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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (May 31, 1892)
ci J TV fl Ay?; VOL. III. THE DALLES, OREGON, TUESDAY, MAY 31, 1892. NO. 142. Look at the Bargains! i4. ,HAnnis, : AT .THE : " "". OLD AND WELL KNOWN. STAND. iAlwag0 tojhe Ffqrjfc ! REGULAR Clearing DOT Sale ! My Entire Stock, Consisting of Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats and Gaps, EEHTS' Furnistting GOODS, : laces ana . proifieiies . , OT. GOING AT BABGAISS. ' And the Sale will be con tinued until all is disposed ' of. A' special opportunity is. here afforded for small stores to replenish their stock. ' Call and Price these Goods, ft. HflHHis, AT THE . . : . i jOLD AND WELL KNOWN STAND. ytEA T.i MEIIIT II you take pills It is because 'yon have never '. inea tne S. B. Headache and Liver Cure. It works ko nlcelv. cleansine the Liver and Kidneys; acts as a mild physic without causing pain or sickness, and does not stop, you from caung ua worjting. . To try it la to become a friend to It. For sale by all druggists. . ' ' '- - 7- - '- .; " 1 ;.. .Eipitii&mgojisiioii General Blacksmitbing and Work' done promptiy','and,iali work " Guaranteed.. Horse Shoeeing a Speiality THiril Street, opsite tlie old Lielie Stand. MRS. C. DAVIS ... Has Opened the -- In the New Frame Building on SECOND STREET, Next to the Diamond Flouring Mills. Firs( Class Meals Furnished at all Hours ; . : Only White Help Employed. Clothing PE ASF, & MAYS VJ..We' have just received another invoice -- s-. - . --. .- , - ' - : of Dry Goods, including Satines, Sum mer Flannels and White Goods, wHich , - are now ready for your inspection. '. PEASE The Largest Variety, the Sprih Dry Summer Dress Goods, The Prettiest i Patterns,: the Mcfst Fash ionable Shades. See our stock. Gents' Furnishing Goods, Collars, Cuffs, sell "MANHATTAN" SHIRTS. : ; In every Size, ne-w.iine 01 Lawn Tennis Shoes. - A. M; WlKLIflmS & CO.. Snipes &,Ki nersly, f . -THE , LEAplNG-77--- v iliiS'Reillgt Handled by Three ALSO ALL Patent Qfedieines and . HOUSE PAIIITS. Agents for1 Murphy's Fine Varnishes and the only-agents in -WE. The Largest Dealers in Wall Paper. Finest Line of Imported Key, ; Agent for Tansill s Irunch. - 129 Second Street, & MAYS Stock, the. Most Complete Best Assorted , Selections Ties, Hats, Etc., We Price and - Vidth. A Registered Druggists.1 THE LEADING . 1 : ; " I 4 .' ,A . Df aaaists : Sundries OILS AND GLASS. . ARE- West and Domestic bigars The Dalles, Oregon THE BLAINE : MOVE. Something nniBilitly Masauerading in GlitteriHE" Armor. THE , ANTI-HARRISON . COHORTS. A Feeling Which Leads to a Search for the True 1 award Motive. A MENACE TO l'BACE IN THE PARTY. Xot a, Blaine, but an Anti-Harrison Fight A . . LakevarmseMr and Kound by Instrnctions. Chicago, May 31. Unfortunately for it, the Blaine movement is not regarded as being exactly what it pretends to "be. There is a suspicion that back . of it. masquerading in the glitterin'g jwaiQjr of the "plumed knight," is somepiing uii knightly base. It is doubtful whether the men who are now turning; tbeitfaces toward Minneapolis! keeoine steD to Blaine Blaine, James G. Blaine, are sin cere in their declaration that Mr. Bkwne will be nominated ; that if nominated he would accept, or if he accepted he would be able physically to stand the labor and harrassments of a presidential contest. This feeling leads to a search for other motives than the Blaine, motive in the fight against President" Harrison. It is perfectly clear that the Blaine cry has been raised merely to muster a following tnat can be directed against Harrison The magic name of the magnetic states man can be relied on to bring forth both numbers and enthusiasm.. It is not im probable that the opponents of Mr. Har rison nave mi .view the possibility of forcing the president out of. the fight Ihey may push Blame up to the point where a roll-call is the next thing in or der. . They may menace the Deace of tho-i party and the good order of the conven tion, and all for the purpose of nomina ting, not Mr, BIaine, but some one who will subserve their individual ends and ambitions. It is necessary to keep in mind that this is an anti-Harrison fight, not a Blaine fight. '- The men and the delegates who favor the president's' renomination are not violently enthusiastic' for him. ; Some Of the three hundred delegates who are in etructed for him are bound only by their instructions. ..It is so with some of the Illinois, delegates. . They are '. ji degree worse than lukewarm.. ..The backers of the president know this, and they realize that it is a menacing danger. Orowine up out of the Blaine movement is there' fpre a possibility that by threatening Harrison with an undignified defeat the Blaine demonstration may drive, him from, the field upon the promise that Mr. Blaine, too, will withdraw.;.. That this desperate hope finds lodgement in : the bosoms of the Ciarkson crowd is apparent Beyond'that point it would be difficult to cast a horoscope; . Yet the . over wean ing ambition of Alger is no small factor in this general nproar. . Old To& Sutter Oold. . , Sacramento, May 31. The - sealed metal receptacle found on the site of old Fort Sutter last week by. the contractor who is building a memorial hall hee for the native sons of 'the: "golden west, who now own the site, contained over f 20,000 worth of gold dust. . This find may make a difference ' in "the. plans of the hall to be erected. Other .deposits of like character, are supposed to be bur ied in the vicinity. It has always been believed that -there are J considerable sums in dust hidden around the old fort by, miners 1 who, came down 'from; the mountains in early davs and who died or iVfere--'killed I before J' recovering' it. Notably In this supposed fo be the' case during the cholera plague of the early fifties, when scores died suddenly in and around this historical spot. - ; Tne Epworth Iag-iie. OMAHAj May 31. -Yesterday a through discussion of the work of the Epworth league was bad, and every depart men t.of this growing society, was carefully, in vestigated -and - a - number - of improve ments were made in the management of this yoong but: vigorous organization. While the church believes it tlje best policy to hav& ill the young people go into this one society, yet it :will not an tagonize any society whose object' ia the same but whose name is different from that of the Epworth league. Dr. J. F. Berry, the present editor ; of the .Ep worth Herald, received 404 out ot -430 votes, And was re-elected. - - . ' Mob Law fiampart. Mokristowx, Tenn., May 30. Charles Weims, colored, is in -jail here charged with attempting to assault a white woman at Chattanooga on May 19. That is a commonplace statement that covers an exciting aperience. Wiems was ar rested immediately after the alleged as- j sault and was jailed ; at Chattanooga. ' The next night a mob captured the jail, only to find that Wiems had been spirit ed . away.' His ' whereabouts : were ' un-1 known for 24 hours, when he was located at Nashville. Mob spirit became ram part and a .second riot followed in- the capital city, in which a dozen, men were hurt.'one seriously. The police forced the cro.wd back, while Wiems in the garb of the jail cook, boldly walked out and joined the officers at the depot, . Then began a race that outclasses anything ever seen in this state, in which the telegraph operators along the railroads joined in and, as far as possible, kept the town ahead informed. In five days' he had traveled 1000 miles, saw over 200 mobs ready to lynch him, was refused admission to a score 01' jails, was attacked in three, went 24 hours without food, during which time he traveled '25 miles over the worst mountains in the state ; was thrown from a train ; was shot at and visited three states, and was so near two others that ho could, see them. If the storv could be told with nil its de tails, narrow escapes, exciting encount ers,. wild rides, lonely walks and agonies of suspense, it would outrival a novel. Weims claims the woman met him by appointment. v , . Fftrringrton's Saginaw Deposit.- -S.vgixaw, Mich., May 31. On Satur day $2,000 in gold and silver was found in the cellar of a house in Midland that was once occupied by Hank Farrington. It is supposed the money was concealed by him in 1870. Farrington was a 'jew eler in Saginaw and neighboring towns ior'inany years, and was suspected of being connected with a gang of counter feiters. In October, 1874, a man named Stewart, living in Ausable, Mich., was murdered and robbed of several hundred dollars. ; Farrington was convicted of the crime and sentenced to the peniten tiary tor lite. Alter serving some years he was pardoned and went back to Au sable, where an old indictment against him was revived. - Being warned he em barked in a small boat with the inten tion of escaping to Canada, but the boat was capsized in a storm anr Farrington was drowned. Hisson,aprinteremployed in a Saginaw newspaper office, will take steps to recover the buried treasure . : -. . Slogging Match. As showing the interest in a prize fight in London laet night, at the national sporting club rooms,1 it is said that al though the members of the club who had seats reserved, subscribed from $25 to $500 for the privilege, and paid $125 more for every guest introduced, the hall was crowded to its full capacity. ; According to social and sporting standards, a finer attendance never gathered to witness prizengnt. Almost every conspicuous sportsman in London was ' presents Most of the crowd were in evening dress B. J. Angle, who refereed the Isahvan- Mitchell fight in France, was selected as the referee. Lord Lonsdale introduced the principals in a neat speech, in which be said fair play would be given both men. " The State Grange. -. - Albany, w., 3lay 31. ine next an nual session of the Oregon state- grange will be held in The Dalles, at, the session here " were ' presents."; Resolutions '-were adopted favoring the free coinage of "sil ver, property rights of women, reform In assessments and taxation, election of United States senators, by. direct vote, allowing women over twenty -one to remonstrate against tne granting ot liquor license.; it opposed congress ap propriating money for. the Nicaragua canal unless this country has control of the canal.. . '-.. y - ' '. , ; Fnpils' View of tne, O. A. R.' Work -' Chicago', May ' 31; Trouble is ex pected in the Oak . Park high school. The boys and girls were ordered to at tend Saturday j and hear, several G. -A. R. posts : conduct - patriotic exercises. The pupils got mad-and ' went on a strike :- The G. A; R., orators according ly repeated their orations to tnemselves, Principal Goddard, and the bare walls of the big' building.' : One young 'man wrote ia note stating that G. A.- R. exer cises tended to keep alive sectional feel ing and were not trae- patriotism. ' Highest of all in Leavening Power.--Latest US. Gov't Report. PATRIOTIC ADDRESS. America's Offeusiye and Defensiye Fow- ,. ers Reyiewcfl.- THE PEACEMARER OF NATIONS. Memorial Address by Ex-President r - 1 ' Hayes at Columbus, Ohio. ' WHY OUR XAVlf XBEI) JIOT BE LAKGE The Most Formidable Army 'the World Has Ever Seen Oar Recruiting Stations. ' - Chicago, May 31. Of the many memorial addresses delivered in the United States yesterdav. none could have been more patriotic than Ahat of ex-President Rutherford B. Hayes at Columbus.. Among other things he said: ''The astounding progress -of America during the war, and by reason of it during the last 27 years, has carried us forward and upward until we have reached a rank among nations so com manding that we ourselves can hardly realize either the privileges that are ours, or the responsibilities and the duties which those privileges impose upon us. .It is our privilege to be witll out extensive and costly fortifications, because we do not need them. We have only a small navy because with our re sources we are able, if need come, to subsidize the ships of almost all the other nations except those of the power with which we are at war. We have to day the largest, cheapest, safest, most efficient and formidable army this world has ever seen. It consists of more than 10,000,000 educated men, who are not merely self-sustaining but who are en gaged in the peaceful : industry of civil life, constantly adding, to our wealth and power. To keep this army up to its maximum strength, we have more than, a quarter of million echoolhouses under the old flag, every one of which is at once a fortress and a recruiting station for ttfeArnjy. of this republic." He added: "Thisation should be the peacemaker of the world. We could,, better afford to suffer a wrong, especially when dealing-with the weaker nations. America should engage in no war not absolutely forced on her, but once in it should cease only with the annihilation of the power that caused it, so that there never could be a repetition of the con flict with that nation. . . The ' War Ship Oregon. . Portland, May 31. Now that the cruisers' attraction and decoration - day ceremonies are ; ended the next ' idea here would be a celebration' of tho glorious Fourth, but as the pride of the city rests upon the exposition, more 'or less, it is thought the celebration will be omitted that people may be given a rest, arid time to prepare the more effectually for the exposition. An attraction almost eqnal to the cruisers will be the model of the battle ship Oregon, which Supt. Mitchell has secured to be placed among the exhibits at Portland.' The total, measurements of this splendid miniature ship are:' Length, 0 feet 7 inches, beam,. 4 feet; and will weigh 1,280 pounds. It will not be completed vbef ore the Tatter part of August,' when it will be shipped at once from Washington. It will be a perfect fac-simile of this, the greatest batfle-ship in the United States navy in commission., under construction or con templated construction. ' The guns, ma chinery and every detail will be com pleted on an exact scale...- . ' ' Death 'of Bond. Boston", May 31.-Geo. WBohd; the celebrated wool expert, died'iivhjB city yesterday;' aged 80 y&rs. Mr.' Bond was remarkable as an expert in wools, and was twice employed by the "United States government to prepare standard samples of wool for the use of the cus toms officers." His report upon the classification of wools was recognized as the highest authority upon the subject.