The Dalles Daily Chronicle. TBI DALLBS OBBGOX MONDAY FEB. 13 1893 . ... Published Hall?, Sunday Ks.cuf.tetl. " ' - r' . ky ' . ' THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING" CO. Corner Ber-oud aud Washlngtu-t Streets. The - - Dalles, Oregon. . Term of Subscription Per Year. . Per month, by carrier. Single copy. . . .6 00 ... 50 ... S of Stew Yocfc, wom a drwr tani of ajvfcie in the long, Lang ngr 6m& " ateo and ward of Matthew L Dweia, tfoa in timate associate and biotpntpher f Uuu, she bad a store of nneodotes ef men who figured promiuMtly in . naftienaJ affniss seventy or eighty years since; bnt this one which I shall repeat, as nearly as possible in hei own words interested me most of all ' - " '' "1 was a schoolgirl of "fourteen, siend- lng a -short vacation at Uncle Matthew's house in the city, when one day I beard ' him calling to me from the hail ' below and. went to the head ot the stairs. 'Come down, he wild. There w a gen tleman here who wishes' to see you. I liesjtated. held lm.ck.by some undefiuable fear Again he Haiti. Come down." and in such tones that I dared not disobey He led me into the parlor, and there on the sofa sat an old man whom I had never before seen Very old he looked dressed in the costume of the lust -century, with his snow white hair drawn . back and tied in a cue behind But his eyes they were not old Large, dark and deep, they flashed with nil the fire of youth 1 never saw such eyes in man or woman. They fascinated while they frightened me. "My nude led me forward and said. 'Colonel Bnrr, this is the child of whom I spoke -' I need uot tell, you whose name she bears. The old man rose, took my hand in his mid held me out at arms length and looked at me rlooked at me with those eyes which seemed to see into my very sonl. Only a moment, but ."the moment was an hour. .Then ho dropped my hands - and exclaimed in a voice trembling with emotion: "Take her away. Matthew, take her awayt I. cannot bear itr 1 saw him only once nfterward; it was on Broadway, and I tried to slip by him unperceived. Bnt when 1 turned to look back he was standing still, fol lowing me with those wonderful, won derfnl eyes They haunt me still, and will, 1 know, while memory lasts." St. ; Louis Post-Dispatch. .' : M Hostility as a Host. Macau lav was a pattern host. On his own account, it is true, he was no epi cure, atid his nephew tells a that at any time he would have, been amply satin' fietl with a dinner. such as is served at a .decent seaside lodging house. This was asad fnoral defect, bnt happily his eon- ecientiouR. viewsoof the obligations of hospitality prevented his guests from suffering toy it. He geuerally selected by a half conscious preference dishes of established character and traditional fame." His Dissenting friends he treated to a fillet of vealv "which he maintained, to be the recognized Sunday dinner in good old Nonconformist families." On Michaelmas ' day- he would have been -wretched, had no goose smoked-on' tho 'board. At Christmas he never forgot -- .the old historic turkey.. - " ' ... I If he was entertaining a-coxipfe-of - schoolboys who could construe the fourth satire of Juvenal, he would re ward them for their proficiency with a ' dish of mullet that might -have passed muster on the table of ah augur or an - emperor's freedman." tW ttlr regard 'to ' the contents of his cellar, Macaulay prided himself on being able to say with . Mr. John Thorp, "Mine is famous good -. stun!, to be sure," and if be 'were taken " to task for his extravagance he would' reply, in the words used by another of his favorite characters in fiction, that there was a great deal of good eating and drinking in 700 a year, if . people knew how to nianagait All the Year Round . .- .- Tho -Senium In War. - One marked difference divided the generals of Frederick William III from ". those of Napoleon. The Dukeof Bruns . wick was seventy-one years old. Prince " Hohenlohe. Rixty. aud among subordi ' nate. commanders were men of sixty -V eight seventy nfui seventy -four. Lefe bvre, the oldest French general, was " .barely fifty -one. Augereaa. forty-eight; Bemadotte. forty-two;-Napoleon, Ney, Son It and Latinos, thirty -seven;" Murat only thirty-five . , . . Excepting for the intervention in Hol ";.lanit in 17b 'Hint . the Duke of Bl;n na il wick's ill starml invasion of Champagne in, the Prussian army like that of , Great Britain in l&i4 had suffered . from u long peace, one of the results in : each case being "a; certain disbelief in young comuiantlefs." Von der Decken, writing in I7US under the. title "la it necessary that we should only -have young generate" decided the question in the negative; and in the British army today an officer of the same age as that of Napoleon or Mnrat at Jena may find - his energies confined to the command of a company," whatever hia capacity. .Edinburgh Review. - -. . : ,v, - "' Examination or Teachers.- i,r. Notice is hereby given that for the purpose of making an examination of all persona who may offer themaelvea as candidates for teachers of the schools of this county, the county school euperin - tendent thereof will hold a public, ex .j' amination at his office in The Dalles be ginning Thursday, January 30th, and ending Feb. 8th 1892, afc 1 o'clock, p. in; All teachers eligible for the state-' certi ficates, state diplomas and life diplomas must make application at the quarterly examinations. Dated this January 27th, 1802. ' Tboy Shelley. : County school superintendent of Wasco County, Oregon. , - - fKOFBSSlOMAL CARD. ilHAI.L iJKSfTisr. Oaa given tor the l painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth t ,n nowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of le (kilden Tooth, Second Street. . - r-tl(. G. E. SANDERS. II TTB'TTT' iraduate of the Uuiversltv oi Ban. Sue- essor to Dr. Tucker. Office Bank, The Dalles, Or. over Frencha" DB. E8HELM AN tllOM-EOPATHicj I'nvsiClAB and 8UEOBOK. Calls answered- promptly, iay or night, city or country. Oflko No. 36 and 37 Chapman block. wtl DK. O. 1. DOAE rHTSlCIAK AKD TOB imo. Office; rooms 6 and 6 Chapman tiit-k. Residence: 8. .E. e rnicr Court and Fourth streets, see nd door from the corner. Office hours 9 to 12 A. M.". 2 to 5 and 7 to i P. M. H. H. RIDDKLL Attorns y-at-IjAW Office Court Street, The Dalles, Oregon. . . B. B. DCFrB. s . FBANK MKlf BFKB. DUFUR, & MENEKEE ATTOBXBTS - AT law Rooms 42 and 43, oyer Post jfflce Bulldins;, Entrance on Washington Street The Dalles, Oregon. " . - H. WILSON Attobwbt-at-law Rooms 52 and 68. New Vost Block. Second Street, rhe Dalles, Oregon. t H. JtENNETT, ATTORNKT-AT-LAW. Of - V . Bce4 Schanuo's building, up stairs. The dalles, Oregon. . " - r. r. MATS.' B. S.HONTTNOTOM .. H. . WILSOK. f AYS. HUNTINGTON & WIIJJON ATTOB .t 1 s yb-at-la w Offices, French's block over 'irst National Bank. ' 1 Dalles. Oregon. SOCIETIES. 4 8SEMBLY NO. 4S27. K. OF L. Meets in K. i. of P. hall the second and fourth Wednes days of each month at 7:30 p-m. . w P. at. ASCO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. & A, M. Meets nrst ana tmra uonaay oi eacn montn at 7 DALLES ROYAL -ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6. Meets in Masonic Hall the third Wednesday oi.eacn montn at i r. m. -.---. MODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. - Mt. HoodCampNo. 69, Meets Tuesday even- mgol eacn week la f raternity Hall, at 7:W p. m, COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 5, I. O. O. F. Meets every j-riaay evening at 7 :w O'clock, in k.. of P. hall, corner Second and Court streets. Sojourning brothers are welcome. H. CliOUGH, Sec'y. -. 11. A. BlLLS.N. Q. F.-'RIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 0., K. of P. Meets every Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in rK-tianno Dutuung, corner ot ixurt ana econa -.trout s. Sojourning members are cordially in cited. W. S. Cram. D. W.Vausk, K. of R. and S. C. C. WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPKRENCE UNION will meet every Friday afternoon it 3 o'clock at the reading room. A 11 are invited. TEMPLE LODGE NO. 3, A. O. V. Yf. Meets in Fraternity Hall, over Kellers, an Second street, Thursday evenings at T :30. FauvKreft, . W. b Mybbs, Financier. ' M. W. TAS. NESMITH POST, No. S3, G. A. R- Meets every Saturday at 7:30 P. M., in the K. of P. Unit. - B OF L E. Meets every Sunday afternoon in . the K. of P. Hall. - GESAXa VEREIN Meets every evening in the K. of P. Hall. SundaN B OF L, F. DIVISION, No. 16T Meets in K. of P. Hull the first and third Wednes day of each month, at 7:30 P. M. . THE CHURCHES. V, ST. ETER3 CHURCH Rev. Father Bkons obkst Pastor. Low Mass every Sunday at 7 A. v. High Mass at 10:30 a. k. Vespers at 7 P. M. ST. PAULS CHURCH Union Street, opposite Fifth. Rev. Eli D. SutcUffe Rector. . Services every Sunday at 11 a. u. and 7:30 p. m. Sunday School 8:45 A. M. Evening Prayer on Friday at 7:30 . . " FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. Tat lor. Pastor. Morninir services every Sab bath at tho academy at 11 A. M. Sabbath School immediately after morning services. Praver meetine Friday evenUisr at Pastor'a resi dence. Union services in the court house at 7 P. M. - - . ,. . . CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. W. C. Curtis, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11 a. if. and 7 p. u. Sunday School after morning service. Strangers cordially invited. : Seats free. r E. CHURCH Rev. J. Whibuer. pastor. iYJ. Services every Sunday morning at 11 a-m. Sunday School at 12:20 o'clock p. M. Ep worth league at 6r30 P.- at;- Prayer jneeting- every Thtiindiiv eveninir at 7:30 o'clock. A cordial in vitation Is extended by both pastor and people to all. . - C1HRI5T1AN CHURCH RBV. J. W. Jbkxins, j Pastar. Preachino- in the Consreeratlonal Church eacn Lords Day at 3 p. M. All are cordially invited . . PRINZ & NITSCHKE DEALERS ' IK "'.- Furniture arid Carpets We have added to. our business' a somplete Undertading Establishment, and as we are in no way connected with the Undertakers' Trust our prices will be low,accordingly. , -v The St. Charles Hotel, PORTLAND, OREGON. TLia old, popular and reliable house haa been entirely refurnished, and every room haa been repapered and repainted and newly carpeted throughout. . The hoase contains 17t rooms and is supplied with every modern convenience. Bates reasonable. A good restaurant attached to the house. - Frer baa to and from all trams. : , - ' C. W. KNOWLES, Prop. The: SnuB. f W. H. BUTTS, Prop. ' No, 90 Seoond SfeetThft palles, Or ' Thia well known stand, kept by tEe well &nown w. .utt. iintts, long a resi dent of Wasco 7countys has ah eitraordi- nary nne BtocKot- i - r1 .j.ji v.; '-. "i . Slififn - rTp.ri!ftr,s flflUtrhi' ini I?k!i ilRfnrlisnp" In fact, all the leading brands of fine Winea, Liquors and Cigar8--.:-Sive the old man a call and you will come again. STEAM WOOD SAW We are in the field for the fall and winter work, and will cut, split and pile wood at the lowest poaaib! rates. NONE BUT WHITE LABOR EKPLOYEE . - - - . ' . - i .... : - We are here foatay.will spend onr money flere, and try and do satisfactory work. . Order boxes at Chrisman Corson's, cor Tier of sfichelbach block, and at the ma obiue, corner of Washington aud Fourth -.. . streets,' . J. 0. MEI1TS, r i y : THE DALLES CIIA8. 8TCBLINQ. bWEN WILUAUS. : Stubling & Williams. The Gepmania, - SECOND ST.. . THE DALLES, - - "OREGON jpSDealers - In Wiriest" Liquors and Cigars. Milwaukee Beer on Draught. BTXIOUSNESS. The S. B. Headache and; Liver Cure. SFE I P H Y S I C I SCUrfEEA If taken as directed, we Guarantee Sat .' isfaction or refund your money. DON'T SICKEN. . DON'T GRIPE. 50 cents per bottle by all druggists. ' OMAHA Kansas City, St. Paul, -CHICAGO, ST. LOUJS, M O ALL POINTS East, North and So.v. LEAVE THE DALLE "No. 7, west, bound. .... . 4:1 . .. No. 1, " " '. 3:05 a. m. No. 2, east bound. .... .11 :55 m. ; No. 8, " ' 1:25 p. m. : : --' . ' ; v' . ' PULLMAN SLEEPERS, COLONIST SLEEPERS, -- '.- - RECLINING CFLAIR CARS, . ; " and DINERS. '.' ,; ' Steamers from PORTLAND to SIN FRANCISCO EVERY FOUR DAYS. TICKETS TrSm EUROPE For rates and g-eneral information caU on '- - E. E. LYTLE, .' -.. Depot Ticket Ajrent. jv. il. nijRtBURT.' ABst." Oen. Pass. Agt, ' . Sl.WaaJilngton St., '." '. ' -- ' OETUKD.OeIOO!!. From TEJJlHBi ov IHTH?I05 Points . the :rkilrokd . ' . V Is tto line to take - T , TO ALL POINTS EAST AND SOUTH. It is the Dlnins; Car Route. It runs Through Vestibuled Trains every day in the yar to ,: pt. paul and Chicago tSCCHANGE OF" CARS. ' Coroposei of Dlninsr Cars unsnrpassod. Pull man Drawing Room sleepers of latest equipment - TOURIST SUITING CARS-: t Best that con be constructed, and In which accommodations are both Free and Furnished for holders of First and Second-class Tickets, and ELEGANT DAY COACHES A continuous line, connecting with all lines, affording direct and uninterrupted service- Pullmnn Sleeper reservations can be secured in advance through any agent of tharood. - . THROUGH TICKETS .:-&S.E2s2! England and Europe can be purchased at any ticket office of the company. .- Full information concemiwe rntea, tluio of trains, routes and other details iurnished on application to v - W? C ALLAWAY. Agent D. P. & A. Kav. Co.", Regulator 'office. The Dalles, Oa., or-: A. D. CHARLTON, .- ... '- .-. ABs't. General Passer ger Agt, Portland, )ga; i . s . TicRelu Hugh mm . - Intiudurtlon of a New Train Signal. j The bell nsexi in the roof of the loco- J. motive cab to signal the( engineer when to stop and start will soon be a thin.-ot the Dast. A new air tr.iin siirnkl is fast I taking the'Vlace ot the. boll or gong, and already all the passenger coaches on the Lake Shore and Wabash, railroads are "'Pl'sd with the air signal instead of the '.'bell. The air signal is worked by means of a small rubber or iron'' tn be that runs under the coaches, like the air pipes' to work the air brakes. In . the locomotive cab there is. an iron whistle , and when . the conductor desires to atop -tlwutrain he pnlls on a short rope br lever that allows the air to escape, and ..the whistle in the cab sounds the signal :-'it- is claimed that this is much superior to tne bell arrangement, for the reason that it works better on a long train. The bell sometimes failed to respond on long trains, and 6erious accidents oc curred on that account. The bellrope was also a handy thing for train robbers to cut in order to prevent an alarm while they were looting the wealth of the pas aengera. The other leading railroads of the country will adopt the air train sig nal as soon as they can get it attached to their coaches. The New York On tral, Pennsylvania, . Baltimore and Ohio and the Big Pour -are-having the new system of signaling the engineer at tached to their trains. New York Tele gram. ' . .. , .' Weut La Church ne.f ! A Maine woman who had an irreli gious husband kept driving at him until she finally- got him to go to. church. Now. mark how she was rewarded. In stead of following the service he looked at the congregation and npticed how much more handsomely the other wom en were dressed than his wife. T3d fact 1. pricked htrrr to the heart as- no words of the minister could.'ahd th -tiext day he gave his wife $500 and told her togpaVnd buy some clothes...-' Need we enlarge on the moral of this story? We think not. New York Tribnne - - YOUR flTTEflTIOfl la called to the fact that Dealer in Glase, Lime. Plaster, Cement and Building Material of all kinds. -Cmrrle the Finest I. In of . To be foand in the City. ' -:. .-' ' 72 LUashington Street. A. A. Brown, . . Keeps a full assortment of and Provisions. which he offers at LowFlgurea.' i SPEGIfili x PRIGES to Cash Buyers. . Hlshest Cask Prices for Eggs and other ProiiTice.; : 170-SECOND STREET. The Dalles - . FIRST STBJFi Mi'-L - FACTORY NO. 105. fT A T Q of the Best Brands jlVTx.JlO manufactured,: and orders from alt parts of the country filled on the shortest notice. The reputation of THE DALLES CI GAB haa become firmly established, and the demand for the home manufactured article is increasing every day. '.'-'V 'V- A. ULRICH & SON VARTIC FACTORY. Candies and Nuts "q wholesale qaotatlons. TOBACCOS 1:1 1 l' CI6ARS.AND 4 SWEET DRINKS Finest Peanut; Boaster In The Dalles Glenn Picture jnouiaings Stan p. nft Fanr.v ftrop,p.rM Specialties L .;Uf WC bfgof38 ' Dill I. HIlDUAU for the protciion of .the smoker. njflE WlMEg DOMESTIC An KEY. WEST ' . CIGARS. -FRENCH'S BLOCK.: . ' :. 171. SECOND . STREET, : . : THE DALLES, OR. Freeborn cSt -DSALP.E8 IK- 1 all PaiaMloonf Ifloulflings; , -295 ALDER " ' -. '-'. . Oi.r Number 95, THE CELEBRATED COLUMBIA ' f AUGUST; BUCHLER, Prop'rl This .well-known Brewery, is now turning 'out the best Utter and" Porter cast of the Cascades. The' latest appliances for, the manufacture of good health ful Beer have -been -introduced, and only the first-class a'rtlcre will: be placed on the market. - ..- -. ' ' .' ' ' '. (a - : - : The e '-'. ' , Genuine Illustrated Unabridged 1 Encyclobecl The full set is iidw ready for. delivery. It is a reprint, in large type, of the last (9th) English edition, over 20,500 ; pages, including, more than 10,000 illus- . trations and 200 Size of voltmies. 891 by 10 inches, br &4 inches thick: weight, about six nounda each. Membership in" the .-.Encyclopedia IBritarmica Cooperative ' Club costs only $1.00 extra, and , secures the en cyclopedia on payments of only 5 cents a day or $1.00 every twenty days. . - : American Supplement. Magnificently supplementing the Eng lish edition(complete. in itself , of course) of the Britannica, - especially treating American topics and living biography, we publish as follows :- -;- - ; ". '" American Supplement, edited by Howard Crosby, D.t)., IX.D.,an4 , ; Others, 5 volumes, 8.84S pages, and Index to entire work, e9 pages, the e vols, bound in 3 volalT cloth, price $6.00; half Bussia, $7.20. . Sample of the Encyclopedia can be ;. seen'at the office of this paper, and you can - save " a ' Uttle i in trojible and cost by joining at once with the editor and some of your neighbors in order ing sets. Coll and see ,it, anyway, , which. costs nothing- : . JOHN B ALDEN, Publisher, 57 Bose St., New York. XX The Tariff Has not raised the pr ice on Blackvveirs Bull; Durham Smoking Tobacco. .There are many other brands, each- represented byome inter- ". ested person to be "just as good as the Bull Durham." They aire not; but like all counterfeits, they each lack the peculiar" and attractive qualities of the genuine. ; ' . BLACKWELL'S DURHAM TOBACCO CO. v . DURHAM, M.C. and LiqUOtg THE CELEBRATED PABST BEER. Company, ST.. COR. FiFTH, ."'-...- - PortiIakd, OREaow. MACK BREWERY, i .. - Britannica. maps - . a-Dav':;'r : r 1