The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, November 27, 1891, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    VOL. II.
THE DALiLES, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1891.
NO. 140.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
J. ROBERTS Civil Enoinbeb Gen
eral engineering practice. Surveying and
mapping; estimates and plans for irrigation,
sewerage, water-works, railroads, bridges, etc.
Address : P. O. Box 107, The Dalles, Or.
WM. SAUNDERS Architect. Plans and
specifications furnished for dwellings,
churches, business blocks, schools and factories.
UAarges moderate, sausiacauu Kuuvinm. w
flee over French's bank. The 1
, Oregon. '
TAR. J.
U Medical Colle
SUTHERLAND Fellow of Trihitt
, ana memoer 01 the joi-
leee of Phvsicians and SnrgeonB, 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. m.
DR. O.
GMOf
D. DOANE PHYSICIAN AMD BUR
GEON. Office; rooms 5 ana 6 Chapman
Block. Residence No. 23, Fourth street, -one
block south of C'onrt House. Office hours 9 to 12
A. M., 2 to 5 an 7 to 4 P. M.
A3. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of-
See in Bchanuo's building, up stairs. The
Dalles, Oregon. -
DSIDDALX
. painless
- Dentist. Gas given for the
extraction of teeth. Also teeth
set on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of
toe Golden Tooth, Second Street.
AR. THOMPSON Attornet-at-law. Office
in Opera House Block, Washington Street,
.The Dalles, Oregon
F. P. MATS. . B. S. HUNTINGTON H. 8. WILSON.
MAY8, HUNTINGTON & WILSON ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW.
Offices, French's block over
First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon.
X.B.DUFUB. GEO. ATKINS. FRANK MENEFEB.
UFUR, W ATKINS MENEFEE Attorneys-at-law
Room No. 43. over Post
Office Building, Entrance on Washington Street
The Dalles, Oregon.
DISSOLUTION SRLE
We have accumulated a large quantity of -
To dispose of these we have decided to hold a
taint
-ON-
Saturday, JStovembet 28.
D
WH. WILSON Attorney-at-law Rooms
52 and 63, New Vogt Block, Second Street,
The Dalles, Oregon.
5JIIPE5 & DMSLT,
Wholesale aid Retail Druists.
-DEALERS IN-
Fine Imported, Key West and Domestii
PAINT
Now is the time to paint your house
and if you wish to get the best quality
-and a fine color use the . .-,
- Sherwin, Williams Co.'s Paint. .
'For those wishing to see the quality
and color of the above paint we call theii
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 Cram itorson.)
We will include in this
PRICES, broken lots of
sale and at REMNANT
Hosiery, Shoes, Gloves, Buttons and- Underwear,
We do not .intend, to realize from this special
sale, even .
' O O S T I 3EL I O E
of goods offered, but will make V .
Manufacturer of the finest French and
. Hpme Made
O JZLST DIBS
East of Portland.
DEALER IN
Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco.
Can furnish any of these goods at Wholesala
or Retail
$FtESH OYSTERS
In Every Style.
104 Second Street: The Dalles, Or.
Bnrnei IM tat Apia in Business!
Wm. miGHEItli,
UNDERTAKER,
And Embalraer, has strain started with a new
and complete stock of everything needed in
- the undertaking business. Particular
attention paid to embalming and
taking care of the dead. Orders
promptly attended to, day or
night.
Price's as Low as the Lowest
Place of business, diagonally across from
Opera Block, on the corner of Third and Wash
ington streets, ion xsaiies, ureguu
ddrw .
FHEj4Cfi Gt .CO.,
'bankers.
TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BU8INE83
Letters of Credit issued available in the
Eastern States.
Sight Exchange and Telegraphic
Transfers aoldon New York. Uhicago, bt
T-onia. San Francisco. Portland Oregon,.
Seattle Wash., and varions points in Or
egon and Washington. -
Collections made at all points on fav
orable terms. . .
in order to close them out. . , : ' .
We have been giving you BIG BARGAINS for
the.past month. Our immense sales during this ,
time show that our friends have not been slow to
avail themselves of the OPPORTUNITIES
OFFERED. " - ;
We now propose to give you
0
pip
iil&lni
BARGAINS
than ever and you must not allow this chance to
pass by. . ;
REMEMBGR
Saturday
November
28
AND IT WILL DO YOU GOOD.
REMNANTS' PRINTS,
REMNANTS SHEETINGS, .
REMNANTS DOMESTICS,
REMNANTS . SHIRTINGS,
REMNANTS RIBBONS,
-. REMNANTS LACES,
REMNANTS FLANNELS,
"REMNANTS TICKINGS,
REMNANTS TOWELLNGS,
REMNANTS DRESS GOODS,
REMNANTS EMBROIDERIES,
REMNANTS TABLE LINENS,
REMNANTS SILK AND SATINS,
REMNANTS CANTON FLANNELS,
REMNANTS DENIMS,
REMNANTS GINGHAMS,
As it will take a gfeat amount of time and labor,
to get our Remnants in order, we will
C LOSE OUR STO R E
THURSDAY AN D FRIDAY
and will reopen 7. o'clock a. m. Saturday.
Remember this sale includes
from 10 cents to. $2.00 per yard and many pieces
of eight and ten yards each. ,
" Do not let your chances like sunbeams . pass
you by." y-:"..V - r- ; , ,
HIP
WERE SHORT ON CORN.
Assignment of a Large New York Firm,
CansedDy High Prices.- :
DOES NOT EFFECT THE MARKET.
Wanted to Suspend the Cornoral From
From Aetive Service.
DISHONEST OFFICIALS. CAUGHT.
Tbe
Condition of the Weather In
East The Texas Alliance
. Draws Out.
-tbe
New York, Nov." . 27. Edwin M.
Field, Daul Levdley, John Frederick,
Weichers and Herman, C." He! nana,
composing of the firm of Field Lindley
Weichers and Co., bankers and brokers,
assigned todayVithout preference.
The failure was announced on the
produce exchange at noon, but the grain
market was only slightly affected. The
house isin old one, but has lately been
somewhat restricted in its -dealings.
The failure is attributed to the rise in
corn' at New York" and Chicago. It has
been protecting some large lines of corn
from S. V, White deal and had been on
the short side of the November market,
and a few days ago had to cover 500,000
bushels. Just how much of an amount
the firm will find itself unable to pay is
not yet clear. The grain markets is
only slightly afficted by the failure. The
bead of the firm is a son of Cyrus W.
Field. The firm was rated at $750,000 to
$1,000,000.
Wanted to Snpend Hint.
London, jnov. Z7. intelligence was
received today from Aldershpt, where is
situated the, great military barracks,
that the privates of the second battalion
of the prince of Wales Westminister
regiment, had attempted to bang a cor
poral who bad taken advantage of a little
authority to make life unpleasant for the
private by . petty tyranies.1' Their
complaints to the higher officers .'were
not noticed, and so angry did they be-
come that they at length seized the cor
poral and suspended hiirr in the air.
After hanging a short time the corporal
was discovered and cut down by. a ser
geant and he was resuscitated after con
siderable effort. . .
An Election Bet Killed Him.
Wjly nesacrg, Pa., Nov. 26. John
Dougherty, an oil well driller, died last
night from pneumonia. Mr. Dougherty
was a democrat and he made a bet with
a republican that Campbell would defeat
McKinley for governor of Ohio. The
loser was to climb to the top' of an oil
derrick, seventy-two feet high and re
main there from 6 in the morning until
6 in the evening. .. Dougherty mounted
the derrick last Saturday mornintr. and
although the rain poured down all day
ne aid not nincn. vynen be came down
at night he was cramped and weak. On
the following day violent pneumonia set
in, brought on by the exposure, and his
death resulted. '
line.
A Water Famine in M
Bangor, Nov. 26. The farming com
munity of eastern Maine is suffering se
verely because of a lack of water. The
failure of 'brooks and streams on account
of a long drought will cause a loss of
thousands of . dollars to lumbermen.
Unless rain comes speedily and in large
quantities no ice will be- cut on the
Penobscot river. All the water flowing
past the ice privileges is salt, and it will
take a week . of rain to effect it ever so
slightly. Millions of trout in northern
Maine'have perished, owing to the -dry
ing up ui me streams.
The- University of Glasgow.
Glasgow, Nov. 26, Right Hon. Sir
Arthur Balfour, first lord of the treasury
some time ago elected to the rectorship
of the university ' of Glasgow, was in
stalled today. A brilliant assemblage
was present, including professors of the
university and many men well known
in the literary and social world. . Balfour
received an ovation from the students.
WHOLE FAMILY DEAD.
A Strange Fatality tiat Eiterainatetl ,
an Entire Family..
EIGHT DEATHS IN SIX WEEKS.
Accidently Killed Her Child While
Chopping Wood.
DARING ,. FEMALE MARSHAL.
The Crnlser Baltimore Ordered North
Killed by an Election Bet
Will Raise the Cruiser.
Dishonest City Officials.
San Francisco, Nov. 27. It is under
stood that the grand jury will today in
dict assessor John D. Siebe city and
countv attorney John A. Durst and
street Superintendent J.ames Gilleran
and that a application will be made to.
Judge Wallace to declare the positions
held by these officials, as vacant. It is
alleged that the assessor and city at
torney have made illegal and unwar
ranted reductions in the assessment rolls
and that the street superintendent has
been exactly a Dercentage of the wages
of his employes.
Conditions of the Weather.
Washington, Nov. 27. The storms of
last night off the Atlantic coast and over
Lake Huron joined as one single deep
storm over Maine. It has been decided
that the storm waves were from Mon
tana' and developed over Iowa. Snow or
rain is falling in Northern New England
thence to the Ohio and Missouri valleys,
and northward.' Continued unsettled
weather may be expected to prevail
whlie the storm is moving over the lakes
and down the St. Lawrence.'
Sunken Crnlser to Be" Raised.
Valparaiso, Nov.. 26. The govern
ment invites bids fer raising the warship
Blance Enculada, which was sunk by
Balmaceda's torpedo-boats, in the har
bor of Caldera. The ship's guns are val
uable, and may be easily made -good if
proper appliances are used.
An Expected Failure.
Wilmington, N. C, Nov. 27. The
Clinton Loan' association at Clinton,
Simpson connty , has suspended. It was
a small state " banking company with a
capital'of $50,000 and has been known to
be in a shaky condition for some months.
Dakota Indians Ready for Trouble.
Blunt, S. D., Nov. 26. Keports from
the reservation, conn try say the Indians
have been stirred up by roving bands of
renegades, and only, wait an excuse to
break away from official authority to
plunder and murder.
Killed by an Explosion.
Akrn, Ohio, Nov. 27. This morning
a -locomotive on 'the Cleveland and Col
umbus road exploded about one mile
south of this city, instantly killing
Engineer John Byron, and -Fireman
George Parker. '
Mrs. Drexel Dead.
Philadelphia, Nov. 27. Mrs. Anth
ony J. Drexel, wife of tne bead ot tne
great banking firm of Drexel & Co
died this morning at her country house,
Sunny Mede, in Dela county.
The Texas Alliance Draws Out
Cobsicana, Texas, Nov. 27. The
Texas state farmers' alliance adopted a
resolution appointing twenty-five dele
gates to represent Texas at the Memphis,
Tennessee, convention. . . Resolutions'
condemning the action of the supreme
council at Indianapolis and proposing to
sever all connection with the "Defacto
Nail alliance,' for a separation of the or
ganization with ans entirely new set of
officers, -were adopted. -
Going to Salt Lake-
North Branch, Michigan, Nov. 27.
A Mormon elder by -the name of
Taylor, in . converting the people of
Mills, a small lumbering, town near
here by the score. , An exodus of the
population in - progress the farmers
among the entbusiastics - announce
their determination to repair to Salt
Lake. " '" - ' ' - -- .- '
Still in tbe Corner.
Chicago, Nov. 27. The corner in No-
.vember corn is still oa but attracts little
attention. -
Chadron, Neb., Nov. 26. The death
of Charles Barnett, a farmer aged 40
years, living. about four miles south of
here is the end of a chapter of fatalities
which' is out of the usual run. Ten
weeks ago the Barnett family -numbered .
eight people. They were Charles and
his wife .and five children and Miss
Martha Barnett his sister. One after
another of these have ail died, and to- -day
not a soul remains of the .family. -The
youngest, a child was the first to be
taken. Diphtheria, in a malignant
form, attacked the babe, and it died
within two days, followed by the next
child with the same disease one day
later. ... The pther children were attacked
but all recoverd with the exception of .
the eldest, who was slow in convalescing.
He took cold just when it was thought
he was getting we1!, 'and died. The next
day one of the remaining children fell "
from the top of the barn, and when
found Its neck was broken. On return
ing from the funeral the team ran away
and threw Mrs. Barnett and her sister-1
in-law from the wagon, killing tbe lat- '
ter instantly and inflicting such injuries
on the former that she died three days
later.. Two weeks ago the remaining
child was trying to light a tire, when
ner doming caugni nre ana sue was so
badly burned tnat ' she died. A week
ago Barnett was working in his stable,
when he received a kick from one of his
horses, from the effect ot which he died
the next day, his death completing the
round of fatalities and finishing putting -the
family out of existence. He had no
known relatives. The farm reverts to
the state unless there can be found some
other members of the family.
Will Try and Catch tbe Democrats.
St. Louis, Mo., Nov. ,27. Steps are
being taken by all the commercial ex
changes and business men generally to
bring tbe democratic national conven
tion to St. Louis. " ' ,
A Carhouse Burned.
Pittsbuho, Nov. 26. The carhouse of
the Second Avenue Traction cdmpany,
at Hazelwood. was burned this morning,
together -with the Electric bote). Loss,
$100,000. ' ,
' Chicago Wheat Market.
Chicago, November 27. Close, wheat,
steady: cash, .92)4; December, .93;
May, SMrd. .
:
" Weather Forecast. "
. San Francisco, Nov. 27 Forecast for
Oregon and Washington : Fair weather.
San Francisco Wheat Market.
San Francisco, Nov. 27. Wheat,
buyer '91, 1.86) ; season 1.93. (
Men who spend more for tobacco than
tbev give to tbe missionary cause never
do the. Lord much good by. shouting in
church. ',
- The kind of a woman who would make
her husband obev and stand around is
the kind of woman who don't have any,
Atchison Globe. - . .
. In a chnrchvard in Surrey the follow
ing is to be seen on the. tombstone be
longing to the Strange family: "Here
lies an honest lawyer, that's Strange."
Peddler Let me sell you the "Life of
Thomas Jefferson." Victim I'm not a
democrat; I'm a mugwump. "So? (go
ing deeper into his pa'ck) Let me sell
you a Uver pad. New York Herald.
Why not plant trees 'around your
place and along the roads for your en
joyment while living? If you stop to
think of it for a moment you must ad
mit . that a tree is much handsomer than
a tombstone. . -., '
A Child Accidentally Killed.
Vineland, N. J., Nov. 26. At Alli
ance, a small Hebrew settlement six
miles from this place, Mrs. Hershkivisky
went to the woodpile Monday and began
to chop wood. She had half completed
her task when her 3-year-old daughter,
who was playing near,' ran in front of
her mother just as she was swinging her
ax. The blow struck the child fairly on
the head, laving open the brain. The
mother carried the child into the house
and tried to staunch the flow of blood,
and a physician was at once called to
dress the" wound. He could plainly see
the pulsation of the brain, and some of it
oozed out. The child retained conscious
ness for some time after she was hurt.
She is reported to have died last nights
twenty -eight hours after the accident.
A Daring Female Deputy Marshal.
Muskogee, I. T., Nov. 26. Mrs
Fanny Miller, a. United States deputy
marshal, is the heroine of the territory.
She recently accompanied her cousin,
Deputy B. C. Cantrell, on a hunt in the
Cherokee mountains ' for Fagan and
Kin slee, the noted cattle thieves. Mrs..
Miller was riding along, when, to her-.
surprise, she came face to face with Far
gan,. whom she covered with her pistol
and placed under arrest before he real
ized the position. Kinslee's hiding
place was also found, and in securing his
arrest several shots were exchanged.
Mrs. Miller also arrested the .Warren
brothers, noted whiskey peddlers. She
is thirty-one years old,, weighs . 135
pounds," and associates with the best
people. ' '- -
The Cruiser Baltimore Ordered Nrth.
Washington, Nov. 26. Captain
Schley, of the cruiser Baltimore, will
receive in a few days orders from the
naval department authorizing him to
proceed north with, the Baltimore im
. mediately upon the arrival of the York-. .
town at Valparaiso, instead of waiting
for the Boston. The Yorktown should
reach Valparaiso by December 1st.
This decision to hurry the Baltimore
north is the result of a telegram from
Captain Schley, calling attention to the
serious condition of the bottom of that
vessel. Divers who were sent below re-
port the paint off in many places, and
the plate's thus exposed are badly corro
ded and pitted by action, of the salt
water. '
-A Failure in Berlin.
Berlin, Nov, . 26. Berlin was
startled today by the failure of the Ber
lin Banking and .Exchange company.
The police closed the head office and
branches. . .