THE DALLES WEEKLY CHEOHTCLE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28. 1897. o I T Displayed i o -r-i ' : t- ... , r TH he Line ot lvus A Superb Collection. Special Axminster Door Mat. .. .. ... Moquette Rug.::........ ......... ... Smyrna Rug....: Smyrna Rug..:....:..- ..... . Smyrna Rug, extra quality Moquette Rug. . . . . : ... "... . ." .... Smyrna Rug ..... . .. Smyrna Rug............:... ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. The Weekly Ghroniele. THE OKEOOX OFFICIAL PAPER OF WASCO COUNTY. , Published in two parte, on Wednesdays and Saturdays. SUBSCRIPTION BATES. BT VAIL, POSTAGE rRIPAID, IK ADVAHCB. One year 11 SO Six months 75 Three months , GO ' Advertising rates reasonable, and made known on application. Address all communications to "THE CHRON ICLE," The Dalles, Oregon. Telephone No. 1. LOCAL BBEYIT1KS. Saturday's Daily. We understand that .W. C. Langille, who is at present running Cload Cap Inn and bossing Mt. Hood, will, in com pany with Joseph A. Wilson of Hood Eiver, leave for the Clondyke some time next week, being backed by Portland parties. It isn't the Clondyke that is exciting Hood Eiver people, bat the grain fields of Sherman county that dozens of them Brfl B OA lr i nrr frt ocaiot; in f o fc-1 r n a m t the immense crops. That's the- Clon dyke they are looking for, and they have one advantage over sold seekers, thev can at least live on the golden grains they secure'. . CrOldendale has a poet preacher, one of his poems appearing in the Agrical tanet. Of coarse it is impossible to jadge of his preaching by his poetry, bat the poem printed brings to mind a criti cism on Doctor Goode, who wrote a farce which was a decided failure. An ac quaintance wrote of him : ' "For farces and physle bis equal there Scarce is. 1 His farces are physio, bis physio -A farce la." The Dalles National bank will pay a dividend of twenty-five per cent aa soon as the proper schedules and checks can be prepared and returned from Wash ington. It will be necessary, for every person who has a claim against the bank to prove such claim and receive a re ceivers certificate therefore, before he is entitled to a dividend.- It was thought that no dividend would be declared un til the time for proving claims - had ex pired, on Sept 5th, bat the comptroller of the currency has already declared a dividend and other large dividends will be made in the near future, provided the debtors of the bank are prompt in paying. If the persons owing the bank will make a special effort to pay this season, a very large percentage will be paid to creditors this year. v-' Monday's Daily. Tfaraaet has falrli Kawnn anrl V. - IV... UBD .Oil l J UCUU) tn uo w ucak jticiu jo eAuecuiug mi estimates. Christian Endeavorers are still crowd ing the trains ' from San 'Francisco to Portland. . The Oregonian says Col. O. Summers is certain to be appointed U. S. Marshal. Its information is like some of that from the Clondyke, probably ' received over the grape-vine telegraph. . The United States crop report, show ing the relative condition of winter wheat for Jane and July, gives the Jane condition in Oregon as 100 and July as 92. This' is certainly a mistake. - The conditions have not changed except for the better. The July condition of win KNOW - A "good thing" when Almost every one does. STIC and in Dry Goods Window The assortment includes all kinds light and dark Prices for this week only. PEASE. & MAYS ter wheat is perfect. The examination of -E. Simmons, Brown and Robert Wilson is being held before Justice Filloon this afternoon. The examinations are being made separ ately, but as one goes so will probably all. Mr. F. W. Wilson is handling the defense. , A man named Dalton has opened a trail from-JDyea to Fort Selkirk, on the Yukon. The distance is 350 miles, and it is said the trail can be kept open and traveled all winter. If this is true, it will greatly leeeen the danger of starva tion in the Clondyke this winter. - . The bicycle path from Ilwaco to Sea view has been finished. A neat trian gular landing has been built at lhe end ot the track, opposite the Ilwaco rail road depot, for the accommodation of riders, and railings are being put up along the track at all dangerous places. Captain McNulty brought the little propeller Pearl up from Portland to Vi en to Saturday. . She belongs to the Ore' gon Lumber Co., and will .be used in towing from the mouth of the Little White Salmon to Viento. . Some of the steamboat men thought she could not stem the rapids below the Locks, but Captain McNulty says she came through like a bird. George Manning, of Moore's valley, in Tamhill county, while with two other boys after a squirrel np a tree, drew a gun toward himself, , muzzle first. :.. The gun waa accidentally discharged, and the ballet struck him near the right nipple, and came oat back of the armpit. Be yond a very ugly flesh wound, the in jury was not serions, but it was a harrow escape from a fatality. The citizens of Marshfield,' Myrtle Point and other towns in Coos county have complained somewhat of a 'sugar famine, bat Coqmlle has been worse off. There there has been a shortage of flour, sugar, batter, eggs and fruit . jars,' and steamers and trains would jcome and go without replenishing the stocks of flour and sugar. , . - ., ... ' . The Odd Fellows hall in Pendleton . is being moved and the contents of the copper box deposited in the corner-stone of the building'May 8, 1879, have been removed. The articles contained in the box consist principally of a number of coins, two business cards, several news papers, a copy of the old constitution and by-laws and the family record of Lot Livermore. ' The grand lodge of the Degree of Honor honored itself, as well as The Dalles, in selecting Mrs. Briggs of this city as its chief ofBcer. No better selec tion could possibly have been made, for besides being a woman of great energy and business capacity, Mrs.' Briggs is also deep reaeoner and an eloquent speaker. If the order does not prosper under her leadership, it will be indeed strange. ..' ." Heater's examination on a charge of horse stealing occupied two days, and re sulted in his discbarge. It seems there was a dispute as to the ownesship of the horse, which had belonged to a man named Sterling, but which Parodi claim ed had been turned over to him in pay ment of a debt. The evidence for the defense showed that Sterling had given Heater permission to take the horse,and hence he was discharged. - A complaint was lodged against him of being drank, and on this he was fined $25, which he U settling by remaining la jail. - Frank Stayers was found lying on the see it. V7i.lv luio n&V'A' a -.-. . everyone a good thing. you .Regular $ .85 Special $ .65 ; 1.25 " - .95 " 1.75 " 1.35 " 2.50 , " 1.80 " .2.50 " 1.90 " 3.00 K. . : " .2.40 " 3.00 " ' 2.60 . " 3.25 " " . 2.70 floor of Richardson's blacksmith shop at Rainier, last Sunday morning, ' in an nncoosciOB condition. He had been worH&ifaB a blacksmith in Mr. Richard son's shop for several weeks, and was Bleeping in a loft overhead. To reach his bedroom it was necessary , to ascend a ladder about 12 feet, and then go on the narrow walk over the joists to his room. It is thought that daring Satur day night he had attempted to go to bed, and fell off the walkway to the floor. He died of his injuries Tuesday. - Arthur Perry, well known in Seattle, has written friends in that place .irom Dawson, under date of June 18th, saying : The first discovery of gold on the Clon dyke was made in August 1896, by George Cormack. Then farther along in bis letter he tells how 300 men went in mid-winter from Circle City, and adds a sentence that those going will do well to ponder. He says, "the creek was soon staked from one end to the other, and all the email gulches were al so staked and recorded." That part . of th8 Clondyke story can be taken as be ing absolutely true. A little girl of F. Fielders was drowned recently in Rogue river, neaf the month of Jump-Off-Joe creek. It seems the mother and two smaller chil dren were sitting in the back of the boat while she held the little ones in by holding one on either side of her, when the current whirled the boat around and tipped the mother and both children oat-into the water. Charles VanDorn, who was rowing them across, and an elder daughter of Mrs. Fielder's were occupying the front of the, boat, and they succeeded in getting Mrs. Fielder and the eldest child out, but the baby they were unable to eave. The child was about a year and a half old, - . Tuesday's Daily. , '. The grand council of the Redmen is in session here, holding its first meeting this morning. The big green-coated' watermelon Is Abundant, filling for The Dalles' small boy a long felt want. . The 6. K. & N. is having the depot painted, a piece of work that has been needed for several years. The examination of the men charged with robbing the Indians is still going on before Justice Filloon. , It will prob ably be completed today. ' - ' The salmon run is far from good, but still much better than it was a week or two ago. Seufert's wheel No. 5, caught six tons a day or so since, and makes a catch of a few tons every night. Last night a ladles' gold ' watch : was raffled off at the Umatilla house. There were two hundred tickets in two series, the watch being valued at $100. Harry Liebe had a ticket that cost him 5 cents and it 1b unnecessary to add he won the watch. . - - The Woman's Relief CorpB will give a social next Saturday evening at Schan no's Hall.' A good program is being arranged. : Refreshments will be served. Admission fifteen cents. ' As this is purely a charitable organ Ization ' let there be a good attendance. . A feat in upper river navigation hith erto nnacccomplished, waa the trip of the Gypsy,? from Corvallis np to the Wilbelm warehouse, Monroe,- says the Corvallis Times.. ' This is eaid to be the latest in the season that ' a boat ever passed np the river so far. It was made possible by the late work of the Math loma in building wingdams where the river channel has hitherto been too shallow. The Gypsy brought down 60 bags of wool and 125 barrels of floor. . . Judd - Fish telephoned down from Cloud Cap today at noon, that the party arrived there last night at -11 o'clock, and moat o! ite members made the as cent of the mountain today.' Judd has no Clondyke fever and didn't care .to sample mountain climbing by tackling Mt. Hood. ;. Mr. Fen Batty will not go to the Clon dyke, at least until -next spring. Not that he has changed bis mind, but simply because he could not get passage on the Elder, and be very eeneibly de clines to start a week or two ' later. There are quite a number of our people who will go In the spring unless reports at that time are discouraging. V We know nothing about the merits of the Pendleton Tribune squabble, but we do know that McManus through ' the columns of the Pendleton Republican is yelping like a whole drove of Coyotes of a winter night. With ' all the concen trated and accumulated load of woes, which he sings of, one would think . he would go gunniug with a cannon for his enemies. . : The-Bonanza mine in the' Greenhorn district, 50 miles west of Baker City, was sold Saturday for $750,000. r Two years ago it could have been bought for $100, 000, and five yeais ago its owners offered it to the storekeepers of Baker City for their indebtedness, about $30,000. The mine has $3,000,000 worth of ore in sight. and why its owners parted with it, is a mystery. '' ... : The reports from Skamania county's mines aie not flattering. There seems to be irom all accounts considerable bodies of ore, hut it does not appear to carry much precious, metal.' Every re port that we have heard expresses the opinion that ores are to get richer as the depth is reached, but this is an open question.. .Ore is just as likely to turn poorer as to get richer, and if there is no pay in the top the chances are against the mines being a success.. The Caecade range is a hard lot anyhow, difficult to prospect, spotted and disappointing. The contractors for the government lighthouse at Westport have the founda tion for the keeper's bouse about com pleted. , The stonecutters will finish their work cutting the stone for the light house by the middle of the week. The framework for the large water . tank . is np. The foundation for the foghorn sta tion is about completed. A large force is at work clearing the ground and erect ing the necessary buildings. On the lighthouse itself excavation work has been commenced, and the stone is al most ready for the builders. The work is being done in a thorough manner. - Shot Br tbe Nlgbt Watchman. . Last night about 10 o'clock Night- watchman Wiley was telephoned to, to arrest a man who bad been forcing bis attentions on a woman going home from the Salvation Army meeting. Wiley responding found his man on Third street in front of Gibons & Marden's of fice. When he undertook to arrest him, the man, who proved to be H. A. Mil ler, engineer on the steam shovel for the O. R. & N., resisted and commenced to fight the officer, whom he struck over tbe eye, making an ugly gash. Wiley finding he was . being overpowered, pulled his pistol and fired It is presumed that Miller seeing tbe gun turned to ran as tne bullet struct him in the npper part of the calf of tbe leg, coming out somewhat lower down. This ended the fight, and Dr. Doane be ing called soon discovered that both bones were badly shattered. Miller was taken care of and this morning sent to the hospital at Portland. - The wound is a very bad one and may result in ampu tation It is said that Miller was intoxi cated. He is a married man. Reasons Vfhj Chamberlaln'a C0II9 .. Cholera and Diarrhoea Kein- " :;' --. . edy Is. the Best. 1. ' Because it affords almost instant relief in case of pain in the stomach, colic and cholera morbus. 2. Because it is the only remedy that never fails in tbe most severe cases of dysentery and diarrhoea. 3. Because it is the only remedy that will care epidemical dysentery. , 4. Because it is tbe only remedy that will prevent bilious colic. 5. Because it is the only remedy that will cure chroic diarrhoea. - 6. Because it is tbe only .remedy that can always be depended upon in cases of cholera infantum. . 7. Because it is the most prompt and most reliable medicine in use for bowel complaints. I 8. . Because it produces no bad results. 9. Because it is pleasant and safe to take. ' '..'-".'..'.. '": 10. Because it has saved the lives of more people than any other medicine in the world. , ' V-.. - . . The 25 and 50c sizes for sale by Blakelev & Houuhton. Wanted. Upright and faithful gentlemen or ladies to travel for responsible, estab lished house in Oregon. Monthly $65 and expenses. Position steady. Refer ence, iDnc.oee self-addressed stamped envelope. The Dominion Company, Dept. H., Chicago. jy20-3td , Cash in Soar checks. . All county warrants registered prior to Feb. 1, 1893, will be paid at my office.- Interest ceases after July 14 1897. ' C. L. Phillips, - ,. County Treasurer. THESE BE WORDS OF WISDOM. A Correspondent Slses Vp ' - - Situation. ': tlte Pmsat The Dalles, July 24, 1897. Editor Chkomclb : " "Two years will tell whether The Dalles will become a city with a popula tion of ten or fifteen thousand people, or take a slip backward and be but an. in terior trading point, doing less buainees than it is today." This was the remark made by a prominent businessman a day or two since, and as be went on to explain what be meant by bis words, it struck the writer that it would be well if they could be heard by all who look to the welfare and progress of our city. It cannot be denied that this is a crucial point in the history of The Dalles. We have come to the parting of tbe roads, and achoice must be made which way we will turn ; ' to stand still is impossible. Tbe excellent editorial which appeared in Thb Chronicle a few days ago de- ( scribes the situation exactly as it is, and tbe same sentiments were well put forth in a letter to tbe Times-Mountaineer, appearing about the same time. ; " To any .but a superficial observer the building of the railroad from Biggs to Wasco has a direct bearing upon the volume of business now done at this point. Farmers cannot be expected to haul their produce and freight up and down the wearisome grades leading to the Descbutes river, when with the ad vent of the railroad a few miles hauling will do tbe work. And, in tbe matter of supplies, The Dalles has growing com petitors in territory she has heretofore claimed exclusively aa her own. But the worst menace co.nea from the pro jected extension of the Wasco railroad to the Antelope country. This will follow, as a matter of course, and when it does, with the erection of wool warehouses at the end of the line, The Dalles may see a considerable diminution in the volume of its wool receipts, and a consequent de crease in tbe amount of merchandise and supplies sold. It is not wise to shut one's eyes to a situation however un pleasant it may be, and it seems but the part of wisdom that efforts should be made and plans considered for the pre vention, if possible, of. tbe conditions likely to result from previous inaction. The writer does not mean to say that The Dalles cannot continue in the road of prosperity that it has heretofore trav eled. Far from him is any such intention ; but he does wish to call attention to what has been a serions defect in our commercial history. Tbe Dalles has had a one-sided development. We have paid exclusive attention to selling goods to people from the interior, and have entirely overlooked the fact that there are other opportunities at oar feet which could be improved ' without damage in any other regard, and which would as sure continued prosperity and increase the city's growth till but a few years would pass before we would be twice as man v as that which now we number. The city with the pay-rolls is the place prosperity come to first and lingers longest. - The Dalles is better situated than is any city in the state tor the es tablishment of industries which will give employment to large numbers of men and bring money from abroad to the hands of energetic citizens. Oregon City is looked upon as the manufactur ing city, but The Dalles has every ad vantage which . Oregon - City possesses and many' more. Oregon City has a woolen mill ; The Dalles has none. Yet Tbe Dalles is, as is often reiterated, the largest wool-shipping - point in the United States. Salem has a woolen mill; nearly a hundred men at work. The Dalles sends wool to Salem and buys its blankets. The little town of Dallas has a woolen mill, a tannery and a box factory. The Dalles has a flour mill and a couple of box factories.- Pendleton has a woolen mill and a sconring mill, both of which were offered us and re fused. . v I will' not draw the painful contrast futtber, only to add that this city has a destiny which, if we will only make tbe effort, will be a grand one. Let it be known that we.want iudustries to come here and will help liberally to establish them. Then we can etand to lose a por tion of our -trading country and still progress and prosper. Let us not 'stand around and say that "what this town needs is a half a dozen first-class funer als," bat let the Commercial Club per form one of the chief objects for which it waa lormed and see that another year does not pass without there being estab lished some industry with a pay-roll. The future proimes us grand things if we will only do our part. - C. D. ROBBED AND BEATEN. Three Indiana Attached on the Highway by White Toughs. ' Tbe sheriff's office was filled this morn ing with Indians, the causo being tbe robbing and beating ef three of their number by three white men'. The affair occurred about 9 o'clock last night, and as near as we can gather tbe particulars from tbe Indians was as follows :.' ' An old Indian named Shorty was com ing into town, and when near the old slaughter bouse east of town he met three men. One of them caught bis horse's bridle while the others proceeded to pall him off his horse. He resisted when one of them struck him in tbe face with a club, the' same being a dead branch of a pine tree about two inches through and about four feet long. Be- ing knocked to tbe ground the party went through his' pockets, and finding nothing let him go. Soon after two oth er Indians, George Peo, who owns farm near Celllo, and Warm Springs Loni, came by, when the men attacked them. Peo was struck in the face with, the club and knocked senseless, while Loni waa also knocked from his horse. The men then proceeded to go through their pockets, getting from Peo $5, and from Loni $2.50. Peo has a bad cut just above the eyes three inches in length and down to the bone, and another at tbe corner of the right eye. The eye. is bloodshot and badly injured. Loci put up his arm to protect his face and received a badly bruised arm and band, besides several email cots in tbe face. They reported the matter to Sheriff Driver this morning, describing the men, and it was not long before the sheriff had the offenders in jail. They are E. Simmons, Brown and Robert Wilson, all of whom are identified by tbe Indians as being the persons who robbed them. The Indians here are peaceable, in dustrious and law abiding, and that they should be attacked upon the public high way ana roDuea dv a gang ot toughs is the very worst kind of an outrage.- It is really a pity the affair did not happea in Nevada or Arizona, where the Indians do not appeal in such cases to the Jaw. Piutes would make to the authorities would be to let them know when tbey were turned loose. As it is, if the of fense is proven against them, they should be given the full benefit of the law. : - - ' - - . . Alas, Poor Violet. Recently at tbe Cliff House, San Fran--Cisco, Violet Clewes, a young English girl, drowned herself in the ead ealt sea. She took off her skirt and tied one cor ner of it full of sand ; the other corner she fastened to her neck. Then with trembling but nervy finger she wrote up on the sand, "Violet loves kindness, and she does not always get it in this coun try." Then she waded out into deep water in search of the kindness of the other world. ' -': One, at least, of our exchanges think this story "pathetic." We must confess it does not strike as that way, for we can see no good and sufficient reason for ber rash action. We all love kindness just as ardently as poor Violet, and sad to relate we can go Violet one better and say we don't often get it. Is that any reason we should go drown oar sorrows beneath the restless waters of the oeean and so pickle our misfortunes in brine? Suppose Violet, before tackling that car go of Band, had written "Violet loves pie and she does not always get it in this country." Would that not have been equally sad, and much' more sentimen tally pathetic? ' Pie is tangible and fill ing. It is something whose presence can be felt; its absence missed. It is a real ity. Kindness is another matter, that cannot be compared to pie as a filler of long-felt wants. Looking at it from this standpoint, we cannof but think that Violet's action was rash and uncalled for. She might at her age safely have hoped to have struck a pay streak, a reg ular Clondyke of happiness. Her taking off was decidedly premature. - '. Plenty of Indians. The town baa been full of Indians all day. . They began arriving . yesterday, and this morning tbe number was large ly increased by arrivals from the Warm Springs. They came at the request of one Harry Ueikes, who had . invited them to take part in a Wild West show,, which was to have taken place at the fair ground today, bat which, owing to the premature . departure of Heikes, failed to materalize.' Heikes claimed to have been with Buffalo Bill in his travels through Europe, which statement has some semblance of truth, for he can drink in fifteen foreign languages, tome of them dead. It seems that Heikes gut np tbe scheme for the purpose of getting credit at the eaJoons, a credit which he . apparently did not allow to get lone some. . Among other things advertised in the show, waa the holding np of the stage, and Heikes fearing there might be some bitch in the proceedings bad prepared for it. He could have stopped it with his breath. : He left two or three days ago to avoid tbe rush today, and is now no one knows where. The Indians are a fine looking looking lot, all of them being togged np in their : best blankets and trappings,, while the sqnaws are simply giddily gaudily dressed. Tbey eeem to be having a good time, anyway, despite their disappointment. ' ' Laylug- the Curaer-Stone. - Tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock tbe corner stone of the Catholic church will be laid with the usual ceremonies. Right Rev. Archbishop Gross will be present, and will be assisted by several prieets from other points and Rev. Bronsgeest.. The church will be a . very handsome one, a credit to the city aa well as to the denomination. Many in vitations have been sent out and most of our citizens will be present to do honor to the occasion, and rejoice with tbe Catholic brethren in tbe church's prosperity. The ceremonies are very beautiful and those who have never seen anything of tbe kind will be greatly pleased with them. Yellow washing powder will make your clothes the same color. Avoid this by using Soap Foam. It's pure white. a2-3m