The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, October 30, 1897, Image 4

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    Tt3 Dalles Daily Chraaife.'
THE DALLES,
- ' OBEOUN
Advertising Kates.
.Per inch
One itch or less in Daily 1 SO
Over two inches and under four inches 1 00
Over four inches and under twelve inches. . 75
Over twelve inches 60
DAILY AND WEEKLY.
One inch or less, per inch ?2 50
Over one inch and under four inches 2 00
Over four inches aud under twelve inches. . 1 SO
Over twelve inches . 1 00
yEKSOSAl. MENTION.
Geo. Friend, tbe Kingsley blacksmith,
ia in the city today. .
M. P. Iseuberg and daughter of Hood
River are guests at the Umatilla.
Otto Kleaian, architect' for the Dew
OotKrtli. nhnrnli liafh i rtr Pnrtlanrl t his
morniDe.
MisB Helen Kelleher and her manager,
L. B. Wood, arrived on the 8:30 train
this morning.
Mrs. L. Hill returned this morning
from the Greenhorn district, near Sump-
ter, where tier Husband is mining.
Miss Guesie Lownsdale of Salem came
up on last night's train, and is visiting
the trttuily ot her aunt, Mrs. J. SI. Irat
terson.
THE CHURCHES.
Elder Wilburn will preach at the Cal
vary Baptist chnrch tomorrow morning
and evening. Sunday school at tbe
usual time. All are invited.
- M. E. church, corner Fifth and Wash
ington streets, J. H. Wood pastor Ser
vices as follows : Class meeting at 10
a.m.; morning service at 11 ; Sunday
school 12:20; Ep worth League 6:30;
union Bible service in tbe evening at
7:30. All are invited to attend.
The Congregational church, corner of
Court and Fifth streets At 11 a. m.
worship, and a sermon by the pastor,
W. C. Curtis. In the evening anion
service at the Methodist church by the
Bible Society. Sunday school immediate
ly after the morning service. Meeting of
the Young People's Society of Christian
Endeavor at 6 :30 p. m. Topic, Trust
Christ for what? II Timothy i:l-12.
All persons not-worshipping elsewhere
are cordially invited.
M A RRIED BY PROXY.
No Lf Than Three Q,neena Have
- Thus Acquired Their Titles.
f One of the queerest features of court
life in Burope is the marriage by proxy
of royal personages. There are at the
present moment no less than three
royal ladies who have been thus wedded
the queen regent of. Spain, tbe dow-ag-er
queen of Portugal and the ex
queen of Xaplcs.
v Kings and reigning sovereigns are
ield to be too important personages to
be married anywhere else than in their
own dominions. On the other hand,
it is held to be infra dignitate for a
spinster princess of the blood, who is
about to blossom forth into a full
fledged queen or empress, to travel
abroad in quest of a consort.
In order to meet this difficulty the
roj-al or imperial bridegroom delegates
one of the principal nobles of the realm,
who goes t hrough the religious and civil
portion cf the v. cdding ceremony in the
capital of the bride's country oa behalf
of his mas ter, making the responses for
him and tendering Ins hand, as well as
the ring, at the prescribed points of the
:eremony. He then accompanies her
to his muster's dominions, acting as her
chief escort.
According to tbe ideas of the Roman
Catholic church, a ceremony of this
liind is sufficiently binding upon the
bride and upon the royal bridegroom to
render any further ceremony, ecclesi
astical or civil, supcrfii-ous. and when
any additional religious function takes
place it usually assumes the form cf a
t "TeDeum''ar.d a sclcinn benediction, at
tended by both husband and wife im
mediately on the arrival of the latter in
the capital of her adopted country.
'Sen Francisco Argonaut.
( William Qoes Armed.
The German emperor invariably car
Vies -with him wherever he goes a small
revolver. His majesty is a skillful shot,
and the chasseur who accompanies him
everywhere has received orders to in
spect this weapon every morning to as
sure the fact of its being in working or
der. Chicago Times-Herald.
t National Revenue.
' THe revenue of nations, raised most
ly by taxation, has trebled since 1850,
increased over five times since 1810,
and 45 times since 1680.
Cab In Voar checks.
All county warrants registered prior
to July 7, 1893, will be paid at my
office. Interest ceases after Oct. 27th,
1897. ' C. L. Phillips,
County Treasurer.
BBROrAHIEE KASIS.
A few more full-blood rams for sale
cheap, and in excellent condition. Eight
dollars per bead. Address
Chas. A. Buckley.
20-t2 - Grass Vallev. Or.
TAKEN UP. ". v
Came to my place last spring, a roan
pony, branded O on right hip. Owner
can have the same by paying all charges.
S. A. Kisyon.
oct20 lm Tygh Valley, Or.
HER TWO NARROW ESCAPES.
Had, Sever Been Away from Home
Bat Wu nearly Drowned Twice.
They were telling stories of the dif
ferent dangers they had undergone Toy
rail, water and other methods of travel
ing, and the girl who had never been
very far away from home decide:! that
it was high time she asserted herself.
So, after a short period of concentrated
thought, she sat tip straight in her
chair with a satisfied smile and took ad
vantage of a momentary pause in the
conversation to put in her long-neglected
oar.
"Weli," she said, proudly, "I know
what it feels like to almost die by
drowning, anyway; I've been nearly
drowned twice."
"When'.' Where? How did it hap
pen? I thought you'd never been, away
from home," chorused all her listeners,
in amazement, and the last speaker lost
no time in plunging into her 6tory.
"I never was away from home," she
related, with great glee, "but I've been
nearly drowned twice, just 'the same.
The first time was two years ago, when
a party of us went out to one of the
South side beaches one evening, r.nd I
bad a lovely time until nearly the last.
I couldn't swim, you see, so 1 was pull-
ig myself out by the guarding rcpe,
d I had got quite out of my depth
Ivhen one of the girls threw some water
at me. We were all splashing each other-merrily,
you know,, and nothing
would have happened if I hadn't had
my mouth open to scream just then.
As it was, the water went down my
throat and nearly choked me. I let go
of the rope and sank, and as we were al
most out of the range of the electric
lights I nearly drowned before they
realized what had happened. That was
the first time I came near to death by
water."
"Oh! And the other?" queried the
girl with a tendency to scoff at other
people's stories. "Was it as dramatic
as that experience?"
"Quite, if not more so," replied the
storj- teller, unmindful cf the veiled sar
casm in the other's manner, "and it hap
pened at that very same beach, too.
I was hanging on the rcpe that time,
too, and having a perfectly gorgeous
time, when the rope suddenly sank
down beneath the water, aud I went
with it. I had just sense er.ough, re
membering the other experience, to
hold onto it, though, end presently, just
as I began to lose eoneciouscesn, the
rope' came up to the surface again, and
I was saved at the very moment when a
man on the shore was taking of? his
shoes to come to my assistance. He had
seen it all, and, I tell ycu, girls, he was
perfectly lovelv, too; I've got his card
yet.
"What made the rope sink? Oh, a fat
woman was balancing herself across it,
trying to swim, you know, and her
weight depressed it awfully, cf course.
When she fell oft up it came, and me
with it, all right and safe. But it was
an awful narrow escape, just the same.
I'd have been dead in another minute,
and as it was I felt sick for a month aft
erward. I was so scared. And I can
just tell you this, girlies, it's an awful
thing to come so bear to death by
drownlng." Chicarro Times-Herald.
THE MAKING OF DIAMONDS.
What the Prodcct of tbe Laboratory
Looks Like.
At the Royal institution recently,
Mr. William Crookes delivered a lecture
on "Diamonds." He said that, thanks
to Prof. Moissan, diamonds could now
be manufactured in the laboratory
minutely microscopic, it wr.s true, but
with crystalline fona and appearance,
color, hardness and action on light the
same as the natural arem. The first
necessity was to select pure iron and to
pack it in a carbon, crucible with, pure
charcoal from sugar. Half a pound of
this iron was put into the body of tle
electric furnace, and a powerful are, ab
sorbing about 100 horse power, formed
close' above it oetween carbon poles.
The irca rapidly melted and saturated
itself with earbon. After a few min
utes' heating to a temperature above
4,000 decrees Centigrade, the current
was stopped and the dazzling, fiery
crucible plunged in coid water until it
cooled below a red heat. Iron increased
in volume at the moment of passing-from
the liquid to the solid state; hence the
expansion of the inner liquid on. solidi
fying produced an eiicrmeiis pressure,
under stress of which the dissolved ear
bon separated out in a transparent,
dense, crystalline form irt fact, as dia
mond. To obtain the diamond from the
metallic ingot required a long and
tedious process of treatment with vari
ous stror.g reagents, and the specimens
thus obtained were only microscopic.
The largest artificial diamond yet made
was less than one millimeter across.
Many circumstances pointed to the con
clusion that the diamond of the chemist
and the diamond of the mine were
strangely akin in origin, and the dia
mond genesis mtirt have taken place at
great depths tinder l:ijh pressure. How
the great diamor.i p'pes came into ex
istence was not d;:culttc understand.
After they were pierced they were filled
from below, and the diamonds, formed
at some epoch too remote to imagine,
were thrown out with a mud volcano,
together with all kinds of debris eroded
from adjacent rocks, According to an
other theory the diamond was a direot
gift from heaven, conveyed to earth in
meteoric showers, and the so-called vol
canic pipes simplj holes bored in the
earth, by the impact - of monstrous
meteors. London Times,
Subscribe for The Chronicle.
NOTICE-SALE OF CITY LOTS.
Notice is hereby given that by "' au
thority of ordinance No. 292, which
passed the Common Council of Dalles
City April 10th, 1897, entitled, "An or
dinance to provide for the sale of certain
lots belonging to Dalles City,-" I will, on
Saturday, tbe 15th day of May, 1897,
sell at public auction, to the highest
bidder, all tbe following lots and parts
of lots in Gates addition to Dalles City,
Wasco county, Oregon, to-wit:
Lots 9 and 10 jointly, in block 14 ; lots
7, 8, 9 and 10, jointly in block 15; lots
7, 8, 9, and 10, jointly in block 21.
known as butte; lots 10, 11 and 12, in
olock 27 ; lot 9 in block 34 ; lots 2, 3. 4,
5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11, in block 35;
lots 2, 3, 4, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12, in block
36; lots 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. S, 9, 10, 11 and
12, in block 37; lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8,
9, 10, 11 and 12. in block 42 ; lots f, 2, 3,
4, 5. 9, 10 and U. in block 43; lots 1. 2,
3, 7', 10. 11 ami lii. in bloc 41, and lota
1, 2. 3, 4, 5, 6, in block 4b.
Tbe teusoi:a!le value of sa -J lots, for
less than which they will no. e sold,
has been fixed i,i:d determine, by the
Common Council of Dalles City as fol
lows, to-wit :
Lots 9 and 10, in block 14, $150; lots
7, 8, 9 and 10, jointly in block 15, $200;
lots 7, 8, 9 and 10, jointly in block 21,
$200; lot 10. in block 27, $225; lot 11, in
block 27, $225; lot 12, in block 27, $300;
lot 9, in block 34, $100; lot9.2, 3, 4, 5, 8,
9, 10 and 11, in block 35, each respect
ively $100 ; lots 6 and 7, in block 35,
each respectively, $125 ; lots 2, 3, 4, 8, 9,
10 and 11, in block 36, each respectively
$100 ; lot 12, in block 36, $125 ; lots 3, 4,
5, 8, 9, 10 and 11, in block 37, each re
spectively $100; lots 6, 7 and 12, in
block 37, each respectively $125 ;
lots 2, 3, 10 and 11, in block
41, each - respectively $100; lots 1,
7 and 12, in block. 41 , each respectively
$125; lots 3, 4, 5,8,9, 10 and 11. in
block 42, each respectively $100; lot e ,
6 and 12. in block 42, each respectively
$125; lots 2, 3,4, 5,9, 10 and 11, in
block 43, each respectively $100; lotl,
in block 43, $125; lots 2, 3, 4 and 5, in
block 46, each reepecti rely $100 ; lots 1
and 6, in block 46, each respectively
$125.
Each of these lots will be sold upon
the lot respectively, and none of them
will be sold for a less sum than the value
thereof, as above stated.
One-fonrth of the price bid on any of
said lots shall be paid in cash at the
time of sale, and the remainder in three
equal payments on or before, one, two
and three years from the date of said
sale, with interest on such deferred pay
ments at the rate of 10 per cent per
annum, payable annually ; ' ptavided
that the payment may be made in full
at any time at the option of the pur
chaser. The said sale will .begin on the 15th
day of May, 1897, at the hour of 2
o'clock p. m. of said day, and will con
tinue from time to time until all of said
lots shall be eold.
Dated this 13th day of April, 1897.
Roger B. Sinnott,
Recorder of Dalles Gity.
THE
NEW YORK WORLD
THJtfCE-fl-WEEK EDITION.
18 Pages a Week. 150 rapers a Tear
It stands first among '"weekly" papers
in size, frequency of publication
freshness, variety and reliability of con
tents. It is practically a daily at the low
price o a weekly ; and its vast list of
subscriber, extending to every state and
territory of the Union and foreign coun
tries, will vouch for the accuracy and
fairnesB of its news columns.
It is splendidly illustrated, and among
Us special features are a fine humor
page, exhaustive market reports, all the
latest fashions for women and a Ion
series of stories by the greatest living
American and English authors,
Conan Doyle, Jerome K. Jerome, '
Stanley Weyman.. Mary K. Wilklns
Anthony Hope, Bret Harte,
llraoder Matthews, Etc.
We offer this uneqnaled newspaper and
The Dalles Twice-a-Week Chronicle to
gether one year for $2.00. The regular
price of the two papers is $3.00.
Harry Liebe;
PRACTICAL
Watchmaker! Jeweler
All work promptly attended to,
and warranted.
174 VOGT BLOCK.
This Is Tool" Opportunity,
On receipt of ten cents, cash or stamps,
S generous sample will be mailed of the
most popular Catarrh and Hay Fever Cure
(i.ly'B tJream isalm) Snmcient to demon
strate the great merits of the remedy.
ELY BROTHERS,
56 Warren St, New York City.
Kev. John E sid, Jr. , of Great Falls, Mont ,
recommended Ely's Cream Balm to me. I
can emphasize his statement, "It is a posi
tive cure for catarrh if used as directed."
Rev. Francis W. Poole, Pastor Central Prea.
Church, Helena, Mont
Ely's Cream Balm is the acknowledged
core for catarrh and contains no mercury
nor any injurious drug. Price, 60 cents.
SUBSCRIBES
. f TWICE
FOR THE I A j FOR THE
And reap the benefit of the following
. CLUBBING RATES. " ;
CHRONICLE and N. Y. Thrice-a-Week World.' ' . $2 00
CHRONICLE and N. Y. Weekly Tribune ..... . ... 1 75
CHRONICLE and Weekly Oregonian,. ............. .......... 2 25
CHRONICLE and S. F. Weekly Examiner .. ....... ... ... 2 25
WORLD
TRIBUNE
OREGONIAN
EXAMINER
C. W, PHELPS & CO.
-DEALERS IN
agricultural
Drapers Manufactured and Repaired.
Pitts' Tlireshers. Powers and Extras.
Pitts' Harrows and Cultivators.
Celebrated Piano Header.
Lubricating1 Oils, Etc. .
White Sewing Machine and Extras.
EAST SECOND STREET,
BLAKELEY & HOUGHTON
DRUGGISTS,
175 Second Street.
ARTISTS MATERIALS
S7Cotmtry and Mail Orders will receive prompt attention.
Pf?ESCHlPTIOJl tHJ GGIST
TOILET ARTICLES
TO. Z. DONNE
Opp. A. M. Williams fc Co.,
Mfr has
AN 0REG0NKL0NDIKE.
Do yon want money? If so, catoh on
to this. " A 7-year-old orchard, twenty
acre tract, seven teea acres in choice
(rnits, bearing treee, new house of six
rooms, barns, outbuildings, etc., all new;
two horses and harness, two wagons, one
road cart and one cow. Will sell at a
bargain and on ensy terms. Call on or
Address C. . Bayard or Chas. Frazer
The Dalles, Oregon.
WHO
FOUR GREAT PAPERS
- impleinents
THE DALLES, OR
The Dalles, Oregon
AND PERFUMERY.
THE DALLES, OR.
the best Dress Goods
has the best Shoes
has everything to "be found in a
first-class Dry Goods Store.
C. F. STEPHENS.
lor People That Are nil f
Sick or "Just DontrJIi H
Feel WelL" IT I tmlj
' ONLY ONE FOR A DOSS.
Ramwat Pimple, curat Headache, Dyspepsia an
Cesttvenees. 26 eta. box at draught or br mail
Sample free, addreu Dr. Bceank Co. Fhila, fa.
Nebraska corn for sale at the Wasco
warehouse. Beat feed on earth. m9-t
THE
HBITE
STSlit
FRO?! THE DALLES TO PORTLAND.
- PASSENGER RATES.
One way . ....$1.50
Round trip 2.5&
FREIGHT
RATES
ARE
down:
The Steamer IONE leaves The
Dalles on Tudsys, Thursdays and Sat
urdays at 6 :30 a. m.
Office in the Baldwin Building, foot of
Union street. For freight rates, etc, call
on or address
J. S. BOOTH, Gen. Agt.,
The Dalles, Oregon.
IJORTHERN
PACIFIC RY.
s
Pullman
Elegent
Tourist
Sleeping Cars
Dining Cars
Sleeping Car
ST. PAUL
MlSSSAPOtl
DCLCTH
KAKOO
TO GRAND FOB
CBOOKSTOM
WINNIPEG
HELENA an
BUTTE
Through Tickets
CHICAGO 70
WASHINGTON
PHILADELPHIA
Mff YORK
BOSTON AND ALL
POINTS EAST and SOUTH
For Information, time cards, maps and tickets,
cat on or write to -
W. C. ALLAWAY. Agent,
The Dalles, Oregon
A. D. CHARLTON. Asst. G. P. A.,
255. Morrison Cor. Third. Portland Oregon
TO THE
EHST!
GIVES THE CHOICE OF
TWO Transcontinental ROUTES !
GREAT
NORTHERN
RAILWAY.
OREGON
SHORT
LINE.
-VIA-
Spokane
Minneapolis
St. Paul
Salt Lake
Denver
Omaha
Kansas City
Chicago
Low Rates to all Eastern Cities
OCEAN STEAMERS Lea-re Portland
Krerr F1t Day for
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
For fall details call on 0. 11 & Co. s Agent at
The Dalles, or address
W. H. HUBXBTTKT, Gen. Pass. Agt
Portland, Oregon
TIHE CABDi
No. 4, to Spokane and Great Northern arrives
at 6 p. m., leaves at 6:05 p. m. No. 2, to Pendle
ton, Baker City and Union Pacific, arrives at 1:15
a. m., departs at 1:20 a. m.
No 8, from Spokane and Great Northern, ar- -rives
at 8-30 a. m., departs at 8:85 a.m. No. 1,
from Baker City and Uniou Pacific, arrives at
8:55 a. m., departs at 4:00 a. m.
Nos. 23 and 24, moving east of The Dalles, will .
carry passengers. No. 23 grrives at 6:30 p.m.,
departs at 12:45 p. m.
Passengers for Heppner will take train leaving .
here at 6:05 p. m.
MawnnMsaMBaiBai