveling doctors who Lad been around regularly for a long time was in town, and she saw him pass with his medical case that afternoon. It was agreed that tbey would watch for the specialist and call him in. A sharp lookout was kept, and Bare enough along became.. He called in. and the young lady very modestly exhibited her boil. The- stranger, rather curiously for a doctor, looked at it and remarked, ''Well that's too bad." "Well doctor, what most - I do?". The' stranger tumbled. He smiled a smile and replied,. "Get a doctor; I'm a piano tnner." Ex. ' ; v NO LONGER IN DEBT. Manitoba Mennonites Even with 1: the Canadian Government. The rphUl Work of the , Sturdy Col onists In Paying; for Their Homes ' -" A Thrifty and Grow- .' ''.. . log- Community. , ' The i Mennonite farmers of Manitoba, to whom the dominion government loaned' nearly one : hundred thousand dollars eighteen years ago to enable them to immigrate to farming lands in Manitoba, have - repaid the debt with interest, closing the account, and also the unusual and . romantic relations that all these years have existed be tween them and the government of Canada.; The story is told in the latest report of A. M. Burgess, deputy minis ter of the department of the interior, and quoted by the New York Sun. .'. Early in 1872, soon after the -great northwest had been transferred to Can ada, the -'government began 'to look abroad for settlers to turn the bound ess prairie into fruitful fields. They heard that in Russia was an -isolated people, the German Mennonites, a race of farmers who desired to find new nomes in the far west,, where they and their wives and children could live in peace and quietness, which was no longer assured to them by the govern ment of the czar. . Canada at once sent an agent to Russia to ask these people to send representatives to Manitoba to inspect the country." So they sent to Canada several persons in whom they had confidence, and the result of their report was that in 1874 many families went to Manitoba' and settled a: few miles southeast " of Winnipeg. , They were supplied with money and needed . no assistance. Hundreds of - their friends, however, desired to follow them, but were - prevented by the fear that they miglit become stranded in a ' strange country before they were able to support themselves. This fact was published in a Canadian newspaper,, and the result was that about 150 well-to-do farmers ' of German extraction. who lived in the county of Waterloo, Ont., formed themselves into the War terloo society and told the government that if it would advance the money re quired to assist the Minnonites to Man itoba they would pledge their fanos as security for the repayment of the loan. The government found the se curity excellent and accordingly ad vanced 896,400 to the immigrants with the understanding that it would not ask for any part of the principal or in terest until the Mennonites who 'bor rowed the money had been able to get a fair start in their new homes. All the government had to do was to ad vance the money. The business: do tails were looked after by the Waterloo society. . Its secretary saw to the dis-, tribution of the loan, its collection and its repayment to tie government. ; This branch of the Jdennonite colony settled in townships immediately north of the international border between tho Red river on the east and Pembina mountain on the west. At that time the tract was a treeless prairie, rich iD everything, except trees, that makes ag ricultural -lands desirable. The immi grants began to cross, the ocean lr 1875, and the work of preparing sheltei for the winter and the difiicnlty o) getting supplies, "prevented them thr first season from bringing more than t small area under cultivation. Noth ing, however, disheartened the sturdy workers, though their first crop was injured, by grasshoppers and the next two crops by excessive rains. Eaefc year saw considerable additions tc their number and a larger area undei cultivation. Their village grew, they built roads and bridges; and to-day the country that seventeen years ago was a treeless prairie without a solitary settler is one of the most thriving in the Canadian northwest. It is, in fact, beginning to ovfirflow, and many of the young men are looking for homesteads further west, either in Manitoba or the northwest ' territories. The money which these people havo repaid in cludes not only the 880,400 borrowed, but also SS3.380 interest, ' making a total return of 130,380. Mr. Burgess, in his report, rightly observes that 'the history of no . country affords a Case in which an obligation to the gov ernment on the part of any society, company or individual has been ful filled with, greater faithfulness than this." The . entire transaction seems creditable to the government, the Men nonite immigrants and the Waterloo society, and it is noteworthy : .that neither of the persons to Whom the loan was made nor the Waterloo so ciety, which became accountable for its repayment, has ever requested any abatement of the terms of refund, nor in any case has there been any effort of the settlers or their bondsmen to esr pe liability.- - . . Cath In Your Cheeks.""; ' All coontv warrants registered prior to Dec. 1, 1892, will be paid at in y office. . ' Interest ceases after May 7, 1897. ;.' v. ; - . C. L. Phillips, ' ' Countv Treasurer. . Sobecribe for Thk Cvkosicle. This la Tour Opportunity. ' On receipt of ten cents, cash or stamps, a generous sample will be mailed of the most popular Catarrh and Hay Fever Cure fElv's Cream Balm) sufficient to demon strate the great merits of the remedy. ,. ELY BROTHERS, " - v : " - 66 Warren St, New York City. Hev. John Eeid, Jr.. of Great Falls, Mont, recommended Ely's Cream Balm to me. I can emphasize his statement, "It is a posi tive cure for catarrh if used as directed." Rev. Francis W. Poole, Pastor Central Pres. Church, Helena, Mont : . Ely's Cream Balm is the acknowledged cure for catarrh- and contains no mercury nor any injurious drug. , Price, 50 cents. ; MINUTE MARVELS. Soma MiorcBcopio Worka of. ' to Bo FciincI Abroad, Art Uemarkablo I'cut :f -thinly FeninanKltip I Tory Dishes Scarcely Visible to the -- , Naked Eyo-A Jcu-der's TTott- ' '.' . t- derf ui I.ltt: IV'oat. ; - V Dr. neylin, in his Life c of King .Charles," reeords that during the reign of,Juecn Elizabeth 'there-was one who wrote the ten commandments, the .creed, the Pater NottCr, the" queen's name and the prayer of our Lord with in the compass of a penny, and gave her majesty a pair of spectacles of such an artificial making that by the help thereof she did plainly and distinctly discern every letter," says the - London Bookworm. A some'wliat similar feat was that "rare niece of work brought to pass by Peter Pales, an Englishman, who also exhibited before her majesty the entire Bible written ia a. book con taining as many leaves as a full-sized edition; but -fitting into a walnut-" In St John's college, Oxford, is pre served a portrait of Charles I., in which the engraver's lines, as they seem to , be,-are really microscopic writings the face alone containing all the book of Psalms, with the creeds and several forms of prayers. .: .. ik : , . r The learned Poiv.on is known to have Indulged in this species of . ''curious idleness" occasionally,- and perhaps the Greek, verses from the Medea of Euri pides, with Johnson's translation "of the same, - for. Barney's "History of Music," were executed b3' bim. Though consisting of two hundred and twenty- j six words, they arq comprised in a cir cle hall an inch in diameter, with a small space in thd center left blank.-'; About forty years ago a specimen of microscopic penmanship was exhibited .in America. It consisted of the follow ing inscription written upon glass in a circle much smaller than the head of an ordinary pin (one six hundred and twenty-fifth part of an inch in di ameter): "Lowell and Scuter. watch makers, 04 Exchange street, Portland. Written by Ferraat at Paris, 1852." -r- At tho Dusseldorf exhibition a few years ago a gentleman showed a postal card upon which the whole of the first three books of , the Odyssey were written,-the remaining space being filled with the transcript of a long de bate which had taken place in, the German parliament a short time be fore. , The. whole card contained thirty-' three thousand words. .' . , Layard, in his "History of Nineveh," mentions that the national records of the Assyrian empire 'were written on bricks in characters so minute as to be scarcely legible without the aid of a micvoricropo, and that, - in. ' fact, a variety of this instrument was found among the excavations. ' .. . -So Eiu'eli . for ' dainty penmanship. That minute mechanical construction can lay claim to con siderable antiquity is evidenced by the works of Pliny and Adrian, ' who relate that Myrmicides constructed out of ivory a ship wiih all her appurtenances and a chariot with our wheels and four horses,- both so small that a bec could, hide either of them with its wings. v . ; ' . 7 -r A still more wonderful work is that of Mark Sealiot, a London locksmith, who, in 1570, manufactured a lock con sisting, of eleven different pieces of steel, iron and brass, which, together with the key belonging to it, weighed only one grain. The sairio artist-con structed a chain of gold containing forty-three link3, which ho fastened to the lock and key, and upon these being attached to the:cek of a llaathe insect was able to draw thera with ease. , liadianus Junius saw at Mechlin, in Brabant, a cherry stone carved in the form of a basket, in whiiili were four teen pairs of dice, the spots on the lat ter visible to the naked cve. A cherry stone carved by the sculptor, EoSsi, and containing a glory of sixty saints, was shown at Florence for many years. A still more marvelous curiosity was a set of one thousand six hundred ivory dishes, which were said to havo been purchased by. onu &had from the maker,' Oswald Xorthingotfan, and ex hibited before Pope VI. Theue dainty turnings, though .parfoet i:i every re spect, were scarcely visible to ; the laked eye, and could be easily . inclosed .n a casket the size., of a peppercorn. A Jesuit, Father Farrarius, rr.ale twenty-five" wooden cannon capable of being packed away in the same spacp. :f .', In T.7C4," on tho birthday of Kinp George III., a watchmaker of London named - Arnold presented hiaself be fore the king to exhibit a curious re peating watch of his raaEufacture. This watch was in diameter somewhat less than a silver'two-pence, contained one hundred and twenty distinct parts and weighed altogether less than eix pennyweights." ; s - - Not very long' ago a London news paper, announced that a jowoler of Turin had made a tugboat formed of a single pearl. : The sail of beatoa gold studded with diamonds and the bin nacle light at the prow i a perfect ruby. ' An emerald serves as its rudder and the stand on which it is mounted is a slab of whitest ivory. - .The entire weight of this marvelous specimen of the jeweler's craft is less than half as ounce, but tho maker values i- at" one thousand pounds. ; " This is an "Age of Soap.'J Why use any but the very best. . Best soap means Hoe Cake. Bold by Pease & Mays. a2-3m Subscribe for The Chronicle.' "- Administrator's Notice. ' Notice is hereby given that the County Court of the State of Oregon for Wasco County, by an order dated the 3d day of April, 1897. duly ap pointed tbe undersigned administrator of the estate of Andrew V. Anderson, deceased. All persons having claims-against said estate are hereby required to present the same, properly verified, to the undersigned at French Co.'s bank in Dalles City, Oregon, within six months from the date hereot . Dalles City, Oregon, May 19, 1897-. . i. my22-li J. C. HOSTETLER, ' ' , - . Administrator. JJ oil Ala Uub GIVES THE Choice cf Transcontinental Routes -VlA- Spokane' Denver Minneapolis Omaha St; Paul Kansas City Low Rates to aii Eastern Cities OCEAN 8TEAME118 Leave Portland , ;: -", Bverv Five Days for SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. ' For full details call on O. K & Co. Agent -. Tho Dalles, or address . . - ,. . . v ' y, H. H0KLBTJRT, Gen. Pass. A gt ' ' --. Portland, Oregon - E. M'KEUX' President aud Ifana er " v. : y .The New Time Card. ;. Under the new time card.kwhich goes into effect tomomw, trains will move as follows : w ' . T '.' . !Nol 4, to Spokane and Great Northern arrives at 6 p. ni- leaves at 6:05 p. ni. No. 2, to Pendleton, Baker City and Union Pacific' arrives 1 :15 a. m., de parts 1 :20 a. m. " . ' , -' j ' . -'"-'. ; - No. 3, from Spokane and Great NortL: ern, arrives 8 :30, ' departs 8:35 a. , m. No. 1, from Baker City and Union. Pa cific, arrives 1 :20, departs 1 :25 a. m. v -1 Nos. 23 and 2V moving east of Tho Dalles, -will carry , passengers. No.' 23 arrives at 6:30 p. m.",." departs 12:45 p. m. " .-V..,'', . Passengers for Heppner will take train leaving here 6 :05 p. m. ; - .-;';'...,' , V EAST and SOUTH via -' The Shasta Route . ; . '.. ""." OF THE . ' ..' ', " . Southern Pacific Comp'y. Trains leave and are due to arrive at Portland. f OVERLAND EX-" press, Balem, Rose-' I onrgf Ashland, Sac-1 1 rnmento, Ogden.San i 1 Franciseo, Moiave, f Lob AUKC-Ies.Ell'aMO, I New urleaus sad I I East .... .1 8:50 P.M. "3-.10A. M. 8:30 A. SI jRoaeburg aud way bu llous .. f Via Woodbnrn fori I Mt.Ai(tet, 811 vert on, IWest Scio. Browns- ville.Sprluglield and j Natron I '4:40 P. M Dally : ejeoept Sunduyi. 4:00 P.M. 7:U0 A. Al. 4:45 P.M. except Sundays. Salem and way stations 10.15 A. M t 6:20 P.M. t 8:25 P. M tuorvams ana way (Stations j iMcMinnville and; (way stations. . . Daily. tD&iiy, except Sunday.' . DINING CAES ON OGDKM ROUTE. PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPERS f i 'AND SECOND-CLASS SLEEPING CARS Attached to all Through Trains. Direct connection at Ean Francisco with Occi dental and Oriental and Pacific mall steamship Hues for JAPAN and CHINA. Sailing dates on at plication. - . Kates and tickets to Eartern points and Eu rope. Also JAPAN, CHINA, HONOLULU and AUSTRALIA, cau be obtained from . : . J. B. KIRKXAND, Ticket Agent. Through Ticket Office, 134 Third street, where through tickets to all points In ; tbe Eastern States, Canada and Europe can be obtained at lowest rates from - - - J. B. KIRKLAND, Ticket Agent AH above trains arrive at and depart from Grand Central Station, Filth and Irving streets. ' - YAMHILL DIVISION. ' Passenger Depot, foot of Jederson street. ' .. . . . . -' Leave for OSWEGO, daily, except Sunday, at 7:JO a. m.;' 12:15, 1:45, 5:25, 6:45, 8:05 p. m (and 11:30 p. tn. on Saturday only). Arrive at Portland at 7:10 and 8;30 a.m.-, and 1:80, 4:15, 6.-35 and 7:55 p. m. , . Leave for Sheridan, week days,-t 4:30 p. m Arrive at Portland, 9:30 a. m. Leave for A1RLIE on Monday, Wednesday and Kri.iay at 9:40 a.m. Arrive at Portland, Ti ues- dav.Tl hursday and Saturday at 3 :C5 p. m. - - Snndav trains for OSWEGO leave at 8:40 a. m and 12115, 1:45,3:30, 5:25 6:45 and 8.05 p. nr. Ar riVe at Portland at 8:30. 10:00 a. m.: 1:30. 4:1b 5:10, 6:35, 7:55p.m. . B. KOEHLER, '" E. P. R0GER3, -: Manager. r Asst. G. F. & Pass. Ajft NEW YS WORLD ';:.; -THSICE-fl-WEErC EOITIOfl. ' 18 Pages a Weak. ' 156 Papers m Tear It stands first among weekly" papers in size," frequency of publication and freshness, variety and reliability of con tents. It is practically a daily at tbe low price o a weekly ; and its vast list of subscribers, extending to every state and territory of the Union and foreign conn tries, wilt vouch for the seen racy and fairness of its news columns. '. It is splendidly illustrated, and among its special featnres are a fine bnmor page, exhaustive market reports, all the latest fashiond " for women and, a long series of stories by the greatest living American and English authors, Conan Doyle, - Jerome K. Jeroma, Stanley Wcjmin, . Mary B. Wllklns - Anthony Dope, Bret Harte, , Braoder Matthews, Etc - We ofTer this uneqnaled newspaper and The Dalles Twice-a-Week Chronicle to gether one year for $2.00. ; The regular price of the two papers is $3.00. flow fibout Your JOB We have the facilities for doing all - kinds v of Job Printing, from a visiting card to a - catalogue, and we are after all the work we can. do. We not only desire to 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 us have your next order. With the close of the Presidential Campaign THE TRIBUNE recognizes the fact that tbe American people are now anxious to give their attention to borne and business interests. To meet this condition, politics will have far Ices space and prominence, until another State or National occasion demands a renewal of the tight for the principles for which THE TRIBUNE has labored from its inception' to the present day, and won. its ereatest victories. - Every possible 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 furuish "The Chronicle" and N. Y. Weekly Trib-. . " - . tine one year for only $1.75. . f& Write your name and address on a postal card, send it to Geo.'W; Best, Tribnne Office, New York City, and a sample copy of The New York Weekly TribV nne will be mailed to you. ;V " ' ' : " . " Wholesale! jVfflliT; LilQUOS, crimes and Cigais. THE CELEBRATED ANHEUSER HOP GOLD Anhenser-Btisch Malt Wntrine,. a non-alcoholic beverage, tinequaled as a tonic. STUBLING & WILLIAM IVasco I7ni ehouse Gompniiy .-J..-:-- ,-J : - Headquarters for Seed Grain of all kinds. Headquarters for Feed Grain of an kinds. Headquarters for Rolled Grain, all kinds. Headquarters for Brani Shorts, "mlfId headquarters for "Byers Best" Pendle- tOH FlOUI ThiB Floar s manufactured expressly for family bUU-X 1UIU : : nse. eVery sack is guaranteed to give satisfaction. ' " . Wa bpII nrtr trnnAa Invar than mv hnnui in f.TiA f.raHA anrl if rnn Ann't t.hintr tu' call and get our prices and be convinced. Highest' Prices Paid for Wheat, Barley and Oats. Lumber,: Building Traded ior TTcrtr rj-rm'Ti "Rnnnn Tjnrrl r.n ROWE & CO., PRIfTlN(i? . FOB Farmers and Villagers, .';'..''' .fob ; " Fathers arid Mothers, ' fob . ': "' ' x Sons and Daughters, . fob . ;'.".-..' All the Family. - BUSCH and BEER on draught and in Dottles. t , ."' " Material - and Boxes The Dalles Or