The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, November 19, 1894, Image 4

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B
B
y
Bran and Shorts (Diamond
Mills), $12 per ton.
Flour at Bedrock Prices.
Good Potatoes, 65c a sack.
Seed Wheat.
Chicken Wheat, 75c sack.
Choice Wheat, Timothy
and Alfalfa Hay.
All Goods Sold at Lowest
Telephone No. 61.
' "I wonder why Philadelphians are so
interested in pedigrees?" "Probably
because every one in Philadelphia is
living in the time of hia ancestors."
Chicago Record.
"You are old, my dear grandma," the little girl
said
As she lay by the fire with Dolly,
For as white as. the snow are the hairs on your
head
Yet you always look rosy and jolly.
"Pray tell me, dear grandma, the reason of this
Why you always look healthy and spritely.
Why you never are pale when vou give me a
kiss,
Why you take tuch long walks morn and
nightly."
The reason," my darling," her grandma re
plied, "Is simple, it needs no description.
I've always been well, for I keep by my side
A bottle of Pierce's Prescription."
All ages, and all conditions of woman
hood will find just the helo that woman
needs, in Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip
tion. That's a matter that's guaranteed.
If it can't be done, then the medicines
eosta yoa nothing its makers don't
wint your money.
For all derangements, irregularities
and weaknesses peculiar to the sex,
"Favorite Prescription" is the only rem
edy so certain that it can be guaranteed,
If it fails to benefit or cure, you have
your money back.- :
' Dr. Sage's Catarrh
cures catarrh.
Remedy positively
tiIXo, a New York concert hall high
kicker, has just married a millionaire
clubman of that town. Serves her right.
Detroit Sun.
W. A. McGuire, a well known citizen
of McKay, Ohio, is of the opinion that
there is nothing as good as children
troubled with colds or croup as
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. He has
used it in his family for several years
with the best results and always kept a
bottle of it in the house. After having
la grippe he was himself troubled with
severe cough. He used other remedies
without benefit and then concluded to
try the children's medicine and to his
delight it soon effected a permanent cure.
50 cent bottles for sale by Blakeley &
Houghton Druggists.
She Didn't you ever see a more per
fect moon? He (slightly under the in
fluence) Wsh one are vou 'ferring to?
Lite.
Marvelohs results.
From a letter written by Rev. J. Gun-
derman, of Dimondale, Mich., we are
permitted to make this extract : "I have
no hesitation in recommending Dr.
King's New Discovery, as the results
were almost marvelous in the case of my
wife. While I was pastor of the Baptist
Church at Rivers junction she was
brought down with Pneumonia succeed
ing La Grippe. Terrible paroxysms of
coughing would last hours with little in
terruption and it seemed as if she could
no survive them. A friend recom
mended Dr.' Kingis New Discovery ; it
was quick in its work and highly satis
factory in results." Trial bottles free at
Snipes & Kinersly's Drug Store. Reg
alar size 50c. aud $1.00.
39otice of Proposed Street Improvement
By order of the Council of Dalles City,
notice is hereby given that the portion
of the east side of Union street, com
mencing on the south line of Fourth
street, Dalles City, and extending south
erly to where the north line of the alley
which forms the north line of the public
school grounds intersects said street,
said public school grounds being situ
ated on both sides of Union street be
tween said alley and the bluff, shall be
improved by the construction of a plank
sidewalk eight feet in width along the
east side of said street.
Dated this 20th day of October, 1894,
Douglas S. Dufub,
Recorder for Dalles City.
IjOSt.
Yesterday afternoon between the
courthouse and Newman's store, two
notes. One made Jan. 1, 1893, due one
day after date; amount $12,4, payable
to Martin Wing, signed by Steve
wing. One dated March, 1893, amount
$100, payable to F. H. Woodcock, signed
by Mike Kened and George Miller.
Finder will please leave them at the
sheriff's office. n!4-d2wl
Wanted.
Some good second
Mast be cheapCash,
this office.
hand harness.
Address, W. X.
Subscr.be forTHB Chronicle.
lliSi
id
Seed Rye."
Feed Oats.
Rolled Barley.
Poultry and Eggs "bought
and sold.
Choice G-roceries & Fruits.
Grass Seeds..
Living Prices.-
Cor. Second and Union Sts.
DANIEL. WEBSTER'S SMALL FEES.
The Great Lawyer s Income Was Uii
nsually Limited Even for Ills Day.
' One of our correspondents has been
so lucky as to fall in with a little
leather-covered book, like those of
bank depositors, which contains Dan
iel 'Webster's autograph, record of. his
legal receipts, says the New York
Evening Post. , This chronicle fills
twenty-eight pages, and extends a
little more than from 1833 to 1830 in
clusive. The first entry, dated Septem
ber in the former year, is of 850, and
the second of $20 for retainers on the
New Hampshire circuit. The first fee
of $1,000 was paid in May, 1834, by a
Mr. Badger. Services regarding Cil
ley's will commanded $800. The total
amount for the first year was footed
up at $13,140, with the remark: "Sep
tember 22, 1834, thus done and con
cluded." A similar summing np ap
pears at the close of each other year.
The second total is 815,183.74; the third
is 821,793. The first entry of 83,000 was
in 1835, March. 7; the first of 83,000
December 7 in the same year. This
last payment was in respect to Florida
land. The largest single honorarium
was 87,500 in February of the fourth
year; 85,000 is set down as bestowed
in a case of Trinity church (New
York.) In turning over this record lead
ing metropolitan and even provincial
lawyers are astonished that Webster,
although twenty years in Boston, so
undervalued his services. He learned
better at last. When Robert C. Win
throp looked at the earliest date, he
said: "That's just the time that I was
ending my studies in Webster's office,"
and the chirography led him to add
that Webster never wrote a firm hand.
Nobody has surveyed the relic with
more interest than Dr. O. W. Holmes.
Among other things he said: "Had
the influx been tenfold, Webster's
purse would nave remained empty
still. Had its capacity received like
the sea, whatever entered there would
have run off like water from the .back
of a duck."
WHY DINNER IS LATE.
Married
Men Agree That It
III Never
Ahead of Time.
"It is a curious thing," said the
Grumbler, "that, while I have been
keeping house for thirty years and have
had my wife tell me a thousand times
that dinner was late, I never once knew
of a time when dinner was ahead of
time. I have made careful inquiry
among my friends- (and I have many
who have been domestic longer than I)
and I do not find a single well-authen
ticated case where dinner was ever, at
any time or place, ahead of time,"
quotes the Buffalo Express. "Five
times a week the cook will do' some
thing she ought not to do and dinner
will be anywhere from five minutes to
an hour behind time, but she never gets
under sufficient headway to have the
things on the table before the appointed
time. I have made this curious and in
teresting phase of home life a careful
study and I intend to write a pamph
let about it."
"I guess you're right." said the Kick
er. "I am a married man of some few
years myself, and I have had the same
experience. I may get home an hour
earlier than usual and be hungry as
three bears, but that does not make
a particle of difference. Dinner never
comes before six o'clock, which is the
scheduled time, but very frequently
comes much after that time. I had an
old uncle once who noticed the same
thing. He was in the house one day
and put the clock ahead two hours to
see if he couldn't work the miracle
But the cook fooled him."
"What did she do?" asked the Grum
bler, eagerly.
"She turned on the natural gas be
fore she put in the match", and when
the fire department got through it was
nine o clock.
Bueklen'i Arinca Salve.
The best salve m tne world for cuts
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever
Bores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains
corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi
tively cures piles, or no pay required
It ia guaranteed to give perfect satisfac
tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents
per box. For sale by Snipes & Kin
ersly..
The regular subscription price of the
Weekly Chronicle is $1.50 and the
regular price of the Weekly Ohegonian
is $1.50. Any one subscribing for The
Chronicle and paying for one year in
advance can get both The Chronicle
and the Weekly Oeegonian for $2.00,
All old subscribers paying their sub
scriptions a year in advance will be en
titled to the same offer.
BAFFLES COUNTERFEITERS.
The
Unlackr Opal Defies the Imitative
Skill of tho Moderns.
' One kind of opal, the hydropane of
Mexico, loses its beauty and becomes
dull and colorless when exposed to
water The same stone, says the West
minister Review, it is said, can be re
stored to its color and beauty by sub
jecting it to a certain degree of heat.
A writer on the subject - says that the
opal is always much more- brill' -nt on
a wirm day, and that a sharp dealer
will always hold one in his hand a
short time before showing it to a pur
chaser. In ancient times the opal was
most successfully imitated by a glass
paste, . which could only be distin
guished from the real gem by the most
careful experts. The art has been en
tirely lost, for the best counterfeiters'
fail to produce a stone that in the
least baffles the connoisseur. -The
finest opal of modern times, says King,
was one which belonged to Empress
Josephine, and which was called the
'Burning of Troy," because of the in
numerable red flames blazing upon its
surface, while the reverse was perfect
ly opaque. In the troublous times that
followed the Napoleonic period the
gem was lost sight of, and there i3
left no trace, of it. There are two
wonderful ' opals among the French
crown jewels, one of which is set in
the clasp of the imperial cloak. Em
press Eugenie is said to have a most
superstitious dread of them and would
not wear an opal foe any persuasion.
Queen Victoria does not share this feel
ing with her. She, on the contrary,
admires the gem very much, and has
given to each of her daughters, or
their marriage day, various pieces oi
jewelry set with the iridescent gem.
There are many varieties of opals.
coming from almost as many quarters
of the globe. The opal found in Hun
gary was thought to be harder anc
more durable than those found in Mei
ico and South America, but since the
better development of the mines in
those places stones have - been found
quite the equal of Hungarian gems.
SALT WATER
IN cement:
The Sulphates
af the Sea
tractive.
Are Very De
In the opinion of Dr. Michaelis, of
Berlin, the greatest enemies to the per
manency of the Portland cement used
m marine structures are the sulphates
contained in sea water. If there is any
great quantity of alumina and ferric
oxide in the cement the structure
breaks up sooner than otherwise. This
is accounted for by the fact that the
sulphate forms, with the aluminate and
ferrate of lime, a number of crystalline
compounds, such as bassic sulphate of
lime, alummo-snlphate and ferro-sul-phate
of lime. These compounds- take
up a large quantity of water of crystal
lization, so that the total volume is
much increased. Hence the weakness
and disintegration of the cement struc
ture. - Dr. Michaelis considers that the
separation of hydrate of magnesia is
quite innocuous, for it is only displaced
from its solution in the form of a floc-
culent, slimy hydrate, which, if any
thing, is useful in stopping up the
pores. His creneral recommendation to
users of concrete for marine work is to
choose a cement rich in silica and as
poor as possible in alumina and ferric
oxide, and to envelop the structure
with an impenetrable mixture com
posed of one part of cement with two
to two and one-half parts of sand of
mixed grain, of which at least one-third
should be very fine sand, and to this
the requisite amount of ballast should
be added. . , '
CASTE FOLLOWS THE NOSE.
Anthropologists Say tbe Nose Tolls the
Cultaro of Man.
Anthropology, said Sir William Flow
er, is becoming of the highest impor
tance in politics. If we take a series
of castes in Bengal, Behar or the
northwestern provinces and arrange
them in the order of the average nasal
index, so that the caste with the finest
nose shall be at tho top, and that with
the coarsest at tie bottom of the list,
it will be -found that this order sub
stantially corresponds with the accepted
order of social precedence.
The casteless tribes who have not yet
entered the Brahmanical system oc
cupy the lowest place in both series.
The fisher castes are a trifle higher in
the scale; the pastoral, the cultivating,
and. a group of cognate castes from
whose hands a Brahman may take
water follow in due order; and from
them we pass to the trading and the
landholding classes and the upper crust
of Hindu society.
Thus it is scarcely a paradox to lay
down as a law of the caste organization
in Eastern India that a man's social
status varies in inverse ratio to the
width of his nose.
Tbe Most Ancient Sons.
A topical song three thousand years
old was sung in a comic opera lately
produced in Australia by a traveling
Chinese company. The history of this
venerable ballad is authenticated by
the affirmation of the chief comedian
of the troupe, who avers that the song
has been snng on the Chinese stage,
With the original words and music,
since 1000 B. C. A Melbourne - critic
says the accompanying melody "con
sisted partly of a Chinese chopping
wood, partly of another Celestial blow
ing a bull's horn with horrible intens
ity of ellort, and partly of a curious
stringed instrument, which makes a
noise like an infant crying in the
night."
Late flowers. . ;
With the turning of the leaves it is
supposed the flowers disappear, but in
northern New England, and over the
line in Canada, the asters are
never more gorgeous, the daisies big
ger or the chamomile more abundant
than just on the eve of frost time. In
towns two or three hundred miles north
of New York the short but warm sum
mer seems to have its fruitage after the
equinox, and the parks and gardens in
these town are brilliant with mari
golds, zinnias, asters, co&mas, and even
sweet peas, long gone by in these lati
tudes. Melons are in their prime m
Maine when" they are not on sale in
New York. '
Mexican
Mustang
Liniment
for
Burns,
Caked & Inflamed Udders.
Piles, v
Rheumatic Pains,
Bruises and Strains,
Running Sores,
Inflammations,
Stiff joints,
Harness & Saddle Sores,
Sciatica,
Lumbago,
Scalds,
Blisters, .
Insect Bites,
All Cattle Ailments,
All Horse Ailments,
All Sheep Ailments,
Penetrates Muscle,
Membrane and Tissue
Quickly to the Very
Seat of Pain and
Ousts it in a Jiffy.
Rub in Vigorously.
. Mustang Liniment conquers
Pain,
Makes flan or Beast well
again.
The Re
ulator
Line
The Dalles, Portland aid Astoria
Navigation Co.
.THROUGH
Freigai ana Passenger Line
Throuzh Dailv Trips (Sundays ex
cented) 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.
PA88KNOKK KATES
One way
Round trip........... ....
?2.00
.... ...... 3.00
Freight Rates Greatly Reduced.
Alt 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
b p. m. .Lave stocK shipments sonctea
Call on or address,'
W. C ALLAWAY,
General Agent
THE-DALLES.- OREGON
J F. FORD, Evangelist,
Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes under date ol
March 23, 1S93:
S. B. Mkd. Mfg. Co.,
Dufur, Oregon.
Qentlemen :
On arriving home last week, 1 found
all well- and anxiously awaiting. Our
little snrl. eieht and one-half vears old
who had wasted away to 38 pounds, ie
now well, strong and vigorous, and well
fleshed np. 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, MB. & MRS. J. x . OBD
If you wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and read j
for the Spring's work, cleanse your system with
the Headache and Liver Core, by taking two or
three doses each week.
Bold under a positive guarantee.
50 cents per bottle by all druggists.
i Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat
ent business conducted for Moderate Fees.
Our Office is Opposite U.S. patent office
and we can secure patent in less time than those
remote from Washington.
- Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip
tion. We advise, if Datentable or not. free of
J charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured.
t A Pamphlet, "How to Obtain Patents," with
(cost of some in the U. S. and foreign countries
(sent free. Address, . .
Opp. Patent Office, Washington. D. C.
A WINTER'S ENTERTAINMENT.
GREAT VALUE
FOR
LITTLE MONEY.
yevj York llfeeJcly Tribune;
a twentv-page journal, is the leading Republican family paper of the
United States. It is a NATIONAL FAMILY PAPER, and gives all
the general news of the United States. It gives the events of foreign
lands in a nutshell. Its AGRICULTURAL department has no su
perior in the country. Its MARKET REPORTS are recognized au
thoritv. Separate departments for THE FAMILY CIRCLE, OUR
YOUNG FOLKS, and SCIENCE AND MECHANICS. Its HOME
AND SOCIETY columns command the admiration of the wives and
daughters. It general political news, editorials and discussions are
comprehensive, brilliant and exhaustive.
A SPECIAL CONTRACT enables
THE WEEKLY CHRONICLE for
ONE YEAR FOR ONLY $1.75,
Oaahi in' Advance. '
(The regular subscription for the two papers ia $2.50.)
SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME.
Address all orde s to nTTROTTTCITR TjTTT3T.TS'HIN'Ct Cid.
Write your name and address on
Koom z, Tribune .Building, new York Jity, ana a sample copy ot itin. rn.cw
YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE will be mailed to you.
When the Train stops at THE
flEW COIUWBlH HOTELt.
.oo
This large and popular House does the principal hotel business,
and is prepared to furnish the Best Accommodations of any
House In the city, and at the low rate of
$1.00 per Day. - first Qass Teals, 25 Cei)ts.
Office for all Stage Linen leaving: The Dalles for all
points In Eastern Oregon and Eaitero Washington.
In this Hotel. ; . i . - ' .
Corner of Front and Union Sts.
T" "757". "7" jQ- "O"
Successor to
-DEALER IN-
PAINTS, OILS AND GLASS.
And the Most Complete and Latest Patterns and Designs in
WALL PAPER.
, - .
PRACTICAL PAINTER and PAPER HUNGER. None but the best brands
of J. W. MASURY'S PAINTS used 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 corner Third and
11 There is a tide in the affairs oj men which, taken at its flooa
leads on to fortune" : :
. Tho poet unquestionably had reference to the
-bs Foiiirc & Cawis
at C RANDALL &, BURG EX'S,
Who are selling these goods out at greatly-reduced rates.
MICHELBACH BRICK, . . -. .... UNION ST. . -,;
What?
Pipe foil T Icpaiis and fWiiii
MAINS TAFPED UXTDER PRESSURE,
Shop on Third Street, next door west of Young & Kuss'
Blacksmith Shop.
WEEKLY NEWS
OF THE WORLD
FOR A TRIFLE.
us to offer this splendid iournal and
a postal card, send it to George W. Best,
DALLES, get off on the South Side
AT TH
T. T. NICHOLAS, Propr.
Paul Kreft & Co-
WALL PAPER.
Washington Sts., The Dalles, Oreo-oL
Hand-Corded Corsets, Health Reform Waists,
Nursing Corsets, Misses' Waists, Children's Waists,
. Shoulder Braces and Hose Supporters made to order.
Where ?
- . , - -
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 our agent will call and secure your order.
BUN SM ELL,