The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947, July 03, 1897, PART 2, Image 4

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    THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE. SATURDAY. JULY ,3 1S97
The Weekly Ghfoniele.
IBS DALLES.
OAIOOM
FIBSOMAL MENTION.
Wednesday. . '
C. M. Townsend of Portland is in the
city. .
Mr. S. Sichelt of Prineville came op
from Portland last evening.
Mrt. Lee Bench left on this morning's
boat for a Visit in Oregon City.
J. D. Wilcox ", a prominent stockman
Lff1erman connty' W89 m twn
Dr.-O.C Hollister and wife left for
the Hood River encampment on this
morning a train
N. J. Sinnott, WV11 Croaaen and Rav
Logan went to Hood River on the Regu
lator this morning, .
Mr, F. D. M-cCuIley, a well known
capitalist of the Grande Ronde valley, ia
in The Dalles today.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fulton of Biggs
. -fame down on the train this morning.
Thev were accompanied by Mra. J. P.
McCorckle, the mother of Mra. Fulton.
Hon. b. s. Hnntington left on last
night's train for Baker City, to attend
court at that place. He was accom
4sniedy his father, Rev. C. A. Hunt
ington, of Enreka, California, who will
visit his other sons before returning
borne.
Thursday.
Mr. C. M, Cartwright ot Hay Creek is
in the city.
Mr. Thomas Balfoor of Lyle came np
on the Dalles City laet evening.
F. S. Gordon, the merchant of Wamic,
came in from that place last evening.
Mr. W. L. Whitman, a well known
travelling man of Chicago, ia ia the city.
Postmaster J. A. Croasen and wife left
on this morning's train for a brief visit
to San Francisco. -
. 'Prof. J. S. Landere, who has apent
-some time in San Francisco, returned on
the boat last night.
Mrs. Mac Alliater and Mra. Mary
French returned last evening from a
visit to Hood River.
- Mr. O. M. Scott, a former resident of
'Sherman connty, but now of Portland,
was in the city last evening.
-Mrs. W. C. Allaway and family, aDd
"Mrs. L. Clark and. family left on the
'Dalles City this morning on a camping
trip to Glenwood, Washington.
Miss Etta Story left thia morning for
San Francisco. Miss Story will repre
sent the local Christian Endeavor -so
ciety at the national convention, to be
held in that city.
Kev. A. W, Ackerman, who spoke in
the Methodist church last evening, left
for his home in Portland today. During
his stay in thia city he was the guest of
Mr. and Mra. S. L. Brooks.
Rev. N. Doane of University Park,
near Portland, is in the city visiting his
eon. Dr. O. D. Doane. Mr. Doane ia
one of the pioneer Methodist ministers
in the Methodist church in this state,
and had a larga share in the religious
and educational progress of Oregon
Friday.
. Mr. V. G. Cozard of -Canyon City ia
in the city.
Misa Grace Lauer went to Portland
yeaterday for a week's visit,
Mr. Si Sichel left for Prineville this
morning by private .conveyance.
Richard Skibbe went to Falda this
morning, to remain over the 4th.
ur. a,. j. rerguson ot umcaga, a
- friend of Dr. Rinehart, spent the day .in
tne city, on ma way to Portland.
C. G. Roberts came down from Mon
tana this morning and went -on to Hood
Kiver to spend the 4th with his family,
Misses Anna and Lena Thompson left
on tne coat mis morning, iliey will
visit their sister, Laura, and friends in
.Portland.
Miss Anna B. Thompson arrived home
few days ago, after teaching one of the
.most successful schools in the county for
iour successive terms.
airs. m. a. uiJKie, who has been a
ueet at the home of Mr. C Chrisman
during the convention, was a passenger
-on toe ooat tnia morning.
Mr. J. H. Hollingshead ia in the city
"today, coming in from Antelope to meet
tola father, who resides at Evanstoa, 111.,
and who aarived here from the Eaat this
morning,
with the exception of the noted
world's fair number of The Cosmopoli
tan, which reached a price of $5 a copy
sifter the last edition had been exhausted,
110 stronger number of this magazine has
ever been issued than that for July, I
2897. The report of Julian Hawthorne,
the special commissioner sent by The
Coemopolitan to India to in vestfgate the
horrors of the plague and famine, ia of
n extraordinary character and will
open the eyes of the world to conditions
which ar.,i .n.n...j
, . 7 .UD
eauio uauBr contains wnat ia proDably
the greatest poem of this quarter of the
nineteenth -century. Thia new
render
ing of Omar Khayyam's Rubaiyat,
which departs entirely from Fitzgerald's
occupies for pages. Amelia Rives re
appears as a story-teller for the first
time since her marriage with Prince
Troubetzkoy. One of the clevereet
etories yet from the pen of Robert W.
Chambers is given.. -The remarkable
story of the War of the Martians, by
Well 8, which ia attracting the attention
both of the scientific and non-scientific
good-story-loving public, is continued,
and there ia a fourth story by a'Becket,
elaborately illustrated by the humor of
Peter Newell. The educational discus
sion this time by Professor Peck, of
Columbia the story of "The Every-Day
Life of a Sister of Charity," elabor
ately illustrated; , "The Genesis of a
Comic Opera," given by Reginald de
Koven ; President Gilman, of the John
Hopkins university, on "The Bank-
Losing
Flesh
You naturally lose flesh In
the summer and running down
is so easy. You get a little
weaker each day without hard
ly noticing it. There is- loss of
aDDetite. headache, weakness
of the muscles, disturbed sleep,
weakness of memory, and these
are Ifie Deginmng OI ucivuuo
prostration. IrOJl and tOmCS
ana Diners may aiioru suuic
temporary relief, but what you
need is a food for body, brain
and nerves. I
of Cod-liver Oil with the Hy-
DODhosphites, furnishes just the
nourishment needed tor tnose
who are run down and pale and
thin and weak. If you lose flesh
in summer take Scott's Emul
sion now. Don't wait till fall
or winter .before beginning.
For sale-at-soc. and 41.00 by all druggist
rnptcv of Science," and an interesting
atory by the Greek who conceived and
brought into existence "The Streeta of
Cairo at the World'a Fair" these are
some of the contents of tbia ' 10-cent
magazine.
Advertised Letters.
Following is the list of letters remain
ing in the postofSce at The Bailee un
called for July 3, 1897. Persona cal Z
ing for the same will give date on which
thev were advertised :
Anderson. ILewis
Benson, Mra Fannie
Krickson, Victor
Hin, Mrs M
Krone, C Herman
Morgan, Walter
Dean, Frank
Fleck, J A
Hooper8on, W M
Meyra, J is
Madison, J R
Merritt, J W
Neiderwing, Wm B Neweome, Mrs Drew
Nelson, MrsCarolije Odell, Irving
Odeil, Edwin Larsson, Lars '
Ryckinan, Harry boutr.wortd, uen
Taylor, J T Walsh, Edwin
Williams, ansa JJella.
J. A. Ckossejj, P. M.
Made a Good Baal.
Bakbb City, June 30. An unknown
party or parties entered the postoffice
here last night and broke open the safe,
eeenring abou.t $1000, $750 in gold and
$250 in stamps of 1, 2, 8 and 10-cent de
nominations. About 30 registered let
ters were taken, their value being un
known.
A sledge hammer, cbisela, drills and a
brace and bit were used, all being It ft in
the office except the drills. Two of the
chisela were stolen from a tool chest at
the St. Elizabeth hospital building,
which ia in course of construction.
There ia no clew to the robbers. '
Indians Drank Painkiller.
Beainked, Minn., July 1. Five In
diana, including Chief Wee bug, are
dead at Malone'a Point, on Mille Lacs
lake, and several others are expected to
die, as the reault of drinking painkiiler,
hair oil. and other preparations contain
ing alcohol. Indian payment has been
going on there, and the redskins gorged
tnemaeivee with tniB start, which was
bought from Malone'a trading poet.
ine Indian riders are scouring every
part of the reseivation to bring the
band together, and serious trouble may
result, aa the redskins think Malone ia
to blame for the deaths.
DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP.
.Notice is hereby eiven that the un
dersigned, J. E. Barnett and Dinamore
Parish, heretofore dome business as
Barnett & Parish, have this day, by
mutual conaent, dissolved.
All accounts againat eaid firm should
be presented to J. E. Barnett, and said
J. E. Barnett ia to collect H accounts,
notea and evidences of indebtedness ow
ing to said firm.
Dated at Dallea Citv. Wasco Countv.
uregon, tnia iti day ot June. lsyv.
Din'smobb Parish,
jun25-4t J. E. Barnett.
The WeBtfield (Ind.) Hews prints the
following in regard to an old resident of
that place: "Frank McAvoy, for many
years in the employ of the L., TS. A. &
C. Ry. here, Bays: 'I have uaed Cham-
berlain'a Colic, Cholera and . Diarrhoea
"My for ten years or longer am
never without it in my family. I take
pleaaure in recommending it. " It is a
specific for all bowel disorders. For
Bate toy Blakeley & Houghton.
A gray mare, branded ? on left shoul
der. Was originally one of the O. S.
Morgan band, and was raised on the!
rangeadjacent to3-Mile creek. Suitable
reward will be paid for the return of
said mare to T. A. Hudson,
CATARRH
m
ifHAHEV
LOCAL DISEASE
and is the result of colds and
sudden climatic changes.
For your Protection
we positively state that this
remedy does not contain
mercury or any other injur
ious drug. . 1
Ely's Cream Balm
Is acknowledged to bs the most thorengh core for
jNasai uatarrn, uoia in xieaa ana Hay rever of all
remedies. ' It opens and cleanses the nasal passages,
sllsys pain and inflammation, heals the sores, pro
tects the membrane from colds, restores the senses !
1 taste and smell. Price 50c. at Draerfsta or by mail.
ELY BitOTHEBS. Warren Street. New York,
MENTAL FEAR.
Wheelsnan
Afraid His Steed "Would Shy
at Steam Boiler.
"A man who has ridden horseback
for many years," said a physician,
"doesn't quickly lose his feeling of un
certainty os to what his steed is going
to do in "on emergency after he has
taken to riding a "bicycle. I had a curi
ous illustration -of this. I was riding
my wheel up the boulevard when I met
a big steam roller at Ninety-second
street. Horses that will Tub noses
against moving train will shy at a
steam roller for some unknown reason.
Horsemen irecognize steam rollers as
things to be avoided at any cost. Now
I have been riding a wheel for a. year,
but as soon as I saw that roller com
ing Sawn the boulevard I instinctively
turned my wheel into a side street to
avoid it. For the moment I felt that I
was in danger of being thrown. Then
I realized the advantage that, a wheel
man has over a horseback rider when
it comes to steam rollers, and I turned
around and rode past this particular
Holler -with great satisfaction."
8he Disliked Steamboats.
The -wife of a physician who lives in
'Washington tells a story of a distant
kinswoman who was her guest during
the'Christian Endeavor convention. Thf
kinswoman lives in an inland Xew Eng
land town, and whrn she came to Wash
ington she spent one night, of thf
journey on board a steamboat. It was
the first time she had ever traveled by
water. She readied Washington ex
tremely fatigued. The doctor's wife
remarked it. "Yes, I'm tired to death,"
said the kinswoman. "I don't know as
I-care to travel by water again. I rend
the card in my state room about how to
put the life preserver on and I thought
I understood it. but I guess I duln t,
though. Some way, I couldn't seem to
go to sleep wirtih the thing on.
Terrible Suicide of Three Men.
St. Louis, July 1. Just west of
Wells vi lie, there is a coal chute belong-
I ing to the Wabash line. Aa passenger
train No. 6 waa dashing through, this
chute, Engineer Robinson saw three
men lying with their heads upon the
rail. He tried to atop hia engine, bat
the distance was too short, and in an
inatant the men were ground beneath
the wheels. A close examination of the
bodies revealed the fact that the men
must have been perfectly sober when
they took their places beside the track,
Wanted.
Agents for "Queen Victoria, Her
Reign and Diamond Jubilee." Over
flowing with latest and richest pictures.
Contains the indorsed biography of Her
Majesty, with authentic history of her
remarkable reign, and full account of
the Diamond Jubilee. Only $1.50. Big
book. Tremendous demand. Bonanza
for agents. Commission 50 per cent.
Credit given. . Freight paid.- Outfit
free. Write quick for outfit and terri
tory. The Dominion Company, Dept.
7,-356 Dearborn St.. Chicago.
jnn22-lm
''For three years we have never been
without Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy in the house,"
says A. H. Patter, with E. C. Atkina &
Co., Indianapolis, lid., "and mv wife
would aa soon think of being without
flour as a bottle of this Remedy in the
Bummer season. We have used it with
all three of our children and it has never
failed to cure not simply stop pain, but
cure absolutely. It is all right, and any
one who tries it will find it so." Foi
sale by Blakeley & Houghton.
Red need Rates.
Our steamer accommodation for Julv
1st being sold, we are prepared to sell
round trip tickets to Portland, at one
fare for the round trip to parties wishing
to take advantage of the Southern Pa
cific reduced rates between Portland and
San Francisco. Extreme limit of these
tickets August 15th. For further par
ticulars call at ticket office. .
jn28-tf E. E. Lytlr.
Bucsuen's Arain salve.
ine Dest salve in tne worm tor cute,
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fevei
sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all skin eruption?, 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 Blakeley and
Houghton, druggists.
-
Suicide of a Disgraced Cadet.
Boston, July 1. Elvin Dilaway, eon
of President C. O. Dilaway, of the Me
chanics' National bank, committed sui
cide laet night. In the competitive ex
amination young Dilawav secured an
appointment to West Point, b& t waa ex
pelled for breach of rules before the
course was completed.
Judge Cooley's Case Hopeless.
Detroit, July 1. A dispatch from i
Ann Arbor to the news says that Judge
Thomas Cooley, the noted authority on
constitutional law, has become a hope
less invalid. His loss of memory has
Deen lonowea Dy aeep meiancnoly.
Hundreds of thousands have been in
duced to try Chamberlain's Cough Rem
edy by reading what it has done for
others, and having tested ita merits for
themselves are today its warmest friends.
For sale by Blakeley & Houghton.
English and Belgian cement, very
best imported brands, for sale by Wasco
Warehouse Co. " -mv5-lm .
Nebraska corn for sale at the Wasco
warehouae. ' Best feed on earth. m9-tf
For the old reliable Mc Cormick reap
erg and mowers go to J. H. Filloon.
m28-tf
CURIOUS
METHOD.
a Albany
Man How Cuts
.Stone with.
Wire Kope.
Those who have indulged in deep sea
fishing know how'' the fish line cuts
deeply into the hard wood of the gun
wale as it is hauled in while taut. Even
an iron protection, after a time, shows
the wear of the rope, which is compara
tively soft. This gives a clew to the in
vention of an Albany quarryman for
cutting stone. Instead, however, says
the Detroit Free Press, of hemp, he pro
poses to use wire rope, and with this he
will carve the marble and stone right
out of its native bed. The wire is wound
in strands, and has a very rough sur
face, powerful machinery gives a strong
and steady strain, and the stone, yield
ing to the constant wear, parts, with
smooth edge. It would be easy enough
to cut the blocks after they are removed
from the quarry., but where the clever
ness of the inventor comes in is devis
ing mechanism that can be applied to
the stone while in the quarry. This is
effected by sinking two parallel chan
nels in the quarry to a depth of little
greater than that of the lowest level of
the stone to be cut. The channels may
be from 20 to 100 feet, or more, apart.
At the bottom of each is made a small
hole to receive the fpot ends of the
shafts of the machir.e. This is the only
preparation of the quarry that is neces
sary. The ropes, which are coiled on
huge drums, pre then passed around
the channel?!, and as the drums revolve
the cutting proceeds. Suitahle brakes
are provided for the regulation of Vhe
speed and pressure. The ordinary speed
of the strand is HOO feet a minute, so that
a mile length of it passes n six minutes.
While the strand is moving, crushed
stone or cliiilcl shot and water can be
introduced to increase the attrition
Far better, however, tha either of these
is a composition obtained from the tail
ings of a magnetic iron separator, which
costs about one-tcntfh as much as the
chilled shot. It docs not leave the lines
caused ly the shot, and it can be used
over and over asrain.
PUBLIC. SERVICE IN . CHINA.
Two Merits of the Competitive Educa
tional System.
Ex-Secretary John W. Foster, who
was the confidential adviser of the em-
'peror of China irthe peace negotiations
with Japan, contributes a paper on
"The Viceroy Li Hung Chang" to the
August Century. Mr. Foster says of
the viceroy:
"He does not regard the competitive
educational system of admission to the
public service as a perfect method, and
more than once he has -recommended to
his emperor material modifications in
the existing system. But it must be
confessed that it has stood the test of
centuries with much benefit to China,
and its practical operation has demon
strated that it possesses two merits of
inestimable value to any nation; first.
it brings all the offices of the empire
within the reach of the lowest subject ;
and secondly, it diminishes the incen
tives to, and opportunities of. corrup
tion and favoritism in securing en
trance into official life. But in China
the competitive examination ends with
the admission; beyond that step promo
tion must come through other methods,
Li Hung Chang secured the right of ad
mission to office through his assiduous
application to study, and every suc
ceeding step in his upward career has
been attained by his own genius, and
capacity."
AN AUTUMN REVERIE.
The Bappy Bride Was Entranced bi
Nature and So Was John.
It was in the month of October and
they had been married four weeks.
Four blissful weeks they had been to
her in that lovely country house among
the quiet hills, says the Detroit .Free
Press.
Day after day the autumn sun had
been painting the trees in wondrous
shades of tints, and now the mountains
were great banks of rich maroon, and
the valleysflowing- silently between.
o'er streams oi grass-green waves and
scarjet foam.
This afternoon she sat with him oa.
the long-, low piazza and gazed dream
ily on the lovely picture spread be
fore.
At first she talked to him sitting
there so comfortable in his great rus
tic chair, but her voice 'gTew softer and
softer until it died away in whispers
and she was still. -
The mystic, restfol touch of the
sweet October days was upon her, and
it was blissful peace to sit idly in. the
sun and look upon the bean ties of the
scene silent she, as it was.
The old life of her girlhood had gone
and she stood upon the threshold of
this new life this wondrous hall of
womanhood, extending far, far before
her, as were the valleys spread below
the mountainside.
There was upon her soul the inef
fable calm of autumn time, and the
magic of the afternoon fascinated her.
And it was not , for her alone, but
him; this man who now was part and
parcel of her life.
He, too, she felt, must" feel the rap
turous thrill, the weird and witching
spirit of the hour.
"John, she whispered, softly, as the
hum of bee that knocks at the door of
every honeyed flower.
But John did not respond.'
Ah, he too, is clothed in this charm,
she thoug-ht.
"John," she said, again, this time
with eager tone, as if to call him
from his reverie and share with her
the rapnsouy that moved her very
soul.
But to her cars no answer came to
lay its soft response upon her heart.
John Was sound asleep.
Have Tour Grain.
Few realize that each squirrel de
stroys II. $0 ' worth of gram annually.
Wafcelee'a Squirrel and Gopher Externa
it jcor ia the most effective and ..econom
ical poison known. Price reduced to 30
cents. For sale by M. Z. Donne 11,
Agent.
NEW QUARRYING
EUSSIAN RESOURCES.
The Empire's Splendid Showing at
Her Grand Exposition.
Signs of Rapid Growth In Manufactures
and Tiade Industries Some
Features or the Great
Enterprise.
The pan-Russian exposition at Urjni
Novgorod, nominally opened by the
minister of finance on June 9, is how in
iull progress, and the multitude visiting
it is swollen by the crowds of mer
chants and traders that annually at
tend the famou fair at the same place.
The exposition is a government under
taking, upon which a great deal of
money has been lavished, with the ob
ject of promoting trade within the em
pire. It is the 16th industrial exposi
tion of all the Russias since 1829, three
having been held in Warsaw, and the
others in. Moscow and St. Petersburg.
The last was in Moscow in 1882. Since
that date there has been a remarkable
development of Russia's manufactures.
It is evidenced by the present exposi
tion in a most convincing way that
Russia has ceased to be an exclusively
agricultural country, and must be
ranked with manufacturing countries
of the first-class. There are samples
and specimens of everything, showing
the wide range of Russian industry.
There is not muchperhaps, that is new
and original in the purely European exr
hibits, but in respect to things which
the west does not produce there is ex
traordinary diversity and abundance.
The peculiarities of Russia's various
races and the products of her provinces
from the Arctic circle to central Asia
are admirably displayed.
- The exposition covers an area of 200
acres, near the confluence of the rivers
Oka and Volga, beyond the fair. The
place is 260 miles east of Moscow, from
which city it was expeted there would
be many visitors at the conclusion of
th coronation festivities. With a view
to this, numerous immense hotels were
erected along the new avenue extending
from the railway terminus to the main
entrance of the exposition. These
palaces, with the floating hotels on the
Oka, have failed till very resently to ob
tain many guests, though the govern
ment has made great effort to render
the place attractive to foreigners. t The
exposition buildings consist of a large
number of separate pavilions, inter
spersed with " restaurants, refresh
ment kiosks and flower gardens
grouped around a circular gallery,
which forms the center. One of the
most interesting sections is that of
central Asia. The people, their indus
tries, their residencss and mode of life
are fully reproduced. The varied pro
ductions of Siberia are well displayed.
Among the rest, the 197 tons of gold,
worth $140,000,000, obtained in the last
64 years from the mines of the czar, are
represented by two large globes. The
exhibit of minerals, furs, etc., is very
rich. Photographs of Siberian con
victs disclose the queer circumstance
that most of them are punished for
"concealing their avocation and family
origin."
Agriculture makes' a poor showing,
reflecting, it is supposed, the condition
of this industry, which is depressed in
Russia as in other parts of the world.
The rural and domestic industries,
apart from farming, make, however, a
large display. Whole villages, it seems,
are turning to the manufacture of use
ful articles to the neglect of agricul
tural pursuits. Spinning and basket
work occupy great numbers. The
largest progress in the past 20 years has
been in mining and metallurgy, ' but
much has been done in textile fabrics,
cotton goods, silks, etc. Electrical con
trivances obtain, of course, a marked
prominence. The machinery hall has
147,000 square feet of space and is a fine
affair. The art display is poor.
The exposition was brought to Nijni
this year, it is said, to revive the pros
perity of this trade center, which has
been declining. It is hoped that the
great Siberian railway, when completed,
will produce the same result. Expert
opinion is, however, adverse to this
view. The increased railway communi
cation must, it is held, tend to develop
other distributing centers. Baltimore
Sun.
LAY
English ixrds
PREACHERS.
Who Deliver Sunday Dis
courses.
Emperor William's taste for preach
ing, even where there is a duty quali
fied ecclesiastia within reach, is far
more common fancy than most people
might be willing to imagine. Under the
circumstances it is difficult to under
stand the surprise which has been
caused by his insistence in delivering
the Sunday discourse during the recent
yachting trip in the Mediterranean, al
though he had on board with, him the
chief of the court chaplains.
Thus in England there are at least
a dozen secular members of the house
i lords who, not content with preaching
to iheir own households and tenants,
actually travel about in England and on
the continent, preaching wherever they
can find either a congregation or a pul
pit at their disposal.
Several of them, such as, for instance,
Lord Radstock, have incurred the wrath
of foreign governments in consequence I
oi their religious zeal.
. The young Earl Beauchemp, is an
other of these lay preachers, but he con
fines his ministrations to the East end
of London. Then there is Lord Btnnef,
married to an American wife and heir
to the earl of Tankerville, who has been
arrested for street preaching on several
occasions. .
The present duke of Hamilton does a
little in the preaching line, chiefly
among the poorer classes of London.
But none of these peers come anywhere
near the late earl of Shaftesbury so far
as pulpit oratory is concerned, the earl
being known by the nickname of "the
lay bishop."
Subscribe for The Chronicle.
PREVENTIVE AGAINST COLDS.
German's Novel Method of Keeping; the
Feet Warm tn Cold Weather.
i
Warm feet during wet weather ure
the best preventive against ao-calied
"colds" and their often dangerous cm
sequences, Rubber shoes and cork soles
have been pretty generally used to avoid
getting cold and wet feet, but a new and
very curious means to warm the feet
has recently teen patented by Paul
Wonneberger, of Gruna, near Dresden,
says the Philadelphia Record. He calls
his invention "heatable sL-CVs.'' Within
the heel of the shoe, which is hollowed
out, there is a receptaale for a glowing
substance, similar to that used in the
Japanese hecd-warmers. Between the
soles, imbedded in asbestos covers, there
is a rubber bag; which is filled with wa
ter. The water, is heated above the
heel, and as it circulates while the
wearer of the shoe is walking it keeps
the entire nether surface of the foot
warm. A small safety valve iz provided,
and the bag cannot burst. The warmth
giwn by this sole never rises above
70 degrees Fahrenheit, and will last for
about eight hours. The shoes are little
heavier than ordinary ones, and the
sole is but slightly thicker than that of
the so-called wet weather boot.
PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS.
Alexius Columbus, a former ship
builder, now ninety-seven years old,
who claims to be a lineal descendant
of great Christopher, has been discov
ered in Buffalo, N. Y.
Rev. Ira Chase, Indiana's ex-preacher-governor,
was by turns school
teacher, soldier, clergyman, lieutenant
governor, governor and bank organ
izer under Zimrif Dwiggins.
Edward E; Hale says that his no
tion of happiness is that a person who
sleeps nine hours out of every twenty
four and lives in the open air two or
three hours of every day will be in
good health if he does not drink liquor.
The variations which time works in
family names was well illustrated at
the Scotch family gathering in Chica
go. Various members of the clan spell
their names McLean, MacLean, Mc
Lain, McClean and McLane. The chief's
name is spelled Maclean.
On the occasion of the meeting of the
grand lodge of Elks at Minneapolis, the
O. R. & N. will sell round trip tickets
July 2d, good to return until July 31st,
for 60.50. - These tickets are good for
stop-over privileges returning. The
meeting of the National Educational As
sociation ia held at Milwaukee at the
same time, and same rates to Minne
apolis will be given. At that point,
tickets will have to be purchased to
Milwaukee, costing for the round trip
$12.30. jnl7-tf
When my little girl was one month old, she
had a scab form on ber face. It kept spread
ing until she was completely covered from
head to foot. Then she had boils. She had
forty on her head at one time, and more on her
bodv. When six months old she did not weigh
seven pounds, a pound anft a half less than at
birth. Then her skin started to dry up and
got so bad shecould not shut ber eyes to sleep,
Sut lay with them half open. About this
time, I started U3ing Cuticuba Remedies,
and in one month the vat completely cured.
The doctor and drug bills were over one An--dred
dollar, the Ci'tici-ra bill was cot more
than Jive dollars. My child is now strong,
healthy, and large as any child of her age (see
photo.), and it is all owing to Cuticuba.
yours with a Mother's Blessing,
Mrs. GEO. H. TUCKER, JB.,
032 Walker St., Milwaukee, Wig.
Bpbbdt Cure TBEinrsNT. Warm baths
with Cuticuba Soap, jrentl applications of Cu
ttcura (ointment), and mild doacs ot CUTICUBA
Resolvent (biood purifier).
jg How to Cure Every tkin Disease," free.
. Sold throughout the world. Totter Darja & -Chem-
Corp., Hole I'ror.. Uostoo, U. S. A. J
INSTANT
in a single
Cataa 2$ Plaster
Sheriff's Sale.
Notice is hereby Riven that under and bv vir
tue of an execution and order of sale issued ont
of the Circuit Court of -the State of Oregon for
W asco County, on the 25th day of June, 1897,
upon a decree made and entered therein on the
16th day of June, 1897, in a cause therein pend
ing wherein Alfred Crebbln was plaintiff and J.
P. Cartwright et al were defendants, and to me
directed and commanding me to sell the lands
and premises hereinafter mentioned to satisfy
the demands ot the plaintiff for the sumof
3016.75, and the further sum of $72 taxes paid
and $250 attorney's fees, and 148.55 costs and
disbursements, and the costs and expenses of
and upon said wri', I will sell, at public auc
tion to the highest bidler for cash in band, at
the courthouse door in Dalles City, in sail
County and State, on Saturday, the 24th dsy of
Julv. 1XS7. at the hour oi 1 o'clock n. m.. the fol
lowing described lands and premises, to-wit:
The soutneast quarter of the southwest quar
ter, and the northwest qnartef of section num
ber 18, township 1 north, range 15 east, Willam
ette Meridian, containing two hundred and
twenty-six and six-hundredths acres.
Dalles City, Oregon, June 25, 1897.
T. J. DRIVER.
. un26-ii Sheriff of Wasco County.
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, dulv ap
pointed the undetsigned administrator oi 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 fc Co.'s
hank in Dalles City, Oregon, within six months
irom tne aate nereoi.
Dalles City, Oregon, May 19, 1897.
myMi , J.
C. HOSTETLER,
Administrator.
Hk.