The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, May 03, 1894, Image 4

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    5.
I 11 I A DISTURBANCE
Lf II I isn't what you want,
iJJ ' I if vour " stomach and
I That's about all you
I et. thnno-h ' with t.h
o ' J '
ordinary pilL It may
relieve you for the mo
ment, but you're usually
in a worse state after
ward than before.
This is just where Dr.
Pierce's Pleasant Pellets
do most good. . They act
m nnctyrr ..... 1
J I way very different from
Ilj the huge, old-fashioned
I H I -piUa. They're not only
111 pleasanter, but there's
and their help lasts.
Pellet for a gentle lax
ative or corrective
three for a cathartic
Constipation, Indiges
tion, Bilious Attacks,
Dizziness, Sick and Bil
ious Headaches, are
promptly relieved and
J They're the smallest,
the easiest to take and
th chpfinest. vnn mn
j j j
buy, for they're guaranteed to give
satisfaction, or your money is re
turned. .
You pay only for the good you
get.
It won't do to experiment with
Catarrh. There's the constant dan
ger of driving it to the lungs. You
can have a perfect and permanent
witn Ur. bage s Kemedy.
Eatliy. Qalckty,
Permanently Restored.
WEAKNESS,
NERVOUSNESS,
DEBILITY,
and aU the train of evils
from early error or later
excesses, tbe results oC
overwork, sickness,
worry.eto. Pull strength,
development and tone
Riven to every organ and
gortlon of the body,
iroplr. natural method.
Immedlatelmproveynent
seen. Failure impossible.
S,000 references. Book,
explanation and proofs
mailed (sealed) tree.
ERIE MEDICAL CO.
BUFFALO. N. Y.
THOSE
WHO WISH
Glass, Lime, Cement,
PLASTER, LATH,
Picture Frames,
SUCH AS
Shafting, Pulleys, Belting,
Engine and Boiler,
CALL AND SKE
"The Regulator Line"
The Dalles, Portland ani kim
Navigation Co.
THROUGH
FieiHt anU Passenger Line
Through Daily Trips (Sundays ex
cepted) between The Dalles and Port
land. Steamer Regulator leaves The
Dalles at 7 a.m., connecting at the Cas
cade Locks with Steamer Dalles City.
Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland
(Yamhill et. dock) at 6 a. m., connect
in: with Steamer Regulator for The
JDallea.
PAbSKNOIR RATE8.
Qm way....
if wind trip.
.$3.00
- 3.00
Freight Rates Greatly Reduced.
All freight, except ear lots,
will be brought through, urilh
vut delay at Cascades. .
Shipments for Portland received at
any time day or night. Shipments for
way landings must be delivered before
5 p. m. Live stock shipments solicted.
Call on or address, .
W. C. ALLAWAY,
Genarart Artlt.
O. F. LAUGHLINr
Osnetsl Htufer, .
THE DALLES. - OREGON
fcft
'1
III 1
IN AN MINE.
A Queer Industry in Which Hon
esty Is at a Premium. , ;
Valuable Deposits Displaced by l'ropitioaa
tiales antt Carried -Ysliorc by the
ares Some Iuterctli,jr
Particulars.
Deep down in the "blue earth" along
the shores of and beneath the treacher
ous breakers of the Baltic sea are found
in bits and .fragments cf fossilized wood
the traces of vast forests that in ages
lone past had covered nearly the entire
I coast line of , what is now known as
East Prussia, says the New York Tress.
Large tracts of land have stink there
below sea level and in time were cov
ered with the rank submarine growths
of ' seawopd and algae. Whenever a
storm churns and lashes the waves then
large masses of this green tangle are
torn from the bottom, and often carry
with them pieces of amber, the resin of
fossil pines, which, being but slightly
heavier than salt water, will float in
the network of weeds.- Upon bringing
the floating meadows, that cover the
sea after a propitious gale, ashore at
given points, there depends frequently
an enormous gain to the amber fisher,
who has rented certain portions of the
shore from the crown.
At those times the villages on the sea
board are all astir with excitement.
Nobody thinks of rest day nor night,
and everyone is on the alert, ready to
fly to the edge of the waves at the first
alarm from the watchers. Men defy
the roaring breakers, and, standing up
to their shoulders in the seething foam,
catch wisps of seaweed in long nets
and fling them shoreward, where the
women and children gather from them
the yellow jewels- of the sea. In this
manner as much as fourteen thousand
dollars' worth is known to have been
gathered in a single night. - But in spite
of the most rapid work it is not always
possible to bring all the cast-up amber
ashore; the larger pieces, especially,
are apt to sink. They are gathered by
means of long-handled nets called
"catchers," when a bright day and a
placid sea enables the amber fisher's
sight to penetrate the limpid water.
Inasmuch as it is often necessary to
turn over huge rocks this work is very
laborious, yet a case is known where
six hundred dollars' worth of amber
amply repaid four men for a summer
day's drudgery. Recently, however,
this mode has been entirely aba ndoned
in favor of one more in keeping- with
modern ingenuity and inventions.
The company now having charge of
the industry recognized some twenty
years ago the fact that the largest
pieces of amber eould not be easily
moved by the waves on account of then
weight, and that therefore a lucrative
harvest could be gathered directly from
the submerged portion of the amber
bearing stratum. Accordingly divers
were imported . from Vranee, but the
very first attempt, though thoroughly
satisfactory from a commercial point of
view, demonstrated that Frenchmen
were not able to stand the rigid climate
of eastern Prussia, and Lithuanians
were substituted for them.
Naturally the gleaning of the bot
tom of the sea along the coast eventual
ly exhausted the accessible supply of the
valuable resin, and from twenty-eight
thousand four hundred pounds in 1881
the treasure dropped to five thousand
two hundred pounds in 1S90, so that div
ing had to be discontinued and will not
be resumed until the government permits
submarine amber mining. The rapid
action of dynamite is t hen to take the
place of the work of divers, whose
movements are hampered by the stiff
and heavj' rubber suit and brass helmet.
Every miner has strapped to him a
bag, in which he collects the pieces of
amber. Before a miner is permitted to
leave the premises after each day's
work he is searched.. Scrupulously
honest men have had strangely per
verted conception of right and wrong
as regards amber. It seems to be con
sidered as a gift of nature to which he
who finds it is entitled. In the Hal tie
amber fields uueh thefts were formerly
punishable by death, and occasion still
required a quite frequent infliction of
severe punishment. A recital of the
curious and ingenious ways and means
iij which men have attempted to cir
cumvent the vigilance of the examiners
would add a highly interesting chapter
to the history of fraud.
The amber gathered in the mine and
the smaller pieces collected from the
shelves are washed with sand in revolv
ing drums. Next the pieces are sorted
into nearly one hundred classes, each
one representing some particular adap
tation of the raw material, flat pieces
that are made into smokers' utensils;
round pieces for beads and jewelry, and
small fragments out of which amber
varnish is made. The output of last
year was manufactured in four hundred
thousand dollars' worth of smokers'
utensils, and the balance of some
eighty thousand dollars' worth into jew
elry and varnish. '
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. Bncklen
& Co., Chicago, and get a sample box of
Dr. Kiiif '8 New Life Pills free, as well
as a copy of Guide to Health and House
hold Instructor, free. All of which is
guaranteed te do you good and coat . yon
nothing. Sold by Snipes & Kinersly.
Musical culture among working peo-.
pie has been tried successfully by Char
lotte Mulligan," of Philadelphia. Be
ginning with a Sunday school cla ss of
bootblacks, she lias had twelve thou
sand workmen uudcr tutelage in " the
last twenty years.
Sleeplessness.
Remove the cause by regulating the
bowels, by establishing good digestion
and by quieting the nerves - with Sim
mons Liver. Regulator. Try it and you
will soon know, the blessingB of good
health and sound sleep.
C'-D MOTHER EARTH.
Eler If Calculated by Geologists to
i: V?ry. Very Crait.
The amount of lime salts in water-whit-h
lraiiis frcin districts made up of
grar.itts c.rA lw alt:v is found by com
pari:;n:i f ilii'Vrent analyses to be on
an av-. iy j;t : if vVcuit ".7t parts in 100,
O0Q pr.rfj' ft v.-utcr. ' It is further as
sumed Vr il.rr.e who take this mode of
reckoni::;- the age of the world, ays
the St. T.t.tvi.s Republic, that the excess
area;; of i;.j-ne.,-u:i rocks, taken on an av
erage throughout all geological time,
will bi-:r to the exposures of sedi
ment a "v rocks a rutio of one to nine.
From these and other more compli
cated data, it has been inferred that
the elimination of the calcareous mat
ter now found in t.11 the sedimentary
strata mr.st hr.vo boon going on through
a period of iu)o,000.000 years! This,
therefore, represents the minimum age
'of the vr:r!-.'.. Ck-ologiots also conclude
that t lie f.rnn-ii n cf t!:s Laurentian.
Cam)ricii :;:it r-.ilui km .strata occupied
a period of about 200,(KM),000 years; the
red sandstone, the carboniferous and
the poccilhie systems another 200,000,
000 years, the remaining 200,000,000
years being taken with the formation
of all other stratas. Tims we are led
to l-jliirve that geological time has
beeu enormously in rxwss of the limits
urged by e. vtak. tvt-i -l::iovn physicists,
and that it h::. txv-i. simple to allow for
all tho ehunges wki h, on the hypothe
sis of evolution. b::e occurred in the
organic v.v.rhf.
A CHEAP EXPERIMENT.
How an liir'nious TrofeHitor MuJe a One
lCuzadrad f llar
Before the fish commissioners de
cided to htock the i.irer.Ms; cf the state
with that, mui.h-det;pi.sod but powerful
fish, the tier-man carp, they were great
ly cenocmcd as to whether the species
would live ir. certain waters, says the
San Ii-anci;,t Kstrarovr.
They debuted the question through
so-vcm! meetings, gre-.v rl in the face
over it. and. t- s:ie her.t and a possi
ble disrs-.r'tion of tin- board, determined
to subuii; t he question to Prcf. lloch
stadter. the eminent pisciculturist, for
decisie.:-. - -
Xumer: 'us samples of the water were
obtai ne.L :u:d turned over to the profes
sor, v, he. in ::. very bvicf space submitted
arep.rl :.-...! a bill f .r ur-C hundred dol-
Ian;, 'i I :'l wa-; pr.nl and the devas
tating e:iep mrned I.xse; to disorder the
rivers.
It w;,s not until the- other day, how
evcT. '.vlv-71 .Judge llcnshaw and Prof.
Hf---!L-it-.-.Hr were straining their iniag
inati. .ns e.ver llihing experiences while
crov.;r .-.a the Pi;'uant. tlu:t ; he truth
about lhrjrr:s;t S 'i.::':,t':. experiments
with that v.-r.f-er o-.iu-Le out. lie chuckled
so much Over teliinj; tbrat his bill for
one hundred doihirs that lTenshaw
asked:
"But l.:v did you ascertain that carp
would live in the water submitted. to
you'?''
'Why, I bought a carp for ten cents
and nut it into the water. It lived."
f.cg-.il Verbiage. "
An old deed recorded in Pettis county
over fifty years ago, says the Chicago.
Herald, contains a good illustration of
the legal verbiage common in such in
struments in early times. In addition
to forty acres of land sold for a consid
eration cf fifty dollars, the d-.x-nment
conveys "all and singular appurten
ances, appendages, advowsono, benefits,
commons, curtilages, cowliouse&, corn
crili. dairies, dovecots, easements,
eni'.',. freeholds, features, furni
ture, li.. . gardens, hcocstn-ils, ira
provemoii. i immunities, limekilns,
meadows, r is, minec, minerals,
orchards, par.. ri'-nrc grounds, pig
eon houses, pig. . "usrrics, remain
ders, reversions, . rig-its," ways,
water courses, win together with
every other necessary i ;M, immunity,
privilege and advents;.?- . whatmever
name, nature or descriplioii."
How's This!
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
for any case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured bv Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO.; Props, Toledo, O.
We the undersigned have known F. J.
Cheney for the laet 15 years, and believe
nun pertectly nonoraDle in all business
transaction and financially able to carry
out any obligation made by their firm.
West & Tbaiix, Wholesale Druggists,
Toledo, O.
WAi-niNoKiNNAN & Maevin, Whole
sale Druggists, Toledo, O..
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken intern
ally, acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the systems Price
7oc. per bottle. Sold by all druggists
Testimonials free.
Mes. Hetty Gbees has removed from
Brooklyn to New York, and the tax
i commissioners oi ine latter city are
1 now engaged in hunting her up in
! order to tax her mortgage of 81,300,000
on me otewart Duildmg.
1 1
(MS!
COMPOUND.
A rooent discovery by an eld
physician. Bucees&uEjf ttaea
fttUv Z)tf thousand of
Carffas. Is the only perfectly
safe and reliable medicine dis
covered. . Beware of unprincipled drngslsts who
offer Inferior medicines In place of this. Ask for
Cook's Cotton ttoot Compound, tab no mibttt
tute, or Inclose $1 and 6 cents in postage in totter
and -we wUl send, sealed, by return in&U. Follsealed
partlcnlars In plain envulopo, to ladles only. 8
tamps. Address Poof Lily Company.
. No.SKSsaerEloci.Twroit,iach,
Bold in The Dalles by Snipes dc Kineraly. :
ViscouxTESS Aoki. the wife of the
newly-appointed Japanese minister to
England, is a German woman of noble
birth. .
Bncklen' s Arimca Salve. 's
The best aalve in the world for cute,
braises, sores, ulcere, salt rheum, fevei
sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all ekin 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 oy Snipes & Kin
erely. - ,
I 1 if, ?
BIRD TOILETS.
Peculiar Habits or the Fcnl.!icrHl DpdI
kcus of Wood actl Held.
The-feathcred tribes have many pe
culiar ways and fancies about the de
tails of their toilets. Some birds use
water only, some water ::nd dust, while
others prefer dust and no water. Uirds
are not only exceedingly nice in their
choice of bath, water, but also very
particular about the quality of their
"toilet dust." Wild ducks, though
feeding by salt water, prefer to bathe
in fresh water pools, and will fly long
distances inland to running brooks
and ponds, where they preen and dress
their feathers in the early hours of the
morning. Sparrows bathe often, both
in water and in dust. They are not so
particular about the quality of the wa
ter as about the quality of the dust.
They prefer clean water, but 1 1 have
seen them take a bath in shallow pools
that were quite muddy. The city spar
row must take a water bath where he
can get it in the streets or on the tops
of- houses but he is most careful in his
choice of his dust bath. Road dust,
the dryest and finest possible, suits
him best. I have noticed the city spar
row taking his dust bath in the street,
and invariably he chooses a place
where the dust is like powder. Part
ridges prefer dry loam. They like to
scratch out the soil from under the
grass and fill their feathers with cool
earth. Most birds are fond of burnt
ashes. Some early morning take a
walk across a field that has been burnt
over and see the number of winged
creatures that rise suddenly from the
ash heaps. A darting form, a small
cloud of ashes and the bathers disap
pear. Persona who sympathize with the
afflicted will rejoice with D. E. Can- of
12S5 Harrison street, Kansas City. He
is an old sufferer from inflammatory
rheumatism, bat has not heretofore been
troubled in this climate. Last winter
he went up into Wisconsin, and in con
sequence baa had another attack. "It
came upon me very acute and severe,"
he said. "My jointa swelled and became
inflamed ; sore to touch or almost to look
at. Upon the argent request of my
mother-in-law I tried Chamberlain's
Pain Balm to reduce the swelling and
ease the pain, and to my agreeable sur
prise, it did both. I have used three
fifty-cent bottles and believe it to be the j
finest thing for rheumatism, pains and
swellings extant For sale by Blakeley
Sc Houghton, druggists.
The manufacture of ikons, thos-: sa
cred images so universally venerated
by orthodox Russians, is one of the
largest household industries in Central
Russia, where 2,000,000 are t urned out
everyyear. '
See tbe World'! Fair for Fifteen Cents.
Upon receipt of your address and fif
teen cents in postage stamps, . wo will
mail you prepaid our souvenir portfolio
of tbe world's Colombian exposition,
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
oc 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 yoa get it, we will
refund the stamps and let yon keep the
book. Address
H. E. Bucklkn & Co..
Chicago, 111,
. .
. A sox of Mrs. IJuri2itt, who is said -to
have been the original of "Little Lord
Faunileroyv" is to enter Harvard uni
versity next fall.
A lady at Tooleye, La., was very sick
with bilious colic when M. C. Tisler, a
prominent merchant of the town gave
her a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. He
says she was well in forty minutes after
taking the first dose. For sale by
Blakeley & Houghton, druggist?.
Hheumatisiriy
Lumbago, ScJatlca,
Kidney Complaints,
Lame Back, &c
B SASH'S ELECTED BELT
With Eiectro-Eflarcnetlc SUSPENSORY.
Xioiefct Patentsi lict Improvement S
W!H cure without medicine all Wealnen resulting1 from
over-taxation of brain nerve forces : excesses or indis
crttion, aa nervous debility, Bleep leasness, languor,
riier.matism. kidney, liver and bladder complaints,
lomebaclr. lumbago, sciatica, all female complaints
euera) ill health, etc. This electric Belt contains
Womlernil Im provemanta over all other. Current ia
instantiy f elt by wearer or wo forfeit 9&.O0O.0O. and
vrill cum ail of the atxve diseases or no pay. Thoa
inds have been en red by this marvelous invention
after all other remedies failed, and e nivo hundred
of testimonials in this and every ether state.
Onr PvreriVil Improved KLBCTKIC STSPEMSOST. fha
greatest boon sver offered weak men, PRKB wits all
Belts. liealUs m Vtorau Strtmrt GUABiftTKKD la CO
w fiend for I'lus'd Pamphlet, niailed, sealed, frea
SAN DEM ELECTRIC CO.,
Vo ITS ATlra sU eet. JMllXXA2JO OOE.
Removed to corner Third and Washington
. streets,, Portland, Or.
J. F. FORD, EyanseUst,
Of Dei Maine, Iowa, writes under date of
March 23, 1888:
S. B. Hid. Mfg. Co.,
Dufur, Oregon.
Gentlemen;
On arriving home last week, -I found
all well and anxiously awaiting. Onr
lift. 1ft Onrl I(yVlt and nna.)in 1 f 1 J
,---, e - - j ti a wiu,
who had wasted away td 38 pounds, is
now well, strong and vigorous, and well
flashed tin. ft R fVT-i rV rnA V J
I - - w.... vwY7 uifto uuue
its work well. Both of the children like
. xour o. n. uougu Cure has cured
And kfnfr. avav all hnarDanca. mA
i j vH. UVU1 UiO,
So give it to every one, with greetings
iu an. it jcuiiig you prosperity, we are
xuuin, jua, oc XUKli. J. r. rOED.
If TOU Wish to fed fresh and fhMrfn1..TiA -o-H.
for the Spring's work, cleans, your system with
the Headache and Liver Cure, by taking two oi
three doses each week.
Bold under a positive guarantee.
' cents per bottle by all druggists. " i
eKYork
-AND-
The
Wasco Cotmty,
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
Liake, a distance of over two hundred miles.
The Largest "Wool Market.
The rich grazing country along the eastern slope of the Cas
cades furnishes pasturo 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 aU available storage places, to overflowing with
their products. .
ITS WEALTH.
It is the richest city of its size on the coast' and its money ia
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 innaloul.-ibli-. Its resources unlimied. . And on tbeef
orner tmi sh- i-tiK. -
When tbe Train stop at THE DALLES, get off cn the South Side
T THE
fiEW GOLiUjVlBlfl HOTELt.
Thas large and T'opnlr House do- Vie principal hotel business,
snd is prepared lo furnish the Vest Accommodations of any
House in tbe city, and at the lu.r mte of
Ji.oo per Day. - pirst Qlass Ieals, 25 Cerjts.
" Office Tor all Stage Lines leaving; The Dalles for all
points In Eastern Oregos .sod Jtoitorii Wasltingtou,
In t Ills' liotel. . . .
Corner of Front and Union Sta.
1
There is a tide in the affairs
leads on to fortune"
The poet unquestionably had reference to the
Clisi-flfl! Si iIp- .
Furniture & Caiits
at CRANDALL
Who are selling those goods
MTOHKLBACIi BRICK.
D. BUWN
Pipe foil; -Till Bepairs aiirt flooring
, MAINS TAPPED UNDER PRESSURE.
Shop on Third Street, nexfr door west of Young ol Kusa'
. : Blacksmith Shop. . . ..
Weekly
Tribune
SI.
Oregon,
T. T. NICHOLAS, Propr.
of men which, taken at its flood
& BURGET'S,
out at greatly-reduced rates.
- . UNION ST.