The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, June 11, 1891, Page 4, Image 4

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    CD W JULIE'S QUESTV
DcaoMlntra Bowery Sympathy.
- "There's a character," said the clerk of
m .twenty-five reent' Bowery hotel, indi
ating a shabbily dressed old man who
stood with his back to the stove. " Wil
lie, come over here a minute."
The old man by the stove evidently
SBswered to the diminutive name, for he
fitaoced up to see who called, and then
.baffled quickly over to the desk.
"Tell the gentleman about yourself.
Willie," said the clerk.
Willie took off his dilapidated hat to
the stranger. and said: ''Twenty-five
years ago ,1 had. a daughter. ; :' One day
jahe went 'away and 'left me 'She was
mighty pretty, and not more'n fifteen
yar old.;. Where had she gone? No
sm could say. j I began my search one
sushi in March, twenty-five' 'years ago.
-I hunted for ten years and never found
her. Then one night in winter 1 saw a
vnaa and a w6:rnan-iro8sin& 'this very
Bowery. I looked closer, and there was
-my child. I called," 'Julia! Julia?
She turued her head and looked at me.
J "waa hurrying pp to take her hands,
-wheu 'f saw that she" was leaving me.
Sbelad inau went fast thriugh the
rowd,' and 1 followed, calling, 'Julia!
J alia! A poliebman stopped met and
bea they all laughed. I had lost her
again.- That 'was fifteeii years ago. I've
rrer seen her since, but I'm still look
ie, and 111 find her yet."' r
"Well, life has gone hard idttr'you.
Tn't it? said the stranger. "You look
Thaolc' you! " I'm" not so very cold.
TJbe trouble is my kind friends give me
thin coat to wear in the winter and a
-thick one to wear in the summer. That's
tie way it was with the Italian; that
"keeps the fruit stand 'out' on'1 the corner
here. . He ; gave ( this little blue coat to
ne, and I pawned the old thick one that
lb cigar man gave me,' because it had
tte most holes in it."
"Are you very poor?" ' L' ' .''
"Mot as long as I stay right in this
iwighborhood. The cigar man lets me
on the floor in his shop, and this
wod 'ybu'njf'man lets me have the use of"
b hotel office . .... , .; , t,
"Where do you get your food! '
"It comes to me from various direo
I have the same trouble with
tkat. ' though, that I do with my coats.
1 get a piece of sweet rice pudding for
breakfast as a" rule, and "buckwheat
mfces for "dinner,'"'Wheh; of course, the
' ardor should be reversed. It ia left over
aa that way." j
"Well, you expect to find your daugh
ter aome day?"
"Yes. ' Vm seventy-six now,' and 1
think 1 will live ten years longer. In
that time 1 shall meet her again. : 1 am
always on the street, except when I step
'.S' here or at the'cigar store to get warm:
4. will bid you good -day, sir. and start out
agaia on my hunt." ",.,.,...
The old man hurried out into the Bow--ry
and disappeared in the crowd.
"The worst of it unremarked the ho
tel clerk after he had gone, 'Old Willie's
lighter has lieen' dead for '"ten years
and he's never been told of "it." New
"Tack Sun.'- ': :-' ':' '
Power Without Oh Ballot.
Ho earnest woman can embark in any
i woric without having the truth
i in upon her of the helpless condi-
i of a citizen without a vote. "Put a
aagle profligate qualified male voter in
M scale, and a score of 'conscientious,
' diKTranchised women in the' "other; and
we know which seals will kick the beam.
So every struggle for the uplifting of the
which enlists the -support of woman
k sure Drenaratorv school for
-nunr.n r, -t,a
' There is a fable of a company of beav-
rs who consoled themselves on parting
'because they would all meet again in
the hatter's shop, ';, And the unthinking
women who deride the thought of voting
and still interest themselves in social re
form will be certain to' find themselves
aume fine morning in the camp of woman
' Mffrage, but with a wholeness which
tha beavers lacked. William Lloyd Gar
rison. .' . , -.-..
The Superior Cape Cod Poke.
"What are you givin' usV" yelled a
down town grocer in an excited way to
an Auburn friend who had just slam
Vanged his hat down on 1 his head and
whirled him around so violently that he
fell on a potato barrel and 'skinned - his
Ibow.
Tm takin' boxin lessons,' said his
friend, "aud that's the marine swing.
"That's it, is it?" said the grocer, as
he grabbed the Auburn man, jammed
him under a meat bench, kicked the vis
ible portion of his anatomy and hit him
hard with a broom. - "How do you like
that? That's the Cape' Cod poke, other
wise known as pot luck. Next time you
oome round with your new tricks just
.remember that there's, a' few of us old
ones left who knew a twist or two when
"we were young.
nfii i u ,i j i .i-
Tnad and -both niled.-Lewiston Jour-r
Mr. Evarta. Famous Pub.
' Probably some readers remember the
beautiful pun that Mr. Evartsmade at a
dinner at Delmonico's some years ago.
la all the constellation of his famous
, fans this is the brightest star. - The din
ner i taking ' place about Thanksgiving
time Mr. Evarts when" he arose to speak
began in this way:
"Friends; yon have just been having a
torkey stuffed full of sage; now I present
you with a sage stuffed full, of turkey. rv ,-
It made no difference ' what he said
after that; the best thing he could have
said would have been, nothing -at alL
Waahington'Star.'. ?
A Happy Retort. J
When the revenues of King Louis XV
6 at Bo loW an ebb that even the serr-J
"ar(the tttHak time'.'TJie opera iB&gers
JNCKUWup yviin.wjua puuojuiiziicbqx,
""g for the payment of their arrears
"Gentlemen,? saidthA mfnistex7, "Ule
-will first satisfy those who weep, it will
tiken be, the turn .of those w"ho rangT' ,
JUfAfteCnitik.l DfS.fS fQ !yt1
!tu to ?iMpjn urnplu onlar.
A..A; . - H- - ." i . . '. .
subject, it has been ascertained . that in
beginning to sleep the senses do not
unitedly fall into a state of slumber, but
drop Off 6ne after the other. 'J- The ti ht
ceases, in consequence of the protection
of ; the eyelids, to receive impressions
first, while all the other senses preserve
their sensibility entire. The sense of
taste is the next which loses its suscepti
bility to impressions, and then the sense
of smelling.
The hearing is next in order, and last
of all couies the sense of touch. Fur
thermore, the senses are thought to sleep
with different degrees of profoundness.
The sense' frf touch sleeps ' the' most
lightly and is the most easily awakened;
the next easiest is the hearing; the next
is the sight, and the taste and smelling
awake the'last. ; ( ''. f ! " , ,s ? ' ;
Another1 remarkableT circtmiBtance 'de
serves notice; certain muscles and parts
of the bod v-begin to Bleep before others.
Sleep commences at the extremities, be
ginning jsrith the feet and legs, and
creeping toward the center of nervous
action. The necessity for keeping the
feet warm "and perfectly1 still as a pre
liminary of sleep, is well kiiowhJ 'From
these xpbinatibns It - will 'not-; appear
surprising that, with one or more of the
senses, and perhaps aluo" one or moro
parts of the body, 'imperfectly asleep,
there should be at the same time an im
perfect kind of mental action, which
ptdd dees the phenomenon of dreamiug.--tChamber
Miscellany.
Seuator Hemrtl'i Men in Baeknun.
One day while the late Senator' Hearst
was a young man and' yet had his fort
une to make he and a few companions
were on a prospecting tour. Along in
the afternoon they sighted a band of In
dians, and,' as in those days all Indians
were hostile, Mr." Hearst and his friends
naturally wanted to get away from there.
All the" prospectors, except the future
senator.-were, mounted on horses. He
was on a retired army mule, and soon
found himself left in the rear. The In
dians were on' his trail and things began
to. look serious, when he called out to
his rapidly disappearing companions:
. "Hold On, boys; there's only a few of
thetn. ;."We needn't be" afraid."
Just then the mule scented the ap
proaching Indians, and with a wild snort
started out at a gait that ''soon ' left the
horsemen far behind.' When Hearst "was
about a quarter "of a mile In advance he
turned in his sadddle ' and yelled at the
top of his Voice: -- ' ; ' '
"Hurry up j boys; youll get scalped:
There's more'n a hundred of them."
Chicago Post.
: Wyoming Woman Miner.
Mrs.' Shane, a widow with two chil
dren, came" to Wyoming two years ago
ana took tip her residence 'in Jawbone
gulch,- Silver Crown mining district,,
where she. took a " claim and with her
own hands has kept up the assessment
work. The claim promises to be a pay
ing one, and already" she has uncovered a
body of rich;"gOld quartz, with" indica
tions of richer ore as depth is gained.
.; Mrs. Shane is a soldier's widow, and is
a lady of fine education: Her1-cabin in
Jawbone gulch bears evidence of "refinev
.ment, and. while it is in one of the most
out of the way places in the camp she
has any number of visitors, among whom
will be found the best, people of Silver
. Crown and the surrounding country, i
. ,To judge, from appearances she is
about thirty-fiiie years old. She lias
broVrn'hair. Woe eyes and fait-and intel
lectual face. '-Fo'r'the,'past year she has
'been teaching the Silver Crawn public
h,m-ir:. BUB aae
"""S wuuo wmung tor ner mine vo
reach pay.Cor. Denver Republican.
;,t '': tlonton 'Are. Safe, t-t
Vhen the devil was sick his eagerness
to become a monk is historical; A
small New Yorker ias been finding
in the same way that altered conditions
have a pronounced effect upon one's am
bition. He is the ton of " a' " lawyer, - and
his admiration for' his' father has led him
to announce frequently that when he
became a man be' intended to be in "just
the same business as! papa." He fell ill.
however, and the services of the family
physician were sought with prompt and
fortuitous effect. "; Convalescence is-apt
to engender reflection, and the 'small
Robert became thoughtful the' other af
ternoon, with this result: "I guess, mam
ma," he said; apropos of nothing, "I will
not be in papa's business when I grow
4up. I would rather be a doctor, because.
you see,' he can't die. Her" Point of
View in New York Times. .
Facte About a Venerable Gooae.
John Ray, an old and respected resi
dent of Croton Landing, and. formerly
of Putnam county,' says that while re
siding in "Putnam county he purchased
a goose of one Isaac Hill, and that the
goose was 52 years old When he purchased
her for seventy-five 'cents. He kept her
for three years. Each year' the goose
d VfJ"?. year
. l nunou cioveu gutuiujH, wmcu leu over a
high wall in the creek and were drowned.
The second year she raised twenty-two
goslings, and the third year forty gos
4lngBw He' r then sold her at the end of
the third year to one Amos Austin for
$100. Mr. Ray says to the best of his
knowledge and. belief the gosse is still
alive, making her 85 years old. Kingston
(N. Y.)'Freeman. '
.- . Old-Story with a Modern H
One day when Dr." Brooks was calling
at the house of a parishioner a little boy
bf thS fabnily,' had tteen' -ufideV the
awe of - Dr. Brooks ae long-as he could
AJ6?.? ve?tn?? V
ask the great
lcman un, UrJ tRooKs.rv
) k?"Hitf -e4ther-nden.vored to hash'
I him up, but the boy went on, "Oh,' 1
guess you wasnx, 'cause the mimti.
"$raa aD in pairs, and tt there Wr 'an
other ukis yduv it wottia .Srf fc'nied 'the
larkr-6&oyTranscfeDt.al I -
! -f . it n a i a h s ' s i "
Mi
'Fairbanks is getting awfully fc .'
"That's-tMily X tendency .of the times. "
uwir ow -- .
He ia resolving bimeetf intoaHorpci
ratkxl f--Pnckv' r. , , ,,-
RIDINCT i WHALE AT SEA
A SEA '.OTTEft . HUNTER'S , HARD
TRIP OFF THE PACIFIC OOAST.. ,
A Very Lucrative Bunineae SpoMed by the
Perveraenese of a Stupid Bull Headed,
'Humpbacked Whale An Incredible
Story or Hard Luck.
In passing up Front street a reporter's
attention was attracted to a singular ap
pearing man who stood in front of a hide
and' fur store examining a very hand
some sea otter skin which ' hung in th6
window: Bis hair was long, and his face
covered with a full growth of beard of a
rich auburn hue", which "hung down on
his breast. His clothing- was of strange
make and material, and his tout" ensem
ble . was calculated to give one an idea,
that "the wild man of Borneo had just
come to town." The reporter approached
thtf ' 'window. ' 'and ' after pausing -a 'mo
ment said: . - , ' ';' ' 'f-''.v.
1 "That ia a very handsome skinf
'"'Yes,'" said the :stranger,''"it is very
fine. There is nothing --that -produces
better fur' thari the "sea otter. ' I have
shot many of them." ::1 - " " -'. ---
' Might I ask -where?" said the report
er. "The sea otter is a rare animal now."
"I suppose they are about all killed off
by' this time on this ' coast," ' feaid ' the
stranger. ' "It was ten years ago when I
. was shooting them on the coast of Wash
ington territory, and they' were not very
numerous then, but in the course of two
years I had killed over . fifty, besides a
good many fur seals, and had; saved - up
'over $5,000 in cash, when I was suddenly
broke ' up m business and ' taken - to a
strange -'country by 'a very-singular acci
dent." . - --; -
On being pressed for an explanation
the stranger told the following remarka
ble Btoryr "Ten- years ago I was hunting
sea otters on one of the wildest' parts of
the 'coast of Washington, several miles
north of the Quillayute Indian reserva
tion,' between " Destruction Island and
Cape Flattery. ' It is one of the wildest
and most ont of the way places on the
coast. I had been- shipwrecked on De
struction Island, and had been rescued
by the Quillayute Indians and had been
living with them several - years, and had
married the daughter of one of 'the 'head
men of the tribe. .-'.
- A DANOBRODS PBBCH. ' !" -.
::"1 was happy and contented, for, after
years spent -in the forecastle of a ship,
the life I led among ' the 'Indians was
comparatively pleasant and luxurious.
Besides, as f told you, I had saved up
seve'ral ' thousand' dollars. When ill a mo
ment, ' by the" .freak' of a "stupid;1 bull
headed, humpbacked Whale, I"was torn
from my home and family and cast pen
niless on the-shores of a stranger and
wilder country than the one I had so on-,
ceremoniously left, among people com
pared to whom my Quillayute ' friends
: were 5ivilied and intelligent
' '' Yciu know; of'ieourse.'hOW sea otters
are shot by the hun ter2 having a 'stand
rigged np away out aaTaf from the shore
as possible, by settirig lap three tall' poles,
so that they cross' a 'few. feet' 'from, the
top, and by building a kind of prow's
nest in the top of this frail, structure.-.- 1
had rigged up ohetf these stands away
out at lo wwter Ttnark- and made it as
comfortable as possible, and sometimes
spent '. two or y three'' .days but there, my
; wife keeping a lookout and securing any
- otters or - seala I shot. . I was' doing first
'rate, owing to -being so far out; and, al
though several . times -badly : scared by
rough weather and by Bchtiols of whales,
Which "came around my : lookout, I could
'hot think of giving it-up for a -place
Which might 1 safer, but where I Could
not kill so many otters." "" ': -
"The list time I got Info' my . lookout
was early one morning. As the weather
had "been stormy I 'Was expecting-that
otters' and seals would be coming-near
the shore, so I took along a good ' supply
of provisions and' water 'and 'plenty 'of
tobacco and ammunition, expecting; "to
stay out two or three days. As" soon as
it was light and the tide was -near the
flood, I saw a number of otters- lying
asleep in the water just beyond range,
and while -1 - was waiting - for them' to
drift down toward me along - came a
school of half a dozen or more of the
small whales common on that coast.
OFF TO SEA ON A WHALK.
"They earner toward toy lookout rolling
and spouting and playing,' and at length
I saw one of them making Tight for the
lookouti" I was afraid he-would 'upset
me, and yelled at 'him, but,-whether by
accident or design' I : knew' not he
plunged between two of the poles on
which my nest was perched, and strik
ing the other with his nose shoved it
away in front of him; and over went
my nest, landing on his back; one of ' the
poles sticking straight ahead' and ' the
others straddling him as a man does a
horse. - - When I saw I was going I jump
ed and landed ' astride the whale's tail,
and quicker than a wink with, my -keen
sheath knife I cut the muscles on each
side of his tail, which prevented him
from going "down;""" I their clambered np
to my nest, and there I was afloat on a
whale," -with provisions; for -three-days
and neither sail, oar nor compass.--
-The ; first thing I did 'was to" cut
-some loops- in ' the ; thick ' hide of the
"Whale and secure my lies I by lashing it
firmly to his' back. ' He struck' out from
shore aridTmade ' the best speed he could
with his partially ' disabled tail ' I hus
banded my provisions 'and water',' and as
I had some whisky and plenty of tobacco
-turd -was -uaet to-living io-taynetI got
along very comfortably for a week, when
f tttihga begaft tdofcblajO -fVsftJmiately
a Knasian ship bound for yiadivostock
cameaIbngan'orpTcleBalne'' np: """" '"
J.-W.as so uncomfortable on hoard that
.r-jwjpassiM tita KoorUislanda I
toe a poat ana got a&nore, ana, arter
rspennaoottf 'sir'yeasaeM1wfth' the
fita-lmialScVe.--getting
across to Japan and finally in a ship to
South AraeTiearaiiil aniymd here a day
orT'5siiHWV,o'anan am now
boond for CaTlanj county-WaanT toaee
wi'hai become J6f my'wif",aad',th
twenty 04'pM;)J!BBt
ayvHPoKlattd'DrenniaaJ
8IlIHSi&vHIIEiLW'T
Wholesale anf Retail Dirosts.
-DEALERS IN-
Fine Imported, Key ' West and Domestic
CIGARS."'
PAINT
Now is the tinie to paint your house
and if you wish' to' get the best " quality
and a fine color use the ' " :
Shenvin, Williams Co.s Paint
For those wishing to see the quality
and color of the above paint we call their
attention to the residence of S. L. Brooks,
Judge Bennett, Smith French and others
painted by Paul Kreft.
" Snipes & Kihersly are agents for the
above paint for The Dalles. Or.
Don't Forget the
HacDonali Bros.; Traps. .
THE BEST OF
Wines, Liquors and Cigars
'.' ALW'AYS ON H'AkD.'""''.'r
Real Estate,
Insaranee,
' and Loan
" - '' .' :'; .
AGENCY.
t is:.: .-. It mi . .
Opera House Block,3d St.
Chas. Stubling,
.:I 7-. yr .
,i -raorRia-ro of th
' ' T New Vogt Block, Second St. .
'. i ; ; .. I , ' : i . ; .- ,.. .
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
Liquor v Dealer,
i MILWAUKEE BEEIf ON DRAUGHT.
Health is Wealth !
OB. E. C. WltST'B NlBVK' 1KB BKA1N TBKAT-
mkkt, a. guaranteed specitic for Hysteria.-"Dizzi
ness, Convulsions, - Fits, Nervous Neuralgia,
Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use
of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness; Mental De
pression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in in
sanity and leading to misery, decay and death,
Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power
in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat
orrhoea Caused by over exertion of the brain, self
abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains
one month's treatment. ' $1.00 a box, or six boxes
for $5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price.
. WK GUAK1NTKB 8IX BOXES .
To cure any case. With each order received by
us for six boxes, accompanied by $5.00, we will
send the purchaser our written guarantee to re
fund the -money if the treatment does notefiect
a cure. Guarantees issued only by
' ' BLAKELEV Si HOUGHTON, : ' ;
- Prescription Ornggiss,
17B Seoond St. . . un The Dalles, Or.
YOTJ NKED BUT ASK
. Sua lOi
-''MriSbLW4'LtY?itth4, May 15,1891.
Da. ViKi)nwrVBw8: . Headache and
Liver .Cure sells, well -here.-..: Everyone that tries
it comes for the second: little, - ; People are com-i
ing-ien iotwve miles ieo gee aotUe1o try K
and then they come back and take thretfour
bottles at a tiroa. . Jhank you, jor sending dup
licate bill aaminp a as diKnlaiwd-. . -
EjlST EJID SBLOOH.
-
Tie
Dalles 'MiiiB
oiv:J annah. .
is here and has come to stav. It hon5?
to win its way to public favor by ener
gy, industry and merit; and to this end
we ask that you give it a fair trial, and
li satisnea with its
support.
The
four pages of six columns each, will be
issued every evening, except Sunday,
and will be delivered in the city; or sent
by mail for the moderate sum of fifty
cents a1 month: ; :'V
Its Obeets
will be to advertise the resources of the
city, and adjacent country, to assist in
developing pur industries, in extending
and opening up new channels for our
trade, in securing an open river, and in
helping THE DALIjES to take her prop
er position as the , ;
Leading City of
The paper, tibth daily and weekly, will
be ? independent in; politics, . and in ; its
criticism of political matters, ; as in ite
handling of local affairs; it will be
JUST,: FAIR AND IWPARtiAL.
We will erideav the lo-
cal news, and we ask that your criticism
of our object and course; be formed from
the contents of the paper and not from
f ash assertions of outside parties. : - -A
VJ.7, I
sent to any address for $50 per year.
It (Will contain ;:from four to six eight
column pages, and we shall endeavor
to make it the equal of the best. Ask
your Postmaster for a copy, or address.
Office, N. W. Cor. Washington knd Second Sts.
THE B
The Grate City of tlie Inland Empire is situated at
the head of navigation on the Middle Columbia,, and
is a. thriving, prosperous city. '
' ITS TERRITORY.
I : ,.- ' ; . ; ..... . .
, It is the supply- city for an extensive and rich agri
cultural an . grazing country, its trade reaching as
far south as Summer Lake, a distance '' ofl over ' Irvvc
hundred miles: - !, ' 7..': V . ;;'r '
, '.THE, LARGEST WOOL MARKET.
i The rich grazing country along the eastern slope
of the the Cascades furnishes pasture for, thousands
of sheep,1 the wool , from which finds ; market here. .
r' The-: Dalles is 'the; largest original wool shipping
point.! in America, , about 5,000,000 ; pounds" being
shipped last 'year. " ' ' 1 ' , f 1
; 1 : ! :;"its : prodtjcts.
The: salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia,
yielding this year a' revenue of ;$1500,000 which .can
and 'will be' more than! dbubtedin Uhe? near future. !
VThb fpf pde"dftthe
market ierej'and
year -filled the warehouses,and 'all available storage
places1 toorerflowing with their .products; . .'. i ,
T if -'' i. j. ..t.v;.f wit frTKSUiii JgjijMTEr ?. --.
- It is the richest-city of . it& sizeon, the coast, and its
money is scattered' over and is being t used to develop,
more mrmingyc6utryntha is tnbutary tet any ether
toUt Its' possibiHtiesancaTiZabie; .'i Ite.rcsQcesxui-
'''"- -iJi. U-fc-U.lt. ii(
course a erenerous
. ....
Daily
Eastern Oregon.
,9
ALIIES:
r
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