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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 12, 1892)
0 3- f ' . VOL. III. THF DALLES, OREGON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1892. NO. 51. FBOFX88IOXAL GABD8. WM. J. ROBERTS Civil Enoikeer Gen eral engineering practice. Surveying and mapping; estimates add plans for irrigation, ' aewerajve, water-woraw, railroads, bridges, etc. Address: P.O. Box 107, The Dalies, Or; ; XXT3'- PAUNDIRS AKCHTrtCT.-rfhiM and TV specifications firrnished for dwellings, churches, business blocks, schools and factories. Charges moderate, satisfaction guaranteed. Of--See over French's bank. The Dalle, Oregon. rT"VR. J. SUTHERLAND FEXiOW or Trinity 1 J Medical College, and member of the Col lege of Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, Phy sician and burgeon. Office; rooms 8 and Chap man block. Residence; Judge Thornbury's 6ec ond street. Office hoars; 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to i and 7 to 8 p.m. DR. O. D. DOANI- PHTBICIAN AND BUR GEON. , Office: rooms 5 and Chapman Blocks Residence No. 23, Fourth street, one block south of Const House. Office hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 6 and to 4 P. M. A 8. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of . flee in Schanno's building, up stairs. The Dalles, Oregon. D8IDDALL Dinner. 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 A ttoruey-at-hw. Office . in Opera House Block, Washington Street, The Dalles, Oregon F. P. MATS. . B. HUNTINGTON H. a. WILSON. ' f AYS, HUNTINGTON & WILSON ATTOB Ifl NBY8-AT-LAW. Offices, French's block over First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. .B.DTjrUB. 6BO. ATKINS. FBAKK KBNBFBE. . DTJFTJR, WATK1N8 & MENEFEE ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Room No. 43, over Post Office Building, Entrance on Washington Street The Dalles, Oregon. WH. WILSON A ttobnby-at-law Rooms 62 and 53, New Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalies, Oregon. Still on Deek. Phoenix Like has Arisen - From the Ashes! JAMES WHITE, The Restauranteur Has Opened the Salduan Restaurant ON MAIN STREET Where be will be glad to see any and all of his old patrons. Open day and Night. First class meals twenty -five cents: . COLUMBIA CANDY FACTORY . W. S. CRAM, Proprietor. (Successor to Cram 4 Corson.) jf unulactarer of the finest French and Home Made OAUIDIBS, East of Portland. DEALER IS: Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Can .furnish any of these goods at Wholesals i or iteiaji In Every Style. 104 Second Street. The Dalles. Or. , The Dalles FACTORY NO. 105. CTC A DC of the Best Braise VXvTx.iVO 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. UL.RICH & SON. FEHCH 6V CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERAL BAKKING BTJSIKE83 Letters of Crediissued available in the . Eastern States. Sight Exchange and - Telegraphic Transfers sol don New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fav orable terms. Gigar : Factory A NEW Dndertaking Establishment ! PRINZ '& NITSGHKE. DEALERS IN Furniture and Carpets. We have added to our business a complete Undertaking Establishment, aad as we are in no way connected with the Undertakers' Trust our prices will be low accordingly. Remember our place on Second street, nest to Moody's bank. DRUGS SlMI PES &, Kl NERSLY, THE LEADING Wholesale it Retail Biiiisis. Handled by Three Registered Druggists. ALSO ALT, THE LEADING " : ." ' . Patent (Dedieines and Druggists Sundries, HOUSE paints; oiCs AiiirGLBs Agents for Murphy's Fine Varnishes and the.only agents in . the City for the Sherwin, Williams Co. V Paints. -WE The Largest Dealers in Wall Paper. Finest Line of Imported Key "yest and Domestic Cigars. Agent for Tansill's Punch. 129 Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon : DEALERS DT:- Siapie ana Fancy GmcBMBS. Hay, Grain and Feed. Masonic Block, Corner Third and '' THE DALLES, OREGON". Best Dollar a Day First-Class Meals, 25 Cents. First Class. Hotel in Every Respect. - .' J None hut the Best of White Help Employed, M T. T. Nicholas, Prop. Washington lorfl DqIIBS "m SITUATED AT THE ' Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center In. the Inland Empire. For Further Information Call at th Office of Interstate Investment Go.; O. D. TAYLOR THE DALLES. Young & Kass, BiacRsmitn & wagon srqd General Blacksmitbing and Work done promptly, and all work " Guaranteed. ; Horse Shoeing a Speciality, Third Street, onnositetne old Liete Stand. NOTICE. . R. E. French haa 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. ARE- V.. Court StreetsThe Dalies.Oregon House on the Coast! HEAD OF NAVIGATION. Best Selling Property of . the Season in the North-' west. 72 WASHINGTON ST. PORTLAND. BIG FINANCIAL STROKE. The Reafiiis Railroad is Now One s V- -the Strongest WHALEBACK STEAMERS IN DEMAND Governor Boies' Silence on the Silver is a . Blunder. FROSPEROl'S MAX SUICIDES. Another Hotel Fire---Victims of the Hotel Royal Fire San Diego Inctendiaiy. New Yokk, Feb. 11. The late coup of President McLeod is the greatest in the history of railroad financiering and makes the Reading as strong a corpora tion as there is in the world. The gross receipts of the Philadelphia & Reading system will hereafter be $20,000,000 an- nu ally, and the number of its employes will approximate 100,000, being more than is employed by any corporation on tins planet. It is now plain what was in Mr. McLeod's mind when he acquired the Poughkeepsie bridge and the lines tributary thereto, which, through the Reading and its entire argumented systems, goes into the very heart of New England, giving it the only all-rail route from the middle and southern states to the east, with connections with all the important JNew ingiana roads, and en abling it to virtually control the coal traffic of that entire, region. Mr. .Mc Leod has had in this matter the hearty support of A. J. Drexel and the banking house with which he is connected, of John Lawler, J. R. Maxwell and George F. Baker And . the - New York. Cen tral people who have secured the largest holding there is at present of the Dela ware, Lackawanna. & Western, railroad. the success of this combination, backed by the strongest financial institution this country, is assured. Jumped Into the River. New . Brunswick, N. J., Feb. 11. George Baier, a prosperous German baker, committed suicide this morning by drowning. He sought the top of the cliffs one mile below the city and took a plunge of 100 feet into the Raritan river. Some fishermen found the body late in the afternoon. Baier went to Germany three years ago. He' was then reputed to be a single man, but on his return he was accompanied by a woman and three children. The woman claimed to have married him ten'years before. Baier's wife admitted when the body was taken to the house that she had frequently. quarreled with him, and that the suicide was doubtless the result of a. quarrel which they had had on Sunday. Both Want the Whalebacks. Ddlutii, Minn., Feb. 11. Represen tatives of St. Louis and San Francisco syndicates are here conferring w'th the McDougall people regarding the lines of whaleback steamers. "The St'. Louis syndicate anticipated the establishment of a line to ply .between St.' Louis and European ports by way of Mississippi the Gulf of Mexico. The San Francisco people are considering' a line across' the Pacific. If the St.' Louis project goes through, a shipyard will be established for the construction of whale backs at or near Cairo, at the mouth of the Ohio river. - ;'.:;.: Gorernor Boles' Sad Mistake. Dubuque, la.,'. Feb. 11. Governor Boies' silence on the 'silver question at the Denver banquet last night is called a fatal blunder by this evening's Tele graph, which has been an earnest sup porter of his claims to the presidency. It declares that Governor Boies' availa bility depends on -his ability to command the support of the friends of, free silver. Having forfeited their support at Denver last night, he can no longer, be regarded as a presidential possibility. Victims of the Hotel fire. New York, Feb. II. Search for the missing in the rains of the Hotel Royal fire is ended. The chief of the fire de partment says there are no more bodies in the ruins, but Mears; the proprietor, expresses the opinion that there are still three more bodies there. ' Seventeen in all were taken out, seven being identified. ' . . The San Diego Ineeudlary. San Diego, Feb, 11. Nearly every hotel and lodging-house in the city was guarded last .night by an increased force of watchmen, while the number of con stables and patrolmen en the streets were doubled to guard against further attempts at incendiarism. ' No arrests have been made as yet, but the authori ties are working on several clews. The opinion is gaining ground that .all five fires were set by the some person. The Trouble In New York. ' Albuqukhuce, N. M., Feb. 11. The Savajos are. growing boldei. They are rapidly gathering and. now outnumber the cowboys in West Fernalius and Valencia counties. ' The fight on Cod dington's cattle ranch, yesterday "after noon, resulted in the killing of three Indians and the wounding of several of the cowboys. The redskins are concen trating their forces, and will swoop down on the small towns and ranches. Lieutenant Wallace, of Troop A, Second cavalry, and ten men from Wingate, with pack animals, passed Coolidge last night on their way to Mitchell's station. THERE WAS SO FIGHT. Coolidge, N. M.,Feb. 11. There is no truth in the reports sent from this vicin ity that cowboys had a fignt with the Navajo Indians yesterday and killed threeof them- Everything is quiet how. Probably no serious trouble will occur. Burial of Spurgeon. Losdojj, Feb. 11. Final services over the remains of Rev. Mr. Spurgeon were held at the tabernacle today. Several members of the commons, the Baroness Burdette-Coutts and deputations- from sixty religious bodies were among those present The services were simple and touching. Rev. Mr. Pierson, an Ameri can minister, made a most eloquent ad dress, at the conclusion of which the re mains were taken to the cemetery. The tabernacle and the streets on the way to the cemetery .were crowded with people Some Kxpentilve Trials. Okoville, Cal.,' Feb. 11. Trials have been going on here for nearly two months over stealing a band of cattle. Two men on the same evidence were sent to prison,- one was acquitted, and in two cases the jury disagreed. The district attornev stated he will move to dismiss the remaining prisoners, four in number. Seventy witnesses have been exasnined, and the trials have cost the county nearly $20,000. Thurston Fears the Alliance. Omaha, Neb., Feb. 11. Hon. John M. Thurston this morning in an interview formally declines to allow his name to go before the convention as a candidate for vice-president, owing to Blaine's with drawal. He predicted that Harrison will be the nominee, and says there will be a stubborn fight. He fears the alli ance will .be strong enough to cause a republican defeat. , Troubles in Brazil. Rio Grande, Brazil; Feb. 11. Vis count Pelotas has assumed command of the province of Rio Grande do ul. t Corumba the garrison deposed Governor Martinho and . declared Corumba the capital of the state They ' nominated Mr. Rocha in his place. The revolution ists are how marching on. the city of Cuvaba. The rebels in Santa Catalina have dsposed Governor Mneler. . Presidential Nominations. '.Washington. Feb. 11. The president sent to the senate today the following nominations: Joseph McKenna, of California, United States circuit judge for the ninth judicial distsict ; Rowland P. Mahanv. of New York, minister to Ecuador. How They Should Act. Axnapolis, Md.,Feb. 11. The house of delegates today adopted a resolution expressing a sense that the national house of representatives should act upon the tariff question in harmony with Pres ident Cleveland's message Of 1887, and the Mills bill. . Mayor Wyman Convicted. . Pjttsbbug, Feb. 11. Mayor Wyman of Allegheny City, was convicted, this morning of extortion. A oharge of era bexlement is still pending. . . . ' A Hotel Burned. ' El Paso, Tex., Feb. 11. The Grand Central hotel was burned early this morning. The building and furniture were insured for $59,000. The losses are fully covered. ' i - Heavy Oamsiffes. . A poor citizen of Nassau, N. Y., sued ft rich neighbor to recover damages for the attack of the latter's small dog, which be maintained was a "snapping, snar)ing, vicious brute." " In answer the defendant maintained that the canine was a "great pet and of gentle nature,' but he lost his case and must pay $1,000 damages. Philadelphia Ledger.' - ' Twins Mine Times Without a 8 kip. Mr. John 'M'Will who is one of the head bakers in James Reed & Sons' bakery, Norfolk, Va., has been made the croud nossessor of the ninth consecutive pair.of healthy and strong twins, a boy and a trirl. Mrs. Miscall has never given birth to one child at. a time. Uor. Baltimore American. MISS MATTIE MARRIED. Oregon's Share of tie Returned . far Money $200,001). . . EDWARD M. FIELD INDICTED. Prof. Davidson Ridicules the Sun Spots Theory. HOUSE RESOLUTION OX TARIFF. Trouble in Rio Feared Brazilian Troubles Strike of Coal Porters. Paris, Feb. 11. The religious mar riage of the Duke de la Rochefoucauld and Miss Mattie Mitchell, daughter of Senator Mitchell, of Oregon, took place today at the Church qf St. Clothilde. The church was crowded with friends of the two families. Many army officers, members of the nobility and leading Americans at present it Paris were among the fashionable throng. Effect of the Spots on the Sun. San Francisco, Feb. 11. Dispatches from the observatory at Harvard Univer sity state that the sun Vpots are used as a basis for the prediction of great storms and general atmospheric restlessness on the earth's surface. Such theory is ridiculed by.Professor Davidson.. Speak ing of the matter today, he said : "It is impossible to say there can be affinity or resultant atmospheric activity of the earth's atmosphere. We cer tainly have no reason to fear storms or anything of that sort. . These solar dis turbances are something difficult to image. Our earth could be dropped into one of those depressions on the sun's surface with' no more effect than a scuttle of coal might have if similarly thrown in. They tried once to prove that Indian typhoons were the result of solar disturbances, . but they had to give, it up, for they had no proof." Need Not Criminate Himself. SHRiKftFrEi.n. TIT.. 'Ffiri. 11. Tn trie-. contempt of court case of Richard Do wle, general manager of the Great Eastern fast freight line, of Detroit, on investiga tion before the United States grand jury reirardintr an alleged violation of the in terstate commerce law by cutting rates, Judge Allen, in the United States dis trict court today, decided that Dowle need not answer questions that would, crirr.hiate himself. htrlke of the Coal Portert. T . . .-wi T7V. "1 1 T" 1 . i " 1 e . i xj? , a-cu. ia. aiic eLriKt? oi me coal jxrters, of whom 10,000 s'truck yes terday in one district only, if it continues, it threatens to bring about a coal famine in this city. , The directors of the chief coal companies this morning are setting an example to subordinate officials by driving coal delivery vans, and in other ways helping to keep business goiDg. . ... ..... . . ... a.... on ir.li .j. LoNDqN, ' Feb. 11. A dispatch from Rio Janeiro states affairs there are in a very bad shape.. Three ministers have resigned, and this is taken as an indica tion the government is breaking up. At Pelatos, Rio Grande do Sul, the feeling between the populace and the govern ment is very bitter, and it is feared a conflict may occur at any moment. Classification of Assorted . Wools. Washington, Feb. 11. The attorney general has directed that an appeal be taken in the case of . Higgins & Co. against the United States, recently de cided in favor of -the claimants in Xew York. The case involves a proper classi fication of . assorted wools. Field Indicted for Forgery. New Yobk, Feb. 11. The- grand jury today returned an indictment for forgery against Edward M. Field, alleging that he forged the name of E. Moore to a bill of lading for a large quantity of wheat last November. . Oregon's Share. Washington, D. C, Feb. 10. The house committee on claims today re ported favorably a bill granting to Ore gon and other states the money paid out during the war for war purposes. Ore gon's share will be about $200,000. Anarchist Plot Discovered. Berlin, Feb. 11. The Kreuz Zeitung says the police have discovered and frus trated ' a wide-spread anarchist plot. The recent fires in the royal palace at Konigsberg, it is said, were the work of a Berlin anarchist society.