The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, July 23, 1894, Image 4

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    SOCIETY IN ENGLAND.
Circles That Are Not Open to Mere
Men of Money.
TWO KINDS OF WOMEN
need Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip
: tion those who want to be made
strong, and those .who want to be
made welL It builds up, invigor
ates, regulates, and cures.
It's for young girls just entering
womanhood ; for women who have
reached the critical " change of
life ' ; ' for women expecting to be
come mothers ; for mothers who
are nursing and exhausted : for
t?ery woman who is run - down,
delicate, or overworked.
For all the disorders, diseases, and
weaknesses of women, " Favorite
Prescription " is tho only remedy
ao unlading that it can be guar-
zrueed. It it doesn t benent or
ure, in every case, the money will
Ue returned.
There's nothing likely to be
just as good."
Btjta.-Pksth avoids trolley accidents
y having1 her electric railroad under
ground.
Valuahlk opals, worth from 85 to $40
per carat, have been found in Owyheo
onnty. Idaho.
Last June, Dick Crawford brought his
twelve months old child, suffering from
infantile diarrhoea, to me. It had been
weaned at four months old and being
sickly everything ran through it like
water through a sieve. I give it the
usual treatment in such cases, but with
out benefit. The child kept , growing
thinner until it weighed but little more
tthau when born, or perhaps ten pounds'.
I then started the father to giving
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera - and
Diarrhoea Remedy. Before oae bottle
of the 25 cent size, had been used, a
enarked improvement was seen and its
continued use cured the child. Its
weakness nod puny constitution disap
speared and its father and myself believe
Abe child'- life was saved by this remedy.
J. T. Maei.ow, M. D., Tamaroa, 111.
, tfor sale by Blakeley & Houghton Drng
ist -
" "The skin of the cactus is air-tight, a
marvelous provision of nature to en
able these plants to live in a soil where
moisture is scarce and under a sun
.that would speedily dry up
JKkeafness Cannot toe Cured
"By "local applications, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
Tberfe is only one way to cure Deafness,
and that is by constitutional remedies.
J"eaf neee is caused by an inflamed con
dition of the mucous lining of the
Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets
inflamed you have a rumbling sound or
imperfect bearing, and when it is entirely
closed Deafness is the result, aud unless
vthe inflammation can be taken out and
this 1ube restored to its normal condi
tion, hearing will be destroyed forever;
wine cass out of ten are caused by
catarrh, which is nothing but an in
ilamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for
any case of Deafness (.caused' by catarihx
that cannot be cured , by Hall's Catarrh
Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo; O.
jg!C"r'Sold by Druggists, 75c.
The New York Observer suggests
that clergymen really ought not to
write so illegibly as to provoke the
compositors to commit the sin of pro
fanity. Help Is Wanted.
y the women who are ailing arrU suffer
ing, or weak and exhausted. And, to
every such woman, hely is guaranteed by
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. For
young girls just entering womanhood;
women at the critical "change of life" ;
women approaching confinement ;
nursing mothers ; and every woman who
as "run-down" or overworked, it is a
medicine that builds up, strengthens,
and regulates, no matter what the con
dition of the system. r '
It's an invigorating, restorative tonic,
.si soothing and bracing nervine, and the
only guaranteed remedy for "female
complaints" and weaknesses. In bearing-down
seneations, periodical pains,
ulceration, inflammation', and every
.kindred ailment, if it ever fails to bene
5t or cure, you have your money 'back.
. M. Eaynal, the new minister of the
Interior in the Casimir-Perier cabinet
at Paris, is the first Hebrew to hold an
important cabinet rank in France.
Bncklen't Arinca ealve.
The best salve in the world for cuts,
braisee, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever
eores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi
tively cures piles, or no pay required.
Zt is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac
tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents
per box. For sale by Snipes & Kin
ersly. '
The Chboniclb is prepared to do all
bunds of job printing.
Aristocratic Cobles Who Arc Above Asso
elating with Wealthy Americans
Because of Their Financial
' r Eminence.
There is a marked difference be
tween the main body of the Americans
who annually invade London nowadays
and those who used to be seen years
ago. Time was when the traveling
Americans did not care for society, pre
ferring to do the sights as speedily as
possible and hurry off to other show
places. Now visitors from the land of
the free consider themselves quite as
much in the social swim as any lord or
lady in the peerage, are "up" in all J' 2
ways and customs of society, and are
regarded by London swelldom as rep
resentative Americans. In general
these are the sight-seers of the past
grown anglicized and their sons and
daughters. I regard Mr. Astor as a
fair sample of the new American in
England, says a correspondent of the
Argonaut. His money, of course, en
ables him to do anything he likes. He
might stand on his head on the top of
the duke of York's column or play leap
frog down Pall Mall with Mr. Vander
bilt. It is doubtful, by the bye, if
either of these performers would make
him a cause of more pitying smiles and
compassionate shoulder-shrugs than
his forced intrusion into London jour
nalism or his ostentatious purchase of
the duke of -Westminster's Thames bank
villa. He has too much money to let
the people who find it pleasant to know
him show what they really think Of his
desertion of his own country. And I
rather suspect that he knows very few
who are great enough in themselves to
be indifferent to the money power he
wields.
There is a class of noblemen among
the English aristocracy who are above
any and all outside influences al
together men whom gold does not
dazzle. I regard them as the highest
type of nobilityNin every sense, and I
consider the duke of Northumberland
as a striking instance of the sort ot
man I mean. The duke of Rutland is
another. The poorest, humblest Amer
ican, -were he a gentleman, might en
ter the society of these noblemen and
be cordially received by them, lint
all the wealth of the Astors and Van
derbilts combined could not get recog
nition for its possessors from the same
men, were there no other recommenda
tion. And I am morally certain of one
thing: Buying and hiring grand houses
in England by foreigners for no rhyme
or reason but the exhibition of a bit of
vulgar swagger, would not be in any
sense a credential of respectability to
them. Much the reverse, I should
imagine. As for the duke of West
minster, he is a shrewd man of busi
ness, and, like all the Orosvenors, has
as keen an eye to the main chance as a
horse-dealer or a patent . medicine
drummer. Yet I cannot somehow
think that any very lasting friendship
has sprung up between his grace a n'l
the American purchaser of Clieveden.
Indeed, the reported controversy con
cerning the right of propert- m the
visitors' book would seem to negative
the presumption of the existence of
very amicable relations. I often won
der how men like Mr. Astor can wi.li
to fill a fourth or fifth-rate position in
England instead of the first place m
America. He cannot at one moment
rely on the fact that he is an Amer
ican, and therefore the equal of any
man, and at the next set up as an Eng
lish country, squire, or a London ed
itor, and therefore several pegs below
the dukes and other nobility. He must
make his choice.
RAINFALL. AND POPULATION.
The Growth of the Latter Depends on the
Former.
The results of the last census have
shown that the distribution of the pop
ulation in the United States is regula
ted by the abundance or scarcity of
rain. The largest part of the popula
tion is distributed in those regions
where the annual rainfall varies from
thirty to forty inches. These comprise
three-fourths of the people. ,
The density of population diminshes
rapidly where the amount of rainfall
differs considerably in either direction
from "these figures, which may be taken
as of mean value.
Greatest density is found where
forty to fifty inches of rain fall yearly,
the number of inhabitants in such dis
tricts being fifty-nine per square mile.
Where the rainfall is thirty to forty
inches per annum the mean density of
population is 43. 1 per square mile.
The dry regions of the east, where
less than twenty inches fall in a year,
which includes two-fifths of the terri
tory, contain actually less than three
hundredths of the people of the state;-.
The population has multiplied most
rapidly, with a rainfall of twenty tc
thirty inches, in the great plains ex
tending from Texas to Dakota, -when
the density has increased 10 to 18.1 pel
mile.
These figures show that, as might
naturally be expected, in the variety
of climatic conditions found in the
great expanse of territory constituting
the United States those most favorable
to increase the number of inhabitants
are a moderate temperature and a mod
erate annual rainfall.
Singers of the plains.
People who have ' read about the
rough manners of cowboys Will be sur
prised to know that they are habitual
singers of hymns, and the strangest
feature is that they sing the cattle tc
sleep. A herd of steers is as skittish
as a. flock of sheep, particularly at
night. Anything or nothing will start
a stampede, and when the cattle get
running they are almost as difficult to
check as a prairie fire. So a part of a
cowboy's duty is to ride around and
around the "bunch" of cattle, singing
a. hymn as melodiously as he can.
Gradually the animals come to a halt,
drop down one by one," until at length
they are all asleep, and the tired singer
can rest his throat. " - ; -
eiv YorE Weekly Tribune
Wasco County,
The Gate City of the Inland Umpire 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 Oai
eades 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 he 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
. ait .-red over and is being used to develop more farming country
than is tributary to nny other city in Eastern Oregon.
Its situation is iiii8urjKKseil. Its climate delightful. ' Its pos-ibilir.i-H
tnt:li-iil il.it-. its resources unlimited. And on thesp
m- --TOll- -ll" -T ill. I-..
J. F. FORD, Eyaieiist
Of Dcs Moines, Iowa, writes under date oi
March 23, 1893:
S. B. Mkj. Mfg. Co.,
Drrfur, Oregon.
Gentlemen :
On arriving home last week, I found
all well and anxiously awaiting. Our
little girl, eight and one-half years old,
who had wasted away to 38 ponnde, 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 greetinge
for all. Wishing you prosperity, we are
Yours, Ma. A Mao. J. F. Fobd.
If yon wish to ieel fresh and cheerf 1, and read j
for the Spring's work, cleans your system with
the Headache and Liver Cure, by taking two or
three doses each week.
Sold under a positive guarantee" . .
SO cents per bottle by all druggists.
COPYRIGHTS.
CAW I OBTAIN A PATENT f For a
prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to
Mil N N fc CO., wbo hare had nearly fifty years'
experience In the patent business. Commnntca
tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of In
formation concerning Patents and how to ob
tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechaa
leal and scientific books sent free.
Patents taken through Mann tc Co. receive
special notloeln the ("tcientino American, and
thus are brought widely before the public with,
out cost to the inventor. This splendid paper.
Issued weekly, elegantly Illustrated, has by far the
largest circulation of any scientific worm In the
world. S3 a year. Sample copies sent free.
Building Edition, monthly, S&S0 a year. Single
copies, 25 cents. Every number contains beau
tlful plates. In colors, and photographs of new
houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the
latest designs and secure contracts. Address
MITNN (XX.. New York, atil Bboabwat.
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
v avnibiii viiiuwHiiiiiiHwr r
SI.
Dhlles
Oregon,
"The Regulator Line"
Tte Dalles, PortM ui Astoria
Navigation Co.
THROUGH
Reigot anHPasseieriiue
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.
FA3SEN6SB BATH.
One way
Round trip.
...f2.00
. . . 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
5 p. m. Live stock shipments eolicted.
Call on or address,
W. CALLAWAY,
General Agent.
B. F. LAUGHLIN,
General Manager.
THE-DALLES,
OREGON
D
B. A. DIKTRICH,
Physician and Surgeon,
DUITTB, OREGON. s
All professional calls promptly attended
o, 'day and night. aprl4
n . . r""" H fj .
jElffOHDC Sd
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 othervj-e-
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 cklJLos, Oregon.
FI RST
lii) f m
Ini
0
lb)
CAN BE HAD AT THE
CHRONICLE OFFICE
treasonably
'There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at its Jiooa .
. leads on to fortune."
The poet unquestionably had reference to the
Ciii-Oii Sain I m
m Fniiiore : Carpi
at CRANDALL
Who'are selling these goods
MICHELBACH BRICK,
, Familiar Faces
O. EC. BAYARD, .
Late Special Agent General Land Office.
Bayar 5L c 33arnett,
Jl?e leal Instate, Ioap, Iiurapee,
COLLECTION AGENCY.
N"OT
Parties having Property they wish to Soli or Trade, Houses to Kent. r :r
Abstract of Title furnished, will find it to their advantage to call on us.
We shall make a specialty of the prosecution of Claims and Contct
. before the TJnitep States Land Office.' ''',
85 "Washington St.
D. BUNSNS
Pipe Woii Tin uepaire M
MAIN'S TAPPED UNDER PRESSURE.
Chop on Third Street, next door west of Young & Kne'
Blacksmith Shop.
CLKSS
UlSj
M
k
IT
JL
9
m
Rainoas Rates.
& BURGET'S, ,
out at greatly-reduced rates.
- - UNION ST.
in a New Place.
J. E. BARNETT
LmJLCD.
THE DALLES. OR.