Tne BaUes My Chronicle. OFFICIAL PAPER OF DALLES CITY. m WASCO COUNTY, x SUBSCRIPTION RATES. BY MAIL, POSTAGE PEEPAID, IK ADVAKCB. Weekly, 1 yoar .1 f 1 50 6 months 0 75 0 50 - 8 " Daily, 1 year. u 6 months " per- " Address all communication to ' CCLE." The Dalles, Oregon. 6 00 S 00 0 60 THE CHKON- Post-Offlce. omct hours General Delivery Window 8 a. m. to 7 p. m. Money Order . " 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday i T. ', ". 9 a. m. to 10 a. m. CLOSING OF MAILS trains going East .9 p. m. and 11:45 a. m. " . " West 9 p. m. and 6:S0p.m. 8tage for Goldendale. 7:29am " PrineviUo 5:30 a.m. "Dufuraud Warm Springs. . .5:30 a. m. fLeavlngfor Lyle & Hartland..5:30a. m. " " Antelope 6:30 a. m. Except Sunday. Tri-weekly. Tuesdav Thursday and Saturday, t " Monday Wednesday and Friday. I-RIDAY, - - FEB. 23, 189 Cumminga of New York denounced vigorously the attempt made to arrest him Thursday morning by the eergeant- at-arms. He declared that he had been present at the sessions of the house daily, hours before and hours after the eergeant-at-arms was there. He told that official and his assistant to arrest him at his peril, and stigmatized as un bridled tyranny the attempt to arrest him on "Washington's birthday. Union is making a tremendous howl against the injunction on their proposed asylum, but the Union Pacific road ought to make the most vigorous opposition, lor the fare will be about $20 for each adult from Salem, and this will have to be paid hundreds of times over. In fact there 'is no end to the tremendous amount of money which will yearly be paid by the state to this corporation. If the railroad company had any policy about them, they would secure the best legal talent they could employ to fight the injunction. Miss Ida M. Tarbell has written for McClure's Magazine for March a com prehenBive account of the French method of identifying criminals. .As invented and perfected by M. "Bertillon, of the French police department, this method has a scientific accuracy that makes is infallible. No offender once brought to record under it can possibly escape iden tification if ever he is brought again ; and "Miss - Tarbell, before writing of it, went to the Paris police headquarters and saw it, in all its details, practically applied. Her article will be illustrated with numerous pictures from photo graphs provided by M. Bertillon him self. Malvern Cressworth, an English min ing man, claims to have discovered in Mexico a large and beautiful deserted city, about 80 miles west of Lake Colo rado, in a basin of the Sierra Madres, ten miles long by eight miles wide. High perpendicular cliffs surround the basin. The only entrance is through a deep canyon thirty feet wide. Mr. Creesworth says the buildings are of red stone resembling granite. The business blocks are two and three stories high and different in design from the struc tures built by the Aztecs and Spaniards. The streets are narrow and laid out in regular order. In the city is a small park which is overgrown with rare flowers and tropical vegetation. Pro fessor Wilson ought to visit vhe place and gather some idea of the future as pect of many manufacturing towns in the United States after the enactment of his tariff bill. The agitation against the employment of juries is not a new one, though the arguments against it, by a correspondent, may contain many facts of interest to those -who have not given the subject attention. He says : "I have come to the conclusion that trial by jury is not far removed from a lottery. I've heard it said that marriage is a lottery, but when ten men are induced to yield to the opposition of two men, or one per son will contend against the conviction of eleven others in the jury room it seems to me to be a clear case of ob stinacy or a surrender of conviction from weariness or anxiety to be released from a place which is not unlike a prison. Who would not, however, abandon one's sense of justice to breathe fresh air, v , l I i . . 1 . , wmcn can only oe ootainea outsiae me narrow walls of our jury rooms. If there be one thing more than another demand ing reformation in connection with our courts it is the absurd practice of en forcing agreement by twelve men by a deprivation of ordinary comforts while they are seeking to find a verdict. ' Per haps in time a majority of the jurors will suffice to determine results." Jl new description of hell; 'according to a certain dramatist, is simply an abode wherein people have no feelings. It ia as impossible to experience pleasure as pain. There are no enjoyments, no ambition, no passions and no desires. The occupants could go to heaven but they have no desire. The description throws light upon one of the tendencies of the age. Persons of wealth, who live idly and who have tasted all the joys of existence have not anything to ' expect. Pleasure to them becomes a bore, for they have seen it in every guise. They are not content to sip slowly and then taste thoroughly, but thev so to the ut- most extreme as fast as money can buy the way. Cost to them is no object, consequently there ia no limit to their excesses. A glass of wine is followed by drunkeness. Gambling becomes frenzy. And the . glance of a pretty woman makes the roue. . Finally when their seven ages have passed,' long before the- three ecore years and ten, they find it necessary to use morphine to bring sleep by night and whisky to keep awake by day. They reach that condition where life becomes a burden and ennui en velops their existence. GREAT ARSENIC EATERS. Australian Women Sacrifice Health and Hair on the Altar of Good Complexion. The majority of the female beauties of Sidney, according to an English ob server, have peculiarly delicate com plexions, languid expressions, fragile physique and a die-away look in the eyes, which are more suited to the en ervated temperment of an old civiliza tion than the active vitality of a new world. It was easy even for a novice to detect that these ladies owed a good deal to their perruquier. The mystery of this curious eomr biation of pre mature baldness and unusual delicacy of complexion was explained by the' fact that these women ate arsenic in order to produce the aristocratic pal lor and languor, and found . to their horror that another effect of the drug was to make the hair drop out. Valu ing their complexion above their hair, however, they sacrificed the one to the other. What a woman will endure for her complexion may be estimated by this and also by the fact that these arsenic eaters rarely live past forty five. . There is no pleasure, moreover, in the consumption of the poisonous drug. The arsenic is made, up into dainty looking caramels, which fash ionable dames will produce from pre cious little bonbonnieres and suck quite openly, just as the American girl chews (rum or the English girl choco late. The arsenic question, English men say, was becoming quite' a burn ing one in. th5 antipodes. When a man married a young looking, lovely crea ture, adorned with luxurious ringlets, he was disgusted to find after the cere mony that she was really a semibald, prematurely enervated woman, who was shortening her life to please her own vanity and was incapable of ful filling the duties of a mother to debili tated children which she brought into the world. Moreover, the suffering winch she would go through in any at tempt to overcome this pernicious habit was quite enough to make her break down, if, indeed, she could be per1- suaded to bear it at all. HIS PET PHRASE. It Was Good for All Occasions and Need Accordingly. In the "Memoir of Henry Compton," published in London some years ago, there is an amusing story which has an obvious lesson. Mr. Watlington was a man from his birth of an -even temper and an easy disposition. lie went through life with the greatest Indiffer ence as to its cares " and its troubles. One phrase he used on all occasions: "It may be so, but then, again it mav not." Or. paying him a visit one day, says the writer, I asked him if he thought it would be fine, "vt hy," replied he, "it may rain, but then again it mav not." - Seeing him reading: "Daniels' Field Sports," I inquired if he ever went on a hunting excursion.- ' 'Why, yes," said he, "T did go once on a bit of a jaunt of the sort, but I made a sorry set out cf it. I borrowed a gig of a friend, and stnrted for a day's pleasure, as I thought; but the horse was a stranger to me, and so, not having . received a regular intro duction to him, as soon as the chase begun, oft he set at full speed, with me inside the gig. "I began i'o be alarmed. - Thinks I, 'There's danger here; 1 may go a little farther without being turned over, but then again I may not.' Well, away he tore, over furrow and field, leaping' every ditch and bank that came in his way. Presently I saw we were Hear ing a horse-pond, and 1 began to say to myself: 'I may get past this pond without being dropped in the middle of it, but then again I may not.' . "However, after running a tremen dous risk, I escaped a broken neck that time, and after getting pretty safely through the remaining part of the chase, says I to myself, says I: 'Well, I may be tempted to go a-hunting again, but then again, I may not!' " Points In Palmistry. '." An interesting discussion has sprung up among the palmists in regard to the line of the hand known as the mar riage line. One recognized authority says that when this line curves upward the possessor is not likely to marry at all. . Other experts say they know many married and happy people with such a line. It is also alleged that the transverse line on the "hill of Mer cury," which one party says is the mar riage line, is not so considered by the Chirological society. "Our opinion," says the editor of the party organ, "is that these lines are signs of attach ment, and there is scarcely a hand ever seen without at least one in the hand of either married orunmarried people." . The people of Red Bluff," California, have subscribed $50,000 toward building a railroad from the Oregon Short line in Eastern Oregon, through Lake county, Oregon, and Modoc, Shasta and Tehama counties, California; and thence to tide water. Other counties will also sub scribe liberally. The road will tap all the valleys of Eastern Oregon and North western California, with probably a branch connecting Klamath Fails. Such a system would open up a vast, fertile country and prove of general benefit. Mexican Silver Stove Polish causes no dust. ' ' " If you toish to see a fine assortment of oranges, lemons and bananas just call and see the display at H. H. Campbell's, next door to the postoffice. ODD, CONCEITS ABOUT JEWELS. Km pre ft Eugenie Always Refused to Wear Opals. The fancy ''for having one's birth- month stone introduced as a mascot ia all possible designs has led to sotne quaint and pretty conceits in the way of spoons, which have set in the han dles in unique and effective fashion the stones assigned by superstition to the various months, says the Great Divide. Thus January has the garnet imbedded among fanciful tracery of silver, February the amethyst, March has the blood-stone, April the diamond, May the emerald, June the agate, July the ruby, August the sardonyx, September the chrysolite, October the opal, November the topaz and Decem ber the torquoise, while the pretty su perstitions attached to the moonstone make it a favorite at all times. It is said of a famous actress that she never appears upon the stage that some where about her person is not to be found one of these Indian gems. When the birth-stone happens to be a secondary gem it is put in a seal, and, mounted with the monogram or crest of the owner, exercises its occult influ ence over the letters sent out from my lady's boudoir. It is said that Queen Victoria . has tried to set at defiance the old supersti tion about the opal, and that she has given many opals as presents, while of the unfortunate Empress Eugenie it is written that she has always refused to wear the stone. The old legend tells a story of an opal - belonging to a Roman senator whi ch was coveted by Marc Antony, yet rather than part with it the records say that the sen? ator went into voluntary exile, prefer ring to part with his country rather than lose his gem. The modern'preju-dice-against this beautiful stone seems not -to have prevailed among the an cients, who believed that it strength ened sight, made its- wearer lovable, dissipated melancholy and paled at the approach of poison. That Sir Walter Scott shared the prejudice of modern times against the opal seems indicated in "Anne of Geier- stein."' Anne's grandfather married a lady, so the tale reads, with a wonder ful opal. On the day of christening their child the opal first glowed, then paled and shortly after the wife and husband both died. . MONEY STOCKS OF THE WORLD. The UlRliest Per Capita Is in France and the T.owest iu China. ' A report recently issued by the treas ury department presents a table show ing the monetary systems and approx imate stocks of money in the aggre gate and per capita in. the principal countries of the world. I rom this table it appears that France, with a population of 38.300,000, has the highest per capita of any of the countries named in the table, it being S30.81. "The Straits Settle ments," with a population of 3,800,000, follows with a per capita of 828.94. Closely following' and having very nearly the same per capita are Bel gium. S30.T0; Australia, 320.05; the r.'r.ited States, S2I3.C3,' and the Nether lands. C24.34. In China, a country hav ing -a population of .402,VOO,000, the .Tias-ses apparently do not have much to handle, for the per capita is but cl.80, all in silver. Countries follow ing China closely in this respect are Roumania, with a. per capita of ?4.(50; Servia, $4.27; Sweden, Turkey, $--33, a population of 39,200,000; Cen tral American states, S3. TS; Japan, S-l; Ind ia. 3.44. against a population of 2S7.2OO,0CO; Hayti. 4.00. The money issued by the United Kingdom is sufficient to give each in dividual 20.44 if equally divided, and that of Uerniany l'8.5G to each person. Portugal, with a population of but 4,700,000, has a per capita of $21.00, and Egypt a per capita of 819.85. The South American slates have a per capita of 819.C7; Canada, 310; Cuba, 813.81; Italy. S9.59; Switzerland, $14.48; (Ireece, 513.23; Spain, $17.14; Austria Ilungary, 9.59; Norway, S(5.C0; . Den mark, $11.72; Russia, $8.17, with a pop ulation of 124,000,000, and Mexico, 85. Since this statement was tabulated the per capita circulation of the United States has decreased to $25.55. The. table puts the stock of gold money at $3,001,900,000: silver, $3,931,- 100,000, and uncovered paper money at $2,700,000,000. BADLY FRIGHTENED. The Tragic End of a Peculiar Ghost Phe nomenon. Innumerable experiences prove that all "ghost stories have a rational ex planation, and that some natural cause can, be found for any seemingly super natural vecurrence. Sometimes it re quires great coolness and self-possession to remember this, but the effort to do so is worth making, for it may save life or reason. A striking illustration ot tnis was tne tragic experience oi a Dutch painter, named Penteman, who lived in the eighteenth century. Penteman had a commission which required the portrayal of skeletons, death s-heads and other objects in tended to inspire - contempt for the frivolties and vanities of the time.. . In order to havemodels before him he painted his picture in an anatomic al museum. One day he had been sketching vhe ghastly objects which surrounded him, when he fell asleep. tsuaaenly ne was awakened by - an extraordinary noise. He was horrified to see all the death's-heads nodding and grimacing, and the skeletons danc ing about, and waving their fieshless arms madly in the air. . Penteman fled from the frightful scene, and escaped into the street. He was picked up unconscious and half dead with fright. . . " As soon as ' he was rational, it was. explained to him that - there had been an earthquake, and that that had caused the commotion among the an atomical specimens, but the shock had been too severe, he died in a few days. -i ( ,r Captain Sweeney, U. S. A., San Diego, Cal., says: "Shiloh's Catarrh Remedy is the first medicine I have ever found that would do me anv eood." Price 50 cts. Sold by Snipes & Kinersly. J All. Free. Those who have used Dr. King's . New Discovery know its value, and those who have not, have now the opportunity to try it free. - Call on the advertised drug gist and get a trial bottle, free. . Send your name and address to H. E. Bucklen & Co., Chicago, and get a sample box of Dr. King's New Life Pills . free,' as well as a copy of Guide to Health and House hold Instructor, free. All of which is guaranteed to do you good and cost you nothing. Sold by Snipes & Kinersly. See the'Worla'a Fair for Fifteen Cen ts Upon receipt of your address and fif teen cents in postage stamps, wo will mail you prepaid our souvenir portfolio of the world's Columbian exDOsition. the regular price is fifty cents, but as we want you to have one, we make the price nominal. You will find it a work o' art and a thing to be prized. It con tains full page views of the great build ings, with descriptions of same, and is executed in highest style of art. If not satisfied with it, after you get it, we will refund the stamps and let you keep the book. Address . H. E. Bucklen & Co., - Chicago, 111, The experience of Geo. A. Apgar, of German Valley, N. J., is well worth re membering. He was troubled with chronic diarrhoea and doctored for five months and was treated by four differ ent doctors without benefit. He then began using Chamberlain's Colic, Chol era and Diarrhoea Remedy', of which one bottle effected a complete cure. It is for sale by Blakeley & Houghton, drug gists. . '"'. ' - Good Chance for a Bustler. A man is wanted by Kerr & Buckley of Grass Valley to. run their hay and grain ranch on shares, one with some means preferred, but can .furnish all horses, harness, plows, etc., if neces sary, provided be pays his own living expenses for the year. One hundred and fifty acres is already sown and now growing nicely, 100 acres are plowed, ready to sow in the spring,and there are 100 acres Of old land to plow arid sow. For further particulars address Kerr & Buckley, Grass Valley, Or. dwtf A. Chance' Very Seldom Offered. For sale or trade for a farm in Wasco county A fine improved farm in one of the best counties of Southern Calfornia in the best of climate, close to Rodondo beach, San Pedro harbor and railroads. Good markets, good scheols and churches. Address this office for par ticulars. ' ' d&w Karl's Clover Boot, the new blood purifier, gives freshness and clearness to the com plexion and cures constipation. 25c, 50c. and $1.00. ' Sold by Snipes & Kinersly, druggists. N ' Does this Apply to Ton? TJiere are many families 'in this sec tion who do not take The Chronicle, some in fact who do not read any paper regularly. , To all such who may chance to see this, we desire to say that one of the first duties a man owes to his family is to provide them with instructive and entertaining reading matter. It is knowledge alone, intelligence gained' by the exchange of ideas, by contact of mind with mind, which raises man above the grade of an animal. There is ns better, no cheaper, medium of instruc tion than the modern newspaper, hence the newspaper should find a place at every fireside. It is one of the things which makes life worth living. For the trifling sum of three cents a week we offer all an opportunity to procure two of the best papers of their class in America. . . ' , The Chronicle is a family newspaper which makes every effort to give all the general and . local news. It will. keep you informed of the world's doings, of the projects, of government, of the trend of politics, and of what is going on among your neighbors. You cannot keep posted on home affairs without The Chkoxicle. It is as necessary to your well-being as food and drink. THE DETROIT FREE PRESS ' Is a -family i journal overflowing with good things. There ia fact and fiction, song and story, sketch and travel, wit and humor without stint, fashion and household departments for the ladies ; in short something to please each, and every member of the family. It is famous for its funny - sketches and liter ary merit; it publishes stories each week, written expressly for it by the best authors. It is a paper which your wife can read without a blush, and your children ean read every line without in jury to their morals. ' Within Its special sphere it has no superior in the world- . We offer to supply you with these two most excellent journals for:- the term of one-year, "for the small .sum of two dollars : a price easily . within the reach of every one.. .With. The Free Press you will get a portfolio containing 20 photos of the strange - people that were seen in Midway Plaisance. " Send in your subscription. YOU NEED ANY JOB PRINTING, NO MAT TER HOW MUCH OR HOW LITTLE, GIVE THE CHRONICLE JOB DEPARTMENT YOUR PATRONAGE AND BE HAPPY. YOU WILL GET THE BEST, AND THE BEST 13 GOOD ENOUGH FOR ANY BODY. USE LOTS OF PRINTER'S INK AND BE PROSPEROUS. 1 1 ew York Weekly Tribune -AND- HSKiioniuie 4iO NLY D. BU - . Pipe wo IK, Till Repairs ai MAINS TAPPED UNDER PRESSURE. Shov on Third Street, next door west of Young Kuss Blacksmith Shop.' 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.: . ' 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 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 yoar a revenue of thousands of dollars, which will be more than doubled in the near future. t The products of the beautiful Klickitat valiey 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 80iitt;red 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 biliilitieii inilculal)lt-. Its resources unlimited. And on these -.triitr t-on.-s shr -tiivl. Common Sense- This invaluabla quality Is never more appar ent in man or woman then when shown in his or her choice ot periodica 1 reading matter. First In order should come tli-i Local Newspaper, so that pace may be kept with the doings of the busy world, it should be a paper like THE DALLE WEEKLY CHRONICLE, which gives all the latest Home News as well as the General hews. Political New and Market News, with seasonable Editorials on current topic". No one can get along wlthont his home paper. The newspaper should be supplemented by some periodical from which will be. derived amuse ment and Instruction during the evenings at home, where every article is read and digested. Such a paper, to fill every requirement, thould possess these qualities. First It should be a clean, wholesome paper that can safely be taken -into the family. It should be illustrated with timely engravings. Second A paper that is entertaining and in structive while of sound principles. Its moral tone should be beyond question. Third A helpful paper, one that tells the house wife of home Hie, thoughts and experiences, and keeps her In touch with social usage and fashion. Fourth A, paper abounding in original charac ter sketches, bright hayings, unctuous humor and brilliant wit. - Fifth It should contain good stories and pleas ing matter for youns; people, that the children may always regard the paper as a friend. Sixth literary selections and stories suitable for older people should bo given, for they, too, like to enjoy a leisure hour.- Seventh In short, it should.be a good all-round Family Journal, a weekly visitor .which shall bring refreshment and pleasure to every mem- . ber of the household. We offer to supply our readers with just such a paper; one Of national reputation and circula tion. It is the famous THE DETROIT FREE PRESS, . The Largest and Best Family Weekly Newspaper -. . -... . . in America, The FREE PRESS has Just been enlarged to Twelve Large Seven-column Pages each week. It is juslly famed for its great literary merit and humorous features. To each yearly subscriber the publishers are this year giving a copy of THE FKEE PRESS PORTFOLIO OF " MIDWAY TYPES;" ; - This artistic production comprises twenty photographic plates, 8x11 inches, representing the strange people that were seen on the Midway Plaisance. - The faces and fantastio dress will be easily recognized by those who visited the fair; others will find in tbem an Interesting study. The price of The Fiee Press is One Dollar per 5 ear. We undertake to furnish - THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE THE. OJEEKLY DETROIT FREE PRESS ' - (Including premium, "Midway Types") BOTH ONE IS1B FOE - - - 19 OO Less than four cents a week will procure both of these most excellent papers and will furnish abundant reading matter for every member of the family. You can not invest $2 00 to better advantage. In no other way can you get as much lor so little money. , , ' , - Subscribe How. ' o Not Delay. $1.75.- N SMELL., SoofiQO Oregon; YOUR ATTEJiTIOp Is called to the faot that Dealer in Glass, Lime, -Plane?, Cement - and Buildisg Material of all Mnds. Cmrrlca tiio finest X.lne of ..... To De f oand la the City. 72 Cllashington Street John Pashek, 76 Court Stit, Next door to Wasoo Sun Offioe. i Has lust received the latest styles in r Suitings for Gentlemen, and has a large assortment of Foreign and Amer ican Cloths, which -he can-Bnish To Order for those that favor him. GleaMng and Repairing a Specialty. . ......ALL THE NEWS TWICE A WEEK....... YOU THINK, YOTJ WILL, CONCLUDE THAT WE ARE AT PRESENT OFFER ING A RARE BAR GAIN IN READING MATTER. $1.50 A VP1P T7nt? VOTTT M M : ' . HOME PAPER. ALL THE NEWS TWICE A WEEK., Hap Glenn piQulaings 1 Merchant Tailor