The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, July 27, 1891, Image 2

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    The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
THE DAI.LK8 OREGON.
Entered fit the Poctoffice at The Dalles, Oregon,
as oecoud-clasa mutter.
STATU OKriCIAJ.8.
Uovernoi -
Secretary of State
Treasurer
Supt. of Public Instruction
cnators
Congressman
State Printer.
8. Heunoyer
. . . .G. W. MclJride
.Phillip Metwhan
E. B. MoElroy
(J. N. Dolpu
J J. H. Mitchell
H. Hermann
Frank Baker
COl'STY OFFICIALS.
Conotr Judice. C. N. Thornbary
Sheriff .
..I). I, ate
Clerk
Treasurer
Commissioners
J. B. Crossen
Geo. Kuch
I H' A. Leavens
) Prank Klnouid
AsneSHOr John E. Barnett
Surveyor E. F. Sharp
Suiierinteiulent of Publio Schools- . Troy Shelley
Coroner . William Mlchell
The Chronicle is the Only Paper in
The Dalles that Receives the Associated
Press Dispatches.
LET US BE FAIR. .
The partisan press 1ms a busy time of j
it. AVhat with enaay8 on tin-plate, j
nominating candidates for the presi-1
dency and besmirching everybody and j
everything tliat does not belong to its
ow n side of the heuse, there is little time
or .space left for giving the current news.
The worst of it is, much of what is other
wise finely written is. absolutely silly
and valuless to a man who simply wants
to know facts. Who'cares whether the
last congress made' appropriations
amounting to a billion or , twice that
sum if so be the money was spent
wisely? A' miserly, parsimonious con
gress is surely a greater evil than one
that may err by-an honest extravagance.
After all is there not a great deal of
truth in the aphorit-m that this is a bil
lion dollar country? The population of
the United States is constantly increas
ing; so are its revenues and so, of neces
sity, must its expenditures. We
are 1
not defending extravagance, but we are
not to be deceived by a word that sounds
big to the ear when there is a studied
concealment of facts. What we want to
know is not how much did the fifty
first congress of the United States ap
propriate during the term of its exist
ence, but how much did it appropriate
foolishly and corruptly? As a matter of
fact the report of the secretary of the
treasury for expenditures for the year
ending June 30, 1800 shows a sum of
f3.ri7,888,550.1(i; ior 18SS) it is $338,355,-
151.60; for 1888 it is f 31 1,657,351.13 and
for 1887 it is !f315,835,4-.8.12. On the
other hand the report shows that the in
crease of revenues have kept nearly an
even pace with the increase of expendi
tures. The total revenues for 1887 were
f 371, 403,277.66; for 1888, if 399,260,
074.76; for 1889, ?387 ,050,058.84 and for
1890, $403,080,982,63. The river and
harbor bill was in no sense extravagant
and we presume the greatest leak was in
the increased number of pensions. We
are most decidedly of the opinion that
this pension business has gone lieyond
the bounds of all reason or common
sense and that some day in the near
future, the country will wake up and
say: What fools we have been. But
just so longas there is demagogy enough
left in political parties to make "liberal
pensions" a part of their platform, just
so long will this thing continue. Before
any state or national election, for the
past ten years, both of the old parties,
alike, advocated liberal pensions. Now
when they begin to see what ' fools they
novo hiUtn Itn. o ivaMmn moq i I ruti M it oat
,v, v - o
iritis hardly fair for one partv to be i
saddled with the whole blame when '
both were nearly alike guilty.
NEW
MARKET FOR
DUCTS.
HOG PRO-;
" '" vti""" '" " !
is believed that the government has de- j
cided to accede to the request of Minis- i
ter Reid to remove the embargo on j
. , , I
American pork, as it is known that the
government has agreed to introduce aj
bill niodifvincr the sreneral tariff law of
May 1881 and fix the duty at 20 francs
per hundred kilos on all salted pork,
ham and bacon itnjKjrted from the Unit
ed States. This would mean a tariff
duty of less than two cents a pound
which is by no means prohibitory. It
would alwo mean a largely increased
market and better times for the pork in
auslrv of the United States, especially,
too as it is likely to be followed by the !
opening of the German markets to the i
same product.
MORE HANGING OR FEWER MUR
DERS. It is a sad commentary on the admin
istration of justice in the United States
that only 102 persons were legally exe
cuted for the 4,290 murders committed
in the year 1890 while 126 persons were,
lynched. Statistics clearly show that
the man who commits a mnrder has a
better chance of escaping than the man
who steals a loaf of "bread. There is
surely something wrong when the execu
tions by lynch law are twenty-five per
cent greater in number than by organ
ized justice and all the hangings put to
gether are not three per cent of the
number of murders. There ought to be
more hangings or fewer murders.
A new candidate for. presidential hon
ors has jnst been announced in the per
son of Senator Peffer of Kansas. His
friends think that the man who was big
enough to beat Ingalls, is big enough for
a presidential candidate.
GOOD EDITORIAL J UDGEMENT.
The leading editorial in the Oregon
Blade of the 25th inst., headed, "recip
rocal trade," is one of the ablest we
have seen for many a day. It was cop
ied verbatim el literatim from the Croni
clk. On the first page of the same is
sue is another half colunih article,
from the, samer source;- without credit.
We admire the Biads't taste but have a
poor opinion of its honesty.
Mc KIN LEY A BOLD BAD MAN.
The Plaiiidealer draws a most touch
ing picture of a poor laborer's wife, who
has to pay a McKinley duty of fifteen
cents on a wash boiler that with' ordi
nary care will last lier five or six years.
What a bold, bad man McKinley is any
way. '
Ivlll ey Ttena.
The hot winds are getting away
with i
the crops. 1
three months pchool clones tomorrow
after a four-months hard struggle to find
the lost day, with Profes-or Pitman as
teacher.
. Kolert Kelly has gone to Portland on
business. .
Johnny Whit ton has given up the '
idea of ever finding water in his new '
well after digging a depth of thirty-eight
feet. "The devil take the water j
witches," so thinks Johnny. i
Ira Americk has nearly filled the Ath- -ens
feed stable with rye hay.
Emerson Williams is clerking for R. :
Kelley during Mr. Kelly's stay in Port- ,
land. If Kobert stays much longer
Emerson will have to have his pants and i
hat made larger. ,
John Russell is hauling iumber from .
Thompson's mill to build a house in
Grass Valley for his eldest son. '
Mr. Sherman Clark and Miss Mary E.
Hilliiuin, of Oak Grove, were married
at the residence of Chas. Fraley, one-
and - a - hulf miles east of Kingsley. Luck j
to the happy couple wherever they may 1
go. j
The widow Baxter has the? finest crop
on Tygh Ridge. 1
The farmers are making hay quite j
lively. There will be lots of feed on j
Tygh Ridge this winter. j
Mr. James Cox has gone to The Dalles ,
with his wife for medical treatment. j
C. G. Abott has just had his hair !
shingled. He had quite a large fleece to
contend with in hot weatherl
Robert Kellv has forty acres
of corn
which looks tine.
0. 1. Abott is getting his stock ready '
to take in the fairs this fall.
The Sunday school is moving along
nicely with Jerry Vaughn aciiug asi
superintendent. Everybody is invited '
to attend. Rasp.
Mr. Keiiftal's Stupidity.
The nienilers of the Four Hundred are
enjoying a story at the expense of a promi- ;
nent society lady of this city who is famed
for her loud dres.ses, her elaborate dinners
and her faux pas. It seems that while the
Hernials were playing in this city a dinner
was given in their honor, to which this
lady was invited The Kendals were in- :
troduced to those guests whom they had
not met before by their own name Grim
Btone ICeudal beinfi, as is well known,
only thuu-nom do theatre.
When the time for the company to go to
the dining room arrived Mrs. X., who
had been told that she was to be escorted
to the table by Mr. Kendal, was amazed
when a certain Mr. Grimstone was pre
sented to her, who thereupon offered her
his arm, and before she had an opportunity
to protest, led her to the adjoining apart
ment. She w;is so furious at what she
; thought was the deception practiced upon
'
replying to bis polite speeches with mono-
syllables and addressing most of her re
marks to her neighbors on the opposite
side of the table.
After the dinner was over and the guests
had reassembled in the drawing room, she
approached her hostess and said indig- i
nantlvr "That was a oretty trick vou !
that Mr. Kendal was going to be here, and
that he was to take me to dinner. Instead
of that you palmed off a mere nobody on
me and the stupidt person I've met this
winter. I was hardly able to be decent to ;
him." i
"1 am very sorry." replied the hostess':
sweetly, understanding at once the situa- i
tion, "that you found Mr. Grimstone stu- ,
pid. lie is generally considered very Intel- !
ligent and interesting. Besides, my dear, !
he really isn't a nobody. Grimstone is his j
family name, but on the stage he is known
as Mr. Kendal." !
Then she sailed away, leaving Mrs. X. In I
a state of mind that can be better imagined ;
than described. New York Telegram. I
In the list of late patents are one for a
propeller ana brake corK packed Dicycie, ;
another for the improvement in the eon-!
struction of tires for bicycles, others ior .
improvements in the running gear of road
vehicles, and all invented by women.
A girl medical student in a western col
lege is the proud recipient of two prizes
won from a competition with seventeen
other places. One of the prizes was for
the best physical diagnosis of the diseases
of children. ' -
Notice.
All ' city warrants registered prior to
October 3rd, 1889, will be paid if pres
ented at my office.
I nterest ceases from and after this date.
The Dalles, Or., July 10th 1891.
O. KlNEBSLY,
City Treasurer.
Cut flowers for sale, bouquets and
floral designs made to order. Corner
Eighth and Liberty.
. Mrs. A. Stobling. '
Money, to Loan.
$100 to $500 to loan on short time.
Bayard & Co.
ESTRAY NOTICE.
A RED COW WITH WHITE SPOTS, SWAL
low fork in each ear but no brand, Is In my
pasture on Mill creek. The owner can have her
by paying for paHturage and advertising.
W. BIKGFELD.
"Drat Surh Luck!"
Ridicule it as we may, there is some
thing in lack, and if there isn't yon can
not break the faith of some people. " Th(
other day a young English friend of
mine picked up a two and a half , cent
Colombian silver 1 coin probably the
smallest silver piece in.the world. ' .
"That's luck," saic) the -yormginan,
who has an English syndicate 'deal on
his hands; tHe"feU'" more confidence, is
the coin as "the day .advanced, for-, htl
showed it to several friends', all of; whom ftp '
curiously examined the piece and smiled'
with its possessor. He finally went joy
fully home late for dinner, and found hit
wife fretting and with red eyes. He be
gan to cheer her op by pleasantly begin
ning the topic of his afternoon and ex
hibiting his find.
"Luckt Luck! Don't you talk to me
about luck!' she fairly shrieked, plung
ing into the sofa cushions and hysterics.
In the course of half an hour's hard i
work she had recovered sufficiently tc
inform him that she had her pocket j
picKea wmie oai snopping ana lost a uia-
mond ring she had been afraid to weal
ana an me money given tier that morn
ing for her summer clothes. Finally she j
braced up all at once and said impera
tively: .
"Gimme that coin!" As she pitched Agents for a Full Line of
it out of the window she uttered the :
a;";nootho:- hefhuSiLeaiing Fire Insurance Companies,
felt better. New York Herald.
Treatment of Bores.
The redoubtable' Samuel Parr proved'
as great a bore to De Quineey as the dip-1
lomatist did to Coleridge. The opium!,
eater, sensitive little spirit that he was,'
did not often put himself in the way of j
being bored. He was completely taken
by surprise, on hi3 first meeting with !
the scholar of prodigious fainfe. to find
him no better than a slander mongering
"old babbler." '
Byron's'-method of dealing with the ,
gentrjr was even more . ingenious than !
Scott s, who himself assumed the ardu
ous tsuJi of boring his bore. Byron used
to set Monk Lewis (whom he found
as great a bore as Scott did) on to some j ,
"vivacious person." " who peculiarly ah-'
horred the tribe as. for example, he ' .
leave the pair to fight it out together,
while he quietly enjoyed his revenge.1-' '
But even this was more humane than
the conduct of those who, like Douglas
Jerrold, leave their bore k the lurch.
"Well, what's going on today?" asked
the bore, full primed for a siege. "I
am," returned the wit, hurrying remorse
lessly past.. ...
"Do not dull people bore you?" one of
his companions at the breakfast table
asked of the autocrat. "Madame," was
Dr. Holmes' suggestive replj-, "all men
are bores except when we want them."
Exchange.
A Talk with a Bird Fancier.
Mocking birds come from Texas chief
ly. Albany in that state is the head
quarters for them. One trapper there
sends me from 50 to 100 mocking birds
every week in crates. I forward nearly
all of them to New York, exchanging
them for other stock. The system of ex- j
change is carried on to a great extent in
the fancier's business. Most of the stock
that we get from boys is negotiated on
that plan ; so many rabbits make a squir
rel, and so on.
. I do a considerable trade in peacocks,
which customers who have country
places buy for ornamental purposes.
Fanners raise them in Maryland and
Virginia. Goldfish are propagated by
regular breeders in Maryland, Virginia
and 'Pennsylvania, who send them to me
in cans, but the fancy goldfish, with
double tails, are imported from japan to
San Francisco and reshipped from that
city.
. Those stuffed birds are pets. . Their
owners bring them here for the purpose;
four legged beasts, too, of all sorts. A
squirrel is one of the most difficult ani
mals to stuff successfully. Food is an
item in caring for such a menagerie as
this; it costs me nearly $1,000 a year.
Interview in Washington Star.
Takiuic a Qirl'a Arm.
The young man who lifts his girl
along by her 'elbow is to be seen every
few yards on Broadway. . Nor is this
style of locomotion confined to any par
ticular class, ft is one of those fashions
that occasionally starts up !in the crude
society of the country -'village, and, re
versing' the usual . rule of social con
tagion, spreads to the metropolis. Being
simply a recorder and not an arbiter in
such matters, 1 am not prepared to say
that, it is strictly fashionable in New
York, much less proper or in good form.
If the girl likes it I withdraw my nat
ural objections. Where the sex is con
cerned it is pretty safe to follow the
rule that obtains in euchre "When in
doubt take the trick." New York Her-
aid. ' '
Force of Bablt.
A lady who wished. to weigh her baby,
two months old, but who had no scales
at hand suitable for the purpose, took
the child to a neighboring butcher shop.
The butcher put the baby in his spring
scales, looked at the dial, and remarked:
"With the bones and all, mum, it's
fourteen pounds and a half. Shall I?"
"How dare you make such a sugges
tion," screamed the womaii, as she
snatched her baby and rushed out of the
shop. Youth's Companion.
Two Boys.
A neatly dressed boy fell into the
Harlem river just below the bridge yes
terday morning about breakfast time.
He was pulled out and went home cry
ing. In the afternoon a smaller boy fell
into the river from a boat house float.
He got out without assistance and went
out in the sun to dry. "1 don't want
the 'old man' to get on to me." he said.
New York Advertiser.
Harvard university, has 365,000 bound
volumes in the library, Yale has 200.000,
Cornell 150,000, Columbia 90,000, STa
cuse 75,000, Dartmouth 08,500, Lehigh
67,000, Brown 66,000. Princeton 65,000.
Bowdoin 84,000 University of Virginia
40,000.
J; M; HUNTINGTON & CO.
Abstracters,
- leal Estate and -, -.
Inert trarnP Anonfc
,fJ"',, MUUUJi
Abstracts of. and Information Concern -,
ing Land Titles on Short Notice. -
Land for Sale and Houses to Rent
Parties Looking for Homes in
r - yt 'lTT"T'T,I?Ar
U IN lit I
OR CITY,
OR IN SEARCH OF
!l Buiqe Location,
Should Call on or Writ to us.
And Will Write Insurance for
-iisnsr" -A-2r:oxj2sra?,
on all
IDESIEABLE EISKS
Correspondence Solicited.-. . All ' Letters
Promptly Answered. Call on or
Address, .
J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO.
Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or.
COLUMBIA
jCaQdy :-: paetory,
W. S. CRAM.' Proprietor.
(Successor to Cram & Corson.)
Manufacturer of the finest Krench and
Home'Made
O-A-UnT dies
East of Portland.
DEALER IN
Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco.
Oan furnish
or Retail
any of these gooda at Wholesale
AFRESH f OYSTBHS-te
In Every Style.
. 104 Second Street. The Dalles, Or.
R. B. Hood,
Livery, Feed and Sale
Horses Bought and Sold on
Commission and Money
Advanced' on Horses
left For Sale.
OFFICE OF-
The Dalles and Goldendale Stage Line.
Stage Leaves The Dalles every morning
at 7:30 and Goldendale at 7:30.'. All .
freight miwt be .left at Rj B.
Hood's office the evening
before.
R. B. HOOD, Proprietor.
Columbia Ice Co.
104 SECOND STREET.
ICS 33 ! ICE !
Having over 1000 tons of ice on hand,
we are now prepared to receive, orders,
wholesale '-or retail,- to' be delivered
through the. summer. Parties contract
ing with us will be carried through the
entire season without advance in
pkice, and may depend that we have
nothing but
. PURE, HEALTHFUL ICE,
Cut from mountain water ; no slough or
slush ponds.
Leave orders at the Columbia Candy
Factory, 104 Second street.
W. S. CRAM, Manager.
Oak and Fir on Hand.
' ' Orders Filled Promptly.
$500 Reward!
We will pay the above reward for any case of
Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, In
digebtion. Constipation or Costiveness we cannot
cure with West's vegetable Liver Fills, when the
directions are strlctlv compiled with. They are
purely vegetable, and never fail to srive satisfac
tion. Sugar Coated. Large boxes containing 30
Pills, 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and imi
tations. The genuine manufactured only by
THE JOHN C. WFST COMPANY, CH1GAGO.
ILLINOIS.
BLAKELEV A HOUGHTON.
Prescription DrnggistA,
175 Second St. The Dalles, Or.
! U11UU1 IUIH1LV UO lUfJ 11011 IHUU 1 1
Office Cop. 3d and Union Sts.
CORD WOOD.
Summer. Goods!
SUMMER-GQODS
- :.r ", .. , - 0.; 'f. t .
iOf EvQtyi Description will be sold at
A : GREAT : SACRIFICE
For the Next THIRTY DAYS.
Call Early arid - get some of our Cienuine
Bargains. . -Azi'iir'?'
H. Herbring':
Terms
The Dalles Mercantile Co., i(
Successors to BROOKS & BEERS, Dealers in " '
General Merchandise,
; Staple and Fancy Dry Goods,
Gents' Furnishing Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, eta. :
Groceries,
Provisions,
HAY, GRAIN AND PRODUCE
Of all Kinds at Lowest Market Kates.
Free Delivery to Boiit and Curs and all parts of the City.
390 and 394 Second Street
NEW firm:
fosooe &
-DEALERS IN-
'."STAPLE '.'AND '.'FANCY V.G8
Canned Goods, Preserves, Pickles, Etc.
Country Produce Bought and Sold.
Goods delivered Free to any part of tlie City.
Masonic Block, Corner Third and
E. Jacobsen & Co.,
WHOLESALE AND KETAIL
nnninn i r-rr n w rv Dt nTmunnn
. .. .. - ."
Pianos and Organs
Sold on EASY INSTALLMENTS.
Notions, Toys,
Fancy
ments of all Kinds.
3VX,X Orders Filled. Froru-ptly.
162 SECOND STREET,
The Dalles
Gigaf : Factory,
FIEST STEEET.
FACTORY NO. 105.
T" A pD of the Best Brands
AvXx,JLjIO manufactured, and
orders from all parts of the country filled
on the shortest notice.
The reputation of THE DALLES CI
GAR has become firmly established, and
the demand for the home manufactured
article is increasing every day-.
A. ULRICH & SON.
NEW
PRINZ & NITSCHKE.
DEALERS IN
Furniture and Carpets.
We have added to our business a
complete Undertaking Establishment,
and as we are in no way connected with
the Undertakers' Trust our prices will
be low accordingly.
Remember our place on Second street,
next to Moody's bank.
$20 REWARD.
WILL BE fAiu-VOR ANY INFORMATION
leading to the conviction of parties cutting
e ropes
es or in any way mrenmus
poles or lamps of Thb Electbic Light
WIT .
Co.
GLENN
Manager
. FLOURING MILL TO LEASE."
rrmn ni.T) nT,l,ES MILT AND WATER
JL Company's I lour Mill will be leased to re
sponsible parties.
For information apply to the
WATER COMMISSIONERS,
The Dalles, Oregon.
A
nnttalrinff Estflhlkhmont '
Summer Goods!
Chsh,
Hardware,
Flour, Bacon, '
new. STORE '
Gibons,
Court Streets, The Dalies, Oregon.
G-oods and Musical
lustra -
THE DALLES, OREGON.
JAMES WHITE,
Has Opened a '
IiixrLCli Counter,
; In Connection With his Fruit Stand -
. "and Will Serve :
Hot. Coffee, Ham Sandwich,- Pigs' Feet,.
: and Fresh' Oysters.
Convenient to the Passenger
Depot.
On Second St.
near corner of Madison.
Also a
Branch Bakery,
Orange Cider,
California
and the
Best Apple Cider.
If you want a good lunch, give me a call.
Open all Night
Phil Willig,
124 UNION ST., THE DALLES, OR.
Keeps on hand a full line of ;
MEN'S AND YOUTH'S
Ready - Made Clothing.
Pants and Suits
MADE TO
ORDER
On Reasonable Terms.
..
Call and see my Goods before
Durchasing elsewhere.
Steam Ferry.
f rrrrrTtiC is now running a steam
If. U. fcVHJlO Ferry between Hood
River and White Salmon. Charges
reasonable. R. O. Evans, prop.