Ths Dalles!) tOhr oniele. MON1MI, JULY,27, J891 .IfETEOEblLTJSIOXl? BEPOBT. Pacific H Rela- fct'll SO State Cotwt Bid, 3 tive -of-I E. f Time. . .- Hum WJinf ? W citther. -V "- ') r- . i . 8 A. M ao.Oi 70 77 north . ... .Cleat 8 P.M.. .. 2U.95 S9. 38 " ' 'l? ' temperature, yeratare, 63. ; -; '' WRATHKK rUOBAKI CITIES., The Dalles, July 27, ltWi;.-- Weatlter forecast till JS m., Tuesday; fair. A'earlg la- -I ( f tionary temperature. The Chronicle is the Only Paper in The Dalles that Receives the Associated ,Press Dispatches. LOCAL BIIBVITIKH. State lecturer William Holder is in the city. . ''.' ;. '.. " rt . .... -1 .', ""Mr. Trueman Butler went to Jllwaco' this morning. . -. . ;V- . Vi :"A. V. Brannerof Narisene is registered at the Umatilla honse;' " "' .' Mrs. Lizzie and Mrs. (ft-orge ; Biixter of Xingsley are in town.' - ' -' Jackson Engine Co., No. 1, meets for drill tomorrow night at 7 :30. There is a letter at this office for Mrs. Jane Whitaire ' addressed "in care of Chkonici.b. . . x Mr. .David Allen and family left this morning for Portland where they intend to make, their future home, Mr. J. S. Young from Denver, Colo rado, is in the' cjfcy. y He comes to; look over the country with a view tojocation. If you want the news of the iown and surrounding country, aeoon'os possible after it has happened, subscribe for the Chronicle.-; " '-J; ' Mr. W. Gihnore, from across the river, brought over a bunch of. beef cattle-' to day that he sold to VV. Wright of Seattle." The cattle will be shipped to the Sound market. V' Mr. John Fitzgerald's little two year old boy was, yesterday .lifted on the horns of a vicious cow and tossed into the air. While considerable shaken up, it is for tunate the child was not "seriously Injur ed. The melancholy brindle cow that has been confined for nearly a week in the Saltmarsh calaboose, charged with hav ing grand larcenied A. G. Johnson's corn patch was fined four dollars and sold to W. H. Lochhead. It is supposed Mr. Loch head bought her for. her rustling qualities. In this respect she has the record and pedigree of a thoroughbred. Wesley Howard, a young man, well known in the Tygh Ridge country, was biften, Saturday last, on the hand by a rattle snake. Dr. Vanderpool, of Duf ur, was promptly called in but by ' the time the doctor got to his patient it took three persons to hold him in the bed. ' The doctor administer ed an antidote that put the young man into a sleep that lasted all night and he was able to lie around yesterday. Friday night last, at about 11:30 o'clock, as conductor Ben Emerick started on his first trip, after a pro tracted spell of sickness, he met with an accident by which he lost his little finger and first joint of the thumb of his left hand and otherwise had the flesh of both sides of his hand badly torn. He was getting off of the top of a freight car at East Portland when the top found of , the ladder gave way and he fell . to the '4 ground with the above result. Ju'sthuw his hand got mashed we have been un . able to learn. . . Mr G. J. Farley, superintendent of ' construction of the Cascades portage railroad, came up Saturday night and will return to the Cascades tonight. He informs us that' the eastern end of the track is nearly finished and that the whole track, with the exception of tres tle work at the western terminus, will be laid this week. Mr. Farley still in sists that everything will be iu readi ness for business as soon as the rolling stock can possibly get here. Engineer M. Cavanaugh, if the Uma tilla House register is to be believed, ii.l n A i i 1 1 Aft u vol i lltr in loco I ! 11 1 th.m George Francis Train. If the register cannot be believed then Mr. Cavanaugh ! can beat Train anyway. Today he is registered as from Hong Kong, China, yesterday it was from Cork, Ireland, to morrow it will be as like as not, from Patagonia, while next day he may hail from Conemara. Either Mr. Cavanaugh has a marvelous gift of ubiquity or a vivid imagination, or both, but in any event George Francis had better pull in his sign. A Chinaman named Na.Auie was brought down from Celilo last night, charged with "assault with intent to kill." The complaining witness is no less a personage than the Earl of Taffe, himself, on whom, the subject of the Flowery Kingdom drew a butcher knife that appeared to Mr. Taffe to be about six feet long, long enough at any rate to superinduce a race for life, on the part nf Mr. Taffe. over hia whole earldom . " Mr. Taffe avows that while he has been a South American guerilla, and a con-, federate bushwhacker he never fled from the face of mortal man before. The Chinaman will have his preliminary ex a intrusion this afternoon before Justice . -Vina B. of L. K. Plente.- ".-'- The annual picnic of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers took place yes terday and was a - quieand. enjoyable affair as .became the tinie and' place. At 9:00 o'clock a. m. the strain,- consisting of three cars and a caboose, comfortably filled, but by no means crowded, started from the Umatilla house for Bonnyville, where it was metlby; taiiLlfroiji;. IJpjrt- land consisting of six cars and a caboose, filled in a similar manner, so that the J whole nttnifber of picnicers numbered about 600 persons. The -Dalles train made the trip in two hours, arriving a few minutes before the Portland train, and confirming the remark of a Dalles enthusiast,- to the effect that "The Dalles" always gets there first." Reader, did you ever'ride on the pilot of an en gine? If you have you will know the treat that was enjoyed by Messrs. A. W. Fee, J. F. Haworth, Will Graham, the drum major and yours truly. To the writer it was hovel, exciting and , enjoy able to a degree. Will Graham pur loined a cushion from the caboose that afforded a soft comfortable seat for two, the rest squatted on their haunches, and thus we rode from Wyeth to Bonney- ville. Wheu the Portland train arrived the- Third ....regiment band,. - gathered itv frrmr. -nt . fr.lm lirr.li rlPTWjf. arm af.rnp.fc - - r 1 ''':i- t a.: i 4.1. .4i l up a iiivrry buuo, aiili tuc.-arot i b- m"ark;ttat . fell from the lips of the Port landers as they took in the situation was "O look at the drum major." Soon the crowd scattered here and there; some went wandering . with their "wives or sweethearts through the shady groves, some went fishing, others hurried to drink the delicious water, others lay down prone : beneath the" spreading branches of the trees. It was a perfect day, and Bonneyville with a little w.orky could be' made a perfectly delightful .place to hold a summer picnic. ; There were no games or sports of any kind, if we except an " after dinner dance, that lasted less than an hour; and every-' one was left to spend the time ai- suited hia or her own fancy. Nothing passed to mar the pleasing quietude of the day. One or two gamblers of the tin-horn, shell variety, came up from Portland but they found no field for operation and soon gave up iu disgust. Fishing was hardly a success, if one is to judge from Engineer Brown, whom the scribe met returning ' from the creek. "Where's.,. your fish George?" asked the ; writer. 'Oh I only caught one" - said George, "but somebody, unbeknown to me, had greased the hook and it slipped off." A very excellent dinner was served at the hotel by mine host Billy ; Robinson, of which as many as four or !five hundred must have partaken. The Portland train started back at 4:30 and ten min utes after, we too, were on the way to The Dalles. One incident of the return trip is worth mentioning. A young gentleman of the city was seated beside his best girl, as the train entered the first tunnel. He undoubtedly wanted, a kiss as the sequel proved, but he was too slow about it, for just as he had got his arm comfortably round her neck the light streamed in from the other end of the tunnel. It was provoking, of course, and he determined to remedy the matter in the next tunnel, which is a little longer, but alas for the best laid plans of of mice and men ; just as he was im the act of saying yum yum, a matron who evidently bad been there herself, struck a match, and gave the whole snap away 1 The train arrived in The Dalles a little before 7 :00 and if there was anyone who did not enjoy the day as a whole, the writer did not happen to meet him. -If half the stories told about the im pounding of cattle are true the matter requires to be looked into ty the city officials. : Mr. John Pashek makes no no bones of stating that this morn ing about 7 :30 o,clock, while his cow was drinking at the crossing of Mill -creek, next to the Odd Fellows' cemetery, and in charge of a boy who was taking her out to pasture, she was forcibly taken from the boy and driven below the bluff, so that, as Mr. Pashek -alleges, she might be impounded when the hour of 9 o'clock would arrive. Mr. Carl Burchtorf is equally positive that a few days ago he saw a person gather up a bunch of town cows that were feeding out at the Catho lie cemetery, and wholly outside the city limits, and bring them into, town for impoundment. We give these stories as we have heard them from the lips of the men named. If they are true, and the men who tell them are our best citi zens and of known veracity, they re quire to be looked into. A gentleman from the Cascades, whom the Chnonicle reporter, met at the pic nic yesterday, in answer to the Inquiry, "How are the government works pro gressing at -the Locks?" said; "More work has been done and more real prog ress made during the past six months, than ever took place in the same length of time before. . The masonry on the south side of the lower gate is all fin ished but the coping,'and it is the finest piece of work I ever saw." Further in quiry elicited the following : At present fifty stone cutters are employed, about fifty laborers and twenty more who are working in the quarry. Soon the water will be low enough to allow the canal to be pumped out and then the work will begin on the north side of the gate. After the gate is finished, work can go on at any stage of water. The receipts Of gold at the government assay office at Boise City for a single day recently amounted to fl0,000, of which $7,500 was the output of Boise county and $2,500 that of Eastern Oregon. , . Portland !ThTity. " ' -- - The story of Mrs. Gardner, the poor womah who, with her twochildren, one of them qillte sick, was' shipped by the citizens of Portland to this place a few days ago, and from here furnished trans portation to Pendleton," ia a peculiarly hard one. We refer to it again to show the Christian charity of Portland for the poor and destitute. The woman's story was well known in Portland, for it was fully published in the Oregonian. It was known she had not a penny in the world, and it ought to have been - known that she was even , without a change of clothing for herself '6rC children. At any rate all she vhad in the world, in that t;,?in'e;'"Jwhen she got to The Dalles ' was a' little old rag of a shawl. But Portland fiad ..done her duty. 1 She had contributed 3,55 for Mrs. Gardner's fare to The Dallea.-and whatever it cost the two children' -be sides. And this was the extent of . heri Christian charity. Mrs. Gardner was' only a pauper whom nobody owns, so they got rid of her as quickly as possi ble. Here, however, she' fared better, how much better we need not tell Port land, but besides the pecuniary help she obtained, we have seen, . what, in some respects was better still, . the big scalding tears gather in the eyes of those" who heard her sorrowful story or. attempted, to tell , jt to. .o.thers.. She got help and sympathy here;, she got $3.55 in Port land. Voluntary Testimonial to Col. Houghton.' The following letter speaks ' for itself. Now that the heat of passion has some what cooled it cannot be out of place to publish it. A private letter from Cap tain McCully that accompanies it con tains tbese; words:' "Our boys regret that they were ript able, physically, to go into the sham battle on the Fourth, but their worn-out condition could 'not be. helped. -. , Every" word our boys have for., you is of' the .kindest nature." V ' Joseph, Oregon, July 18, i,S91. To - Col. T. A. Houghton, Thicdr...Regt., O. N. O.: By a unanimous -vote "!" company has instructed the undersigned to con vev to vou the information, that , thev do not approve the unjust criticism and ungentlemanly treatment you have re ceived at the hands of certain parties in the Dalles and'from some portions of the regiment; . iThey regard the censure uncalled for, and the attacks upon you by certain newspapers as an outrage. - You are authorized to make whatever use of the above vou mav wish. F., M. McCdlly, "Capt. "I" Co. .!. A. Rumble, let Lieut. J. H. French, 2d Lieut. At the Cascades, yesterday the Chbon icle reporter saw the familiar faces of a number of Dalles folks who are .camp ing, we believe on Herman Creek. The party consists, in part, of Mr. and Mrs, J. L. Story and family, Mr. Frank Shon tell and Mr. T. P. Crum. Last week they had visitors from T!- e Dalles in the persons of Misses Glenn and Rowland. Fishing is good, for a party of five of them caught 175 trout in a few hours last Friday. They are all enjoying themselves immensely, and living on the very fat of the land. The younger generation of the male persuasion do the foraging, and to keep their hands in practice, they buy their neighbors chick ens on the range and then raid the chicken houses at night. The boys are honest, for the pay for all they steal before-hand, and they have all the fun of chicken stealing without the sin It is a new game and beats drive whist all to pieces. But one of the party lost his hat the other night and hereby hangs a tale which the Chbonicle may tell some other day. Among many comments made on Major Handbury's report as published yesterday, showing the splendid snccess of the jetty, one man very aptly said: "I wasn't surprised at the result, for I expected that, but I am filled with as tonishment' that the work is going to be done for considerable less than the ori ginal estimate. This is the first instance of the kind, on record, that I know any thing about,, where government work didn't exceed the amount originally rec ommended." Antorian. "Did you ever go up in a balloon?" "Once." "What were your sensations?" "Oh, same as usual. I wanted the earth." Harper's Bazaar. , Robert Kelly, of Kingsley left on the stage, this morning, on his return from a business trip to Portland. Persons leaving the city for a summer outing can have the Chkonicxe sent to them without extra charge. If you want fine job printing call at the Chkonicxe office. You going to the sea shore, camping or to the picnic? If so get your supplies at 62 Second Street 62. ; ' Potted, canned and smok ed meats, Pickles of all varieties, Crackers and Biscuits, fine Coffees and Teas, canned Fruits in variety, and in fact every thing one needs for. pic nics or camping parties. 62 JOieOOTH, G2 Leading Grocer, Second Street. CHEONICLK SHORT 8TOV8. Blackberries, three boxesvfor twenty five cents at Joles Brothere. : For headache use S. B. headache cure. For coughs and colds use 2379. . -. . For physic always rise S. B. headache cure. Use Dnfur flour. It is the beet. -" 2379 Is the cough syrup for children. For O. N. G. diaarhoea S. B. pain cure is the best thing known. Get me a cigar from that fine case at Snipes & Kinersley's. For ice cream cramp use S. B. pain cure. ,. - . For 4th of July colic use S. ' B. pain cure. 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 Mespue place. . Ask your grocer for Dufur flour. For 4lh of July colic use S. B. pain cure. . ... The celebrated Walter H. Tenny Bos-.ton-made mens' and Ikvs' fine boots and shoes in all styles, carried by The Dalles Mercantile company at B'rooks & Beers old stand. 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 Erskinville. - There is a never-failing spring ot imng water capable ot 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. Apply by letter Or other wise to the editor of the Chhonicle or to the owner, W. L. 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 says: "I have used 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 for rheumatism. We always keep a bot tle of it in the house." For sale by Snipes & Kinersly. ' ' . NOTICE. R. E. French has for sale a number of improved ranches- and unimproved lands in the Grass Valley "neighborhood in Sherman county. They will be sold very cheap and on reasonable terms. Mr. French can locate . settlers on . some good unsettled claims in the same neigh borhood. His address is Grass Valley, Sherman county, Oregon. 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. " Twenty Dollars Reward. Parties have been cutting the supply pipes abore the city between the flume and the reservoir, thus doing much dam age. This must be stopped and a re ward of if 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. In almost every neighborhood 4there is some one or more persons whose lives have been saved by Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, or who have been cured of chronic diarrhoea by it. : Such persona 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 & Kinersly..-. r HOI THKKK 1 I will give 50 cents for each, cow im pounded between the hours of 8 o'clock p. m. and 7 :30 o'clock a. m., found at large about my premises. Put them in boys, bring marshal's certificate' and get vour money. E. B. Ddfuk. 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. Citv taxes for 1891 are now due Dalles Citv 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 will be delinquent. O. KyiEBSLY, ' " ' ' City Treasurer. Notice. Notice . is hereby given to all persons knowing themselves indebted to the es tate of H. Solomon to call at the store and settle the same, as all book accounts must be settled. J. R. Dawson. t ' - Assignee. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria The Alabama Theatrical companv now- billed to play in Portland, passed through the city this morning. About a dozen of the troop changed cars for the boat. They hud their own special bag- ' SIO.OO Keward. ' ' Lost, a diamond scarf pin the above reward will be paid by returning to C. E. Haight. ' " - ' One hundred cords dry maple and dry fir wood in lots to suit at a low price. Apply to J. C. Baldwin. - Child's Blng; Found. : Owner can have it by calling at office and paying for this notice. this The more a man knows, the less he believes.-- : ': OP MILWAUZEE, WISCONSIN. - : Assets oyer $42,000,000.00. Surplus over $6,500,000.00. . Ugonda Heights, Spkinqfikld, O., Jane 15, 1891. ' ' Prof. Dayton, Ohio. ; ;.iP5BJ?IB; Repylnjr to your request for u statement of the facts concerning my 'experience !. ne Equitable Life Assurance Society of New York in their lute settlement with me, I woul. state that in the early part of 1881, my age being 50 years, I took out a Ten-Payment Life Policy im the Equitable upon their Ten-Year Tontine flan, for 40,00u. My premiums during the perio. amounted to 137,512.00. . The Tontine period expired early in January of the present year, and the Company then offered me the following terms of settlement; . , FIRST-xA paid up policy for .'.' 40,000 W -And cash 9,75160 HECOND A paid up policy for. .'.'.". 54,600 00 THIRD Surrender my policy, and receive in cash 36,496 80 policy and take the cash, they finally instructed me for the amount. $3f..496.80. to their Rbire uiMiiiLirer in I followed their instructions and sent the policy and receipt through my bank in Springrleld to our correspondent in Cleveland, only to have it returned from the Cleveland Bunk with the information thiit the State manager of the Equitable states that he "had not sufficient funds to meet it." This forced me to return it to the New- York office, and compelled me to wait some twenty days afber 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 -. turns were ?l,01.r.ao less than my total Investment renders- further comment unnecessary. . During the time I carried the Equitable policy mid uo to the dv when they submitted the above proposition to me. I was kept In total ig.ioraucsof trie condition"of my Investment. In marked conrrubt with this lias been my experience with the Northwestern, in which in 1882, I took a Ten-Year Endowment Policy, Ten-Year Tontine, for $10,OUO, that company having from time to time furnished Jne with a memorandum of the surplus on my policv over the signature of their actuary; so that while my policy has not yet matured, and will ujt until next year, I have the satisfaction of knowing that at maturity it will net ine from 4,ou0 to j,00 more than the face of the policy calls for. Very truly yours, . ' . ROSS MITCHELL. We have thousands of compurisous with all the leading Life Insurance Coni panies of the United States. Full information furnished upon application to -T. A. HUDSON, . . Associate General Agent. - JOHN A REINHARDT, - : Special Agent, The Dalles, Oregon.' BOBT. MATS. MAYS & CROWE, ' (Successors to ABRAM3 & STEWART.) . , - Retailers and ffo'b'bors m. lifiware, - Tinware, - firanitewaie, - woQUeoware, ! SILVERWARE, ETC. -: AGENTS "" "Acorn," "Charter Oak" "Argand" STOVES AND RANGES. Pumps, Pipe, Plumbers' and Steam Fitters' Suppliesv Packing, Building Paper, " SASH, DOORS, SHINGLES. Also a complete , stock of Carpenters',. Blacksmith's and Farmers Tools and Fine Shelf Hardware. -AGENTS The Celebrated R. J. ROBERTS "Warranted" Cutlery, Meriden Cutlery and Tableware, the "Quick. Meal" Gasoline Stoves, "Grand" Oil Stoves ' and Anti-Rust Tinware. All Tinning, Plumbing, Pipe Work and Repairing will "be done on Short Notice. 174, 176, 178. 180 SECOND STREET, jtfeu Qolumbia J-lotel, 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. JSUeholas, Prop. The Opepa Restaurant, No. 116 Washington Street, MEALS -at ALL HOURS of the DAY or NIGHT. Handsomely Furnished Rooms to Rent by the Day', Week or Month. Finest Sampie Rooms for Commercial Men. Special Rates to Commercial Men. WILL S. GRAHAM, JOLES -: DEALERS IN :- DEAl D Hay, Grain and Feed. No. 122 Cor. Washington and Third Sts. Clothier and Tailor, BOOTS AND SHOES, tyats apd Qaps, JrupK5, ilalises, Gronts' oxx-sxljslxlxxsr Goods, CORNER OFSECOND ANDJWASHINGTON2STS-, THE DALLES, OREGON. TJOSir due from the home office to sand policy and receipt r:1.viMiiH unH ho wm.m mn.it ma .v.. amnnnv Xj. IE. CK.O W JJ- FOR . THE :- FOR- THE DALLES, OREGON". PROPRIETOR. BROS.. na tancy hiss, n i -