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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 14, 1891)
i. mm urn VOL. II. THE DALLES, OREGON, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1891. NO. 77. I f 1 PROFESSIONAL CARDS. WM. 8AUNDER8 Architect. Plans and specifications furnished for dwellings, churches, business blocks, schools and factories. Charges moderate, satisfaction guaranteed. Of fice over French's bunk. The Dalles, Oregon. DR. J. SUTHERLAND Feixow of Trinity Medical College, and member of the Col lege of Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, Phy sician and Surgeon. Office; rooms 8 and 4 Chap man block. Residence; Judge Thornbury's Sec ond street. Office hours; 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. fa. DR. O. D. DOANE PHYSICIAN AND BUR GEON. Office) rooms 6 and 6 Chapman Block. Residence over McFarland & French's tore. Office hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to S and 7 to 8 P. M. AS. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of . fice tn Schanno's building, up stairs. The Dalles, Oregon D6IDDALL Dentist. Gas given for the . painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth set on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of the Golden Tooth, Second Street. AR. THOMPSON Attornet-at-law. Office . in Opera House Block, W ashington Street, The Dalles, Oregon P. P. MAYS. . B. 8. HUNTINGTON. H. 8. WILSON. MAYS, HUNTINGTON & WILSON Attor-neyb-at-law. Offices, French's block over First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. a.B.DUFUR. GEO. W ATKINS. FRANK HENEFIE. DUFUR, W ATKINS & MENEFEE ATTOR-nbys-at-law Room No. 43, over Post Office Building, Entrance ou Washington Street The Dalles, Oregon. WH. WILSON Attorney-at-law Rooms . 52 and 53, New Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. SillPES H1IIERSLY. Wholesale and Retail Dniipsts. -DEALERS IX- Fiae Imported, Key West and Domestic CIGARS. PAINT Now is the time to paint your house and if you wish to get the best quality sb1 a fine color use the Sherwin, Williams Cos Paint. For those wishing to see the quality and color of the above paint we call their attention to the residence of S. L. Brooks, Judge Bennett, Smith French and others painted by Paul Kreft. Snipes & Kinersly are agents for the above paint for The Dalles. Or. COLUMBIA CANDY FACTORY W. S. CRAM, Proprietor. (Successor to Cras & Corsoio Manufacturer of the finest French and Home Hade CAITDIES, East of Portland. DEALER IX Tropical Frails, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish nnr of these goods at Wholesale or Retail In KTr y Style. 104 Second Street. The Dalles, Or. Office Cop. 3d and Union Sts. Oak and Fir on Hand. Orders Filled Promptly. Nicholas & Fisher, BARBER SHOP. -ANI Hot and Cold Baths! mfllEU 1 BEJITOJI, CORD WOOD JUST RECBIVBD! lOO PIECES OF- Which we will Sell at the 41" 1 2 For all THIS WILL ONLY LAST FOR A FEW DAYS, AS IT IS A RARE BARGAIN. HID . : ; t. . orth DciIIbs, SITUATED AT THE HEAD OF NAVIGATION. Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center in the Inland Empire. For Further Information Call at the Office of Interstate Investment Go., 0. D. TAYLOR, THE DALLES. 7X. BE'TTINGEN, -Retailer and Hardware, Tinware, Graniteware, Wooden ware, Silverm re, Crockery, Gl ssai re, Ete.' AGENT THE OAKLAND STOVE. Pumps, Pipes, P umbers and Ste m fitter's Supp ies. All Tinning, Plumbing, Pipe Work and Repairing will be done on Short Notice, and at the Lo-west Prices. - , Second Street, next door to Snipes & The Opeta Hestauant, No. 116 Washington Street, . MEALS, at ALL HOURS Handsomely Furnished Rooms to Rent by the 1 Bay, Week or Month. Finest Sample Rooms for Commercial Men. Special Rates to Commercial Men. t WILL S. GRAHAM, W.&T.JVIeCoy, BARBERS. Hot -: and-:-Cold-:-Baths. HO SECOND STREET. Extreme Low Price of GENTS Widths. Best Selling Property of the Season in the North west. 72 WASHINGTON ST., PORTLAND Jobber In - FOK Kinersly. THE DALLES. of the DAY or NIGHT. PROPRIETOR. $500 Reward! We will pay the above reward for any case ol Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, In digestion, Constipation or Costiveness we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fail to give 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. WF8T COMPANY, CHIGAGO, ILLINOIS. BLAKELEI A HOUGHTON, Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. The Dalles, Or. FEED. Laid at Rest. Baker City, Sept. 13. The remains of Miss Bertha Ison, the young lady who was murdered at Blooinington, 111., last Monday, arrived in this city this morn ing at 7 o'clock, the scene of her birth and home for almost her entire life. The funeral party, consisting of the mother, sister and brother, were met at Pocatello, Idaho, by W. F. Butcher, and at the state line by several intimate friends who accompanied the remains here. When the train arrived in the city hundreds of friends were standing on the depot platform, and . the scene was indeed a sad one. Among the num ber were many schoolmates of the de ceased who could not keep , back the falling tear. The remains were con veyed to the family residence, from which place the funeral will take place tomorrow at 3 p. m. Never in the his tory of Baker City was there an an nouncement which fell heavier than the intelligence that Miss Ison, one of the city's fairest and most highly respected young ladies, had been ' shot down by the cruel hand of an assassin. The news fell like a pall, and a state of gloom is everywhere manifest. The remains ar rived in a good state of perservation and look very lifelike. Wnat are the Authorities Doing? New Yohk, Sept. 13. Statistics fur nished by her majesty's customs officers at the port of Vancouver, B. C, state that for a period of six and a half months, irom January 1st to July 15th, 1891, there were disembarked at Van couver 7900 Chinamen, ninety-five per cent, of whom were bound for the United States, and her majesty's officers also es timate that at least 7000 of this number are either in the United States or scat tered along the border waiting an oppor tunity to slip across the line. Customs officers and special agents of the treasury department along the northwestern frontier . concur in this estimate. The prohibited Chinamen cross tne border in at least twenty different places between Vancouver and Montreal. They are as sisted across by syndicates of men who make a regular business of it, who have fast teams, stations and secret trails in the interior and trim clipper sloops on Puget sound. . The United States government offers practically no resist ance to this illegal trade. Resistance is to all intents and purposes useless, be cause it is so feeble. WORLD'S IA1B..TEAB. Washington Park Meeting; to be ' the Grandast Erer Held. Chicago, Sept. 13. It is the intention of the Washington Park Club to make their racing meeting of 1893 (world's fair year) the grandest ever -given in America. Secretary Brewster an nounced tonight it had been decided the value of the American derby that year will be at least $60,000. The Queen Isabelle'stakes $10,000, and the Sheridan 8 taken $5,000 will also be run, besides twenty or more valuable stakes for two and three-year-olds and all ages, includ ing the guaranteed stake of $25,000 for two-year-olds and the Columbus handi cap for three-year-olds, and upwards of $25,000 to the winner. The program for the 1892 meeting announces $120,000 added money money in stakes and purses. BBZEF STATE NEWS. The Fox valley mines in Grant county are attracting the attention of capitalists. T. J. Cozard, living on a ranch six miles east of Burns, had a horse and mule killed by lightning on the night of the. 2d inst. The residence of C. P. Zumwalt, near Perrydale, Polk county, was destroyed by fire on " Wednesday last. A portion of the household goods was saved by the family. - The plat of township 1, north range 6 east, has been received at the Oregon City land office, and will be filed and open for settlement under the homestead law on and after October 19, 1891. W. Wampole, a farmer near Gervils, while driving to that town with a load of wheat, was thrown under his horses' feet by several sacks of grain slipping off and was trampled and kicked severely. The appointment of J. W. Blackburn as judge of Sherman county by Governor Pennoyer, appears to be satisfactory to the people of that county. He is spoken of as one well capable of filling such an important office. Calvin Neal, a pioneer of '44 died near Stay ton last week, and fourteen hours after his supposed death revived and lived several hours longer, and then 're lapsed and the final disolution of body and soul took place. Three men living on Johnson Free man's farm near Glencoe, went to Hills boro .Tuesday last to secure medical treatment. All were suffering with poisoned fingers, and none of them could give any idea of how the poisoning occurred or what caused it. The flesh seemed to rot as in blood poisoning. A son of Mr. Faulkenberg, Hying two miles from Holbrook, Washington county, was thrown from & mowing machine on Tneseay last, falling in front of the sicklebar, the -bar 'passing over him cutting his left, ear nearly off, and inflicted a bad scalp wound, also a bad wound on the right 'side of the ,head and injuring the bones of the skull. - GREAT LOSS OF LIFE. Heavy Storms in Spain Cause the Death of 2000 people and the Loss of an Immense Amount of Property. England (letting Ready for War Great Excitement in France Strengthen ing the Canadian Frontier. LOOKS LIKE TKOUBLE. The Political and Financial Circlet! of France Greatly Excited by English Manoeuvres. Paris, Sept. 14. A decided feeling of uneasiness is caused in diplomatic and financial circles here by the receipt of a dispatch announcing that Sigri, on the west coast of the Island of Mitylene, be longing to Turkey, near the coast of Asia Minor and within steaming distance of Dardanells is occupied by a detach ment of British troops. Under ordi nary circumstances little or no credence would be placed in this alarming rumor, but coupled with the story broadly cir culated Saturday, that Great Britain, in view of Russia's practical .coercion of Turkey in regard to passage through Dardanelles of a vessel belonging to England, her volunteer fleet intended to occupy the island of Tenedos at the en trance of Hellesport or Dardanelles. The Situation in London. London, Sept. 14. As soon as the re port of occupation of Mitylene by British forces was received here there was con siderable excitement. Up to 5:30 p. m. there was no official utterance upon the subject. A dispatch was received from Constantinople stating the occupation of the island of Mitylene is an accomplished fact and it has found echo on all conti nental bourses today. . . More Good Indians Killed in a Duel. St. Louis, Sept. 14. A Guthrie, Okla homa, dispatch says : A government inspector just in from the Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indian reservations reports that for nearly a week the Indians have been holding' dances. From result of that and eating ' melons both green and ripe fully fifty of them .died and scores more are very sick. Particulars of a bloody duel which took place at Venice, 111., yesterday, reached here this morning. ' Two ne groes, Grant Wood and Dick Oliver, quarrelled over a woman and fought with knives and pistols. Wood was cut La- the heart, dying soon afterwards. While Oliver's wounds are serious he will probably recover. He and the woman are under arrest. Getting Heady For War. Ottowa, Sept. 14. A British army of ficer on his way to inspect defenses of British Columbia says his government intends to strengthen the defenses of Canada on both oceans' and along the frontier on the St. Lawrence and Great Lakes and that ships and armament of the Atlantic and Pacific squadrons will be greatly strengthened. At Halifax the British government is building im mense fortifications. He says the gen eral belief in England is that trouble with jthe United States is inevitable. Chicago Wheat Market. Chicago, Sept. 14. "Hold 3'our wheat" circular issued to members of the farmers' alliance from St. Paul and higher cables in spite of heavy receipts, caused wheat to open higher this morn ing. December opened all the way from 96 to 97. . After numerous fluctuations the price rose to 98; eased off to 98 at 12 :30. Wheat closed steady) cash 94 J94 ; Dec. 7373. Severe Flood in Spain. Madrid, Sept. 14. Serious floods and storms reported in various parts of Spain. Official information received here from the scene of the floods now devastating the province of Toledo, ac cording to news received, two thousand people have perished and an immense amount of damage has been, done. Ex-Minister Loring Dead. Salem, Mass., Sept. 14. Hon. George B. Loring, ex-minister to Portugal, and former commissioner of agriculture, died suddenly this morning of heart tronble. He was 74 vears old. A 200,000 Fire. London, Sept. 14. Salvages, a group of islands near the Canaries, was le cently the scene of an extensive confla gration. The loss amounts to 200,000. Next Year In Portland. Seattle, Sept. 13. The annual meet ing of the German M. E. "conference closed its session here today, and voted to meet next year at Portland. - Oregon's Fair. , Salem, Sept. 14. The thirty-first an nual state fair opened here today. The fair will continue during the week. A NEW DEPARTURE. Several Prominent Democrats on a Cam paigning Tour of the Northwest. Wabhinqton, Sept. 13. Several dem ocrats, more or less., prominent, will be gin their tour to the Pacific coast tomor row. It is something of a new depart ure in the way of campaigning. The nominal object is to attend the second annual meeting of the state democratic societies of Washington, which will be held at Spokane. The party consists of Senator Faulkner, General Black, the president of the national association of democrat clubs, Representative By num, Representative McAdoo, James M. Beck, of Philadelphia, and Lawrence Gardner, secretary of the national asso ciation of democratic clubs. They will talk tariff and preach the old democratic doctrines to'the people all along their route, which will include about all the northwest, finally closing with an active participation in the campaign in Iowa. They will reach Spokane about Wednes day, the 23rd of this month, where Sen ator Faulkner and General Black will deliver the principal speeches. The night of Thursday, the 24th instant, there will be a meeting of the state so ciety at the Grand opera house, and Mr. Bynum will be the orator of the occa sion. The party will then separate, the speakers going to various parts of the state of Washington. On reuniting they will visit the principal points on Puget sound as far north as Victoria. San Francisco will be the next place visited. There the visitors will attend a union meeting of the democratic clubs of San Francisco, several of the party making addresses. They will speak at different points in California, then go to Ogden, and two of the party will go to Salt Lake before going intp Iowa, where thpy will spend a week making campaign speeehes. ' THE THIRD PARTY. President Folk Thinks Nothing can Prevent it Now. Toi'eka, Kan., Sept. 13. Colonel Polk, national president of the alliance, in company with Frank McGrath, the Kansas president, returned from Holton last night. President Polk talked this morning freely of the political situation. He said : If southern farmers are driven into the peoples party, no power on earth can prevent them carrying every south ern state, but the question is, will they be driven into the third party? Four months ago I would have said a new political party was not likely to follow. It now seems impossible to prevent it. The alliance is with us and is in such a condition that it can be changed in one day into a political party. It was or ganized as a non-partisan institution and has been conducted as such. The south is a unit on the' sub-treasury plan. Whether the supreme council in "Febru ary decides a third party must be placed in the field or not, it will be a go any- ' how, and it will receive thousands of votes in the south. The democrats have it in their power to stop the movement by acceding to the St. Louis demands.. Nothing short of that will avail and if it is not done the south is lost to them. The Memphis Baptists. Menphis, Tenn., Sept. 12. A bill was filled in the chancery court this morn ing asking a decree declaring the Rev. Taylor Nightingale, pastor "of the Beals street Baptists church, wrongfully usurp ing its pulpit, and holding possession of the church property. The bill charges That the defendant, Nightingale, not having the fear of God before his eyes, and being moved and incited by the instigations of the devil, schemed and intigned to subvert the use of the church property to satiate his personal and political ambition by conspiring to take charge of said property, archives, keys, records and parsonage, -and now holds thems bv violence. SAVING EXPENSES. Tricky Chinese Illegally Cross the Bor der In Order to Save Transportation. Tucson, Sept. 13. A Chinaman in jail here yesterday revealed to his brother prisoners one cause'of the exo dus of Chinese from Mexico who are at tempting to enter the United States. He says that one Chinaman was just taken to San Francisco, who had sent his earnings from Mexico, where he had lived several years, to China, and then deliberately crossed into Arizona, that he might be captured and sent to China at the expense of the United States. Eighty-two Hours From San Francisco. San Francisco, Sept." 13. The South era Pacific has issued a circular stating that the schedule of the line north of Ashland has been made to connect with the schedule south of Ashland, making continuous freight service . from San Francisco to Portland in eighty-two hours. . Weather Forecast. San Francisco, Sept. 14. Forecast light rains, except in Northwestern Washington and Southeastern Oregon. San Francisco Wheat Market. San Fbancisco, Sept. 14. Wheat buyer '91, 171, season 80. - Portland Wheat Market. Portland, Sept. 14. Wheat, Valley 150152 ; Walla Walla 140142.