The Dalles Daily Chronicle. OFFICIAL PAPER OF DALLES CITY. AND WASCO COUNTY. at the Postofflce at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. BY MAIL ( POSTAOB PKXTAID) lit ADVANCE. Weakly, 1 year 1 SO " 6 months 0 75 s ' .. 0 SO Daily, 1 year 6 00 - 6 months 8 00 per " 0 50 Address all communication to " THE CHRON ICLE," The Dalles, Oregon. THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1893 THE WOOJjSITVATION It ie expected that the yield of wool in item Oregon will amount to at least 17,000,000 pounds this year. While this large yield should be gratifying to all sheep men the market conditions are in the last degree discouraging. At no time has the price of American scoured medium been as low as it is today, which is 52c.53c. The lowest record prior to this time was in 1885, when it fell to 55c. While eastern mills are fairly busy on old orders, they are doing almost nothing in the way of new business, and consequently manufactur ers are not disposed to buy wool. It now looks as though considerable ma chinery would be stopped as soon as the fall business gets a little further ad vanced. The tariff change that is ex pected next winter means a great falling off in business while the order of traded being brought aboutjand the disposi tion with manutacturefs will be to go alow and operate with conversatism during the period between now and the time the change is made. They will not make any goods ahead to take the sure chances of a loss in the iace of a tariff reduction , and their business until a lower duty goes into effect will depend largely on the amount of goods the clothing people will require to carry them through. These are the conditions that wool dealers are obliged to face in negotiating with our wool growers for the new clip, and it is needless to say that they derive little comfort from the outlook. The money question is also bound to be a factor of importance in handling the clip. The prospect is now leaning strongly towards a tight money market, and with the unfavorable out look, the indications are that the banks will curtail their lines of credit to a con siderable extent, and through higher rates of interest make dealers even less sanguine of profit, and more disposed to wards following a hand to mouth method of operations. There is every indication at present of a slow draggy season in the wool trade, with the dis position to buy close and conservatively with quick turns, as there will be appar antly no profit in holding wools under the conditions promised for this clip. The Six Companies who ordered the Chinese not to register have sent the Astoria Chinese another circular of a re assuring nature, which, as translated for the Associated Press, reads as follows: "To our Astoria brothers, and espec ially to those who do cannery work : Tour officers need not telegraph to us any more. You may feel secure. A cablegram was received lrom Prince Li Hung Chang yesterday. He says that our imperial government is sending a commissioner on the next steamer to see President Cleveland in Washington. He knows what to say, and the American law will be altered when he tells the American president what the emperor desires. Do not be afraid or leave the country. Yon will not be made to reg ister. The men in the Astoria canneries are good residents, and we want them to be careful not to offend any American officials, because we will prove that great damage will be done by sending you out of the country.. Nobody who is working will be sent away. We will send you word again soon." The rule of the Six Companies ha6 been as absolute in the United States as that of the emperor in China. However a Chinamen in The Dalles said yesterday that he had made a mistake in not registering when the opportunity was presented a few days ago, and that the next time he had a chance he would do so. The Chinese all over the coun try, from all reports, seem to have dropped on to the Six Companies, and their last pandering circular will unde ceive them thoroughly as to their pre tended power. Ex-Mihister Stevens gives his views with no uncertain sound in the matter of our policy with Hawaii. He appeals to the American people not to - desert their kinsmen in the battle for civiliza tion, and closes as follows : "I do not believe the administration of President Cleveland will neglect this great Ameri can opportunity, careful and cautious as it is its duty to be ; but in due time, and at an early date, I believe it will not fail of its great duty to the American peo ple. Failure to accept this valuable prize would surely bring our statesmen to the bar of history with an indictment of blundering" criminality from which there could be no escape." There is not a single state institution located at Salem. They are-all outside the city limits, and are no more a part of Salem than ia Dahomey. Wanted. Ladies to do writing at home, will pay $18 to $20 per week. Send self addressed, stamped envelope for reply. Address Mhe. Wright, Mishawaka, Ind. 22.3t PRESIDENT'S.PRESENTS. Queer Things That Have Been Sent to the Chief Executive. Enough Animals and Odds and Ends to Stock a Large Museum JL Trying; Ordeal to Un dergo. If Mr. Cleveland takes to his home, says the New York Times, all the pres ents of one description and another which have been sent to him since last November he will have a museum that will be worth going miles to see. His admiring fellow-citizens from one end of the country to the other have been showing their devotion to him by send ing him no end of remembrances. If it had been Christmas eve every night since November 8, and his stock ing had been hung up every time, it would have been stuffed more than full every morning. He has" received ilmost everything from live stock to jewelry, and the accumulation is some thing which cuts a considerable figure vhen the question of moving is under consideration. Many, in fact most, of these gifts have come from persons whom he does not know. Some of them are of no earthly use, and some which might be useful if he were the owner of a dime nuseum or the proprietor of a stock arm would be out of place in the white 1 louse or the spacious grounds about it. Somebody in Michigan showed his Levotion to the president by sending iim a deer about two months ago. It iv as in a healthy condition and had an appetite that was something enormous. No one knows just what the sender thought Mr. Cleveland was to do with the animal or why he would appreciate such a gift. It came by express to this city, and, as his residence was not built for the accommodation of such animals, it was forwarded to his country place at Buzzard's Bay. Soon after the deer there came from a distant state a large rooster that crowed incessantly. It was a good enough rooster as roosters go, but was not interesting enough to be classed as a curiosity or useful enough to pay for his "board and keep." As a symbol of victory, he did the best that his lungs and large expe rience could do, and at unseemly hours in the morning has been proclaiming to a large section of Lakewood town ship that he is on earth and is enjoying life immensely. Some one sent to the. president a live raccoon about six weeks ago, and this, thoujrh not considered intrinsical ly of value, is said by "old inhabitants" to be a proper present for a president. It is said, too. that had not some one sent a live raccoon to Mr. Cleveland the precedents of a hundred years would have been broken. Ex-President Harrison received more than one, and it is said that since the early days hardly a president has been chosen who has not been the recipient of one or more of these animals. As a gift to the president the raccoon is said to stand at the head of the animal lnnfr dom. with the oppossum a gooa second. It was in June of last year that Mr. Harrison received his last installment of oppossum, when an admirer from Virginia sent him a pair, a few days' after his nomination at Minneapolis. The gold-headed cane has been a favorite with those who have desired to send to Mr. Cleveland a token of esteem. His rack is filled with them and with canes that are not gold headed. Canes from the old home of Thomas Jefferson are among the number; canes of hickory from men who cast their first vote for "Old Hickory"' Jackson and their last for Mr. Cleveland have come in such num bers as to indicate that there must be nearly a quorum of the old Jacksonian democrats still on earth. The supply of this article which Mr. Cleveland has on hand would go a long way toward supplying timber for the annual cane rushes in American colleges next faU if it were distributed. A great many people who say they voted for him have apparently thought Mr. Cleveland would be interested to know how they look. As a conse quence he has a large collection of photographs. They show the voter in all stages, from the stripling of twenty-one to the patriarch of fourscore. They show him in profile and from a square front elevation. They show him in broadcloth and in homespun. Some of the photographs are of men, apparently, who resolved in Lincoln's time not to shave again until a demo crat was elected president and who had lost their razors eight years ago. Some have sent two photographs, one show ing them with a clean-shaven fae'e and' one with a beard. Explanatory notes have accompanied some of these photo graphs which have depicted a degree of -jov at the election of Mr. Cleveland which the camera has failed to reveal. Some of these photographs indicate a hungry gleam in the eye, which, taken with the general contour of the head, is entirely inconsistent with the spirit of civil-service reform as enunciated and practiced by Mr. Cleveland. Some look as if the original had had his eye strained at a fourth-class postmaster's job so long as to have im paired the sight permanently. Many persons have attempted to se cure some free and widespread adver tising for a business house by making gifts to Mr. Cleveland. These are dealers in hats and other articles who recognize that'a note of acceptance would be valuable. These articles have been returned in some instances. The presents which have come to Mr. Cleveland have included slippers enough to last him the balance of his 'life if he saw fit to use them, elabo rate pieces of fancy embroidery made by women who have taken great pains with them, and curious pieces of bric-a-brac. They are of little value, for every one seems to have respected Mr. Cleveland's policy of never accept ing presents which would in any sense put him under personal obligations to the donors. They are taken as Indica tions of a kindly feeling in the hearts of the people which cannot bo other than pleasing. "THE DESTROYER." Built from Plans Left by the Late John Ericsson. j3hortly after Capt. John Ericsson had built the original Monitor and her sis ter gunboats he conceived the idea of inventing another vessel that would be able to demolish his earlier creations. With this end in view, he spent much time and money over a vessel carrying a submarine battery that finally met with his ideas, but, says Harpers Weekly, the old man died before he received any fa vorable response from the government Washington. The authorities, however, approved of the plan of the boat for the testing of the systent, and the work was carried on by the Erics son Coast Defense company, under the supervision - of Engineer V. F. Lassoe EXTERIOR VIEW OF "TITE DESTROYER. and others, who were closely associated with Capt. Ericsson for many years. Improvements in the boat were further made, and the vessel, aptly named the Destroyer, now lies at the Brooklyn navy-yard. She is 130 feet in length,with 12-foot beam; draught 10 feet, with a displacement of 250 tons. Her bow and stern lines are exactly the same, being straight and very sharp. The upper deck is low, with no rail, and from amidships rises a long superstructure with no openings, so that the vessel, if required, may run with upper deck submerged. At a distance of 32 feet from the bow a heavy-armored bulk head, which is inclined at a ver tical angle of 45 degrees, crosses the vessel. This is intended as a protection to the engines and boilers, and permits the boat to run toward the enemy bow on. Eight feet under water is the projectile, 27 feet 4 inches in length, and weighing 1,525 pounds. It is of steel, with a heavy bursting charge in the forward enc', which is exploded by percussion cap. This charge is of 300 pounds,. and the diameter of the projectile 16 inches. A tube runs the entire length of the vessel just above the keel, and is fixed with wateir tight gates at the bow. Only 30 to 4'J pounds of powder are re quired to prooel the torpedo, the muz zle velocity of which is 54S feepcr sec ond. A series of trials took place near Now York recently, and the results were extremely satisfactory. The mechanism of the gun showed no de i forts during the firing, and the report J states that had a vessel 100 feet in leii,?th. with a draught of 20 feet, been stal ioned CX feet away, 15 out of 20 ; shots fired would have struck her. The ; Destroyer is more effective than a ram, j although the projectile has been termed i "the detachable ram," for it is able to achieve similar results at a distance. : HOW WE TASTE. The Middle of the Tongue Is the Most Sensitive. Strictly speaking, with the tip of the tongue one cannot really taste at all If you put a drop of oil of bitter almonds on that part of the mouth you will find, no doubt, to your great surprise, that it produces no effect of any sort; you only taste it when it begins slowly to diffuse itself and reaches the true tasting region in the middle distance. But if you put a little mustard or cayenne on the same part you will find that it bites you im mediately the experiment should be tried sparingly while if you put it lower down in the mouth you will swal low it almost without noticing the pun gency of the stimulant. The reason is, says the Yankee Blade, that the tip of the tongue is supplied only with the nerves of touch, not nerves of taste proper; they belong to a totally different main branch, and they go to a different center in the brain, together with the very similar threads, which supply the nerves of smeU for mustard and pepper. That is why the smell and taste of these pungent substances are so much alike, as everybody must have noticed, a good sniff at a mustard pot producing almost the same irritating effects as an incautious dose. When one is trying deliberate experi ments on the subject in order to test the varying sensitiveness of the differ entrparts to different substances it is necessary to keep the tongue quite dry in order to isolate the thing you are experimenting with and prevent it spreading to all parts of the mouth to gether. In actual practice this result is obtained in a rather ludicrous man ner by blowing upon the tongue be tween each experiment with a pair of bellows. To such undignified expe dients does the pursuit of science lead the modern physiologist. German Railroads. An official of a railroad, recently re turned from Europe, referring to rail way practice in Germany, says: "The roadbeds are about perfect, while the stations are simply magnificent, even in the most insignificent places being very fine. The roadbeds are quite rigid, but this is mainly due to the iron and steel cross tie's that are used. The lceomo tives are fine pieces of mechanism, but their capacity is scarcely equal to those on this side of the Atlantic. Their en tire passenger equipment is away be hind that in use here. Their trains, itowever, run like clockwork, and the connections are perfect." That man has reached a high state of grace who never blames his wife for his own mistakes. BORN. In this city. May 24th, to the wife of Mr. Julius Wiley a son, weight 7 lbs. Father, mother and son doing well. BOGUS HYPNOTISM. Astounding Confessions of Fraud by Professional Subjects. Some of the "Fakes" of Humbug Mes merists in Europe How a Man Was Apparently Hypnotised by Telephone. Hypnotism has been having a hard time lately in London, Paris and Eu rope generally, but especially in Eng land. Confessions of professional sub jects have become common. There is, indeed, a very strong disposition to reject hypnotism entirely and consign it to the limbo of exploded fakes. The London Times had a series of letters some time ago from an eyewit ness and alleged investigator of the re markable doings of Prof. Charcot and other less noted doctors in Paris, de scribing in detail the "desensitiza tion" of subjects, the "mind transfer ence," and all the wondrous things made familiar to us- of late years, and setting up a seemingly strong case in favor of all that has been claimed for hypnotism. This induced Mr. Labouchere of Truth, to tell of an interview he had with one of the hypnotic subjects most before the public a short time ago. This subject gave undoubted evidence that he humbugged the doctors throughout, and that by practice he and other well-known subjects, whom he named had cultivated the ability to eat candles and soap, and to drink castor oil and pepper sauce when "un der the influence," smacking their lips as if eating cake and drinking wine, as "suggested" to them. He permit ted needles to be thrust through his ears and cheeks, and thoroughly satis fied Mr. Labouchere that he could sub mit to all the wonderful things com mon in hypnotic demonstrations. This seemed to hurt the mesmerist business, and-apparently the subjects were thrown out of work. They have turned to and deluged the land with confessions. Some are astounding, all are amusing. One man tells how he traveled for a year, along with five other subjects, with one of the best known traveling mesmerists in the country. The man was reaUy able to mesmerize people and perform some of the actual wonders of the remarkable agency; but he did a vast amount of "faking." One time he declared to a Committee of local doctors in a provin cial town that he could as easily hyp notize a man over the telephone as face to face. The professor went about a mile away, called up his desired subject to the telephone fixed on the stage, and told him to go to sleep. The man promptly complied, and the doctors jabbed pins and needles into his flesh, pinched him, pulled his tongue and poked his eyes. The man was in pos session of all his senses. A dozen times he wanted to yell but held out, know ing that the professor was driving to the hall as fast as a horse could bring him. Finally the subject was placed with his feet on one chair and his neck on another, and two fat doctors :;at on his chest. His backbone was just giving out when the professor rushed breathlessly into the haU and released him. This subject soon after ward resigned. STREETS UNDER GLASS. An Extraordinary Proposition to Cover Over London Thoroughfares. A proposal to make London a glass roofed city is the subject of a long let ter addressed to the London Daily News. The plan, which will not be popular with the umbrella-makers, re sembles one in Mr. Bellamy's "Looking Backward. The writer, however, does not treat the subject as part of a scheme for a future Utopia, but as one to be carried to a practical and successful issue. He says: "The covering of Cheapside, Poultry, Queen Victoria street, Regent street, lionu street, or uxlord street with a glass roof may appear a quixotic sug gestion, but other at first sight less practical schemes have been launched successfully, and the world has not ceased to revolve on its axis in conse quence. The gain to the great British .public, or to that section who are in the habit of traveling the main arteries of London, from a point of comfort alone, should be sufficient to warrant a trial. Most people prefer brightness and beau ty to dirt and discomfort. Nothing to my mind, can have a more miserable and tawdry appearance than a leading London, thoroughfare on a wet day, when poor, dripping humanity de scends to the depths of despondency and every object, animate and inani mate, has a washed-out appearance. A change from the conditions of things would be delightful to all persons con cerned those who would reside under glass, so to speak, and those who would use the thoroughfare for business pur poses. The former would, of course, be called upon to bear the expense of improvement. If I say the outlay they would incur would be returned to them in a few years, owing to the increased flow of business to their doors and to the lessened expenditure upon paint and cleaning I should- be under the mark. Our wood and asphalt streets would be dry, perfectly safe in all weathers, and the lease of life doubled or trebled. If the rain water were not preserved for domestic use it could be usefully applied in flushing the sewers with clean water instead of liquid mud. The health of the inhabitants would be greatly benefited by breathing dry at mosphere instead of a damp, humid one. Our clothes, boots, hats and general comfort would not suffer as they do now." . Queen Victoria has sent specimens of her own art work to the Chicago fair. She has three landscapes, mount ed in plain frames, representing scenes near Balmoral. A fourth is a view of Aix-les-Bains, taken from the spot where the queen intended to build a villa. . No hearses are used in the City of Mexico. The coffins and mourners are borne to the cemeteries in horseears. He Starts for Europe "With His SI 80,000. With languid, measured tread he as cended the gang plank, the waiting hundred stepped back in awed silence, making a passage for him, and bowed in speechless reverence as he passed. The vision of loveliness had been too much for them. Paddy wore a tall silk hat much too small for him, which nestled down on his chrysanthemum locks like a cork in a demijohn. He also wore a chastened look, for he had been up late the night before playing billiards and smoking cigarettes, HisJong black overcoat was thrown back and disclosed his low, roll ing collar, flapping white tie and equally white throat. The women lost consciousness only for a moment. When Paddy had reached the upper deck they made a wild rush after him, surrounded him, shook his hand, begged for his autograph, and hoped "Oh, so much, Mr. Paderewski," that he would come back. Most of the women had the Pans passenger list in their hands, and wanted the idol's auto graph on thai. He had a. hard time writing those autographs. He wrote against the side of the deck cabin sometimes, bat as he wrote his left hand would be grasped by one or two admirers, and having only one hand with which to hold the paper and pencil, he frequently dropped one or both. Once when he dropped his pencil he muttered to a reporter to kick it overboard. This the sympathetic man did, but a woman with phenomenal adroitness found her pocket before the ship sailed, and produced another pencil. When it was seen that there were not going to be autographs enough to go around the women began stealing each others lists which has already been signed. He said, in answer to anxious in quiries, that his health was improved, and that he had only pleasant recollec tions of his American tour, excepting his recent Chicago experience. He de clared vehemently that his treatment by the Chicago papers was nothing less than outrageous, and all the women shuddered to think that the Chicago papers could be so incomprehensibly wicked. He consoled his adorers then by adding that he bad taken in $180,000 during the tour in return for 70 concerts. New York Sun. Anasrreeable Laxative and NERVE TONIC. Sold by Druggists or sent by mall. 25c, 60c.. and $1.00 per package. Samples free irn ffif A The Favorite TOOTH POWJIIt AVI Hi W for the Teeth and Breath. 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Jewelry Made to Order. 138 Second St.. The Dalles. Or. emu. -Plain enough the way to a clear complexion, free from blotches, pimples, erup tions, yellow spots, and roughness. Purify your blood, and you have it. With pure, rich blood, an active liver, good appetite and digestion, the hue of health follows. Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery gives you all of them. It is the blood-purifier. There's no lack of them, but there's none like this. It's guaranteed to accomplish all that's claimed for it. In all dis eases arising from torpid liver and impure blood, it benefits or cures, or the money is refunded. With an ordinary medicine, it couldn't be done. But this isn't an ordi nary medicine. It is the cheapest blood -purifier sold, through druggists, because yon only pay for the good you get. Can you ask more? The " Discovery " acts equally well all the year round. Ask your Dealer Hand Made M.A.GTJNST&CO. SOLE AGENTS, PORTLAND, OREGON. Seed Wheat, " Oats, " Corn, " e, " Potatoes, Garden Seeds, Grass Seeds in Bulk. -AT- T. H. CROSS' Hay, Grain and Feed Store. The Dalles Gigar : Faetory PIBST STREET. FACTORY NO. 105. ""tTf A nqof the Beet Brands JL vXxVXXO manufactured, and orders from all parts of the country filled on the shortest notice. The reputation of THE DALLES CI GAR has become firmly established, and the demand for the home manufactured article is increasing every day. A. ULRICH & SON. J. F. FORD, Evanplist, Of Des Moines, Iown, writes under date of March 23, 1893: S. B. Med. Mfg. Co., Dufur, Oregon. Gentlemen : On arriving home last week, I found all well and anxiously awaiting. Our little girl, eight and one-half years old, who had wasted away to 38 pounds, is now well, strong and vigorous, and well fleshed up. S. B. Cough Cure has done its work well. Both of the children like it. Yonr S. B. Cough Cure has cured and kept away all hoarseness from me. So give it to every one, with greetings for all. Wishing you prosperity, we are Yours, Ma. & Mrs. J. F. Ford. If yon wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and ready for the Spring's work, cleanse vour system with the Headache and liver Cure," by taking two o three doses each week. Sold under a positive guarantee. '50 cents per bottle by all druggists. Altar ram