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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 26, 1892)
i-fiee " j 3 JU-- 'J.'aU'. 'J 1 Pi t CLOSING THE SEASON. Ml our pall apd Uipter Qoods must o. a - CLOSING n NOW IN - . ; v. .. ; a o Furnishing "T7"E will; not another ; markedathem down to pri ces that must-sell them and that "vThe Dalles Daily Chronicle. - Entered it . the i'ostotfie at The Dalles, as second-class mnlter. Oregon, Local Advertising-. U) Cent per line for first insertion, and S Cents per line for each subsequent insertion. - Special rates for long time notifies. All local notices received later than 8 o'clock will appear the following day. . ; Weather Forecast. - 'Offieiat fortcatfor twenty-four hour ending at 6 p. m. tomorrow : Fair followed., by rain." 1 mountains. Snow in . the SATURDAY ' - - v- - .NOV. 26, 1892 LOCAL BRKVTTTK8. Leave your order for cord wood . at . Maier & Benton's. . Miss May Booth of Portland is in the eity', visiting Miss Nellie Brown. ' Phil Smith, who was taken to the hos pital recently very ill, is slowly recover ing. T. A. Hudson . ava.n now has the noooiest sign on Washington., street, at his'newjf8 jmce. ... The Baldwin has a fat 30-B turkey hung out today,, signifying that every 'day is Thanksgiving at that ' restaurant. ' Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hanna of Olex, were in the city yesterday, en route to their new home from Benton, connty. 4(t is Mrs. Hanna's first visit. We acknowledge' a social call -from James L. Easton and ' son, of Boyd. Mr. Easton has been a resident of Wasco county fourteen years.' He belongs to' the. argonants of '49, at which time he landed in California a. hi vt ..ecu v. ucv mjj. - hire porkers were driven in today for the Columbia Packing company, from jJballed, when the question was raised as te Klickitat farm of -MxA W. Lord.to the admissability f.his testmony, and They are all about equally proportion and "very nearly marked alike. At a recent meeting "of the official board of the M. E.. Church a' resolution was unanimously passed tendering a vote of thank 8 to Prof. M. W. Smith for bis splendid present of ten elegant high back chairs for the use of the choir. ..... Balfe Johnson, the worthy operator of . the W. IT. T. Co at The Dalles, met with - his 23d annual reception in Life yester day and duly observed the event by making a call last evening where he was considerably surprised by the cus 'tobaary flogging; with an unusually pleasant aftermath. . - , The carrier boys' appeal to the city subscriber is to have boxes placed at the gates i to keep the . paper1 dry,': assure prompt delivery and preserve the. paper -in readable form from the' storms of . winter. Thk - Chroniclb would be ' pleased to see this appeal acted upon Sherman county fares no better, since she left Wasco, if as well as formerly. Assessments of the value of the lands are fully 20 per cent, greater, and taxes much higher than previous to the crea- .tion of the new countrv.' ' "Let well . . enough alone," is a pretty fair motto in times like these. N .... . . ' "' TRev. W. H. Wilson of this city has an "-PP'e which he picked a year ago this month from a tree on his Mill creek m farm now owned by the Columbia river fruit company It -is;, solid good fruit,! . but Mr. W. does not know the' name of it. He purchased the tree in Missouri, and on .coming outj with other trees, the tag was lost.' It- shows, however, how fruit will keep in this climate. 0TO SMiE:; of ?oiir affld lnter- Dry carry jthese oyer; to season; and have Oir Mew Railway. The Telegram claims that theTacoina, Lake Park and Columbia ' river'' railway in a scheme of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy," ' and will' build through Cowlitz pass to a connection with ; the Hunt system. It is said the Great Northern and C, B and Q. have a per fect understanding. If they build west from Wyoming to Boise, there verging to connect with, the Hunt system on Snake river, amLthe Oregon Pacific via Albany and Astoria, they will thns have three outlets to the' coast. One oa the sound and two in Oregon. 'The C, B. and Q. is a wealthy and independent corpora tion, but it is too conservative ior uh amlimited extensions. ; " ;.- ! ' ; The ttergfeld Cse. The court room was densely packed last evening to listen 'to the testimony, in the case of the State v. Win. Bergfeld; The evidence of Capt. J. H. Fisk, Miss L: V. Hampton and her brother, W. H. Hampton, was completed. The analysis of -the-etomach of .Mrs. Kogera,. sub- wm t f-cx) o f- Yk a wsa1 i iii inn o ni !nut n 1 F - ' made by- Capt. -Fisk .and Miss Hampton; on the 16th the balance of the contents of the jar was delivered to W. H. Hampton, and he was .engaged by the prosecution,' to make another analysis. -' His j testimony i last" evening showed that a large quantity of zinc bad been taken into the stomach oft deceased, when the' proportions of the bodv and the conditions are considered in connec tion with the small quantity of the fluid analyzed. It is expert testimony and may. perhaps not be sufficiently plain to be clearly understood "generally, except as to the particular point that there is N evidence in the trace of a considerable nquanncy naving enierea xne siomacn. II At 10 o'clock Mr...D. L. Cates was counsel argued the wattter until the ad. journment, 10: i5 p. m. , r On convening court this morning Mr ates again took the .fitAnd, vanJ ..the rgument continued on the admissibility f the evidence he was about to give. inally it. was admitted, the statement made, and afterwards stricken out. The next witness called was Mr. Bert Rogers. , It is thought the- prosecution will not close their -testimony' before Monday. Telegraphic Flashes. The N. P. R. No. 1, was held up sixty three miles east of .Tacoma on the 24th and passengers were relieved of about (1,500 in money and valuables. Fire in a New Mexico coal mine at Blossberg makes It possible for 100 men to meet their fate in death. It is poasi ble they may escape from another shaft. Great floods are reported in China; many people, have been drowned. James G. Blaine's physical condition is reported to be serious, and his friends are fearful of the result. ' Dying- From Hydrophobia. - Danville, Va., Nov. 25. A little son of J. A. Lee, of North Danville, was. bitten by a dog September 15th. The dog also bit forty or fifty other personB and five days later died, showing symp toms of; .madness. Two plays ago yOung Lee was taken sick and, today .developed a genuine case of hydrophobia. He is not expected to live. As so many others were -bitfcen, by the "earns dog, North Danville people are in a-state. of great excitement tonight. v W ,v-v';r .-r-Lt ; ''' j iBiiiiiH "'S' " J Goods GpodsH quickly, too. You will need Blankets,- - Quilts,-, Underwear, Hosiery, Rubber :Goods, Shoes, Dress Goods, Clothing " Then take advantage of "Cleer IetectlT Work, I - l Thk Chronic lb reporter was on with some- "clever Tbursday.mtru8ted with some detective secrets.;" but as we do not be lieve in the policy of trying a case until it. gets into court,' nor revealing facts 'to a culprit "fugitive until he is safefy be hind the bars; . we do not propose to give away any of the secrets, of work in trusted to our keeping this week ; and whatever we may say here now has been picked, up on the street. -There is no longer any secret about the arrival here of twenty-one armed men ; of how they chartered teams and loaded- themselves and their beds t' blankets covering1 Win chester), and bnggugisaatchels' filled j with cartridges), and took their way out i of town in different vehicles, each ap pearing to be a stranger to the other, j They drove into the Inland Empire and separated, temporarily; a part of their party returned to The Dalies with Cal. Hale, who has been identified as the man who struck Mr. Abernathy over the head with a revolver in the Roslyn bank, and .was one of the cow boys im plicated in that robbery. They also, by this clever' piece of detective service, captured another man CKimsey), impli cated in the same robbery, and have got an eve on others. This is all news picked up on the street today. In addition to . the above we are in formed by one who was told by a de tective.' that the "pointer" which put them on track of the robbers was a couple of horses captured from them at the time the citizen's posse was chasing the bandfp the mountains near Roslyn, The Roslyn robbers belong to. a gang ex tending from Mexico to British Colum bia, and they steal horses intone place, running them to another place, revers ing "the order" for security and 1 sales. The captured horses had been stolen from Eastern Oregon,' in the' vicinity of Fossil, and taken as a clew, lead to the discovery of the rendezvous. There are a number of Stories floating about, one of which sniffs out the light cast upoii the rendezvous of Sontag "and Evans as' pictured by thtf Ban Francisco Examiner man who pretended to visit them recently in the mountains of Cal ifornia. . Our informant says, a 'detec tive", told him that a hostler in a stable was told by a tramp who got it from a Harney sheep herder that. Sontag and Evans are up this way, and that the latest recruit at the rendezvous is Bur- dette Wolfe, whom they are after 'be cause pi' the - reward. It . is. said the other thugs, thieves and murderers in camp' make it hot for Burdette, and if he only could be assured that his pen alty might be imprisonment for life, be would gladly surrender. But bis chums are watching him now, and he. is, so to speak; "placed between two fires." All jokes aside this is a serious nib- ji'ct. Officers in pursuit of criminals de- eervH tne support oi tne press ana me public; and that, justice may be done Tthev usuallv have" such suDDort: but when they destrov the very influence they are 'most in need of1, iand tell Tom, Pick ; and t Harry this and that item, which forms th wool of the .web - they are- weaving, it must be expected 3- that their plans will1 be frustrated. This ar ticle is compiled , whollv from current ' . I ft S fl rumors on tne street couay. nau xhk Chbonicls been disposed to do so, ' the story might have been published on Thursday,' . but' we '; preferred1 to keep silent and give the a "detectives", a chance. entire line bit Piall Glothm St " Okanogan .Smith, the pioneer pros pector, died last week of typhoid fever. He was chosen a member of the Wash ington, house of representatives at the last election. For the past quarter of a century he has denied himself the ben efits of civilized life, in his . devotion to the mining interests of Okanogan. His death will be regretted more because of the apparent dawn realization of his "long deferred hopes." , j . The cost of good - roads is discussed considerably . of late. The graveled streets of East Portland are the worst in the world, both for the animal and the tax payer. Good country roads, dry the the year round may be made at $7,000 to 2,000 per mile, and even less accord ing to location, and the expenditure pays. To puli a ton on macadam costs just half as much as on hard dirt, and one- fourth as much as on sand. It is esti mated in ' England that improved roads have made it possible for . three j horses to do the work formerly doVie, by j four, thus saving $100,000,000 annually. It is also stated that with improved roads, the farm produce could be hauled for $15,000,000 per annum less than- now, and that $160,000,000 would be added to the value of the farms. A worse land slide is reported in Fair- haven than anything in OregQU yet. It was an avalanche which came dowu the mountain on the east side of Lake What com sweeping toe house occupied oy Warren Burgess and his wife, together with his entire farm, into the lake. It seems that they were asleep in bed when the avalanche came down and awoke to find themselves 600 feet out in the lake on . a pile ot aeons. Mr. surgess naa his leg crushed in a jam of trees, but managed to swim with his wife to the shore. There they lay in a terrible storm without clothing for seven hours before help reached them. Mr. Burgess is well known here, having . formerly lived in theInland Empire. Some years ago he removed to the sound, and bad by hard labor cultivated and im proved a , farm on- the. bank of Lake Whatcom; The house' stood on a little plateau about fifty feet from the lake shore. Every vestige of the improve ment which his toil wrought was swept awav bv the terrible landslide. - On the 20th, in Dufur, to the wife of T.-H.Johnson, -a daughter. . . On the 25th, in The Dalles, to the wife of Hans Hansen, a daughter. Quickest Way to Cure a Cold. ' Do vou wish to know the-quickest way to cure a cold? We will tell vou. To cure a cold quickly, it must be treated before the cold has become settled in the system. The first symptoms of a cold is a drv, loud cough and sneezing. 'The coueh is soon followed by watery ex. pectoration and tne sneezing oy a pro fuse watery discharge from the nose. In se vere cases there is a thin white coating on the tongue. What to do? It is only necessary to take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in double does every hour. That will greatly lessen the severity of the cold and in many cases will effectu ally counteract it, and cure what would have been a severe cold within one or two days time. Try it and be convinced. 25 and 50 cent bottles - for sale . by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists. Pioneer Bakery. Having again reopened this popular bakery and employed the services of . a first class baker, I am prepared. to furn ish the public with the very best of bread, pies and cakes on short notice. Next door to Chrisman & Corson, Cor. Washington, and Second streets, The Dalles, Or. ' - Gko.'Ruch.-' Cloaks this GREAT MARK-DOWN SALE Remember first comers have choice of selections., , s t . , : ? N:' bV Ail'marked; in plain figures. . The Parting-, of . tha Ways. . ,; Wilkins and Watkins were' college chums and closet friends.; They had been hard students and bad taken' little out-door .exercise. When they shook hands and said good-bye iftt the end of their college' career, they , were in im paired health. "Both had dyspepsia, liver troubles and troublesome coughs. Wilkins had plenty . o" . money, and decided to travel for hie health-. Wat kills was poor. "I must go f work for my , living," said hej "but I'll try the remedy that- Robinson talks so much about ; Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery." ; -v';.i... -..In less than two years Wilkins came home' in his ' coffin. ' Watkins, now in the prime of life, is a bank president, rich and respected, and weighs 200 pounds. - "The 'Gojden - Medical Dis covery' saved my life at a critical time," he often sayc. "Oh, if poor Wilkins had only tried' it J" For. weak lungs, spitting of blood, all lingering coughs, and consumption in its early stages, it is an unequaled remedy. For Sale Cheap Fur Cash. The ' best ranch .in Gilliam countv. Oregon. Being the E. 4 of the N. W and N. E. of the S. E., S. i of S. W. of section 10, S. E. of the N. E.,"N.- of N. W. of section 11., and the IN. w. of the N. E., and the N. E. of the N. W. of section 15, tp. 6, S. 21 E. of the W. M. This ranch contains 4U0 acres; some of which is grazing. There are fair buildings on the place, and good water. r or further information address U. vv. Richie, P. O. box, 108, Walla Walla Wash. ' 10.2sdwlm American Cholera. From the Daily Rbvbiixr, Whatcom, Wash. "T. C. Burnett, the democratic candi date for sheriff, was 'taken violently ill at (Jlearbrook. lie' had all the symp toms of Asiatic cholera, and for an hour or two it was feared he would die. Thev finally gave him a dose of Chamberlain's (Jolic. Uuoiera ana uiarrlioea Keuiedv, which revived him until a physician ar rived." That is precisely what the manufacturers of that medicine recom mend for cholera. Send for a physician but give their medicine uiitil tne physi cian arrives, if cholera become preval ent in this" country "next" summer this preparation will be in great demand be cause it can always be' depended ' opon For sale by Blakeley & Houghton, drug gists. ' ;.'. : .... ' , . . NOTICK. r ..- -: All Dalles Citv warrants registered prior to January 6, 1891, will be paid H presented at niv office.. Interest ceases from and after this date. . Dated October 13th, 1892. ' L. ROKDBK, , tf. , Treae. Dalles City NOTICK: SAXK OF CITY LOTS. Notice is hereoy given that, by -uthorlty of it, by -i iK-sed t: Ordinauce o. iij, which paased the common council of Dalles city. SeDtember Sd. lSWi. enti tled "An t r inance entitled an ordinauce to Srovlde for thi- sale of certain lots belonging to alles city," I will, on Saturday next offer for sale at vublic auction, to the highest bidder. all of the lots and parts of lots situated in Kates Addition to Dalles City. Wa co county Oregon, not heretofore sold, as previously adver tixed. Each of said lots will bu sold noon the lot respectively and none of them shall be sold for a less sum than the value thereof as above stated. One fourth of the Triee bid on any Of said lots ahull be paid in cash at the time of sale, und the remainder in two equal payments on or before one ana two years irom tne aate oi sucn sale, respectively, witn interest on sucn aeienea pay ments at the rat - of ten per cent, per 'annum.. payable annually. Provided that payment may be made in full at the time of such sale at the option of the purchaser. The sale will begin at the hoar of ten o'clock a. m. of said dav and will be continued from time to time until all of said lots shall be sold. Dated this 1st day of November, 1S92. 1 , .FRANK MENKFEE1 U-ldtf;,' f- - - Recorder of Dalles City. DEW-DROP INN I.. C. 8HEKWOOD, Prop. The very best Wines, Liquors 'and Cor- . dials. 4; imported and Domes- ' ' PHOTOGRAPHER. First premium at the Wasco count- fair for best portraits and views. COLUMBIA n ANDY FACTORY Campbell Bros. Prop rs -. (SMcmin 'io.H. I. craa.) - Manufacturers of the finest French and i Home Made O -A. INT. 3D I IE S , East of Portland. -DEALERS IX- Trbpical Fruits, Nats, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish any of these goods at Wholesale or Retail . .' . la Inrf Style. Ics Cream and Soda Water. .104 Second Street. The Dalles. Or. The Dalles, Portland ani'AiMi ' Navigation Co. THROUGH Frsigm aila PassBoner Uiib Through dally service (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land." Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a. m. connecting at Cascade Locks with steamer Dalles City. Steamer Dalles City - leaves Portland (Yamhill street dock) at 6 a.. m. con necting with steamer Regulator for The Dalles. . ': ', fVA ... pAMSNecK m. One way.5.': J:A ."iCf J.. Round trip . . '. ;. V; " 1 ' .. . .' '. . ...$2 00 ,-;. 3.00 Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. Til ulator Line .... . ..'..,..V i .r-j : .,' V : - " Shipments received at wharf any time, day or night, and. delivered at- Portland -in' arrival.' ; 'Live stock" shipment solicited. '' Call on or address. ' -, - , W. C. ALLAWAY, - - . . Cieneral Ageat. B.F. LAUGH LIN, - ,,,.--.; a- General Msas(r. "THE DALLES;;- OREGOmSt,!