The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, June 30, 1894, Image 4

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    The Most. Stubborn-
Skin and - Scalp Diseases, the
worst forms of Scrofula, all
blood -taints and poisons of
every name and nature, are
utterly rooted out' by Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medical Dis-
For every disease
by a torpid liver or
blood, it is the only
remedy so certain and enec
tive that it can be guaranteed.
If it fails to benefit or cure,
you have your money back.
Eczema, Tetter, Salt-rheum,
Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles,
Enlarged Glands, Tumors, and
Swellings, and every kindred
ailment, are completely and
permanently cured by it.
sight of a man, but by January cared
nothing for one. They mingled with
the cattle; they leaped over fences built
high to exclude them; they, attacked
the haystacks in spite of armed men
standing there on guard. They died of
starvation by the thousand, and one
who drives up the valley sees hundreds
of whitened antlers where the elk fell
on the plains and thousands of dead
and blackened tree trunks on the moun
tain side. ..
covery.
caused
impure
To every sufferer from Catarrh,
no matter how bad the case or of
how long standing, the propi
of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy
say this : " If we can't cure it,
perfectly and permanently, we'll
pay you $500 in cash." Sold by
all
druggists.
FOR WEARERS OF FALSE HAIR.
Jew York
Weekly Tribune
A Few Facts Which May Result In Wean
Ins: Them from tho Practice.
TThe most expensive is the silver white.
which is in great demand and very dif
ficult to find. Hair of the ordinary
shades is obtained in two ways. The
tetter and more expensive kind is cut
directly from the heads of peasant
'women, who sell their silken tresses
sometimes for a mere song and some
limes for a fair price, according as
' they learned wisdom. Kvery year the
whole territory of France is traveled
over by men whose business it is to
persuade village maidens, their mothers
and their aunts to part with their hair
for financial considerations. The busy
searchers of ash heaps and
A STRANGE BUILDING LEGEND.
Curious Practice In VOgruo Among Bul
garian Masons.
Nine master masons who were en-,
gaged in building a citadel in the time
of the Voivoid Neagoe, found on return
ing to their work each morning that
the portion of the wall which they had
completed the day before had fallen to
pieces during the night and was lying
in a heap of ruins in the ditch. Manol
of Curtea, the head mason, informed
his comrades one morning that a voice
from Heaven . had warned him in his
sleep the night before that their labors
would continue to come to naught un
less they all swore on that very morn
ing to immure in the structure the first
woman, be it wife, mother, daughter or
sister, who should arrive with 'the
morning meal of one or either of them.
They all took the oath, and the last
had hardly been sworn when Hanoi's
own wife appeared, carrying her hus
band's breakfast. The oath was kept,
and the woman, known in the legend
as "Flora of the Fields," was murdered
and her blood and flesh incorporated
with the wall of masonry. A . curious
practice of the Bulgarian masons (the
above scene is laid in Bulgaria), which
survives to this day, testifies to the vital'
ity of the legend. To insure the solid
ity of the houses they build they meas
ure with a reed the shadow of the first
person who passes after the digging of
the foundation has been completed.
When the foundation is commenced
this reed is buried under: the first rock,
usually the .corner stone.
EUROPE'S LABOR LAWS. .
.. .
The iaflies
Daily and WeeEdy
Ihroiiicle.
0KD.N LY
SI.
barrels collect every day in the city of
Varis alone at least a hundred pounds (
of hair, which some hundreds of thou
sands of women have -combed out of
their heads during the preceding
twenty-four hours. This hair, all
mixed together and soiled, one would
think, beyond redemption, is sold to
hair cleaners at from a dollar to a
dollar and a half a pound, which shows
simply that the fair sex in one city
alone throws away annually about
sixty thousand dollars' worth of hair,
for which they afterward pay and it is
the same hair, mind considerably over
two hundred thousand dollars.
Tho cleaniDg of this refuse hair is an
operation which requires careful atten
tion. After the hair has been freed
from the dirt and dust and mud and
other unpleasant things with which
it has come in contact in gutters
and slop buckets it is rubbed with saw
dust until it shines once more with its
pristino gloss and then the process of
sorting is begun. In the first place,
according to the Baltimore Herald,
skillful hands fix the individual hairs
in frames, with the roots all pointing
the same way, and then they are ar
ranged according to color. Finally,
when a sufficient number of hairs of
one color have been obtained nor is
"this number so immense as is generally
supposed they are made 'into the
beautiful braids which are shown so
seductively in the windows of the
fashionable coiffeurs. If, as the book
says, wisdom goes with the hair, she
who places on her head one of those
conglomerate braids might be said to
. receive a portion of the wisdom of hun
dreds of thousands of other women who
had worn those hairs before.
What Some Nations Have Done to Pro
tect the Working Classes.
A great trades-union congress, com
posed of delegates from all tho labor
Drffamzations in Great Britain, met at
Liverpool on tho 1st of September, It
was composed of five hundred delegates,
including ten women, and represented
most of the large trades of the Kingdom.
The principal act of tho congress was
to p3 a resolution in favor cf reduc
ing the time of laboring to eight hours
a day and of making eight hours a day's
labor by act of Parliament. This was
not passed, however, without a good.
garbage. Joal of strenuous opposition on tho part
He
Wasco County,"
Dklles
Oregon,
ONE CIGARETTE STUB.
Ruin of a Ynut Crazing Ground and Star
vation to Thousands of Animals.
A number of hunters in the Gros
Ventre range, Wyo., one day in August,
1889, were smoking as they rode along.
One carelessly cast his cigarette stub on
the grass beside the trail. Usually it
would have died there and no harm
come from it, but a breeze was blowing
that fanned it till a dry blade of grass
flamed up. The hunters had just passed
around a bend and did not see the
flame. An hour later a fire that threat
ened all the grass south of the Gros
Ventre river was raging and the few
settlers there were riding from ranches
even thirty miles away to save the
range their cattle needed. One man
followed and brought back the hunters
and for the rest of the day more than a
score of men with horses dragging
"bundles of green brush galloped up and
down to confine the flames to the can
yons and mountains east of the valley.
They succeeded, and the ranchers worn
out rode home to rest. , Some hundreds
of square miles of mountain sides and
the bottom lands in the canyons were
burned over.
Later came winter and the deep snow
common to that country. With the
enow came herds of elk rom the moun
tain tops to feed in the thickets along
the brooks between the mountains. It
was their regular practice, and they
bad always lived therein peace the
winter through, for the settlers killed
only what were needed for food. . But
this winter, instead of nourishing
grasses and twigs, . the Chautauquan
says, the unfortunate animals found
only charred stubs and blackened sods.
Goaded by their hunger they came out
on the plains and about the ranches of
the settlers. At first they fled at the
of some of the older delegates
Tho meeting of this congress and tho
?reat strikes which are frequently tak
ing place in almost every civilized
country and region render the subject
af what laws have been passed by the
several nations regulating labor es
pecially interesting at this time, says
tho Youth's Companion.
Thus far. no European nation has
passed a law limiting tho time of the
labor of adult male working-men. Such
measures as have been passed relate for
tho most part to tho protection and lim
itation of the labor of women and chil
dren, and the greater part of these
measures have become law within the
past fifteen years.
For instance, by a statute passed by
tbe British Parliament in 1878, women,
and children between fourteen and
?ighteen years of age, who are engaged
in the textile factories are allowed to
work only ten hours a day. Children
under fourteen years can work only six
hours a day. In other industries tho re
snectivo neriods of labor are increased
jver the figures stated by half an hour.
Moreover, no child under ten years of
age is permitted to work in an English
factory at all, and all night work is for
bidden to women, young girls and children.
Itnrlitii's lrni' fl. -
The lest salve in the worid or cuts,
bruirtes, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fevet
sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all fkin ernptions. and posi
tively cures piles, or no pay required
It ia guaranteed to give perfect satisfac
tion, or .money refunded. Price 25 cents
per itoK. For sale ry Snipes & Kin
ernly A I.1TTI.K knowledge wisely used is
better than all knowledge disused.
Exckksivk labor is wrong, but judi
cious labor is the safety valve of life.
The Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the head
of navigation on the Middle Columbia, and ia 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
take, 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. t
ITS PRODUCTS.
The salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, yielding
this vear a revenue of thousands of dollars, which will be more
than ioubled in the near future.
Tin; products of the leautiful Klickitat valley find market
it iiinl the country south and east has this year filled the
w :rliusi--!-,, ;il all available storage places to overflowing with
t.ln'ir products.
ITS WEALTH.
- It is tin; richest, city of its size on the coast and its money is
srAttered over and islemg used to develop more farming country
than is tributary to any other city in Eastern Oregon.
Its sittiiit.i.ui is i!iisuvp iss"d. Its cliroate!Nleliglitfui. Its pos
iiliilities iii..ii.-iii il.i- . ! ts resources unlimid. And on these
THE CHRONICLE was established for the 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 Daily 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.,
Tlio Dalles, Oregon. .
J fl 13)
FIRST CLHSS
"Many of the citizensof Rainsville, In
diana, are never without a bottle of
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in the
house," says Jacob Brown, the leading
merchant of the place. This remedy
has proven of so much value for colds,
croup and whooping cough in children
that few mothers who know its worth!
are willing to be without .it. For sale
by Blakeley & Houghton druggists.
J. F. PORD, Evan&elist,
Of Dra Moines, Iowa, writes under date ol
March 23.' 1893:
S. B. Mid. Mfg. Co.,
Dufur, Oregon.
Gentlemen :
On arriving home last week, 1 found
all TOfM n.nd an-rionslv awaiting. Our
little girl, eight and one-half years old,
who had wasted away to 38 pounds, ie
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, Mb. & Mao. J. F. Fokd.
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 ot
three doses each week.
8old under a positive guarantee.
50 cents per bottle by all druggists.
"The'Replator Line"
The Balles, Portland and Astoria
Navigation Co.
Keep yonr eye on this proposition
We will giTe free to every new cash sub
scriber to the Weekly Chboxiclk a
year's subscription to tbe great New
York Weekly Tribune. This offer will
be open until, the first of July. Don't
forget it You get Thb Chronicle for
one year for $1.50 and tbe Tribune as a
premium. Old subscribers can have
both papers by paying up arrears and
renewing subscription at $1.75.
Dr: S. F. Scott, Blue Ridge, Harrison
Co., Mo., says: "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 Colic and Grub
V CcAVEAl o. I nAUt MARKS
COPYRIGHTS.
CAST I OBTAIN A PATENT f For ,
nompt answer and an honest opinion, write to
I U NN & CO., who have had nearly fifty years'
roarience In the natent business- Communica
tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of In
formation concerning Patents and bow to ob
tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of maohan
ical and scientific books seat free.
Patents taken through Munn A Co. receive
special notice in the Scientific American, and
thus are brought widely before tbe public with
out cost to tbe inventor. This sDlendid paper,
issued weekly, elegantly Illustrated, has by far tbe
largest circulation of any scientific work In the
world, 3 a year, eampie
gin wing noma
conies, cents.
HI Ul puues, in coMira, ouu
But
real
atai
Dbotooranh
bouses, with plana, enabling builders to show the
Sample copies sent free.
on, monthly, 2J0 a year. BlngM
i. Every number contains beau-
pas oi new
latest d
and uenre contracts. Addrem
co. mkw york. a til BBOUWir,
In uiy mules and horses, I give Simmons
Liver Regulator. I have not lost one
1 pave it to..
' K. T. Tayloe, Agt. for Grangers of Ga.
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.
THROUGH
Freigni and 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 st. dock) at 6 a. m., connect
ing with Steamer Regulator for The
Dalles.
PAB8EN6EB KATES.
" It
NT
ml
rxii
can be; had at the
CHRONICLE OFFICE
Reasonably Hrjinoas Rates.
' ' Tiere is a tide in tlie affairs of inen which, taken at its fieoa
leads on to fortune."
The poet unquestionably had reference to the
Clsii-Om Sale ol
at GRAND ALL & BURGET'S,
Whb are selling those goods out at yreatly-reduced rates.
MICH KLB ACH BRICK, - - I7XION ST. t
One way
Round trip.
.$2.00
. 3.00
Freight Rates Greatly Reduced.
All freight, 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
6 p. m. Live stock shipments solicted.
Call on or address,
W. CALLAWAY,
v General Agent.
B. F. LAUGHLIN,
' General Manager.
THErDALLES.
OREGON
PHOTOGRAPHER.
Chapman Block, The Dalles, Oregon
Address P.O.Box 181,The Dalles. I have taken 11 first prizes.
THOSE
WHO WISH
Glass, Lime, Cement,
PLASTER LATH.
Picture Frames,
mficHir4EHy
-such As-
Shafting, Pulley s, Belting,
Engine and Boiler,
CALL ASD 8KB
Hi
j Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat- J
ent business conducted for moderate Fees.
f Aneirr li e. Patent Ornet i
t and we can secure patent in less time than those 1
1 remote from Washington. - i
f Send model, drawing or photo., vrith descrip-
Stion. We advise, if oaten table or not, free of J
i charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured, j
w a n . ....... "HawiouDiain mcDU. wiiui
cost of same in the U.S. and foreign countries t
(sent free. Address,
C.A.SF30W&CO.
Opp. Patent Office, Washington, D. C
John Pashek,
The Merchant Tailor,
76 Count Sttt,
Next door to "Wasco Sun Office.
-Has Inst received the latest styles In
Suitings for Gentlemen,
and hs a large assortment of Foreign and Amer
ican Cloths, which he can finish To Order for
those that favor him.
Cleaaing and Repairing a Specialty.
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
... Laud Office, The Dalles, Or.,
' ' . May U, 1894. J
Complaint having been entered at this offloa
by Johann G. Fischer against the heirs at law ol
William M. Murphy, deceased, for abandoning
his Homestead Entry, No. 4571, dated October
12,1892, upon the V14 8E, and JiX BWjSee
31, Tp 1 N, B 10 E, In Wasco county, Oregon, with,
a view to the cancellation of said entry; the
am luruiM mn iiaicuv nu iu.u' . - "j ...
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-
-mo-nt . JOHN W. LEWIS.
June 9 Register.
fun sunt un iRun
A FINE - IMPORTED
Freud Percleron Stallion,
Weight in good flesh 1,506 pounds, and Sure Foal
(latter. W'ill sell for cash or notes with
approved security, or will trade
. , for horses or catte.
Address:
Kerr & Buckley,
Grass Valley, Or.