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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (March 3, 1891)
- en 1 THE DALLES, OREGON, TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1891. NO. 68. VOL. I. Clt the Dalles Daily Chronicle. Published Daily, Sunday Excepted. THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. Corner Second and Washington Streets, Dalle, Oregon. The Terms of Subscription. Per Year Per month, by carrier. . ingle copy . 00 TIME TABLES. Uail roads. BAST BOCKB. No. 2, Arrives U.I. Departs 1:10 A. M. WEST BOUND. " No. 1, Arrives 4:50 A. M. Departs 5:05 A. M. STAGES. For Prineville, via. Bake Oven, leave daily (except Sunday) at ft a. m. For Antelope. Mitchell. Canyon City, leave Mondays, Wednesdays hjImvh And Pridavs. at b A. M. Kor Dufur. Kiiureley and Tygh Valley, leave daily (except Sunday) at 6 A. M. For Goldendale, Wash., leave every day ol the week except Sunday at A. M. -Offices for all lines at the Umatilla House. THE CHURCHES. IMRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. -Tay-' lob, Pastor. Services every Sabbath at 11 A M. and 7 r. M. Sabbath School at 12 X. Prayer meeting every Thursday evening 1 clock. .-.rMOfiniPfiATinx AI. :HTiRCH Rev. W. C. I 1'nvnn. Viwtnr. Horvices everv Sunday at 11 a. M. and 7 p. h. Bunday School after morning I Mrvine. Stranitera cordially invited, beats tree. m r v.. CH U RCH Rev. H. Brown, Pastor. 1 ' Services every Sunday morning and even ing. Bunday ecnool at rift o cioca m. nlt tjU o'clock M. A cordial Invitation is extended by both pastor and people to all. ST. PAUL'S CHURCH Union Street, opposite Fifth. Rev. Eli D. SutcliB'e Rector. Services very Sunday at 11 a. m. and 7,30 P. m. Sunday School 12:ao r. u. Evening Prayer on Friday at 7:30 ST. PETER'8 CHURCH Rev. Father Bbokr 6EE8T Pastor. Low Mass every Sunday at 7 a. u. High Mass at 10:30 a. M. Vespers at 7 P. M. SOCIETIES. A BSEMBLY NO. 2H70, K. OF L. Meets iu K. I of P. hall Tuesdays at v :au r. m. W AB.ro Tnnr.K. NO. 15. A. F. & A. M. Meets first and third Monaay oi eacu uiouvu at P. M COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 5, T. O. O. F. Meets every Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in Odd Fellows hall, Second street, between Federal and Washington. Sojourning brothers are welcome. H. A. Bills, Seo'y R. G. Clobteb, N. G. , FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P. Meets every Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in ehanno's building, corner of Court and Second street. Sojourning memDers are coraiaiiy in vited. Geo. T. thohpsom, D. W. Vaosb, Sec'y. 0. C. WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE I UNION will meet every Friday afternoon at 8 o clock at the reading room. Aiiare invireu. mRMPLE LODGE NO. 3. A. O. U. W. Meets J. at K. of P. Hall, Corner Second and Court Streets, Thursday evenings at :.iu. Johh Fillook. W. 8. Mtbhs. Financier. M. W. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. VV R O. I. DOANK PHYSICIAN AND 8UR- IJ geon. Office; rooms 5 and 6 Chapman Block. Residence over McFarland & French's Office hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 5 and 7 to tore. P.M. A. flee in Bchanuo's building, up stairs. The . a UffBHVTT ITTftU VirV.I'l'.l .tW i IT ' " I tM o. C. ESHELMAN Homoiopathic Phy- Lf sician and Surgeon. Office Hours: 9 to 12 A. H' ; 1 to 4, and 7 to 8 V M. Calls answered promptly duy or night' Office; upstairs In Cbap- man J L iioca TTb 8IDDALL Dentist. Gas given for the 17. nainless extraction ot teem, aiso teem set on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of the Golden Tooth, Second street. AR. THOMPSON ATTORNBY-AT-LAW. Office 1 . in Opera House Block, Washington Street, Tne Danes, Oregon r. P. HAYS. B. B. HUNTINGTON. H. 8. WILSON. rAVS. HUNTINGTON & WILSON ATTOB- nbys-at-law. Offices. French's block over first national Hank, The Danes, Oregon. B.B.DCFUB. GEO. W ATKINS. FRANK MENEFEK. DUFUR, W ATKINS & MENEFEE ATTOR-neys-at-law RoottiB Nos. 71, 7S, 75 and 77, Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. WJ H. WILSON Attorney-at-law Rooms V v . 52 and 53, New Vogt Block, Second Street, me uaiies, uregon. W. & T. mocoi BARBERS Hot and Cold BKTH S. 11Q SECOND STREET. YOU NEED BUT . ASK The 8. B. Headache and Liver Cure taken according to directions will keep your Blood, Liver and Kidneys in good order. The 8. B. Cough Cube for Colds, Coughs and Croup, in connection with the Headache cure, is as near perieci as anything known. The 8. B. Alpha Pain Cube for internal and external use, in fteuTalgla, Toothache. Colic and Cholera Morbus, is unsurpassed. They J mitwipn . ThfiV are well liked wherever known. M ami f sutured I at Dufur, Oregon. For sale by all druggists. 3 T?ilF S A COMPLETE JEN'S FINE SHOES McFarland CHAS. STUBLING, -PROPRIETOR 41- New Vogt Block, OER7VaIN. WHOLlESRliH and ETflllx IiIQUOR DHALEt. Milwaukee Beer on Draught. D. P. Thompson' J. s. Schbnck, H. M. Bball, Vice-President. Cashier. President. Hist national Bank. THE DALLES, - OREGON A Genial Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to Sight Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly reimtteu uii uav ui wntn;uuu Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on Hew York, Kan rrancisco ana ron land. DIRECTORS. P. Thompson. Jno. 8. Schenck. W. Sparks. Geo. A. Liebe. H. M. Bball. , FSeHch & co., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERALBANKING BUSINESS Letters of Credit issued available in the Eastern States, -Sieht Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fav orable terms. PIHIER&BEJITOU, Cor. Third and Union Streets. We are in thelce Businness. BULLETIN. The V.mr market ia almost bare and we are selline todav at 20 cents, or 3 dozen for 50 cents. Lemons 35 cents per dozen. Walla Walla Flour 1.00 per sack. We inst received one box of Sweet Potatoes. Anyone wanting any to plant can find some at our store. Choice lot of California Eoll Butter just received. J" MAIER & BENTON. $20 REWARD. VTTTLL BE PAID FOR ANY INFORMATION T leading to the conviction of parties cutting i I I . t 1 1 V. . K,. w ropes ut in uj "v "' "'" w.ra, I " Electric Light H. GLENN. Manager. LINE OF ' t I & French. OF THE- Second Street. BUNNELL BROS., 190 Third Street. PIPE v WORK. Pipe Repairs and Tin Repairs A SPECIALTY. Mains Tapped With Pressure On. Opposite Thompson's Blacksmith Shop. COLUMBIA QaQdy :-: paetory, VY. S. CRAM, Proprietor. (Successor to Cram & Corson.) Manufacturer of the finest French and Home Made O 1ST .ID. I East of Portland. IE S -DEALER IN- Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish any of these goods at Wholesala or Retail . OfFESH -f OYSTEHStv- In Every Style. 104 Second Street, The Dalles, Or. A. A. Brown, Has opened a choice assortment of Staple and Fancy Groceries, Wood and Willow-Ware, Fruit Con fectionery, etc. , which he offers at Reasonable v Prices A Share of the Public Patronage is teepectfully Solicited. fliekelseri's Block, Cor. Third and Washington, The Dalles, Oregon. FOR SALE. 12 HEAD OF CATTLE CONSISTING OF Cows. Calves and YearUngs Apply to Near S. H. Waterman's, Eight-Mile. HE HUNTED A BUYER. Hnnt Sells his Entire System to Chas. B. Wright for $3,000,000 Will the Northern Parallel the U. P? Senator Dolph is Doing Good Work, for the Cascades Right of Way The Sherman Diamonds to be Sold. HIM 8ELL8 Ol'T. Charles B. Wright Bays the "Hunt Sys tem" A 3,000,000 Transaction. - Philadelphia -March-v3. -The-Pre says Charles B. Wright has purchased from George W. Hunt, of Walla Walla, Wash., a number of railroads known ae the "Hunt System", which penetrates the great wheat fields of Eastern Wash ington and Oregon. The first payment on this transaction which involves $3, 000,000 was made today. Wright is a heavy stock holder in - the Northern Pacific RaHroad. FKUM SENATOR DOLPH. He Will do All He Can for the Cascade Right of Way. Washington, D. C. March 2, 1891. To the President of The Dalles Board of Trade: Havejiad reported from the commit tee on commerce and passed through the senate and sent to the house a concur rent resolution granting state of Oregon right of way at the Cascades and have also reported it as amendment to an ap propriation bill and if the resolution does not pass the house, will try to pass it as af'rider on the appropriation bill. J. N. Dolph. Congressional , Proceedings. - Washington, March 3. The president has signed the direct tax bill. The Senate has adopted the conference report on the diplomatic appropriation bill including the provision for the Hawaiian cable. The senate today agreed to the amend ment to the general deficiency bill reem bursing California, Oregon and Nevada, for moneys expended by them in sup pression of the late rebellion. $225,000 is given Oregon. The senate has passed the general deficiency bill and sent it back to the house with senate amendments. Ia Not "Jack. tne Ripper" Mra. O'Shea Gets Her Fortune. London, March 3. Firman Sadler, arrested for the. murder of "Carroty Nell," has been discharged as the police could not collect sufficient evidence to connect him with the crime. The application of the brother of Mrs. Wood to break her will, bequeathing her large fortune to Mrs. O'Shea, was today refused by the court. Chief Bushy head Get a Kastralnlng Order. Guthrie, I. T., March 3. Ex -chief Bushyhead, who has a lease upon stone quarries in the Cherokee Strip, today obtained a temporary restraining order from Judge Green enjoining Lieutenant Golden from moving Bushyhead and his employes from the Strip, or destroying his buildings, side-tracks, derricks and machinery. Water Higher than Brer Before Known in Arizona. San Francisco, March 3. A dispatch from Clifton, Arizona, dated March 1st, says that the Graum County Bulletin states that the water.is higher than the Aztec ruins, and sev.en feet higher than the oldest Indian or Mexican remem bers. It is impossible to ascertain the damage done to property or life. Good Sale of California Stock. New York, March 3. At the opening three davs sale of California trotting stock today. Among the important sales were Hindoo Wilks a black mare 6 years old by Guy Wilks, 2:15J $5,900; Cog nag, a black colt 3 years old by Guy Wilks, and Lottie by Belmont for $3,200, Sad Death of two Children. . Chicago, March 3. Hans Peter Jacob- son, aged twelve years, and his little siS' ter aged five, were partly burned and partly suffocated to death shortly after midnight last night. The house caught fire in the absence of their parents. Two of Astoria's Bad Men Fined. Portland, Or., March 3. Larry Sulli van and Dick McCarran both of Astoria. plead guilty in the United States court today to a charge of boarding vessels without permission of the captain. They were fined one hundred dollars each American Trotting Association In Session. Chicago. March 3. Men of the turf from Maine to California are in attend ance upon the second biennial congress of the American Trotting Association About seventy delegates are present, San f ranciseo Afarket. San Francisco, Cal. March 3. Wheat buyer '91, 1.48. CALIFORNIA'S DEAD SENATOR. A Brief Biography of George Hearst of That State. Washington, D. C, March 3 Special George Hearst -was born in Franklin county, Mo., Sept. 3, 1820. His father had gone to that state from North Caro lina in 1818. The son received only such a limited education ' as tne . common schools afforded in that day. He worked on his father's farm until 1850 when he caught the gold fever and went to Cali fornia. For several years he was a miner and prospector and subsequently by location and purchase became the owner of valuable mining interests and a large -employer, : having at one time as many as two thousand men at work in his mines and operating quartz ' mills that crushed 1000 tons of ore per day, The increase of his wealth was steady and rapid and for some years past his in come has been something like $1000 per dav. He has been for a long time chief partner in the extensive mining firm of Hearst. Hacrgin, Lewis & Co. He owned about forty thousand acres of land in San Luis, Obispo county, California, a ranch of 160,000 acres of grazing land in Old Mexico, stocked with a very large herd of cattle and a fine stable of thoroughbred horses. He was also interested in a large tract of land near Vera Cruz and in railroad building in Mexico. His fortune at the time of his death was estimated at $20, 000,000. Mr. Hearst's political life began in 1865 when he was elected to the Cali fornia legislature and served one term In 1883 he was a candidate before the democratic state convention at San Jose, California, for the nomination for gov ernor but was defeated by General George Stoneman. The latter was elected governor and when, by the death of United States senator John F. Miller, in 1885, the power of appointing a sena tor was given to him he appointed his former opponent for the gubernational nomination, Mr. Hearst. The latter was re-elected in 1887 and his term would have expired in 1893. His death givei the republicans in their turn, the same advantage which the death of Senator Miller,- gave the democrats. While in- the senate, Mr. Hearst was a man of action rather than of words. He took but little part in the debates an he suffered from a weak voice but when he did address the senate, his speeches, though brief, were always pointed. Benator Hearst leaves a wife and but one child, William B. Hearst, proprietor of the San Francisch Ex aminer. Mr. Hearst was in person tall and slender with blue eyes and long irrav beard. He was a eood type of the old California pioneer. He was warm hearted, impulsive and generous, popu lar with his associates in the senate, and had many devoted friends. The following tribute to his memory is from the pen of a well known Cal afornian: For thirty years or more George Hearst has been one of the vital men of the west, one of the individual forces which have inspired and given direction to that quick and vast develop ment of its resources which is one of the material miracles of the century.- But it is not as the mining expert, the or ganizer of gigantic enterprises . or the possessor of a great fortune that he will be nominated, It is not an obituary commonplace but the simple truth to say that his death has brought sorrow to thousands of hearts. Change of fortune made no change in the man. As a sen ator of the United States he was the same simple, unaffected, clear headed. arm-hearted George Hearst who mined on the Feather and Yuba in the fifties and took his share of the rough free life of the claims and cabins. To the thous ands of comrades who knew him he re- mained always as a comrade. Ostenta tion was abhorrent to the man formed on his rugged lines and it will never be known how' many successful men owe their beginnings to him or how many broken lives were made easier to live be cause of his hidden helping hand. To hundreds upon hundreds of the associates and even' the acquaintances of pioneer times he was a good providence, because he was a thorough Californian. Mr, Hearst was held in affection by all Cal ifornians whose experience reached back to the days when railroads, and the sharp completion of commercial life were unknown on the coast. His years of hard work and intimate mingling with men of every social and intellectual grade gave him a knowledge of human nature and a sympathy with its defects and weaknesses which kept him free from that pride of purse and hardness of feel ing that sometimes go with the riches .of the self-made man, and while he had singularly keen perception of character and a shrewdness that baffled all pre- tenders, his heart was tender, his charity great and his capacity for forgiveness inexhaustible. Neither in business politics nor in private life would he cherish enmities but when blows were necessary he would give as well as take. for he was a man of intense and strong character, but the battle over he was for shaking bands with a good humor that had in it no mixture of guile. If he has left enemies he has passed away hating none without previous experience of public life. Mr. Hearst the miner and man of business went to the senate and although in that body he spoke seldom' he brought to his duties a conscientiousness and on industry that made him highly useful to his people, in his committee work. The sturdy good sense of the man, his knowledge of affairs and particularly of the needs of the Pacific coast more than compensated his constituents for deficiencies as a pub lic speaker. He earned the esteem of the senate and the best men in it, be came his friends as good men did every where. His death is a serious public loss not alone to California but to the entire Pacific coast and peculiarly to the mines whose special friend and a advo cate he was. In the death of George Hearst a strong man; an able man, a good man, and a very humble man has been taken away. He had a manly, a gentle and a loving heart. There will be moist eyes in thousands of western homes, grand and humble, at the news of his death, and the sorrow will not be least in the cabins, dotting the canyons and streams of the Sierras. - THE SHERMAN DIAMONDS. The Latest Story is That They are to be Sold. Pittsburg, March ' 3. The famous " Khedive diamonds valued at $135,000, which were presented to Miss Minnie Sherman bv the chief ruler of Egypt in honor of her illustrious father when she married Lieutenant Thomas W. Fitch in 1875, are to be sold. . Although given absolutely to Mrs. Fitch, the proceeds . will be divided equally among the four children. Deleware Loses 58,1C0 Securities. Worth of Wilmington, Del., March 3. It ha just leaked out that $589,150 in securi ties owned by the state of Deleware, have been lost and no one knows how or when they disappeared. The securities are not negotiable. The legislature has appointed a committee to investigate he unsettled condition .in which the state's treasury has been left by ex Treasurer Herbert and upon the pre liminary report from that committee it has decided the secretary of state shall enter judgment upon Mr. Herbert's official bonds. Mormons Leaving- Utah. Salt Lake. March 1. A regular exo dus of Mormons from Utah to Mexico is taking place. The Mormons have a tract of land in Chihuahua, which they are settling up. All over the territory they are preparing to go south to "live their region' The head of the church is said to ue encouraging ciuigmuuu, ouu putting up funds. It is estimated that at least 2000 will leave this summer. Vandals at Work. Moscow. March 1. Great excitement has been caused here bv the discovery that four pictures by French artists which have been on exhibition here, have been cut from their frames and carried off. The general belief is that the outrage was committed by bermans, as an act of revenge. Upon this theory the police are making a careful search of the houses ol all Germans tnrougnout the Moscow government. A Visit From Lady Churchill. London. March 1. Lady Randolph Churchill has signified her intention to visit New York during 'the absence of i Randolph Churchill m Africa. Lord Randolph intends to be gone eight months, and it is likely that Lady Ran dolph will spend the gi-eatei1 part of that time among her old friends in New York. Conspicuous by His Absence. London, March 1. Sir William Gor- don-Cumming, whose peculiarities as a nlaver of baccarat have rendered nis presence offensive at most of his former .... , a i tt : . l resorts, win suoruy ean lor me uimcu States, where he will make a long visit to his brother, who owns a stock farm in Dakota. Couldn't Kill the Tramp. Eugene, March 1. A tramp met with a serious accident oy trying 10 augiii. from a moving train near the depot yes tprrlav pveniiic His scalp was laid open for about six inches, making a hor- noie Bpectacie. tit; wd tcwv u y will probably recover. Imnriumment for Life. Chicago, March 3. George Hathwan, who shot and killed Ex-Alderman Wm. Whelan in a saloon brawl some weeks ago, was today found guilty. The punish ment fixed was imprisonment for life. Travel to be Resumed. San Dikgo, March 3. Agent Keller, of the Santa Fe, reports that travel will be resumed between here and Los Angeles, Thursday, the first train leaving that day. . Chicago Wheat Market. Chicago, 111., March. 3. Wheat, steady; cash, 949478; May, 97 97M; July, 94. Retailers generally find Februrry a fchort month.