en The Dalles Daily Chronide. OFFICIAL PAPEK OF DALLES (HTT. . . AND WASCO COUNTT. SUBSCRIPTION BATES. BT MAIL, POSTAGE PRXFAID, IN ADVANCK. Weekly, 1 year 1 SO " 6 months. 0 75 g 0 60 Bally, 1 year 00 " 6 months. 8 00 per " Address all communication to CLE." The Dalles, Oregon. 0 50 THE QHEON- Post-Ornce. OPPICC HOURS - General Delivery Window 8 a. m. to 7 p. m. Money Order '.- 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday i n. " 9 a. m. to 10 a. m. CLOS1KQ OF MAILS trains going East 9 p.m. and 11:45 a. m. " West 9 p.m. and 6:30p.m. 'Stage lor Goldendale 7:30 a. m. " " Prineville ........6:80a.m. " Dnfurand Warm Springs. ..6:80a.m. - Leaving for Lyle it Hartland. .5:30 a. m. u . - " jAntelope. ....... .-5:30 a. m. Except Sunday. . - tTri-weekly. Tuesday Thursday and Saturday. -Monday Wednesday and Friday.. MONDAY, - XAN. 8r 1894 .: HOPE IN DESPAIR. The Pacific Banker and Investor hopes the Jsomber pictures drawn by the Northwest congressmen are untrue, the basis for such hope being that tney are now in the political minority and conse quently are apt to mirror the dark side of industrial life brought on by the Wil son bill. But the magazine realizes at the same time that our industries would be struck a severe blow in saying that our recuperative power may be strong enough to weather the unfavorable leg islation of the Wilson bill. Kecupera tion of an industry, as of health, implies an ailment, and it is plain to see that the Banker and Investor believes our re sources would be at least crippled by the adoption of the new tariff bill. In this time of financial distress, caused by the sharp drawing of lines upon the long struggle of protection versus free trade, it would be well if a little more patriot ism were injected into the contest, and not so much of politics. Wis should re alize the condition the country has got into, and bv leaving ' the tariff in the hands a of trustworthy commission, even ly divided among the political parties, abide by the result for a stated term of years, lone enough to enable industries to adapt themselves to the conditions ' This complex question has become dis astrous to the business of the country by the intensity of the struggle, which has now been of twelve years' duration, and it-is hi eh time it were ended. The McKinley bill, for instance, has been in vogue les9 than two years. Its merits or demerits cannot become known to a cer ' tainty for a shorter , lease than ten years. Whatever tariff bill may be ' adopted during the present session of congress, let it have a stated existence long enough to enable the country to adjust itself to the conditions. Absolute free trade would be better than the pres ent financial paralysis brought on by .. the uncertainty as to what kind of a ' tariff business is to be regulated by. The postoffice department has given notice to the, country that the Colum bian Btamps must go that is, they must all be sold before new stamps of normal size will be issued in their place. Lobengula, the savage, is giving his English pursuers a great deal of trouble. The African haj - the advantage of the bad roads of this season of the year, and the English only put themselves in the . hole in occupying Buluwayo, the chief's capital. The Oregonian says Eastern Oregon should not have an insane asylum at all, that if the one at Salem is insufficient it should be enlarged, so that the business could be concentrated at one point. "Very good. And this reminds ris that one custom house is enough. Let the one at Portland be discontinued and concentrate all the business at. Astoria, the main plant. What's the use of hav ing two sets of officers? One set is enough at Oregon's only port of entry. Since it has been generally and truly supposed that England greatly desires the United States to adopt free trade, a comment from the Pall Mall Gazette of recent date will show how that country is affected by its prospective adoption t "Trade during 1893 was worse even than in 1892. A general gloom now hangs over the country's industries. ' The im ports for eleven months declined 17 500,000 as compared with 1892, and ex ports declined 6,500,000. Theresas been a shrinkage in every important class of imports and exports. Tobacco, with an increase of imports of 67,000, and manufactured articles made in Ger many and elsewhere, with increased im ports amounting to $600,000, are the only exceptions. ' The Wilson bill is shown to be a mon strosity, of inequality. It follows con sistently no principle, good, bad or in -different. It is a piece of patchwork at that. It is protective in spots and de- -structive of protection in spote. The in dustrial interests of some sections of the country are more or less nnintelligently conserved, and those of other sections are murdered' with' what seems like . malice aforethought. The Wilson bill is . possessed of some redeeming features ; out tney Dear almost as small a propor tion to the irredeemable badness of the "bill as a whole as did the righteousness in Sodom to that city's turpitude. Bos ton Advertiser. " , ' WHY OIL STILLS OCEAN WAVES. Tbe Wind Passes Alone the Oily Surface with Reduced Power. A great deal has been written about the influence of oil on waves at sea, and of the practically useful action of oil in. many cases there is abundant testimony, bnt little has been heard of the reason for . the results obtained, says the Chicago Tribune. Experi ments made in shallow, broken water on the coast, where the wind and tide conflicted, have .shown that little or no advantage can be traced from the use of oil under such conditions; that is to say, the wave motion being disturbed and under forces not wholly those of wind action, the oily film becomes broken up. In deep water, however, where the waves may be considered as wholly formed by the wind, their forms are more regular, and it is in such cir cumstances that the recorded exam ples show to the best effect. These ef fects suggest the real action of the oil. According to some theories the oil acts as it does when applied to bearings in machinery, and thus the wind glides more easily over the oiled surface than it does over the water surface. It is difficult to see, however, that the fric- tional resistance between air and oil should be less than between air and water, as the oil is a less mobile fluid that the water. Again, when we con sider the surface tension of -fluids, and can often observe their restraining ac tion on ascending air 'bubbles or small floating objects in glasses of water, we might suppose that by the addition of the film of. oil sufficient resistance wasJ offered to the uprise of the upper part of the wave, and thus the tendency to break would be restrained. The ac tion of the film of oil is one of separa tion. When we consider the tendency of air to become saturated with watery vapor due to evaporation and of. water to retain air by absorption, we may readily conceive that the - impact of air on a- watery surface will tend to cause a commingling at the surface of air and water which will thus ' offer sufficient resistance to the motion of the wind to throw the water and mixture in to an undulatory movement and, there fore, when this forward movement has exceeded the speed due to the periodic motion in the wave itself, the upper part in falling forward from the effects of the push of air from behind shows a foaming rush of broken water; that is, the air incorporated with' the water and the water itself. Arguing on this basis there is no difficulty in accepting the theory that the film of oil spread over the surface of the water effect ually prevents the f ormation of broken water: as the air and water are kept separate the tendency to mutual ab sorption at the surface is checked and the wind passes along the oily surface with reduced power of wave rhakmg, CZAR PETER'S JOKES. A Great Monarch Who Was Decidedly Brat 1 la His Sense of Humor. At one of the grand dinners given by the Czar Peter, says the London Tele graph, a hugh pie was placed in the center of tne gentismen's tabic, out of which, when the carver broke the crust, a beautiful dwarf lady, in puria naturalibus, all except a head-dress, stepped out, proposed in a set speech and drank in a glass of wine the health of the company, and then retired to her snug retreat and was carried from the table. A man dwarf was substi tuted at the ladies' table. Did not Peter say he could reform his people, but not himself? A dinner party at the czar's must indeed have been a sight not conceivable out of Bedlam, and could only have been planned in the maddest brain on earth, if a manu script among the Sloan papers in the British museum is pelievable. Such practical jokes! such wild grotesque gamboling! the frolics of leviathan! the laughter of Titan, as frightful in his fun as in his fury! There was ac commodation at the czar's table for about one hundred, but the grim hu morist always issued invitations to twice or thrice that number, and left his guests to elbow, jostle and fight for chairs and places, and retain them against all comers and claimants if they could. Not unfrequently a free fight was extemporized and noses tapped, and even the sacred persons of ambassadors have been profanely touched and trifled with, ilie czar sat at the head of the table, a broad grin on his face, rolling the spectacle like a sweet morsel under his tongue. The guests are so closely packed that feed ing room is not to be thought of, and ribs are often blackened and almost driven in by active and vigorous el bows, provoking fierce recriminations and quarrels. The kitchen is so near the dining-hall that ' there floats through the latter a fragrance of onions, garlic and train-oil, mellowed and tempered by the. more delicious aroma of the roast. The more knowing and initiated guests wave away soups and such like edibles, and manifest a special appetite or hams, tongues and viands that cannot be tampered with, or made the vehicle of practical joking, for as, often as not it happens that a bunch of dead mice will be drawn out of the soup or discovered snugly im bedded in a dish of green peas, and sometimes, when his guests have well partaken of certain pastries, the czar will courteously inquire if the cat, wolf, raven or other unclean animal proved a savory or delicious, morsel, with what result let the imaginative guess. The approach to a regular Donnybrook washastened on by liberal supplies of brandies, strong ales and wines so adroitly served out as to expedite the grand climacteric of drunkenness. The Globe Flab. . The celebrated "globe fish'.' is not al ways globe shaped 1 They have the power of distending- themselves into a globular form by inflating a large air sac in 'the abdomen"- When this is blown out they assume a normal shape. ' . - Shiloh's cure, the Great Cough and Croup Cure, is for sale by Snipes &-Kinersly. Pocket size contains twenly-five doses, only 25c. Children love it. Sold ry Sniper & Kinersh-. INDUSTRY OF THE MOLE. Tbe Hard-Working Littl Animal at Least ma Industrious as tbe Ant. , A mole's life is by no means a gen tlemanly sinecure, according to the Cornhill Magazine. He has to work harder, in all probability, for bis pit tance of , earthworms than any other 'animal works for his daily bread. His whole existence is spent in perpetu ally raising apd removing large piles of earth by sheer force of muscle. In order to sustain. such constant ntou and to replace and . repair the used-up tis sue the mole requires to be always eating. His appetite is voracious. He works like a horse and eats like an elephant. " Throughout his waking hours he is engaged in pushing aside earth and scurrying after worms in all his galleries and tunnels. The labor er, , of course, is worthy of his hire. Such ceaseless activity can only be kept up by equally ceaseless feeding, and so the mole stexistence is one long savage alternation of labor and ban queting. bHis heart and lungs and muscles are working at such a rate that if he goes without food for half a day he starves and dies of actual in anition. He is a high pressure en gine. His drinking is like his eating; immoderate in all things he must have "his liquor much and often. So he digs many pits in his tunneled ground and catches water in them to supply his needs at frequent intervals. He docs not ' believe, however, in the early closing movement. Day and night alike he drinks every ' few hours, for day and night are all alike- to him. He works and rests y turn, after the fashion of the navvies employed in digging tunnels, or measures his time by watches, as is the way of sailors. ".During trie epidemic ot la grippe Chamberlain's Cough Remedy took the lead here and was much better liked than any other medicine." IT. M. Bangs, druggist, Chatsworth, 111. The grip is much the same as a very severe cold and requires precisely the same treatment. This remedy is prompt and effectual and will prevent any tendency of the disease towards pneumonia.. For sale by Blake- ley & Houghton, druggists. Ask your dealer Stove Polish. for Mexican Silver Cures Concrlis, Hoarseness, Sore Jhtoat, Croup i:-"rTipiy; re'ieres Whooping Cough end Aftiuua. F.-r Consumption it bns no rival; has cured thonsands where all other), failRil; vriilcurtB TOUJf taken in time. Sold by li".i-'t?iiis on arrcnrantee. For Lame Back or ClK ti, use BXJILOH'W FLAS12B. S5 Cta. CATARRH REMEOY. inre vou Catarrh ? Tlrfa reused v is guaran teed Co cure you. Price CO cts. Injector fren. For sale by Snipes A Kinersly. . Easily, Quickly, Permanently Restored. WEAKNESS, NERVOUSNESS, DEBILITY, and aU the train of evfls from early errors or later exoe&ses, tbe results of overwork, sickness, worry, eu;. Full strength. development and tone given to every organ and noftlon of tho body. Simple, natural methods. Immediateimprovement seen. Failure impossible. 2.000 references. Btk. explanation and proofs maiieo. iseaieu; tree. ERIE MEDICAL CO. BUFFALO. N. Y. Rheumatism. . Lumbago. Sciatica. Kidney Complaints Lame Back. etc. D3. SAESSEN'S ELEQT3IC BELT With Electro-Magnetic SUSPENSORY Latest Patent t Bert Improvement X Will cure without medicine all Weakness resulting from over-taxatiou of brain nerve forces i excesses or indis. cretioo, as nervous debility, sleeplessness, languor, rheumatism, kidney, liver and bladder complaints, lame back, lumbago, sciatica, all female complaints. WHieral ill health, etc. This electric Belt contains onderfol Imprwetaeats over all others. Current is instantly felt by wearer or we forfeit 9&.0OO.O0, and will cure all of tho above diseases or no pay. Thou cnds have been cured by thie marvelous invention after all other remedies failed, and we Rive hundred of testimonials in this and every other state. Our Powerful Iaiproved ELECTRIC SU&PENSOBT. the RTPtttest boon ever offered weak men, FREE with 1 Belts. Health and Vteoroos Streacta ClUAlUMTKIf D la 00 t 9tfaa fiend for Illus'd Pamphlet, mailed, sealed, free 8ANOEN ELECTRIC CO.. Ho. 1T Sirs Street JOK-XXA3i OXLXU The Dalles Daily Chronicle. HAS A .FAMILY OF ; -Ai iV - 2000 EEADEBS. They read The Chronicle to get the latest and most reliable l ews. ; And they read every line that is in the paper.' That is what makes the Chronicle an Invaluable advertt ing medium. The newspaper that . goes to the family firesides is the one that the advertisers of today patronize1 when they desire to reach the people. When they want your trade their announcements will be found in the paper. Look over our columns and observe the verifica tion of the truth of this assertion. Remember, a trade of a family of two thousand . -la worth asking for through these S- columss. eanciallv so at om varv "If AW. THE WOMAN- WHO WORKS, and is tired, will find a special help in Ur. ruerce s favorite -Prescription. Perfectly harmless in any condition of the female system. It promotes all the natural functions, and builds up, strengthens, regulates and cores. For women approaching confinement, ' nursing mothers, and every weak, run-down, delicate wo man, it is an invigorating, support ing tonic "that's peculiarly adapted to then- needs. But it's more than that, too. It's the only guaranteed remedy for all the functional disturbances, painful disorders, and chronic weaknesses of womanhood. : In "female com plaints" of every kind, periodical pains, bearing-down sensations, in ternal inflammation, and kindred ailments, if it ever fails to bene fit or cure, you have your money back. Something else that pays the dealer better, may be offered as " just as good." Perhaps it is for him, but it can't be, for you. WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL Entirely Kctv. Tl Tf.SkTCi J-J A J? T'" Abreast oftht Times.-' . Ji Grund Educator. Successor of tnc V "Unabridged." Ten years spens in revising, 100 ed itors cr?-,c-.il,anl more than $300,000 expended. Everybody should own this Dictionary. It an swers ail questions concerning the his tory, spelling, pro nunciation, and meammr of words. A.l,ibraryinltself. it dso gives the often desired information concerning eminent persons; facts concerning tbe countries, cities, towns, and natural fea tures of tho globe ; particulars concerning noted fictitious persons and places ; trans lation of foreign quotations, words, and proverbs; etc., etc., etc. This Work is Invaluable in the household, and to the teacher, scholar, pro fessional man, and self -educator. Sold by All Booksellers. G. & O. Merriam Co. Publishers, Springfield, Mass. R-k1 Do not bnveheantihoto- WEBSTER'S IKTERNSTIONAL I frraphic reprints ol ancient editions. J DICTIffiHKSCy X3T Send forf ree prospectus. SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon ior roe eounty 01 asco. Maximilian Vogt and Fhilipine Chapman, r-iainuns, vs. v Augustus Bunnell and John B. Foster and uavia Kobertson, partners ao.ng busi ness as Foster & Kobertson, and Mrs. D. K. Price, Defendants.- To Augustus Bunnell and Mrs. D. E. Price, of tne aDove-namea aetenaants: In the name of the State of Oregon ; You and each of you are hereby notified and required to appear ana answer xne compiaim 01 piaintms filed herein aerainst vou in the above entitled cause and Court on or before the first day of the next regular term 01 tne circuit uourt ot tne State of Oregon for Wasco county, next follow ing the final publication of this summons, to wn: on or before Monday, the 12th day of Feb ruary, 1893, and if you fail so to answer, for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the Court for tbe relief prayed for in their complaint, to-wit; For a decree of foreclosure of that certain mortgage deed made and executed by the de fendant, Augustus Bunnell, to tne aoove named piaintitts on tne l'Jtn day of October, Vsas, upon the following described real estate, situated in Wasco county, Oregon, to-wit: The south half of those certain lots commonly known as the Bickel lots in Trevitt s Addition to Dalles City on the road from said city to the U. S. Garrison as formerly traveled, and being the same prop erty conveyed by Griffith E. Williams and wife w saiu Augustus cunueu Dy aeea uuiy recoraea at page 853 Book of Weed Records for Wasco county, Oregon, and particularly bounded and descrioed as follows, to-wit; Commencing on tbe east line of Liberty street at a point on said line 170 feet southerly from the touth line of rourtn street at a point on saicrscutn line wnere the same is intersected by said east line of Lib erty street: thence southerly and along said east line of Liberty street w teet; tnence easterly and at right angles with said first line 104 feet: thence northerly and parallel with said east line of Liberty street 60 feet; thence westerly to the place of beginning, said premises being in block it or xreviii s Auuition to uaiiea city; ana that said premises be sold under such foreclos ure decree in the manner provided by law and according to the practice of this Court; that from the proceeds of such sale the plaintiffs have and receive the sum of 1,000.00 and inter est thereon since October 19th, 1888, at the rate of 8 per cent per annum, less payments made upon said notes as follows: $80.00 paid March lutn, ieju; tizu.uu paia reDruary :&tn, isyi, 420.00 paid December 21st, 1891; 183.36 paid January 2d, 1892, and $16.64 paid October 7th, 1892; and the further sum of 1100.00 as a reasonable su m for attorneys' lees in this suit to foreclose said mortgage and collect said note, and the-further sum ot $13.75 insurance prem ium upon the buildings upon said premises paid by these plain tin's, and $4.00 taxea upon said premises which have been paid by plaintiffs, to gether with all costs and disbursements made and expended in this suit, and that if any de ficiency shall remain after all of the proceeds properly applicable thereto shall have been ap plied in payments of plain tin's' demands aa aforesaid, that plaintiffs have a judgment over against the defendant, Augustus Bunnell, for any such deficiency ; and that upon Buch fore closure sale all of tbe right, title, interest and claim of said defendants and each and all of them, and all other persons claiming or to claim by, through or under them or either of them, in and to said mortgaged premises and every part thereof, be forever barred and foreclosed from the equity of redemption; that plaintiffs be al lowed to bid at said foreclosure sale and become the purchasers thereof at their option, and that uwm such sale the purchaser be let into the im mediate possession thereof, and for such other and further relief as to the Court may seem eq nftahlearui lust. " - This summons is served "upon yon, the said Augustus Bunnell and Mrs. D. E. Price, by pub lication thereof, by order of Honorable W. L. Bradshaw, Judge of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregou for Wasco County, which order was duly made and entered at Chambers on the 2iin aayoi iiecemuer, iosj. . DUFCR & MENEFEE, -d30w7t ' Attorneys for plaintiffs. - - LOST. 1 Bay Horse, four white legs and white face, branded on right shoulder - Weight, 850 lbs. 1 Bay Horse, small star in forehead, branded on left shoulder with J C over T. Weight, 850 or 900 lbs. Finder will be rewarded. j44.iw JOHN LOWE, Kingsley, Or. : SlilXB BOOKS, JEWELRY; iKHTCHES and Musical H. hi. CKMPBE . , Successor to LESLIE BUTLER. . " ' ' Will constantly keep on hand a complete line of ' , S GROCERIES, Having purchased Mr. Butler's entire stock, I shall endeavor to maintain the reputation of the house, which has been : - BEST GOODS AT L0WETT . PRICES. ; Call and see me, next door to Postoffice. Hew York Weekly -AND Wasco County, - - Oregon, The Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the head of navigation on the Middle Columbia, and is a thriving, pros- ; perous city. . ITS TERRITORY. It is the supply city for an extensive and rich agricultural -and grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer -Lake, a distance of over two hundred miles. ; The Largest Wool Market. The rich grazing country along the eastern slope of the Ca- ; cades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheep, the wool from which finds market here. t ' The Dalles is the largest original wool shipping point in America, about 5,000,000 pounds being shipped last year. - ITS PRODUCTS. The salmon , fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, yielding this year'a revenue of thousands of dollars, which will be more than doubled in the near future. . The , products of the beautiful Klickitat valley find market here, and the country south and east has this year filled the - warehouses, and all available stom go places to overflowing with their products. ' . ITS WEALTH. It is the richest city of its size on the coast and its money is scattered over and is being used to develop more farming country than is tributary to any other city in Eastern Oregon. Its situation is unsurpassed. Its climate delightful. Its pos sibilities incalculable. v Its resources unlimited. And on these iorner stones she stands. John Pashek, The Merchant Tailor, " 70 CouKt street, Next door to "Wasco Sun Office. Has just received the latest styles in Suitings for Gentlemen, and has a large assortment of Foreign and Amer ican Cloths, which he can finish To Order for those that favor hint. , t deaaiug and Repairing a Specialty. ; nukL.! .J business : Times makes it all the more necessary to advertise. That is what the most progressive of our nesa men think, and these -same bus iness men are the most prosperous at all times. If you wish to reach all the reople in this neigh borhood you can't do better than talk to them thrrailrh thAflnlnmns of the DAILY CHBONICLE. It has more than double the circulation oi any other paper, and advertising in it pays Dig. IS Instruments. CROCKERY, SQUARE DEALING T0-EVERY ONE YOUR UTTEflTIOfl Is oalled to the faot that paghGlenn, Dealer in Glass, lime,. Piassar, Cement and Building Material of all kinds. ".: - ' -" . ' . -Carrleo tha Finest I.lm ot Pictuiel To be found in the City. 72 OUasbrngton Street. Tribune jjjj! BHBa HMBk BMk aaaa aaM