The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947, December 28, 1898, PART 1, Image 4

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    THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE. WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 28, 1898
PERSON At. MENTION.
John Parrot t is in the city from Poit-
land.
Charles Lord is in the city from
Arlington.
' Mf 68 Melissa Hill ie enjoyirjg her va
cation in Portland.
G. C-Blukeley returned on last night
train from the metropolis.
G. W. Phelps is down from Heppner
spending a few days at home.
G. E. Stewart returned last night from
short trip to the metropolis.
Miss Nellie Michell is spending the
week wita her parents in Columbus.
H. N. Derthick is in from Victor to
day, and paid this office a pleasant visit.
Arthur Stubline. who has epent a
short time in Portland, will return home
tomorrow.
Miss Mvrtle Short, of Portland, came
up Saturday night and is a guest of the
Hisses Bolton.
Will Frank returned Saturday evening:
from Mt. Angel, where he has been at
tending college.
Miss Anna Moore returned to Portland
toJay, after visiting with her mother for
the pact two days.
Chas. Clarke came up from Hood
River Saturday evening and remained
over Sunday at home.
Chris Schwabe, of The Cheoniclk
force, and Alfred Huot spent Sunday
' and yesterday in Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Haworth and Mr.
and Mr. R. E. Haworth spent Christmas
-with their, parents in Portland.
Carrie and Arnold Sbeuerman, of
Pendleton, are spending their vacation
with Mrs. N. Harris, in this city.
Miss Henderson returned last night
from Bonneville, where she past the two
holidays with Miss Hattie Ricks.
Fletch Faulkner was among thoee
who attended the football game between
the Multnomah and Berkeley team 8.
' - Mrs. Vm. Bruen, who has been visit
ing Mrs. C. Stabling for several days,
returned to her home on the Waehiog
- ton side today.
Sayre, Earl and Carl Rinehart are
home from school and will remain dur
ing the week with their mother, Dr.
Belle Rinehart.
Miss N. Wolfe, a niece of Mrs. N.
Harris, ariived in the city Saturday I
evening on the Flyer, and will visit her
aunt in this city.
Miss Eitella Aher, who has filled a
position as clerk in Jacobsen'e stoie
curing the past few weeks, returned to
Portland yesterday.
'"MrF. Emory Oliver and little son,
Graydon, arrived from Portland Satur
day and spent Christmas with Mr. and
Mrs. W. E. Sylvestei.
Miss Grace Smith arrived in the city
from Pendleton Sunday morning and
will take the place in the millinery store
vacated by her sister.
Ray Logan, who has been attending
the Portland Medical College, spent
Christmas with his father and will re
turn to Portland Thursday.
Florence Hilton came np from Port
land last evening and will spend a short
time with friends here. She is at present
the guest of Florence Sampson.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Butler arrived
"home" Saturday evening. How long
they will remain has not been decided.
Mr. Butler says they have had just such
weather in Skagway as we have here.
Twins Hon.
In this city, December 26th, to Mr.
and Mrs. W. J. Jeffers, a son and
daughter.
A riGHTING DiET. .
lack la Said to Ec That of the Veg-e-tartan.
' I regret to say that veg-etarianism is
a fighting diet, writes G. U. Shaw in the
London Vegetarian. Xinety-nine per
cent, of the world's fighting' has been
done on farinaceous food. In Trafalgar
- square I found it impossible to run
away as fast as the racat eaters did.
Panic is a carnivorous r.pecialty. If the
army were fed on a hardy, healthy,
flesbJess diet we should hear no more oi
the disgust of our colored troops and oi
the Afridis and Fuzzywuzzies at the
cowardice of Tommy Atldns. I am my
self congenitally timid, but as a vege
tarian I can generally conceal my
tremors; whereas in my unrcgenerate
days, when I ate my fellow-creatures, I
was as patient a coward as Peter the
Great. The recent spread cf fire-eating
fiction and Jingo war worship a sort
of thing that only interests the pusil
lanimous is due to the spread of meat
eating. Compare the Tippcrnry peasant
to the potatoes-ar.d-buttcrmilk days
with the modern gentleman who gorges
himself with murdered cow. The Tip
perary man never read bloody-minded
novels or cheered patriotic music hall
tableaus, but he fought recklessly and
wantonly. Your carnivorous gentle-
' man is afraid of everything including
doctors, dogs, disease, death and truth-telling.
SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY.
J llabblt Stopped Family Prayers.
"One Sunday we were all at regular
family prayer. A sporting friend was
visiting me, and he and I knelt, facing
a low window with our elbows upon the
silL And from round acorner, lo, tlhere
came up on us a coney, and he reared
np not two yards from us, and he heark
ened unto the prayers, and he winked
his nose at us, till my friend - forgot
himself and exclaimed: ' 'We kin catch
that devil! I threw np the window so
hard that I cracked a pane, and out we
leaped in red-hot chase. And the dear
old archdeacon almost burst trying not
to Iangh. for he had seen tlhc rabbit,
and was a keen sportsman withal. We
ran that rabbit across four two-acre
lots as Ward as we could eplit, and at
lest wc got him into deep snow, where
he gave up and was captured alive. And,
on, looking back to the first fence -we
had cleared, I saw a fuza of white wlils
kers above it, and heard a strong old
voice shout : "They got him J they got
him." "Outing.
" Greenwich, observatory claims that
it has little clear weather, sun and
stars are wholly invisible every other
day in winter, one day in four in fall,
one in eight in spring and one in six
teen in summer. In the 20 years end
ing with 1S96 there were only eight in
stances of sunlight for 14 continuous
hours. ' .
The number of asteroids discovered
np to the present date is 423. A num
ber of these small planets have not been
observed since their discovery and are
practically lost. Consequently it is
now a matter of doubt, until the ele
ments have been computed, whether
the supposed new planet Is really new
or only an old one rediscovered.
Oil can be automatically fed to rap
idly revolving shafts and pulleys by a
new attachment for ordinary oil cups,
consisting of a tube curved the way the
shaft runs, with a screw cap at the in
ner end, the outer end being left open
to receive air as the wheel turns, thus
forcing the oil through the cup instead
of letting it run to the top of the cup
from centrifugal force.
It is supposed that a Centauri, one
of the brightest stars of the southern
hemisphere, is the nearest of the fixed
stars to the earth. The researches on
its parallax by Henderson and Maclear
gave, for its distance from the earth, in
round numbers, twenty billions of
miles. At the inconceivable rapid rate
at which light is propagated through
space, it would require more than four
years to reach the earth from this star.
The president of the Agassiz asso
ciation, Mr. H. H. Ballard, recently
caught an ant near its hill, shut it up
in a box, carried it 150 feet away, and
set it free in the middle of a shady road.
What followed he thus describes: "It
seemed at first bewildered. Then it
climbed to the top of a ridge of sand,
erected its body as high as possible,
waved its antennae for several seconds,
and then started in a straight line for
home."
Last yeai Dr. Abbott, of Philadel
phia, published some researches which
tended to show that microbes which
could not accomplish the death of
healthy animals proved fatal to ani
mals under the influence of alcohol.
A French investigator has gone a step
further, and has succeeded in demon
strating on irrefragable evidence that
alcohol not only destroys what we may
call natural immunity, but tends to
prevent the acquisition of the immu
nity conferred by the various serums.
Stories of the ravages of termites,
or "white ants." come from the curator
of the Australian museum at Sydney.
Some time ago they destroyed the roof
of the museum building, and it had to
be replaced with a covering composed
largely of steel and copper. Their
work, being carried on in the interior
of the timber, does not reveal itself un
til the structure is about ready to fall
to pieces, and so it was only recently
that the fact came out that the ants had
also destroyed the underpinning of one
of the important floors of the museum.
- COULDN'T FIND HER.
"Lady Who Sent Senator' Perkina Her
Card Wore Male Attire.
' -The owners of probably half the
cards that are sent in to the senators
are unknown to, their recipients. Sen
ator Perkins one day recently, in re
sponding to one of those unknowns,
who happened to be of the feminine
gender, told the page who brought the
card to show the lady to the marble
room.. He went out there a few min
utes later, expecting, of course, to be
recognized by the lady who had eailed
on him. Norue of the three ladies in
the room came forward, so he politely
asked each of them "in turn if she
wished "to see Senator Perkins." , Re
ceiving a negative to each inquiry, he
started back to his seat in the cham
ber when he met, in the corridor of the
marble room, the -weather bureau man,
who is stationed there, and who is
often called upon by visitors to point
out senators whose faces are . unfa
miliar to the former. Seeing the sen
ator with a card in his hand and a per
plexed look on his face, he asked him
if he were looking for some one.
"Yes," the senator replied, "I re
ccived this card,, and told the page I
would see her In the marble room, but
she isn't there.".
The weather man glanced at the card
ajid grinned. "But she is there, sen
ator," he said, at- the same time point
ing to an individual clad in broadcloth
trousers and Prince Albert coat seated
on a soft in a corner of the marble
room.
The card bore the name of Dr. Mary
Walker. X. Y. Sun.
JT ''; A Fine Point In Banking-.
: Banks do not usually accept checks
which call for one dollar more than the
amount of deposit, unless the customer
is well known, and the officers are con
fident that he will promptly make up
the balance. Thus, if a check for $200
is presented and the maker has only
$192 to his credit, the paper will usually
go back stamped "no funds." But one
attorney recently got around that. He
had, after long dunning, secured" a
check from a slow-pay debtor. When
it was presented for collection he
found that the deposit lacked eight dol
lars of the amount the paper called for,
and payment was refused. Thereupon
he promptly deposited eight dollars to
amount of the creditor and gained $192
by the operation, for the check was
cashed. Worchester (Mass.) Gazette.
BnoKien's Arnica salve.
The best salve in the world for vats,
braisee, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fevet
sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all skin eruptions, and poai-
It is jTimnritwerl to nv rnnrinrr. .tff no
tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents
per box. For sale by Blakeley and
Houghton, druggists.
DsW8
fee
o
fusine
88 a a
-For a catch, but -we have good -well-made Clothing manufactured for city trade, and one
third or one-half off cannot reach our prices for the same quality of goods. All we ask is a call and
we "will convince you that we sell clothing for less money than any store here in The Dalles.
NOTE OUR PRICES,:
MEN'S
Melton, Kersey, Cassimere Overcoats, in blue or black, worsted lining, double raised heams, single or double breasted, a coat sold all
over the country at $12.50; our price
- - .
Men's satin-lined Overcoats, latest cut, double stitched and raised seams, guaranteed all-wool, sold elsewhere at $12,00; on sale here at
Men's Ulsters, Irish frieze, blue or black, cnt pxtra long, large storm collar, handsomely lined, equal to the finest tailored eaiment in
J wjivv uva ut-r vaowtTUVAO SV flUiVV UJU CHIC
$5.50
$7.50
here i t collar , nandsom ely lined, equal to the finest tailored gaiment in Q0
All-wool, worsted and cassimere slnele breasted; round sack suit, handsomely tailored, made especially for our trade, so we can guarantee chtrf t?r
it. Sold everywhere eke at $12.00; on sale here at.' ...7. .. OO.OO
OYS'
Ulsters, large storm collar, cut extra long, worth $6; on sale here at.: .' ;
Boys' Cape coats, cut extra long, for ages 6 to 15 years, guaranteed all wool, a garment that we'll put up against any $6 coat in the city
. on sale here at ;
Boys' all-wool cheviot and cassimere suits, blue and black, fast colors, doable breasted, handsome, dressy garments for boys from 6 to 15
years old, on sale elsewhere at $5, here for
Young Men's Washington all-wool cheviot euits, ages 12 to 19 years, double-breasted, double-stitched, seams and edges sewed with silk,
sold everywhere else at $12.50 ; on sale here at
t
Underwear and hats we will guarantee better quality for leES money than can be had anywhere else in the city.
: Johnston's old stand, 166 Second Street, The Dalles Oregon.
$2.75
$2.50
$2.25
$3.50
THE WHIT
E HOUSE
CLOTHING GO. ofaPORTLAfJD
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL CLOTHIERS.
Mail orders promptly attended to. If goods do not suit, return at our expense.
Clearance Sale of Bicycles
NEW AND 2d HAND WHEELS
For Less than Half Price
We wish to clear out all old stock before mov
ing into new store and have some bargains.
This is an opportunity to get a bicycle cheap
All wheels sold at half regular price.
ISLaws cfij Crowe.
' Opposite old stand.
1
C. J. STUBMfiGs
Wholesale and Retail
Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
Agency for the Greatest American Liquor
Yellowstone Sour Mash Whiskey.
SHERIFF'S SALE.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT UNDER
and by virtue of an execution dated the
10th day of November, 1838, Issued out of the
Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Graut
Couuty, upon a Judgment Riven and rendered
t Herein on the 5th day of October, 1896, (a trans
cript of which was filed and docketed in office of
the county clerk of Wasco County, Oregon, on
the 25d day of October, 1896,) In lavor of E. 8.
Penfield and against Mary D. Hess, for the sum
of $368.45, and the further sum of $30.00 as at
torney's fees.and $11.00 costs and dlrbursements,
which said execution is directed to me ana com
manding me to levy upon and sell the property
of the said judgment debtor, Mary D. Hess, or
so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy
said judgment aforesaid with interest thereon
at the rate of ten per cent per annum from said
5th day of October, 1896, and the costs and ex
penses of and upon this writ, I did on Saturday
the 17th day of December, 1898, levy upon and
on
Thursday the 19th day of January, 1899,
at one o'clock p. m. at the County Courthouse
door, in Wasco County, Oregon, will sell, to the
highest bidder for cash in hand, for the pr.rpose
of satisfying said judgment, interest, costs and
expenses, the undivided one fifth interest of
the said judgment debtor in and to the follow
ing described lands and premises, to wit:
All of sections 21, 23, 25. 27 and 36; the south
east quarter and the north half of the northwest
anarter of section 22: the northwest auurter of
section 26; the west half of the west half and the
south half of the south half of section 34; the
south half of the northwest quarter of section
36, all in township 7 south, range 17 east, and all
of section 3 in township 8 south, range 17 east,
Willamette meridian, in Wasco County, Oregon,
containing 4600 acres more or less.
Dalles City, Oregon, December 10. 1898,
. ROBT. tCELLEY,
Sheriff of Wasco Ccunty, Oregon.
By F. C. Sexton, Deputy. Dec2l-4w
Executor's Notice.
Notice is hereby given that the undersignedA
has been duly appointed executor of the last 1
will and testament of Sarah McAtee, deceased,
by said will and by order of the county court for
Wasco county- All persons having claims
against said estate are hereby notified to present
the same to me, with the proper vouchers there
for, at the office of Huntington & Wilson, The.
Dalles, Oregon, within six months from the
date of this notice. Thomas Nobval,
Novl6-i. Executor.
NOTICE.
TJ. S. Land Offick, Thk Dalles, Or.,
NOVEMBER, 23, 1898. f
Complaint having been entered at this office
by Frank C. Wilson against Gustave A. Brock
man for abandoning bis homestead entry, No.
4949, dated Oct. 21, 1893, npon the W SEJ-i sec
tion twenty-two and the NJi NEJ4 section
twenty-seven, .township five south, range ten
east, W. M. in Wasco county, Oregon, with a
view to the cancellation of said entry, and said,
parties are hereby summoned to appear at this1
office on the 10th day of January, 1899, at 10
o'clock a. m., to respond and furnish testimony
concerning said alleged abandonment.
1180-1 JAY P. LUCAS, Register.
WHl8KaYfroai $2.75 to $6.00 per irallon. jj'to 15 VearTold". T
IMPORTED 00GHA0 from $7.00 to $12.00 per gallon. (11 to 20 ytarg old.;
A LIIOBKIA BBEPjIS1 Ut-tn 3.!6 to $6.00 per gallon. (4 to 11 years old.
ONLY THE PUREST LIQUORS SOLD.
HOP GOLD BEER on draught, and Val Blatz and Hop Gold Eeer in bottle
Imported Ale and Porter.
JOBBERS IN IMPORTED and
DOMESTIC CIGARS.
Todes ai)d pabrie
We are ready to 9how them in Dry
Goods, Notions, Clothing, Boots and Shoes,
Ladies' Capes and Jackets. "Time enough"
is a poor principle. Those who make the '
' earliest selections secure best results. The
- stock is complete and new and we invite -you
to look at it. '
Notice Final Account.
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned
administrator of the estate of Oliva Esplng,
deceased, has filed his final account and
report in said estate with the County Clerk for
Wasco County, Oregon, aud that Monday the 2d
day of January, 1899, at 10 o'clock, a. m., has
been fixed as the time and the county court
room of the county court house, in Dalles City,
Wasco County, Oregon, has been fixed as the
place for hearing said final account.
All persons interested in said estate arc herebv
notified to be and appear at said time and place
and show cause wity said account should not be
in all things, allowed, ratified, approved and
confirmed, and an order be made discharging
said administrator and bis bocdsme" -ther
liability in said trust.
WM. MICHELL,
Administrator of the estate of OlivaEsping,
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, United
States Land Office. The Dalles, Oregon, Au
gust 19, 1898. Notice is hereby given that the
order of the President of January 31, 1898, per
manently reserving the following described
tracts or parcels of land, for the use of a boat
railway between The Dalles and Celilo, on the
south side of the Columbia river, has been re
voked. Said tracts described as follows: One
tract situated in the NWW of Sec. 81, T. 2 N., K.
14 E., containing about four and one-half acres
(no other description). The other tract in the
NW4,'Sec. 21, T. 2 N., K. 15 E., containing about
one-half of an acre, particularly described as fol
lows: Beginning at the northwest corner of
said section 21, and running thence in a south
erly direction along the west boundary line of
said section 21, one hundred and seventy (170)
feet to a point on said boundary line; thence in
a straight line to a point on the north boundary
line of said section 81, distant two hundred and
sixty (260) feet in an easterly direction from the
point of beginning; and thence In a westerly
direction along the north boundary line of said
section 21 to the point of beginning. Said tracts
are therefore restored to the public domain, and
are subject to disposal the ume as other public
lands. By order of the Hon. Commissioner.
Dated at The Dalles, Oregon, August 19, 1898.
, JAY P. LUCAS, Register. -aug24-i
OTIS PATTERSON. Receiver
One Minute Cough Cure, cures.
That is what It was made for.
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION.
U. S. Land Offic, Vancouver, Wash.,
November, 26, 1898.
Notice is hereby given that the following
namedtsettler has filed notice of his intention
to make final proof in snppoit of his claim, and
that said proof will be made before W. B. Pres
by, United States Commissioner for District of
Washington, at his office in Goldendale, Wash
ington, on Friday, January 6th, 1899, viz:
Gotav Herman Kab.De,
Homestead Entry No. 8119, for the 8 of the .
NE'.and S4 of the NWJ, section eleven, town
ship three north, of range thirteen. East W. M.
He names the following witnesses to prove
his continuous residence upon, and cultivation
of said land, viz:
Angust Campbell, David K. Clark, of Hartland
Washington, Wendel Leidl, George G. Llndtey,
of Goldendale. Washington.
11-30 i W. R. Dunbar, Register.
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
U. 8. Land Office, The Dalles, Ob., (
December, 12, 1898. (
Notice is hereby given that the following
named settler has filed notice of his intention to
make final proof in support of his claim, and
that said proof will be made before the Register
and Receiver at The Dalles, Oregon , on
Tuesday, January 24, 1899, viz:
Lewis A. Sear,, The Dallas,
Homestead Application No. 5310, for the NWJi,
NWH Section 31, Township 1 north, Range li, -East
W. M.
He names the following witnesses to prove bis
continuous residence upon and cultivation of '
said land, viz:
Newton Patterson, of The Dalles, Oregon;
John Ferguson, of The Dalles, Oregon; Henry
Ryan, of The Dalle, Oregon; Andrew McCabe,
of The Dalles, Oregon.
18-14-1 JAy P. Lucas, Register.
NOTICE OF RESIGNATION.
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned
has filed his resignation as one of the adminls .
tratora of the estate of Perry Watkins, deceased,
and the county court of the state of Oregon for
Wasco county, has appointed the 30th day of
January, 1899, at the hour of 10 o'clock, a m, aa
the time for hearing the same and tbe accounts
of said administrator up to said date. All per
sons interested in said estate are hereby notified
to appear lu said court at said time to show
caut-e, if any exists, why said resignation should
not be accepted and said administrator diacharg-
DaUes City, Or., Dec. 27, 1898.
Frank Watkins,
One of the Administrators of the Estate of
Perry Watkins, Deceased. , d28-4w
Hea W anted
To cut cord wood.
Dallas Lumbering Co,
Inquire . of The
17-lm.