The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, April 13, 1893, Image 2

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The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
OFFICIAL PAPER OF DALLES CITY.
AND WASCO COUNTY.
Entered at the Postofflee at The Dalles, Oregon,
as second-class matter.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
BY MAIL (POSTAGE PREPAID) IN ADVANCE.
Weekly, 1 year 1 80
" 6 months 0 76
3 0 50
Daily, 1 year 6 00
" 6 months 3 00
per
u ou
Address all communication to " THE CHRON
ICLE," The Dalles, Oregon.
THURSDAY, -
APR. 13, 1893
OREGON AT THE WORLD'S FAIR.
The following is a list of the superintendents
of the different departments of the world's fair
commission. Anyone who has anything to ex
hibit should correspond with the proper officer,
one of the following :
V. F. MATLOCK, department of agriculture,
forestry and forest products, and live stock;
Pendleton.
C. W, AYERS, department of mines, mining
nnd metallurgy ; Ashland.
DR. J. R. CARDWELL, department of horti
culture, including floriculture and viticulture;
Portland.
GEO. T. MYERS, department of fishing and
fishing apparatus, manufactures, electrical and
mechanical inventions; Portland.
MRS. M. PAYTON, balem, (untllJuly 1, 1893)
and MRS. E. W. ALLEN, Portland, (after July 1,
1893), department of woman's work, comprising
the fine arts, hous hold economy and products
thereof.
E. E. McELROY, department of education,
including educational exhibits, literary, special,
general, music, etc. ; Salem.
GEO. W. McBKIDK, department of civil gov
ernment, including state and county; Salem.
Trusts are one of the greatest evils of
modern times. They are only the legal
means to rob the people. In order to
show th:s more plainly, we will refer to
the great rubber trust that has been in
operation since April 1. The majority
of the great rubber factories in the east
formed a trust last j-ear iu order to
raise the price of their output. Two or
three firms (amongst them the great
Woonsocket Rubber Co.,) remained out
side, but it seems now that all have
combined, as the price of rubber boots,
rubber shoes, etc., has advanced fully 30
per cent, since Aprii 1. Think of it,
farmers and laboring men, an advance
of 30 per cent, all at once ! This means,
for instance, that you have to pay $4.00
for a pair of boots that you cauld buy for
$3.00 last winter. Thus it will be seen
that trusts are on the increase. Almost
every line of industry is on the road to
that end. It muy be the infection was
communicated from the tendency of
everything to organize and fight with
the benefit of numbers. But latterly
capital has appeared to force the fight
ing. By all means let them have
enough of it. Let the watchword be:
'Down with the trusts."
it never rains but it pours. Now is
the season to bring out legislative rot
tenness, from that of a powerful nation
down to a borough. France started the
ball rolling in the Panama scandal,
showing a magnitude of bribery unpar
alleled in the history of the world, and
comprising a steal of $5,000,000. The
latest corruption is developed in Minne
sota. The senate committee report will
be the most sensational ever prepared
by a legislative committee and is all
based on sworn testimony. Frauds
and conspiracy of the most gi
gantic aud far-reaching character
are said to have been unearthed. It is
claimed the state has been defrauded
directly and indirectly out of hundreds
of thousands of dollars. Many
persons hitherto above suspicion are
said to be involved and besmirched by
the committee's findings. Innumerable
false homestead entries, soldiers' pre
emptions and Indian allotments, all
made on powers of attorney by means
of straw, in the interests of corporations,
are said to have been disclosed.
The Union Pacific has contracted for
the coming season an item of expenditure
in the shape of 2,500,000 ties, the cost
of which "will amount to $1 ,000,000, or 40
cents each. Extensive preparations are
being made for building branch lines to
tap the main portions now in operation
west and northwest. In different de
partments of the shop sat Omaha several
thousand men are busy turning out ma
terial for new rolling stock. The loco
motive department has completed seven
unusual by large engines. Besides build
ing a number of new vestibule cars,
many of the old ones are being run into
the shops for alteration and renovation.
JcjMehson once said ne was under no
obligation to think today what he
thought yesterday. That was the blunt
expression of a bit of philosophy recog
nized to a greater or less degree by all
the great minds of earth, and when
Chamberlain quotes the past anti-home
rule utterances of four liberal ministers
now leading the way in a proposal to es
tablish an Irish parliament, be weakens
his own cause. He merely argues that
while others have advanced in states
manship, learning and liberality, he has
been standing still by the established
systems of the dying past.
A news item in another column re
lates that workmen and a large install
ment of machinery have been put to
work at the Monoghan quarry, six miles
from the locks ; also that the family of
the senior Day has arrived. All reports
received during the last two weeks are
confirmatory that at last, work is to be
hastened on the locks, and that in
eighteen months the dreams and hopes
of twenty-fire years will be realized.
Go to S. & N. Harris for stiff felt hats.
A fine line only 50 cents each.
Honey to Loan.
I have money to loan on short time
loans. Go. W. Rowland.
SPOKANE SPARKS.
Holler Man Wallowa Around In the
Nebulas Left by Bill Nye.
William Edgar Nye has come and
gone. He showed here last Saturday,
and we got here on Monday, so the peo
ple do not really miss him so much as
they would otherwise.
This town is not nestled in a valley by
a silvery streamfat the foot of a mount
ain, covered with laurel and stately
pines, where the winds moan in the tree
tops like a dirge over the grave of Moses
on Mt. Nebo ; not by a dam site, for
there are many mills and factories here,
and such powerful falls that a dam is
not really needed. I don't believe that
they could make one stick. I don't
know exactly what nestled means, but
I guess this town is not nestled, for it is
all spraddled out on both aides of the
Spokane river and covers a heap of
space that could not be used for any
thing else. It is like the old Connecti
cut Yankee's turkey. He told a friend
he set her on seventy-two eggs. His
friend said: "What did you do that
for? She can't near cover them." "I
know that," he said, "but I wanted to
see the old fool spread herself." There
was just a touch of profanity in the ori
ginal story, but early good training for
bids its use, and out of respect for the
dead turkey (for it killed her) we will
not use it.
We were in a chair car from The
Dalles, in one of those instruments of
torture like that used on the martyrs in
the Fourth century to make them let up
on being Christians, and it worked to a
charm. No one who rides in a chair car
can ever be a Christian.
When we passed Umatilla the con
ductor punched me in the ribs, having
previously punched my ticket, and told
me to move into the car next behind, as
it was the one that went to Spokane
Falls. I walked up to a stranger that
sat in the seat next me, thinking it was
F . He was very sound asleep and
it took considerable shaking to thor
oughly arouse him. I asked him to
excuse me, and I am not certain that he
did, though I was very polite to him.
If he ever sees this explanation of how
it happened, I think he will yet.
At Pendleton we got breakfast at the
railroad lunch counter. Black stuff,
alleged to be coffee, and sandwiches,
thirty days old that is is the bread was
that age ; the deceased steer could not
have been less than thirty years old at
the time he was assassinated.
A poor old man got on the train here,
with his wife and two daughters and
nine (9) satchels and boxes, besides a
dinner basket. The girls were too Droud
to help their father carry the baggage,
but not quite proud enough to save their
poor old sire a few steps, and he had to
return to the platform four times to get
baggage. "Now oount them up," he
said in great excitement, fearing that he
would be left. "Hold my coat while I
run and get the dinner basket." Sev
eral of the passengers suppressed what
otherwise would have been a smile. The
party were ticketed to Balls Junction,
and got off at about every other station.
At Walla Walla the conductor asked
the old man to please stay on till he was
put off.
We ran into snow at Echo. At
Weston it was five inches deep, but we
ran out of it before reachine Walla
Walla.
In the Palouse country they are be
tween hay and grass they are out of
hay and not into grass, and. Joseph
could see seven lean kine here without
going a block.
Eli Stout got on the train at Milton
and was seated with me to Walla Walla.
He says he came to the Walla Walla
country with Judge Martin , of Pendle
ton, in 1843. The Catholics had a mis
sion there for the Nez Perces. Mr.
Stout says he was on Hosier creek in
1848 ; that at that time it was called
Dog creek. I told him that it was pro
perly named, and should be called that
yet ; that I lived there and had lost one
hundred dollars and fifteen cents worth
of dogs on March 6th, last, by blood
poisoning one valued at $100 and one
valued at 15 cents, or two tor a quarter.
Upon cross examination it was brought
out that Hood river was called Dog
creek, and I'm mighty sorry of it, for
I am often asked, "Where do you live?'
and I would be proud to be able to faith
fully say, "On Dog Creek!"
Sworn to and subscribed before me, a
notary public, in and for Spokane
county, Wash., April 11, 1833.
John Pocahontas Smith,
Seal. Notary Public.
Specimen Cases.
S. H. Clifford, New Cassel, Wis., was
troubled with neuralgia and rheuma
tism, his stomach was disordered, his
liver was affected to an alarming de
gree, appetite fell away, and he was
terribly reduced in flesh and strength.
Three bottles of Electric Bitters cured
him. Edwd Shepherd, Harrisburg, 111.,
had a running sore on his leg of eight
years' standing. Used three bottles of
Electric Bitters and seven boxes of
Bucklen's Arnica Salve, and his leg is
sound and well. John Speaker, Cataw
ba, O., had five large fever sores on his
leg, doctors said he was incurable. One
bottle Electric Bitters and one box
Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured him en
tirely. Sold at Snipes & Kinersly's
drug store.
One drunken hobo in the lockup last
night.
Persons who are subject to attacks of
bilious colic can almost invariably tell,
by their feelings, when to expect an' at
tack. If Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy is taken as soon
as these symptoms appear, they can
ward off the disease. Such persons
should always keep the Remedy at hand,
ready for immediate use when needed.
Two or three doses of it at the right
time will save them much suffering.
For sale by Blakeley and Houghton,
druggists.
How to Tell tbe Kpeeu
There is one way of telling the speed
of a railway train which old travelers
claim is almost infallible. Every time
the car passes over a joint in the track
there is a distinct click; count the num
ber of these clicks in twenty seconds,
and it is said you have the number of
miles the train is going per hour, as the
length cf tc rail is uniform.
Gone mad
the person with bad blood who's not
taking Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery. You are bereft of judg
ment and good sense if you allow
Sour blood to get out of order, your
ver sluggish life dull, everything
blue, for you may soon find out that
you're in the grave or next to it
because you did not procure the
G. M. D. soon enough, and some
dread disease, may be influenza
or consumption, may be typhoid
or malarial fever, has taken you.
Consumption is Lung Scrofula. For
Scrofula in its myriad forms, and
for all Liver, Blood and Lung dis
eases, the "Discovery" is an un
equaled remedy. Everybody, now
and then, feels " run-down " " played
out," with no power to generate
vitality, in fact, just too sick to be
welL That's where the right kind
of medicine comes in, and the "Dis
covery" does for a dollar what the
doctor wouldn't do for less than five
or ten.
We claim that nothing like it has
been discovered for a blood-purifier.
It's guaranteed by the makers. Youl
money is returned if it dosen't bene
fit or cure you.
Ask your Dealer
-FOR THE-
1
Hand Made
M. A. GUNST & CO.
SOLE AGENTS,
PORTLAND, OREGON.
COMPLETE
MANHOOD
AND HOW TO ATTAIN IT.
At last a medical work that tells the causes,
describes the effects, points the remedy. This
is scientifically the most valuable, artistically
the most beautiful, medical book that has ap
peared for years ; 96 pages, every page bearing a
half-tone illustration in tints. Some of the sub
jects treated are Nervous Debility, Impotency,
Sterility, Development, Varicocele, The Husband
ThoseJ intending Marriage, etc.
Every Man whowould know the Grand Truth,
the Plain Facts, the Old Secrets and New Discov
eries of Medical Science as'applicd to Married Life,
who would atone for past fouies, and avoid future
pitfalls, should write for this WONDERFUL LIT
TLE BOOK.
It will be sent free, under seal, while the edi
tiou lasts. If convenient, enclose ten cents to
pay postage alone. Address the publishers,
ERIE MEDICAL CO.,
BUFFALO, N. Y.
Rheumatism ,
Lumbago, Sc!at!ca,
Kidney Complaints,
Lame Back, &c.
05. SANDEN'S ELEGLC BELT
With Electro-Magnetic SUSPENSORY
Latest Patents ! Best Improvements I
Will cure without medicine all Wesfauss resulting f rora
over-taxation of brain nerve forces t excesses or Indis
cretion, as nervous debility, sleeplessness, Languor
rheumatism, kidney, liver and bladder complaint!
lame back, lumbago, sciatica, all female complaints
general ill health, etc. This electric Belt contains
Wtstorfal IwprateaMats over all others. Current Is
Instantly feltW wearer or we forfeit S,000.00, and
will cure all or the above diseases or no pay. Thou.
pds nave been cured by this marvelous Invention
after all other remedies failed, and we give hundred!
of testimonials in this and every other state.
Our Powerful Improved ELECTRIC STJ8PKHSORT. the
greatest boon ever offered weak men, FREK wttk all
todar. Send for Ulos'd Pamphlet, mailed, sealed, free
. SANDEN ELECTRIC CO.,
To. XTS KUrat Street, JOKXXan& OJKK.
Amor
mm
H. M. Bbajll I
Cashier.
Fitst Rational Bank.
CHE DALLES, - OREGON
A General Banking Business transacted
Deposits received, subject to Sight
Draft or Check.
Collections made and proceeds promptly
remitted on day of collection.
Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on
New York, San Francisco and Port
land. DIRECTORS.
D. I. Thompson. Jug. S. 8citisv-k
Ed. M. Williams, Geo. A. Lutp.
H. M. Bkaix.
FSEflCH & CO.,
BANKERS.
TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BUSINEr -
Lettera of Credit issued available in he
Eastern States.
Sight Exchange and Telegraphic
Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St.
Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon,
Seattle Wash., and various points in Or
egon and Washington.
Collections made at all points on fav
rable terms.
THE DALLES
Rational Bank,
Of DALLES CITY, OB.
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.
House
Moving!
Andrew Velarde
IS prepared to do any and all
kinds of work in his line at
reasonable figures. Has the
largest house moving outfit
in Eastern Oregon.
Address P.O.Box 181, The Dalles
W. IT. WISEMAN. WJI. MAKHEBS.
lUiseman & Warders,
Saloon and Wine Rooms
The Dalles,
Oregon.
Northwest corner of Second and
Court Streets.
The Snug.
W. H. BUTTS, Prop.
No. 90 Second Sreet, The Dalles, Or.
This well known stand, kept by the
well known W. H. Butts, long a resi
dent of Wasco county, has an extraordi
nary fine stock of
Sheep Herder's Delight and Irish Disturbance.
In fact, all the leading brands of fine
Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Give the
old man a call and you will come again.
the Dalles
AND
Prineville
Stage
Line
J. D. PARISH. Prop.
Leaves The 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 Prin"ille with
Stages from Eastern and Southern Or
egon, Northern California and
all Interior Points.
Also makes close connection at The Dalles with
trains from Portland and all eastern points.
.' Courteous drivers,
.' Cool accommodations along toe road.
. First-class coaches and horses used.
.- Express matter bandied witl can.
All persons wishing passage must waybill at of
fices before taking passage; others will not be
received. Express must be waybilled at offices
or the Stage Co. will not be responsible. The
company will take no risk on money transmit
ted. Particular attention given to delivering
express matter at Prineville and all southern
points in Oregon, and advance charges will be
paid by the company.
STAGE OFFICES;
K. Slchel & Co. Store. Umatilla House.
Prineville. The Dalles.
6. SCHEKCK,
President
: DEALERS IN:
staple and Fancy tones,
Hay, Grain and Feed.
Masonic Block, Corner Third and
flew
Qolumbia
jHotei.
THE DALLES,
OREGON.
THE DALLES MERCANTILE CO.
SOLE AGENTS FOR THE DALLES.
BRAINARD & ARMSTRONG'S
SPOOL SILK
FINE LINE OF
UNDERWEAR
No. 390 to 394, 2d street, The Dalles
"There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at its flood,
leads on to fortune."
The poet unquestionably had reference to the
-m Furniture & Cumins
at CRANDALL
-ellin--' l e goods
v HELL BRICK,
PAUL KREFT & CO.,
-DEALERS IN-
PAINTS, OILS
And the Most Complete and the
Practical Painters and Paper
Sherwin-Williams and J. W. Masury's
the most skilled workmen employed. xlgents lor Alasury liquid .faults, jno
chemical combination or soap mixture. A first class article in all colors. All
orders promptly attended to.
Faint Shoo corner Thirdand Washington Sts.. The Dalles. Oregon
Lace Curtains,
Have your Lace Curtains, Shirts, Col
lars and Cuffs laundried by
THE TROY STEAM LAUNDRY,
of Portland, Or. Leave your bundles
with Thos. McCoy, No. 110 Second St.,
before Tuesday noon, and get them on
Saturday.
Jatisfaetioi? guaranteed.
WINHNS
5 HE NEW TOWN has been platted on the old camp ground, at the Forks and
Falls of Hood river, with large sightly lots, broad streets and alleys, good soil,
pure cold water and shade in profusion, perfect drainage, delightful mountain
climate, the central attraction as a mountain summer resort and for all Oregon,
being the nearest town to Mt. Hood. It is also unparalled as a manufacturing
center, being the natural center for 150 square miles of the best cedar and fir
timber, possessing millions of horse power in its dashing streams and water
falls, easily harnessed. Where cheap motive power exists, there the manu
factories will center, surrounded by soil and climate that cannot be excelled
anywhere for fruit and agriculture, and with transportation already assured
you will find this the place to make a perfect home or a paying investment
TITLE PERFECT
W. RossWinatis.
Freeborn & Company,
DEALERS IN
mall Paper and Hoom fllouldiflcjs
295 ALDER ST., COR. FIFTH,
Old Number 95,
Court Streets. The Dalles.Oregop.
This Popular House
Has lately been thoroughly renovated and newly
furnished throughout, and is now better than
ever prepared to furnish the best Hotel
accommodations of any house in the
city, and at the very low rate of
$1 a day. First-Class Meals, 25c.
( Roe of the fast and commodious opposition Stage
lo Dufur, Kingsley, Tygh Valley, Wapinitia,
Warm Springs and Prineville is in the Hotel
and persons going to Prineville can save
$4.00 by going on this Stage line.
All trains stop here.
&, BURGET'S,
out at greatly-reduced rates.
UNION ST.
AND GLASS,
Latest Patterns and Designs in
Hangers. None bu t the best brands of the
Paints used in all .inr work, and none but
See me on the ground, or
address me at Hood River,
Wasco County, Oregon.
Portland, Oregon.