THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 27, 1897. THK DAtLES, OrtEGON PERSONAL MEStlOJt. Saturday's Daily. W. H. Hilgea of Grass Valley ia in thecity.- . .. Mr. Walter F. Clark of Kingsley ia in the city today. y Leon Rondean of Kingsley la in the city on business. . ; Michael Callahan and family came in from their farm near Kingsley today. ' Mrs. Hugh Baxter, proprietress of the Athens I. X. L. store, is in the city today. Miss Alma Schmidt went to Portland ' this morning, where she will remain for a short time. Mr. C. J. VanDuyn, Tygh's leading merchant, save this office a pleasant call this morning. 1 ' Rev. W. C. Curtis, of the Congrega tional chnrch, exchanges pulpit minis trations with J. H. Hershner of Hood River tomorrow. .'" Mrs. Qainn Doane came down from Spokane yesterday, and is visiting the family of her brother-in-law, . Dr. &oane, in this city. Mr. aDd Mrs. R. E. Haworth, who have spent the past year in Oakland, Or., came up on the boat last night, nd will remain in the city. Mrs. Michael Kice and children, Ella ami WiHie, made a flying trip tp Port land Utility, going down on the local this morning and will return on the overland tonight. F. C. Sexton left tor his Old home in Kansas on the 1 o'clock train yesterday ' mornine. Mr. Sexton goes to visit friends and attend to his property in that state. . Monday's Dally. Governor Moody was in the city yes terday. ' Frank Gabel of Wapinitia is in the city today. - Mr. Tom Fargher of Dufnr is in the city today. , Mrs. D. M. French went to Portland this morning to visit friends. 1 Mrs. J. A. Randolph, of Portland, is . visiting Mrs. Cbas. Stephens in this city. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. H. Dufnr were in the city yesterday to attend the funeral of Mr. Sinnott. Mr. Chester Starr came in froai Ante lope Saturday and was visiting .friends in the city yesterday. Hon. Phil Metschan came op from Salem vesterday to attend the funeral oi ' the late N.'B. Sinnott. Meesrs. Otto Kohler and Fred Nyffler were in the city today. They are on their way to Columbus, Neb. Miss Mollie Bottorff left on the local this morning for Portland, to purchase goods for the Elite millinery parlors. Rev. F. Hogan came np from Portland Saturday night to hold services at the Catholic church yesterday and be pres ent at the funeral. HIS l&iCHES "took' 'wings. :' Children m s Mi w m Who would prescribe only g m tonics ana Dieters ior a weax, $ puny child ? ' Its muscles and $ nerves are so thoroughly ex $ hausted that they cannot be whipped Into '"activity. The a child needs food a blobd- m making;, nerve-strengthening S and muscle-building' food. w 1 Scott's Emulsion I m -i r-J t : rvt t -ft tUir- and you still have a tonic in $ the hypophosphites of lime and soda to act with the food. For thin and delicate children w there is' no remedy superior w to it in the world. It means growth, strength, plumpness $ and comfort to them. Be sure jg you get SCOl I'i Hmulsion. w 50c. and $1.00, ' all druggists. tmrr ROWNR. Chemists. New York. PHOTOGRAPHERS AND DUST. Miss Laura , Fenton, who for some - time has been visiting with her sister, Mrs. Leon Curtis, of Rockland, left for her home in Portland this morning. George Liebe, Jr., who has been at tending febool at the Business College in Portland, came np on the Dalles City Saturday. He will visit relatives and friends here for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Seufert came up fiom Portland Saturday night, Mrs. . Seufert returning on the local this morning in order to be with her little boy, who is under the doctor's care in that city. Mr. Frank A. Murray, who for five yearB was connected with the Pioneer Press, gave this office a pleasant call. Mr. Murray is. accompanied by his wife, and they are a genial couple. He Is at ! present traveling manager of the M. B Cnrtis Co. . - Tuesday's Daily. , B. F. Swift of Wamic is at the Uma tilla House. John Roth of Kingsley is in the .city on business. " Mr. F. H. Hillgen of Tygh Ridge is in the city today. ' Richard Segman of Dry Hollow was in the city last night. Miss Helen Warner of Nansene is in the city visiting friends. " Mrs.. Vanbibber went to Portland on the Regulator this morning. Jndge Blakeley left for Portland this ..morning on the delayed train. W. L. Hendricks, one of Dufur's pros perous farmers, was in the city today. ' Mr. O'Brion of Upper 15-Mile gave - the office a pleasant call this morning. A McLeod, an enterprising farmer from the Kingsley neighborhood, is in the city today. . Dr. Siddail has been ill at home for several days, but is out again and will be in his office tomorrow, able to attend to business. Mrs. J. Gilbert came up on the train last night from Portland to attend the . funeral of her mother-in-law, Mrs Miller. Her husband being ill, wfis un able to attend. Bow It Affects Tbelr Plate and What They Do to Escape It. Among the many evils which are at tributed to the all-pervading', never-to-be escaped city dust, there is one which, constitutes a grievance peculiar to pho tographers alone. It is . the .injury which the flying particles, sifting into the room through every aperture, cause to the delicate films and sensitive plates, All films are made of preparations of gelatin, and a large proportion of the glass plates now used are also coated with this substance, which, because of its soft, sticky nature, is particu'larly likely to attract every atom of dust in the surrounding air,. The particles, however small, leave their impress in the form of opaque spots upon the sen sitive surface and seriouslymar its per fection. To remove the damage a great amount of retouching is necessary, which is not only laborious and tire some, but which cannot always be sat isfactorily accomplished if the dust is very thick.. What is known as the "car bon process" in photography is prob ably more easily injured by dust than any other, because an. extremely deli cate film of gelatin is used. Chiefly on account of this drawback the carbon process is seldom employed in this coun try, although photographs are made which resemble the real carbon pic tures so closely in color that they are "carbon types." In England, where the carbon process is more common, it has become customary for London pho tographers to send their developing work out of town to be done, in order to escape the dust and smoke of the city, but this practice has not gained much ground here. The photographers in this city, as a rule, perform their operations in the same building in which their studios are situated, and for the sake of thus keeping the developing process at home, they are obliged to be at great trouble in protecting it. Some of the methods employed for this purpose were men tioned to a Tribune reporter the other day by a well-known Broadway artist. . "In the first place," he 6aid, "we not only keep onr dark room itself, but the whole top floor in which it is situated, spotlessly clean. The floors are all oiled until there is not a crack in their surface to harbor dust-, and they are thoroughly washed every morning be fore we begin our day's work. All the tables, trays, and everything we use are kept equally clean. The windows, in stead of being in the side walls, where the wind would strike them and bear the dust in with it, are in the roof, and very little dust can come in that way. All the cracks in the doors or around the window frames are stopped up, and we keej) the dark room tightly closed as much of the time as possible. With these precautions we manage to get along pretty well, but a certain quanti ty of dust seems bound to creep in, and it causes us a good many hours of extra work in retouching." Practically the same struggle against dust is the experience of every photog rapher in the city. One remedy which I has been tried occasionally with success consists in filling the room in which the plates are kept with steam for a few mo ments each morning. This usually suf fices to lay the dust Tor the entire day. N. Y. Tribune. JS Farmer's Treasnred Geeae Take a . .-' Notion to. Fly. ; A Pawtuxe valley farmer, whose farm is near the village of Crompton, had a literal exemplirication a lew lays ago of the old adage which says that, "lHebes take lfiito themselves wings and fly away," says the Provi dence Journal. Something over a year ago he and his son tired ut a flock of wild geese that flew over his farm and managed "to bring dov.'n nearly . two score of them. About 13 of the. birds were only wounded, and, surviving the shooting, were so carefully kept that in a year their captors had succeeded by judicious breeding jn increasing the stock. to over 70 geese and goslings. They were kept in a pen that was cov ered with wire netting, and seemed to have become thoroughly domesticated and satisfied with their surroundings. One day lately the farmer, wishing to let them feast awhile on the tender blades of grass that were sprouting in an adjoining field, opened the coop and let the. strange flock into the pasture. green and new. And this is where he made a mistake. The half-wild ganders,, geese and goslings reveled for awhile amid the verdant grass and new-found freedom, but never made an effort to rise above mundane things, and the experiment wars voted, a success by the owners of the f.oek. They congratulat ed themselves too soon however, for later in the day there came winding over the Coventry hills, high in air, a snaky black line from which there floated down into that Crompton farm er's pasture the "henk, honk" of the wild goose, a sound familiar to sports men, which it seems the half-wild-geese in the verdant meadtow also understood. Without waiting to bid' their owner goodby, with one accord the ganders, geese and goslings arose on new-found wings to join their free feJlows near the cloutls,' and before the farmer . knew what had happened' they, were out of gunshot, following the black trail to ward the southeastern horizon. THE LITEST XjIJNT 3D FROM THE DALIES TO PORTLAND. PASSENGER RATES. One way ....... Round trip .. FREIGHT RATES . ARE DOWN. The Steamer lONE leaves The Dalles on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sat urdays at 6 :30 a. in. Office in. the Bnldwirt Building, foot of Union street. For freight rates, etc, call on or address : . : ' J.'S. BOOTH, Gen. Agt., ' ' The Dalles, Oregon. J? UxC l ij 1 M 1 FOR THE . V WEEK J $1.50 .'"'' : JOBS OF CHEMISTS. The Queer Claaa of Patrons liat They Have to Serve. . Chemists sometimes have queer ex periences. The following facts, says- the Chicago Journal, were told by a professor : in one of the western universities: "For about ten years I have made a specialty of examining and reporting upon cases of real or sus pected poisoning. As a number of my cases have been connected with murder trials, I have had considerable notice in the daily papers. This reputation for making analyses for poisons has brought me a queer class of patrons, "Every year I have one or more old men come to me with samples of food to be examined for poison. These men, without exception, have married young wives, and when the husband is taken sick and does not recover as quickly as he thinks he should, he begins to sus pect that his young wife wants to get rid of him, and is poisoning him grad ually through the medium of his food, Of course he does not want his wife to know of his suspicions, and he quietly gets a sample of the food he suspects, and at some unusual hour for work, generally either early in the morning or very late in the evening, he comes to rue and tells me verv secretly that he wishes to have an examination for poi son made. ".Now, the odd part is that, though I have made a number of such analyses, I have never found poison present in any case. Then the husband is very much afraid that his wife will find out that he suspects her, and he gets out of my laboratory in the quickest and quietest manner- possible. So every year I expect to see some elderiy man coming apprehensively up my office Ft airs with a well-concealed sample of food about him to (be examined for poi son. Every year he comes, every year I make my analysis and find no poison, and every year the old gentleman gets information that he considers pheap at the price.'" ' lyjoiTUo iiMo TO THE EHST . GIVES THE CHOICE OF TWO Transcontinental ROUTES GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY. OREGON SHORT LINE -VIA- SpOkane Salt Lake Minneapolis Denver St. Paxil Omaha Chicago Kansas City Low Rates to all Eastern Cities SENSORY HALLUCINATIONS. This Ia Toar Opportunity. ' On receipt of ten cents, cash or stamps, ft generous sample will be mailed of the most popular Catarrh and Hay Fever Cure ( .1 y 8 uream tmua) snmcient to demon strate the great merits of the remedy. ' ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren St, Kew Tori City. Itev. John Eoid, 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." Kev. Francis W. Poole, Pastor Central Prea. Church, Helena, Mont., . ' A - - Ely's Cream Balm is the acknowledged enre for catarrh and contains no mercury nor any injurious drug. - Price, GO cents. AN OSESOS. KLONDIKE. Do you want money? If so, catch on to this. A 7-year-old orchard, twenty acre . tract, seventeen acres in choice fruits, bearing trees, new house of six rooms, barns, outbuildings, etc., all new ; two horses and harness, two wagons, one road cart and one cow. Will sell at a bargain and on easy terms. Call on or Address C. E. Baya'rd or Chas. Frazer The Dalles, Oregon. For People That Are nil A Sick or "Just Don't i Feel well." ONLY ONE FOR A DOSE. Ramorca Pimples, cum Haadaeha, Dyspepsia and Coatlnna!. 26 cts. a box at druegiau or br mail bamplaa Free, addraaa Dr. BoMnks Co. Fhila. Fa, The Seelnsr of Ghoats Dne to Defective KycHlcht. A recnt number of the Australian Medical Gazette contains a brief but instructive report of the cure of a ease of hallucinatory disorder. The patient, a man aged CO years, had suifered for two years from subjective visual sensa tions not a day passed that he did not 6ee a large number of spectral human figures, and believing himself to be haunted by ghosts he had become very despondent and melancholy. On seek ing medical advice it was found that he had senile cataract. When ihis was removed by operation the g-hosts fled and the man recovered his usual health. In this oonneetion we may cite the ease of a tradesman in Berlin whose shop was haunted by apparitions resembling, in appearance some of his deceased cus tomers. He was an intelligent man, aware that he suffered from sensory hallucination, and made notes of ' his subjective impressions. In due time he submitted his eyes to examination and operation, With the result of a restora tion of normal vision and the immedi ate. and final disappearance of his in tangible visitors. The obvious teach ing of the foregoing and similar cases is that in these modern days the person to be resorted to for the exorcism of spir its and demons is the opthalmic Bur geon, ' ' . . - . , . WANTED. ... Upright and faithful gentlemon 'or ladies to travel for responsible estab lished house in Oregon. Monthly $65 and expenses. Position steady. . Kefer erence. Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope.' The Dominion Company, Dept. H., Chicago. o51o OCEAN STBA3IKK8 LeaT Portland Berv FIto lav for SAN FRANCISCO, CAL For full detailN call on O. The Dalles, or address W, H S & Co. a Agent at IIURLBURT. Gen. Pass. Act Portland, Oregon TIME CARD. No. 4, to Spokane and Great Northern arrives at 6 p. m., leaves at ti:iio p. m. t,o. to Pendle ton, Bilker City and Union Pacific, arrivesat 1:15 a in., departs at l:a a. m. Iv o 3, from Spokane ana Great Northern, ar rives at 830 a. m.. departs at 8:3a a. m. No. from Baki r City and Union Pacific, arrives at 3:00 a. m., departs at :uu a. m. N'os. 23 and 24, moving east of The Dalles, will carry passengers. io. a graves at b:au p. m aeparis at p. mj Passengers for Heppner will take train leaving nereaib:uap. m. - . Regulator Line The Dalles. Portland and Astoria Navigation Co.' , strs. Regulator & Dalles City FREIGHT AND , PASSENGER LINE BETWEEN Tne Dalles, Hood River, Cascade Locks and Port- jana aany, except bunday. GOOD ISERVICE, LOWEST RATES Are you going DOWN THE VALLEY OH TO EASTERN OREGON? If so. save money and enlov a beautiful trin on the Columbia. The west-bound train arrives at Tbe Dalles in ample time for passengers to take the steamer, arriving in Portland in time for the outgoing southern and Northern trains; East bound passengers arriving in The Dales in time to taae me .asi-DOUDa train. For further information apply to J. N. HARNEY, Agent, ...'.'. Oak Street Dock. Portland. Oregon, . Or W C. ALLAWAY, Gen. Agt., The Dalles; Oregon Subscribe for The. Chronicle. Nebraska corn ior sale at. the Wasco warehouse. Best feed on earth. ; m9-t ffilLDDD PDISOn 0 nochai enry, A gPECIALTYoltf: tlary liLOOU VUISON permanently cared in 16 to 35 days. You can be treated at borne foraume price under same a;aaraa ty if you prefer to come here wr win n. tract to Dayrallroadfareandhotiiihiiia Bn rge, If we fail to cure. If yon have taken mer , iodide potash, and still have achea ni pains, MucousPatcheg in mouth. Sore Throat. fimples. Copper Colored Spot", Ulcers on any port of tbe body, UtilrorEyebrows fuUins; out. It is this Secondary BLOOD POISON we rnarantee toctire. We solicit the most obsti nate cases and challenge the- world for a case we cannot cure, a'bis disease baa always battled the skill of the most eminent physi cians. 8500,000 capital behind our uncondi ttoDal guaranty. Absolute proofs sent sealed on application. Address COOK REMEDY CO. CgUaconia Temple, CUICACiO, ILL. And reap the benefit of the following CLUBBING RATES. CHRONICLE and N..Y. Thrice-a-Week World.. CHRONICLE and N. Y: Weekly Tribune .... ...... CHRONICLE and Weekly. Oregonian . i.......:.... ... CHRONICLE and S F. Weekly Examiner-:. WORLD TRIBUNE OREGONIAN EXAMINER .$2 00 75 25 25 FOUR pins C. W. PHELPS & CO. -DEALERS IX- Agricultural Implements, Drapers Manufactured and Repaired. Pitts' Threshers. Powers and Extras. Pitts' Harrows and Cultivators. Celebrated Piano Header. 1 Oils, Etc. - White Sewing1 Machine and Extras. EAST SECOND STREET. THE DALLES, OR Slew York weeldy i V 1 I.::. '1 I I J Tribune FOB Farmers and Villagers. FOR Fathers and Mothers, FOR Sons and Daughters, FOR All the Family. With the close of the Presidential Camoaien THE TRIBUNE recognizes the 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 fight for the principles for which THE TRIBUNE has labored from its inception to the present dav. and won its. erea teat victories. Everv rTBsibIe effort will be tmt forth ' and monev freelv SDent. 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 yonr name and address on a postal card, eend it to Geo. W. Best, Tribune Office, New York City, acd a Sample copy of The New York Weekly Trib une will be mailed, to vou. -' Wasco warehouse Company Headquarters for Seed Grain of ail kinds. Headquarters for Feed Grain of all kinds. Headquarters for Rolled Grain, ail kinds. Headquarters for Bran, Shorts, "mTllfeed Headquarters for "Byers' Best" Pendle- Trio "IT T This Flour - ia manufactured expressly- for family . . use: every sack. is guaranteed to give satisfaction. We sell onr eoods lower than any honse in the trade, and if vou don't think so call and get oar prices and be convinced. - . . Highest Prices Paid for Wheat,' Barley and Oats. Job Piuntina a t This Off ice;