The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, January 14, 1899, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    CI I
Tbs Dalles Daily Chronicle.
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE.
One week : 55
One month 50
One year 6 00
SATURDAY - JANUARY 14, 1899
THE TORONTO MARPLOT.
The Toronto World keeps up its
Machiavelian tactics. Out of a spirit
of mere partisanship it is doing all it
can to engender strife between Can
ada and the United States.
It pretends to fear that England
and Sir "Wilfrid Laurier, the Domin
ion premier, will trade off Canadian
interests for the sake of the Anglo
American alliance, and to support its
absurd contention gives a grossly in
accurate review of historic incidents
bearing on the fixing of the boundary
between Canada and the United
States. England, it claims, has made
a wanton surrender of Canadian ter
ritory, and un that line it refers to
the Oregon treaty, saying:
"In 1846 the Oregon treaty was
made. By it England gave away
northern California, Nevada and the
states of Washington and Oregon
without compensation of any kind,
and through ignorance of the value
of the territories. A young lord's
letter, it was said, bad quite an in
fluence. He was hunting in Oregon,
and he wrote home that the fish and
game there were no good."
The converse is the case. England
drove a wonderfully shrewd bargain
for Canada. The United Stales had
superior title to the entire watershed
of the Columbia. By treaty it bad
acquired the discovery rights of
Spain, and these rights were fortified
by Captain Gray's discovery in 1792
of the Columbia river, by Lewis and
Clarke's explorations in 1804-5, by
John Jacob Astor's occupation of the
country long before the Hudson's
Bay Com pany came in, and by actual
possession and settlement. At the
time the treaty was- signed which
made the 49th degree of latitude the
boundary line, smoke was rising over
the disputed territory from a thous
and American cabins.
.iiuouga j.-oik was elected . on a
platform expressly declaring for
American ownership of the Oregon
country up to the line of 54 40,
"with or without war with England,1
British diplomats wheedled him into
a square backdown, and he shuffled
upon the senate the responsibility for
the adoption of the unpopular treaty.
These historic facts are not re
called in a lamenting spirit, but to
point out the unreasonableness of the
Toronto paper, in finding fault, at
this late day, with England's adroit
settlement of the Oregon question.
Some Englishman, preter.diDg to
know more about the Filipinos than
Admiral l)ewey or General Merritt,
recently declared that Americans
promised the natives of the Philip
pines islands independence, and that
under this promise the Filipinos re
sisted all overtures from Germany
and France. The Englishman makes
a mistake. The Americans made no
promise of independence. Admiral
Dewey went to Manila to destroy the
Spanish fleet and to take possession
of the city. The Filipinos were in
no way concerned, and no promises
were made to them.
If it becomes necessary for the
United States troops m the Philp
pines to whip Aguinaldo and his
heathenish followers, we hope they
will make a complete job of it so
they will know for all time they are
whipped. Some of the sort of medi
cine the English used in India to
show the natives the disastrous con
sequences of opposition to civilized
methods will likely have to be ad
ministered to the obstreperous Fil
ipinos, and it ought not to be stunt
ed. It should be given In allopathic
doses.
Use Clarke & Falk's Floral Lotine for
unborn and wind chafing. tf
Government Breeding: Them lor the
Purpose of Prodnclnar New Kind
of Silk An Interesting
Experiment.
Some very remarkable bugs are be
ing' hatched and reared just at present
by the experts of the government bu
reau of entomology at Washing-ton.
Most people would suppose that there
were enough insects in existence wit-n-out
resorting' to artificial propagation.;
but the fact is that this kind of scientific
work'has a very useful purpose in view.
This, too, notwithstanding thef act that
the species selected for breeding are
the most pestiferous that can be found.
The bug hatchery, pr "insectary," as
it is calledj is a brick building close by
the department of agriculture. In con
struction it resembles a greenhouse, the
upper part being of glass so as to admit
plenty of light for the insects. It is
divided into two compartments, one of
which is artificially heated for the ben
efit of tropical and other species that
require warmth, while the other is cold.
On 'shelves all around the interior, and
on the floor as well, are glassr jars and
queer glass-sided boxes containing a
great variety of odd-looking objects.
The objects in the glass jars are parts
of plants, fruits, dried-up vegetables,
pieces of branches or roots, etc. One
does not see any bugs at all, and the
reason why is simply that the veg
etables, fruits and so forth are' tjhe
natural food of the insects, and the lat
ter are either inside of them or else
are "done up" in cocoons for the win
ter. For example, there is a huge cocoon
nine inches long hanging from a twig
in a jar of exceptional size. This is the
temporary communal dwelling built by
the so-called "gregarious butterfly" in
Mexico. More correctly speaking, it is
the caterpillars transformed later into
butterflies that construct the cocoon
for a residence while they are under
going their metamorphosis. The co
coon looks and feels as if made oi tnicK
parchment, and at the lower end of it
is a small hole that serves for a door.
The labor employed in building it must
be enormous, under a powerful mag
nifying glass, it is seen to be composed
of an infinite number of shining and
very slender silken threads, crossing
each other in every direction. When
cut into,' the nest is found to contain
100 or more chrysalids, attached to the
walls on the inside each one repre
senting a future butterfly.
The habit of combining together to
build a house seemsi to be peculiar to
this species among butterflies. The silk
romposing the nest is exquisite, and
from 20 to 25 sheets of it can be stripped
off from the great cocoon as if woven
in a loom. If the silk could only be
spun,&he "gregarious butterfly" would
soon displace the silkworm, and; the
silks and satins of commerce would be
of butterfly manufacture. Unfor
tunately, the 'difficulty remains un
solved, though many attempts in this
direction! have been made. Could a so
lution of the problem be found, silk
would become at once enormously less
eostly, inasmuch as the cocoons of this
kind of butterflv are to be gathered in
immense numbers as.a wild crop in the
forests of Mexico. Boston Transcript.
To Cure a Cold in One Day,
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab
lets. All druggists refund the money if
it fails to cure. 25c.
Furnished rooms to rent. Steam heat
and electric lights. Apply to Max Vogt
& Co. Chapman block.
You'need have no boils if you will
take Clarke & Falk'a sure care for boils.
Use Clarke & Falk'a Quinine Hair
Tonic for dandruff and falling hair. - tf
One Minute Cough Cure, cures.
Tf,., I . U t .... .
PROFESSIONALS.
W. LUND ELL, B M-
Teaclier of Vocal Culture.
81ght Reading and Harmony. .
Studio at Residence. Cor. 6th and Liberty,
Invesgtion ollcltea. THE DALLES, OR.
JQR- OEI9ICNDOBFFER i
Physician and Surgeon,
Special attention given to surgery.
Rooms 21 and 22, TeL 328 Vogt Block
JJA- STURDEVANT,
Pentist
omoe over French fc Co.'s Bank
Phone 6, . . THE DALLES, OREGON
J)AN ROBERTS,
Attorn ey-at-Law.
Collections a Specialty. '
3eeond Street, ' THK DALLES, OREGON.
M
OLLIE V- O'LEARY,
Art Studio.
Room Z, Chapman Block.
China painting a specialty.
B 8 HUNTINGTON K S WILSON
HUNTINGTON A WILSON,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
THE DALLES, OREGON
Offioe ovp Pint Nat. Bank.
FRED. W. WILSON,
ATTORN ET-AT LAW,
THE DALLES, OREGON.
Oflioe ovet First Nat Bint.
A good
drug sign.
mi.
T
' You well know that a good drug sign
is the patronage which is bestowed on
the store. It is the purity of the goods
bandied and the manner of doing busi
ness that makes and keeps this business.
We are pleased with the result of our ef
forts to supply the best drugs at the
best price. We are particular about the
compounding of them.
RELIABLE PHARMACISTS.
175 Second Street. THE DALLES.
Just What
Voa taant.
New ideas in Wall Paper here. Such
wide variety as we are showing never be'
fore graced a single stock. Real imita
tion creton effects at ordinary prices.
(jood papers at cneap paper, prices.
Elegant designs, tasteful colorings, yours
for a small price, at our store on Third
street. Also a full line of bouse paints,
D. W. VAUSE, Third St.
In anticipation of your holiday needs we have
guuiercu a stocic oi
Toilet Articles, Perfumes,
etc., which should prove pleasiner. The email
ties will speak for themselves, and the prices
prove that there is remarkable value in each of-
nenng,
some are gooa to look at and to use, some
good for UBe alone, some are entirely ornament
al, but all will serve the purpose for which they
were made in the best possible manner.
M. Z. DONNELL
...DRUGGIST...
X.a Urlppe Successfully Treated.
"I have just recovered from the sec
ond attack of La Grippe this year," eaye
Mr. J as. A. Jones, publisher of the
Leader, Mexia, Texas. "In the latter
case I nsed Chamberlain's Congh Rem
edy, and I think with considerable suc
cess, only being in bed a little over two
days against ten days for the former at
tack.' The second attack I am satisfied
would have been equally as bad as the
first bnt for the nae of this remedy as 1'
bad to go to bed in about six fconrs after
being 'struck' with it, while in the first
case I was able to attend to business
about two days before getting 'down.' "
For sale by Blakeley & Honghton.
KOTICE OF PUBLICATION.
TJ . S. Land Office, Vancouver, Wash.,
NOVKMBBB, 26, 1898. ( '
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 W. B. Pres
by, United States Commissioner for District of
Washington, at his office in Goldendale, Wash
ington, on Friday, January 6th, 1899, viz:
. Gutav Herman Knhne,
Homestead Entry No. 8119, for the A of the
NE, and B14 of the NVr section eleven, town
ship three north, of range thirteen, East W. M.
.He names the following witnesses to prove
his continuous residence upon, and cultiva ion
Of said land, viz: . ,
' August Campbell, David K.Clark, of Hartland
Washington, Wendel Leidl, George G. Lindsey,
of ioldendale. Washington.
V.0 i W. R. Dbnbab, Begister.
0.R.1 .GO
Defakt
FOB
tims schedule.
From Dalles.
Arrive
From.
Fast
Mail
Salt Lake. Denver. Ft.
Fast
Mail.
3:15 p. m.;
wortn, umana, .Kan
11:50 p. m.
sas uity, at. lxmis,
umcago ana n.asc
Spokane
Flyer
Walla Walla, Spokane,
Spokane
Flyer.
S:00 a. m.
.Minneapolis, bt. raui,
Du lut h, Milwaukee,
Chicago and East.
5:40 p. m.
8 p.m.
From Pobtland.
Ocean Steamship.
4 p. m.
All Sailing dates subject
to cnariKe.
For San Francisco
, Nov. 28, Dec. 3, 8. 13,
its, za, zs, Jan. z, 7.
8 p. m.
4 p. m.
Ex.Bundaj
Ex. Sunday
Columbia Rv. Steamers.
To Astoria and Way
Saturday
10 p. m.
landings.
6 a. m.
Willamette River.
4:30 p. m.
Ex.bunday
E x.Sunday
Oregon City, Newberg,
baiem dt way Lana s.
7 a. m. '
Willamette and Yam
3:30 T. m.
Tues.Thur.
hill Rivers.
Mon.,Wed.,
and Sat.
Oregon City, Dayton,
ana fri.
ana w ay-itnaings.
6 a. m.
Willamette Riveb.
Portland to Corvallis,
and Way-Landings.
4:30 p. m.
Tue..Thur,
Tue., l'hur
and Sat.
and Bat.
Leave
Lewiston.
daily
except
Friday.
Lv Riparia
Snake River.
Riparia to Lewis ton.
daiiy
except
Saturday.
No. 22, throueht freight, east bound, does not
carry passengers; arrives 2;o0 a. m., departs
3:50 a.m. .
No. 21. local freieht. carrier nnasencrprR. pAKt
bound; arrives 4:30 p. m., departs 8:15 p. m.
zi, west Dnuna inrougn treignt, aoes nor
carry passengers; arrives 8:lo p. m., departs
9:30 d. m.
No. 23, west bound local freight, carries pas
sengers; arrives o:io p. m., departs b:so a. m.
For full particulars call on O. R. Sc N. Co.'s
agent ine Dalies, or address
W. H. HURLBNRT,
Gen. Pas. Agt., Portland, Or,
EAST and SOUTH via
The Shasta Route
OF THK
Southern Pacific Comp'y
Trains leave and are due to arrive at Portlai.
(ft
OVERLAND EXO
urg, Ashland, Sac
6:00 P.M.
ramento, Ogden,San
i rranciseo, . Moiave,
1 T A 1 -ci
9 A. M.
New Orleans - and I
I East J
Roseburg and way sta
tions .
fVia- Woodburi for")
MiAngel, Silvcrton,
West Scio, Browns- )
llle.Springneld and
(.Natron t J
(Corvallis and "way
I stations j
8:80 A.M.
4:40 P. M
Daily
except
Sundays.
Daily
except
Sundays
17:30 A. M.
:50P.M
INDEPENDENCE PA8SENGER. Express train
Daily (except Sunday).
4 ;50 p. m. (Lv Portland Ar.) 8:25 a. m
7:30 p.m. ?Ai..McMinnviUe..Lv. 5;60a, m
8:80 p.m. (Ar..Independence..Lv.) 4:60 a. m
Dally. fDatly, except Sunday.
DINING CAES ON OGDEN ROUTE.
PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPERS
AND SECOND-CLASS SLEEPING' CARb
Attached to all Through Trains.
Direct connection at San Krancisco with Occi
dental and Oriental and Pacific mail steamship
lines for JAPAN and CHINA. Sailing dates on
application.
Rates and tickets to Eastern points and Eu
rope. Also JAPAN, CHINA, HONOLULU- anc
AUSTRALIA.
All above trains arrive at and depart front
Grand Central Station. Fifth and Irving street
YAMHILL DIVISION.
Passenger Depot, 4oot of Jetlerson street.
Leave for OSWEGO, daily, except Sunday, at
7:20 a. m.; 12:30, 1:55, 5:15, 6:25, 8:05 p. m.
(and 11 :30 p. m. on Saturday only, and 9:00 a. m
and 8:30 p. m. on Sundays only). Arrive at
Portland daily at 6:40 and 8;30 a m.; and 1:86,
4:15, 6:20 and 7:55 p. m., (and 10:05 a. m , 8:15
5:10 p. m. on Sundays only).
Leave fAr Sheridan, week days, at 4:30 p. m
Arrive at Portland, 9:30 a. m.
Leave for ATRLIE on Monday, Wednesday and
Friday at 9:40 a. m. Arrivo at Portland, low
dav, Thursday and Saturday it 8:05 p. m,
Except Sunday. ""Except Saturday.
R. KuEHLER, G, H. MARKHAM,
Manager. Asst. G. F. s Pass. Agt
Through Ticket Office, 184 Third street, where
through tickets to all points in the Eastern
States, Canada and Europe can be obtained at
lowest rates from .
J. B. KIRKLANI), Ticket Agent.
or N. WHEALDON.
5
..GJiAS. FRflllK.
Bateheps
and Farmers
..Exchange..
Keeps on draught the celebrated
COLUMBIA BEER, acknowl
edged the best beer in The Dalles, .
, at the nsual price. Come in, try
it and be convinced.. Also the
Finest brands of Wines, Liquor.
.and Cigars.
Sandtaiehes
1 of all Kinds always on band.
i
C. J. STUBLilJlG
Wholesale and Retail
Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
Agency for the Greatest American Li qxior
Yellowstone Sour Mash Whiskey.
WHISKEY from $2.75 to $6.00 per gallon.
IMPOBTED 00GNA0 from $7.00 to $12.00
ALIIOBftJA EB-AEBIEB n-43.5 to
ONLY THE PUREST LIQUORS SOLD.
HOP GOLD BEEB on draught, and Val
Imported Ale and Porter.
JOBBERS IN IMPORTED and
DOMESTIC CIGARS.
PIONEER BAKERY.
I have re-opened this -well-known Bakery,
and am now prepared to supply every
body with Bread, Pies and Cakes. Also
all kinds of Staple and Fancy Grocer es.
GEORGE RUCH, Pioneer Grocer.
Todes ayd
Grandall
DEALERS IN
RI1 kinds of
UNDERTAKERS
tP EMBALMERS
The Dalles, Or.
Fanef al Supplies
BLACKSMITH and WAGON MAKER.
Blacksmith's Supplies. Horse-Shoeing a Specialty.
Second and La-agMm Streets,
THE DALLES, - - - - .. OREGON.
War or No war
You will always have the benefit .
of Low Prices at '
Ipdru feller's ?afe.
Ice Cream, Ice Cream Soda, Candies, Fruits, Nuts and
Oysters in any style.
Advertise in...
a
The...
It
ccii 11
Best Results
(4 to 15 years old
per gallon. (11 to 20 yeara old.;
$6 10 it-r gallon. (4 lo 11 years old.
Blatz and Hop Gold Beer in bottlea
pabrie
We are ready to show tbem in Dry
Goods, Notions, Clothing, Boots and Shoes,
Ladies' Capes and Jackets. "Time enough"
ia a poor principle. Those who make the
earliest selections secure best results. The -stock
is complete and new and we invite
you to look at it.
. F Step's.
& Borget
Robes,
Burial Shoes,
Etc.
give