The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, February 13, 1892, Image 1

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THE DALLES; OREGON; SATURDAY, EEBRXVRY .13, 4892.
NO. 5?.
.
e-v : f .n e.
FBOFIBSIONAL CARDS.'
J. ROBERTS Civil. Engimbbb Gen
eral engineering practice. Survevinir and
mapping; estimates and plana for, Irrigation,
sewerage, waier-worKs, raiirosns, Dnagea, etc.
Address: P. O. Box 107, The Dalles, Or. ,
WSI. 8AUXDERS Architect. Plans and
specifications furnished for' - dwellings,
eirarches, business blocks, schools and factories.
Charges moderate, satisfaction guaranteed. Of
Bee over French's baiiji, The Dalles, Oregon... ..
DR. J. SUTHERLAND Fellow or Trinity
Medical (Allege, and member of the Col
lege of Physicians and Burgeons, Ontario, Phy
sician and Burgeon. Office; rooms 8 and 4 Chap
man block.- .Residence; Judge Thombury's Sec
ond street. Ofllce hours; 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to t
and. 7 to a p. m. . . . .... ,
D
i R. O. D. DO A N E physician and buk-
uion. Oftire: rooms 5 and 6 Chanman
bioci. - iiesiaence Jo. -jn, f ourth street, one
block south of C'ortrt House. Otrloe hours 9 to 12
A. M.. 2 to 5 and 7 to P. W
AS. BENN1
flee in 8c 1
DaJles, Oregon.
:tt, attorkey-at-law.
lanno's building, up stairs.
Of
The DSIDDALL-
painless
- Dentist. Gas given for the
extraction of teeth. Also teeth
set on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of
the Golden Tooth, Second Street. - ,
AR. THOMPSON ATTOBNBY-AT-I.AW. Office
in Opera House Block. Washington Street,
The Dalles, Oregon . . . .7
F.P. MATS. B.S, HUNTINGTON- ' H. B. WILSON. .
MAYS, HUNTINGTON A WILSON ATTOB-NBVe-AT-LAW.
Offices, French's block over
first National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon.
.B.DBrUB. 6 BO. ATKINS. PBANK aTBNBFBB.
.TDFTJR,' WATK1N8 & MENKKEE ATTOB
.1 J nkys-at-law Room No. 43, over Post
Office Building, Entrance on Washington Street
The Dalles, Oregon. .
WH. WILSON Attorn ey-at-lajv Rooms
62 and 53, New Vogt Block, Second Street.
The Dalles, Oregon.
Still on Deek.
Phcenix . Like has Arisen
... From the Ashes!
JAMES WHIT ;
The Kestaurauteur Has Opened the
Baldmin - Hestaarant
-.ON MAIN STREET
Where he 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 & Corson.) .
Manufacturer of the finest French and
Home Made
OIST DIE s
East Portland. '
-UKAJJBIi IN-
Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars, and Tobacco.
Can funiieh any of these goods at W'boleaala I
or Kwtui .
In Every Style.' ..'..
104 Second Street. The Dalles.-Or.
The Dalles
FIBST " STEEET.
njp the Best.3rands
Vy JL VJTxl O marmfactured,- and
orders from all parts of the country mled
on the shortest notice.
The reDUtation of THE DALLES CI
GAR has become firmly established, and
the demand for the -home .manufactured
article is increasing every
i ;r ' rc-Ai:ULRici
day.
LRlCH & SON.
& CO.,
' BANKERS. .
TRANSACT A GENKRALBANKINO BUSINESS
Letters of Credit issued available in the
' Eastern' States. .. ;.'.'
' Sight Exchange and Telegraphic
Transfers sold on 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.
ClQctf
Faetopy
A NEW
; . w v
Undertakiiig Establishment !
PRINZ & NITSGHfKE.
DEALERS IN
Furniture and Carpets.
AVe have ' added to our .business a
complete Undertaking Establishment,
ajjd as we are in no way connected with
the Undertakers Trnet oar prices-will
be low accordingly. -'
- Remember onr place on Second- street,
next to Moody's bank.
DRUGS
S N I PE S &, K I NER S LY ,
THE LEADING
2 1 ' ........ r
Wltt.ai RetaU Bnisis.
-DE3 XT Dt JE2 I,EXrC3r S ' ,!
.. Handled fay Three Registered Druggists.
. - . ALSO ALL TH.rIiap.ISG r .
Patent : IDedieines ;and- Druggiste Sundries,
HOUSE PAINTS Ql
Agents for Murphy's Fine 'Varnishes and thejonly agents in
the City for The Sherwin, ;: Williams Co. 's Paints; - ;
-we
: The Largest Dealers m Wall Paper.- ; :
Finest Line of Imported Key West and Domestic Cigars.
' Agent for Tansill's Punch
..-.-( . , '; T r .. .. -
129 Second Street, , The Dalles, Oregon
: DEALERS IN:
Staple and Fancy
Hay, Grain,
Masonic Block, Corner Third and
; THE DALLES, OREGON.. ' k:';-:-:--
Best Dollar a Day, House on the Coast!
First-Clss. Meals, 25 Cents.
First Class Hotel in 'Every Respect. j; v it : -v . ; .
. -j. i't. None but the'
: ::xLt :;T.:.T.
Washington
SITUATED AT THE
Destined to be the Best
Manufacturing; Center in :
the Inland Empire.
For Further Information Call at the Office of . '
a. D. TAYLOR THE DALLES.
BlaGKsw&wagoiiSloii
General Blacksmithing and Work done
",' promptly, and all work : "
Ji A. . '- 1 . - ' ). ' ;-. , ... -
llorse Shoeing a Speciality.
Tliird Street, opposite tlie olfl Lie-lie Stand
. NOTICE.
j R. E. Frenclj 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 terras.
Mr. French can locate settlers on some
good unsettled claims in (he same neigh
borhood. . His address is Grass - Valley,
Sherman county, Oregon.
are -
and: Feed.
Court Streets. The Dalles.Oiegon
Best of AVhite Help Employed4
Nicholas, Prop.
Washington
HEAD OF NAVIGATION,,
Best Selling Property of
the Season in the North
west. ."-' : -
72 WASHINGTON ST. PORTLAND:
neiies,
OLD ARMY. REVENGES;
Statement Froi Gen. A. :Afer Disclosing
an Any Rerenie.-
THE BOODLERS IN MISSISSIPPI.
The Truth About the Sufferings of the.
Peasantry in Russia.
FEASANTS FREEZING TO 'DKATH,
Relief for the Distressed- Fawine
Bombay German Anarchists
' Arrested.'
Dkteolt, . Feb. 12. In answer to
charges against Gen.. Russell A. Alger,
that Had been dishonorable discharged
by. Custer 23 years ago, Gen. Alger says
.".Along in June and July, 1864,' Gen.
Custer requested me several times to
have hie brother Thomas appointed as a
lieutenant in my regiment, as he wished
to have him serve on his staff. . As be
did not belong to mv regiment I de
clined, and--' fn. a "hot. controversation
about it one day he told me I would re
gret it some day. . I said to him I would
rather resign than to have an outside of
ficer promoted in my regiment when I
had deserving men in tile ranks. I never
knew or suspected that there was the
Slightest question about my .being prop
erly sent with large .number xf sick
and wounded, to Annapolis or of Gen;
Ouster's recommendation. If he knew
the fact,, it- was one of the most cruel
outrages ever perpetrated npon --old-
ier.,'f Again he says:- -'.'I was honorably
discharged from the service, and was not
dismissed as stated.'': He says, that in
August, 1864, he was sick and was sent
to a' hospital at Annapolis,' Md. -After
his partial recovery he was detailed to
court-martial duty at Washington, 'but
not. liking it, and being unable to return
to . the .field,, be resigned. - irle. never
heard of the' charges till 1888 during the
Chicago convention. In this connection
he says :. : "i had never heard a word
directly or indirectly up to that date
almost .twenty-four years that there
had been any such recommendation,
which I found afterward, to my surprise,
was true. I never had any more bus
picion that I was not regularly sent to
the hospital than anything improbable
on earth. There was never a more cruel,
unjust act committed by man. I served
three ' years, participated in sixty-six
battles and skirmishes, was promoted to
all the grades from captain to colonel,
and was breveted brigadier-general and
major-general without my application
I never .was absent from my command a
moment, except on account, of" wounds
or sickness. I never received a censure
from my superior :officer in any way
shape or manner during the war. Had
I known of the existence of such a docu
ment during the lives of Gen. Sheridan,
who was always a warm, personal friend,
and Gen. Custer, who always claimed to
be a friend and visited me frequently,
could easy y have had -the record cor
rected ; but when I first heard of it Gen
Sheridan was on-his' death-bed and un
able .to . see any one; and Custer was
dead." W,-"- :.;::'. :.T :- : .
- Prominent Legislator Crooked.;
y JAC;sW, .iJi88., IFel. 12. The intror
ductton in the assembly of a set of reso
lutions - concerning ' the - affairs of ," the
penitentiary, brought several members
to their feet,;:, and. . the 'result promises
-sensational disclosuVes involving several
prominent legislators,;; The; resolutions
charges that money .was used., to post
pone the' penitentiary farm "bill for twoJ
years,, and-calls Jor: an investigation.
The storm which followed the introduc-4
tipn pf the resolutions 'compelled with
drawal before a vote was taken, but the
subject wU. come! bp in'hew : form .'in a
few- dayi- it iaijcharged '.byi members
that qpdue influence was used in having
the plea for a - penitentiary farm post
poned, for two years, j and thej object' Of
this resolution rwas to . see how much
truth there was in, the charge. ;, It is un
ainuated that persona desirfag, for per
sonal ' reasons, - to; - have the - leasing
system continued as long as possible,
had much to do with the - postponement
and this rumor. . - - - . V V 1
-"- ; ' '. ' - ' - " - '
Facts Concerning Starving Kosai.
.- ...
. London, Feb. 12. A ; dispatch from
Penza, Kussia,'- 'says the thermometer
registers 58 deg. below zero, and there is
terrible suffering among the peasants
A number of men were frozen to death
on the high roads. . A quantity of grain
for famine sufferers has arrived at Penza, J
but it -is impossible .to distribute it,- be
cause' nearly all ' the horses have "been
killed for food or sold to procure raoiiey
with ; which to' buy the necessaries of.
life, j Jt, is estimated that neacly 1,000,
000 .draught animals-have.: been -killed
thronghout the empire since autumn.
Typhus fever, smallpox and diphtheria
.8X6. decimating the inhabitants.. -Around
Penza 200 peasants have died from these
diseases. ' The : dispatch, adds that the
governments of ' Samara, Saratov and
Nijnj Novgorod are i a, condition far
worse than in . Pensa. Jn those three
governments the peasanty Have fallen
victims to hunger and disease. In the
governments of Charkov and Kazan ty
phus b especially terrible in its ravages;
the-inhabitants are dying by hundreds.
Grand Army Election. ,
feALKM, i?eb. 12. State encampment
of the department of Oreeon. Grand
Army of the liepnblic, today elected
officers as follows for the .coming year:
Department Commander,- Major, H. H.
Xorthup, Portland; -.Senior .Vice-Corn
roander, B. A. Crossan, Salem; Junior
Vice-Commander, Ol M. Dodson, Baker
City; Medical Director, Joseph P.Gill,
Eugene; Chaplain, Wiley Knowl, Mc
Minnville; Delegates to national en
campment, A. E. Bailey, J. P. (Jalbraith,
Capt. E, Lombard ; Alternates, Capt. J.
C. Shaw, Frank Storey, A. G. Hardesty.
The roster of the department shows the
number in good standing ' December 31,
1890, to have been 1905; gain during the
year by muster, 405; by transfer, 194;
from suspended or dropped, ol.; rein-
statements,
2591.
30;. total, 686; aggregate,
Death uf Younr Jsr. f. Fair.
San Fkascisco, Feb. 12r-James G.
Fair, jr., eldest son of ex-Senaibr Fair,
died suddenly' early this morning from
heart failure. Young Fair returned from
an extended visit East - Wednesday
last, and spent last evening- with" his
J-father-tit-trne-Lack-honee; He- paswedl
some time in reading on retiring to his
room, and then suddenly fell with a cry
of pain. Physicians .w.ere - summoned
but he died shortly.af ter the attack - He
was born in Virginia; Nev.; and was 29
years of age. Senator Fair is now the
only member of the family on the coast,
Miss Virginia fair being in .New York
with her sister, Mrs. : Herman Oelrichs,
and Charles Fair, a younger, son , of. the
senator, being in Europe.
.The Warm Bpringi Xemrvatlon.
Washington, D. Ct, Feb. 12. Senatpr
Mitchell, of Oregon, today introduced a
bill permanently fixing and defining the
boundary line of the AVarm Springs In
dian reservation in Oregon, and . declar
ing it to be that part of the line run and
surveyed by T. B. Handley in 1871, from
the initial point np to and including the
twenty-sixth thereof ; thence in a due
west course to the summit of the Cascade
mountains, as found by Commissioner
Mark A. FullertonVilliam H. H.
Dufnr and James F Payne, in their, re
port to the secretary of the interior of
June" 8, 1891.
.'. Organizing Political Clubs.
City -of Mexico, Feb. 12;' Ciubs hav
ing fortheir object the advocacy of the
re-election of President Diaz are being
organized through the republic.
Kelief for the Distressed.
St. Petersburg, Feb. 12. The gov
ernment has granted the further Su m of
6,000,000 rubles for the relief of suffer
ers'in the famine districts. . '" :
iThey Have Not Revolted. .1 H- r '
"LpNDON,'Feb. 12. A dispatch received
here from Montevideo states the rfcport.
that the .'troops in that'eityhad revolted
is without foundation. ..... , " ,
Arresting Cerman Anarchists. r
Berlin, Feb. 12. Arrests ' of anarch
ists are being made here " almost daily,'
and already a large number of them . are'
waiting trial.; r..;, -,, i '.. i ',
'.j'lll, Famine' in Bombay. ';
7 Bombay,! Feb. ,12. Official. . notice is
given that famine; prevails, in this prov-;
Ince.' It affects 1,500,000 persons. .; ...
The.XInth Jndleial Judgeship I CalledU
President"PHarri8on' " appointed. Hon.
Joseph McKenna, of California judge of
the- J?intlt : , Judicial district yesterday.
Judge McKenna'ls spoken of as a- man
of excellent learning 1 and legal . ability
He is a: native - Californian and served
his state as ' congressman ' from- the
fourth district in 1874 and also in 1886,
and has, filled this honorable .position
eontineulsy until, the present." He is 47
or 48 years of age and in the prime of
Ufe. We believe Hoa.-Wi Lair Hill had
the preference' of ' the masses ; of the
people in the northwest, but for the ac
cusation, of being connected with the
Cronin affair sprang by an enemy
would have been the appointee.
LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY.
IE
Chicap, PMla&GlphiaV. Colnmlias,
Brooklyn aM Boston. ;
PATRIOTIC EX-COXFEDERATE.
Ben BiHtler Makes Himself a Record
Against F.ree Silver.
THE TYPHI'S SCAIiE IN SEW YORK.
The Indian Appropriation Bijl Cut
Ilown S60.000 for the Salem
School.
...
Chicago, Feb. 12. The Marquette
Club celebrated the birthday of Abraham
Lincoln with a banquet at the Auditor
ium hotel tonight, at which covers were
laid for over 500 persons. The great
banquet hall was resplendent with elec
tric lights and appropriately decorated
with flags, banners and fet-toons in the
national colors, interspersed with por
traits of Lincoln, Washington, Grant,
ifnd other national heroes. Prominent
republicans from all parts of the country
were bidden to the feast, and a number
were present. The principal address of
the evening was by Senator Shelby M.
Culloin, who recently announced him
self as a candidate for the presidency of
the United States, and who responded to
the toast "Abraham Lincoln." '
- THE PHILADELPHIA BANQUET ' ' .
Philadelphia, J?a-, Feb 12. The ,
Pennsylvania Club, a political orgaiza- :
ion tM.tyiJtoniglit celebrated the
birthday of Abraham Lincoln, by a- din
ner at which the principal guests ,. were
Attorney-General Miller, Solicitor-General
Taft and Senator Gallinger, of New
Hampshire, " C. Stewart Patterson, dean
of the law - school of the university of
Pennsylvania responded to the toast, -"Abraham
Lincoln."
TH COLUMBUS GATHERING. ;
Columbus, Ohjo, Feb. 12.-i-The Lincoln .
banquet wag given tonight. A telegram
of regret was .read from Chauncey M.
Depewfcwho was expected to be present
and respond to . the toast, "Abraham
Lincoln." .Also from JameS S. Clarkson",
who was prevented from attending by
illness. Representative Storer took Mr.
Depew's ' place, and ex-Representative
Allen responded to Clarkson's toast,.
"The "Coming Campaign." ' Gov. Mc
Kinley responded "to "Ohio," and was .
grealed with great applause.
an ex-confederate's thibute.
Brooklyn,' Feb. 12. The annual din
ner of the Union Leagu Club, of Brook
lyn, N. "V- was give'n at the club-house
tonight. .The Hon. John S. Wise, the
jrincipal "speaker, responded to the
toast,. "Abraham. Lincoln.". He said; in
part: "I speak as one who, while yet a
boy, embarked enthusiastically in the
confederate cause. The nomination, of
Lincoln, ! pictured in boyish fancy, as
the elevation of a bad man by an insane
faction with cruel, quixotic purpose.- I
laughed in my heart in the springtime
of : 1860 : "at the thought that . any thing
could uproot and destroy the social and
political - fabric by which I was sur
rounded.' Within five years from that
time I stood upon the same spot, a par-
oled prisoner of the army of the, dead
Confederacy. : Mr. Lincoln had the . -un
questioned right to proclaim.the freedom
of the slaves as a war measure, . None
butf a bold, 'Strong, independent nature
wonld'bave "assumed all the reaponsibil
ityVfor'the danger which the" step'in-
volyed' to'' himself , his friends:, and ' his
eaufta.; V,.l(oRkBg at' its 'onsequehces,
friend and foo . alike) . now concur that it
was the - matchless stroke of a master
handr"' -Lipooln will be remembered for
all time to come by friend and -foe-' alike
as the great. t sad almbet "lonely ' helms-
perilVwho, steered by the unfailing light
of a single . constellation ; who,, never
veering a point,- was- always guided by
bis self-made' ehart, with .malice to
ward none and charitv for all." -
butler opposes free coinage. I
Boston, Feb. 12.r Abraham. Lincoln
was the topic upon which nearly all the
Speeches centered at the banquet of the
Butler 31ub this .evening.' The chief '
point of interest in Gen. Butler's speech
was his declaration in opposition! to free
coinage' of silver. '-" ' - - ' . '
' Villard is Again Elected. .
New York, Feb. 12. Trustees of the
Edison General Electric Company today
elected Henry Villard president.