THE DALLES; WEEKLY CHBOlflCLE SATURDAY, MAT 9, 1896. The Weekly Ghrortcle. THK DALLES, - OBIGON OFFICIAL PAPER OF WASCO COUNTY. Published in two part, on Wednesdays and Saturdays. . - - . , - SUBSCRIPTION BATES. BT MAIL, POSTAGE PREPAID, IM ADVAKCX. 1 One year '. 1 SO Six months 75 Three months 60 Advertising rates reasonable, and made known on application. Address all eommnnieatioiis to "THE;CHRON ICLE," The Dalles, Oregon. . Thft Daily and Weekly Chronicle may be found on sale at I. C. Nichelsen't store. . .Telephone No. I., LOCAL BKKVIT1K9. Wednesday's Daily. . 'The May term of county commis sioners' court began today. The committee to solicit money to de velop a coal shaft near Buchler's began work this afternoon. A marriage license was granted today to John L. Northrop and Minnie Hun ter, both well known young people of MoB'er. The painters are at work painting the Carlson house, corner Ninth and Union streets, now occupied by Capt. Lewis' family. A complaint was filed with the county clerk today of G. W. Scramlin vs. M. U. Billings for the recovery of a $500 prom issory note, Geo. Young, Bakeoven, today sold a band of fine mutton sheep to Mr. Ketch Dm. They averaged 107 pounds in weight, an unusually high average. According to Observer Pague'u in quiries Wasco county will lead the state this year in quantity of fruit, it having been injured the least by either frosts or rain. Cut worms are said to be doing con siderable damage to growing crops in Sherman county.. A few warm days, however, would put a stop to their rav ages, and set everything growing in that county. . Q. A. Phelps, a Populist speaker of the western states, will lecture tonight. ' Tomorrow night Grand Master J. K. Sovereign, of the Knights of Labor, will speak at the opera house. Both of theee men are famous orators, and will undoubtedly be entertaining. Messrs. E. T. Hinman and T. J. Powell of Dufur are in the city and ap peared before the county judge today to claim the $200 reward for the apprehen sion of the criminals, Hawthorne, Hayes and Rowe, about two years ago. Iheir claim is that they followed their trail and located their camp, finding the dead robber, Hayes. Returning to Dufu thev met the sheriff s party, woo re quested them to return, which they did Thursdays Daily The Dufur Dispatch issues its first number today. The Wasco Warehouse received 100 sacks of wool from Wallula yesterday. The second game in the bowling con test will be on tonight and tomorrow night. Six car loads of sheep were shipped from the Saltmarshe stockyards today two to Tacoma and four to Troutdale. A telegram was received from Mr, Crittenton today to postpone the revival meetings until May 23a. tie promises particulars by mail. The team attached to Mr. John.Bruh man's milk wagon ran away this morn' ing and brought up near Crate's point. No harm was done, except spilling about two gallons of milk. - An exchange says that apples may be kept two years by wrapping them in newspapers in such a way as to exclude . the air. The newspaper must, however, be one which the subscription has been paid in full or the dampness resulting from the due will cause the fruit to spoil. ' General Roadmaster Peters, who died at Umatilla recently, leaves a. large familv at that town. He caught cold during his labors for the company dur ing the flood, which gradually became worse, resulting in bis death. The com pany has very kindly allowed him his full salary during all this time. D. C. Ireland of the Moro Observer prophesies that steamers will pass : through the Cascade locks June 4, 1896, The only way it can be done is for the water to be so high that the locks will be completely covered so that there will be no obstructions for the boats. And then the Days, or the engineers, would try to collect toll. . Mr. J. H. he.ar was badly iujured Tnesday night near Bakeoven, while in hitching his team.! He failed to un fasten one of the tugs, "the team started. ' and in- some manner he was struck in the lower ribs by one of the horse's hoofs, throwing him down and causing the wagon wheel to puss over his face. J He was driven to hi& home, twenty miles distant. A poet in the Bakersfield Californian has turned his thoughts upon the spring rain. They gush forth as follows: A short time since, the cow was sad, she scarce could raise her bead, begad; her hoofs were sore, her. tail was limp, her mane and bangs bad -lost their crimp, and miles ehe trudged, from grass to drink, with scarce enough -strength to wink. The owner, too, looked ' blue and glum, and cursed the cattle business! some; but since the ram the grass is tall, the cow -can raise her head and bawl ; ber hide is sleek, no bones pro trude, she prances like an English dude, God bless the rain, the gentle rain, it makes a man feel young again. - A party just arrived from Prineville reports that circuit court is still in ses sion. Each evening, after adjournment, Judge Bradehaw and H. S. Wilson are to he seen but on the desert south of town rolling rocks at greasewood pins the sheriff and bailiffs being kept busy "setting 'em up" on the alley. . The champion score will be knocked into a cocked hat upon the judge's return. We can almost hear his, "Give me a strike on the spare," at this distance. The McKinley Club will hold a grand jollification and: ratification meeting on Friday, May 29th. JNotaoie speakers from abroad will be present, and the effort will be made to make it the event of the campaign, which it undoubtedly will be. Everyone interested in the success of Republican politics, as well as adherents of all parties, should make it a point to de present, neglecting, if nec essary, every other appointment. This meeting precedes the June election only three . days, and there should be the largest turnout of the season. Mr. D. J. Cooper, who returned laBt night from Salem, says that the Salem telegram to the Oregonian concerning bis incompetency was totally unwar anted,and he defies any man to prove it. "The trouble is," said Mr. Cooper, "that it is almost a crime for any man outside of Marion county to hold a job, on .ac count of so many hungry men in that county who are out of work." He com plied with eery order given him except the one given him to vote a certain ticket at the primary. He handed the j ticket back, with the statement that he supposed there would be plenty of tickets at the polls and he could make his own selection. Friday's Daily. The county court is engaged today on road petitions and bills. Geo. N. Ssttlemeir died at Woodburn Tuesday, aged 82 years. He was a pio neer of 49, and the father of 17 children all Oregon born. ' The county court has authorized the making of a connected map of school districts of the county.' Mr. Geo. Mor gan has been employed to do the work Elder J. W. Jenkins returned from Heppner Tuesday quite ill. He is re covering slowly and hopeB to be able to fill his appointment at Dufur Saturday evening and Sunday. . ibe mayor of Pendleton is in a pre dicament. The council was a tie on the question of abolishing houses of ill fame, and it is left to his vote to settle it. He has postponed bis certain damnation for a week. The latest news received concerning the opening of the upper river is very encouraging. Both Umatilla and Walla Walla counties are taking hold of the matter in earnest. It will be a matter of no great surprise if work begins on this within the next ten days. A large number of tramps are congre gated on the beach today near the China garden. They are a pretty .tougn-look- ing lot and it behooves everybody to keep a sharp lookout for possible depre dations. The city officers have them spotted, but professional tramps are adepts in eluding the officers of the law Lincoln was the first occupant of the White House to wear a beard, and Grant was the first to wear a mustache, It was up to the time of Lincoln, con sidered gross and unlean to wear either beard or mustache. Lincoln had no mustache, Cleveland baa a moderate mustache, and is the only one of the presidents to wear a mustache without a beard. A life-size portrait of Governor Lord was this week hung in ' the representa tive hall in the capitol at Salem. The governor is portrayed in a Btanding posi tion. . The picture represents the gov ernor as he now appears, with the ex ception of the face being somewhat thin. The representative and senate chambers now contain life-size portraits of all of Oregon's 14 governors. In the senate chamber is also a portrait of ' Dr. Mc- WAGON ROAD TRANSPORTATION A Train of Wagons That "Will Just Like the Cars. Track L. H. Campbell, a brother of the chief engineer of the D. P. & A. N. Co., is in the city, and has the model of a wagon train, which promises to' inaugurate a new era in the ! transportation business on wagon roads. '' Six miniature warons, trailed One behind another, kept track as perfectly as does a train of cars on the railroad. They were . circled in an S shape around a chair and a cuspidor and each wagon moved in the Identical track made by its predecessor. This inven tion was by Mr. Campbell, and in con nection with a traction engine, he claims that fifty tons of freight may be hauled at a speed of five miles an hour over any ordinary road. -Mr. Campbell selects this field as the proper one to establish a transportation company, on account of tne immense wool and wheat interests tributary to The Dalles. An equipment capable of hauling 100 tons a day would cost ap proximate! v, he believes, $10,000. Three men would be employed, and the total daily expense would be far less than that required to haul the same amount of freight. Grades of one foot in twelve can be accomplished easily. The plan proposed by Mr. Campbell is already employed in California. ' It is in practical use for hauling salt from the mine of the Crystal Salt Co. to Dan by, a station on the Atlantic & Pa, cific By., a distance of thirty miles. Previous to the advent of the engine it was impossible to get the salt to market, except by team hauling. With the traction engine and wagon train 33 to 38 tons are hauled at a trip. More could be hauled if it were not for a number of grades to ascend, some of which are 10 to 12 feet in a hundred. Mr. Campbell went to Goldendale to day to ascertain the feeling of the peo ple, and if they enter into the plan with anv degree of alacritv efforts will be make to inaugurate a stock company, with all the rights and privileges of any other kind of a transportation company, and with a capital stock of $10,000. Mr. Campbell will return to The Dalles on Saturday. ' - MOST REMARKABLE. QUR SKLE. Saturday , fay 9 th TWO vSI'I-CIAI. We will continue the sale of our NEW SPRING- CAPE for the rest of this week at a special discount of TEN PER CENT.- Special Drive in Men's and Boys' Sweaters. Boys' Cotton .Mixtures, in Grey, Blue and White. Regular price, 25c, 4(Jc, 50c and 6oc. Men's Ht-avy All-Wool Sweaters, fine ribbed Bottoms and Necks, in all the desirable shades Navy, Maroon, Black and White. Reg ular price, $1.25 and ,$ 1.50. . Discount of 10 per cent, on Sweaters. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS. CRITTENTON Some Cry, IN PENDL TON. Some Bid Their Face and Soma Accept ChrUt. Laughlin. Lecture at the Court House. Prof. O. A. Phelps spoke to a good- sized audience at the court house last evening. He declared that the same issue existed thirty years ago as now the money issue ; that the tariff as affecting the laboring man is of no in terest one way or the other. In free trade England and in protected. America the laboring man has become poorer and poorer. Money bears the same relation to the nation as the blood to the body. What the nation wants, contended the speaker, is more blood in its veins, more money. He then proceeded to demon strate, in his own way, the advantages of a larger use of silver. He has a pleas ing style of delivery, and received re spectful attention to the close. Tonight Grand Master Sovereign, of the Knights of Labor, holds the floor. A Man Uses the Track for a Pillow and Not Hart by the Train. Evangelist Charles N. Crittenton ad his traveling companion, Carpenter. preached, prayed, sang and pleaded a courtroom, full of old men ami lvr. women whose hair was whit, and others with babes in their laps, to ynunit Indies and tiny girls, last evening, pays the Pendleton Tribune. The services were awe inspiring, faith engendering, sinple, yet grand mid beautilul from the standpoint if the Godly. There was nothing howei-fun nor loud. There was a hleridinu ! trim- Mr. E. B. Burns, who was a passenger on No. 2 last night from Portland, tells of one of the most singular experiences that ever happened in the annals of railroading, .which occurred about two miles west of the Locks. Mr. Barns said he knew something juil and peaceful pleasure, of happinepr-, was wrong by the way the train was and quiet but exquisite delight throiiwh slowing up. While Bitting in the Beat out the proceedings. The pleadini; he could feel the inclination of his body were not made in harsh and extravagant to go forward, while the seat be was sit- dialogue, but in an easy and eli.qii. iit ting on did not yield to the demand. He flow of soul-piercing language. therefore knew the lull pressure of air The sermon was delivered by Mr. Car was being used to stop the train as sud- penter. It was essentially anecd .t nl denly as possible. He left the seat and &nd an earnest plea for the salvation ! went out the car and met the fireman souls. He concluded by strong -xhrtn. with a lantern walking toward the rear tions and, as the choir commenced i of the train. The fireman met the con- sing in a subdued tone "Why Not Come cerning the condition of frui", as follows: "I f til to find any of my apples, pears. c.erries or strawberries hurt in the least bv the weather, or frost; in fact, it is seldom that the trees are so loaded with bloHr-oms and huds." It is the impres sion that, the strawberry crop will reach market 10 to 12 days later than usual, owing somewhat to frost injuries to early bloom and partly to unsuitable weather Peaches have been hurt in all sections and especially in the Hood River sec tion the trees are troubled with curl leaf. Apricots art, doing well; apples are coming into full bloom and grapes are making the usual growth. BiuflVd out. ductor between the chair car and first sleeper, and pulled a man out from nnder the train, who had evidently been in a neavy stupor from tne effects of whiaky. He could not stand steadily, but staggered around, as men will whose brains are paralyzed by too much alco hol in their stomachs? He was asked if he was hurt, and replied in the negative. The conductor remarked, "Well, that beats anything I ever saw," and prob ably he was correct. The conductor asked him where he was going, and in a voice scarcely coherent he replied he was to Him Now?" begged all' timet l... would accept Christ to stand n, rai-e tneir nanus, or signify their winiintnes by other manifestations. Sune re sponded, some drooped their heads a though in prayer, others cried, while a few looked on wonderlngly, marveling at the susceptibility of the human niechan- ism. 'Tomorrow evening Mr. Crittenton will speak on the "Florence Mission Reseat Work" at the court hou?e. It will he a lecture in which he will tell his experi ence of thirteen years in ret-cuing lo-t going home. No information could be B,r and women in New York, Chicago, pained from him in the state h vaa in. Denver and other cities and the trainmen could not linger any way, so they started him to traveling and pulled out. The fireman said he noticed the man's head move on the track ahead, and the engineer tried hard to stop the train be fore reaching him. His head was lying across the track on a bundle, it and the track being used as a pillow, but his body was outside the rail. The tender must have struck the bundle and thrown his head aside, but was protected enough by the bundle not to injure him, You can't kill some of these fools," said the conductor, in a somewhat ag grieved tone. Mr.- S. E. Van Vactor, a prominent attorney of Goldendale, Wash., has de cided to cast his lot . with ns and will open an office in this city, for the prac tice of his profession. HAS CAPTURED PENDLETON. The. La Grande Chronicle has the following: Evangelist Crittenton, while meeting with rather a cold and reserved reception at Pendleton, has persevered and at last struck a responsive chord, it appears. Sunday night he preached to an audi ence in the court house in that city that is said to have exceeded in numbers any he bad here. He claims to have captured the city. and has decided to remain until Mav 10. it. E. Hawthorne made a play for i-yint.Htl.y today from his better half, i-ut. didn't win out. He walked into he I,. Hue with a tragic air and a bottle of l.laek colored liquid and said : "I am now going to give you a divorce. When I drink thin I will be a dead man. Don't eill a doctor, for it w ill be too late. See that my grave's kept green. Guggle, gngg'e, guggle." And down it went. Before he could assume the proper pose to il'e to his greatest satisfaction, he th.ew up the contents of what be had taken, and as his wife made no move to end either for a policeman or a physi cian, and wore an air of absolute indif ference he didn't drink anything more in. in tne tome. . ltie bottle contained w hi-ky and blue vitriol. If Mrs. Haw thorne obtains a divorce it will be in the olil-fanhinned manner. congratulation, urging him to not with draw and promises of hearty support from all over the county. He will get the Dufur vote solid, he be lieves. The hardest jolt was purported to be from the regular nominee on th Populist ticket, and John was pretty mad before he hang np the receiver on the telephone. John is very popular, so much so that he did not have to so licit names on bis petition. They came to him, and naturally he was much pleased. Any man would be, aud it didn't take more than a minute and a half to show his appreciation, too. The Bowling; Contest. The second set of bowlers began work last evening, and though both sides made a low score, the married men for the first time led their competitors. They will try again this evening, when the score will be different. That is the most we can say at present. There will be two more sets of bowlers, then the ten will be selected who made the high est average on each side. Probably also the ten individuals who made the high est scores on all the teams will have a contest. Following is last night's scorer MA11RIED. UNMABRIED. .' H W French. 22 18 L A Porter. . .25 19 i Ayer's Pills are recommended by lead ing physicians and druggists, as the most prompt and efficient remedy for biliousness, nausea, costiveness, indi gestion, sluggishness of the liver, jaun dice and sick headache; also to relieve Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair, Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. colds, fevers, neuralgia and rheumatism. mssm Most Perfect Made. 40 Years the Standard. TTTfTh'- mm This Year' Fruit Crop. The results of Observer Pague's special inquiry as to the Uregon trim crop are briefly these. Clatsop, Tillamook, Lincoln, Coos and Curry, and the western portion ol Lane and Douglas counties Few, if any. peaches will be grown this rear. The frosts injured the peaches and the rains killed what. the frosts left. The prune, pear and apple crops were slightly in jured by the rain, but unless more in jury result there will be a fair crop. Columbia Fruit considerably thinned out. Clackamas Peaches, apricots and nectarines nearly all killed. Plum, prune and cherry injured by the rain. Washington and Yamhill Peaches nearly all killed. Cherries slightly damaged. Other fruits are in fine con dition. Wasco-Reports from Wasco county are very cheering concerning the fruir out look.' An occasional report sets forth some damage which the cherry aud early , strawberry crops sustained from frost. It is thought what little damage . has been done fruit was caused by frost and not by the excessive rains of the past three weeks. A correspondent -writes (and this is the general expression), con- The ballot which will be placed in the bands of the voters at the coming elec tion will have some points of difference from the ballots of two years ago. The names on the tickets in 1894 had the names of the candidates of the various partie-i pretty well mixed up. This year, according to the form prescribed by the luct legislature, the legislative candi dates and the presiaential electors will be grouped together, the names fit the candidates of each party being segre gated. There was also auother im portant change, in that this year the choice will be designated by making a cross lie ween the number and the name instead of crossing or cancelling the name of the undesirable candidate, as formerly. FBayley.....l8 29 LE Crowe... 24 21 F Houghton.. 28 24 W H Hobson.26 29 A M Kelsay. .26 32 D Vause 18 22 O Birgfeldd. .18 26 CF Stephens. 24 32 JPMcInerny.25 29 J Maloney.. .19 83. H Lonsdale. .28 IS W Vogt 25 23 Max Vogt Jr. 19 19 C W Lord.... 22 38 8 H Frazier..22 25 F D Hill 29 2ft J H Weigle..2rJ 1ft H Liebe 31 21 Averages Married, 24.11 ; nnmarried. Fire Meeting:. Mr. John Roth has filed notice of his intention to rnn Independently for sheriff on the Populist ' ticket. He was kept very busy until 2 o'clock this morn ing answering telephone messages of The Dalles Hook & Ladder Co. held their regular monthly meeting last even ing. The president being absent, E. H. Merrill was chosen as temporary chair man. After reading of the minutes of last meeting and roll call, the members en gaged in a discussion as regards tbe ap pointment of special police at the time of fire from that company, it having come to their knowledge that the other com panies of the different departments have thus appointed members. A committee was appointed to inquire into the matter. The committee consulted with the sec retary and foreman of the company, who were expected to inquire fully into the matter and report at the next meeting. For Sale. Three Jerseys, a cow and two yearling; heifers. Inquire of H. A. Bills, at Maier & Benton's store. ; He Price on Farm wagons jlss'Bropi; That is, the price on some wagons has fallen below our price on "OLD HICKORY" Wagons. Why? Because no other wagon on tbe market will sell alongside of t'ie "OLD HICKuRY" at the same prices. It is tbe best ironed, best painted and lightest running, and we guarantee every bit of material in it to be strictly first clrss. If you want the CHEAPEST Wagon on the market, we haven't got it ; bnt we have got the BEST, and solicit comparison. MAYS & CROWE, The Dalles, Or.