Dalles Daily Chronicle. Published Dally, Sunday Exoeptcd. fHE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. Beeond and Washington Streets. Dalles, Oregon. Tbe ( Tern of Subscription. tmt Tear .6 00 so .. . 6 r month, by carrier TINS TABLM. Railroads. BAST BOUMD. , Ho, S, Arrives 12:45 a. M. Departs 12:65 A. u. a, " 12: 15 P. . " 12: 85 r. M. WEST BOUMD. ex 1, Arrive :) a. M. Departs 4:50 a. at 7, " 5:15 P.M. " 5:30 P. X. Two loea freights that carry passengers leave aaaa (or the west at 7:45 &. M., and one for the eaat8A. 8TAOEH. Tar PrtneTille, via. Bake Oven, leave daily iMMli HllTMlnVl at H A. M . For Antelooe. Mitchell. Canyon City, leave Mondavi. Wednesdays and Fridays, at 6 a. x. jrnr Untiir. Kinirslev. Wimhs. Wapinitia, Warm nga and Tygh Valley, leave daily (except lay) at o A. M. . r Goldendale. Wash., leave every day of the r Tiit Mnndav at H A. M. Offices for all lines at the Umatilla House. Post-Offlce. OPPICB HOURS I DelivTev Window 8 a. m. to 7 p. m. Order " H a. m. to 4 p. m. j. D. " a. m. loiua. m. CUMINS OF MAILS Try trains going East 9 p. tn. and 11:45 a. m. t4 west 9p.ro. and 4:45 p.m. nissfi for Goldendale 7:30 a. m. "Prlneville 6:30 a. m, 'Dufur and Warm Springs. . .5:30 a. m Leaving for Lyle Hartland. ,5:: a. m m m u Antelope .6:30 a. m, "Bateept eunaay. fxit-weeaty. TkMH TTinradAV and Haturdav. Monday Wednesday and Friday.. TBE CHIIBCHKS. rIHBT BAPTIST CHDRCH Kev. O. D. Tat- X lob, Pastor. Services every Sabbath at 11 sua. and '7:80 P. M. Sabbath bcnoni at ni. JTayer meeting every Thursday evening at 7 rwiHRSTRkTIOIOL CHURCH Rev. W. C. J Cubtih, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11 aw at. and 7 p. m. Sunday School after morning service. Strangers cordially invited. Seata free. MK. CHURCH Rev. H. Brown, Pastor. owvbuia M-m RiimtHv mnrninK and even- Jag. Sunday School at 12J-, o'clock M. A cordlul tavitation is extended by both pastor and people tajaU. ST. PATJL'S CHURCH Union Street, opposite ' Fifth. Rev. Ell D. Sutclift'e Rector. Services HnnilRv at 11 a. m. and 7:80 P. M. Sunday Wataool 12:30 P. M. Evening Prayer on Friday at -t pbtrr'8 r:H IT RCII Rev. Father Bbohs- ' -O oust Pastor. Low Mass every Bunday at ?A, m. High Mass at 10:30 a. m. Vespers at 7r. w. SOCIETIES. A SRKMRI.Y NO. 4827. K. OF L. Meets in K A. of P. hall on firet. and third Sundays at 8 4aMek p. m. XTTABCO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. A A. M. Meets iv, Orel ana Ultra uonaay ox eacn umuHi u i srv aTJ.TCfl ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6. UMeets In Masonic Hall tbe third Wednesday f each month at 7 P. M. IfODEBN WOODMEN OF THE WORU1.- 1 Mt. Hood Camp No. 59, Moets Tuesday even. lawoieacn week in l. u. u. r . nan, n i:i r. COLUMBIA UJIXiK, NO. 5, I. O. O. F. Meets very Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in Odd aUows hall, Second street, between Federal and waaEungton. nojoarning Droimsrs are wciwmc ja. A., isixxs, sec y k. kt. llohtea, . FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P. Meets every Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in eh an no's building, corner of Court and Second -creels, sojourning memoers are coruiauy m V&wsa. oso. l. 1 Huantwn, . W. V ausb, Sec'y. C. C. WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE UNION will meet every Friday afternoon -m 3 o clock at the reading room. Auare uiviiea, rraupi.K ix)tm;k no. a. A. o. U. W. Meets JL at K. of P. Hall, Corner Second and Court , Thursday evenings at i :su. . a My BBS. Financier. M". W PBOFB88IONAL CARDS. ,K. J. SUTHERLAND Fbixow op Tbinity Medical College, and member of the Col of Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, Phy- n and surgeon, utnee; rooms s ana 4 uiiap block. Residence; Judge Thornbury's Sec- atreet. Office hours; 10 to 12 a. in., 2 to 4 7 to 8 p. m. f" R. O. D DO AN E PHYSIC1AX AMD HUB- Ofnoe: rooms 6 and 6 Chapman AJ SBON JUock. Residence over McFarland French's Office hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 5 and 7 to P. M . A 8. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of- flee in Schanno's buUding, up stairs. The Bailee, Oregon. riL O. C. ESHELMAN HOMCTorATHIC Pht J sician and Suboeom. Otttce Hours : 9 to 12 a. M ; 1 to 4, and 7 to 8 p' m. Calls answered nptly day or night' Ofhce; npstalrs in Chap i Block' fTa I 8IDDALL Dehtist. Gas given for the Um painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth eta. Also teetn Rooms: Sign of sot on flowed aluminum plate. B tb Golden Tooth, Second Street. A R. THOMPSON ATTOEWBT-AT-1.AW. Office Jm in Opera House Block, Washington Street, 'The Dalles, Oregon . V. MAYS. B. 8. HOHTTNOTON. B. S. WILSOM. MAYS, HUNTINGfON s WILSON ATTOB-NKYS-AT-LA w. Offices, French's block over Slrst National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. . B.B.DCrCS- OBO.WATKINS. PBAMK MBMBPBB. lBrDR' W ATKINS & MENEFEE Attok AJ hbys-at-law Roomi Nos. 71, 78, 75 and 77, Yogt Block, Second Street, The Dalies, Oregon. WH. WILSON Attobkky-at-IjAW Rooms a 62 and 53, New Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon, J. C. IJLDWip. (ESTABLISHED 1S07.) , ll2 Second Street, THE DALLES, - - OREGON II & T. JUCGOY, BARBERJS Hot arid Cold BHTHS, E w RICHEST OF ALL TRIBES. BIG FUND OF THE OSAGE INDIANS IN THE TREASURY. s Mawita Hunj to Their Credit That tha GoTenraflDt Oarv Not Pay It at One Time A Millionaire Indian la Kansas. How tho KaorsnooA Kan Accumulated. Speaking of a visit to the Indian Ter ritory some years ago Senator Piatt said: "When 1 was at the trading poet of the Osage Indians I was uinch amused to see an Indian baying a barrel of good flonr for himself and a barrel .of cheap flonr for the white man who worked for him:r' The Osage Indians can afford to be lux urious. They are the wealthiest Indians in the United States. It is estimated at the Indian office that the Osage Indians men, women and children are worth $15,000 each in what onght to be as good as cash i. e., salable land and the .government s promise to pay. So great is the interest on the sum held by the United States to their credit that the secretary of the interior will net pay out all of it at one time, and a gradual increment is adding to the mill ions already credited to the tribe on the books of the government. The Osages came to their wealth through the sale of their lands in Kansas when they were moved to a reservation in what is now known as Oklahoma teV. ritory One Indian abandoned his tribe and clang to bis Kansas land, and it is said that today, through the appreciation in the value of that land, be is worth a million dollars. . Be ja perhaps the richest Indian in the world. Nothing is known of him at the Indian office because, having abandoned his tribe, be has ceased to be a subject of solicitude to the gentlemen in charge of Indian affairs at the national capital. The land belonging to the other Indians was bought by the government and thrown open to settlement. ' THE INDIANS AND THE GOVERNMENT. In buying this property the govern ment did not make any actual payment for it. It announced to the Osages that they had been credited with the amount of the purchase money -and that - they would receive interest on that amount. There was no deposit made to secure this indebtedness of the government. There is nothing to represent it in the treasury department except the record of the fact that it has been assumed by the government. This has been the prac tice of the government its exclusive practice for many years. . A long time ago the treasury depart ment used to purchase southern state bonds with tbe purchase price of Indian lands and hold them in trust for the Indians. A great many of these southern state bonds are now in the treasury vaults, held in trust to secure indebted ness to the Indian' tribes. But' on the majority of them no interest has been paid by the states for a long time; in fact, the bonds in effect have been re pudiated. , . The government,' however,- under its contract with the Indians, is held liable for the interest which these bonds should have drawn.. This interest it has as sumed. So the purchase of the state bonds was a losing investment for the government. ' Its unhappy experience in this direction has taught it the wisdom of securing its debts to the Indian, like its other obligations, with a promise to pay . In the deposits to the credit of the Osage' Indians there is one item of $8,147,- 515. The annual interest on this is $407,' 876. There are about 1.500 Osages on the reservation in Oklahoma. The ex act number mentioned in the last annual report or the Inaiau commissioner is 1,496: but this, of course, varies from time to time. The members of this tribe, men. women and children, are joint sharers in tbe interest money. As it is paid to the tribe it is divided equally among them. It is drawn by the head of each family for himself, his wife and his children. HOW THE MONET IS SPENT. The Indian with a large family draws a goodly sum each month. Even the amount to which the single Indians are entitled is large for an Indian. It has been the policy for the secretary of the interior, acting for the ' president; who nnder the new law, is the trustee for the Indians, to pay to the Osage tribe only a part of the money to which it is entitled. The amount paid annually was for long time $250,000. Two years ago the payment was increased, at .the - request of the Indians, to $300,000 a year. That is lees than 75 per cent, of the amount due the Indians, and the other 25 per cent.- goes toward swelling the amount with which the tribe is credited on the treasury books. What will be done with this slowly increasing capital and the correspondingly increasing in terest on it is a question with which the government has not yet troubled itself." Occasionally some of the interest money which is due to the Osages is ex pended for their benefit by the secretary of , the- interior, within his discretion. The Indian office has on hand now plans for a $30,000 building to . be used as dormitory and school in connection with the education of the Osage children. The council 'of the tribe requested the secretary to make this expenditure. The government looks after the education of the Osages, and a special fund is set aside for educational purposes, ' ' The government supplies them with agricultural implements': and a great many other things which the Indians could very well afford to buy for them elves. They do buy a great many luk- uriea. Very few of ' them save any of the money which is paid to them by the . government. The trader at the agency gets a greater part of it within an hour after the payment has been distributed. The Osage tradership is regarded as the most ..valuable in the United States. Other traders have more Indians to deal with, but not so much money. Wash ington Cor. New York Sun, Without Mask OMBoalty. Gasxara It is so hard to be poor. Haddox And yet a great many peopte ooompUob it. -New York Epoch. A CURIOUS WEDOiNG , PRESENT. j .. v. i' -".'; --' . - ! DM- tlto .jBoreJiavmt . rVlh tn Ri-biiks Bis Dsatlitxr. ur Ww It His SlnspllrltvT or There was a fine- old . gentleman iu this city, who from the humblest begin nings made his way steadily up to com- ' mercia! fame and immense ' wealth, all by the manufacture of soap.", said a New Yorker the other day. "and with all his wealth and . prosperity he never forgot how a poor man feels or lost any of his consideration for the rights of others. Pride never puffed him up nor made, him ashamed of his business or his early history. . He was proud of the punty and ex cellence Of his soap, and the secret of bis success ' over his rivals lay in the fact that he invented several processes for cheapening the manufacture of that arti cle, and his great factory in this city was full of machinery- of his own inven tion and manufacture. He made one ample fortune solely out of patenting the ideas of his fertile brain, and several others by m;Ukigrw-.mannfactures he was thus able ta-.turn put. . "His wife was as intensely purse proud as be Was simple.: though her origin was as simple as his own, and her daughter took after her. This child married well, as they say: that is, a young swell about town proposed to her on account ; of toe great wealth he knew she would inherit. J When the engagement was settled the daughter and mother asked the old man what ue was going to do in the way of setting the young people up in life. "Here they ran - up against m -nuex- pected snag. - The old boy would giv nothing' in the way of a dowry. "EEs thought the bridegroom should support his wife unaided all her father s will gave her a share f lus !, JThe -utmost he could be ptvemiietiNxpaa to do was to givs his daughter wadding present. What this would be he stead fastly refused to say just then. On the wedding day. however, his gift to the bride was the deed for a handsome house in a fashionable street, completely fur nished in costly style from top to bottom. "The bridal tour had all been arranged, so no stop was made by the happy pair to examine the new bouse. All through the honeymoon they talked of the pleas ure they would have in going over the house, examining the pictures and plate and entertaining their friends in it. Great was the delight with which they entered their new home on their return. The carpets were velvet, the hangings of silk and lace, the furniture hand carved. the pictures old masters, the linen of the finest, and silverplate was everywhere. even in the kitchen. The. bridesrroom was delighted, but the bride's cheeks were crimson, and her eyes flashed a fire that tears could not quench. Everywhere she looked she was familiar objects that filled her with rage. Snatching a heavy silver salver from the table, she showed to her husband, en graved on it 'minutely but with elaborate detail, the -representation of -r a bar of soap with her father's well known trade mark on it. This queer crest was everywhere about the house, worked into carved furniture, woven in the linen .and hang ings, and even painted on the carriage and stamped on the harness which were presented with the house. It was the old man's greatest pride, that trademark and what it stood for, but whether he had it put on his daughter's things out of sheer simplicity of heart or whether he intended it as a rebuke to her foolish pride I never found out." New York Tribune. . A. Lord Who Drovo a Water Cart, When Lord Charles Beresford first en tered upon a naval : career he was very fond of a bit of fun occasionally. This is shown by the following incident. which is told by one of his brother offi cers. W hue in the officers mess one day, a discussion arose among the young officers as to whether any one of them would care to ride down tbe Bow at a fashionable hour on a cart, and "Char lie.' as be was familiarly called, under took to accomplish tbe feat. A bet of a five-pound note was immediately made that he would not do so, and in this bet the other officers in the room about seven in number joined. The matter then dropped. A few days afterward Lord Marcus Beresford was riding down the Bow, followed closely by Lord Melville and his brother, when they were suddenly hailed by a man sit ting on a water cart with tbe salutation. "Hi. just hand over those fivers." The officers drew up in astonishment, which immediately gave place to uncontrolled laughter when it was seen that the driver of the water cart was Lord Charles Beresford, dressed np in laborer's clothes. He had bribed the driver to allow him to take his place, and the "fivers'" had to be paid. London Tit-Bit. ' Oldest Doom Ih WaalUiictosi. Down at the foot of Seventeenth street. away from the usual route of the guide book sightseers, stands the oldest hones in Washington. The moss had grown thick around its humble roof long before quarreling congresses wrangled, and dis puted, over the location of the future "Federal CUr," and when at last tbe dispute was ended and a definite site se lected it was found that the unpreten tious home and paternal acres of a sturdy old Scotchman, David Burns oy name. occupied a large portion of the proposed situation. Tbe . homestead itself was lo cated almost upon the immediate bank of the Potomac, here a mile or more iu width, and only a little distance away from the beautiful hill upon which the observatory now stands the hill upon which, it is related, Braddock's forces camped on their first night out from Alexandria, ' in that ill starred march into the wilderness. New England Mag- azine. ' - Psllssmea's Lot Hot Happy. ' The Portland police are not allowed to carry umbrellas. They have also been ordered to report daily the electric lights that do not burn. The result of this at tempt to ,make the polieeman useful as well aa ornamental will be carefully watched by other cities not less anxious to experiment in the airectioa of reform. Biddeford (Me.) Journal. Wesale aid . Detail Drnaists. -DEAUKR8 IN- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic CIGARaS. PAINT Now is the time to paint your house and if you wish to get the best quality and a fine color use the Sherwin, Williams Co.'s Paint. For those wishing to see tbe quality and color Of the above paint we call their attention to the residence of S. I Brooks, Judge Bennett, Smith French and others painted by Paul Kreft. Snipes & Kinersly are agents for the above paint for The Dalles. Or. Don't Forget the lacDonali Bros., Props. THE BEST OF Wines, Liprs and Cii ars ALWAYS ON HAND. (J. E. B2YAD 2 dO., Real Estate, Insurance, and Loan AGENCY. Opera House Bloek,3d St. Chas. Stubling, PaoruiaToa or thb New Vogt Block, Second St WHOLESAIE AND RETAIL Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON DRAUGHT. Health is Wealth 1 KAIM Dr. E. C. Wbt Kbbvb ikb Bbaik Treat ment, a ruaranteed specific for Hysteria. Dlszl ness. Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental De pression, onenins; or tne israin, resulting in in sanity and lea dine to misery, decay and death Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power In either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. . Each box contains one month's treatment. $1.00 a box, or six boxes tor so.uu, sent Dy miu prepaid on receipt oi price. ' GTJAKATVTKR SIX BOXES To cure any case. With eaeh order receive us for six boxes. accemtanled bv S5.00. we wi send the mirchaser our written rnarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effect a cure, uuarantees issued oniy Dy - BLAKELEY & HOUGHTON, vl ' Prescription Drnggista, 175 Second St. Tbe Dalles, Or. YOU NED BUT fiSK Middlb Vaixxt. Idaho. Mav 16. 1891. Dm. VariDSBPOOl.: Your 8. B. Headache and Liver Cure sells well here. Everyone that tries it comes for the second bottle. - Peonle are com ing ten to twelve miles to get bottle to try It and then they come back and take three or four Dottles at a time, man you, 'or senaing aup- ueaie uim as nunc as uispiaceu. - Trr!V- BesDeetfullv. V kf; A. FLETCHER. EBSTPSJLOOD allll. For aal by all DruTaTista. Ttie Dalles is here and has come to stay. It hopes o win its way to public favor by ener gy, industry and merit; and to this end xxiPt nlr T.rint. Trrm on-rro " . if satisfied with its support. The four pages of six columns each, will be issued every evening, except Sunday, and will be delivered in the city, or sent by mail for the moderate sum of fifty cents a month. Its Objeets will be to advertise city, and adjacent developing our industries, in extending and opening up new channels for our trade, in securing an open river, and in "h p.1 Tn n o TTTTT! "H ATT .TT.Pi r f-o to ti an nTmv. .lr O - - er position as the Leading City of The naner. both dailv and weeklv. will be independent in criticism of political matters, as in its handling of local affairs, it will be JUST. FAIR AND IMPARTIAL We will endeavor to give all the lor: cal news, and we ask that your criticism of our object and course, be formed from the contents of the paper, and not from rash assertions of outside parties. THE WEEKLY, sent to any address for $1.50 per year. It will contain from four to six eight column pages, and we shall endeavor to make it the equal of the best. Ask your Postmaster for a copy, or address. THE CHRONICLE PUB. CO. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. "E DALLES. The Grate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the head of navigation on the Middle Columbia, and is a thriving, prosperous city. ' ITS TERRITORY. It is the supply city for an extensive and rich agri cultural an . grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer Lake, a distance of over twe hundred miles. . THE LARGEST WOOL MARKET. The rich grazing country along the eastern slope of the the Cascades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheep, the -wool from which finds market here. ',The Dalles is the -largest original "wool shipping point in America, about 5,000,000 pounds being shipped last year. - The salmon, fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, yielding this year a revenue of $1,500,000 -which can and "will be more than doubled in the near future. The products of the beautiful Klickital valley find market here, and the country south and east has this year filled the -warehouses, and all available storage places to overflo-wing -with their products. ITS WEALTH It is the richest city of its size on the coast, and its money is scattered over and is being used to develop, more farming, country than is tributary to any other city in. Eastern Oregon. Its situation is unsirpassed! Its climate delight ful! Its possibiHties incalculable!- Its resources un limited! And on thesa corner stones she stands. Ciwcie i q foirffiQl orif! .at V UA AWA, lUU course a generous Daily V the resources of the country, to assist in w wuku uvi jla vr Eastern Oregon. politics, and v in its 110 SECOND STREET. -. V - . .