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

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CHILDREN
fho are puny, pale, weak, or Bcrof
ilone, ought to take Dr. Pierce'a
Solden Medical Discovery. That
builds up both flesh and strength.
For this, and for purifying the
blood, there's nothing in all medi
cine that can equal the " Discovery."
In recovering from "Grippe," or
in convalescence from, pneumonia,
fevers, or other wasting diseases, it
speedily and surely invigorates and
builds up the whole system. As an
appetizing, restorative tonic, it sets
at work all the processes of diges
tion and nutrition, rouses every or-
fan into natural action, and brings
ack health and strength.
For all diseases caused by a torpid
liver or impure blood, Dyspepsia,
Biliousness, Scrofulous, Skin and
Scalp diseases even Consumption
(or Lung-scrofula) in its earlier
stages the " Discovery " is the
only guaranteed remedy. If it
doesn't benefit or cure, in every
case, you have your money back.
i;igiit l"; with Iliui.
There are certain Scotch lairds who
hike the nsme of their estate, anil
usually use that appellation in place of
a i.umaijie. One of thisc is '"duiiy"
T.hiopi-.v iron, to whom Mr. and Mrs.
Frunlc Lockwptxl roivntly paid a visit.
During the London lawyer's :"tay, Mr.
and Airs. Maepher- n and their quests
vere invited to lunuh at a neig-hlxiriag
country house, where n. visitors lxwk
was kept. The head of the Clan Mac
pherson, in accordance with Scotch
custom, wrote in the book: "Cluny und
Mrs. Macpherson." Mr. Loekwood was
not to be outdone by any Scottish chief,
and underneath "Cluny V t-ignature he
wrote in a fine, bold hand: "26 Lennox
Gardens, and Mrs. Loekwood."
Deafness Cnnnot be Cured
By local applications, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There is only one way to curs' Deafness,
and that is by constitutional remedies.
Peafness 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 hearing, and when it is entirely
closed Deafness is the result, and unless
the inflammation can be taken out and
- this tube restored to its normal condi
tion, hearing will be deetroyed forever;
nine cass out of ten are caused by
catarrh, which is nothing but an in
flamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for
any case of Deafness (.caused by caturih
that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh
Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CH ENEY & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75ci
Tiiekr has been au improvement in
the linen trade of Great Britain with
Spain and Germany, but with France
, and Italy there has been a consider
able decrease.
"o Quarter
Will do you as much good as the one
that buys Dr. Pierce's 1'leasant Pellets.
This is what you get with them: An
absolute and permanent cure for Consti
pation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks,
Sick and Bilious Headaches and all de
rangements of the liver, stomach and
bowels. Not just temporary relief, and
then a worse conditiou afterward but
help that last.
Don't hawk, and blow, and spit, but
use Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, and be
cured. 50 cents ; of druggists.
'What do you girls call that club of
yours?" "The Analytical." "H'm.
What do you analyze?" "Other peo
ple's reputations, mostly." Washing
. ton Star.
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
than when born, or perhaps ten pounds.
I then started the father to giving
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy. ' Before one bottle
of the 25 cent size had been used, a
marked improvement was seen and its
continued use cured the child. Its
weakness nnd puny constitution disap
peared and its father and myself believe
the child's life was saved by this remedy.
J. T. Mari.ow, M. D., Tainaroa, 111.
for pale by Blakeley & Houghton Drug
gist. '
Wifk "Isn't it. funny? Prof. Garner
says the jforilla only speaks eight
words." Husband "Nothing strange,
he has live or six wives." Cleveland
Vlaindealer.
Bueklen'a Arincta naive.
The best salve in the world for cuts,
braises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever
sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all skin 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 dv Snipes & Kin-rsly.
AN EXPENSIVE LIGHT.
An Inveterate Smoker Thirty Thou
sand Dollar for a Fum.
Inveterate smokers , acknowledge
that the habit is a most expensive one,
but it is seldom that a light for a cigar
costs a smoker a fortune, as in the
story told by the author of "Glances
Back Through Seventy Years." He
was an inveterate smoker, having con
tracted "a diseased habit of puffing
away at a cigar every moment he was
not eating or sleeping." He smoked
only the very best brands, and in
those careless days spent, he says, more
for cigars than it 'afterward cost him
to live.
Well, one afternoon a day or two be
fore "Palmer's Life" was published, I
had been to a prize-cattle show at
Chelmsford and then to a dinner with
the Royal Agricultural society, and on
arriving in town by the last train, as I
was walking homeward .my cigar un
fortunately went out and, much to my
annoyance. I discovered I had no fuses
about me. The streets, too, were de
serted, so that there was nobody from
whom a light could be obtained.
On descending Ludgate hill I noticed
that the gas of the gas lamp, perched
high against the wall just within
Belle-Sauvage yard, was broken. There
being a slanting ledge at the lower
part of this wall 1 placed my foot on it,
and. springing up, succeeded in ' light
ing a paper-spill which I had impro
vised, but in my rapid descent one of
my feet unluckily caught the edge of
the curb and I dislocated my ankle and
broke the small bouc ox :ny leg.
Quick us thought 1 wrenched the an
kle into its place again, but it was not
so easy to unite two pieces of fractured
bone, so I hopped to a neighboring
post and there awaited the protecting
peeler's periodic round.
He came at last and charitably put
me into a cab and accompanied me
home. I was carried upstairs, a sur
geon was sent for and the broken limb
was set. Then I was put to bed and
told I should have to remain there a
month or more. .
It was while I was fretting under this
involuntary confinement that my part
ner in "Palmer's Life" paid me a sym
pathetic visit and bought me out of
the speculation for a mere song, with
out, of course, saying a word to me of
the phenomenal success our joint ven
ture had already met with.
Owing to this circumstance I have
always reckoned that the going-out of
my cigar cost me about fifteen hundred
pounds, which actuaries tell me would,
with compound interest added, have
amounted to some six thousand pounds
at this date. A sum sufficient, I fancy,
to buy up all the "partagas- imperiales
superfinos" in the world.
PATENT LEATHER.
The Process for . I'mducln? the Sliliiy
Surface.
Japanned leather, generally called
patent leather, was first made in
America. A smooth, glazed finish is
first given to calfskin in France. The
leather, says the New York Telegram,
is curried expressly for the purpose,
and particular care Is taken to keep it
as free as possible from grease; the
skins are then tacked on frames and
coated with a composition of linseed
oil and umber, in the proportion of
eighteen gallons of oil to five of umber
boiled until nearly solid and then mixed
with spirits of turpentine to the proper
consistency. Lampblack is also added
when the composition is applied in or
der to give color and body. From
three to four coats of this are neces
sary to form a substance to receive the
varnish. They are laid on with u knife
or scraper. To render the goods soft
and pliant each coat must- be very
light and thoroughly dried after each
application. A thin coat is af terward
applied of the same composition of
proper consistency to be put on with a
brush and with sufficient lampblack
boiled in it to make a perfect 'black.
When thoroughly dry it is cut down
with a scraper having turned edges,
when it is ready to varnish. The princi
pal varnish used is made of linseed oil
and Russian blue, boiled to the thick
ness of printer's ink. It is reduced
with spirits of turpentine to a suitable
consistency to work with a brush, and
then applied in two or three separate
coats, which are scraped and pumiced
until the leather is perfectly filled and
smooth. The finishing coat is put on
with special care in a room kept closed
and with the floor wet to prevent
dust. The frames are then run into an
oveu heated to about one hundred and
seventy-five degrees. In preparing
this kind of leather the manufacturer
must give the skin as high a heat as it
can bear ir. order to dry the composi
tion on the surface as rapidly as pos
sible without absorption, and cau
tiously, so as not to injure the fiber of
the leather.
ilarharnus Japauese Customs.
From evidence that it seems difficult
to dispute, it appears that in the Celes
tial empire old, incurably diseased and
hopelessly depraved persons are fre
quently burned alive in order to rid
the community of the burden and re
sponsibility of their care-taking. This
arrangement is the result of a mutual
understanding, the victims assenting
to and sometimes assisting in the pre
liminary ceremonies. The usage seems
to have been recognized by the high
est authorities, and the burials have
certainly been conducted with the
sanction of the ruling powers. Great
preparations are made and there is
much ado, and sometimes a show of
grief, but a great deal of the latter is
evidently perfunctory, as there is an
all-around feeling of satisfaction on
the part of the spectators and more or
less complacency on' the mind of the
victim, who is comforted by the as
surance that he is fulfilling a tradition
and will earn the respect of his an
cestors and gone-befores. This custom
is scarcely more strange and barbarous
than the Japanese practice of com
pelling a man for certain" crimes or
calamities-to commit suicide. It would,
at least, have its compensations in
that the criminal Could be made to
take himself off and thus leave no un
pleasant reflections upon the mind of
hangman or executioner.
Eta York Weekly Tribune
HflMpMulrnnMR
(UlJLA.feP ii 11 Ejfliff flange jLfl.ujLaj.jjay
4IONLY
An old Timer.
Abraham Garrison, the brother of the
late Commodore Garrison, who died at
Allegheny, Pa., at the age of ninety, a
few days since, said in a reminiscent
mood recently: "In 1846, when I was in
Washington, I saw Clay, Calhoun, Web
ster and Benton in the senate. A party
of us each paid Samuel B. Morse fifty
cents to telegraph our names to Balti
more, and he was glad to get ' the
money. In 1840 I. saw Gen. William
Henry Harrison drive up to the old
Pittsburg hotel, now the St. Charles
hotel, with an old army comrade. It
was snowing, and some men told the
general to put on his hat, which he
had raised to aaknowledge the greet
ings of the people. The general laughed
and said to the old comrade at his side:
'We have been in a worse situation than
this without our hats, and it won't hurt
us.'"
A horse kicked H. S. Shafer, of the
Freemyre House, Middleburg, N. Y. on
the knee, which laid bim up in bed and
caused the knee joint to become stiff.
A friend recommended him to use
Chamberlain's Pain Balm, which he
did, and in two days was able to be
around. Mr. Shafer has recommended
it to many a bruise or sprain.. This
same remedy is also famous for its cures
of rheumatism. For sale by Blakeley &
Houghton.
We have made arrangements with the
San Francisco Examiner to furnish it in
connection with The Chronicle. Hav
ing a clubbing rate with the Oregonian
and N. Y. Tribune for our republican
patrons, we have made this arrangement
for the accommodation of the democratic
members of The Chronicle family.
Both papers, the Weekly Examiner and
Semi-Weekly Chronicle will be fur
nished for one year ior $2.25, cash in
advance.
W. H. Nelson, who is i.n the drug
business at Kingville, Mo., has so much
confidence in Chamberlain's Colic, Chol
era and Diarrhoea Remedy that he war
rants every bottle and offers to refund
the money to any customer who is not
satisfied after, using it.. Mr. Nelson
takes no risk in doing this because the
remedy is a certain cure for the diseases
for which it is intended and he knows
it. It is for sale by Blakely & Houghton.
Lady Grisiloa Ogilvie, sister of the
earl of Airlie, is going through a course
of training in Edinburg to qualify for
a nurse. She is at present a probationer
in the Children's hospital.
As elevator up Mount Calvary is in
construction for the benefit of pil
grims. WOOD'S A-XIOSi?ICr32W"Xi
The Great EaglUh Remedy.
Promptly and permanently
cures all forms of Kervcrus
Weakness, Emissions. Spernr
otorrhea. Impotence and aU
effects of Abuse or Excesses
Eecn prescribed over SS
cars la thousands of cases;
JBefort and After.
Is the only Reliable and Son'
est medicine known. Ask
druggist for Wood's Phosohodlne; it ho offers
some worthless medlcln9 in place of this, leave his
dishonest store, inclose price In letter, and
we will send by return mall. Price, one package,
$1; six. 5. One will please, six will cure. Pamph
let in pliin sealed envelope, 2 cents postage.
Address The Wood Chemical Co.,
101 Woodward avenue, Detroit- lllch.
Sold in The Dalles by Snipes fc Kitiersiy.
A box of earth has been sent from
the grave of Gen. Lafayette to the
Daughters of the American Bepublic
at San Francisco, in which to plant a
tree of liberty.
Malaria In any of Its Furms,
Chills and fever, congestive chills, can
be prevented or cured, by the use of
Simmons Liver Regulator, a purely veg
etable medicine, superior to calomel and
quinine.
Cheap Wall Paper.
Over 50 patterns, new and desirable
designs, with borders 'to match, at very
low prices. Jos. T. Petebs & Co.
tjull.
The Chronicle is prepared to do all
kinds of job printing. '
- $175.
"The Regulator Line"
Tie Dalles, Portland ani Astoria
Navigation Co.
THROUGH
Freiglit aafl Passenjer LiiiB
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.
PAS8ENOEU KATES.
One way .
Round trip.
.?2.00
. 3.00
Freight Rates Greatly Reduced.
All freight, except car lots,
will be brought through, witi
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. C ALLAWAY,
General Agent.
B. F. LAUGHLIN. . v
General Manager.
TH E-DALL.ES,
OREGON
J. F. FORD, Eyanplist,.
Of lieu Moines, Iowa, writes under date ot
March 28, 1893: "','. .
S. B. Med. Mrs. Co-., - '
Duf or, Oregon.
Gentlemen : '
On arriving home last week, 1 found
all well and anxiously awaiting. Our
little girl, eight and one-half years old,
who had wasted away to 38 pounds, is
now well, strong and vigorous, and well
fleshed up. 8. 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
Yoursj Mb. & MH3. J. F, Ford.
It you wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and ready
for the Spring's work, cleanse your system with
the Headache and Liver Cure, by taking two ot
three doses bach week. '
Sold under a positive guarantee.
50 cents per bottle by ell druggists.
House
. Moving!
Andrew Velarde
IS prepared to do any and all
kinds of work in his line at
reasonable, figures. , Has the
largest honse moving outfit
in Eastern Oregon. '
Address P.O.Box 181,The Dalles
For Colio and Grubs
In my mules and horses, I give Simmons
Liver Regulator. " I have not lot ne
1 gave it to.
E. T. Taylob, Agt. for Grangers of Ga,
Subscr.be for The Chbonicuc.
THE CHROMICLE 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 v
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
Tlie TJallos, Oregon.
FIRST
fo)
0
ss. Ill
fAl I "I
CAN BE
CHRONICLE OFFICE
Reasonably
There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at its fltioa
leads on to fortune."
The poet unquestionably had reference to the
li-UUI M II!
at CRANDALL
Who are selling those goods
MICHELBACH BRICK.
Familiar Faces
C. EX BAYARD,
Late Special, Agent General Land Office.
Jtye feal Instate, Ipai, Ipsuraiee.
COLLECTION" ACENCY. "
3N3" O IT uGL 3R- "52" PUSIiIO.
Parties' having Property they -wish to Sell or Trade, Houses to Rent, r
Abstract of Title furnished, will find it to their advantage to call on us.
Wo shall make a specialty -of the prosecution of Claims and Conott
before the Unitep States Land Office. . .
85 Washington St.
D. BUtMSM
Pips worK, Tin Beiiaiis aiitt iloofino
1IAINS TAPPED UNDER PRESSURE. .
Shop on Third . Street, " next door west of. Young & Kus'
Blacksmith Shop.
PUBLISHING CO.,
CLHSS
. ... ... y
o) n Dim
iii. ' iivi y
Map,
Jll U iiU jinn
u 111
; : J-
HAD AT THE
' ' . '"t ,.
Ffcainoas Hates.
&. BURGET'S,
out at greatly-reduced rates.
- - ' TIXION iT.
in a New Place..
J. E. BARNETT
THE DALLES. OI3