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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 14, 1891)
The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Published 'Daily, Sunday Excepted. BY THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. Corner Second and Washington Streets, Dalles, Oregon. The Terms of Subscription. Per Year 16 00 Per month, by carrier 60 Single copy 5 STATE OFFICIALS. Governor . S. Pennoyer Secretary of State G. W. McBride Treasurer Phillip Metschan Supt. of Public Instruction.. E. B. McElroy (J. N. Dolph enatora J. H. Mitchell Congressman B. Hermann State Printer . . . .Frank Baker COUNTY OPFICIA1S. County Judge. C. N. Thornbury Sheriff D. L. Catcs Clerk J. B. Crossen Treasurer Ueo. Kuch Commissioners Sanca'id Assessor John E. Barnett Surveyor E. F. Shurp Superintendent of Public Schools ... Troy Shelley Coroner William Michell The Chronicle is the Only Paper in The Dalles that Receives the Associated Press Dispatches. ' PATRONIZE THE OPPOSITION. This morning at eight o'clock the Reg ulator left on her first business trip to the Cascade Locks. The day marks the beginning of a new era. A few days more and we shall have through connec tion with Portland. Eight car loads of the rolling stock of the portage railroad have already arrived at the Cascades and the locomotive has been on the way. eince the 4th inst. The city of The Dalles, on the lower river, will be ready for busi ness by the end of this week and some time the week after, the entire route from The Dalles to Portland should be open for traffic. Every pound of freight that the farmers and merch ints, contig uous to The Dalles, have for shipment, ought to be sent by the new line, and passengers should patronize it in pref erence to the opposition! It is in every way safer than by rail, and the .boats will not fall far short of raiiroad speed, besides that a trip by water is much pleasanter than by land. The old com pany has so long held us by the throat . while it robbed us that we owe it noth ing and the man who does not, by every honorable means, encourage and patron ize a line whose existence will put thous ands of dollars in the pooiets of con sumers is not worthy of American citi zenship. AWAY WITH THEM. Pinkertonism has put the crown on its work of infamy in Washington by the altogether lawless and reckless ur rest and abduction of two citizens, of Seattle, and the press of the state is thoroughly arroused and unanimous in demanding that an end be put to the dangerous operations of this class of so called detectives. The sentiment of the" jHSople, not alone of Washington but of the whole nation is opposed to the exist ence of a body of brutal hirelings whose very business and occupation are a me nace to the freedom of the citizen. Did they confine themselves to the legitimate work of hunting down wrong doers and detecting crime, no fault would be found, but when these relies of a barbarous age make it a profession to sell themselves to those who are rich enough to be able to purchase their services, in order to enforce, under a thin cloak of law, at the muszle of the rifle, the harsh decrees of some heartless oppressor, it is time -that the fitful storms that labor has of ten raised against them should swell" into a tempest that shall wipe th m out of existence..-, . , The dispatches inform us that U. S. Hall, ex-president of the Fanners' Al liance, is in St. Louis perfecting arrange luentri for the National Anti-sub-Treas-'Xiry and Anti-third Party convention which will meet in St. Loui3 tomorrow. Hall expects the convention to be the largest representative gathering of farm ers ever held in this country, but while the movement is significant, as showing that the farmers are getting their eyes open to the utter impracticability of the sub-treasury and land loan schemes of the third party, it is quite possible Mr. Hall is oversanguine in his estimation. Nor is it of any great importance. These schemes are bound to die a natural death any way, and if Mr. Halls' estimates should turn out to be true it would only prove that their demise came sooner than was expected. The country will never see the day when the government will go into the business of loaning money on farm or any other kind of produce. The Milton Eagle has formulated an excellent plan for meeting the expenses of sending home the thousands of China men who are constantly 'smuggling themselves into this country in violation of the law. The Eagle thinks if the gov ernment is going into the pawnbrooking and saloon business, as proposed in the Ohio Third party platform, it ought cer tainly to start a federal laundry and when a surreptitions Chinamen is caught, make him first work out his passage; and then ship him to China. - . PORTLAND'S. i GENEROSITY. The people of The Dalles will not soon forget the kindness and generosity of Portland in contributing to the needs of those who have suffered by the late fire. $2500 will be raised, in addition to num erous private contributions of various kinds and the proceeds of the benefit at Carday's theatre tomorrow night, for which tickets are said to be selling very rapidly. Mayor Mason has been very active in the cause of The Dalles people and has even requested the police to sell tickets, and as these gentlemen are said to be possessed of good hustling qualities it is expected that Very few will remain unsold, of the great number placed in their hands. It is rumored that Mr. Parnell intends, in the near future, to visit the United States to see what can be done io reor ganize the broken ranks of his party on this side the Atlantic. The cool recep tion his last emissaries met here would indicate that he may just as well stay at home. Parnell has undoubtedly lost his grip on the Irish people and the. best thing he can do is to take Kitty to some quiet corner of the earth, away from the busy haunts of men and both of them stav there. Adam Forepaugh Shows. From the way in which this city and country are covered with the artistic pic torial paper' of the Adam Forepaugh Shows,' it seems like "carrying' coals to Newcastle," to say that the great shows now on their 28th annual tour will ex hibit at The Dalles, one performance only, Wednesday afternoon, September. 16, in all their regal magnificence. The Adam Forepaugh shows are well known as the oldest, largest and richest of all exhibitions. This year with three ciscusses, huge menageries, real Roman hippodrome, new Wild West, and fa mous foreign features, it eclipses its for mer self. Probably the greatest feature of this season is Coloned Edgar Daniel Boona and Miss Millie Carlotta, the cel ebrated European lion-tamers, who will exhibit live forest-bred lions in a steel encircled ring. The lions will be har nessed to and draw a chariot, they will play see-saw with a great German boar hound named "Saxon," they will form tableaux, ride tricycles, and do many other astonishing thing things while loose in the ring. The famous Hanlon-Volters appear for the first time under canvas with the Adam Forepaugh shows this year. These remarkakle artists wil do douhle somersaults high in the ambient air, from swaying-bar to swaying-bar, fully sixty feet apart. Owing to the height of the rigging and length of the leaps, the acts cannot be dotie under a roof because there are not more than two or three buildings in the country large enough. In fact, the great waterproof tents of the Auhiii Forepaugh shows are the only cir cus canvases large enough. The act is. entirely new and extremely .hazardous. There are more than 200 artists in the triple circus. Twenty female bareback riders, twenty-five male bareback riders, and in short, actors and acts of all kinds. In the hippodrome more races are given by intrepid riders and fiery steeds than in any other shows, Roman standing races, Roman chariot races, modern running and trotting, mule and donkey, monkey and pony, elephant and camel, bag, wheelbarrow, man vs. horse, and many other races. The Wild west is composed of a great number of Indians, scouts, cowboys, patiinnaers, inaian ngnters, Indian squaws and papooses, led by Capt. A. H. Bogardus and hia sons, champion shots of the world. All kinds of Wild West scenes, historical, romantic and comical are portrayed, the ghost dance, hanging a horse-thief, Custer battle, etc. In the menagerie will be found one or more of every species known to Zoology, more cagefuils of animals than some shows have single ones. Adam Fore paugh, Jr., will present a huge herd of $50,000 trained and dancing elephants, and highly trained stallions, bronchos and dogs. The entire shows will sur pass any exhibition ever given in such a way as to defy comparsion. Another Cliance. The following telegram was received this afternoon : Portland, Or., Sept 14. To Hon. A. S. McAlister, president of the Hoard of Trade: I shall visit the Locks tomorrow going by morning train and returning by tV?frlt. troin T f artvr rf x-mii. conviently be present I should be glad xo meet mem. j. jN. dolph. N The following telegram was received Saturday evening, too late for publica tion : . Walla Walla, Sept. 12.-VTo Robert Mays, mayor: The committee report $750, check for same, together with a car load of flour and potatoes from the county will be forwarded tinder care of Colonel Parker. Farther aid being soli cited. J. L. Roberts. Mayor. . . Lost. A lady's gold watch. Walthain, with riverside movement, attached to a black silk fob. Twenty dollars reward will be paid for its return to the Chronicle office or to Mrs. T. Baldwin.. 14-tf. A newspaper is always printed in a rush. There is always something left out that should have gone in ; it is at times too quick to judge, often too quick to act ; but with all its faults and short comings, there is more education in a bright, newsy paper than there is in a novel. You will find that the brightest boy on practical, sensible everyday questions is the boy who prefers news papers to novels. Ex. The Burns Herald says : In the United States circuit court Henry Miller, who owns a large tract cf swamp land in Harney county was given & judgment for want of an answer, against "Charles W. Brigus, C. H. Burdick, S. King, G. W Bartlett, R. J. Ivers, J. E. Leasy and Henry Phillips.- These persons had filed homesteads on Miller's land, and he brought suit to recover possession and was successful. Stock Holders Meeting. Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of the stockholders of the Wasco Warehouse company will bt held at the office of French & Co., The Dalles, Oregon, on Wednesday September 30th, 1891, at 3:30 p.m., for the purpose of electing directors for the ensuing year and the transaction of such other busi ness as may come before it. The Dalles, Oregon, Aug, 29th, 1891. G. J. Farley, Secretary Wasco Warehouse Co. 9-5td. Notice. ' All persons are hereby warned not to purchase or negotiate for a certain promissory note bearing date about June 5, 1890, given by Max ,Vogt & Co. to Pat Donlan, for $1188, pavable one year after the date of said note with interest thereon at 8 per cent, per annum , as said note is claimed by said Donlan to have been lost or stolen. The Dalles, Or., Aug. 27, 1891. 8-27-d&w-4w Max Vogt & Co. An Old Adage. There is an old adage : "What every body says must be true." Henry Cook, of 1m ew Knoxville, Ohio, in a recent let ter says: "Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy has taken well here. Everybody likes it on account of the immediate relief it gives." There is nothing like it to loosen and relieve a severe cold. For sale by Snipes & Kinersly, druggists, dw SPECIAL- NOTICE. Notwithstanding the fire we still have a half million (500 thousand) feet of ROUGH AND DRESSED LUMBER Suitable for buildings of all kinds ; also our planing mill is the only one now in the vicinity and ready to turn out mill work ot every description. d9-3 Jos. T. Peters. They Speak From Experience. "We know from experience in the use of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy that it win prevent croup," says Messrs. Uad' berry & Worley, Percy, Iowa. They also add that the remedy has eiven ereat satisfaction in this vicinity, and that they believe it to be the best in the market tor throat and lung diseases. .tor sale Dy bnipes S Kinerslv druggists, 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 neieh borhood. His address is Grass Valley, snerman county, Oregon. Notice. The Chronicle will be pleased to pub lish, free of charge, a list of all property that persons may have lost during the nre and cannot una or may nave in pos session and cannot find the' owner. In all cases where convenient, goods may be left at thre office. Notice. ' . City taxes for 1891 are now due. Dalles Citv tax assessment is now in mv hand and will be held in my office for J : . j oi j j . j Yin okA.i,y uava. oijLty uavn iroiii uutc, ouiy 18, 1891, city taxes will be delinquent. ' O. Kinersly. City Treasurer. For Sale. Thomas McCoy has between sixty and one hundred head of good stock cattle to sell. For particulars apply at the bar ber shop, Xo. 110 2d St., The Dalles. 9-11-tf Pasture. Good stubble and meadow pasture to be had on the A. 3. Moore place on Three-mile, two and one-half m'iles from town. . 8-17-tf. A girl to do general housework. To a good girl good wages will be paid. Ap ply to Mrs. J. P. Mclnerny. 9-l2tf Wanted. A girl to do general house work at a road ranch seventeen miles from The Dalles. Apply at this office. 8-17-tf. F. Debm is again on deck. He saved his stock and tools and has opened busi ness at the cigar factory on First street. 9-9 -lm A. A. Brown, Keeps a full assortment of Staple and Fancy Groceres, and Provisions. which he offerr at Low Figure. SPECIAL y. PPJGES to Cash. Buyers. Reopened at 10! 1'iiion Pt. First door north of the Court House, The Dalles, Oregon. The Dalles Gigaf : f aetofy, FACTORY NO. 105. OTfr ADO of the Best Brands v.'A VXxA. JAjO 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. TO RENT. A Union Street Lodging House. For terms apply to Geo. Williams, Administrator of the estate of John Michelbaugh. dtf-9-2 A NEW Undertaking Establishment ! PRINZ & NITSCHKE. DEALERS IN 'r 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. , Biiiiflifip plaiefiais ! Having made arrangements' with a number of Factories, I am pre pared to furnish Doors, Windows, Mouldings, : STORE FRONTS And all kinds of Special work. Ship ments made daily from factory and can fill orders in the shortest possible time. Prices satisfactory. It will be to your interest to see me before purchasing elsewhere. Wm. Saundef s, Office over French's Bank. Health is Wealth ! Da. E. C. West's Nekve anb Bbain Tbkat ment, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi ness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco. Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in in sanity and leading to misery, deeny 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 ovc indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. $1.00 a box, or six boxes for $5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any ease. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by $5.00, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued only by yBLAKXLIT & HOUGHTON,' 7 ,' Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. The Dalles, Or. S. 13. Cleveland, Wash., ) June 19th, 1891.f S. B. Medicine Co., Gentlemen Your kind favor received, and in reply would say that I am more than pleased with the terms offered me on the last shipment of your medicines. There is nothing like them ever intro duced in this country, especially for La grippe and kindred complaints. I have had no complaints so far, and everyone is ready with a word of "praise for their virtues. Yours, etc., ' M. F. Hackley. W. E. GARRETSON, Mm - Jeweler. SOLE AGENT FOli THE All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to . Order. 138 Second St.. The Xalle, Or. ; Phil Willig, 124 UNION ST., THE DALLES, OK. Keeps on hand a full line of i MEN'S AND YOUTH'S Ready - Made Clothing. Pants and Suits MADE TO ORDER On Reasonable Terms. Call and see my Goods before -. Durchaaing elsewhere. , 'P335' " i m .... - ct ,, T1 m SUMMER GOODS Of Every Description will be Sold at jcii FOR THE NEXT THIRTY DAYS. Call Early and Get Some of Our Gen uine Bargains. Terms Chsh. H. Herbring. J. H. CROSS -DEALER IN- If, Gri, HEADQUARTERS FOR POTATOES. Cash Paid for Eggs and Chickens. . All Goods Delivered Free and Promptly TERMS STRICTLY CKSH. Cor. Second & Union Sts., The Dalles Mercantile Co., , Successors to BROC General Merchandise, Successors to BROOKS Staple Gents' Furnishing Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, etc. Groceries, Hardware, Provisions, Flour, Bacon, HAY, GRAIN AND PRODUCE Of all Kinds at Lowest Market Rates. Free Delivery to Boat and Curs and all parts of the City. 390 arid 394 Second Street E. Jacobsen & Co., WHOLESALE AND RETAIL ii w I i ; if i f t Pianos and Organs Sold on EASY INSTALLMENTS. Notions, Toys, Fancy G-oods and Musical Instru ments of all Kinds. 3VX.iX Orders Filled 162 SECOND STREET, - - Great Bargains! Removal! Removal! On account of Removal I vill sell my entire stock of Boots and. Shoes, Hats and Caps, Trunks and Valises, Shelv ings, Counters, Desk, Safe, Fixtures, at a Great Bargain. Come and see my offer. GREAT REDUCTION I1M RETAIL. 125 Second Street, FRENCH & CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GEXEBALBAXKKTG BCSIKE8- Letters of Credit issued available in the Eastern States. Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St: Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections maria nt. nil nninta nn fav orable terms. i REMOVAL. H. Glenn has lemoved his office and the office of the Electric Light Co. to 72 Washington St. D M J H upu St BEERS, Dealers In and Fancy Dry Goods, iv I f f ' i ' n t i e i r- r- n 'romptly. THE DALLES, OREGON. The Dalles. D. P. Thompson' President. I. S. BCHKNCK, H. M. BEALI, . . Vice-Presideut. Cashier First National Bank. THE DALLES. OREGON A General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to Sight Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly remitted on day of collection. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on New York, San Francisco and Port land. DIRECTORS. D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. Schbxck. T. W. Sparks. Geo. A. Lierk. H. M. Beall. $20 REWARD. WILL BE PAiu FOR ANY INFORMATION leading to the conviction of parties cutting the ropes or ln any way interfering with the wire pole or ".amps of The Electric Light Co. II. GLENN, Feet mill flic.