The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Entered at the Postofflce nt The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. Local Advertising. 10 Cent j per Hue for first Insertion, and 6 Cents per line for each subsequent Insertion.. Special rates for long time notices. All local notices received later thau S o'clock will appear the following day. TIME TABLES. Railroads. -' EAST BOCKO. 'o. 2, Arrives 11:40 a. k. Departs II :45 A. M. , " 12: 05 p.m. " 12: JO P.M. WEST BOUND. No. 1, Arrives 4:40 a. m. Departs 4:50 A M. 7, " 6:20 P. M. - 6:45 P. M. Two locai freights that carry passengers leave t for the west at 7-45 a. m., and one for the eJt at S A. H. STAGES For Prlneviilc. via. Bake Oven, leave dally except Sunday) at ; t a . M. EVtr A n tplnne. Mitchell, Canyon City, leave Mondays, Wednesdays and rldays, at ft A. M. For Dufur, Kingsley, Wamlc, Wapinitla, Warm springs imd Tygh Valley, leawe daily (except Sunday) at 6 A h or uoiueuuaici ' oT4HTit KnndAT at 8 A. M. Unices for all lines -at the Umntilln House. rost-Offlce. . . oyncB hovbb ' General Delivrey Window 8 a. m. U 7 p. m. Monev Order " 8 a. m. to 4 p. m. sundav i H 3 a. m. to 10 a. m. . CLOSIKO or MAILS Hy trains going East 9 p. in. and 11:45 o. m. " " West a p. in. an 4:45 p.m. -Stage for Ooldendale 7:30 a.m. " "Prlnevillo 5:30 a. m. u "Duf ur and Warm Springs ..5:30 a. m. " fLeaving for Lyle A Hartlaud..5:30 a. in. " JAntelojie. 5:30a.m. Except Bundny. Tri-weekly. Tuosdnv Thursday and Saturday. " Monday Wednesday and Friday. METE0E0L0GI0AL EEP0ET. Pacific Rela- D.t'r !o Btate Coast BAR. 3 tive of . of Time. Hum Wind Weather. 8 A. M. . . 2!.fi0 86 Calm .18 Lt. Rain 8 p. M 29.63 41 81 " .14 Cloudy Maximum (crature, " i. tcmiwrature, 44: minimum tem- . WEATHER 1'IIOMABII.ITIES. 1 The Dali.es, Dec. 8,1891. RAIN Weather forecast till 12 m. I Wednesday: Scattering rain, 1 sligylly cooler. .56 of an inch of rain fell yesterday. WEDNESDAY, DEC. 9, 1891. The Chronicle is the Only Paper in The.Dalles that Receives the Associated Press Dispatches. , LOCAL BREVITIES. . We understand that the Union Pacific has raised the passenger rates on Xhe D. S. Baker. .... The wrecking train was called from The Dalles last night to assist in placing a derailed passenger car upon the track near Mosier. ; A private letter received this morn ing iroui Major Ingalls contains these words "The world's fair subscription will be raied Portland's part sure." Owiug to the fact that JJollie Edison has broken her arm' Miss Dollfe Dollison will be obliged to postpone her doll show until December 18th, a week from mixt Friday night.' . . ' ' sSome one left the water faucet in the . hall-way of the court house open last night and the result was three feet of water in the cellar this morning and the sew;- of the building stopped up. We. regret to hear that seven members of the family of Hon. D. J. Cooper are downvT ith the measles. They are nil doing c well as could be expected and with good care no serious trouble is an ... ticipateu. . Traffics as suspended upon the road between The Dalles and Portland for hours last. Bight on account of two land slides one'in. the vicinity of Bonneville that covereti the track to the depth of of live or six ieet and one hundred feet . in. length, 'the other near Mosier .was a smaller obstruction. ' Word comes to this office that Edgar Burlingauie of Wamic got lost' in the mountains west of Oak Grove, a few days ago while out hunting and re mained out two days and two nights with nothing to eat and four feet cf snow on the ground. He finally turned up at the . residence of Hon. W-i McD. Lewis, which -is close to the edge of the timber. Last night about 11 o'clock just as a Chinaman who is in the employ of VV: S. Cram emerged from tlie.Cliinese store of Oek Sing on-Front street two white men, far gone in their cups, jumped on Vlim nnil lrT,ftrl?krl Kti rlrtu'n t..lrinr . p. from him, as the Chinauian charges the sum ui ifoo. xne.Lninaman says ne ioi the men some distance hoping to regain his money when they knocked him down a second time.. He then mad his way to Mr Pram's, store cut and bleed.ng ated in Hamburg, has been made en and told the btory -just related, tirelv of nanor Kwu ia o,- This morning he swore out a warrant for the arrest of his assailants. The etorn in Portion,! W. MnH,.v mDk iuuuuiu was the severest known in the gale of 1880. The wind blew at the j egram7t ow r ae rate of forty-five miles hour. The j : Stark street ferry was tivd up the greater ! T1,e To,ie, Apple Tree, portion of the day as the coin Dan v was! T.be hardihood and longevity of the afraid of - breaking its cabl. rnrin the storm the Madisou and Morrison i street bndges closed their .draws and j ti affic between Portland .,. and Oregon ; city was stopped. At Sell wood the whid i was so high that the ferry had to be laid j up. -Some fifty or eixtv shade trees were ' blown down.and the roof. am, fence of;' ... i ii i i , , 1 the base ball, stand and grounds were " damaged to.the amount of o00. -8. B. j Pague, 'the wellknown signal serviire j man had A narrow escape. Hs Iiat-just inspected the telf recording r.iMgrange, ' on the roof of the Kamm building and finding it all 'right, had moved Ao the platform of the instrument shelter when a gust of wind tore off the double roof of the raingange, completely demolishing if. It was a most miraculous escape for Mr. Pague. Had he been thirty eeconds longer at the raingange he might have been killed as the roof of the shelter is exceedingly heavy. Several minor casu altys are reported but no serious damage was done as was the case in 1880 when one man was killed and several severely injured. . MARRIED. In this city, at. the Umatilla House, by: Kev. William Michell, R. Under bill to Maggie Sternweis, both of Boyd, in this county. The Chronicle wishes the young couple many happy days. BORN. At Kingsley, December 4, 1891, to wo of Davis Hix, a daughter. the THE ART IN ACTING. The Essential Point In Which the Artor Differs from tlie Dramatist. A great French critic said once, in concluding an essay, that acting was the lowest of the arts. He admitted that it was an art, but only by courtesy. I agree with him, and I do not think it requires much reasoning to arrive at that conclusion. The mimetjc ' art means Bimply the interpretation of the creative art. Do you catch the idea? A pupil in the beaux arts may sketch the Venus de Milo on paper with, such vigor that his fellows are wonderstruck. But the vi rile reproduction on paper of thetatue does not place the artist next the statue's maker, nor does the representation of Phedre put the actor on the pedestal of Racine. The sculptor, the painter, the drama tist, the musician they create. A thou sand different persons, a thousand differ ent things rush to be assimilated by their I genius. The effect is an aggregate of beings taken from the whole of a na ture. The individuality of the creative genius is deepened, but is not annihi lated. His art is of the highest, -because he- is the embodiment, the representa tive of nature. Balzac said that to de scribe a landscape he turned himself for the moment into trees and grass, and fountains and stars, and sunlight, and thus reached the heart of that which he would reproduce. In other words, he created the landscape just'as Rousseau would create the same landscape upon six inches of canvas. But for the actor let him storm Par nassus as he will; there are few leaves in the laurel crown. It is his function to represent the creations of genius to in terpret them to the public. He has not the thousand inspirations of the author; he has only the suggestions of the glow ing words. The actor is subservient to the author, notwithstanding he may for get his bondage for a brief five minutes and breathe the free air of genius. There was an age in France, they say, when actors were provided simply with the framework of the drama and left to improvise the rest. In fact, Goldoni, the Italian dramatist, speaks of supplying i plots to the French king's players from which they improvise the speeches. But r we have no evidence that the actors rose above the level of the Chinese stage of today, where a similar practice prevails. ' Mind you, this opinion is not accepta ble to the public. I know it must be unpopular of necessity. The public looks upon Siddons, Mars or Rachel in terpreting the grand creations of gen ius and regards the actor , as the em bodiment of Shakespeare or Racine or Corneille. The public shouts with ap plause when the actor trembles with feigned passion, but this same public forgets that the words, the action, the expression are all simply echoes of an other genius. In the clamor of approval the creative art is forgotten, although that is the base of the entire structure. No actor brings this genius nearer to the heart of the public, to be sure, but at the same time let him remember that he is only the interpreter, after all, and the shouts are really for Shakespeare and Racine. . And, to end with a suggestion, is not the actor's art akin to the journalist's that is, in the relation of the latter to literature? It seems to me that the playhouse and the. newspaper go hand in hand. They are .popular vehicles of thought, and are within the scope of the people. Perhaps this is not flatter ing and perhaps it is unjust but then, it is only a suggestion. Sarah Bernhardt in San Francisco Examiner. ' Hamburg's Paper Hotel. .There seems to be practically no limi tation to the uses to which paper can be and is applied. To the long list of ar ticles intended for personal use,' and in the smaller details of construction of rolling stock, such as wheels, axles, etc.; there has been added a more extensive r application to the need of everyday life by the building of a hotel constructed of this material. This novel residence. - nrVfivh Vino 4nn4 ,1 2. are of the hardness of wood, but possess I an advantage over the latter material in ! ?naT lne7 are nreproor, this desirableend rw., ;.,,. i eu-euMJu uy impregnation witU cer Oregon since ; i,om;0i ,w,- -vr tt..,. . - , a -. I aPPie tree is . illustrated by some apples Berwick, planted by the Taylor family in 1751 now 140 years old. The old tree bears some, six or seven bushels this year. Portland Argus. '. '' ' ' .th"r HT Bee" TT M If Uncle Sam has to pay back $20,000.- . . 1 ."r. 000 on account of those hat trimmings, he will not be the first man who hu been embarrassed by big millinery bill. Boston Herald. -. , .' " Who S01d So? "Well it's so, because mother said so. and if mother said so, its so, whether it is so or not" but it is a fact that the people of The Dalles will be very highly favored on the night of the 26th of De cember when the. Mendelssbon co., of Boston will appear in the grandest con cert of - classical music of this decade. The popular admission fee, will be charged and. all should take advantage of the opportunity to hear these star performers. Further announcements will be made in due time. 12-9-lt. NOTICE. All persons who have not paid their echool tax for 1891, will have costs added after January 1, 1892. "- . J. M. Huntington. ' School Clerk. December 9, 1891. 12-9-1-1 The agent of Dr. Sills factory in Port land is at 64 sd. street with a full stock of electric belts, etc.. call and get elec tricity free of charge. He is here for a few days only. 12-9-2t CfiROStCLi; SHORT STOPS. .. For coughs and colds use 2379. . 2379 is the cough syrup for children. Stacy Shown having left my employ I will not be responsible for any debts he may contract' nor anv business he-may transact. ' W. E. Gaebetson. " 11-16-tf. Wm..Michell has added a full line of picture frame mouldings of all descrip tions and is now prepared to make picture frames of all sizes and qualities at his undertaking rooms, corner Third and Washington streets, The Dalles. 11- 21-lm Mrs. Lochhead will take a limited number of pupils for painting and for vocal music after the 10th of December. For further particulars inquire at the residence of W. S. Myers Esq., Third, street. 12-7-4t . Any person desiring their horses or cattle wintered until the 1st of March can do so by inquiring at Cbrisman Bros.' meat market or J. L. Kelly, for the reasonable rates of ten dollars. : " 12- 7-17 - If you want to send an accptable Christmas gift to friends in the old country buy an Anchor Line draft for any amount payable on demand in all cities and towns of Europe, Great Britain and Ireland. For sale at lowest rates at the office of Thornburv & Hudson. 12-2-6w . ... For the Children. Our readess will notice the advertise ments in these columns for Chamberlain & Co., Des Moines, ' Iowa. From per sonal experience we can say that Cham berlain's Cough Remedy has broken up bad colds . for our- children and we are acquainted with many mothers in Cen terville who wOu'd not be without it in the house for a good many times its cost and are recommending it every day. CenterviUe, OS. M., Uhronicle and Judex. 25 cent, 50 cent and $1 bottles, for sale' by Snipes & Kinersly, druggists. d.tw . Wanted. . An experienced salesman from the east desires a position. Best of refer ences. Address Box 156, The Dalles. - 11-30-tf. For Sale Cheap. ' A gentle, handsome family horse and a new covered buggy and harness for sale cheap. Apply at this office. 15tf For Rent. A nicely furnished, furnace heated room, in central location, suitable for a lady or gentleman. Board if desired. Inquire at this office. The Old and the Jcw." "Of course it hurts but you must grin and bear it," is the old time consolation given to persons troubled with rheuma tism. "If you will take the trouble to dampen a piece of flannel with Cham berlain's Pain Balm and bine it on over the seat of pain your rheumatism will disappear," is the modern and much more satisfactory advice. 50 cent bot tles for sale by Snipes & Kinersly, drug gists. dw For Sale At a Bargain. The - Mission Gardens, greenhouse. stock and fixtures. I am prepared to offer A rare bargain owing to a change in residence. For terms enquire at the premises or of A. N. Varney at the land offi.ee. 15tf. J. A. Vakney. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Hiss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria NOTICE. To the merchants of The Dalles. In ordering freight shipped be sure, and have it marked etre of Holman & Co.i Portland, Or., who will transfer all freight to the Dalles Portland & Astoria Navigation Co. - Holman & Co. Draymen and forwarders, No. 24 N. Front street, . J 0-22 12-22. - Portland, Or. , A Preventive for Crosp. We want every mother fo know that croup can be prevented. True croup never appears without a warning, The fir8t symptom is hoarseness; then the ! cl,,''d aPPears to have ta.ken ? cd or a " 7"' ;:; ..7i YfK.;. ness from the start. After that a pecul iar rough cough is developed, which is followed by tho croup. The time to act is when the Child first becomes hoarse; a few doses of - Chamberlain's Cough Remedy will prevent the attack.. Even after a rough cough has appeared the disease may be prevented by ubing this remedy as directed. It has never been known to fail. 25 cent, 50 cent and $1 bottles for sale by Snipes & Kinersly, druggists. ' dw - "Notice. will be shut The water off for two or j three hours this evening commencing at j 7 o'clock. . Tha National market is now open and will fnrnish yon meat at living rates. Remember that restaurants, hotels and Sieamboats are given wholesale rates. 12-8-dl-w3t. l)o You lik-cllot Cakes ? If ao, get a sack of Eastern Bucfcwfteat Flour AND A. CAN OF Loi Caliii Maple Syrup And your utmost desire will be satisfie d N. B. Quaker Oats, Germea Steel - Cut Oat Meal and Kudaveue Flakes, are very fine for Breakfast. Get them from - JOHN BOOTH, He Leafllug Brocer, 62 SECOND STREET.- WINK THE OTHER EYE ! STAGY SHOOIJl, He WatcliiiiaKei, Has opened an office for Cleaning and Kepairing VVatches, Jewelry, etc. All work guaranteed and . promptly attended. Dunham's IDvxiq Store. ' Cor. Second and Union Streets. Pipe Work, Tin Repair ing and Roofing. Leave orders at L. Butler's, Grocery Store. W.&T.JVIeCoy, Hot -: and-:- Cold-:-Baths. tlQ SECOND STREET. The Dalles Gigaf : Faetory . FIEST STBEET. FACTORY NO. 105. rC A T O of the Best Brands VX vJTrVXXlO manufactured, and orders from all parts of the country filled on the shortest notice. ". The reputation of THE DALLES CI GAB has become firmly established, and the demand for the home manufactured article is increasing every day. . A. ULRICH &. SON. R. B. HOOD, Livery; Feed and Sale Horses Bought an cl Sold on Commission and Mon ey Advanced on Horses Left for Sale, . OFFICE OF The Dalles and Goldendale Stage Line. Stage Loaves The Dulles Etct)- Homing . at 7:30 uud (ioldendnle t 7:S0. All IreiKht must be left nt K. 15. Hood's oftiee the eve ' uii'g before. R. B. HOOD, Opposite old Stand. Proprietor. The Dalles, Or. THE Dalles. Portland & Astoria ' NAVIGATION COMPANY'S - Elegant Staimer . ' H E G U M TO R Will leave the foot of Court Street every morning at 7 A. M. - for "..'! Portland and Way Points . Connections Will be-Made with the ! Fast Steamer - ' ' j DflliliES GITY, At the Foot of the Cascade. Locks. ' For Passenver or Freight Rates, Apply to Agent, or Pnrser on Board. Oiliee nortlieiwt csrni-r of Court and nii street Keep this in Mind. - : WE CARRY - . . Men's Ladies' Misses' and Children's In Every SIZE, STYLE, WIDTH JTID .PRICE. And Sell them at BEDROCK. Prices ! A. M. WILLIAMS & CO. DID YOU KNOW IX I WE ARE AGENTS FOR THE Arpid Stoves and Ranges, Garland Stoves and Ranges, Jemell's Stoves' and Ranges, Universal Stoves and Ranges. We are also agents for the Celebrated Boynton fornaee. Ammunition and Loaded Shells, Ete. SRtflTAlY PliUmBlHG R SPECIAIiTV. . MAIER & BENTON. EOBT. MAYS. MAYS & CROWE, , (Successors to ABRAMS & STEWART.) Retailers and irobberB Ixx " Harflware, - Tinware, - Graniteware, - Wooffenwate, SILVERWARE, ETC. -: AGENTS ZiA II I J "Acorn, "unaaer uaK "Argana . STOVES AND RANGES. Pumps, Pipe, Plumbers' and Steam Fitters' Supplies. Packing, Building Paper, SASH, DOORS, SHINGLES. Also a complete stock of Carpenters', Blacksmith's and Farmers Tools and Fine Shelf Hardware. -AGENTS FOli- The Celebrated R. J. ROBERTS "Warranted" . Cutlery, Meriden CutWy and. Tablewaref the "Quick Meal" Gasoline Stoves. "Grand" Oil Ston-B and Anti-Rust Tinware. All Tinning, Plurnbing, will be done SECOND STREET. - - H. C. NIELS6N, Ciothiet? and Tailor, BOOTS AND SHOES, Hats and Caps, Trunks and Valises, G-ents' Fizrnlslilns G-pods, CORNER OF SECOND AND WASHINGTON KTS.. til Kflfllj I JT,KH, K ES Wow on HI 1 ' f4 1 j - fT 1 ' "We respectfully invite the public to .call and. look at the finest display of Toys, Albums, Dressing Cases, Gold Pen with Fancy Holders, Dolls, Plush and Fancy Goods of all kinds ever displayed in thi9 city. f "'"j!.. Oop plaee of Easiness 162 See6nd St. ' , The Dalles, Oregon.'. JOS. X. PET6RS St C,V ' " : - ... ..-..i.t.--; - ' rDEAI.KJ'.S IN ,w; ., Ge neral BDilflii lalBiial ! " Office and Yard Corner of First and Jefferson TH ' LUMBER, MTH Office ana Yarfl tf. First ail JoTsrsou Sis. E Xj- 333. CEOWE FOR THE X-X. 1 tl A. "l Pipe Work and Repairing on Short Notice. THE DALLES, OJSEGON. Xissly :;.;et't o. . '. Streets. ' North Side of Railroad Track. BUTLtER & CO., LEADERS'' IN AI10 SHlHGIiES. ' SCDTH SIDE iIEailri)?! Tract.