The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, April 18, 1892, Image 4

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Ifci tialles Daily -Chronicle.
THE DALLES
OBIGON
MONDAY
APRIL 18, 1892
A quantity of nice, clean rags wanted
at this office. ,
First-class job work can be had at the
ru cc ,. t : nnj
at reasonable prices. '
Pabst's Milwaukee beer at the Uma
tilla house at a bit a bottle. Free lunch
tonight at 8 o'clock.
A pamphlet containing the new Aus
tralian ballot law adopted by this state
is for sale at the Chronicle office at ten
cents a copy.
The best spring njedicine is a dose or
two of St. Patrick's Pills. They not
only physic but cleanse the whole sys
tem and purify the blood. For sale by
Blakeley & Houghton, druggists. d&w
Miss Clara B. Story will instruct a
limited number of Dunila in oil naint-
ing, water colors, crayon, charcoal and
paatelle work and China painting,
jfetudio, room 3, over Mclnefny's- dry
goods store. 2-3-tf
A traveling man who chanced to be
in the store of E. V. Wood, at McKees
Rocks, Pa., says while he was waiting
to see Mr. w ood, a nttie gin came in
with an empty bottle labeled Chamber
lain's Pain Balm and said : "Mamma
wants another bottle of that medicine ;
she says it is the best medicine for
rheumatism she ever used." 50 cent
bottles for sale by Blakeley & Houghton,
druggists. d&w"
Keep Out the Files.
Wni. Butler & Co., have 'just received
. a Btock of screen doors and windows.
Call and get prices. 4-ll-d6t.
The Havana Sprout. .
The leading cigar now, with smokers
about The Dalles, is the Havana Sprout.
It is A No. 1, and is to be found at
Byrne, Flovd & Co.'b. all and try it.
2-24-dtf "
Beit Tonic.
Byrne, Floyd & Co., the leading whole
sale and retail druggists of. The Dalles,
have today received their second large
invoice of Bet Tonic. Best Tonic takes
with all who have tried it. It cures
dyspepsia, strengthens the system, re
stores sound and refreshing sleep, and
as a beverage at meal time promotes
digestion. 2-27-dtf.
. A tyord to the Wise. '
The beet business opening and chance
to make money in the state, is lying idle
at Dufar, Or. A store 32x00 well fur
nished in a growing, and prosperous,
farming community. For sale or rent
cheap. Let us hear from you. Address
the S. B. Med. Mfg. Co., or A. J Brig
ham, Dufur,' Or.
NOTICE.
All Dalles City warrants registered
prior to September 1, 1890, will be paid if
J ireaented at my office. Interest ceases
rom and after this date.
Dated February 8th, 1892.
O. KlNBBSLY,
tf. Treas. Dalles City.
MARKET REVIEW.
Wheat We quote 70 to 75 . cents
per bushel. Corn in sacks 1.20g$1.25
per 100 lbs. . .
Oats The oat market is in good sup
ply with a limited demand. We quote
1.20 cents to $1.25 per cental.
Baeley The barley supply is fairly
good with a limited inquiry. Brewing
1.00 per cental. Feed barley at 80
to 90 cents per cental.
Floue Local brands wholesale, $4.25
per oarrei at me mills (r!f4.oU retail.
Millstuffs We quote bran at $20.00
per ton. Retail $1.00 per lOOtbs.
Shorts and middlings, $22.50$25.00
per ton.
Hay Timothy hay is in good supply
. at quotations $14.00 to $15.00. Wheat
iijr la ijuuLc-i ul i-.-hji ipio.uu per ton,
and scarce, baled. WTild hay is quo
ted at $12.00(313.00 per ton. Alfalfa
$12.00 baled. Oat hay $13.00.
' Potatoes Abundant at 50 to 60
cents a sack and demand limited.
Butteu We quote Al .40. 65 cents
per roll, and more plentiful.
Eggs Are not coming in freely and the
market strong, we quote 12 to 14 cents.
Poultry Old fowls are in better sup
ply at $4.00 to per dozen.
Apples 1.2o$1.75 box and scarce.
Vegetables Cabbage, turnips, carrots
and onions, 1? cent per pound.
Hides Prime dry hides are quoted at
.06 per pound. Culls .0405. Green .02C
.03. Salt .032-04. Sheep pelts
1.00 to $1.75; butchered, 75 to cents;
bear skins $6 to $8; coyote .60; mink 50
cents each j martin $1.00 ; beaver, $1.75
3.00 per lb.; otter, $2.005.00 each
for Al ; coon, .30 each ; badger, .25 each ;
fisher, $2.50 to $4.00 each ; Red Fox,
$10.00; Dilon gray, $25.00; Black Fox,
$25.00; Polecat, $.25; Wildcat, $.50;
Hedghog, $1.00 to $3.00.
Beef Beef on foot clean and prime
02, ordinary and firm. --- . .
Mutton Choice weathers $3.25; 44
per lb in carcas. . ; :
Hogs Live heavy, .05. Dressed
.06.
Countrv bacon in round lots .10. "" "
Lard 6tb cans .12U ; 10B
40 lb .08K.09M.
" Lumber The supply is fairly good.
"We quote No. 1 flooring and rustic
$26.00. No. 2 do. $21.00. No. 3 do
$16.50. Rough lumber $9. to $12.- No.
1 cedar shingles $2.60$2.60. Lath $2.85.
Lime $1.65$1.75 per . bbl. ; Cement
14.50 per bbl. . , . . ..
STAPLE GROCERIES. '
Coffee Costa Rica is quoted at 23
cents by the sack ;
Sugars Chinese in 1001b mats. Dry
Granulated, $6.J;' Extra C, 5 cents
C, 534 cents. - - -
American sugars Dry Granulated in
barrels or sacks, 6 cents ; Extra C, in
do., b cents; C, b cents.
Sugars- in 30tt boxes are -quoted:
Golden C $1.80; Extra C, $2.10' Dry
Granulated $2.25. -
Syrup $2.25 to $2.75 can, kegs 1.90
to $2.00 keg.
Rice Japan rice, 6J6- cents; Is
land rice, 7 cents.
Beaks Small white, 45 cents:
Pink, 4Ji4 cents by the 100 lbs.
Stock Salt Is quoted at $17.50 per
ton. Liverpool, 501b sack, 70 cents
100 Bsack, $1.25; 200fi sack, $2.25.
Woman's Dainty Underwear.
' Just what sort of underwear to assume
is "one question that troubles the average
woman very much. She doesn't want
to wear so much that it will be bulky,
andshe . doesnt want to wear too little
for fear she will catch cold. She tries
first one and then another shaped gar
ment, and the wise woman is she who,
having at last hit upon that which is
most comfortable, makes it most dainty
and assumes it for good. Very little
linen is used nowadays for one's lingerie,
the preference being given to cambric,
Victoria lawn, nainsook or percale. The
last is. noted with tiny dots or wee flow
ers in pink, blue or lavender upon the
white ground. . Then when the garment
is finished the edges have a triple scal
lop or a sharp point embroidered in cot
ton of the same color as the figure. This
material, with its simple finish, is liked
for - sack - shaped chemises, for night
dresses and for drawers. It is seldom,
if ever, used for skirts.
The fancy for silk nightdresses still
exists, but as there always have been
women who would wear nothing but the
clear white lawn of nainsook,, and as
these women are many, the makers of
underwear are specially catering to
them. Very much more fine work, that
is, handwork, can be put upon a nain
sook gown than upon a silk one, and the
needlewoman can. make more fine tucks,
fancy stitches, gatherings, hemstitch
ing and drawing of threads than ever
would seem possible. Mrs. Mallon in
Ladies' Home Journal.
The Bayeux Tapestry.
. Tapestry was brought into general use
in western Europe, with many other
elegancies of life, by the Moors of Spain.
The oldest known specimen is the Bayeux
tapestry, an epic in embroidery, careful
ly treasured for centuries in the cathe
dral of Bayeux, and now preserved in
the hotel de villa of that place. Miss
Strickland says of this piece of work:
"It is beyond all competition the
most wonderful achievement in the gen
tle craft of needlework that ever was
executed by fair and royal hands."
It was done by Matilda of Flanders
wife of William the Conqueror, and the
ladies of her court. It is a coarse linen
cloth, 214 feet long and 20 inches wide,
on which is worked in woolen thread of
various colors a representation of the
invasion and conquest of England by the
Normans. '
It contains the figures of about 625
men, 200 horses, fifty-five dogs, forty
ships and boats, besides a quantity of
quadrupeds, birds, trees, houses, castles
and churches, all executed in the proper
colors, with names and' inscriptions over
them to elucidate the story. It is a
valuable historic document, as it gives a
correct and minute portraiture of the
Norman costumes and" their manners
and customs. Woman's Work.
. Ailments of the Eyes.
No organ of the body is liable to a
greater variety of" ailments than the eye.
More than forty such diseases are enu
merated in medical works.
. Some of these tend toward blindness,
partial or complete. Some are highly
contagious. Some are peculiar to the
earliest Btages of infancy; some to old
age. Some are due to other diseases;
some originate with the eye itself;- some
are the result of external wounds. Some
are brought on by the improper use of
the eye; some by the abuse of other or
gans. Some are partially or wholly
curable; others are not
As we have two eyes, the loss of one
does not materially affect the other.
The double ' provision is a wise and be
nevolent one in the case of an organ ex
posed to so many accidents from with
out and so many diseases from within.
Youth's Companion. " . -
A .Professional Uousecleaner.
A woman in this city has a certain
number of customers, all of- whom are
persons of wealth and willing to pay her
well. She goes to the house of each
customer at stated periods and removes
all the f uroiture, curtains and pictures
from the drawing rooms. She then di
rects the cleaning-of the rooms and the
furniture, taking care that theatter is
not scratched or injured in the handling,
ahd that all blemishes are removed by
careful oiling. All the furnishings are
then replifted according to her ideas. As
she has excellent taste, she manages to
create a good impression each time, but
never duplicates a setting. . She suggests
the removal of
addition of odd bits that will fill out her
plan, and keeps the customer informed
in regard to the changes of styles. New
York Sun.
- Btmlni and the Fountain of Youth.
; Bimini was a fabulous island firmly
believed in by the Indians 'of the An
tilles, though they could give no further
clew to its location than that it lay some
hundreds of leagues north of Hispaniola.
On this island was the .famous foun
tain of youth which had the power of
restoring youth . and giving perpetual
health and vigor. It was the search for
this fountain that led Ponce de Leon
and Hernando de Soto to Florida, on the
outskirts of which the island was gener
ally supposed to- be situated. St Louis
Republic. ,. - . .. .. .
The Heart Bests Eight Honn Every Day.
That wonderful piece of mechanism,
the heart, appears to work continually
day and nighty from birth to death, but
in reality there are short pauses or rests
between each beat, which, though mi
nute in themselves, mount up in the ag
gregate to eight hours out of every twenty-four.
, These short pauses enable the
heart to repair the waste which constant
work entails and without which rests it
would break down. Brooklyn Eagle. ;"
"Why the Wren Is King.
The wren is chased every St Stephen's
Day oa account of it betraying the Sav
iour by chattering in a clump of furze
where he was biding. It is called the
"king of all birds," because it concealed
itself beneath the wing of the eagle when
that lordly bird claimed ' supremacy by
Soaring highest J 'Here 1 .am," said the
wren, mounting above - the eagle's head
when the latter could go no higher.
Irish Times. - - -rv
SOCIETIES.
ASSEMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF L,. Meets in K.
- of P. hall the second and fourth Wednes
days of each month at 7:30 p. m.
w
ASCO LODGE.-SO'. 15, A. F. & A. M. Meets
nrsi ana imra wonuay ot each month at 7
DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6.
Meets in Masonic Hall the third Wednesday
of each month at 7 P. M.
MODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD.
Mt. Hood Camp No. 59, Meets Tuesday even
ing of euch week, in the K. of P. Hall, at 7:30 r. ji.
COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 5, I. O. O. F. Meets
every Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in K.
of P. hall, corner Second and Court Btrcets.
Sojourning brothers are welcome.
H. Clough, Bec'y. H. A. Biiis,N. G.
FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P. Meets'
every Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in
Schanno'n building, corner of Court and" Second
streets. Sojourning members are cordially in
vited. W. S. Cram.
, D. W.Vause, K. of R. and S. C.-C.
WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE
UNION will meet every Friday afternoon
at S o'clock at the reading room. All are invited.
TEMPLE LODGE NO. 3, A. O. U. W. Meets
at K. ef P. Hall, Corner Second and Court
Streets, Thursday evenings at 7:30.
George Gisonb. -W.
S M.YER8, Financier. . M. W.'
TAB. NESM1TH POST, No. 82, O. A. R. Meets
V.F
every Saturday at 7:30 P. M., in the K. of P.
Hall.
B
OF L. E. Meets every Sunday afternoon In
the K. of P. Hall.
ESANG VERETN Meets " every Sunday
3T evening in the K. of P. Hail.
BOF L. F. DIVISION, No. 167 Meets in the
K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednes
day of each month, st 7 :3t) p. it.
THE CHURCHES.
ST. PETER'S CHURCH Rev. Father Brosts
gkkst Pastor. Low Mass every Sundav at
7 at. m. . High Mass at 10:30 a. m. Vespers at
7 P. M. - . - . .
ADVENT CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Preaching
in the Y. M. C. A. rooms every Sunday at 11
a. m. and 7 p. m. Sundav school immediately
after morning service. J. A. Orchard, pastor.
ST. PAUL'S CHURCH Union Street, opposite
Fifth. Kev. Eli D.Sutelifl'e Rector. Refvfce.
every Sunday at 11a. m. and 7:30 p. v. Sunday
School9:45 A. M. . Evening Prayer on Friday at
FIP.ST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. Tat
lor, Pastor. Morning services every Sab
bath at the academy at 11 a. m. Sabbath
School immediately after morning services.
Prayer meeting Friday evening at Pastor's resi
dence. Union services in the court house at 7
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. W. C.
Curtis, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11
a.. M. and 7 P. M. Sunday School after morning
service. Strangers cordially invited. Seats free.
M- E. CHURCH Rev. A. C. Spencer, pastor.
Services every Sunday morning. Sunday
School at J2:20 o'clock p. m. A cordial invitation
is extended by both pastor and people to all.
A; A. Brown,
Keeps a full assortment of
Staple and Fancy Groceries,
and Provisions.
which he offert at Low Figures.
SPECIAL :-: PRIGES
to Cash Buyersr
HiEtat Cash Prices for Eis anfl
.otoProte....
170 SECOND STREET.
YOUR ATTENTION
Is called to the fact that
Hagh Glenn,
Dealer in Glass, Time, Plaster, Cement
and Building Material of all kinds." '
-Carrie the Finest tine of-
To be found in the City.
72 UUashington Street.
W. H. BUTTS, Prop.
Ifo 90 Second Sreet, The Dalles, Or.
This well known stand, kept by tbe
well' known W. H. Bntts, long a resi
dent of JWasco county, has an. extraordi
nary fine stock of
Sheep -Herder's Delight and Irish : Disturbance.
'"In fact," all the'leading' brands of fine
Wines, Liquors and Cigars.' ' Give the
old man a call and you will come again.
PiGure
- How to Treat Newspaper man.
Don't tell a newspaper reporter, when
he calls on yon on business, things which
you do not wish him to print. He does
not call for information for the fun of it
He is there on 7 business. When you
meet a reporter socially, don't say to
him every time you open your mouth,
"This ia not for publication. "
' If you really have information to give,
either give it cheerfully and frankly or
refuse with firmness, but don't try to be
clever and attempt, any. "funny busi
ness." If you give the information
frankly you will in ninety-nine cases
out of one hundred be accurately re
ported and respectfully 'treated. If yon
refuse firmly and politely your reticence
will be respected. If you try to outwit'
the reporter "by an effort to mislead him
or by direct misrepresentation, you are
sure to make a mess of it and wish that
you had been better advised.
Disabuse your mind of any foolish im
pression that -the newspaper reporters
are malignant persons, trying to stir up
trouble in the world.. They are, as a
rule, the opposite of this and have- as
high an idea as other men of the relative
advantages of contentment and strife.
Portland. Oregonian.
imples,
The old . ides of 40 years ago was that facial
eruptions were duo to a "Wood humor," for
which they gave potash. Thus all the old Sarsa
parlllaa contain potash, a most objectionable and
drastic . mineral, that instead of decreasing,
.actually creates more eruptions. You have no
ticed this when taking other Earsaparillas than
Joy's. It Is however now known that the stom
ach, the blood creating power, is the seat of all
vitiating or cleansing operations. A stomach
clogged b7 indigestion or constipation, vitiates
tho blood, result pimples. A clean stomach and
healthful digestion purifies it and they disappear.
Thus Joy's Vegetable Satsaparilla is compounded
after the modern idea to regulate tho "bowels and
stimulate tho digestion. The effect is immediate
and most satisfactory. A short testimonial to
contrast tho action of the potash Sarsaparillas
and Joy!s modern vegetable preparation... Mrs.
C. D. Stuart, of 400 Ilayes St., S. F., writes:" I
have for j'cars had indirection, I tried a popular
Sarsaparilla but it actually caused more pimples
to break but on my face. Ilenriug that Joy's was
a later preparation aud acted differently, I tried
it and. tbe pimples immediately disappeared."-
Vegetable
SarsapariSIa
Largest bottle, most ciT..-etivc. same price.
For Sale by SNIPES & K1NERSLY
THE DALLES. OREGON. .
Democratic State Convention.
A democratic state convention will be
held in the city of Portland, Or., April
19, 1892, at 10 o'clock a. m., for the pur
pose of placing in nomination two can
didates for congress, one supreme judge,
one candidate in each judicial . district
for circuit judge and prosecuting attor
ney, jto be voted for at the coming June
election, and such other business as
may properly come before said conven
tion. The various counties are entitled
to representation in said convention as
follows: r ." ,
Baker 7 Linn 16
Benton 9 Malheur 3
Clackamas 11 Marion 15
Clatsop 8 Morrow . . . .' ; . . . 5
Columbia 3 Multnomah 42
Coos ; 5 Polk 9
Crook 7 Bherman ... 2
Curry 2 Tillamook 3
Douglas 11 Umatilla 15
Gilliam . . ... 4 Union . . 15
Grant 5 Wallowa 4
Harney -. 4 Washington 8
Jackson.... 11 Wasco r 9
Josephine.:.. 5 Yambill 8
Kiaamath.. .... ... .. 3
Lake....' 3 Total.. 265
Lone -. 13.
It is recommended, unless otherwise
ordered by the local committees, that
the primaries in the various counties be
held on Saturday, the 9th day of April,
and the county conventions on Thurs
day, April 14, 1892.
By order of the democratic state cen
tral committee. -
B. Goldsmith, Chairman,
A. Noltneb, Secretary. .
NOTICE.
Parties holding claims against W.'S.
Cram are notified topresent them to him
at once, at the Columbia Candy Factory,
and all those indebted are requested to
settle at the same place, as I have sold
out my business and want to close up
my accounts.' Respectfully,
4-tidw4w . W. S. Ckam. -
Dissolution Notice.
The copartnership hetofbre existing
between b. F. French and J. N. Lauer,
doing business in The Dalles under the
firm name of French & Lauer, has been
dissolved by mutual consent. The busi
ness will be conducted at the old stand
First street, by J. N. Lauer who has
purchased the same, and will collect and
pay all outstanding accounts.
Signed: Fkench & Laueb.
4-14-dlm .
Dissolution Notice. '
Notice is hereby given, to whom it
may concern, that the partnership here
tofore existing between E. M. Wingate
and E. Wingate, nnder the firm name of
E. Wingate & Co., at Dalles City, Or., is
this day dissolved by mutual consent.
By order, E. Wingatk & Co.
Dated April 1st, 1892. - - 4-2-d6t
-. NOTICE. -' -
R. E. French has for sale a number of
improved ranches and unimproved
lands in the Grass Valley neighborhood
in Sherman county. They will be sold
very cheap and on reasonable- terras.
Mr. French can locate settlers on some
good unsettled claims in the same neigh
borhood. His address is Grass Valley,
Sherman county, Oregon.
' - City Board of Equalization. - .
Notice is hereby given that the city
board of equilization will rneet at the
Recorder's office, on Monday the 25th
day of April, 1892, at 9 o'clock a. m., and
continue in session until 4 o'clock p. m.
of said day. - All persona desiring any
change in their assessment,, as returned
by the city assessor for the year 1892, are
required to appear before said board on
said day.
By order of the Common Council.
. i - FRANK MENEFEE.
" ' , - v . Recorder of Dalles City.
Dated this 6th day. of April, 1892.' 4-6dl4t
FI RST"CLHSS
1p
CHRONICLE OFFICE
'.-' HsMbbbsbbbisibbmbsbbbmsm
Reasonably Ruinous Rates.
: DEALERS IN:-
Hay, Grain
Masonic Block, Corner Third and
Pipe WorR; Tin R
MAINS TAPPED UNDER PRESSURE.
Shop on Third Street, next door . west of Young & Kuss'
-Blacksmith Shon.
fleu Qolumbia . jlotel,
THE DALLES, OREGON.
Best Dollar a Day House on the Coast!
First-Class Meals, 25 Cents.
First Class Hotel in Every Respect.
None but-the Best of White Help Employed.
T. T. Nicholas, Pfop.
AND OYSTER HOUSE.
One of the Finest Cooks in The Dalles.
All Work done by White Help.
Next door to Byrne, Floyd fc Co.s'
Drug Store. "
85 Union St., The Dalles.
Just Opened,
fllis. fl. JOflES - Proprietor.
Everything the Market
Affords, at Reasonable
' Rates. ...... .:
mrs. c. Davis
Has Opened the 1
REVERE . RESTAURANT,
In the ' New Frame Building m
SECOND STREET, Next to the f
' Diamond Flouring Mills:
First Class MealsFurni8hed at all Hoars.
Only White Help Employed. :
- Old papers, nice and clean, for sale at
this office. ... They are ; useful for many
things..
nil
it
ill u
yy m
CAN BE HAD AT THE IPl
and Feed.'
Court Streets, The DaSies.Oregon.
epairs sol Hooting
j. -
A Revelation.
Tew people .know that tha
bright bluish-green color of
the ordinary teas exposed In
the windows is not the nat
ural color. Unpleasant as tha
fact may be, It is nevertheless
artificial; mineral coloring
matter being . used (or this
purpose. The effect is two
fold. It not only makes the
tea a bright, shiny green, but also permits the
mse of off-color " and worthless teas, which,
onee nnder the green cloak, are readily
worked off as good quality of tea.
An eminent, authority writes on this sub
ject: "The manipulation of poor teas, to give
them a'liner appearance, is carried on exten
sively. . Green teas, being in this country
especially popular, are produced to meet the
demand by coloring cheaper black kinds by
glaaing or facing with Prussian blue, tumeric,
gypsum, and indigo. This method ia so. gen
eral that very littte genuine uncolored green tea
U offered for tale." . ,
It was the knowledge of this condition of
affairs that prompted the placing of Beech's
Tea before the public It is absolutely pure
and' without color. Sid yon ever see any .
genuine uncolored Japan tear' Ask your
grocer to open a package of Beech's, and yen
will see it, and probably for the -very first
time. It will be found In color to be lust be
tween the artificial green tea that you hare
been accustomed to and tbe black teas. '
; - It draws a delightful canary color; and Is so
fragrant that it will be a revelation to tea
drinkers. -Its purity makes it also mors
economical than the artificial teas, for less
of it is required per cup. Sold only in pomnd
packages bearing this trade-mark:.
.TrVre-AsWdhoo'd
If ycr grocer does not have it, he wia get
ft ft rem, Mc8 per ptMud. Voraatoal
Xieslle Butler's
.... -j.THB DALLES, ORBOOIT.
m