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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1894)
A TIRED WOMA N, fust as much as a sick and ailing ne, needs Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. That . builds up, strengthens, and invigorates the entire female system. , It regulates and promotes all the proper func tions of -womanhood, improves di gestion, enriches the blood, dispels aohes and pains, melancholy and nervousness, brings refreshing sleep, and restores health and strength. It's a powerful restorative tonic and. soothing nervine, made espe cially for woman's needs, and the only guaranteed remedy for wo man's weaknesses and ailments. In all " female complaints " and irregu larities, if it ever fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. A great many medicines " relieve " Catarrh in the Head. That means that it's driven from the head into the throat and lungs. But, by its mild, soothing, cleansing and healing properties, Dr. Sage's Catarrh Rem edy perfectly and permanently cures. "Don't you think Miss Comingirl a trifle mannish?" "A trifle! When a girl has her bloomers made with two pistol pockets I call her more than a trifle mannish." Indianapolis Journal. Deafness -Cannot be Cored By local applications, as tbey cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure Deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed yon have a' rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, andjanless the inflammation can be taken oat and this tube restored to its normal condi tion, hearing will be destroyed forever ; nine cases 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 catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars,-free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. ESSF'Sold by Druggists, 75c. Mrs. Bingo Can't I have a bicycle, dear? Bingo Pshaw! you'll never learn. Mrs. Bingo Well, I've had enough practice working the sewing ma chine. New York Herald. Strength and Health. If you are not feeling strong and healthy, try Electric Bitters. If "la grippe" has left you weak and wear", use Electric Bitters. This remedy acta directly on liver, stomach and kidneys, gently aiding those organs to perform their functions. If you are afflicted with sick headache, you will find speedy and permanent relief by taking Electric Bitters.' One trial will convince you that this is the remedy you need. Large bottles only 50c. at Snipes '& Kinersly's drag store, j " "You are engaged to him ttien? "Yes." "Has he any money?" "No, but that doeBn't matter ; this is only a seaside .engagement, you know." New York Press. ' While in Chicago, Mr. Charles L. Sahler, a prominent shoe merchant of Des Moines, Iowa, had quite a serious time of it. He took such, a severe cold that he could hardly talk or navigate, but the prompt use of Chamberlain's 'Cough Remedy cured him so quickly that others at the hotel who had bad colds followed his example and half a dozen persons ordered it from the near est drug store. They were profuse in their thanks to Mr. Kahler for telling them how to cure a bad cold so quickly. For sale byBlakeley & Houghton Drug gists. Beggar Will you give me a dime? I am starving. Bilkins (hurrying past him) So am I and I'm going to be late for dinner if I don't look sharp. Chicago Record. . Bncklen's Arlnca Salve. The best salve in the world lor cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fevei 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 by Snipes & Kin ersly. 1 . "She's the most abandoned woman I ver heard of." "You don't say so?" "Yes, sir. No, less than six husbands have deserted her." Tammany Times. For Colie and Grub . In my mules and horses, I give Simmons liver Regulator. I have not lost ne I gave it to. E. T. TatiQB, Agt. for Grangers of Ga. Many a man is afraid of ghosts and still is not afraid of spirits. Florida Times Union. MONEY CAUSES TROUBLE. Manj Fierce Hatreds Begin at the Bead ing of the Win. Of all things, after jealousy of which, indeed, it is part and parcel, the visible substance of the unseen feeling' money is the most potent factor in the creation of domestic rows. To see a set of expectant heirs all wait ing on the reading bf the will, ' and to note the disappointment of those who have not been well endowed, and their frantic jealousy of and fiery anger against those who have, is to see an object lesson in human nature among the most saddening and degrading that exist. By reason of those legacies all the former love is forgotten, and a hatred like to nothing so much as the fire of hell takes its place. Brothers and sis ters glower at one another over the lump sum given to one and the small annuity doled out to another, with the thundering residuum that goes to perhaps the already richest member of the family, or the portion which cre ates the head out of one of the minor joints of the tail. How many affec tions have received their death blow by the side of that divided heap of money where each legatee thought himself defrauded by all that the oth ers had received, and where there were disappointed heads by as many as there were joints in the tail left in their natural condition. It is an exceptional nature that can take coolly the disappointed expecta tion formed by vanity or cupidity of the legacy to come after such and such a death, writes Mrs. Lynn Linton, in the Queen.- For, indeed, money is the touch-stone par excellence of character, and baser hopes do sometimes so often mingle in even with love where the lover is poor and the beloved is wealthy. Then comes the crash, and then follows the row; and flames burst out where the flowers once bloomed and the sweet waters once flowed. ' HE WAS MOVING. And for a Wonder His Belongings Did Not Crowd the Van. A young man on the South side had two rooms in a flat building and had furnished them himself. He had all the comforts of a home such as a fold ing bed, a dresser and a set of boxing gloves. His lease expired on May 1, and he had some other rooms engaged, but he required two weeks in which to screw up his courage to the moving point, says the Chicago Record. He hired a brawny man to do the packing. The carpets, the bookcase and the other traps, including two trunks, made a formidable showing, and when he telephoned the transfer company he said: "Send one of your largest wagons." Next morning early there was a rap at his door and the brawny man said: "The wagon is here." Before anything was carried down stairs he went out in" front just to as sure himself that the wagon was large enough. He found that it was. It" re sembled a storage warehouse on wheels. It was as large as the Barnum cave in which travel the two hippopo tami. The driver sat on tne roof, away up in the air, and the horses were dwarfed into ponies. When the back doors were opened there yawned a cavernous interior in which two sets could have danced a quadrille There was no doubt about it being large enough. After a,U the earthly posses sions of the young man had been pushed into one corner, the captain of the van asked where the rest of the stuff was to be found. "That's all," said the youna man. 'All! That's not enough for ballast. Why didn't you get a wheelborrow?" "I didn't know they had any wagons so big," stammered the humiliated young man. His property did make a paltry showing. When he paid the bill he was sorry that he hadn't used a wheelborrow. - BEAVERS NOT EXTINCT. Traces of the Busy Little Animals Found In the Adirondacks. It has been supposed that beavers were long extinct iu the Adirondacks, but fresh work by them has been found on the outlet of Lake Meacham, twenty-five miles south of Malone. This discovery has attracted a good deal of attention from the guides and hunters. Beavers feed on the bark of the birch, willow, alder and poplar, and it is their habit to lay by stores of food in the summer. Guides who were fishing on Meacham outlet recently found sticks of poplar of varying length and diameter, from half an inch to an inch, cut almost as neatly at each end as if the work could have been done with the knife. It-was unmistakably the work of beavers. It would add largely to the charm of . the Adirondacks if beavers were again to establish themselves there and erect their strange habitations. The game laws now forbid the trapping or kill ing of these animais at any time of the year. - Original Phrasing. There are many wonderful dialects in existence, says Harper's Magazine. One of these is what might be called the suburban domestic dialect; that used by servants in the rural commu nities in the daily routine of house work. l Several examples have come to hand. A suburbanite was greeted, one morning, as he entered his dining room, with this choice specimen: "Mr. J., the colt has friz the pipes. They've bust, and the cellar's all afloat!" The same domestic, while at work in the hall adjoining the library where her employer was writing, thinking he might prefer not to witness the .opera tion of polishing the floor, entered the room, and said: "Mr. J., do you want the door cluz, or the curtains drew?" A Superior People. In China Ts'aichow men are a su perior race. They are the Chinese Four Hundred . nn rl Tm.t.iv n -n i fim .r distinguishes them in an altogether unusual way. xne surgeons say that while all other Chinamen have eight pieces of bone from the neck to the top of the head Ts'aichow men are the proud possessors of nine. THRIVING ON PERSECUTION. The Gypsies of Hungary -Still Maintain Their Ancient Customs Unchanged. In Hungary there are, according to a rough estimate, about one hundred and fifty thousand gypsies, vagabonds who wander about the country with their carts and horses, accompanied by their women and children; and . though at one time persecuted as unbelievers and -hunted to death as sorcerers and poi soners, the cruel edicts which enjoined such treatment were never sympathized in by the Hungarian people. The re sult is, as we learn from "The Peoples of the World," that the gypsies have increased, and, in their own thriftless, squalid fashion, prospered, despite the hard usage they have received at the hands of their rulers. Indeed, the Hun garian kings have more than once pro tected them as a "poor wandering peo ple . without a country, and whom all the world rejected," and granted them safe conducts to go wherever seemed good to them, with their troops of donkeys . and horses. Joseph II. of Austria-tried to settle them as agricul turists, and had huts built for them. But instead of occupying the comfort able dwellings themselves, they stabled their cattle in them and pitched their tents outside. Then, to prevent their corn from sprouting, they boiled it be fore sowing; and though their children were taken from them and trained up into 'habits of work under Magyar and German peasants, these wildlings soon escaped and joined their parents, with out having learned any thing from their foreible apprenticeship to civilization. It is affirmed that a gypsy who had actually risen to the rank of an officer in the Austrian army disappeared one day and was found six months after ward with a band of Zingari encamped on the heath. A young Slovack peasant fell in love with and married a gypsy girl, but in his absence she escaped to the woods, and, when discovered, was sleeping under the skies and feeding on hedgehogs, after the fashion of the race from whom she had been taken. Abbe Liszt, charmed with the talent for music displayed by a gypsy boy, took him to Paris and tried to train the little lad. But all in vain. The mo ment he saw his own people in "Vienna his delight was indescribable; there was no longer any hope of keeping him under the restraint of polite life. FLAX CULTURE IN EUROPE. Russia Grows- More of This Crop Than Any Country in the World. Our principal supply of the raw ma terial, says Chambers' Journal, is im ported from Russia, where the plant has long been, and still is, cultivated more extensively than in any other country in the world; but there the culture of the crop and preparation of the . fiber receive less care and atten tion than in any other flax-producing country. This neglect may be ac counted for by the immense tracts under crop and also by much thinner sowing than is practiced in other coun tries in order to give the plant greater strength and more numerous branches, to prevent it beintr laid during the vio lent thunderstorms hat prevail about the time it is in flower. The result of this treatment, however, is a coarse fiber, and also a very much inferior yield to that grown thicker and under more favorable circumstances of soil and attention in its early stages. Ger many, Austria and France will follow Russia as flax-producing countries, and in each of these an average area of over two hundred thousand acres is kept under this crop. In Holland flax is grown principally for the seed, and the planting and growth of the crop, as well as the time for pulling, is regu lated for this purpose. By properly maturing the seed the quality of the fiber is injured and renders the subse quent process more difficult; but the Dutch farmers are amply remunerated by the high price obtained for the seed, which has for agricultural pur poses a world-wide' fame, and is chiefly sown in Britain, although Riga seed is also used and preferred by some grow ers as being more hardy. It is Bel gium, however, to which we must turn to see flax in the highest state of culti vation, where nothing is neglected that can in any measure improve the quan tity, and more especially of the quality of the crop. Here proper rotation of the crops, superior tillage and liberal manuring of the land are attended to in a manner not seen elsewhere, and to this the careful, plodding Belgian farmers owe their success in raising other crops as well as flax, and which has earned for them the reputation they enjoy of being the most successful agriculturists in the world. . EXTRAVAGANT MILL GIRLS. Tbey Beeelve Fairly Good Wages, But Are Averse to Savins;. In the great carpet mills of Philadel phia, where, it is claimed, more carpet is made in a single ward than in the whole of England, the actual competi tion of . women with men is a marked feature; in many cases, says Lippin- cott's Magazine, they earn equal pay for the same work. In these mills the burlers earn from $6 to $10 a week. They work from 7 in the morning till 6 at night, with half an hour off for din ner. -Those who do not live at home can get good board for $2 a week, leav ing quite a large margin for dress or for savings. It would be of great ben efit to them if they could acquire the habit of systematic saving, but to this they are generally averse. Some of them do save, however, and it is no un common thing for a mill girl to save 8300 or $400 before marriage. The first few years of married life are safely tided over by the united savings of the couple, and it is unusual for the chil dren not to begin work by ' the time they are 14. They can earn 83.50 and upwards, and this sum, as a rule, goes into the family treasury. Thus there will often be five or six bread-winners in a family, and, if thrifty, a neat lit tle sum may be laid away. Thrift and economy are, however, rather ex ceptional virtues among the mill work ers. They eat, twice a day, the most expensive meat (18 and 18 cents per pound), and pay extravagant sums for early vegetables. talis U A substitute for lard? Upsetting the customs, hab its, and prejudices of cen turies? Yes,, all this and more. Cottolene is a new cooking product it is bet-. tertha.a lard or butter for cooking, so say such noted housekeepers as Marlon Harland, Catharine Owen, Christine) Terhuna Harriet Emma P. Ewing, Mrs. S. T. Rorer, Mrs. F. A. Banian, Amy Barnes, Margaret Wister, and many others; it is healthier so says every thoughtful physician; and it is cheaper as every house keeper knows when she finds that one-half the. quan tity answers every purpose. OQTIOLEf; is the purest clarified cot tonseed oil mixed with pure beef fat. It is the cook ing material ever devised .for frying anything and everything easily digested and highly nutritious. . '. Beware of imitations. Ask your grocer for the genuine Cottolene. Mass by N. K. FAIRBANK & CO., ST. LOUIS and CHICAGO, NEW YORK, BOSTON "The Regulator Line" Tie Dalles, Portland, aiii Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Freiani ann Passenser Line Throuch Dailv Trips (Sundays ex cepted) Between The Dalles and Port land, steamer .Regulator leaves xne Dalles at 7 a.m.. connecting at tne Uaa- cade Locks with Steamer Dalles City, Steamer Dalles Uity leaves .Portland (Yamhill st. dock) at 6 a. m., connect ing with Steamer Regulator for The Dalles. - - PABBBIiUBS KATES. - One way Round trip. . .$2 XX) . 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 wav litndincrfi rnnnt-. ha delivered hefnra 6 p.m. .Lave stocK smpments sonccea Call on or address, W. C. ALLAWAY, General Agent. B. F. LAUGHLIN, General Manager. THE-DALLES, OREGON J I FOED, Evangelist, Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes under date ol March 23, 1898: -. S. B. Mkd. Mfg. Co., Dufur, 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 pounds, is now well, stronz 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, ALB. & MBS. J. J!. i0RD. If you wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and read; for the Spring's work, cleanse your system with the Headaohe and Liver Cure, by taking two or three doses each week. Bold under a positive guarantee. 60 cents per bottle by aU druggists. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. TJ. S. Land Office, The Dalles, Or., (' August 11. 1894. i Notice is hereby given that the following named settler has filed notice of his intention to make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be made before the register and receiver of the U. S. Land office at The Dalles, Or., on Bspt, 28, 1894, viz: Alvln B. Lake, H. E. No. 4612, for the NW, NEJ4, See. 35, SWV. SEl and EX. SWV Sec. 26. T 4 S. K 11 E. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultivation of said land, viz. : J. R. Woodcock, I. D. Driver, 8. G. Ledford, of wamic: 1. J. JJ river, oi xne uauea. - JAS. F..MOORE, Register. , NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. . TJ. 8. Land Office, The Dalles, Or.,) July 26, 1894. Complaint having been entered at this office by Frank Malone against John Vredt for aban doning his homestead entry, No. 4833, dated March 28, 1892, upon the EA SWJi, NWK 6WW and BWii NW, Sec 10, Tp. 8 8, R 18 E, IB Wasco County. Oregon, with a view to the can cellation of said entry, the said parties are here by summoned to appear at this office on the 19th day of September, 1894, at 10 o'clock a. m., to respond and furnish testimony concerning said alleged abandonment. E. M. Shutt, U. 6. Com missioner, is authorized to take testimony at Antelope, Oregon, on September 12th, 1894, at 10 o'clock a. m. ' JAS. F. MOOKE, Register. ' nn ei7 York Weekly AND- ONLY lisai Weekly 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., MMolo Dalles, Oregon. There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at its Jif?4 leads on to fortune" .- . The poet unquestionably had reference to the . . Cisii -OfltSalfil at CRANDALL Who are selling those tioods MTCHKLKACH BRICK. BuNIX! Pipe woik, Tig Bepairs ana Roofing MAINS TAPPED TJTTDER PRESSURE. Chop on Third Street, next door west of Young & Rubs' ' Blacksmith Shop. " THE CELEBRATED COLUMBIA BREWERY- AUGUST BUCHLER, Prop'r. ' ' This well-known Brewery ia now turning out the best Beer and Portei east of the Cascades. The latest appliances for the manufacture of good health ful Beer have been introduced, and ony the first-class article will be placed on he market. , - ' tribune rear, - $1.75. Mir I. rands & SURG EX'S, out at greatly-reduced rates. - - UNION ST. : - aCLa fn f i y