They Pxist Go Will You Pay . TheBean SprayPump, an Income Tax? If so, perhaps it doesn't make any difference to you -whether yon "buy of us or not, "because you are able to pay higher . prices for your goods. To make room for new stock, and this If You Don't It's mighty important for you to give us your trade, as you must undoubtedly he interested in close prices. ALL GOODS MARKED IN I PLAIN FIGURES. I The Dalles Daily Chronicle. ntered a the Postofflce at The Dalles, Oregon as second-class matter. Clubbing List. Regular Our price price Chronicle nd If. T. Tribune $2.50 $1.75 " aid Weekly Oregtniaa ....... ( 3.00 2.00 " and Weekly Examiner 3.25 2.25 " Weekly lfew York World 2.25 2.00 10 Ceii to per line for first InBernon, and 5 Cents oer line for each subsequent Insertion. Special rates for long time notices. All local notices received later than 8 o'clock will appear the following day. THURSDAY FEBRUARY 28, 1895 BRIfcF MENTION. Leave! From the Notebook of Chronicle Reporters Licenses to marry were issued today to Fred Kantz and Miss Lucy O'Dell, and S. J. Hanna and Miss E. J. East man. Official members of the M. E. church are requested to meet in the lecture room of the church this evening at the close of the prayer meeting. Rev. L. Grey of Oregon City, who was to fill the pulpit of the Lutheran church next Sunday, will be unable to keep his engagement. Services will be conducted by Rev. A. Horn. The city council has offered a rewar of $250 for the arrest and conviction the person and persons who set fire to 5 the pest house. It is only a question time until the person is discovered. A Postmaster General Biesell has ten dered his resignation of that office to President Cleveland. It is said to be quite certain that Congressman Wilson of West Virginia will be his successor The old telegraph poles on First stree are being chopped down, now that the he V have been in the ground a number J years they are quite sound, the sap alone showing signs of decay. We Bpoke yesterday of Dr. Holli9ter having "a wife and babies," in which statement we were guilty of umnten uonai exaggeration, instead of saying . babies, we should have been satisfied . -Vwith the singular, baby. The male quarte'tte will occupy prominent place on the concert program next Wednesday night, and those who have not heard them, will have a treat , on that occasion, while those who have heard them will take care not to miss ij O. B. Hartley and E. Calkins of Hood River were in the city yesterday, on their way home from Sherman county JM.r. (jalkins is the owner ol some very fine thorough bred colts, which he had just taken to Sherman county -for the L summer. Dr. Hollister reports the smallpox patient as being in fair condition, con' Bidering that he is at the most critical stage of the. disease, and has strong hopes of his pulling through all right -The next two days will decide the mat' - ter for him. We Sell on Small Margin of Profits. PEASE There was a runaway yesterday about noon, the team that distinguished itself belonging to a Chinese vegetable man. The horses ran up First street, following the railroad track and those who saw the affair say that vegetables fluctuated very rapidly. The euit of Urquhart against Eshel- man has been occupying the time of the recorder this afternoon. The action was brought to recover "constable fees in civil suit, and we judge from the amount of argument over some of the legal points that there are several knotty questions involved. Mr. J. R. Bone came up from Van couver yesterday for the purpose of buy ing wheat here. He finds that owing to the especially low rates to Portland caused by the D. P. & A. N. Co. 'a boats that this market is one of the highest priced ones in the Northwest, and that he can get his grain from Portland at as favorable prices as from here. Yesterday afternoon the officers quietly took the six quarantined persons to the pest house, and had them safely lodged therein before anyone knew anything about it. Up to date none of them have shown any symptoms of the disease, though, this ia the sixth day since they were exposed. By Monday both scare and danger will be over, unless in the meanwhile a new case should develop. This is possible, of course, but hardly probable. Mrs. Mattie A. Oilar. of Hood River as arrested a few days ago on the com- aint of the road supervisor of that dis trict, charged with obstructing a public highway, and was tried before Justice Soesbe, of that precinct, yesterday, found guilty and 'fined. The caBe will be ap pealed. The road which MrB. Oilar is charged with obstructing, is that portion of the old Dalles and Sandy wagon road leading from a point a few rods west of he Hood River bridge to the river,a distance of perhaps fifty yards. Mrs. Oilar owns the land, and claims that the change in the road from the old route, which crossed the river and came out on the cast side near the end ot the railroad bridge, to its present route, was an abandonment of that portion of the road. The matter has been a source of con tinual quarreling and we hope will now be settled permanently. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. i When she had Children, she gave them Castoria, Spring straw shapes, just received Iffrom the East, wil be displayed in the r windows tomorrow. Mes. M. E. Beiggs. Room to rent, with or without board, Fourth near Lincoln. " tf. Mrs. W. H. Swain. Job. T. Peters & Co. have cord wood, which is desirable in all respects, and respectfully solici' your orders. & MAYS. How the New Remedy for Diphtheria Was Discovered. A number of series of experimental observations regarding the nature and causation of diphtheria pre ceded the discovery of the new remedy. These began with the discovery of the diphtheria bacillus by Klebs in 1883. In the follawing year, 1884, the organ isms described by Kleba were more care fully studied by Loeffler, were cultivated outside the living body, and diphtheria, or a disease resembling it,was reproduced in animals by inoculating them with the cultures of this germ. Loeffler was unable, however, to reproduce the vari ous form of paralysis which frequently follow diphtheria, but Roux and Yersin, in Paris, in 1888, succeeded in reproduc ing artificially, by the inoculation of animals with cultures of the diphtheria bacillus, a perfectly characteristic diph theretic paralysis, and they were also successful in separating from the cul tures of this organism a poison (the diphtheria toxine) with which they also produced paralysis in animals. Then Behring and Kitasato, in Berlin, found that by the inoculation of animals with the poison obtained from cultures of the diphtheria bacillus they could be gradu ally rendered extraordinarily insuscep tible to both the poison and the diph theria bacilli themselves. They further showed that this insusceptibility or im munity was due to the formation and presence in the blood of some substance which it has not been-possible to sepa rate chemically, and which is known as the diphtheria anti-toxine, or, from its wonderful action, the curative serum Then followed experiments by Behring, Ehrlich, and other observers in Ger many, and Roux in Paris, experiments designed to make this discovery practi cally available for the prevention and treatment of diphtheria in the human being. The first important results of these ex periments were published in the early part ot last year, and tney snowed a striking diminution in the" mortality, in a series of caBea of diphtheria subjected to the new treatment. The results ob tained in these first cases have been more than confirmed by subsequent ex perience in the treatment of this dis ease. Dr. Hermann M. Biggs, in Mc- Clures Magazine for March. A Broad-Minded Railroad Manager. Receiver McNeill is in the city. In conversation with a Chronicle reporter this morning, he took what we think is a sensible view of the boat railway propo sition, although it ' is one seldom ex pressed by men in his position. Al though manager of the O. R. & N he is a firm friend of the boat railway proposi tion, and thinks that the opening of the Columbia instead of injuring that road will benefit it greatly. That it will open , up the "Inland Empire to settle ment, will result in rapid increase of population, and will in a few years double the products of the country. The rates will, of course, be reduced, but this will be more than compensated for by the greater amounts carried. Though Lime, Sulphur, Salt, -FOR SALE BY- MAO & BENTON not saying so, it was plainly to be seen that Major McNeill is a firm believer in the doctrine that like causes produce like effects, and that even with the river open the railroad would here, as other roads do that parallel the Ohio, Miss issippi and other great streams, carry the greater portion of the products of the country to market. He expressed the opinion that the whole Northwest should unite in petitioning congress for an ap propriation sufficient to complete the boat railway at once, and that if this were done the wore could be accom plished within eighteen months. Concerning the locks at the Cascades, he said, "the end can now be seen, and a very brief time will see that work ac complished." From all of which it can be seen that Major McNeil is a broad- minded gentleman, mho can see beyond the apparent results of improving the Columbia, and realize what will actually occur, and further that he appreciates the fact that Eastern Oaegon cannot de velop and prosper, no matter nnder what circumstances, but that the O. R. & N. will be benefited thereby. " Died at Her Work. Mrs. Sarah States died suddenly this morning at 11 o'clock, at the residence of D. J. Cooper in this city. Mrs. States has earned her living by washing and doing house cleaning and such work, and has done the washing for Mr. Cooper's family for some .time. Last week she bad an attack of dizziness and fell while at her work at Mr. Cooper's, but recovered in a few moments and completed her work. This morning she was engaged in washingin the kitchen, Mvs. Cooper being at work upstairs in the room over the kitchen. Being called to another part of the house for a few moments, Mrs. Cooper noticed on her return that there was utter . silence in the kitchen and fearing Mrs. States had suffered a recurrence of the attack of dizziness hastened down stairs. Enter' ing the kitchen she found Mrs. States bad fallen, her head being over the edge of the tub and her neck wedged between the latter and the poet of the wringer. Help was called and the unfortunate woman released from her position There wa"s a livid mark across her throat whore it had rested upon the edge of -the tub, and it is quite probable she choked to death, having tainted and fallen where she was found. Deceased had been a resident ot The Dalles for a number of years and though 69 years of age, was an industrious and self reliant woman. She had no rela tions here, but one daughter lives in California, who was telegraphed the sad news at once. Wood! Wood! We have yet on hand a complete stock of Dry Fir, Oak and Maple Cordwood, which will be sold at minimum prices. feb27. Maikb & Benton. Sugar Cured Hams, 11 cents per lb; Boneless Hams, 9 cents per lb. ; 51b Pail Lard, 50 cents ; 101b Pail Lard, 95 cents, at Columbia .racking Co. b. . tf. AH pain banished bj Dr. UUea Pain PUla. Hegardless s We are doubling our Store Room to make room for new G-oods, and our present stock has to go. Everything in the shape of GkOTfllJlG fOR JQK. A. BIETKICH, Physician and Surgeon, DTJFUR, OEEGON. All professional calls promptly attende (odaj ', day and night. aprl4 JOS. TV PETERS & CO., -DEALERS IN- BUILDING '. - Teleplioiie Jo. 25' Are Your Eyes Open ? IF SO, READ THIS. Just Received,. A Complete Assortment of GrARDEN" and TIMBER SEEDS. We can save , you money. Now wend your way to the Big Brick, opposite Moody's Warehouse. E. J. COLLINS & CO, Telephone 20. Terms Cash. - THE CELEBRATED COLUMBIA AUGUST BUCHLER, Prop'r. ThiB well-known Brewery is now east of the Cascades. The latest appliances for the manufacture of good health-' ful Beer have been introduced, and on. he market. - " The AMERICAN BELL TELEPHONE CO. 125 Milk St., Boston, Mass. This company owns Letters Patent No. 463,569, granted to Emile Berliner November 17, 1891, for a combined tele graph and telephone, and controls Let ters Patent No. 474,231, granted to Tbos. A. Edison ' May 8. 1892, for a speaking telegraph, which Patents cover funda mental inventions and embrace all forms of microphone transmitters and of car bon telephones janSt of t Prices. EVERYBODY. TMu HARRIS. JOHN I. GKOGHEGAK, Register U. S. Land Office, 1890-1894. Business Before the United States Land Office a Specialty. Wells Block, Main St., Vancouver, Clarke Co Washington, no vis MATERIALS AND - , - BREWERY, turning out the best Beer and Porter y the first-class article will be p'aced on " T. A. VAN NORDEN, DEALER. IN Watches, Clocks, Jewelry AND SPECTACLES. Oregon Railway Navigation Company Watch Bepalnr and Iiupeotor. . Repairing of Fine Watches a Specialty. lOe Second St., THE DALLES, OR.