The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, June 28, 1894, Image 4

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    V,
SOME ODD I1IP0KTS.
FA CE AND FIG UIZE
show it, if you're
a healthy woman.
They'll have a
beauty of their
own, no matter
what your features.
Perfect health, with
its clear skin, rosy
cheeks, and bright
eyes, is enough to
' make any woman
To get perfect
health, use faith
fully Dr. Pierce's
Favorite Prescrip
tion. That regu
lates and promotes
all the proper func
tions of woman
hood, improves di
gestion, enriches
the blood, dispels
aches and ' pains.
brine's refreshing
sleep, and restores health, flesh and
strength.
For periodical pains, prolapsus
and other displacements, bearing
down sensations, and "female com
plaints " generally, it is so effective
that it can be guaranteed. If it
doesn't benefit or cure, you have
youi money back. Is anything that
isn't sold in this way likely to. be
"just as good."
For every case of Catarrh which
they cannot cure, the proprietors of
Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy agree
to pay $500 in cash. You're cured
by its mild, soothing, cleansing, and
healing properties, or you're paid.
OPTICAL ILLUSIONS.
Toa 3Iay Have I'lenty of Fnn on the
Train by Thoir Moans.
As flic train proceeds rapidly over
the level desert my eyes fix" i. e.
paze steadily ;it a, clump of sage bush
which is probably two miles distant.
The bush seems to move slowly vith
the train, while objects between it and
my eyes have an apparent motion in
the opposite direction: Of these latter
the near ones lly pass with fjreat rapid
ity, but the r.pparent velocity of those
farther removed diminishes until, just
before the point of fixation is reached,
objects come to an apparent standstill.
Beyond the point fixed by my eyes. ob
jects move in the same direction as the
train, their velocity apparently greater
the farther away they lie.
Suddenly I. shift my paze, writes Dr.
Wood in.thc Popular Science Monthly,
from the sagxj busli to a larjre bowlder
which is sailing- slwwly past, probably
one thousand yards from the train.
Everything1 is changed at once. The
bowlder's retrograde progress is arrest
ed; near objects fly by with accelerated
speed; the sage bush clump forges
ahead as if to make up for 1-ir t time,
while the plain beyond it, indistinct in
the distance, races aliead of every ob
ject in view. And so I while away
a. full half hour, making one conspicu
ous object after another stand still, go
ahead, or sail past r.t will all upon the
surface of this apparently liou'rullcss
plain trying to realk-.c. meantime, that
things are not as the moving- panorama
before mo indicates. For, relatively to
the train, all objects are passed at an
equal rate, the near as well as the dis
tant, those seen by direct as well as
those seen by indirect vision. i!nt, in
iookhig from my ear- window, I am
made the subject of optical illusions
common m a journey of this sort.
I
?. : ' (
BANANAS ARE USEFUL,1
hey Grow Spontaneous'- ami Contain
All tltu K4cntl4l'-ti Sa;t u:i I.'.ie.
Wild varieties of banana have been
found in Ceylon, Cochin China and the
l'hilipptnes. These, of course, have
seeds, but they are inferior to the long,
cultivated varieties. Thc banana is cul
tivated ly suckers, and'it is in this way
that the plant is perpetuated in
definitely. ,
The banana belongs to the lily fam
ily, and is a developed, tropical lily,
from which', by ages, of cultivation, the
seeds have been eliminated, while the
fruit, for which it has been cultivated,
has greatly expanded. In relation to
the bearing qualities of this fruit, Hum
boldt, who early saw the wonders of
the plant, ' said that the gTOund that
would glow ninety-nine pounds of pota
toes would grow thirty-three pounds of
wheat, but that the same ground would
grow four thousand pounds of bananas.
The banana possesses all the essen
tials to the sustenance of life. Of wheat
alone, or potatoes alone, this cannot be
said. When taken as a steady diet the
banana is cooked baked dry in the
gTecn state, pulped and boiled in water
as a soup or cut in slices and fried.
The leaves of the banana, often sis
feet long and two feet wide, are tender,
according to the Youth's Companion,
and the strong winds of the tropics soon
tear them in strips, thereby adding-to
tlieir grace and, beauty. The banana
is a fruit that beast and bird, as well as
man, are f ond of , and the owner, when
2ie lives in a sparsely-settled country,
must protect his plantation by a fence
of some thorny plant. ,
Dr. S. F. Scott, Blue Ridge, Harrison
Co., Mo., Bays r "For whooping cough
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is excel
lent." By using it freely the disease is
deprived of all dangerous consequences.
There is no danger in giving the Remedy
to babies, as it contains nothing injur
ious. 50 cent bottles for sale by Blakeley
& Houghton, druggists.
For Collo and Grubs
In my mules and horses, I give Simmons
I.iver Regulator. I have not lost one
I gave it to. .
K. T. Taylok, Agt. for Grangers of Ga.
i
Articles That Are Dutiable in Vari
ous Parts of the World.
Taxes Imposed Upon Persons. Wbo Follow
Certain Calling Sweden's Blg Tax
- Upon Commercial Travelers
from Abroad. ,
In times past it was deeimed war
rantable to tax salt, candles, Jeather,
brick, soap, starch, paper, and in 1050.
even bread and meat. IJter the
Great of Russia levied a tax on beards,
with the laudable object of making
his subjects wash their, faces and
shave. Brass tokens are still " to he
bought in that country bearing the
words: "Borado pignaia tiagola,"
which means "The beard tax has been
paid." F. G. C. Lundy gives particu
lars in Temple Bar of the British hat
tax of 1784, requiring hatters to take
out licenses and imposing an ad vaj
lorem stamp duty on every hat sold.
In old times, too, the Scotch sacra
mentaLcertificates used to bear a six
penny stamp; a tax on religious al-,
manacs, glass, stone bottles and adver
tisements were among the fiscal duties
of the past. There was also a tax on
"the light of Heaven" in the shape of
an impost on windows until far into the
present century. This odious and un
sanitary burden caused architects and
builders to erect houses with as few
windows as possible, and to escape the
tax the windows of many houses were
blocked up. Some of these dark and
dismal abodes are still in existence in
England. The Russian government a'
few years ago decided to tax kerosene
oil and matches virtually a tax on
light. In some parts of China a tax is
imposed on all women entering the
bonds of matrimony. Travelers to those
parts are obliged to take a wife, and
when they leave the ladies take fresh
husbands, to the benefit of the revenue.
In Servia vanity is taxed in the shape
of ladies' bustles. In Melbourne
Christmas cards are taxed one-fifth
per cent. It has been stated that in
Weimar the authorities levied a duty
on musical parties.
Quite lately an annual tax of ten
francs has been imposed on pianos in
Prance. Music has paid tribute to tax
ation in other ways. A musical troupe
Recently crossing the frontier of Sax
ony carried with them a crown of
laurels awarded them at a triumphal
performance. The custom house offi
cers taxed the laurels as spice. Masse
net, the composer, it is related, was
also charged duty on a crown of laurels
on the German frontier. In his case
the wreath of fame was deemed to be
woven of "medicinal plants." In
Montreal organ grinders pay a license
of twenty dollars and are only allowed
to play at stated times. In Vienna
they are also licensed and regulated as
to hours. In France a certificate of
character, a distinctive badge and lim
itation of hours is insisted upon. Ad
vertisements in the form of posters and
placards are required to bear a tax
stamp in France, which is distinctly a
tax on trade and publicity. In Italy,
where the" people complain that the
taxes are exorbitant, the voluntary tax
paid by the poorer classes in the form
of lottery amounts in a year to over
three million pounds sterling. At
Laterza the Italians recently broke out
in open revolt against the municipality,
II which had increased the hearth tax,
and took the civic buildings by as
sault, wounding the syndic, but they
do not agitate against the lottery tax.
In "Old Madrid" last year there was
terrible and fatal rioting among the
men and women who hawk vegetables,
fruit and other articles in the streets
and markets owing to the imposition
of a tax on Spanish hawkers.
In 18S9 M. Dunajewski, the Austrian
minister of finance, who was described
as "the -nimblest politician in the
world for inventing new taxes,? de
cided to tax the total isa tears or bet
ting agencies. Totalisateurs are es
tablished on all German and .Austrian
race courses. The system is to divide
all the money invested on the losing
horses among those who backed the
winner, after deducting eight per cent,
commission for the agency. There is
no cheating or welshing possible in the
plan. - A ten per cent, duty on win
nings was decreed. In France the
parimutual, a similar system of bet
ting, is taxed seven per cent., five per
cent, of which is devoted to the relief
of the poor. Bookmakers are also
taxed. There is also a municipal tax
of ten per cent, deducted from the re
ceipts of theatrical and public enter
tainments, which is also assigned for
the benefit of the unfortunate. This
revenue is principally distributed in
the shape of grants to public charities
and hospitals, thus making pleasure
come to the rescue of poverty and the
relief of pain. In Sweden commercial
travelers visiting that country have to
pay one hundred kroner (about twen-.ty-five
dollars) for every month or part
thereof they may remain for the privi
lege of transacting their business. . ,
"Many of the citizens of Rainsville, In
diana, are never without a bottle of
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in the
house," saya Jacob Brown, the leading
merchant of the place. This remedy
has proven of so mnch value for colds,
croup and whooping cough in children
that few motbere who know its worth
are willing to be without it. For sale
by Blakeley & Houghton druggists.
There is nothing but danger in the
intimacy of a married heart with an
unmarried one, unless there be. other
relationships which justify it. -
Keep your eye on this proposition
We will give free to every new cash sub
scriber to the Weekly Chronicle a
year's subscription to the great New
York Weekly Tribune. This offer will
be open until the first of July. Don't
forget You get The Chronicle for
one year for $1.50 and the Tribune as a
premium. ; Old subscribers can have
both papers by paying up arrears and
renewing subscription at $1.75. .
ew York Weekly Tribune
AHD
. . . '. . ' V ' -
T HE
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 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.
1 1 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 unsnrpnssed. Its climate delightful. Its pos
sibilities in.-sii.-ul.-iiij.-. ' I r.s resources unlinned. And on these,
iir?ijr toii. st tt-1 '
J. F. I0RD, Evanplist,
Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes under date ol
March 23, 1893:
S. B. Med. Mfg. Co.,
Dufur, Oregon. .
Oentlemen :
On arriving home last week, I found
all well and anxiously awaiting. Our
little giri, eight and one-half years old,
who had wasted away to 38 pounds, is
now well, strong and vigorous, and well
fleshed up. S. B. Cough Cure has done
its work well. Both of the children like
it. Your S.'B. Cough Cure has cured
and kept away all hoarseness from me.
So give it to every one, with greetings
for all. Wishing you prosperity, we are
Yours, Mr. & Mr3. J. F. Ford.
If you wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and read;
for the Spring's work, cleanse your system with
the Headache'and Liver Cure, by taking two or
three doses each week. - ; -
Bold under a positive guarantee. ,
GO cents per bottle by all druggists.
COPYRIGHTS. Vr
CAW I OBTAIN A PATENT For a
prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to
MliSNdc CO., who have bad nearly fifty years'
experience in the patent business. Communica
tions strictly coiifldnttaI. A Handbook of In
formation concerning Patents and bow to ob
tain them sent free. Also a catalogue OX mftThan
tcal and scientific books sent free.
Patents taken through Mann Se Co. receive
special notice in the Scientific A mcricanand
thus are brought widely before the public with
out cost to the inventor. This splendid paper,
issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, bas by far the
largest circulation of any scientific work in the
world. S3 a year. Sample copies sent free.
Building Edition, monthly, tlSO a year. Single
copies, 2S cents. Every number contains beau
tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new
bouses, with plana, enabling builders to show too
latest designs and secure contracts. Address
MUlUi CO Jiiw YOIUC 361 BBOASW1T.
House
Moving!
Andrew Velarde
IS prepared to do any and' all
kinds of work in his line at
reasonable figures. Has the'
largest-house moving outfit -
in Eastern Oregon. . ' .
Address P.O.Box 181,The Dalles
9t
SI.
Oregon,
"The Regulator
if
Tie Dalles, Jortlaii ani: Astoria
Navigation Co.
THROUGH
Freigfiiaufl Passenger Line
Through Dailv TriDB fSnndava 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 st. dock) at 6 a. m., connect
ing with Steamer Regulator for The
Dalles.
PASSJKNGKK BATES.
One way.'. . .
Round trip.
. 2.00
. 3.00
Freight Rates Greatly Reduced.
Airfreight, except car lots,
will be brought through, with
out delay at Cascades.
Shipments for Portland received at
any time day or night. Shipments for
way landings must be delivered before
b p. m. JLive stock shipments Bolicted.
Call on or address,
W. C. ALLAWAY.
General Agent.
B. F. LAUGH LIN,
' General Manager.
THE-DALLES. . OREGON
; PHOTOGRAPHER.
Chapman Block, The Dalles, Oregon,
I have taken 11 first prizes.
Line
iaily and Weekly
THE CHRONICLE was established for tne ex
press purpose of faithfully representing The Dalles
and the surrounding country, and the satisfying
effect of its mission is everywhere apparent. It
now leads all other publications in Wasco, Sher
man, Gilliam, a large part of Crook, Morrow and
Grant counties, as. well as Klickitat and other re- -,
gions north of The Dalles . hence it is the best
medium for advertisers in the . Inland Empire.
. The DailV Chronicle is published every eve
ning in the week Sundays excepted at $6.00 per
annum. The Weekly Chronicle on Fridays of
each week at $1.50 per annum.
For advertising rates, subscriptions, etc.; address
THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO.,
Tlie ,3ZtlJLoj9, Oregon.
FIRST
in
o) 11 ;
J ' CAN BE
CHR ONI C
treasonably
HP!
'There , is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at its fiooa
' , - ; '-'.leads on to fortune." - -, v
y The poet unquestionably had reference to the
CI
AT CRANDALL
Who are selling those goods
michelbach brick;
THOSE
WHO WISH
Glass, Lime; Cement,
PLASTER, LATH.
Pietarre Frames,
- - ,
. ;
, SUCH AS
Shafting, Pulleys, Belting,
Engine and Boiler,
CALL IKD'SII
is. g-Ij-Ej nsr nsr '
BSEEH
Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Fat.
cut basinets conducted for MoDtftaTC Fees.
OUR OPFICC IB OPPOSITE O. S. fATCIT OFF1CC
and we can secure patent in less tune than tnoae
remote from Washington.
Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip
tion. We advise, if patentable or not. free of
charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured.
A Pamphlet, "How to Obtain Patents," with
cost of same in the U. & and foreign countries
sent tree. Address,
C.A.SFJOW&CO.
Opt. Patent opticc. Washington, d. C.
DsiM-Qot Sale ol
CLKSS
HAD AT THE
L E O Fry I C E
Hainoos Hates.
& BURGET'S,
out at yreatlyTreduced rates. .
- - .jtniok st.
John Pashek,
The Merchant Tailor,
T Court Stfeat,
Next door to Wasco San Office.
3B-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 him. .
Cleaning and Repairing a Specialty.
notice for pubiication.
Land Office, The Dalles, Or., )
' Hay 11, 1894. j
Complaint having been entered at this offioe
by Johann G. Fischer against the heirs at' law of
William M. Murphy, deceased, for abandoning
his Homestead Entry, No. 4571, dated October .
12, 1892, upon the N and N 8w, Sec
31, Tp 1 N, R 10 E, in Wasco county, Oregon.with
a view to the cancellation of said entry; the
said parties are hereby summoned to appear at
The Dalles, Oregon, on the 14th day of July,
1894. at 9 o'clock A. M., to respond and furnish
testimony concerning said alleged abandon
ment. JOHN W. UEWI8,
june 9 - Register.
FOR SALE OR TIRADE
A FINK IMPORTED
Frencl Percteron Stallion,-
Weight in good flesh 1,506 pounds, and Sure Foa)
Getter. Will sell for cash or notes with
approved security, or will trade - .
for horses or catte.
Address: Kerr'& Buckley,
, " Grass Valley, Or.
!j era
;ul