The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, March 13, 1893, Image 1

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    THE DALLES, OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH 13, 1893.
NO. 71.
VOL. V.
:
Dress Goods Wash Fabrics j, . J White Goods , , able Linens
SHOES Futtnishing Goods CliOTHlflG
Pongee Silks Drapery Silks Dress Silks Trimming Silks
FREfiCJi & CO.,
BANKERS.
TRANBACT A GENERALBANKINO BUSINESS
Letters of Credit issued available in
Eastern States.
he I
Sight Exchange and Telegraphic
Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St.
Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon,
Seattle WaBh., and various points in Or
egon and Washington.
Collections made at all points on fav
orable terms.
J. B. BCHBHCK,
President.
II. M. Bbalj.
Cashier.
first Rational Bank.
YHE DALLES. -
OREGON
A General Banking Business transacted
- - Deposits received, subject to signt
Draft or Check.
Collections made and proceeds promptly
remitted on day 01 collection.
Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on
. New York, Ban Francisco and irori
t land.
DIREOTOKS.
D. P. Thompson. Jno. 8. Schknck
Ed. M. Williams, Geo.
A. Libbk.
H. M. Bball.
4 THE DALLES
Rational Bank,
Of DALLES CITY, OR.
President - -Vice-President,
Cashier, - -
- Z. F. Moody
Charles Hilton
M. A. Moody
General Banking Business Transacted.
Sight Exchanges Sold on
NEW YORK,
SAN FRANCISCO,
CHICAGO
and PORTLAND, OR.
Collections made on favoreble terms
at all accessible points.
the Dalles
AND
Prineville
Line
J. D. PARISH, Prop.
Leaves Tbe Dalles at 6 a. m. every day and ar
rives at Prineville in thirty-six hours. Leaves
Prineville at 5 a. m. every day and arrives at
The Dalles In thirty-six hours.
Carries the U. S. Mail, Passengers and Express
Connects at Prinf-llle with
StaeeB from Eastern and Southern Or-
egon( nortnern uamornia aau
all Interior Points.
Also makes close connection at The Dalles with
trains irom roiuanu uuu &u Buwauiwu"
; courteous Amers.
Good accommodations along tie road.
, nrst-class coacles and torses used.
. Eijress matter Handled lift caie.
in nomnna shiner nassaee must waybill at of'
fices before taking passage; others will not be
received. Express must be waybilled at oflices
or the Stage Co. will not be responsible. The
company will take no risk on money transmit
PapHnniii, nttontinn riven to delivering
exnress matter at Prineville and all southern
points in Oregon, and advance charges will be
1MUU UJ UiCWJUl'BUj-
STAGE OFFICES',
M. Slchel & Co. Store.
Prineville.
Umatilla Home.
The Dalles.
PHOTOGRAPHER.
First premium at the Wasco county
Stag
fair for best portraits and views.
JJ v jf 'eiii r
Our S-orxans: Stools, of .
COLUMBIA
CANDY FACTORY
Campbell Bros. Proprs
; (Successors to V. S. Cram.)
Manufacturers of the finest French and
Home Made
CADDIES,
East of Portland.
DEALERS IN
Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco.
Can furnish any of these goods at Wholesala
or Retail
In K very style.
Ice Cream and Soda Water
104 Second Street. The Dalles. Or.
JOHN PASHEK,
jneiGixaat Tailor,
76 CouPt Street,
Next door to Wasco Sun Office.
Has jnst received a fine line of Samples
.for spring and summer Suitings.
Come aiifl See He. New Fashions.
Cleaning and Hepairing
to order. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Seed Wheat,
" Oats,
" Com,
" Rye, -"
-Potatoes,
Garden Seeds,
Grass "
Seeds in Bulk;
-AT-
J.
H. CROSS'
Hay, Grain and Feed Store.
XXI. H. Young,
BiacKsmiifi & wagofi SfiOD
General Blacksmithing and Work done
promptly, and all work
Guaranteed.
porse Shoeing a Speciality
TIM Street, opposite tie old Liele Stand.
Money, to Loan !
Six Per Cent. Interest.-
Six Years'
Sinking Fund or Building and Loan Plans.
The New England National
Building,
Oregonian Building, Portland, Or.
JOEL G. KOONTZ, AGENT,
Tlao Dalles, Oregon. v
Jgp3 Agents Wanted! Address the Portland Office.
iea to iia.ve you. ua.ii ciiiu eaiiiinc i.w.r.
line, best assortment, latest novelties, . and
ua3r x" c? jsj are tlie Xj o w & & "t .
A. M. WiLLSAI
"The Regulator Line"
Tie Dalles, Portland anl Astoria
Navigation Co.
THROUGH
Freignt ana Passenger Line
Through dallv 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 . Uity.
Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland
(Yamhill street dock) at 6 a. m. con
necting with steamer Regulator for The
.Dalles.
PASSENGER KATES.
One way
Round trip.
$2.00
3.00
Freight Rates Greatly Reduced.
Shipments received at wharf any time,
dav or night, and delivered at Portland
on arrival. Live stock shipments
solicited. Call on or address. .
W. C. ALLAWAY,
General Agent.
B. F.
LAUGH LIN,
. " General Manager.
THE DALLES.
OREGON
The Dalles
GigaF : Faetory
FACTORY NO. 105.
flTpt A 13 Q of the Best Brands
JLvXx-JL0 manufactured, and
orders from all parts of the country filled
on tbe 8nortest notice.
The reputation of THE DALLES CI
GAR has become firmly established, and
the demand for the home manufactured
article is increasing every day.
A. ULRICH & SON.
Time, and
May be Paid On or Before Maturity.
Loan & Investment Ass n,
e fire in boston
NOt SO Man?-LiyeS LOSt aS at FirSt
SUDDQSefl.
THE VACILLATIONS OF A BARON
He Is First Expelled by the Socialists
and Then by the Anarchists
Minor Mention.
Boston, Mass., March 11. The three
greatest fires in Boston's history, those
of 1872, 1889 and 1893, were all rung from
the same box, 52. No change is war
ranted in the estimates of the loss and
insurance sent out last night. Of the
property loss of $4,550,000, a little over
$1,000,000 is on the buildings and the re
mainder on the stock. This is covered
bv an insurance -close to- $4,000,000.
Firemen searched the ruins all day for
the dead. One additional body was
found, that of Henry Turner, aged 18,
who was one of the employes of-the
Jaquith Rubber company. Lewis Buck,
aged 19, of the same company, is miss
ing. Thev worked on the fifth floor.
It is also believed that the body pf Chas
O'Diorne, traveling salesman for Red
path Brothers, is in the ruins. A thor
omrh search has been made in the hos
pital and morgues, but no trace of him
can be lound. vine persons empioyea
by Horace, Partridge & Co., in the
. a , 3
building where the fire started, are all
accounted for. It was generally be
lieved the bodies of 12 or 15 of them had
been buried in the ruins.
BOMB INDIVIDUAL LOSSES.
T. B. Fitz, a member of the firm of
Brown, Durell & Co., says the stock
which was not burned is of such a nature
as to be easily injured by water and
smoke, so that they have nothing left
but the insurance. He thinks it will
take $1,200,000 to make them whole.
The damage to the United States hotel
is placed by the management at $50,000.
A. Vacillating Baron.
New York, March 12. Great was the
joy of the enemies of Jobann Most today
when it was learned that a real live
baron, who had become an anarchist of
the goriest type and was Most's right
bower for months, had been expelled
from Most's organization. The expelled
nobleman was the Baron von Barnekon,
who came to this country from Germany
about 18 manths ago with recommenda
tions from Neidringhup. The socialists
received him with open arms and he be
came a writer for the socialist organ,
the Volkszeitung, attacking the anarch
ists and proclaiming socialism an ideal
destiny of humanity. When the baron
had been writing for several months,
Mr. Gronsieg, one of the editors, found
several items charged against himself
for dinners and beer in saloons and res
taurants, which, he said he could not ac
count for. Alittle investigation showed,
he says, that the baron had represented
himself as Gronseig and had been feed'
ing himself under that name. There
were explanations, recriminations
and oratorical blue fire at this dis
covery, and alter a very Btonny meeting
the baron was expelled from tbe social
ist labor party.
: He went over to Most and became a
wrirer to Freiheit. He outdid Most him
self in his diatribes against socialism,
which he described as a concentration of
the worst evils of capitalism. About a
week ago Most went out to collect some
money for advertisements procured by
the baron. He found, he says, that the
barcn had been there before him . and
collected the money witoont the formal
ity of accounting for it. This was re
ported to Moet's anarchists organization.
Its meeting was the etormiest ever
known in its history. Men capable of
swearing in four- or five different
languages exhausted their powers, and
fay acclamation it was voted that the
Uaiuu nuuiu ucw v v vv i) nivi
did. It is reported that the Peukert
group of atoimsts, who do, their dyna
miting as their individual consciences
move them, want the baron now, and
will try to show that the whole thing
was a conspiracy to get rid of the baron.
Before Barnecoup went on the Freiheit
he bad been trying his band at report
ing for the German dailies. To one of
them he sold a story of the arrest of
Most in Newark. It was well written
and devoid of foundation. The baron
now says he was captain of a regiment
of drawguards in Germany, and lostjin a
single night at gambling 300,000 marks,
which he was unable to pay, so he had
to resign. .
A New Treaty.
New York, March 11. In a lengthy
dispatch regarding the Hawaiian treaty,
the Washington correspondent of a
morning paper says that a gentleman
closely connected with the administra
tion is authority for the statement that
the Hawaiian matter will be taken up
immediately by Judge Gresham,' and
that a message transmitting a treaty pf
some kind will be sent to the senate
during the present special session.
This gentleman, who is in a position to
know, said further that the treaty would
be on annexation lines, although radi
cally different in its terms from the Har
rison treaty. The features that would
bo added, he stated, would leave - no
possible chance for the sugar syndicate
to reap any benefits, which will relieve
the United States from any financial
responsibility ' for the support of the
islands. In other words, the attitude
of this administration is not unfavorable
to annexation, but is opposed to the
Harrison treaty, because it is thought to
have been too hastily drawn, and not
full and definite enough in ita scope to
properly protect the interests of our gov
ernment. - . :
Tbe Basil Beady.
San Fkascisco, March 12. The reve
nue cutter Richard Rush is lying in the
stream off the foot of Clay street with
fires banked and ready at a moment's
notice to sail for any port she may be
ordered to. The Rush is under. special
orders from Washington, D. C. What
her destination is there is no way of tell
ing positively, but it is more than likely
that the revenue cutter is bound for
Honolulu, and that besides dispatches
she may take down, a senatorial com
mittee to investigate matters at the
islands. Captain Hooper has been
ordered to prepare the Rush immedi
ately for a 2,500-mile voyage to extend
over two months, and to hold the vessel
under waiting orders.
San Fbancisco, March 12. From
Washington arrangements have been
made with Spreckles Bros, to hold the
steamer Australia,' which was to have
sailed for Honolulu Wednesday. The
following dispatch was received late yes
terday from Superintendent of Foreign
Mails Brooks by Postmaster Backus:
'Please ascertain and advise me this
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report.
IV
evening what price tne agent will name
to hold the Australian 48 honrer"
Postmaster Backus conferred at once
with Spreckles,and the terms named
were evidently satisfactory, for tho post
office department has telegraphed Mr-
Spreckels agreeing to his terms and
asking that the Australian be held until
Friday.
An Ingenious Prisoner.
It is seldom that a convict turns tho
hours of his enforced confinement to such
good purpose as an inmate of a Maryland
prison. TTi term of imprisonment is
thirteen years, on a conviction of horse
stealing, of which' he insists he was in
nocent. By working overtime he has
earned such sums of money as to enable
him to purchase books, of which his cell
contains over 200. A short time ago,
when electric light wires were being
placed in the prison, he became inter
ested in electricity and bought some
standard works on the subject. The re
sult was the cons traction of half a dozen
different electrical appliances, including
a burglar alarm, which he has just com
pleted for the bedroom of the warden of
the prison.
Another result ol nis industry is aloeff
which is so arranged that hammering on
it drives the bolts deeper into their fas
tening. He exhibited a model of this
lock to the warden, who was so pleased
with it that it was at once adopted for
use in the prison. Castings for the locks
were made in the prison foundry, a lathe
was set up in the prisoner's cell and he
was relieved of all other tasks so that his
entire time could be devoted to the man
ufacture of his locks, with which in a
short time all the dormitories of the
prison will be provided. Exchange.
Against tbe Insurance Compuii;.
A merchant who was a member of a
mutual accident insurance association
was killed, while hunting: for recreation,
from an accidental shot. The associa
tion provided for the payment of sums
ranging from $5,000 to $500, according
to the occupation of the member. Mer
chants' certificates call for $j,000; but
the company paid the beneficiaries of
the man in question only $500, on tho
strength of a provision that any member
receiving an injury while engaged tem
porarily in another occupation more
hazardous than the one given in his cer
tificate, he shall be entitled only to such
sum as provided for in the occupation in
n which . he is engaged at the time or
injury.
Tbe Illinois supreme court held tnat
the beneficiaries were entitled to the
whole $5,000, as the word "occupation"
In the bylaw has ' reference to trade, vo
cation or profession, and does not pre
clude a member from the performance
of acts which are simply incidents con
nected with the daily life of men in all
ynrsuits. St. Louis Globe-Democrat
FOB SALE.
One lot, with a good dwelling and out
buildings situated west of tho Academy
grounds, and fronting Liberty street on
the ea6t, is for 6ale at a bargain. Terms
easy. Apply at this office for informa
tion. Title perfect.
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