The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947, November 17, 1897, PART 1, Image 4

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THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 17, 1897.
The Weekly GhroMele.
tBI DALLES.
OREGON
.' Schedules of Expenditures.
Showing the amounts ; of all claims
presented, the names of all claimants,
-the article or claim for which payment
is made, the amounts allowed and the
claims cod tinned or rejected at the
November term, 1897, of the county
court for Wasco connty, Oregon. The
following list, however, does not corf
tain any claim for which the salary or
fees are provided by statute :
F. S. Smith, labor on county
road
Joe Bonn, for labor on county
42 00
roati
J. H. Hollett, sawing wood......
: M. M. Cashing, keeping poor. . : .
'Van Dayn, Adams A Co., supplies
68 15
985
125 00
' 2 86
lilaps dc Fradhoinme, furni
ture for clerk's office
Glass & Prudhomme, supplies
for clerk's office..
- Br. Sutherland, prof, seivices. ..
Mays & Crowe, supplies
-Oregon Telephone & Tele
(trapb Co., mes. and rent. ..
D W Vanae, varnishing office. ..
. Dalles Lumbering Co., wood
Times-Mountaineer, pub
Geo Buch. supplies for paupers.
J. H. Elton, rebate on taxes
Lane Bros.," supplies
A S Blowers & son, sup. paupers
E J Perine, drawing jury list. .,
Thomas Harlan, "
L J Davenport, "
J H Freiienburg, care of poor. . .
J M Hnntineton, deputy assess.-
A C Gtier & Co., sup. to poor. .
F tt llliauiS, watering streets.
Peter Richard, summoning jury
8 BGoit, surveying
W D Richards, viewing road
H A Levins, supplies to poor
t3 L Gilbert, deputy assessor. . . .
M Z Donnell, m?d. for poor..,..
Dr H Logan prof, services
H Clougb, labor on vault
Joel Koontz. work on roads
Dalles City Water Workr, for
water, Sept. and Oct.. . ...
Lewis Dryden Ptg. Co
Dr O Doane, professional services
pauper . . ..
S E Bartmess, burial pauper. . . .
Mountain Stage Co, team hire.
Time9-Mountaineer, printing. . . .
V H Farlow, rebate on taxes
Isaac Hicksoh, lumber bridge. . .
TJ Driver, eundry bills
. A 8 Blowers, supplies pauper....
C E Bayard, rebate on taxe ....
105 65
10 00
1250
540
8 10
4 45
2 75
1 50
1 00
' 3 15
505
10 35
200
200
2 00
200
102 00
2 89
3 75
5 00
400
200
10 00
141 00
1 73
19 00
4 50
150
13 00
26 00
8 00
20 00
11 00
27 70
2 00
25 00
222 90
12 00
31 90
I, A. M. Kelsay, county clerk of Wasco
connty, state of Oregon, do hereby cer
tify that the 'above and foregoing is a
full and complete statement of the
claims presented and action taken there
on by the county court of Wasco county,
Oregon, sitting for the transaction of
county business at the November term
1897, thereof, save and except all claims,
- the salary or fees of which are provided
for by statute.
Witness my hand and seal of the
connty court, affixed this 16th day of
November, 1897.
Seal. A. M. Kelsay,
County Clerk.
Meteors This Month.
Astronomers all over the country are
looking forward to the possible brilliant
display of meteors next Saturday and
Sunday night. Once in 33 years at about
this time in November these meteors
'appear. November 12, 1833, a shower
is reported to have caused consternation
among the fgnorant negroes of the south
' while it attracted attention1 all over the
world, Descriptions ' published at the
time say that the air seemed as full of
falling stars as flakes in a snow storm. A
remarkable dieplay was witnessed in
Europe in 1866, lasting for six or seven
hours. Leonids, so-called from the
fact that they Beemed to radiate from a
point in the constellation Leo, are there
fore due to return in force in 1S99, but
the earth will doubtless meet the ad
vance guard this year or next, while the
camp followers will probably appear
in small numbers as late as 900. The
fullness of the moon will probably inter
fere somewhat with observations this
year and next, but there is a good chance
to see something spectacular if the
watch is kept up late enough, for
L?o this month does not rise until about
midnight.
Another shower due this month is the
Andromedes, from the constellation An
dromeda. This shower should be seen
. about the 27th of the month. They ap
pear every id years in nnusual nora
bers, the last two times being in '72 and
'85, so that the period will be completed
in 1898. It is not iinprobnble however
that they will appear in sufficient num
bers this year to cause comment.
Cuh In loor Check.
All countv warrants, registered prior
t) July 7, 1893, will be paid at my
office. Interest ceases after Oct. 27th,
1897. C. L. Phillips,
: Conntv Treaenrer.
We have used your Happy
Thoaght Salve with excellent
results. Our little girl, 4 yrs. !
Old, had SOre ears for. nearly a j
year from the effects, of a se
vere case of chicken pox. Af
ter using the salve for a short
time, her ears were complete
ly healed. We find it works
wonders. .
M. A. Covington, B. B.,
Pastor Madison St. M. E. Church,
... " Seattle, Wash.
50 cents a jar-"05
at Donneirs Drugstore. -
A GEEAT FEAT.
The Mesa Enoan tada
Last.
Explored at
After Many Year of Conjecture the
Troth Comralng the Famous ,
Roek la Xoir l'osltlrelr
Known.
For the first time in the history ol
man the celebrated Mesa has . been
mounted. The honor belongs to Prof.
William Libbey, pi Princeton universi
ty, Xcw Jersey, and the fact has been
scientifically established that the sum
mit is uninhabited, and, as far as the
party could discover, ' has ever been.
There were absolutely no traces" of ani
xal life.- r - -
' It may be thai new specimens of flora
have been found that existed in the
prehistoric v.crlJ, but sufficient exam
ination has not yet been made to de
termine this fact. The Mesa Enean
iada is caid to be the only spot on the
fuee of the globe where the flowers of
the period of long ago can exist without
the contamination and war of plant life
with the world of the present day.
Trof. .Libbey succeeded iu making his
mueh-talkcd-of ascent of theencantada
a few days ago. The trip to the summit
was fraught with great perils, and. the
result is of little value from an arch
aeological standpoint.
The party consisted of Prof. Libbey,
IT. L. Bridge niah, of Brooklyn, and the
correspondent of the Times-Herald.
Every preparation had been, made for
the uscent, there were great kites and
balloons ready for use, but it was decid
ed to throw a line across the top of the
Mesa with a gun, borrowed for the pur
pose from the United States life-saving
service. - '
The first shot was too low. The sec
ond, carrying a steel wire, went over
the summit, but took two days to draw
the cord which was attached to a long
er ropi? over the rough, rocky surface
of. the spot described by Goronado in
his report to the king of Spaiu nearly
three centuries ago as being the strong
est natural fortification in the known
world. ' :
When the ropes were made fast a
block was arranged, and a great chain
of boards, 20 feet across, was fastened
to it. A huge rock was sent to the sum
mit without tipping, and then Prof.
Libbey made the ascent. It was dan
gerous, exceedingly so. As the pro
fessor' came close to the summit he had
to bang on by one hand, while with the
other, he disengaged the ropes of the
chair, which had caught in the rough
rocks. The remainder of the party then
made the ascent, and were assisted on
the surface by. the professor.
Xext a great difficulty presented it
self in the form of a gaping chasm. This
was crossed on the ropes, and the ten
acres of the surface of the rock were ex
plored by the daring scientists.
They spent the entire : day there,
searching for the evidences of the vil
lage, said to have existed 500 years ago,
but there was nothing to indicate that
it ever had existed in reality. There
were monuments of rock, such as the
Indians built in the ages that have'
gone by, but that was all.
There were some pools of water that
had callected, but whether they were
worn .by the action of small particles
of rock carried by the windsorwhetber
they were in reality constructed by the
Acoma Indians in the centuries that
have gone down into the silence of the
past is not known. - .
Search was made for the bones of the
human beings whom the legend of the
haunted rock describes as having been
starved to death there, but they were
not found.
It is assumed by botanists that this
great rock, which rises over 700 feet
from the surface of a desert of sand.
protruded out of -the ancient sea that
covered this section of the world in the
distant past, and that the flora is the
same to-day as it was in those days,
when the world was young nnd of which
history has no account. Specimens,
such cs there were, were collected, but
whether they belong to this day and
age or to the realms of the prehistoric
world is not known.
This rock, enchanted or haunted, ns it
has been called by the Acoma Indians.
has been the center of scientific inter
est for years. Numerous attempts have
been made to mount it, only to be
doomed to failure.
The legend of the Indians is that the
summit of the rock was once reached
by a natural ladder in a pillar. .On this
place the old and decrepit were kept to
shield them from the attacks of hostile
foes, while the men were in the valley
at work.t Once a great torrential rain
crime, like a cloudburst, and ate away
the sandy foundations of the pillar,
which fell, and the inhabitants on the
rock, several hundred in , number,
starved to death.. ' ,
It has even been asserted that the
place was inhabited,- and the ascent by
the Libbey party was made to set at
rest the rumors and determine once and
for all whether or not the stories as
told were true. Chicago Times-Herald.
Rich and Poor In India.
Our standard of civilization is per-
! sonal comfort luxury, a thing abso-
llltdlv nntnnu'n in. nolir. Trwllo TV,
is scarcely any difference in the mode of
living between the rich and the poor.
If you go into the house of a rajah, there
Ms the same bare floor, and only a simple
platter to eat from, such as is seen in the
home of the poorest. To put it crudely,
there will probably not be even the
luxury of a wash basin and towel, for
the rich man, like his poor brother, he
washes in the open and dries himself
in the sun. -Such is the extreme sim
plicity of life that wealth is still buried
in India; a man may spehd it on jewels
for his wife, bnt not on pleasure or per
sonal comfort. This simple life, which
fostered no distinctions 'of class," has
been preserved for 3,000 years by In
dian civilization, but oura will destroy it
in 50 years. Humanitarian. '
ORTHERIST
PACIFIC RY.
J
Pullman
Elegent
Tourist -
Sleeping Cars
Dining Cars
Sleeping Car
V , 8T. FAIT I.
MINNEAPOLI
v DCLUTH
,'KAHGO
TO ' "' GRAND FOR
v . CROOK9TON
' WINNIPEG -HELENA
an
BUTTE
Through Tickets
CHICAGO
WASHINGTON
PHILADELPHIA ,
NEW YORK
BOSTON AND ALL
POINTS EAST and SOUTH
For information, time cards, maps and ticket,
cal on or write to '
W. C. ALLAWAY.' Agent.
- . - The Dalles, Oregon
OB
A. D. CHARLTON. Asst. G. P. A..
255. Morrison Cor. Third. Portland Oregon
TO THE
GIVE8 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 Lare Portland
Every FItb Days for
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL
Steamers monthly from Portland to
Yokohama and . Hone Kong via North
ern Pacific Steamship Co., in connection
with O. R. & N.
For full details call on O. K A Co. a Agent at
xne uaues. or aaaress
, W. H. HUKLBORT, Gen. Pass. Agt
. Portland. Oregon
TIME CARD.
No. 4, to Spokane and Great Northern arrives
ato:25 p. m., leaves at 5:30 p. m. No. 2, to Pendle
ton, Baker City nnd Union Vaciticarrives at 12:45
a m., departs at a. m. '
No 3, from Spokane and Great Northern, ar
rives at 9-20 a. m., departs at 9:25 a. m. No. 1,
irom Bauer city ana uniou racmo, arrives at
a. m., departs at a:au a. m.
Nos. 23 and 24, moving east of The Dalles, will
carry passengers. .o. a arrives at a p.. m.
departs at 1:45 p. m.
Passengers for Heppner take No. 2, leaving
nere at j. :w p. m.
THE
NEW YORK WORLD
THRIGE-fl-WEEK EDITION.
IS Pages a Week.
196 Papers a Year
It etands first among ''weekly" papers
in size, frequency of publication
freshness, variety and reliability of con
tents. It is practically a daily at the low
price o a weekly ; and its vast list of
subscribers, extending to every state and
territory of the Union and foreign coan
tries, will vouch for the acenracy and
fairness of its news columns.
It is splendidly illustrated, and among
its special features are a fine humor
page, exhaustive market reports, all . the
latest fashions for women and a "Ion
series of stories by the greatest living
American aud English authors,
Conab 07le, , Jerome K. Jerome,
Stanley Weyman. .Mary E. TVilklus '
Anthony Hope, Bret II arte,
Brancrer Matthew, Etc. .
We offer this unequaled newspaper and
The Dalles Twice-a-Week Chronicle to
gttther one year for f 2.00. The regular
price of the two papers is 3.00.
For People That Aren 1 1 I A
Sick or "Just Don't IJ II 1
FeelWelL" . IbEaU
W ONLY ONE FOR A DOSE.
Remsves Pimples, car Haadache, Bysptpsta and
CottJ veriest. 28 ct. a box at druggisu or by mail
bamplsi Free, address Dr. Botanka Co. Phil. Pa.
HITE
TOO
FROM THE DALIES TO PORTLAND
PASSENGER RATES.
One way .....
Round trip
....$1,00
...1.50
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 ' . - ;
J. S. BOOTH, Gen. Agt.,
The Dalles, Oregon
Regulator Line
Tie Dalles. Portal ani Astoria
Navigation Co.'
strs. Regulator S Dalles City
FREIGHT AND PASSENGER LINE
The Dalles, Hood River, Cascade Looks and"Port-
land daily, except Sunday.
GOOD SERVICE. LOWEST RATES
DOWN THE VALLEY
. OR TO - '
EASTERN OREGON?
Are you going
' If so, save money and enjoy a beautiful trip on
the Columbia. The wet-bound train arrives at
The Dalles in ample time for passengers to take
the steamer, arrivine in Portland in time for the
outgoing Southern and Northern train : East
bound passengers arriving in The Dales in time
to take the East-bound train.
For farther Information apply to
J. N. HARNEY, Agent,
Oak. Street Dock. Portland. Oregon,
Or W C. ALLAWAY, (Jen. Agt,
The Dalles. Oregon
EAST and SOUTH via
The Shasta Route
OP THE
Southern Pacific Comp'y.
Trains leave and are due to arrive at Portland.
OVERLAND EX-)
Dress. Salem. Rose- 1
burg, Ashland, Sac
6:00 P. M
ramento, ugaen.ban
Franciseo, Mojave,
9:30 A. M.
Los Augoie8,h.i fi
New Orleans
East
and
8:30 A. M.
Roseburg and way sta
tions
4:30 P. M
fVia Woodburn fori
MLAngel, Bilvertou.
' Dally
except
Sunday.
Dally
except
Sundays.
V West Scio, Browns-
vuie.bpringneia ana I
L Natron : J
(Corvallis and way)
stations (
jMcMimivllle and)
(way stations : (
17:30 A. M.
M:30 P.M.
t 5:50 P.M.
t 8:25 P. M
Dally. t Daily, except Sunday.
DIKING CARS ON OGDEN KOUTE.
PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPERS
AND SECOND-CLASS SLEEPING CARb
Attached to all Through Trains.
Direct connection at San Francisco with Occl'
dental and Oriental and Pacitic mail ateamship
uues lor jArAn ana luiaa. bauiue a aces on
af plication.
Kates ana tictets to tnstern points ana En
po. Also JAPAN, CHl.N'A, HONOLULU and
I'STRALIA. can be obtained from
J. B. KIRKLAND, Ticket Agent.
Throueh Ticket Office, 134 Third street, where
tnrougn ucjiew 10 an points in ice as tern
States, Canada and Europe can be obtained at
lowest rates from
J. B. KIRKLAND, Ticket Agent
All above trains arrive at and depart from
Grand Central Station. Fifth and Irving streetb
YAMHILL DIVISION.
Passenger Depot, foot of Jettereon street
Leave for OSWEGO, dally, except Sunday, at
:u a. m.; 1:2:1a, 1:49, a:, b:, ":to p.
fand 11:30 p. m. on Saturdav onl v. and 8:40 a. m.
and 3:30 p. m. on Kundavs only). Arnve
Portland daily at 7:10 and 8:30 a m.: ankl
4
la, 6:35 anu 7:55 p. m.. (and 10 a. in . 3-15 and
:10 p. m. on Sundays only).
Leave for Sheridan, week days, it 4:30 n. m
Arrive at Portland, 9:30 a. m.
Leave for ATRLIE on Monday. Wednesday and
Frinav at 9:40 a.m. Arrive at Portland. Tues
day, Thursday and Saturday at 3:05 p. m.
Except Sunday. Exccpt Saturday.
R.
KOEHLER.
, H. MARK1IAM,
Asst. G. F. it Pass. Aet
Manaser.
iQison
01
tiary J5LUUU fulON Derma.n.i-
curcdin!5to85daTS. YoucanbatriitA
I JhomeforsunepriceunderBame8;anraii
I Jfty.lfyoa prefer to come here we w 11 1 ooq.
nmMiy tracttODflTrailroadfnrpflndhofpihiiiq
Docbaiye, if we fail to core. If yon have taken mer
cury, iodide potash, and still bare aches .nil
enry. iodide
pnlns. Mucous Patches in mouth. Sore Throat.
'im olefl. CoDDer Colored Kntkta. Illx... J?
any part of the body, Huiror Fvebrows falilne
oat, it to this Secondary BLOOD Foisiw
we cnuirantee to cure. We solicit the most obsti
nate cases and challenge the world for ah
ease we cannot cure. This dlset.se has always
baffled the skill of the most eminent physi
cians. 8500,000 capital behind our uncondi.
tional guaranty. Absolute prooff: sent sealed on
application. Address COOK REMKDV CO
AlkUwonio Xeauple, CHlcaciO, 1LX. ,
fOlLDOD
T.'i ...... . ...
' '.. ' !':" re-o i.(d,JiJ
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-DEALERS IX-
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Drapers Manufactured and Repaired.
Pitts' Threshers. Powers and Extras.
Pitts' Harrows and Cultivators
Celebrated Piano Header.
Lubricating Oils. Etc.
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EAST SECOND STREET.
Wasco Warehouse Company
Headquarters for Seed Grain of au kinds.
Headquarters for Feed Grain of ail kinds.
Headquarters for Rolled Grain, ail kinds.
Headquarters for Bran, Shorts, mT"l FEdED
Headquarters for "Byers' Best" Pendle-
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THE DALLES, OR
at This Office.
FOUR
PflPEflS