The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, October 01, 1894, Image 2

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    Tho Dalles Daily Chroniels.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
by xa.11., roaTAes ruun, m adtahc.
Weekly, 1 year.
" 0 months.,
14 8 ..
Dally, 1 year .".
" 6 months
.SIM
. 0 75
. 060
. 6 00
. 8 00
per
. 0 50
Addreas all communication to " THE CHKON
(OLE." The Dalles, Oregon.
MONDAY. - -
OCTOBER 1, 1894
BEET SUGAR INDUSTRY.
Until sites are chosen for the two beet
, sugar refineries, which an enterprising
company intends to establish in this
state, the machinery now being ruanu
iactnred in ' Germany, will not be
shipped. At least that is the statement
given out for publication by a piominent
member of the company in Portland.
"We will erect two factories one in
Eastern Oregon and one in the Willam
ette valley," he said, "but their exact
location haa not yet been decided. Nu
merous offers of land have been received
by us, and they are under consideration.
When we have made our selections, the
machinery will be shipped to us, pro
vided it is ready for shipment. I can
not state with any degree of certainty
when we will be ready to. begin build
ing, but believe that the time is not far
distant when we will be ready to make
'contracts for beets."
; It was the opinion of the gen tern an
quoted that the new tariff law will not
seriously interlere with the beet scgar
industry in this state. He ' explained
that ' while the McKinley ' bounty has
: been abolished, there is still an ad
. valorem duty on refined sugar sufficient
, to make its manufacture from beets
profitable to both the producer and the
refiner. Practical experiments in differ
ent parts of this state have demonstrated
- the fact that an average profit of $40 per
'. acre can be made by beet cultivation
. much more than can be derived from
any other branch of agriculture. True
it is that beet-raising demands more at
. tention than any other crop, but the per
' centage of saccharine matter in the beet
rewards the grower according to his in-.
dustry. To promote careful cultivation,
the factories will put a graded price on
' the raw product.
No trouble is anticipated in finding a
. home market for all the eugar that the
two factories will be able to turn out.
Professor G. W. Shaw, of the agricul
tural college at Gorvallis, who has made
' exhaustive inquiry into the beet sugar
question, found that Portland alone con
sumes and distributes about 25,000,000
pounds of sugar per annum. That is
more than a dozen beet suagar factories
could manufacture in a single season.
By locating its Willamette valley-fac-
. tory within a short distance of Portland;
the new company hopes to be able to
undersell the San Francisco refiners in
that city.
A GREAT DUTY.
The Oregonian yesterday has au arti
cle concerning the management of state,
county and city affairs that is directly to
the point and filled with good bard horse
6en8e. We regret that lack of space pre
, vents our re-printing it, but we console
ourselves by clipping the concluding
paragraph :
"Never before has an Oregon legisla
ture had such summons to duty as rests
upon the one that will convene in Janu
ary. Our whole official system has be
come honeycombed with practices
which to nee no harsher terms, are bur
densome to the taxpayer and destructive
to the state. Offices are sought for
their emoluments, and "worked for all
'.there is in them." Extravagance,
looseness and recklessness of expendi
ture have prevailed in legislative balls
and department offices. It should be
the business of this legislature to reform
uieeB aDuses, ana put tne state upon a
career of honesty and economy such as
honored its early yeare. The voice of
the people has called it Into life for that
..end, and their eyes are .upon iXf'J
Senator Mitchell, in an interview con
. cermng the probable candidates for
president, -after going over the 'field
pretty thoroughly, gives as his opinion
as to the most available man on the re
"" publican side the name of Senator Cam
; eron of Pennsylvania. He says that
events may transpire between now and
the time of making the nominations that
may make some other candidate 'more
available, but that at the present time
s Cameron would lead all others. We
confess .our inability to understand by
; what, process of reasoning the senator
reaches this conclusion, as candidates
as strong or stronger can be found fn
every state. Senator Allison of Iowa is
a stronger and far abler man than Cam
eron. Besides he comes from the West.
The members of the Oregon Press
Association from Western Oregon will
' pass through tonight on their way to
Pendleton to attend the. annual. meeting
of the association, which will be called
to order at that place- tomorrow. They
are a jolly lot and we regret with an
upper case R, our inability to go with
them, for we know we will miss lots of
fun, and the very best time that can be
crowded into forty-eight hours. Wh"en
Pendleton and the Press meet, the glow
ing hours and flying feet will have such
a chase as would gladden the eyes of a
blind man to see. ' Pendleton knows
liow to entertain, and the, Oregon news
paper men, God bless 'em, leave their
diffidence with the devil when they go
away from home.
The czar of all the Russias is a very
sick man. One learned doctor says he
has Bright disease in an advanced stage
and another says Le has neurasthenia
coupled with anemia, in addition to
kidney disease. They agree in one
thing, and that is that at the beet the
czar can only live a few months, so that
he can console himself with the r'efiec
tion that it does not matter which one is
right. - '
Our editorial page was slightly mixed
Saturday. However the matter was all
there, and you can arrange it to suit
yourself. '
Purely vegetable Dr. Pierce's Pleas
ant Pellets. They're a compound of re
fined and concentrated botanical ex
tracts. These tiny, sugar-coated pellets
the smallest and the easiest to take
absolutely and permanently cure Con
stipation, Indigestion, Sick and Bilious
Headaches, Dizziness, Bilious Attacks
and all derangements of the liver, stom
ach and bowels.
They cure permanently, because they
act naturally. They don't shock and
weaken the system, like the huge, old
fashioned pills. And they're more effec
tive. One little pellet for a corrective or
laxative three for a cathartic.
They're the cheapest pills you can buy
for they're guaranteed to give satisfac
tion, or your money is returned.
You pay only for the good you get.
VIGILANCE AG AfNST THE PEST.
What Happened to Kate Field in a Fifth
Avenue Omnibus In New York.
If Kate Field, of Washington, were
not a woman whose word cannot be
questioned, this story of an occurrence
in a Fifth avenue omnibus would not
be believed. A friend and herself had
entered the vehicle, says the New
York Press, and another woman and a
man followed at intervals of a block
or two apart. Presently a gentleman
got in who was recognized as one of the
most eminent physicians in New York.
He made his way up to the front of the
omnibus and sat quiet for a minute or
two, then turned and looked earnestly
up and down the two sides on which his
leiiow passengers were seated, a. mo
ment later he pulled the strap and
stepped to the door.
"Ladies,"' said he, "one of you has
smallpox. I shall have to trouble you
all to lift your veils." The narrator and
her companion responded at once, but
the other woman held back. The man
arose and beat a hasty retreat, the doc
tor noiding open tne door, but saying
as ne did so: You would be wiser, sir,
to come with us and be vaccinated.
The man came back and took his seat
quietly in the omnibus, and the doctor
ordered the driver to drive at once to
the stable, 'which he did. From the
stable the doctor telephoned for an
ambulance, in which ' the woman who
had refused to lift her veil was taken
away to the hospital, she having bo-
come thoroughly frightened by that
time and offering no resistance. The
doctor procured some fresh vaccine
from a neighboring druggist and vac
cinated the two ladies and their male
fellow passenger.
He explained that he had detected
the odor of the disease on entering the
omnibus, and that it was only by such
prompt action as his that it would be
possible to stamp out the epidemic in
the great city.
That Altered the Case.
Of the late French Senator Kenaud
the Kolnische Zeitung tells the follow
ing anecdote:
vvnen Kenaud nrst came as senator
to Paris from his home in the Pyrenees
ne engaged a room at a hotel and paid
a month's rent one hundred and fifty
iranes in advance. The proprietor
asked him if he would have a receipt.
"It is not necessary," replied Eenaud.
"God has witnessed the payment."
"Do you believe 'in God?" sneered the
host.
"Most assuredly," replied Benaud,
"don't you?"
"Not I, monsieur."
"Ah," said the senator, "in that case
please make me out a receipt."
Female Garments.
The leaves of the sensitive plant
shrink from a touch; but Mrs. Claflin,
in her "Personal Recollections of Whit
tier," tells of a man so sensitive as to
shrink from the sight of a woman's
dress, even when it was hanging harm
lessly from pegs and hooks.
An old Quaker friend, a bachelor,
visited Mr. Whittier When the hour
for retiring came he was 6hown to his
room. Soon afterward, he called from
the top of the stairs, in an excited tone:
"I think thee has made a mistake,
Friend Wftiltier. I find female gar
ments izi my room!"
. "Thce d better go to bed," replied
the poet: "the female garments will
not h:jrt thro."'
To eradicate the poisons which pro
duce fever and ague, take Ayer's Ague
Cure. It cures without leaving any in
jurious effect upon the system, and is
the only medicine in existence which
may be considered an absolute antidote,
for malaria.
Cord Wood.
We again have an abundant supply of
dry fir and bard wood for immediate
delivery at the lowest rates, and hope to
be fayored with a liberal share of the
trade. Jos. T. Pbtebs fe Co.
bvain sacks
for sale at the
Wasco
tf
warehouse.
Taken Up.
On Bay Horse, weieht about 1000 lbs : hrnnriari
Invert, d V with perpendicular line through It.
on rght shoulder; branded on left shoulder.
Same may be had by calling at Joles, Collins 5c
Co's Feed Yard and paying coats. octl
he Best Medicine.'-
I. O. Wilson, Contractor and.
i cildcr, Sulphur Springs, Texas,
tl i us speaks of .flyer's Pills:
" Ayer's Pills are the best medicine I
ever tried; and, in my judgment, no
bettor general remedy could be devised.
I have used tliein in my family and
recomineuded them to my friends and
employes for more than twenty years..'
To ray certain knowledge, many cases
of the following complaints have been
completely and .
Permanently Cured V.
by the use of Ayer's Pills alone: Third,
day chills, dumb ague, bilious feve,
sick headache, rheumatism, flux, dys-.
pepsia, constipation, and hard colds. I
know that a moderate use of Ayer's
Pills, continued for a few days or weeks,
as the nature of the complaint required,
would be found an absolute cure for the
ilisoiNlers I have named above."
"I have been selling medicine for
ii-hr Yc-irs, and I can safely say that
i yrr's Pills frive better satisfaction
than any other Pill I ever sold." J. J.
I orry, Spottsylvnnia C. H., Ya. . f
AYER'S PILLS
;ured by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co Lowell, Masai
Cwery Dose. Effective
THIS.
TLACE
RESERVED
FOR
J. B. CROSSEN'S
FIRST
CLASS
FAMILY -
GROCERY
STORE.
A Letter.
The Dau.es, Or., Sept. 2S, 1894.
THE KRAKICH & BACH PIANO
, has won
GOLDEN OPINIONS FROM ALL
sorts of people.
AT A REDUCED PRICE '
I have
STILL ONE LEFT AT ONLY $270.
Former price, $350.
To the music-lovers, I have only just opened
the door. There is being prepared inside a feast
whieh I will shortly spread before you. In the
meantime I offer you bargains that will whet
your appetite for more. ,
Yours verj truly,
I. C. NICKELSEN.
Guard's Sale of Real Estate.
Notice is hereby (riven thnt the undprsfenp!.
guardian of the parson and estate of Nanev
(Stanley, an aged and infirm person, by virtue of
an oraer or me county i-outi or the state of
Oregon for Wasco County, in probate, made and
entered on the 4th day o September, A. D.,
1894, at the regular September term of said
Court for the year 1894, will on Saturday, Octo
ber 20th, 1894, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m. of
said day, on the premises known as the Home
stead of John Stanley, deceased, situated on the
south bank of the Columbia River at Hood
River, in Wasco County, State ol Oregon, sell at
Public Auction to the highest bidder for Cfuh In
hand, the following described real property be-
lots numbered One 1, Two 2, Three 31 and
Four 4l of Section Thircy-two ?321 in lownshfn
Three 3 North of- Range Eleven 11, East of
the Willamette Meridian, containing 139 43-100
acres and situated in Wasco County, State of
Oregon. Together with the tenements, heredi
taments and appurtenances thereto belonging.
All of said lots to be sold in one narceiand
said sale to be subject to confirmation by said
Court.
Dated September 15, 1894.
HANS LAGE,
Guardian of the person and estate of Kanev
Stanley, an aged an infirm person.
JJR. A. DISTRICT.
Physician and Surgeon,
DUFUR, OREGON.
All professional calls promptlv attends
to, day and night. t aprl4
rOHN 31. KANE,
Physician and Surgeon.
uTJFOE, OREGON.
Late House Surseon. St. Vincent's Hosnital of
Portland, Oregon. sep28
Notice.
All nersona are herohv notified not rn htrA
keep Marion Hurst, a lad 14 years old, about
their premises, as his services are needed at
home.
augl8-lm JAMES HlHtST.
Prices that Will
Astonish You.
Just received a fine stock of goods, -which. I am offering
at astonishingly low prices. A fine line of
DRESS GOODS, SILKS, GINGHAMS, CALICOS, LACES, EMBROIDERIES,
Call and See.
PROFESSIONAL.
H. RIDDELL Attorney-at-Law Office
Court Street, The Dalles, Oregon.
. b. rjuruit. FRANK. MtNim.
DTJFCR, A MENEFEE AnosHiTi - at
uw Rooms 42 - and -43, over Post
imce Building, Entrance on Washington Street
rhe Dalles, Oregon.
3. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LA.W. Of
V. flee In Schanno's building, np stairs. The
Jalles. Oregon.
J. B. CONDON.
J. W. CONDON.
CONDON & CONDON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Office on Court street, opposite the old
court house, The Dalles, Or.
B. S.HONTrNeTON. h. 8. wtlsoh.
HUNTINGTON & WILSON ATTORNS YS-A T
law Offices, French's block over -rst Na
tional Bank Dalles. Oregon. .
vv.
H. WILSON Attobnbt-at-law Rooms
French & Co.'s bank building. Second
Street. The Dalles, Oregon. -
J SUTHERLAND, M. D C. If.; .F. T. M. C.
M. C. P. and 8. O., Physician and Sur
arebn. Rooms 3 and 4, Chapman block.
Residence Mrs. Thornbury's, west end of Second
street.
DR. E8HELMAN (HoM .xofathicj Physician
and Subgson. Calls answered promptly
lay or night, city or country. Office No. 86 and
'Chapman block.
wtf
DR. O. D. DOANE PHYSICIAN AND BUR
GEON. Office; rooms 6 and S Chapman
-(lk. Residence: 8. E. corner Court and
fourth streets, sec nd door from the corner
ffiee hours 9 to 12 A. 21., 2 to 5 and 7 to 8 P. M
DBIDDAIX Drntist. Gas given for the
painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth
et on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign ol
he Golden Tooth. Second Street.
liessons.
-IN-
FRENCH
AND LATIN.
ItvGay de la Gelle
WILL GIVE LESSONS
IN THESE LANGUAGES
TO PUPILS, i: : :
Twenty Lessons for Five Dollars.
PRIVATE LESSONS, SOc.
Mr. De la Celle is a graduate of the University
oi i-ans. itesiaence, cor. renin ana u nion bis,
SiuDiing Greennouse
We wish to announce that
we have made a specialty of
Winter Blooming Bulbs.
HYACINTHS and LILIIES,
POTTED PLANTS of All Kinds,
. We are prepared to burnish
on short notice cat flowers
for all occasions ; also pot
plants and wires.
John Pashek,
The Merchant Tailor,
IN THI
Old Rvtnotry Building,
Washington Street, between Second
bet Second and Third,
Has just received the latest styles in
Suitings for Gentlemen,
and has a large assortment of Fonhrn and Amer
lean Cloths, which he can finish To Order for
those that favor him. ,
Cleaaing and Repairing a Specialty.
St. Mary's Academy
THE DALLES, OR.
BE-0PEJTS SEPTEMBEE 3d, 1894.
BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL FOE GIRLS.
itates per term of ten weeks,
payable In advance: ,
Board and Tuition J40 00
Entrance Fee (payable but once). 6 00
Bed and Bedding : 3 00
Instrumental Music, Type-writing, Telegraphy,
nrnwfnrnnd Pjifntin? tnrm extrachanrea.
French, German, Latin, Needlework and Vocal
Music taught tree oi cnarge to regular pupiis.
RATES FOR DAY-PUPILS. $5, 16, 8 or10 per
term according to grarie.
For further particulars address,
SISTER BUPJiRIOR.
MENS' SUITS, BOYS' SUITS, CHILDREN'S SUITS.
Say, are you happy?
If you are not,
and need a Stove, call and see the
. Largest Assortment of
look and
in . the city, at prices that will,
surely make you smile.
You want a Stove,
We want your Money.
Come and be convinced that we mean
what we say . We defy competition
MAYS & CROWE.
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. All orders
promptly attended to.
Store and Faint Shoo oorner Third and Washington Sts.. The Dalles, Ore-oi
THE CALIFORNIA WINEHOUSE.
-ALL KINDS OF . , '. . .
California Wines at Low Prices.
FflEE DELIVERY' TO
Call on or address
Cfms.
What?
Where?
THE CELEBRATED
COLUMBIA
AUGUST BUCHLER, PropV.
Thia well-known Brewery is now turning oat the best Beer and Porter
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
Harry Liebe,
PRACTICAL
Watchmaker! Jeweler
All work promptly attended to,
and warranted. ,
Can now be found at 162 Second
street.
Heating
Stoves
Paul Kreft & Co.
flflY PAST OF TflE CITY.
BECHT'Jhe Dalles, Orr.
Hand-Corded Corsets, Health Reform Waists,
Nursing Corsets, Misses' Waists, Children' Waists,
Shoulder Braces and Hose Supporters made to order.
At the Pacific Corset Company's Factory, north
east of the Fair Grounds. It desired each garment
will be fitted before being finished. Call at the fac
tory and examine our goods, or drop a card in the
office, and oar agent will call And secure your order.
BREWERY,
. . ' -
Ad. Keller is now
located at W. H.
Butts' old stand,
and will, be glad
to wait upon his
-
many friends.
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