The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, January 13, 1894, Image 2

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    The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
OFFICIAL; PAPER OF DALLES CITY.
JJD WASCO COONTT. -
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
- BT If AIL, P08TiGI PREPAID, IU ADVAHCB.
Weekly, 1 year f 1 60
6 months.
0 75
8 "
Dally, 1 year. .'.
" 6 months
' " per "
0 60
6 00
800
0 60
- Address all communication to " THE CHRON
ICLE." The Dalles, Oregon.
: ' . Post-OrBce.
OFFICE BOUBS
Ganeral Delivery Window 8 a. m. to 7 p. m.
Honey Order . " 8 a, m.'to 4 p. m.
Sundays D, . "... 8 a. ra. loioa. m.
closing or halls
trains going East -.9 p. m. and
" " West...... 9 p.m. and
8tage for Ooldendale
-II II TJ ....1 1 1 r.
11:45 a.m.
6:30 p. m.
7:S0 a. m.
.6:30 a.m.
.6:30 a.m.
A:RO h m.
" "Dufuraud W arm Springs. .
" " (Antelope
.6:30 a. m.
-except nuuuny.
tTri-weekly. Tuesday Thursday and
t " Monday Wednesday and
Saturday.
Friday.
SATURDAY,
JAN. 13, 1894
TARIFF MADE TO SUIT 'EM.
Charles L. Pack, whose experience in
and knowledge of the lumber business is
well known in Cleveland and all over
the country, was interviewed in his
home recently by the correspondent for
the Detroit Tribune on the Wilson bill
as it affects the lumber industry.' The
first thing that the correspondent struck
was the astounding and surprising in
formation that President Cleveland and
his friends had found time to spare from
the affairs of state to devote practically
every day to business interests.
Mr. Pack said : "The Wilson tariff
bill puts all logs and lumber and their
products on the free list, but places a
duty of 10 per cent, ad valorem on all
wood pulp, including chemical . wood
palp. The Mitcherlich patent is the
most common, most important and most
generally used process for the manufac
ture of wood pulp. It is owped by a
company, prominent if not controlling
stockholders in which are Honorable
William C. Whitney, Honorable Daniel
S. Lamont, Honorable Don M. Dickin
son, of Michigan ; Pierpont Morgan and
President Cleveland. Yes, and also" I.
M. Weston, of Grand Rapids, Mich.
"When I say this 1 know what I am
talking about and am sure of. my facts,
at all events as far as knowing that such
was the case last year. They were posi
tively large stockholders then to my
personal knowledge and I have not
heard that any changes have taken place
since. From the formation ior that
tariff bill I should assume that the same
men are still owners.
"How came those men to possess that
valuable patent ? Negotiations were had
between certain Americans and Professor
Mitcherlich, of Germany, looking to the
purchase of his patent which ended in
in its purchase for $290,000. The stock
company now controlling it was organ
ized at $4,000,000, the capitalization no
doubt representing the investment of
capital in improving and operating the
patent as well as using it. Among those
who bought the patent from Professor
Mitcherlich in the first place were Hon
orable Don M. Dickinson and I. M.
Weston. The other prominent gentle
. men were not then interested in the
venture, but became so later and owned
Btock heavily." -
The soup house is the only plant that
grows fastest in the shadow of free
trade.
An example of the initiative and refer
endum is found in the Portland com
mittee of 100, who have saved the city
$120,000 yearly already. The West Side
asks : Why not every city have a refer
endum committee, and why not each
county, and why not all of Oregon?
The Wilson bill puts salt on the free
list, and its advocates claim that the
present duty of 8 cents per 100 pounds
on salt for the poor man's bread is too
"grevious to be borne." All this is bom
bast. Fifty cents worth of salt a year is
about what every poor man buys, and is
sufficient to not only salt his bread, but
his meat and potatoes, articles perhaps
overlooked in the democratic estimate of
a poor man's cuisine. On or off the free
list the difference to the poor working
man consnmer is infinitesimal. But
the deviltry of putting salt on the free
list is in the decline of wages inevitable
of the. workman who mines or pumps It.
The United States . has hundreds of
square miles of salt near Lake Huron, as
well as many other places in the coun
try. England controls the India mar
kets, whose subjects are made to pay
about three times as much for their salt
as the trust demands for the same arti
cle delivered in" New York. ""This trust
pays its laborers the smallest possible
wages, or about one-half what is paid in
this country, and the free traders are
clamoring that this foreign "octo
pus," with a capital many millions
greater than the combined capital of all
the salt works in the United Statss,
shall be allowed by their subsidized
steamships to enter our markets and
ruin our individual manufacturers. .
Shiloh's cure", the Great Cough and
Croup Cure; is for sale by Snipes & THn.
ersly. Pocket size contains twenty-five
doses, only 25c Children love it. Sold
by Snjpes & Kinersly.
. Warner's butter at Maier & Benton's
grocery store. -v -j V
Leave your orders for chicken tamalas
10 cts. eacb , at the Columbia Packing Co
ESQUIMAUX USE TOBACCO.
They Mix the Weed with Fine Cat Wood
to Make It Go Farther.
Perhaps there is nothing' more pecul
iar about the Esquimaux of Point Bar
row than their methods of using' to
bacco, which, of course, they procure
from the whites. .-' They know good
from bad tobacco, says the Washington
Star. When they get hold of a few
plug's of commissary tobacco from a
vessel of the United States navy they
show a marked appreciation of it. The
habit of chewing the weed seems to be
universal. Men, women and even un
weaned children keep a quid, often of
enormous size, constantly in the mouth.
The juice is not spit out, but swallowed
with the saliva, without producing any
symptoms of nausea. - ,
These people, for the sake of making
their tobacco go further, cut it up very
fine and mix it with finely chopped
wood, in the proportion of about two
parts of tobacco to one of wood. Wil
low twigs are commonly used for this
purpose, possibly because they have a
slightly aromatic flavor." The mode of
smoking the weed thus prepared is
very odd. The smoker, after clearing
out the bowl of his pipe with a little
picker or bone, plucks from his deer
skin clothing in some conspicuous place
a small wad of . hair. This he rams
down to -the bottom oC the bowl, the
purpose of it being to prevent the fine
tobacco from getting into the stem and
clogging it up. The pipe is then filled
with tobacco, of which it only holds a
very small quantity. : The tobacco' is
then ignited and - all of It is smoked
out in two or three strong whiffs. The
smoke is deeply inhaled and is allowed
to pass out slowly from the mouth and
nostrils.
The method of smoking would be
found exceedingly trying to any white
man. In fact itr usually brings tears
to the eyes of the Esquimau, often pro
ducing giddiness and almost always a
violent fit of coughing. A native will
sometimes be almost prostrated from
the effects of a single pipeful. - These
people carry their fondness for tobacco
so far that they will actually eat the
foul, oily refuse from the bottom of
the bowl, the smallest portion of
which would produce nausea in a civil
ized person. This habit has likewise
been observed in northern. . Siberia.
They also eat the tobacco ashes, per
haps for the sake of the potash they
contain.
The persistent cough which usually
follows an attack of the grip can be per
manently cured by taking Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy. Mr. W. A. McGuire, of
McKay, Ohio, says : "La Grippe left
me with a severe cough. After using sev
eral different medicines without relief, I
tried Chamberlain's . Cough Remedy,
which effected a permanent cure. I have
also found it to be without an equal for
children when troubled with colds or
croup. Fifty-cent bott'es for sale by
Blakely & Houghton, druggists.
Bneklen't Annra Salve.
The best salve in the world for cute,
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever
sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi
tively cures piles, or no pay . required.
It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac
tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents
per box. For sale tv Snipes & Kin
ersly -
Ask your dealer for Mexican Silver
Stove Polish.
IH3U. FOH A CASE IT WILL NOT CURE.
An agreeable Laxative and NERVE TONIC.
Sold by 'Druggists or sent by mall. 25c., 60c.,
and $1.00 per package. Samples free.
TTt "IS 4 1118 Favorite TOOTH P0WSM
iiU laV for the Teeth and Breath. 2io
. For sale by Snipe A Kinersly.
Easily, Quickly,
Permanently Restored.
WEAKNESS,
NERVOUSNESS,
DEBILITY, "
and all the train of evils
from early errors or later
excesses, the results of
overwork, sickness,
worry, etc Full strength,
development and tone
given to every organ and
portion of tho body.'
simple, natural methods,
immediate Improvement
seen. Failure impossible.
3,000 references. Buck,
explanation and proof
mailed (sealed) free, j
ERIE MEDICAL CO.
BUFFALO. N. Y.
Rheumatism
Lumbago. Sciatica,
Kidney Complaints
03. SAEH'S ELEC73IC CELT
With Electro-Magnetlo SUSPENSORY,
WTO cure without medicine all Wiitim resulting-from
overtaxation of brain nerve forces; excesses or indxs.
ereiion, as nervous debility, sleeplessness, languor,
rneomatism. "fciduey. liver and bladder complaints,
lame back, lnmoago, sciatica, all female complaints
general ill health, etc This electrto Belt contains
Woaderfol hapraiemeaU over all others. Current is
instantly felt by wearer or we forfeit 5,000.00, and
wiileureallof the above diseases or no pay. Thou,
cands have been cured by thje marvelous Invention
after all other remedies failed. and we (rive hundreds
of testimonials in tills and every other state.
Our Toweriul Improved ELECTRIC BEHFENSOKT. tbo
greatest boon ever offered weak men, FRF.K with all
MM. Hnltk U Y Iraras StraavtS GUARANTEE D la OO t
VOdars Bend for IllusM Pamphlet, mailed, sealed, free
&ANOEM ELECTRIC CO.,
So. ITS Kirs Street, rOBTLAA" X OKE.
VIGOR
mm
tame uacx. c&c
THORN OF GLASTONBURY.
Miraculous Stories Told of the Tree
. Which Blooms on Christmas.
At Glastonbury Abbey, in Somersetshire,-
England, once stood a thorn tree
which, it is said, bloomed every Christ
mas morning1. The first authentic ac
count of it ever written was in 1773 by
a visitor who tells of it in the account
of his visit to the abbey. ' . :.
The keeper assured , him that St.
Joseph of Arimathea landed not far
from the town, at a place where there
was formerly an oak that had been
planted to his memory; that he and Ms
companions marched to a hill and
rested themselves, and that Joseph
stuck his stall on the ground. Now this
staff was a common dry hawthorn stick,'
but it grew and first came into full
flower on Christmas day. Afterward
the- tree, which had' thus grown and
budded like Aaron's rod, always
bloomed on the day of our Lord's na
tivity and upon' no other day, the
flower, like those of the night-blooming
cereus,' lasting but a few hours."- -
Many queer stories have been told of
the "Miraculous Thorn of Glastonbury."-
It was said that if the chips
from it were planted they would sprout
and grow like potatoes; that the leaves
cured all inflammations, swelling's, etc.,
and that "rods" cut from it would
never leave marks on the children cor
rected by their use. -
Java's Fire Island.
One of the greatest natural wonders
in Java, 'the fire island," a large lake
of boiling mud, is situated almost in
the center of the plains of Grobogana,
fifty "paals" to the northeast of Solo.
It is almost two miles in circumference,
and in the; center immense columns of
soft, hot mud may be seen continually
rising and falling like great black tim
bers thrust forth and then suddenly
withdrawn by a giant's hands. ' Be
sides the phenomena of the columns
there are two gigantic bubbles near
the western edge, which fill , up like
huge balloons and explode on an aver
age of three times per minute.
Spring Bledlcne.
Dr. Gum's Improved Liver Pills on
account of their mild action are especi
ally adanted for correcting eprine disor
ders, such ps impure blood, tired brain
and aciiiDg and worn oat body. They
act promptly on the Liver and Kidneys";
drive out all impurities irom the blood,
and malaria from the system. Only
one pill for a dose. Try them this
spring. Sold at 25 cts. a box by Blakely
& Houghton, Druggists, The Dalles, Or.,
wt3-l
Magazine
FOR 1894.
The Best Literature,
The Newest Knowledge,.
and Fully Illustrated.
15 Cents a Copy. .
Only $1.50 a Yeair.
Some of the features are:
The Edge of the Future.
Tbe Marvels of Science and Achievement,
presented in a popular way.
Famous People.
Their life-stories told by word and pictures
the materials being in all eases obtained
- from sources intimately connected with
the subjects. , .
True Hatarathes-
of Adventure, Daring
and Hardihood.
Leopard banting In Northern Africa, Lion
burning in Algeria, Tiger hunting in In
dia, Elephant bunting in Africa, and ad
ventures in the Upper Himalayas. .
Great Institutions.
The longeEt railroad in the world. The
Hudson Bay Company. The Bank of Eng
land. The business of the greatest mer
chant (1100,000,000 a year).
Human Documents.-
Portraits of famous people from childhood
to the present day. .
Short Stories.
And by the best writers obtainable.
fiotable Serials.
By
Robert Iiouis Stevenson
" . -'' and
William Dean Homelis.
Among the contributors for the year ore:
Professor! Svummond,
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, -.
nvendeaeon Jarrar, - .
Bret Herte,
-I?udyard Kipling,
Oetave Thanst,
flndvetu Liang,
W. D. floujells,
Gilbert Parker,
. p. ti. Stoekton,
tJoel Chandler. Harris, .
Conan Doyle, ,
I?. It. Stevenson.
Charles A. Dana,
Archibald Forbes,
- and many others.
IS CEJ4TS R COPV. - $1.50 fl YEflR.
" ' Remit by draft, money order or :
. . ; registered letter. .
S.S. JVIeCIiXJH, Himited,
J : 743 & 745 Broadway, N. Y. City.' "
The Dalles Cbjtoniele, Tw,
r JHeClcure's Magazine,
a whole year for 12.25.. - r
Adress,
. CHRONICLE PUB. CO.,
- THE DALLES, OR.
Guardian's Notice.
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned
has been appointed by the County Court of
Wasco County, Oregon, guardian of the person
and estate of -Lars Larsen.
All persons having claims against Bald Lars
Larsen are notified to present the same with the
proper vouchers to the undersigned, at the office
of Mays, Huntington & Wilson, within six
months from the date hereof.
Dated at Dalles City, this 6th day of Jnnr, 1831.
jlOwaptl. . W. T. WISEMAN.
vnrr a AN" SEE IT.
perhaps, one of Dr.; Pierce's Pleas
ant Pellets but you can't feel it
after it's taken. And yet it does
more good than any of the huge,
old-fashioned pills, "with their grip
ing and violence. These tiny Pel
lets, the smallest and easiest to take,
bring 'you' help that lasts." Consti
pation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks,
Sick or Bilious Headaches, and all
derangements of the liver, stomach
and bowels are "permanently cured.
They're the cheapest, for they're
guaranteed to give satisfaction, ox
your money is returned, . . You pay
only for. the good you get. "
O 3 $500 in gold is made
by the proprietors of
CJ zi Dr. Sasre's Catarrh
Remedy, for any case
of Catarrh in the Head,
no matter how bad , oi
of how long standing,
which they cannot cure.
WEBSTER'S ,.
INTERNA TIONA I,
'SS&iSsLi DICTIONARY
jttreastojTth Times.;
etf lrana & due a ttrr.
Successor of Vie
"UnabrZCCcd."
Ten years spent
In revising, 100 ed
itors cr'i'-jrinil
more tlian "t 300,000
expended. .:
Everybody
should own this
Dictionary. I!) an
swers all questions
concerning the his
tory, spelling, pro
nunciation, and
meaning of words.
m
A library in Itself, it also gives
the often desired information concerning
eminent persons ; facts concerning the
countries, cities, towns, and natural fea
tures of the globe ; particulars concerning
noted fictitious persons and places ; trans
lation of foreign quotations, words, and
proverbs ; etc., etc., etc.
This Work is Invaluable in tho
household, and to tbe teacher, scholar, pro
fessional man, and self-educator.
" Sold by Ml Booksellers.
G. & C. Merriam Co.
WEBSTER'S
- Springfield, Mass.
DJTERNruTONAL I
ShiKaSSSnt DICTIQNSEQf
em uo ds.
3""Send for free prospectus.
SUMMONS.
In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon
for the county of Wasco.
Maximilian Vogt and Philipine Chapman,
- Plaintiffs,
V8. -
Augustus Bunnell and John B. Foster and
David Robertson, partners do ng busi
ness as Foster Robertson, and Mrs: D.
E. Price, . -., Defendants.
To Augustus Bunnell and Mrs. D. E. Price, of
the above-named defendants;
In the name of the State of Oregon ; Yon and
each of you are hereby notified and required to
appear and answer the complaint of plaintiffs
riled herein against you in the above entitled
cause and Court on or before the first day of the
next regular term of the Circuit Court of the
State of Oregon ior Wasco county, next follow
ing the final publication of this summons, to
wit: 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
the relief prayed for In their complaint, to-wit ;
For a decree of foreclosure of that certain
mortgage deed made and executed by the de
fendaut. Augustus Bunnell, to the above named
Slaintiffs on the 19th day of October, 1888, upon
ae following described real estate, situated in
Wasco county, Oregon, to-wit: The south half
of those certain lots commonly known as the
Bickellots in Trevitfs Addition to Dalles City
on tbe 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
to said Augustus Bunnell by deed duly recorded
at page 353 Book "E" of Deed Records for Wasco
county, Oregon, and particularly bounded and
descrioed as follows, to-wit; Commencing on
the east line of Liberty street at a point on said
line 170 feet southerly from the south line of
Fourth street at a point on said south line where
ine same is intersected Dy saia east line oi Lib
erty street; thence southerly and along said east
lino of Liberty street 60 feet; thence 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
Rlace of beginning, said premises being in block
D" of Trevitfs Addition to Dalles City; and
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 sucb sale the plaintiffs
bave and receive tbe 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 saia notes as toiiows : ssu.oo paid March
iuin, loau; suu.uu paia reDruary zaw, issh,
620.00 laid December 21st. 1891: S83.&
paid January 2d, 1892, and $16.G4 paid October
7th, 1892; and the further sum of 100.00. as a
reasonable su:n for attorneys' lees in this suit to
foreclose said mortgage and collect said note,
and tbe further sum of (13.75 insurance prem
ium upon me Duiiaings upon saia premises paia
by these Dlamtift'8. and (4.00 taxes uton 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 plaintiffs' demands as
aforesaid, that plaintiffs have a judgment over
against the defendant, Augustus Bunnell, for
any sucn aenciency ; ana inai upon sucn tore
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
bv. through or under them or either of them, in
and to said mortgaged premises and every part
mereui, ut9 lurevtji uarreu ana loreciosea Irom
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
upon such-sale the purchaser be let into the im
mediate possession thereof, and for such other
ana iurtner reiiei as to we i;ourt may seem eq
ui table and insL r . , . ; -.
This summons Is served upon yon, the said
Augustas Bunnell' and Mrs. D. E. Price, by pub
lication thereof, by order of Honorable Yt. L.
Bradshaw, Judge of the Circuit Court of the
State of Oregon for Wasco County, which order
was duly made and entered at Chambers on the
zvin aay oi jjecemDer, isas. . .
;..'.-.. DUFUR & MENEFEE,
d30w7t ... Attorneys for plaintiffs.
-; . . LOST.
1 Bay Horse, lour white legs and -iviite face,
branded on right shoulder TfT 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. . . ;
j4d4w x --. JOHN XOWE, Kingsiey Or.
i
A
Grand
Will be
East End Hose Co. No. 3.
AT THE
Toi7day yu 17 i 17 ,
Music by Birgf
Committee of
el. Li. ls.Uiji. itjnairman), K. JS. SALTMARSHE, B.WILSON
Reception Committee,
M. SHOREN,
F. KRAMER,
B. E. WILLIAMS,
A. C. WYNDHAM,
Floor Managers.
H. J. MAIER.
J. 8. FISH,
A. W. FARGHER,
JOS.
J. P. McINERNY,
- DKAEEB IN -
BOOKS. JEMELRY, WHTCHES
V. .." and Musical Instraments.
H.H.
Successor to
. Will constantly keep on
GROCERIES,
- Having purchased Mr. Butler's entire stock, T shall endeavor to maintain the reputation of
- . - the house, which has been: . .
BEST GOODS AT L0WETT PRICES. - SQUARE DEALING TO EVERY ONE
Call and see me, next door to Postofflce.
Wev Yorfr Weekly Tribune
AND-
ON
Wasco County,;
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. v -
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 f the Cas
cades furnishes pasture for thousands' of sheep; the wool from
which finds market here. ' -
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 storage 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.' - Its resources unlimited. And on these
corner stones she stands. - - ;
John Pashek,
76 Coort SWtst,
Next door to "Wasco Sun Offioe.
fyHsB 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 him. . - -
Cleaning and Repairing a Specialty.
I T yr . Times makes it all the-more
I 111 L necessary to advertise. That is
I 1 J what the most progressive of our
business men think, and these same bus
iness men are the most prosperous at all times.
If you wish to reaoh all the reople in this neigh
borhood you can't do better than talk to them
through the columns of the Daily Chronicle.
It has more than double the circulation oi any
other paper, and advertising in it pays big-
The Merchant Tailor,
Ball
given by the;
ARMORY,
pe b nu a ry 5 , 1894:
eld's Orchestra.
Arrangements.
F. W. L. SKIBBJ3,
Li. . JJAVIS. '
A. BUCHLER,
J. HARPER,
F. EPP. -
WORSLEY,
LESLIE BUTLER.
hand a complete line of ;
CROCKERY,
Oregon,
YOUR ATTEJlTIOIi
Is called to the fact that
Dealer in Glaaa, lime, Flasvw, Cement
" and Building Material of all kinds.
-Carrie tba Finest Linst mt
Picture
To be found in the City.
72 CUashingtoo Street