THE DALLES WEEKLY CHKONICLE, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 13, 1897. The Weekly Ghroniele. THE DALLES. OBKGOS - Saturday's Daily. ' Wilbnr Hendrix of Doinr was in the city last night. Captain Lewis left on-' tba boat this morning to visit the fruit fair at Hood River. Hattie Glenn left' for Portland this morning, where she will visit friends -for a short time. Mr. Patrick Bolton, one of the enter prising farmers of the Kingsley neigh borhood, ia in the citv-today. Ralph and Jessie Fisber were pass engers on the Regulator this morning, going to Portland, where they will re main a lew days. H. S. Tamer, of the Dnfnr Dispatch, is in the citv todav. He contemplates putting in a clab room and bowling ; alley in Dnfur, and is taking notes as to ' how to begin. Miss Martha Woodbury, who has been visiting the family of Mr. H. S. Wilson in this city, left for her home in Portland this morning. Mrs. Wilson accompanied her as far as the Locke, , Monday's Sally. - H. A. Yorke of Hood River was in the city yesterday, . L. H. Clausen -of Goldendale is at the Umatilla houee. Earnest Mabew of Eight Mile is in i in the city today. Attorney JTt. Darch of Goldendale is in the city. on business today. Mil's Nona Rnch returned Saturday night from a visit in Portland. Mr. Briggs was down from Arlington yesterday, visiting his family in this city. . Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Hlllgen, from the Kingsley, vicinity, is in the "city today. Mrs. Jackson and Mrs. More are here from California visiting their sister Mrs. Cathcart. Will Brookhoose, one of the proeper ; one farmers of lower Ten Mile, is in on business today. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore H. Liebe of Portland, are visiting with the family of George Liebe in this city. . " Mr. Eddy Michell left yesterday morn " ing for Portland, where he will accept a ' position with Peaslee Bros., job printers. .tass Mabel Mack returned from San Francisco on the Spokane locai last ' nierht. She intends entering the employ of Mr. Hudson, of this city. Earnest H. Drews and wife, arrived on the morning train from Walla Walla, -, where they were married vesterday at 3 ' o'clock. His Dalles friends tender their - congratulations. . Tuesday's Daily. Sigh Sichel of Prineville, came in yes . terday on business. . Mr. and Mrs. Vanderpool of Dufur came up on the boat last night. Ralph and ' Jessie Fisher returned ' home from Portland last night. - Mrs. Xickelsen and daughter, of Hood - River, came up on the boat last night. Miss Beulah Patterson, who has been ' visiting relatives in Salem, returned borne last night. ( ' William L. Marray of Portland, re porter for the Rural Spirit, made the of ' fice a pleasant call this morning. V Miss Anna Dnfur of Portland, came np on the boat last night. She will visit ' friends for some time in the vicinity of her old home at Dufur. ' Lindsey Thomas, who was for a time proprietor of the Red Front grocery in Dufur, and who has been receiving treat ment in the Good Samaritan hospital. ' in Portland, for some time past, arrived home laBt night. Rev. De Forest and wife, and their son and daughter will leave this evening for Decatur, 111., where Mrs. De Forest, Miss De Forest and the little son will spend the winter with relatives. Mr. De For est will return in a short time. 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 (Ely's Cream Balm) sufficient to demon ' abate the great merits of the remedy. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren St.. New Tork City. "Eev. JohcP.sid, 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 nsed 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, 5 tanta. Executor's Notice. Notice is hereby given that tbe undersfgned has been duly appointed and is now tbe quali- lied and acting executor of tbe last will and tes tament of Elizabeth J. Bolton, deceased. AH peixins having claims against said estute are notified to present them to me, with the proper J . vouchers therefor, at the office of tbe county clerk of Wasco County, The Dalles. Oregon, . within six months firm the date hereof. I . Datei September 10. 1897. . I spld-i SIMEON BOLTON, Executor. '' WANTED. ' ' upright ana taitnful gentiemon or ladies to travel for responsible estab lished house in Oregon. Monthly $65 . and expenses., Position steady. Refer- erence. Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope. The Dominion Company, Dept. 1., (jnicago. -. ' oo-lo rnjlDDD poison n A SPECIALTYorfS ill !""' BLOOD POISON permanently f jcureralto363ays. Youcanbetreatedat I .1 home forsame price under same rnann. t I Jty.lt youprefertooomebere wewiiicoo- "'' tracttopayrailroad fareand hotel blll,aol - tweoanre.ifwefail tocure-IfyonbaTetakeumer- urr, iodide potash, and still bare aches and fins. Mucous Patches la mouth. Sore Throat, imples. Copper Colored Spots, Ulcers on any part of tbe body. Hair or Eyebrows falling ont, it la tbta Secondary BLOOD POISON . wegrumranteetocore. We solicit the most obsti nate cases and challenge the world for we.?"u,n,?,t,,,l.,e- TBi" disease has always - DaflledtheskiUof tbe most eminent phvsi ciaad. aVSOO.OOO capital bebind our nncoDdW tiooal guaranty. Absolute proof sent sealed on aoplicatkm. Addresa OOK REMEOI CO. A NICARAGUAN HEROINE. How a Soldier's Daacitn Defeated Capt. Xelaon'a Force. It is well1 known that Lord Nelson, the hero of Trafalgar, : had . but one eye, and it is commonly supposed' that he lost it in the ordinary fortunes of war. Such, however, is. not the truth, if the story current in Nicaragua may be believed. In. 1780 England sent out an expedition to enforce her claims to cer tain lands adjoining the isthmus. - The point of attack was Fort San Carlos at San Juan del Norte. : Two hundred sailors and marines under the leader ship of Capt. Kelson were Jan-died. The cowardly garrison of Spanish soldiers deserted: the commandant, but he re fused to leave. 'His daughter. Donna Rafaela Mora, a girl of 15, Temained by his side end determined to do all she could' for her father and for her coun try. She took up her position behind an embrasure, seized a gun and when the party adiYHncedi fired directly at their leader. He fell, his eye pierced by a bullet. His followers were instantly thrown into confusion, and the garri son, seeing its opportunity and inspired by this young heroine, returned to duty awl succeeded in driving the English forces back tto their boats. Donna Rafaela Mora was decorated by the king of Spain, commissioned a colonel in the royal service and pen sioned. for life. .;" ." Nelson's "biographers merely state that he was repulsed at Fort- San Car los, and claim that he lost his eye in Corsica.' The foregoing story has, how ever, been considered' authentic, and by reason of it Gen. Martinez, the grand son of Donna Rafaela, was sufficiently popular to be elected president of tne republic, inf 1857 by a grateful people. Brooklyn Eagle. Italian Paper. ' The manufacture of paper, cardboard nnd kindred articles is becoming in Italy an important and growing indus try, the annual exports amounting to $2,500,000, an increase of 50 per cent, in white and packing paper within five years, and of 25 per cent, in cardboard. Piedmont, Liguria, Lombardy and Ven etia are the principal centers of this manufacture, but there are a number of mills at other points. There are now about 450 paper mills, employing some 20,000 horse-power, and 20,000 hands, over 50 of the establishments manufac turing wood pulp. Detroit Free Press. Ice-Breakina; Ships. Vice Admiral Makarow, of the Rus sian navy, has been studying the con structionandfuseof powerful ice-breaking ships. At a recent meeting of the Imperial Geographical society at St. Petersburg, he expressed his belief that with two such ships, each of 10,000 horse-power, acting together, a line of free water communication could be kept open in winter to the port of St. Petersburg, and he added that they could even force their way through, the glacial ocean if the thickness of the ice dad not exceed 13 feet. Youth's Companion. FOUND IN A FISH. Cnrioua Fact About the "Mnrray Cod" of Australia. There is a large fish found in the rivers of western Australia known as the "Murray Cod." This fish which is delicious for the tabic is remarkable for its size, sometimes weighing- as much, as 150 pound's; but the strangest thing- about it is the fact that it car ries around a photograph inside its body. At least the natives say that it is a photograph, and certainly it looks like one. . When the Murray cod is cut open a bladder is seen, extending- oTong- the backbone from just behind the gills to the fatty part of the tail. In a 30 pound fish the bladder is about 12 inches long antii an inch or more in width. Within this is a film,- or thin membrane, through which runs a deli cate tracery composed of a multitude of little red lines, interlacing like the frost work on a window pane in win ter. This film can be peeled off and spread upon a sheet of paper or a piece of cloth, to which it readily adheres. It then forms a very pretty picture. Sometimes it .. looks like a bit of pressed seaweed; sometimes it Beems to portray a miniature landscape with a dark forest background; but in most cases it presents a surprisingly distinct outline of a single tree, tbe Australian gum tree, a species of eucalyptus To explain this singular fact the ab origines have an ingenious theory. They say that the picture thus im printed on the membrane represents the tree which overshadows the pool where the big fish made its haunt in short, that it is a real photograph. Fanciful as the notion seems, it gains a certain plausibility from the known habits of the fish, which is extremely solitary and exclusive in its ways. The Murray cod- really does make its home in some forest-shadowed pool, to which it always returns after its excursions abroad' for food or exercise, leading a curiously hermit-like existence; it will allow no otheT member of its species to intrude upon its domain. Here the sul len creature spends its life, year in and year out; . it never changes its resi dence. Here it-grows from insignificant minnowhood" until it becomes a king among fishes, as big and heavy as a well-developed man, and for the greater part of each day the shadow of its fa vorite tree falls upon its slimy back. It is little Wonder, therefore, that the untutored'bnt imaginative savages, puzzled- by the lifelike picture which they find in the bladder conclude that the familiar scene has become photo graphed In the creature's very, sub stance. N. Y. Journal. - -.". THt UUUH arniWQ. Its Later Development nnd Ita Wide- ' ly Extended ITae. "In no one single thing," said the middle-aged man, according to ' the New York Sun, "has there been a great er advance since I was a boy than in the introduction of the door Kpriner into comparatively common use. 1 Buppose there must be now hundreds of patents on door springs. Some of the springs are well-nigh perfect. It is difficult to see in what respect they could be im proved. But the main fact is the door spring itself and its common use in buildings of a more or less ; public character, and many others as well. "We don't shut doors now. nearly as much as we used to; we don't stop to shut them. , We are spared that trouble and we save time. We open the door and push on through and leave the door take care of itself. In the time that it would have taken us to close it we are six, eight or ten feet off; but the door is not neglected; it shuts itself, calm ly, quietly and with certainty, as the man marches away. There is less slam ming of doors now than ever, and few er doors are left open; end the saving of time effected by the use of the self closing door is in the aggregate tre mendous. " . . "Truly in no minor feature is the progress of civilization more apparent than in the present common use of the door spring." . .... A NEW WESTERN IDEA. Girla Who Give Gold Models of Their Little Finger to Their Betrothed. "Do girls here give gold models of their little fingers to their fiances?" asked the western girl of the Gotham ite, reports the New York Sun. - "Heavens, no!" answered the Goth amite, "It seems to me that that is rather a grewsome souvenir." "Not at all," answered the western girl; "it is decidedly dainty, and I'm a little surprised that New York is so far behind the times. The fad started in this way. When the daughter of one of our .big western politicians was six months old he had a model of her little finger cast in gold. Around the little dimpled digit is a ring of turquoise, which is her birth stone, and it makes alovelycharmforher betrothed's watch chain. He valued it so much that it set other men to thinking, and the re sult is that as soon as a girl wraps one of these chaps around her own little finger sufficiently for a proposal to fol low he immediately insists upon a gold facsimile of the flesh and blood orig inal. It is a pretty conceit, and is be ing followed by every westerner who is in subjection to somebody's little finger." A SPRY MAINE GIRL. Works Bcr Fatncr'a Dairy Farm, and When Grown Will Be a. Doctor, All the" way from East Orringtoh to Bangor the people are talking about and praising Sarah Curran, the 16-year- old daughter of Nick Curran, a dairy farmer. Curran has been confined to the house iy rheumatic fever for six weeks, and every morning Sarah has been up at three o'clock to do the chores. When she and her mother have milked 18 cows and put them to pasture, she eats her breakfast, and by the time the other milkmen are getting up she is on the milk cart on her way to Banger. When she has gone over c good port of the city, supplying cus tomcrs with, milk m pint and quart lots, she turns the horse lor home, ar riving there in time to take dinner. In the afternoon she attends to the farm work and docs other tasks that usually devolve upon a man. After supper she helps to milk the 18 cows and goes to bed early, to get a good start the next morning. Though she does the work of a man, she is not at ail mannish in her ways. ucir.g cr sligiit frame and very modest Until she left school two years ago to help her rather cn the farm she was considered the brightest pupil in her class. 4ice then most of her life has been passed outdoors. She has driven a pr.ir of horses to haul cordwood to n:arket, taking it from the stump in the forest to the dooryr.rd cf her customers and ur.loaii-g- it without trouble. She says that v. hc:i che reaches 13 years of aje-by which lime her father ought to be well-to-do she 13 going away to scuocl and tke a course in same col lege that 'grants equal privileges to both sexes.' After yetting educated she proposes to bet:ori;c a doctor. cu.ncuj cjnMcv. Vcfc-etcblcs t'Bed ca a Circnlatlnff B?cili3:a in Icct3zia. Boys in the cast ,-:ae limes think money a searc ecouph r.rtiele, but they really know very little about it com pared with what some cf their cousins from the far -west could tell them. There or.e often gecc. fcr days without 5!ght of even to much as a nickel, and then the people .resort to all sorts of flucer aevices to mclce change, says tha San Francisco Chronicle. An eastern man who had occasion to spend many months in 'Montana tells of having seen a man buy a bes of matches with a wacrraelon and receive as change two muskmelons. Another paid for supsenders in turnips and got a carrot or two back with his purchase. "But of a!l the queer financial trans actions that I have ever known," said he, "ite oddest came under the head of 'paying the fiddler.'. It had been noised abroad that a dance was to be irfven a little way up 'the mountain, and I agreed to go along with one of the boys and see the f'jn. After going through the elaborate preparations-of blacking his boots and putur.g on a collar I saw my companion go to the potato bin and carefully select a Cccn nice potatoes and put them in his pocket. !fo sooner had we arrived nt the 'music hall than he gracefully surrendered his vegeta bles for an entrance ticket. But what puzzled me recFt was that upon coming out after dancing all night he was given two Onions as change. I have been trying to make up my mind ever since just what that dance was worth in the 'currency of the realm.." BORN. In this city. Sunday, Oct. 10th, to A. Woods of Deschutes, Mr. and Mrs. W. a daughter. Nitrogene cures rheumatism in 10 days THE MITE Tflfl FROM THE DALIES TO PORTLAND. PASSENGER RATES. One way ......;...:...:.........:;.$1.50 Round trip 2.50 FREIGHT RATES ARE DOWN. - The Steamer IONE leaves The Dalles on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sat urdays at 6 :30 a. m. Office in the Baldwin Building, foot of Union street. For freight rates, etc, call on or address t J. S. BOOTH. Gen. Agt., The Dalles, Oregon. TO THE : GIVES THE CHOICE OF TWO Transcontinental ROUTES GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY. OREGON SHORT LINE -VIA- Spokane Salt Lake Minneapolis Denver St. Paul Omaha Chicago Kansas City Low Rates to all Eastern Cities OCEAN STEAMERS Leave Portland Everr Five Days for . SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. For fnll details call on O. K A Co.'s Agent at xne Dalies, or aaaress W. H. HTJELBTJET. Gen. Pass. Art Portland, Oregon TIME CARD. y No. 4. to Spokane and Great Northern arrives at 6 p. m., leaves at 6:05 p. m. No. 2, to Pendle ton, Baker City and Union Pacific, arrives at 1:16 a. m.t departs ac i:so a. m. No 8. from Spokane and Great Northern, ar rives at 8 SO a. m., departs at 8:85 a.m. No. 1, from Baker City and Uniou Paciile, arrives at a.oo a. m., departs ai 4:uu a. m. Kos. 23 and 24, moving east of The Dalles, will carry passengers, no. '& graves acb:sup. m.. departs at 12:40 p. m. Passeneers for Heppner will take train leaving nereat b:uop. m. Harry Liebe, PRACTICAL : All work promptly attended to, . and warranted. - 174 VOGT BLOCK. NORTHERN )j PACIFIC RY. s Pullman Sleeping Cars Dining Cars Sleeping Car 8T. FAVL ' ' MINKEAPOLI ' DtTIjUTH rAKQO GRAND FOR CBOOKSTON WINNIFEO HELENA sa BUTTE Elegent Tourist TO Through Tickets CHICAGO WASHINGTON PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK BOSTON AND ALL POINTS EAST and SOUTH For information, time cards, maps and tickets. cal on or write to W. C ALLAWAY. Agent, the Dalies, Oregon A. D. CHARLTON. Asst. G. P. A., ' 255, Morrison Cor. Third. Cortland Oregon ffateflMeriJewe er SUBSCRIBE TWICE v FOR THE I; A J FOR THE CHROfllCIiE And reap the benefit of the following CLUBBING RATES. CHRONICLE and N. Y. Thrice-a-Week World ..:.$2 00 CHRONICLE and N. Y. Weekly Tribune 1 75 CHRONICLE and Weekly Oregonian 2 25 CHRONICLE and S. F. Weekly Examiner 2 25 WORLD TRIBUNE OREGONIAN EXAMINER BUCKS K i. H. Ml .7' I $1- F- .v..:;-'. - t T4 v Wenow have for sale at our ranch, near Ridgeway, Wasco : Count7, Oregon, 260 head of THREE-QUARTER-BREED : SHROPSHIRE : BUC Also fifty head of THOROUGHBRED SHROPSHIRE BUCKS. Tbe above Backs are alt large, fine fellows, and will be sold to the sheepmen of Eastern Oregon at prices , , to suit the times. The thoroughbreds were imported by ' " - - ua from Wisconsin, and are the sires of the three-qnarter- -" breeds. Any information in regard to them will be cheer fully furnished by applying by letter to the owners, , r ' . i .1?. ' - - -. RIDGEWAY, C. W. PHELPS & CO. -DEALEBS IK- Agricultural Drapers Manufactured and Repaired. Pitts' Threshers, Powers and Extras. Pitts' Harrows and Cultivators. Celebrated Piano Header. Lubricating1 Oils, Etc. White Sewing1 Machine and Extras. EAST SECOND STREET. BLAKELEY & 175 Second Street, ARTISTS MATEE-IALS Country and Mail Orders will receive BISJ40P SCOTT flCflDEjaV PORTLAND OREGON. - POUNDED- 1870. - A Boarding; and Day School for Boys, Military Discipline. , The 20th rear tinder the present management begins Sept. 14, 189. This institution is thoroughly equipped lor the mental, social, physical and moral training of boys. A thorough preparation for any college or scientific school. Graduates at present in Yale, West Point, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Btate CniTersities of California, Ore gon, Pennsylvania, Stanford and MeGilL During vacation visitors welcome trai 9 to 12 a. m. For catalogue and other information, addiess tbe Principal, J. W. HILL, M. D. Portland, Oregou. Fostofttce draper 17. FOUR T r' Mi afagi iavl: OREGON. THE DALLES, OR HOUGHTON The Dalles, Oregon proinptjattention. Under n PflPEOS Implements.