The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, August 28, 1894, Image 3

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If You Want $1.00
Q
At Prices within reach of all.
We hesitate not for Congress to decide, but have marked our
. goods to please the people. Large stock of
iJevloousi
4Hk. 35N m "m wr-rwv fflk a i V
Come to Us,
ALL GOODS MARKED IN
PLAIN FIGURES.
The Dalles Daily Chroniele.
Knee red a the Postofflce at The Dalles, Oregon,
as seoond-class matter.
Clubbing List.
Regular Out
pi Ice price
. .2.50 $1.75
.. 3.00 2.00
Smith ud H. T. TriUit
" ud Veckl; Orcgwiii . .
Local AdTertisln;.
10 Cents per line for Brat Insertion, and 5 Cents
par line for each subsequent insertion.
Special rates for long time notices.
All local notices received later than S o'clock
will appear the following day.
The Daily and Weekly Chronicle may
be found on tale at I. C. Nickelsen't it ore.
. ' Telephone No. 1.
TUESDAY,
- ATJGDST 28. 1894
AUGUST AUGURINGS-
Leaves Prom the Notebook of Chronicle
Reporters.
The Regulator took down six horses
and four mules this morning.
Kelt Monday is Labor day and there
fore a legal holiday. Don't forget it.
The train dispatchers office has been
attain moved, this time from Pendleton
back to La Grande.
Quite a number of ministers who have
been attending conference were pass
engers on the Regulator this morning.
The mayor interviewed two victims
yesterday and one this morning. The
genial Butts is teaching them the art of
road building.
Very rich gold finds -are reported as
having been made on the Kaslo river
about the boundary line between this
country and British Columbia.' '
On and after September let, 1894, the
office hours of the Pacific Express Co.
will be from 8 to 12 and from 1 to 6
o'clock. The office will not be opened
Suudav. eepl
The Coffee Club will serve lemonade
and cake at Fraternity hall one evening
next week, after which there will be
dancing. Everybody is invited. Ad
mission, 25 cents.
Mr. Kinersly found a check for ten
dollars drawn in favor of Mrs. M. King
in his store yesterday. Owner can have
the same by calling for it at the Snipes
& Kinersly drug store..
At Cloud Cap Inn, Sunday the ther
mometer stood at 79 in the shade, the
warmest day ever known there. As the
Inn is more than 7(XKJ feet above eea
level, and almost on the glacier, this
heat seems almost impossible.
All persons who are interested in
forming a local union of the various
young people's socities in The Dalles
will please meet at the Cong'l. church,
tomorrow evening (Tuesday) at 8 o'clock
p. m. All are cordially invited to come.
The public schoolhousea of this city
will be open for inspection by. the public
from 9 a. m . to 4 p. m., Thursday. ' The
public generally and .those . who have
children attending the schools partic
ularly, are invited to visit the buildings
' and satisfy themselves as to their com
fort, convenience and. sanitary con
ditions. The Salvation Army continues' to
gather large crowds, both at their out
door meetings and at the hall. The ex
ercises at the hall would naturally make
anyone passing by think an old fash
To go as far as $2 00 in ordinary
and places, take your Dollar and
And supply your wants from
CLEARANCE SALE. : : : :
PEASE
ioned minstrel show as going on inside.
We fancy that most of the crowd go
simply to be amused, and not on account
of being smitten with the spectacular
form of worship.
There was a small sized runaway yes
terday . evening, a little one for a bit,
the run being made by a pair of horses
hitched to a light spring wagon. They
were caught on First street near the
Cosmopolitan, before any damage was
done. .
Hon. -Robert Mays came in irom An
telope yesterday. He tells ns the crops
in that neighborhood are the best ever
known. An immense amount of hay
has been put in stack, and every stock
raiser is prepared to stand any kind of a
winter. . -
J ust remember if you have any bills
against the county (.hat the sooner they
are in the better. . After next Tuesday
all bills presented will remain unacted
upon until November. By putting the
bills iu early it facilitates the work of
the clerk as well as the court, for then
they are properly docketed.
- County Judge Elakeley is having the
vault in which the record of the county
clerk's office are kept overhauled and re
paired. The shelves have become so
crowded that there was no longer room
for the books and everything was very
inconvenient. New shelves are being
put in, which will make room for the
books for the next ten years.
The latest from the Regulator is that
her cargo is safe and uninjured, but that
there is about three feet of water In her
engine room. She struck against a
sunken pile and knocked a bole in her
hull just forward of the after gangway,
twelve feet long by about four wide. It
is further stated that she will not be
able to make her regular trips for four
days.
Jndge Wis wall's 8 accessor. '
Governor McGraw of Washington yes
terday appointed A. L. Miller of Van
couver . superior judge for the counties
of Skamania, Clarke and Cowlitz, to suc
ceed Juige Wiswall, recently drowned.
Miller received the endorsement of
every member of the bar in the three
counties, irrespective of party, with two
exceptions. Judge Bloom 6eld of Van
couver has also been seeking the ap
pointment.
Judge Miller is 31 years of age, and a
repub'ican. He possesses every quali
fication necessary to acquit himself with
credit in the administration of - the
duties of the office to which he has been
appointed. He filled with honor the
office of district attorney for the conn-
ties of Clarke. Klickitat and Skamania,
from 1S88 to 1890. and again, as prosecut
ing attorney of Clarke county from 1890
to 1892.. He was the choice of his party
in JS92 for superior judge, bat, with al
most the entire republican ticket in tne
county and district, was defeated by a
email majority.-. ;
He is the son of G. W. Miller of this
city,- .
Real K.tate Transactions.
The following deeds were filed; for
record yesterday afternoon : . '..
E. P. FitzGerald and Elizabeth Fitz
Gerald to Joseph Sherar, lots 1, 2, 7, 9
and 12, block 5,: Laughlin'a addition to
Dalles City; $2000.
James A. Balch to Wm. Boorman, ten
acres in sec 3, t 2 n of r 10 e ; $450.
United States to Preston Redman,
ne, eec 34, tp 2 n of r 14 e ; patent.
times
. .
our
:
& MAYS.
A New Factor in Transcontinental Rates.
On the eve of the meeting of repre
sentatives of the transcontinental rail
roads in Chicago today, having in view
the revival of the defunct Transcontinen
tal Association and the raising of rates,
comes a "paralyzer" in . the form of a
tariff into Portland of the Panama Rail
road Company and Columbian line
steamers, cutting the rates away below
those of the Southern Pacific's
Sunset route and the Great Northern's
lake and rail route.
The Telegram Saturday summarized
the principal difficulties in the way of a
reorganization of the; Transcontinental
Association as a rate-raising expedient,
showing the situation a deplorable one
for the railroads, and the new tariff ot
the Panama line cannot but add to the
present demoralization. ; The quickest
service via Panama to Portland is about
30 days, the longest 50 days, - depending
upon the connections made at Panama
between the Columbian and the Pana
ma steamships. The lake, rail and
canal service is 23 days, by the Erie
canal, Northern steamship line and
Great Northern ; The lake and rail ser
vice, rail to Buffalo instead of canal, is
14 days, and the best all-rail service,
carloads is 12 days. On many classes'of
freights the difference in time is of little
consequence. ' The " Panama . line ' has
never heretofore issued a tariff to Port
land. Its doing so just at the time the
transcontinental lines are trying to re
vive their old association may be a play
for a subsidy, but whatever the cause,
the effect remains the cutting of rates to
a point far below any other published
tariff in effect. The classes rates on the
first three classes, Western classification,
are less than half that in effect by rail
from Chicago to Portland.
The Food taplea of the Future to be
Blade ta Factories.
Prom an Interview with Professor Berthelot, the
French chemist, iu MCUlure s Magazine lor
September.
"Do you mean to predict that all our
milk, engs, meat and flour will in the
future be made in factories?" -
Why not, if it proves cheaper and
better to make the eame materials than
to grow them? The first steps, and you
know that it is always the first step that
costs, have already been taken. It is
many years, you must remember, since
I first, succeeded in making fat direct
from its elements. I do not say that we
shall - give you artificial beefsteaks at
once, nor do I say that we ehall give
you the beefsteak as we now obtain and
cook it. we shall give you tne same
identical food, however, .chemically,
digestively and. nutritively speaking,
Iu form will differ, because it will prob
ably be a tablet. -. But it will be a tablet
of any color and shape that is desired,
and will, ! think, entirely satisfy the
epicurean senses of the future ; for, you
must remember, that the beefsteak of
today is not the most perfect of pictures
either in color or composition."
' Tea- and coffee could now be made
artificially," 'continued the professor, "if
the necessity; should arise, or. the com
mercial opportunity, through .the nec
essary supplementary . mechanical in
ventions, had been reached.
"And what about tobacco?'
. 'The essential principle of tobacco, as
you know, is nicotine. We have ob
tained pure nicotine, whose chemical
constitution ia perfectly . understood, by
treating ealuuiine, a natural glucoside,
with hydrogen. Synthetic chemistry
has, not make nicotine directly as yet.
but it has very nearly reached it, and
We have again on hand
an abundance of strictly
dry FIR WOOD, which
we will sell at the lowest
rates.
MAIEB & BENTON.
the laboratory manufacture of nicotine!
may fairly be expected at any time. I
Conine, the poisonous principle of hem
lock, has been made synthetically, and
it is so close in its constitution to nico
tine, and so clearly of the same class,
that only its traueformation into nico
tine remains to, be mastered, a problem
which is not very difficult when com
pared with others which have been
solved. The parent compound from
which nicotine of commerce will be
made, exists largely in coal tar."
The Regulator Damaged.
A telephone message received here
about 11 o'clock 'his morning announced
that the Regulator had struck on a rock
and sunk. It created considerable ex
citement for a few moments, as the lo
cation was not given, and those who had
friends among her passengers were
naturally anxious concerning them. A
disDatch received a little later gave
further particulars. ' The accident oc
curred at the incline at the Cascades.
The boat was heavily loaded, having
among other freight about 70 tons o
wool, and as the wind was blowing hard
she swung in against the piling wiih
considerable force. One of the piles
broke off, and the stump broke through
her planking a out the after gangway.
It was not supposed at the time that
she had received any damage and the
passengers were all ashore before tbe
injury was discovered. She was then
crowded further in shore until she rested
on the beach. The cargo was not dam
aged. As soon as the nature of the
damage was learned tne Day Bros sent
down a big pump, which with those on
board will keep her afloat. It is thought
she can be repaired in. time to get up to
night or early in the morning.
He's All Right.
The Portland evening Telegram of the
25th savs :
The wife of R. E. L. Simmons of the
drug firm of Heppner & Simmons, pre
sented her husband with a 10-poiind
baby boy Thursday morning and the
event had such an effect upon the father
that his business partner, in order to
preserve the firm's reputation, has been
forced to issue a statement saying that
until further notice, patrons and old
friends will please take cognizance of
tbe fact that this firm will in no way be
responsible for any of the acts of Mr. S.
until his mind is restored to its normal
condition."
Wanted.
A widow with one child wants a posi
tion as housekeeper or housework in the
country.- Apply to Mrs. M. Smith,
European hotel. The Dalles, Or.
A girl to do housework. Apply at
this office. ....
St
m
THE DALLES, OR.
EE-OPENS SEPTEMBER 3d, 1894.
BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL FOB GIRLS.
Kates per terra of ten weeks,
payable in advance:
Board and Tuition..!'.'. f40 00
Entrance Fee payable but once).... b 00
Bi d and Bedding 3 00
Instrumental Muoic, Type-writing, Telegraphy,
Drawing and fainting form extra charges.
French, (ierroan, Latin, Needlework and Vocal
Music taugut free of charge to regular pupils.
BA1KS i'OK DAY-HmLa. 5, $6, f8 or 10 per
term acordirg to grade.
For further particulars address,
. BISTER bUPKRIOK.
Mary
Academy
G-ents' Furnishings,
Boots and Shoes,
Ladies' Hosiery,
Ladies' Kid Shoes,
Ladies' Underwear,
Children's School Shoes,
A Thorough Clearance Sale.
Watch our Center Window for Bargains.
Order Groceries,
Telephone No. 20.
EUROPEAN HOUSE,
Best Hotel in the City.
NEW and FIRST-CLASS.
fit a 5aerifiee.
-
Summer Dry Goods,
Clothing, Hats,
Shoes, Etc., Etc.
NOW 18 THE
G-KBAT BABG-AI1TS.
TERMS STRICTLY CTKShi.
Jtye Sariff Bill 4
ItTSurqs (gfyeap (foods
And if you don't "believe it, go to
H. flAflKlS' DKY GOODS flOUSE
and "be convinced of this fact.
A Large Invoice of Dry Goods Clothing, Etc., just ar
rived. A fine assortment to select from.
Successor to
-DEALER IN-
PAINTS, OILS AND GLASS.
And the Most .Complete and Latest Patterns and Designs in
WALL PAPER. WALL PAPER.
PRACTICAL' PAINTER and PAPER HANGER. ' None but the best brands
of J. W:' MASURY'S. PAINTS , nsed. in all' our work, and none but the
most skilled workmen 'employed.- "Agents for Masury: Liquid Paints. No-chem-icel
combination or soap mixture. A first-class article . in all colors. Ail orders
promptly' attended to. '.''', ,
Store and Faint Shoo corner Third and "Washington. 8t The Dalles, 0reo
THE CALIFORNIA WINEHOUSE.
ALL. KINDS OF ;
California Wines at Low Prices.
FREE DELIVERY TO flflY PAST Op THE CITY.
Call on or address CHS. BBCHT The Dalles, Or.
Calicoes,
Men's French Calf Shoes,
Amoskeags,
Oxford Ties, ;
Outing Flannels,
Quincy Cloth.
JOLES, CQLLIf:C0.
PHOTOGRAPHER.
Chapman Block, . The Dalles, Oregon.
I have taken 11 first prizes.
OCR -
TIME TO 8ECTJBJE
Paul Kref t & Co.