The Dalles Daily Chroniele. TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1891 The Chronicle is the Only Paper in The Dalles that Receives the Associated Press Dispatches. . f.ir. - 1 .-' Notice. . t "f Persons leaving town for the springs, sea coast, or mountains can - hav Thjs DailkLChboniclb. sent to them without extra cost by leaving orders at this! office; J - -- ' ' , LOCAL BRKVIT1K8. C. E. Bayard is (n the city. ' Mr. John Farris of Waplnitia is in the city. . ? ': " Mr. R. H. Guthrie of ' Rutledget. came " '- .... into to town last evening. Mr. A.'-S. Macallister went.to Portland " today on the. 5 a, m. train. . ; " . " .ft iMesmXA.. Kelsay'and W.'lJ? Hin-r -kle of Antelope arajin town. " ' " t -. ' Mr. John FilloonahA-wife "returned this morning from -Viitoria,-; Bj C. 4' Messrs John Baxter of Antelope and J. H. Menefee of Dnfur are in the city.' Mr. C. P. Heald, of Hood River, gavn the Chronicle office a ' welcome : call - today. . r--'f -""-" r; " , Mr. W. N. Wiley and two sons left to day for the Cold Camp ranch near An- telope. s . ......... m. Mr. S. E.' Farris went out this morn ing to his ranch at Wapinitia to remain " for a week. - ' ' Two cars of sheep were shipped from, this place last night by Chas. Butler, to ' Portland. ;"" - - -' Mr. R. C. Fleck, of the Chronicle, returned from a pleasant trip to Port- This office is under obligations to Col. W. E. McArthur of Washington, D. C. for valuable documents received. Mr. Q. C. Stevens and wife have gone to Gilliam county to visit their children a.nd far t.ha hranftt of Mr. Stevens' health ' .which has been very poor of late. There are several cases of : measles in : t.h ?1tv. Th innnveat child of Mr. C. W. Richmond is just recovering from an - attack, .v . , We call attention to the advertise ment in another column for bids for hauling 150 barrels of cement from the cars to the new reservoir on the Meeplie place. Two carloads of wagons and one of headers are at the depot - for Filloon Brothers. Mr. Geo. Filloon says, "We are prepared to cut the seaRon'sJcrop and move it on wheels." ' James McGinty has commenced the 'excavation for the new reservoir on the Mesplie place.' Six" men-are now em ployed and more will be added as they V I J . J . y can w worxeu auvunuure. Mr. J. A. Varney leaves this evening for the Willamette valley where he will look over the ground with a view of tak ing in charge the platting and planting of an orchard of 2700 acres, for an east ern syndicate. '-' Mr. A. Hall yesterday came up from Hood River where he has been working on his claim for a few days. The claim lies near to that of our fellow towns-man . Mr. C. J.. Roberts. Mr. Hall's hands .bear evidence that grubbing out pine stumps don't agree with them. the West Indies refused to suoply France with sugar, he called the farmers of the ' North of France together and said : "If vou plant beets we will make our own sugar," and this was the foundation of the srreat industrv in France, which has spread into Germanv and now bids fair 1 - - , ? 1 . 2 l-V lo uecome a staple uiuumry tu vrreguu Ex. Every little while we hear of some new Adventurer making search for the famous if not mythical' Blue -Bucket mines. 1 The last person w 6 has recorded . his failure to locate them is one John Buck triaHter of Fox Valley, Harney county Mr. Buckmaster closely followed the in structions given him but the search . failed to discover anything of value T Mr. August Buchler met with a painful accident last evening that will confine him to the house for a few davs. As our reporter learned it, Mr. Buchler was the act Of stepping on a switch engine - on which he had been riding, when the engine came to so sudden a stop while Mr. Buchler still grasped it, that his left shoulder was knocked out of joint. Dr. Logan was promptly sent for and soon had the joint in place and Mr, I Duvuior Will, IIO UUUUb Ut3 UJUIDCU UU in a few days. Mrs. J. H. Covington of this city has a .' plan for exterminating squash bugs and . . cabbage and tree lice, that she .com mends to the attention of all whose gar dens are infeated with these pests. It ' is simply finely ground cayenne pepper, a sed as a powder or in a solution of five gallons of water to. : a pound of pepper. . As a powder, fhe appiles it to the squash leaves and around their roots, by a com . mon insect bellows which can b-bought at any of our drug stores. The solution . ' she applies by either washing the leaves, . or when convenient dipping the infected branches into a vessel containing the solution, Mrs. Covington, pronounces this remedy a complete success. It is teiitAd it and never found it to fail.. ..The solution no matter how strongly made, will not effect the trees, or plants. The TJ. .P. pay car passed through the city today going east, and made a num erous constituency happy T. P. Cram and F. E. Shontell intend, in a. few days to go to the Cascade sul pher springs and remain for about a month. Fireman Palmer and ' Tode Jackson and family will go to Wind River on Thursday and remain a month or six weeks. " .. .- : In a Mexican . town Methodists were laying the corner stone of a church when they were attackhd by a crowd of igno rant Mexican Catholics. "My friends," said the - pastor, "for the sake of that gentle -Christian, in whom we all believe let us proceed in peace.' Just then he was knocked .down :bj a rock thrown by an angry Mexican, and as he picked himself up he exclaimed : "Jf the low lived, white-livered Greaser'that threw that .rock will come forward I will l'ck him out of his boots." Then the police came on the gronnd and peace settled down over the scene. f t , y .1- .i n i ,i iTlI . Hd, Lilt? cubiouinmv KgCUb v the Union, Pacific company at this place has had taken a number of fine photo graphs of that part of ' the ' Fourth pro cession which be, personally engineered, which illustrated the difficulties of the pioneer's methods of travel, as well as the comforts of the modern railroad car riage. The picture is entitled the "Trail and the Rail." The prairie "schooner, propelled by the patient oxen, the .six taofcse stage coach of "49" and the mod-. era palace car, all are finely represented, as is the legend on the latter, "This is the road you1" long have sought and mourned because;' you -found it not." The picture' is a very handsome one, in deed, and the use Mr. Lytle haB made of it, shows a genius for advertising Uhat is worthy of a P. T. Barnum. It makes as handsome an advertisement as we have ever seen. .." - . There is a very melancholy looking brindle cow and calf impounded in the Saltmarsb calaboose under the indict ment of having stolen or otherwise sur reptitiously grand larcenied Deputy United State Marshal A. G. Johnson's garden valued at about $20. She waives examination and is fully committed for trial before his honor Marshal Gibbons. What makes the matter possess a touch of deep pathos, is the fact that the edi tor's cow is there too, though under what charge we have not yet learned. We are fully prepared however, to certify as to her -previous good character. As to the brindle, Mr. Johnson says she is an old transgressor, -well known for her theiying propensities in' the Garrison neighborhood. When she comes up for trial. Mr. Johnson will prove that she can open a garden gate, no matter how it is latched, slicker than any. cow he ever saw in his life. She can . eat corn. without a question. .She has now four or five hundred yards of A. G's. sweet corn concealed on her person, or had, when she latched the. garden gate after her. " . . . ; , . .. , . . . A very pleasant party met last night, about 8 :30 o'clock, in the parlor of the Umatilla house, from whence they cross ed the river, on sail boats, to the wheat platform near the shoe factory, where Messrs. J. P. FitzGerald, Fred Wilson and John Booth had stretched an ample canvas and where, beneath the twinkling stars, to 'the charming music of the guitar club, they chased the happy hours onflying feet till midnight hour called them back across the river. It was a happy merry crowd and before it broke up it solidly voted the meeting a delight ful success and solemnly resolved to have it duplicated next week. The following are the names of the participants : Misses Maggie Rowland, Allie Row land, Virginia Marden, Grace Marden, Ursula Ruch, Louisa Ruch, Sada Whit mer, Lena Wentz, Bertha Wentz, Ma tilda Hollister, Alice Mulligan, Kath nna De Huff, Gertrude Myers. Rose Michell. , . , ,. Messrs. John Booth. J. C. Mason, L, Ainsworth, Roger Sinnott, F. Faulkner, W. S. Elliot, Sam Campbell, Norman Wilson, Chac. Wilson, John F. Hamp shire, Fred W. Wilson, Joe P. FitzGerald, Max.- P. Vogt, Will Michell, Ed. Patter son and Mart Donnell. ' MoAier Correspondence. Mosieb, July 20, 1891. Ed. Chronicle : I should be pleased to write something yery entertaining and newsy, but as I have been too busy to find out anything, if there was any' thing to be found oat, so I shall have to beg all concerned to take the will for the deed. - - '- - We had a very pleasant but- short call from Misses Carry Davenport and Anna Dehm yesterday. " ; - .1 have heard that some of The Dalles people are talking of camping on Mosier creek. We shall be pleased to. entertain them from our orchards, and gardens ; and not only' in this, but also from a social point of view. The people here have been packing prunes the past week for the foreign market. ; I hear some of the Mosierites say they wonder if such as we would have an in vitation to try the new boat on its trial trip? ' . . .- M. G . , BORN. This morning, to the wife of Mr. Frank Winter, a son.s Mother and child doing well. ... -.. , . - - , . Twenty Dollars Seward. . Parties have been cutting - the supply pipes above the city between the flume and the reservoir, thus doing much dam age. .mis. must De stopped and a re ward of $20 is hereby offered for evidence that will lead to 'the, conviction of. per sons doing the same. By order of the Board of Directors. A Lone Bemenereil Debt. ' ' Forty-nine years ago 'Father Beezley of this city was dunned by a storekeeper for the price of a bushel of flax seed. He refused to pay on the ground that, he had never got it. Time ' passed and the storekeeper died and Father Beezly if he ever thought . of the incident at all thought that he .was right in refusing to pay- for a thing he never .' got.'. .ToKlay while setting , in the store of W. A. Kirby something . occurred that revived the incident and he remembered, ag if it i had happened yesterday, the purchase of j the flax seed and what he did with it". As the incident came back to Father ' Beezley's memory the omnipresent news gatherer entered the store and heard the tale. When it was finished he mildly suggested - that Father - Beezley would have to square that bushel of flax-seed with Saint Peter before he would ever be admitted through the golden gate ; but Father Beezley was equal to the occasion when he replied, "That store-keeper died' fifty .dollars, in my. debt; the bal ance'ls on the other side." . iCHBpNICLE SHORT STOM. ; ' RaspWrries,' three boxes for twenty' five centa at JoleS Brothere. ' ' : For headache use !S. B. headache cure. For coughs and colds use 2379. . For physic always use S. B. headache cure.' , ' , Use Dufur flour. It is the best. ' 2379 is the cough syrup for children. ' . One hundred gallons currants at Joles Bros.,' twenty-five cents per gallon. For 0.; N. G. diaarhoea S.- B. pain cure is the. best thing known. Get me a' cigar from that line case at Snipes & Kineraley's. A. M. Williams & Co., have on hand a fine lot of tennis and bicycle shoes, 'v, For ice cream cramp use S. B. pain cure. Fb'iUh.of July colic use S. B."' pain cure. ' i ' . r , ' For 4th of July colic use S. B. pain cure. , - ... V ,, Bids will be received at the, office of Hugh Glenn up till the first of August, for the hauling of 150 barrels, more or less, of cement, from the cars to the new reservoir on the Mespiie . place. . Ask your grocer for Dufur flour... ' The celebrated "Walter H. Tenny Boston-made mens' and boys' fine boots and shoes in all styles, carried by The Dalles Mercantile company at Brooks & Heers old stand. . . - Don't wear your life out scrubbing your kitchen floor when you can buy such beautiful linoleum, the best for kitchen and dining-room, for 75 cents a yard, and oil-cloth at 35 cents a yard at the store of Prinz' & 'Nitsche. For 4th . of July .colic Use S. B. pain cure. Long Ward offers for sale one of the best farms of its size in Sherman county. It consists of 240 acres of deeded land at Erskihville. - There is a never-failing , spring of living water capable of water-' ing five hundred head of - stock daily. Tne house, which is a large store build ing with ten rooms attached alone cost $1700. A blacksmith shop and other buildings and the whole surrounded by a good .wire fence. Will be sold cheap and on easy terms. Applv by letter or other wise to the editor of the (Jhroxicle or to the owner, W. Li Ward,. Boyd, -Wasco county, Oregon. The following statement from Mr. W; B. Denny, a well known dairyman of New Lexington, Ohio, will be of interest to persons troubled with Rheumatism. He savs : "1 have usea Chamberlain's Pain Balm for nearly two years, four bottles in all, and there is nothing I have ever used that gave me as much relief lor rheumatism. -: we always keep a bot tle of it in the house." For sale by Snipes & Kinersly. In almost every neighborhood there is some one or more persons whose lives have been saved by Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, or who have been curecUof chronic diarrhoea by it. Such persons take special pleasure in recommending the remedy to others. The praise that follows the introduction and use makes it very popular.. 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by Snipes & Kiner sly. - - - - .. JfOTICK. R. E. French has for sale a number of improved ranches and unimproved lands in the Grass Valley - neighborhood in Sherman county. Ihey will be sold very cheap and on reasonable terms. Mr. French can locate settlers on some trood unsettled claims in the same neieh borhood. His address is Vjrrass v alley, Sherman county, Uregon- - - " v - Mr. John Caraghar, - a merchant at Caraghar, Fulton Co., Ohio, says that St. Patrick's Pills are the best selling pills he handles.. The . reason is that they produce a pleasant cathartic effect and are certain and thorough in their action. Try them when you want a re liable cathartic. . For sale by - Snipes -.& Kinersly. " " y ...... HOI THERE t . 1 will give 50 cents tor each cow im pounded between the hours.of 8 o'clock p. m. and 7 :30 o'clock a. in., found at large about my premises. Put them in boys, bring marshal's certificate and get your money. j. u. JUnrcB. For a troublesome cough there is noth ing better than Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It strengthens the pulmonary organs, allays any irritation and effect ually cures the cough. . It is especially valuable for the cough which so often follows an attack of the grip. For sale by Snipes & Kinersly. . Notice. , City taxes for 1891 are now due. Dalles City tax assessment is now in my hand and will be held in my office for sixty days. Sixty davs from date, July 18, 1891, city taxes wui oe delinquent. - O. Kinersly, City Treasurer. Lost -A post office key, locket and i?old watch, chain, between the Post-of fice and Episcopal church, Sunday morn. inir. Finder wili please return it to the Chronicle office. $100 to $500 to loan on short time. Batabd & Co. TaBuoiimiDia PacRmgGo,. PACKERS OF and Beef! : MANt FACTCKEKS OF 1 Fine , Lard and Sausages. Curers of BRAND Dried Beef, Etc. Cor. Third and Court Sts.The Dalles.Or. Charles E. Dunham, -DEALER JCN- Drugs, vplctiws. ''" CHEMICALS, Fine Toilet Soaps, , Brushes,; Combs, Perfumery and Fancy Toilet Articles. In Great Variety. Pure Brandy, Wines and LtiquoPs fov JVTediei nal Purposes. Physician' Prescription Accurately .' Compounded. Cor. Union and Second Sts..;Tu.e Dalles. A. A. Brown, Keeps a full assortment of ' and Provision. " which he oflerr at Ixw Figures. SPEGlAli :-: PRICES to Cash Buyers. fliekelsen's Bloek, Cor. Third and "Washington, The Dalles. Oregon. Chrisman Bros., (Successors to K. Taylor.).- . V -:pbopkiktos8 or the:- '- GITY MARKET THIRD STREET. D ealers in all kinds of Meats. HAMS, BAuON and SAUSAGE AX WAYS ON HAND. DIAIOP - ROLLER - MILL A. H. CURTIS, Prop. '';. Flour of the Best Qual ity Always on fiand. THE DALLES, OREGON. GLENELD The Fine Draft Stallion, Will make the season at my feed stable In Kings- ley on f riday, baturoay ana Hunaay of eaon " - GLKNELD Is adiipplcd bay, 18 hands hith and weighs 2000 pounds. -..." FEDIOBES. He is ont of Major ' Brace's Gleneld, the (treat centennial prize winner; he by John Copp, darned by John mare. John was sired by Cnarley ; he by bay Arabian, of Kentucky, and he by imported Arabian-. TEKM8, $10, 15 and f'25. Good pastnrnge for marea from a distance furnished at $1.50 per month. . . E. L. BOYNTDN, Agent r. ageni, Kingsley, Or. , - - .Glencoe, Oregon. PAIJL KllEFT, Artistic PainteraHonse Decorator. " - -r THE DALLES, OR. -House Fainting and Decorating a specialty. No inferior and cheap work done ; oat good last ing work at the lowest prices. - 8 HO"P- Adjoining KM Front Grocery, ;'.! i THIBB STBKET. . : , Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Whfen Baby wi Bick, we gave her Castorla, When she wais Child, she cried for Castoria,' When aha became Mias, she clunjc to Castorla, . VThenahehadCluldnshagaTetJiemCaatorU Pork lis aMBan, Stapla and Fancy Groceries The Northwestern Life Insurance OP MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN". ; Assets over $42,000,000.00. Surplus over $6,500,000.00. . . Laoonda Heiohts, Spbihopikld, O., June 15,1891. E. L. Shvey, " 'V ' "' ' . - Prof. Dayton, Ohio. ' - . Dkar Sib: Replying to yoty request for a statement of the facta concerning my expert eM with the Equitable Life Assurance Society of New York in their late settlement with me, I woM. state that in the early part of 1881, my asre being 66 years. I took out a Ten-Pavment Life Poller tab h;iuimuicu)iuu vum mi-ivttr luiimie r uiu, amounted to 37,512.00. The Tontine period expired vA'jujiauj iui;u vuoiu iuc tne luiiuwiiiK terms 01 settlement; FIRST A paid up policy for".' j-.. "...I..... $40,000 00 - - . Andcash ...i..".... ..., ..." 9,75160 SECOND A paid up policy for. . . . ; , 54,600 00 , THIRD Surrender my policy, and receive in cash .. " -. ...... 36,496 80 I was so little satisfied with theiresulte of my investment that I chose the third, cash, proposi tion, but when I so decided, the company, through several of its representatives, labored to indnear me to take one of the other forms of settlement, bat finding that I was determined to surrender tha policy and take the cash, they finally instructed me from the home office to send policy and reoeip for the amount, $36,496.80, to their State manager in Cleveland, and he would remit me the amoiK. I followed their instructions and sent the policy and receipt through my bank in Springfield to oar correspondent in Cleveland, only to have ft returned from the Cleveland Bank with the inf ormatkw. that the State manager of the Equitable states that he "bad not sufficient funds to meet it." Tbte forced me to return it to the New York office, and compelled me to wait some twenty days after maturity before receiving final settlement. I have given no statement endorsing the Equitable, or expressing my satisfaction with their settlement with me. On the other hand I have positively refused to do so. The fact that my re turns were f 1,013.20 less than my total investment renders further comment unnecessary. inuring tne timo i curriea me jcquituble policy above proposition to me, I was kept . in I took a Ten-Year Endowment Policy, Ten-Year In marked contrail with this has been my experience with the Northwestern, in which in 1SS&. time to time furnished me with a memorandum of the surplus ori my policy over the signature e their actuary; so that while my policy has not yet matured, and will not until next year, I hav the satisfaction of knowing that at maturity it will net me from $4,000 to $5,000 more than the fae of the policy calls for. . ........ very truly yours, -"-.- '. ROSS MITCHELL. . We have thousands of comparisons with all the leading Life Insurance "Com panies of the United States. - Full information furnished upon application to ' '--'."' - W T. A. HUDSON, . " Associate General Agent. ' ' - - - "-' ' JOHN A. REINHARDT, . - . . ." .-" Special Agent, The Dalles, Oregon. eobt. nA:.-sre. MAYS & CROWE, - ... i. . :- '- .. (Successors to A BRAMS & STEWART.) X9.o"t.JLlexrB and T o"bl3erai xa. Hafilwaie, - Tinware, - Granlteware, - VoodBuware, SILVERWARE, ETC. AGENTS. "Acorn," "Charter Oak" "Argand STOVES AND RANGES. Pumps, Pipev Plumbers' and Steam Fitters', Supplies, Packing, Building Paper, SASH, DOORS, SHINGLES. Also a complete stock of Carpenters', Blacksmith's and' Farmers Tools and Fine Shelf Hardware. AGENTS FOR The Celebrated R. J.' ROBERTS "Warranted" Tableware, the All Tinning, Plumbing, -will oe done on 174, 176, 178. 180 SECOND STREET, feu o Columbia THE DALLES, OREGON. Best Dollar a Day House on the Coast! First-Class Meals, 25 Cents. ; First Class Hotel in Every Respect. None but the Best of White Help Employed. T. T. Nicholas, Pirop. The Opera lestauiant, No. 116 Washington Street, MTlAts at ALL HOURS of the DAY or NIGHT. Handsomely Furnished, Rooms to Rent by the Day, Week or Month. Finest Sample Rooms for Commercial Men. Special Rates to Commercial Men. WILL. S. GRAHAM, : DEALERS IN: Siapie and Fancy Gfoceties, Hay, Grain and Feed. No. 122 Cor. Washington and Third Sts. H. C. NI Clbthiepand BOOTS AND SHOES, aijd Caps, ; Jrui)K5, tlalises, CORNER OF SECOND ANDWASHINGTONTiSTS., THE DALLES,?REGOW 8qm ior vh,uuu. fliy premiums aunng tne pet early in January of the present year, ana ana up to the day when they submitted total hrnoranne of the condition nfmv investment. Tontine, for f 10,000, that company having from Xj. is. cteo w jb FOK THE Cutlery, Meriden Cutlery and Qnick Meal" Gasoline Stovee. "Grand" Oil Stoves and Anti-Rust Tinware. Pipe Work and Repairing Snort Notice. THE DALLES, OREGON PROPRIETOR. Tailor