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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 24, 1892)
i i VOL. IV. THE DALLES. OREGON. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1892. NO. 60;, .4? I I a W. E, GARRETSON. Leadiag - Jeweler. SOLE AGENT FOU THE AIJ Watch Work Warranted. jewelry Made to Order, 1 38 Second St.. The Inllca. Dr. Kranich and Ikli Pianos. . 100 Dozen TOWEItS. . , " .... '" . : " '- .' ', - ... . : . . " ' '.; ' f-X "Worth 25 Cts., going for 12 1-2 Ct&j ! THE BUFFALO STRIKE. Sweeney Doing all That lie Can fio to Force an Overt Act. Just Received an Immense Shipment of the Celebrated 4 - "I ! VERY SLIM PROSPECT OF SUCCESS. - . " . - - .- v . . . -. i-v i l i t s ; Kclief That the - Conference, RoyaL JJuoreester orsetsi s When it Feae. '. INlEVEEY STYLE and PRICE. itccogniscd as Standards- of the-high est grade of manui.tcture. :3F:0.3.S5 ? J you bike jiiMs ft in because yuii Iiavc never trictl t!:e S. B. Herilachs and Liver Curs. It works so nicely, cle.mMnp; tho Liver iuiu Kidneys; nets as a mild pliysie without causing pnin or sickness, and does not Rto you I'ruin e&UiiR and working. ... To ti-y it in to become :i friend 1o IS. ?or K.fle by all druggists. J . . 1 StMIPES & KlNERSLY. "1 i ter Sweeney, of the switchmen's union." He said, as far as be knew, the con ductors hare no grievances to right. He thought the demands of the switchmen were just, but strongly condemned law lessness. Clark was accompanied by grand master Wilkinson, of the order of railway trainmen, of Galeeburg. V " rA dastardly attempt was made to wreck the express on the. Pennsylvania road duo' at Heading from Philadelphia a,t S o'clock last night. ' The train dashed into four heavy timbers placed across the track. . Fortunately only the rear wheels of the locpmotive jumped the track. The lives of 100 passengers were imperiled. - -v Curxent Toyfcs fihriie Wright "Seminary; k Boarding and Day School for Girls. Ninth Year begins Sept. 8th 1892. For Admission, Apply to the Principal- A1 ks. Saha h K. White, Aunie WriRUt Seminary. TACOMit, - - WASH. FINAL ACCOUNT. - Notice is hereby given, that ttia undersigned, Julia A. Obarr, tho duly appointed, actintr and qualified administratrix of the estate of William A. Obarr, deceased, has filed her final account and petition in said estatd, and that Monday the Ath day of September, 1892, at the hour of ten o'clock, a. m. of said day, said day being the first day of the next regular t?rm of the County Court for Wasco county, Oregon, at the County Court room of the County court house in Dalles City, Wasco county, Oregon, has been duly appointed by said court as the time and place for hearing said petition and final aocount. All persons interested in said estate are hereby notified to appear at said time and place and show cauBe if any there be, why Said petition and final, account should not in all things-be allowed, ratified and oonfirmed. 8.5w5t.2td JULIA A. OBARR, " Administratrix of the estate of William A. Obarr. deceased. Dufur Sc Menefee. Attorneys for Estate. -" " . rju. 8. Young, B!3cKswm& wagon SfiOD General Blacksmithing and Work done promptly, and all work J guaranteed. ; ' , Horse Shoeeing a Spciality fM Street, opposite tte eli Lieoe Stand. MRS. C. DAVIS Has Opened the . ! the New Frame Building on ' SECOND STREET, Next to the EHamond Fleming MUk. Piret Claa Meala Furnished at all Honrs. Okty White Help BmpJoyed. ; Handled by Three Rsgistefbd Druggists. ALSO- ALT. THE LEADING- Patent iDedieines . HOUSE PAINTS, OILS AND GLASS. Agents for Murphy's Fine Varnishes and the only agents i the City for The Sherwin, Williams Co.'s Paints. ATTKMl'T X WIIECK A TRAIN'. .Made a !:ud licginulng And The Pickets j Slirl Slcolklng In THe Darkp?B9. ! ?.lior Tojicp. ' - " -, Bii'f.ilo, J?. v., Aug.. 24. The eknik- i ing strikers, under cover of darknefcs i continue cta of lawlessness, but it is the belief that if a conference is held, I which Sweeney is working so hard to Itrtnn nlxitt- tilt rucnlt. tiil o- oiioi. I donment of tho etrikc. The plan, it is I" now F;:id. is to lut tlio Ftrika down easv. The conference will ndvise pcac.". Grand blaster Sweeney will yield grracefally ; and the striking switchmen will go back to their places. if they can, cr will seek work f Irfewliere. . This ia admittedly a critical point of the trouble. Sargent is i macio oi clillerent stuli lroui that ot Sweeney. lie Bays that no matter if the I vote was unanimous to strike, he would not approve il iijn his judgement ho did ; not - consider jt prudent; and farther ; more, however mnch ho may be in favor : of going put .with the switchmen," the j .firemen will not do so unless- all other '. railroad organisations go out. A loaded freight train waS-pulling out .l'roin Niagara falls, when the switch east (."of Lewistoi) avenue was thrown open. ' Tbc engine and .four' cars' bad already ; passed, ho the train " broke in two and tbtt rear and grtHiter portion sped toward- srMieiaierQ CentratrrgnEit - j As soon a9 .jJie-gate-mtOT-fSaW" the train l '"pjowrifTgia made a hnrriad effort to open ' the gate, but before he could do so the . i cars dashed into it and ho was struck -AVE ARE The Largest Dealers in Wall Paper. Finest Line of Imported Key West and Domestic Cigars. .Agent for Tansill's Punch. " 129 Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon J. O. MACK WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Liquor De AL Finest Wines and Liquors. 171 Frenohs' Block, Second Street, . The Dalles Oregon GKBLEREBSTER PIANOS AND ORGANS Sold on Easy Payments. -. . ' - j.-'"' '"' ' ' Musical Instruments ai Mrisic. ?i V- Booksellers and Stationers. ! and had two ribs broken, his hand hurt, and otherwise injured. The train was running eighteen miles an hour, and ' when it came to. a stand it wa- all on 'the bridge. After tho -collision, the ' switchman bad his lantern kicked out ! of his hand by a bystander.. 1 Gov. Flower, referring to the strike, I says : ;'The strikers made a bad 'rfiove at the beginnintr. If they had gone to work and had the president of the Cen tral arrested for.violatingone of the laws of tbe state," they could have had him convicted arid fined $500 oi" imprisoned f for ono year.. Last winter the legislature passed a law; malting it obligatory lor railroad companies to giye a day's pay for ten hours and to pay -.extra for all Qyer .that. I signed the bill - and the strikers had a. good chance to make - a test case.- - Why did they not do . that?" Vice-President Web-by of" the New York Central, said v'The strike, in my oDinion, is broken. It cannot extend eastward ; There ir' .'elllght chance of Sweeney ordering a strike in the west, but even that is a elim" chance. The men acted rashly and hastily, and have lost tbe fight. The sooner they : recog nize that, the better." - " - - The board of moderation and arbitra tion baa decided to begin investigation into the cause of the switchmen's strike today.. Summoning of witnesses began yesterday-. ' Grand ; Master -Sargent, -f the firemen's organization js awaiting the arrival af the executive officers of the other raflwayuhions, whom Grand Master Sweeney has Invited here in con ference.- -, y : v" '' z ' "'" E. B. Clark, grand master of der of railway conductors, arrived this morning. "I. am here," said hej. "in .response to the invitation of grand mas- . Hon. J.- II, McGraw, repulilican can didate for governor of Washington, in an interview at the Portland yesterday said: "Onr" c.impaign will be fought out on the protection lines. The stats of Washington, with its greet unde veloped natural resources, is practically undeveloped, nid the people are very earnest on the protection proposition. I think this-will be" our winning card." Tho silver question in Calcutta is creating quite ' a tumult. . "A- difference of opinion exists in "regard to the adop tion of the gold standard, but the con viction is growing that the time has ar rived for the government to take , the public into its confidence and prevent, a further fall of the rupee, by closing the mints to free silver coinage. Cholera continaes to claim a fearfully large nniulr of victims in Teheran. Sanitary . regulations are .almost iin know, and the fatalistic tendency of the people makes it'nlmost impossible to combat- the disea.se. : Eiht hundred persons died yest'rdiiy in the. city alone, which has a population of but 140,000. Mrs. Henry 51. Stanley has not yet decided whether she will permit Henry to adhere, to his" determination never again, to visit. America. We suspect that if she wants to come her spouse will have to give in. "His defeat is quite sensibly felt by Mrs. Stanley.: ' Nearly ail tlie votes he did leceive came through the tact of his Charming wife rather than to any personal popularity to which he nootea oy tho mob on one occasion,, she cried out: "Two years ago I voted for Henry Morton Stanley in Westminister abbey and I want you all to vote for hinr now." . During the whole of his .canvass he displayed his essentially British ten dencies. He is British in that roving, irresponsible disposition of his, British in his acquisitiveness. British in -his disregard for human rights and . hmnan life, British iu his hatred of the United States of America and British in his se rene impudence in aspiring to political aggrandizementSin tbe mother country, which for many years he disowned. So let the British keep him and care for him, for he ia of them, truly. .' . - . , A Wonderful Romancer. - Review. Ignatius Donnelly is out in a long interview in which he airily prophesies that he will be elected gov ernor of Minnesota. The interview is probably a cryptogram,- and when Ignat ius has been snowed undei in November it is likely that he will come forward and reading between the lines show con clusively that he predicted his own de feat and foretold the failure ot the entire Weaver campaign. Ignatius' ia . a won derful romancer.. Weatner Buesg. Report. . Portland, Aug. 24. The weather bureau report of yesterday, speaking for Eastern Oregon says :.: "More reports of the excellent condition in which the hay crop is being pn up are being, received daily. Fruit is ripening, fast and the trees -arc" -reported as being generally well loaded.'.' : the or- Not A jKafg- Money Community. " . . . : Helena' Independent." "Weaver's'Mon tana tonr has lost him votes. - He is la boring under the mistaken impression that the people pf-tbis'state, like those of his native prairies, Want greenbacks.. This, is not a rag-money community V A CUT IN THE RA7K A Quiet Warfare; WMch has -Been Go: .. ing on forSomc Time. , PEPPEKY." LETTER FROM CHARLTOX'.- Thc Alton Management Getting Down, , , : . ; to a 2-Ceni. Kate. . ; . THE ASSOCIATION- MEETING V. 1 - Mr. ToLiter's NotiScalion to ' CUairman i Viulng CoiiCfrnIn(j the l'oiiit at - VlUcrt to Jlcct This Week.. . ' ' Sr. ftivi, Mo., Aug.. The quiet V warfare that has -been going on -for- a long time between the Chicago and Al ton railroad managers and .the western :. ' passenger association is made- interest ing by a peppery letter from Gen. Ticket j Agent Charlton'to tho association. Mr. " Charlton acknowledges the receipt ofyt'jX" letter from tho association notifyi nar -tho" ' jf. Alton road tiiat the association made a . . ; round-trip rate fur tho Kniglifs of Pyth- - . iae from Chicno to Kansas City, of ,3.--' -". Tartly replying to this, Mr.-Charkon gays : "But" yon have. faUed - to 'adviws ; - " mo that the lines in yonr -association--. 7 -have4laced on the Chicago' market re turn coupons of the Christian Endeavor ." tiekets at rates which ' 'cut the regular " -. rates from Chicago to Kansas f ity to an -indefinite figure.-' . .'" : .' .' - - " Furthermore, Mr. Charlron asks -why," out of S.50 for a ticket from Kansas city to Chhtago, $3.50 should go" to " middle -- . men'.'wlio do nothing but selUhe tickets. - . Mr. Charlton 'theii .- adds ': ' 'These -ar-"-" V.r" rangement, howver7 public and private, more especially private, niade by mem bers of your association, made' it abso-:". -. 3.nt-lv nei-essarv -fcr ilw ..Cldcnifrt '"orid ' '"'.'" ' ntOnTaiTrOad to prOtccTnTserr ry opt'n .. ' 7 rates over its own ticket counter." -This announcement is followed np hy a list of trfj rates calculated to cause end less anuoyaht-e to-the' association and ; the ticket brokers. It has been -understood for some time that the Alton man- ' agement is "inclined toget down to u 2- . . cent basis. In inviting ; a warfare on ' -' ... rates with the" Alton it- may be -doubted whether the western passenger" associa- -tion has acted with discretion. - - . ; . T- .. . The Gould lines will not be represent-- ed at the general meeting of . the trans- :.-.'; continental association in New York to-"' day. Manager Packer, of tbe Missouri. : -- ''-' Pacific aud Iron Mountain, not i tied . Chairman Vining that he believed the- -transcontinental association, headquar- " ters in'St. Louis was the proper place to . '-'"' -call the meeting. - That he was opposed ' -! on general principles to an association meeting 'away from its headquarters. - : ' , That the transcontinental headquarters " ' '7 are centrally located, and yet it is the exception and not the rule to call meet- ' .' inge here. ' The Missouri Pacific, it will be remembered, - cast negative vote ' ; -against tbe proposition of the. Southern Pacific to reduce all-rail rates, west and . east-bound, for 'the purpose of meeting water competition 'of the clipper lines, ; taking the ground that such competition was directed against the Southern Paci fic's local rate to California points. At : the meeting today, the Pacific Mail sub-' sidy and the notice of withdrawal of the -Rio Grande Western will be acted upon -in addition to the Southern Pacific troub-", :. les.' .. .- ' '' - ; - - -r-' -' '"' "- . I'olltlcn Acroas tho River. . .' Cheney Sentinels . The political .aren r ' .; is merging iroin warm to iiot.t..:.v itn four tickets in the field,, the. ward boss should be able 'to. 'earn-an honest-f?) living, and even the country editor poor : j devil, would be' justified in indulging in ; - an occasional smile. . - . '; . 165 SECOinD STREET. Thd Danes," Ot, Is Royal Baking Powder rior to Supe - JL Every It is a' scientific fact that the Royal Baking Powder Is . absolutely pure. . ; 1 wilhgo still' further and state ; that because of the facilities that company have for obtaining perfectly pure cream of tartar, and for other reasons depend--ent upon the proper proportions-of the same, and the method Z of its preparation, the Royal Baking Powder is undoubtedly . the purest and most reliable baking powder offered to the public. ; ' - - HENRY A. MOTT, Ph. D., '.' ' ' -"--.'' -; ;; .. I ' :v;: ."'..; LaU" Chemist Jot U.SGavU '.- "V- 1