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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1892)
&3 f- v ' vi t .- i ii. ,. I I . . ' VOL. IV. THE DALLES. OREGON. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 8, 1892. WT E. GARRETSOH. Jeweler. SOLE AGENT FOB TI1K " All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. 138 Second St. The Ualles. Or. . Kranicb and Bach Pianos. Recognised as Standards of the high pet grade 6f manufacture. JUDGE NELSON'S DECISION. Speaking of patent- medicines, the Judge Bays: "I wish to deal fairly and honorably with all, and when I 6nd an article that will do what it is recom mended to do, I am. not ashamed to say so. I am acquainted with Dr. Vander pool (having been treated by him for cancer), and have used his blood medi cine, known as the S. B. Headache-and Liver Cure, and while I am 75 years old, and have used many pills and other remedies for the blood, liver and kid neys, I must say that for a kidney tonic in Brights disease, and as an alterative for the blood, or to correct the action of tbe stomach and bowels, it ib a very su perior remedy, and beats anything I ever tried. J. B. Nelson, Yakima,- Wash. At 50 cents a bottle. It is the. poor man's friend and family doctor. Annie Wright Seminary, Boarding and Da; School for Girk flintb Year begins Sept. 8th 1892. for Admission, Apply to tbe Principal Mrs. Sarah PC. White, Annie WrigHt Seminary, TACOMA. WASH. JOHN PASHEK, J - Tailor, . Next door to Wasco Sun. Just Received, a fine stock of Suitings, Pants Patterns, etc., of all latest Styles, at Low Prices. Madison's Latest System used in cutting garments, and a fit guaranteed each time. Repairing and Cleaning Neatly and Quickly Done. til. H- Young, Biacksmiiti& wagon shod General Blacksraithing and Work done promptly, and all work Guaranteed. Horse Shoeeing a Spciality Lean pieiM L Third Street opposite tbe old Lletie Stand. MRS. O. DAVIS lias Opened the . - . - REVERE RESTAURANT, In the New Frame Building on SECOND STREET, Next to the " Diamond Flouring Mills. ' - i . . First Class Meals Furnished at all Hours. Only White Help Employed. Clothing. Our pall Ijije Of Clothing and Kiarraishxirig Goods is now complete." You can. '. . 5a ue fOT)ey By seeing our stock before making your purchases. ft nri DRUGS S N I PES & K I N ERSLY THE LEADING Wo lesale and Retail Druggists Handled by Three Regtstereil Druggists. ' . . -' ALSO ALL " THE LEADING V Patent (Dedieines and Druggists Sundries, HOUSE PAINTS. OILS AND GLASS. Agents for Murphy's Fine Varnishes and the only agents in the City for The Sherwin, Williams Co.'s Paints. -WE- The Largest Dealers in Wall Paper. Finest Line of Imported Key West and Domestic Cigars. Agent for TansilPs Punch. 129 Second Street, The Dalles. Oregon J. O. FiplE WlMEg DOMESTIC And KEY WEST CIGARS. FRENCH'S 171 SECOND -STREET, : WM. BUTLER & CO.; - . u ' DEALERS IN ' ' Building Material; Rough and Dressed Lumber. Lime, Plaster, Hair and Cement; ' A liberal discount to the trade JEFFERSON STREET, between Second llamslloo ARE - MACK, and LIQUOR THE -C ELC8RATED PABST BEER. , BLOCK. : THE DALLES, OR. in all lines handled by' us. and Railroad, THE DALLES, OR VERY ACTIVE CANVAS; . ; '! : -'...;', ' ' : ' . -" i ' ' V '' ; McCobM will Male a Vigerons Cam v Win Hanoi THE LOCAL CONTEST IN MOSCOW. Proportion of Withdrawals From Old '. v ' " y ' " '- - .Parties AbeutEqaal. ; r"- THRKK TICKETS IN TnE FIELD. Tbe Democracy Mot in it And The Popu llflts trill be - Sullivaned t Tbe -Polls. . ' ' : " '- . Boise Cit, Sept. 8. A Tkfoscow dis patch eays politics are quiet but that Mr. McConnell will actively .enter 'into the canvas on and after - September 15, Burke will poll a light vote . in this country, Latah.-" The main local issue in this county will be for treasurer, be tween the little man, R. 8. Browne rep. and the large man, I. C. Hattabaugh dem. - The people's party's strongest man is C. A. S. Howard for sheriff, but in alt probability he will remain at home, although he is an excellent man. A number will withdraw-from .both old parties in favor of the people's party, but it will be about an equal thing. Chairman Wilson of tbe republican state committee expects to open the cam paign with a whoop a week from today. Before that time tbe leading men on the state ticket Will be in the city', and for mulate a systematic plan of action. Sen ator Dubois is nere now and will .assist in the deliberations. W. J. McConnell; the nominee for governor, is expected in a few days. Chairman Tillinghast of the democratic state committee is in tbe city and has taken charge of tbe wigwam recently vacated by ex-Chairman Ainelie Burke, the nominee for guber natorial honors on the democratic ticket, will arrive in a few daye and formally. Open the campaign. Chairman Bad ley , of the populist committee, is ' hard . at work.-. Mr. Badly was . a republican but became disgruntled over sundry matters, and enlisted his sympathies and talent "with the third party movement. He is a rustler, organizing his party all along the line, and expects to make it ex tremely tropical for opposing factions. He said to your correspondent yester day: "Well, there is soms consolation for the republicans in the tact that the fight this year is between their party and the populists. The democrats are not in it. Many of them have juet as good as admitted that fact to me, and a .nominee on the democratic ticket for a prominent office told me a few days ago that he did not intend to put up much money for this year's campaign, as the ticket had too much of a load to pack to insure anything like success. - The very fact that the democrats were compelled to wire all over " the state before they could secure men who would allow their names to go before the state convention for positions on the ticket showa that this nominee is not the only one of the unier rifled who have thought, if not ex pressed similar sentiments. Foots up Heap. ; Courier. About seventy-five sets of Encyclopedia Britanica have been sold in Oregon city during the past - eighteen days. These average about $70 per set making a gross amount of books con trac ed for in that city -$5,25Q. - Irk order that the purchaser's shall get the value of the coupons, which if utilized, will give them . their encyclopedia free, - it will make necessary the expenditure of $52, 500 with the fifteen - Oregon city mer chants .whoj are in the deal. If these merchants had not gone into the ar rangement - the encyclopedias "would have been -sold " just -itfae same in all probability, with the exception that the coupons -would --have"' been good in Portland and the $52,500 would 'have gone there instead of being kept in cir culation at home. ?few York "papers advertise (Tic same wotk for $22.50.. A Leap for Life." . -Telegram. A few days ago a party from Oswego .returned from a vacation forty rriiles up. the Clackamas river, where they had teen .camping, fishing and hunting. Daring their stay in that picturesque spot, the party found the body - of a magnificent deer that had jumped a . 350-foot precipice, evidently having been pursued by wolveB. From all appearances it had made the leap a few moments before they saw it. " J" Cholera Talk. v' There are ten fresh cases of cholera on board the Rugiaand three on board tbe Normania in N.- Y: quarantine j - also two deaths last night, one on the Rugia and one on the Normania. - . ' At Hoffman island two new cases de veloped and have been removed to Swinebui-ne island.' No deaths at the hospital. : " . ' .- ' ' There is no news from lower quaran tine with the exception of a nurse re ported as sick. Her'name is given, as Adelaide Merres, of New York. The Scandia, which may . arrive -at any moment, is now being anxiously looked for. , She is from Hamburg, and has-a largemumber of emigrants on board, and is the only steamer likely - to arrive within tbe next few day s with cholera on board. The Joseph . John , . from Hamburg, may also arrive at any moment. . She is a tramp, and is now out sixteen days ' A Hamburg dispatch eays.moBt of the bodies are buried j; in.- trenches - at Ohisdorf cemetery wbicK: ia six miles out' of town. Both' hospitals are full and numerous barracks -are being util ized to relieve the- regular hospitals. The sick are ' conveyed to the hospitals in coaches with seats turned over, while the dead are transported in old furniture vans and bakers'' wagons. ."Notices 'are posted on all street corners, warning the public against the use of. unboiled water, which Cornea from the river Eibe, into which tbe sewers are emptied. Artesian Vell Tested. Heppner Gazette. The artesian well, from which jt was thought a sufficient supply of ' water for the water works could be gotten, was given a thorough test Sunday afternoon.- . A six-inch pump, with" a capacity of 250,000 gal lons per day, was. put in the well, after it was cased sixty feet down, and started at a 72,000 galloiis-a-day(rate; Stand ing this test, it was increased to 144,000 gallons rate, and last to a 216,000 gal lons rate, which test it stood,-to the sur prise of many of the doubtful persons. This test convinced the company, that the supply of water there is sufficient for Heppner's demand, though another well may be sunk to insure a supply equal to any emergency. The test on the well proving satisfactory, Mr. Gates left yesterday morning for Portland, where he will at once place the orders for material for the electric lights and waterworks. -. - " L 'Wbale OCT tbe Coast. - Oregonian. A. W..MyfflKen-eie, of the steamer Willapa, says' the Columbia river, at its month, id- fairly swarming with sardmes. Since the salmon fish ing seaeornXhas now expired, many of the fisberineSj are turning to this as a means of livelihood, which is proving quite prpfitablV On theprevioas morn ing the pen onVii Willapa sighted an immense whaledead, floating in the ocean, ja short distance from shore. They at first thot it was a schooner bottom fcide up, le was ita size. He thinks" that this Vtnusuallv large school of sarnines basattracted the mon8tersof thfe deep, for iVia a fact that whale haie been more numerous in the proximityoythe mouth of the Colum bia than ever before. The steamers on the San Branciaco line pass through great Echools of whale all along the Ore gon coast. ' " ' - - . - A Longr Voyage. Telegram. Captain Richardson and Chief Engineer Harry Lord, of the steamer Manzanita, have left for Cleve land, to take charge of the new light house tender Columbine, juet completed at that city. The Columbine is one of the largest vessels of its kind, and is fitted up with all the modern appliances for such vessels. She will bo taken to New York to complete her' fittings and furniture. She will go by ' the. great lakes, St. Lawrence river and the Atlan tic ocean. As soon as equipped she will be brought around to Astoria to take the place of the Manzanita, which will probably be transferred to the southern coast. The Columbine will, arrive at Astoria some time next February. Oar Barren "Waste. ' . . , -Review. The -DalleB Chronicle re ports a yield of five pounds of grapes on a vine three- feet long grown near that city. From a barren waste Waaco county is fast bacoming one of the most fruitful sections of Oregon. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. ARAM V KVW IIP M k I Miyan EnocM Out by Corbett" iii tire Twenty First Round. : - A -.CLOSELY CONTESTED SCRAP Some of the "Amusements" Going on ia New Orleans: This Week.-' -.; SICKESIXG . 'ltFIORT ' tF A FFAIBS Tbe. Host Pitiable Spectacle of ; the Occasion A Modern llaron ...-w.-: a- T- Cbevrlal. Etc. . " New Orleans, Sepi.sJ-t7 breakfast tables all over the world this morning, tbe sport iDg fraternity, and, for tbe Oc casion, men, women and ..children gen-. erally,.will eagerly scan the columns of their newspapers to learn, with satisfac tion in the greatest degrees of proportion , that Corbett has taken the champion's belt from John L. Sullivan. Nauseating details of sickening scenes will be read with eagerness to learn all the repelling particulars, of how two human hyenas endeavored to anhlliate each . other for . money, while a great multitude looked on and applauded, wagering. money that ' once was honest on the fat brawn of Sullivan or the nimble-footed science of his opponent. The saloons and gamb ling resorts-are running wide open and in full blast niglit and day, and aro making money band over fist.' ' One. spcrr. from Colorado dropped $8,000 in a game in a single night after having got ten ahtad of the game at one time to the ' tune of $6,000. One of the most pitiable 8. ectacles of the occasion w the pres-" ence of E. H. Canfield, a Philadelphian over seventy years of age, author of sev eral standard law books end the founder . of two or three western newspapers. He is so-- helpless - from paralysis .and rheumatism' that it takes two men to keep him on his feet.- This is" about as horrible a conception of the paralytic old roue, Chevrial, who died at a petit Bottper given to a gay throng of . the demi-monde of Paris. Last night a ball was given that -was expected to prove as wildly hilarious - as . the one which usually goes with the MardrGras cele- bration. The immediate effect of this gathering is highly- advantageous to the business interests of New Orleans, but the after results cannot be otherwise than demoralizing and injurious. Few thoughtful men of a family vould think of going there in search of a home. Nex Forces Keserratlon. Teller.'. The first step in the opening of the Nez Perces reservation has been taken, in tbe completion of tbe work of alloting lands to the Indians. It re mains only for the government to take action in treating with the Indians for the residue of the lands. The policy of the government is now clearly defined toward the speedy opening of Indian reservations, and this, with, the great -pressure brought' to. bear by our repre--sentatives in congress, will hasten the event long looked for by citizens in this vicinity. The Nez Perees reservation , lies almost wholly in this county, and . the opening of the reserve will add" greatly to the benefit of Lewis ton. A half million acres of the finest grazing and . pasture lands will, within a few months, be opened for settlement under the homestead law. ; A Close Call. . Sun. Engineer John Christians came ' near taking a plunge into the Columbia last Friday, by ' his engine striking a large steel plate near The Dalles fishery.-- The pilot was badly broken, and several bushels of gravel thrown over tbe engine and into the cab made it very unpleasant for a while. ' Fortun ately, Mr. . -Christians and Fireman Brown escaped uninjured, and their hair has resumed its normal condition. The plate was lost off a carload of steel plates, destined for Puget sound.