The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, January 03, 1894, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Tne Dalles Daily Chronicle.
OFFICIAL PAPER OF DALLES CITY.
AJKD WASCO COUNTY..
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
' BY HAIL, POSTAGE PREPAID, IN ADVANCE.
Weekly. 1 year -t 1 60
6 months.
0 75
0 60
" g
Daily, 1 year.
" 6 month.
" per "
ddreu all communication to
1CLE," The Dalles, Oregon.
6 00
8 00
0 50
THE CHRON-
Post-OfBce.
OPTIC HOURS
Ganeral Delivery Window. . .... .8 a. m. to 7 p. m.
Money Order " 8 a. m. to 4 p. m.
Sunday i D, " 9 a. m. to 10 a. m.
CLOSING OP MAIL8
trains going East 9 p. m. and 11:45 a. m.
" " West 9 p.m. and 5:90 p.m.
Stage for Goldendale 7:80 a. m.
" " Prlnevlllo 5:30 a.m.
Dufurand Warm Springs. ..5:80 a. m.
Leaving for Lyle & Hartland. .6-:S0 a. m.
j Antelope 5:30 a. m.
Except Sunday.
Tri-weekly. Tuesday Thursday and Saturday.
J " Monday Wednesday and Friday. .
WEDNESDAY,
JAN. 3. 1894
Mr. R. H. Thornton, in the Oregonian,
recommends that the ministers of the
state preach a sermon on the subject of
Pennoyer's last letter, taking as a text
I Kings, xiii, 18, "But He Lied."
Alexander Roakaday, who lives in
Harrison county, Ind., celebrated his
one hundred and fourteenth birthday
recently. - He says he has voted at every
presidential election since 1800, a period
of ninety-three years,- and has always
cast his vote for the dnmocratic nomi
nee. We shudder to think what Alex
ander will do when he walks into an
Australian ballot box.
We notice that the Forum and many
newspapers of the East speak of the un
usual dullness daring the Christmas
season, and that a comparatively small
amount of money,has been expended for
. Christmas remembrances. In contrast
to these reports as well as the letter of
Gov. Pennoyer is the holiday business
done this eeason in' The Dalles. Our
merchants say that the December trade
of 1893 has exceeded that of several years
previous, much against their expecta
tions, as some of them (ailed to stock up
to the extent they would have done had
they anticipated so lively a trade. As a
result there is not that dearth of money
in circulation which we are lead to be
lieve from accounts are a feature of most
cities in the land. .
The calling of a road convention to
devise ways and means to improve the
roads, is a Btep in the right direction.
The subject of good roads is creating a
good deal of attention everywhere. In
Ohio, especially, a man has little chance
to be elected to any public position un
less he is prepared to advocate and vote
for good - roads. In this country it is
next to impossible for a farmer to haul
either wood or produce to market in
winter time. Very often produce brings
a better price in winter than in the fall.
But the farmer, especially if he lives
any distance from a town or railway
station, cannot, jowing to the state of the
roads, take advantage of this condition.
The merchants are also sufferers from
bad roads. For a large part of the year
they are deprived ' of the trade that
should come to them from the country.
Everybody, in fact, is vitally interested
in the subject of good roads.
CURRENT PRESS COMMENT.
The government receipts are running
about $5,000,000 a month behind the ex
penditures.' ; This is democratic economy.
When Professor Garner has succeeded
in acquiring an accurate knowledge of
the chimpanzee language and can con
verse with the wild simians of Africa, he
will have the proud distinction of being
known as the'missing link."
Women now have full suffrage in
Colorado, Wyoming, New Zealand, Ice
land, Isle of Man, Jersey and Pitcairn
island. This territory has an area of
345,723 square miles, and 1,287,200
people. The woman suffragists are yet a
long way short of storming the castle,
but they certainly have their foot in the
open door.
The Oregonian says : Very little dis
cussion of the tariff question is needed.
We know what the conditions have been
under protection during more than 30
years. We know what the conditions
Tinder "the change," or under the men
ace or shadow of it, are now. It is not
all a matter of theory or opinion, but
purely a matter of experience and fact
The country has the experience, is in the
presence of the fact, and wants no more
oi either. - ;
'
The persistent cough which nsuallv
follows an attack: of the grip can be per
manehtly cured by taking Chamberlain'i
Cough Remedy. Mr. W. A. McGuire, of
McKay, Ohio, Bays : "La Grippe left
me with a severe cough. After using sev
eral different medicines without relief, I
tried Uhamberlain's Conch Rempdv
which effected a permanent cure. I have
-also found it to be without an equal for
children when troubled with colds or
roup. Fifty-cent bottles for eale by
Blakely & Houghton, druggists.
'J' Peanuts!
Cheaper' than anywhere else at the
California winehoude.
TO HONOK KOSCIUSKO.
Monument in Honor of One of the
Greatest of Heroes.
It Will Be Erected in Chicago by the PoUata.
Kesidents of the United States The
Work of Baronet, the F
mous Sculptor.
A little over a year ago the secretary
of state for Illinois issued a charter to
the "Kosciusko Monument associa
tion." Little was then said of this
new association and perhaps less was
expected, but still the members of the
association have continued to work in
a quiet way until to-day they promise
to present to Chicago . a monument
which will be second, perhaps, only to
the Grant monument in Lincoln park.
This monument will be erected in
Humboldt park and represent Gen.
Thaddeus Kosciusko, the Polish patriot
and hero. . . , .. "
As dear as the name of George Wash
ington is to every American, so the
name of Kosciusko is to every true Po
lander and every liberty-loving man.
He was a man whose whole object was
the defense of the ' weak against the
strong, the oppressed against the op
pressor. Having fought through the
war of independence- of the United
States against England, where iis
bravery gained for him the ranlrof
general and the personal friendship of
Washington, he returned to Poland,
which at that time was oppressed from
all sides by its powerful neighbors.
Kosciusko was the oft-repeated hero of
the last struggles of this unhappy
land. The braverycf this wonderful
leader, and patriot and his gallant
band, who have made themselves fa
mous in innumerable struggles and
battles against tenfold foes, has been
told in hundreds of stories, sung in a
hundred songs, related in prose and
poetry until his name is as fresh, to
day in tlie mind and heart 'of his coun
trymen as it was a hundred years ago,
when it resounded through Europe
and the entire world and gained for
the unhappy country but words of
praise and admiration.
As the general desire was that the
monument should be made by a Polish
artist, the contest was published in
Europe, in the city of Lemberg, an
ancieht Polish city. Nearly all the
Polish sculptors competed for the prize.
Awards were offered of S1,000 for the
first prize, 750 for the second prize
PROPOSED KOSCITTSKO MONUMENT.
md S500 for the third prize. !The con
test was conducted under the direction
of Prof. Emil - Uabdank Eanikowski,
dean of the Lemberg university. The
jury was composed of Julius Ilossak, a
prominent painter; Vincent " Savvski, ,
an architect of high reputation: Julian
Markowski, a sculptor; Katchor Ba
towski, an artist painter; Daun. pro
fessor of sculpture at the University of
Fine Arts: Talowski, a prominent
architect; Ilochberger, a civil engi
neer; Count George Borkowski, presi
dent of the Society of Fine Arts and
Prof. Emil Uabdank Danikowski.
All models sent for competition were
placed in the city hall of Lemberg,
where the jury convened May 18 last,
and after careful study and delibera
tion announced it's , decision.
The first prize was awarded to Thad
deus Baroncz, a sculptor of reputation
and ability. His ' model represents
Kosciusko in the uniform of an Ameri
can general of the revolution sitting
upon a spirited horse holding aloft in
his right hand the banner of freedom,
with the inscription: "Free, Sovereign,
Independent." The rider has brought
his horse to a sudden standstill, and,
rising in the stirrups with head erect
and inspired face, raised high the
standard of liberty he so dearly loved.
The horse, with his front legs dug into
the ground, and through the sudden
stop thrown upon his hind legs, with
the rider standing erect in the stirrups,
represents a unique and striking .fig
ure, bearing a character historically
and strikingly monumental. The
model arrived In Chicago a few days
ago and has been set up in the Polish
hall, Bradley and Noble streets.
The pedestal of Mr. Baroncz's monu
ment is a marvel of beauty and sym
metry, on one sijle of which is repre
sented in bas relief the meeting of
Kosciusko with Gen. George Washing
ton, surrounded by Gens. Green and La
fayette President Jefferson, Benjamin
Franklin, Pulaski and other famous
men of that time; on the other side one
of the battles in which Kosciusko was
victorious. The whole pedestial is in
excellent harmony with the figure and
is strikingly light, fresh and original.
The monument will cost 40.000, of
which the committee have collected
310,000, and the balance is now being
raised by subscriptions. It is estimated
that two years more will be necessary
to complete the monument. "
The Output of Soft Coal.
The bituminous or soft coal output in
the United . States now aggregates
100,000,000 tons annually.
Masons and Odd Cnllows.
In the United States there are said
to be 670,000 free masons and 650,000
oddfellows. . '
Use Mexican Silver Stove Polish.
2s. '-. ".vJ-iiM
..... . .
CHRISTMAS CANDIES.
Hickoby-Ntjt Creams. Boil, sugar
and water as for peppermint creams.
Cool, beat, and when the mixture is
white stir in one cup of hickory-nut
meats.- Turn into a flat, warm tin and
cut into squares. ;
Coffee Cream Nut Casdt. Boil to
gether without stirring half a cup of
strong coffee and two cups of sugar
until thick enough to spin a thread.
Remove the pan to a dish of cold water,
and beat the mixture rapidly until .it
creams. Stir in a cup of chopped,, nut
meats, pour into a warm, flat tin and
cut into squares.
Chocolate Caramels. Dissolve over
a fire one cupfuls of molasses and two
teacupful of sugar. Add one-quarter
of a pound of grated chocolate and a
piece of butter the size of an egg. Boil
for fifteen or twenty minutes. Pour
into flat, buttered dishes to the depth
of a quarter inch, and when cold cut
into squares an inch in size1.
Butter-Scotch. Good butter-scotch
is as rare as it is simply made. Here is
an infallible receipt: Boil-without stir
ring two cups of sugar,. butter the size
of an egg, and two tablcspoonf uls of
water, until" the mixture" hardens and
crisps when dropped from a 6poon into
cold water. Remove from the lire and
pour on buttered plates to cool. .-
Pkppermijtt Creams -Boil together,
without stirring, two cups of sugar and
half a cup of water. When thick
enough to spin a thread remove the
tin to a basin of cold water and beat
the "mixture rapidly until it becomes of
a white, creamy consistency. Flavor
with peppermint and squeeze through
a pastry tube into quarter-dollar sized
drops on waxed paper. Ladies', Home
Journal. - . ;
The minister sent the message and
the name given in the colonel's reply
was Chevert. He received his promo-,
tion at once.
Chevert found an' appreciative friend
in Marshal Saxe. The marshal heard
some titled officers speaking of their
fellow-officer Chevert.
"The fellow rose 'tfrom the ranks,"
said one, contemptuously.
Saxe turned to the speaker and said,
severely: "Sir, I always esteemed Che
vert; now that I learn from you that he
rose from the ranks, I find that . 1 owe
him respect and admiration."
V C Q 3fc
51.00 per Bottlo.
Cnrer. Concha. X7o:rtM?neH.;, tiore Throat.
Croup m-npci.v; re'ievesWiioopingConjrl
and A.jhi:i.w 'F- r Coiisomftioii it ban no
rival; .li.i? c-.iredtiioiifia.nd3 wnoreall othcrr.
failed: iviii curb top if taken in time. Sole
by D-ugri4isia on ft rwnrantee. Fnr Lame Back
cr Chest, use. Sill LOU'a fLASlEB. 25 cts.
REMEDY.
llaTe-ou . itiurh ? Thl turned v is ftrnran.
teed to cure you. Price 50 cts. Injector frfw.
For sale by 8nfpe & Kmersly.
Easily, Quickly,
Permanently Restored.
WEAKNESS,
NERVOUSNESS,
DEBILITY, '
and all the train of evil a
from early errors or later
excesses, the results of
overwork, sickness,
T7orrv,etc. FuH strength,
development and tone
given to every organ and
gortion of tno bodr
Imple. natural methods.
Immediate tmproToment
seen. Fatlnre unposuiible.
2,000 references. Bofc.
explanation and prccfa
mailed (sealed) tree.
ERIE MEDICAL CO.
BUFFALO. N. Y.
Rheumatism j
Lumbago. Sciatica
Kidney Complaints,
Lame Backs c
S3. SAKBEK'S ELECTRIC CELT
With Electro-Magnetic SUSPENSORY
' latest Patents I Bert Improvement I
Win cure without medicine all WeekMew resulting? from
over taxation of brain nerve forces t excesses or lndis.
crction, as nerroos debility, sleeplessness, languor,
rheumatism, kidney, liver and bladder complaints,
lame baclc. lnmbago, sciatica, all female complaints.
W'neral ill bealtb, etc. This., electric Belt contains
oaderTnl IiapreTemeata over ell others. Current It
Instantly felt by wearer or we forfeit g&, 000. 00, and
will care alt of the above diseases or no pay. Thou.
cnds have been cured by this marvelous invention
after all other remedies failed, and we frive hundreds
of testimonials In this and every other state.
Our Powerful iMprorea KLECTKIC SCSPKISOET. tho
frmuest boon ever offered weak men. KUKK wlthsll
lls. liealth ami Vigorous Strength GUARANTEED Im GO ts
8U dr Bend for Illns'd Pamphlet, mailed .sealed, tree
SANOEN ELECTRIC) CO.,
Ko ITS Bin Street, JOJtXIA8J QUE.
The jDaUes Daily Chroniele.
HAS A JAMIL Y OF 1
' 2000 EEADEES.
They read The Chronicle to get the latest and
most reliable i ews. And they read every lina i
that Is in the paper. That la what makes the
Chronicle an invaluable advert! ing medium.
The newspaper that . goes to the family
firesides Is thfc one m that the advertisers
of today patronize when they desire to
reach the people. When they want your trade
their announcements will be found In the paper.
Look over our columns and observe ithe verifica
tion of the truth of this assertion. Remember,
a trade of a family of two thousand
M- is worth asking for through these
columns, espcially so at or w;3j
IJ2T IT JR ZTN"
and your cough may end in some
thing serious. - It's pretty sure to,
if your blood is poor. That is just
the time and condition that invites
Consumption. The seeds are sown
and it has fastened its hold upon
you, before you know that it is
near. . - '
It won't do to trifle and delay,
when the remedy is at hand. Ev
ery disorder that can be reached
through the blood yields to Dr,''
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery.
For Severe Coughs, Bronchial,
Throat and Lung Diseases, Asthma,
Scrofula in every form, and even
the scrofulous affection of the lungs
that's called Consumption J in all its
earlier stages, it is a positive and
complete cure.
It , is the only blood - cleanser,
strength -restorer, and flesh - builder
so effective that it can be guaran
teed. If it doesn't benefit or cure,
in every case, you have your money
back. All medicine dealers have it.
For every case of Catarrh which
they cannot cure, the proprietors of
Dr. Sage's v Catarrh Remedy agree
to pay $500 in cash. You're cured
by its mild, soothing, cleansing, and
healing properties, or you're paid.
WEBSTER'S ' 1
INTERNA TIONAL
JXMiSLIICTIONAR y 4
Jl Grand Educator.
Succcccr of i'ie
Ten years svens 5
in rvirin"-. 1fl;l rj'.
itorsc!";1--;-:u,an:l
expended.
Everybody
should own this
Dictionary. It an
swers ell questions
concerr.inir the his
tory, spelling, pro
nunciation, and
meaning: of words.
A. Itibrarv in Itself, l s also d ves
the often desired information concerning
eminent persons; facts concerning the
countries, cities, towns, and natural fea
tures of the globe ; particulars concerning
noted fictitious persons and places ; trans
lation of foreign quotations, words, and
proverbs; etc., etc., etc.
This Work: is Invaluable in tho
household, and to the teacher, scholar, pro
fessional man, and self -educator.
Sold by All Booksellers.
G. & V. Merriam Co.
rtuUshcr8,
Springfield, Mass.
"WEBSTER'S
INTERNSnONAL I
1 Do not buy cheap photo
ftraphic reprints of ancient
DICTIONrWi
eaiuons.
tg"Send for free prospectus.
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
Timber Lund, Act June 3, 1878. -
V. S. Land Office, The Dalles, Or.,(
Nov. 8. 1893.
Notice is hereby riven that in compliance
with the provisions of the act of congress of
June 3, 1878, entitled "An act for the sale of tim
ber lands in the states of California, Oregon,
Neal C Stevenson,
Of Kingsley, county of Wasco, state of Oregon,
has this day filed in this office his sworn state
ment for the purchase of the NEWT of
of Section. No. 23, in Township No. 3 S.j range
No 13 E. W. II., and will oiler proof to show
that the land sought is more valuable for its
timber or stone than for agricultural purposes,
and to establish his claim to said land before
the Register and Receiver of this office at The
ijaues, or., on tne lotn day of January, 1894.
He names as witnesses: George McLeod. Jas
per ins ley, Leon Konueau ana Lafayette Davis. I
all of Kingsley, Or. 1
Anv and all nersons claiming adveTselv the
above-described lands are requested to file their
claims in this office on or before said 15th day of
January, 1894.
wiu
JOHN W. LEWIS, Register.
SUMMONS.
In the Circuit CCnrt of the State of Oregon,
lor tvasco county.
Louis KUnger, Plaintiff, "1
vs. .
A. Mowery, Joshua Mowery, Isaac vf owery, I
David Mowery, ilnria Brady, Catherine f
Williams, R, Gibons and L. Vander- .
pool, Defendants. J
To Maria Bradi
above named
' and Catherine Williams, of the
defendants :
In the name of the State of Oregon : You and
each of you are hereby required to annear and
answer the complaint of plaintiff filed against
you in the above entitled Court and cause, on or
before the first day of the next regular term of
the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for
Wasco county, next following the final publica
tion of this Bummons, to-wit: on or before Mon
day, the 12th day of February, 1894 ; and if you
fail so to appear and answer, for want thereof
the Dlaintltr will anplv to the Court for the re
will apply
lief prayed for in his complaint, to-wit:
For a decree of foreclosure of that certain
s
mortgage deed made and executed by Conrad
Mowery to plaintiff, on the 5th day of June, 1888,
upon the southwest quarter of Section Twenty
six, in Township One South, of Range Fourteen
East, of the Willamette Meridian, in Wasco
county, Oregon, and for a decree that said prem
ises be sold according to law ; that from the pro
ceeds of such sale the plaintiff be allowed to
have and receive the sum of 1400.00 and interest
on said sum at the rate of eight per cent per
annum since March 27th, 1891, now due and
owing upon the promissory note secured by
said mortgage and herein sued upon; also the
further sum of $50.00 as a reasonable attorneys'
fee for instituting this mit to foreclose said
mortgage and collect said note, together with
plaintitTs costs and disbursements made and
expended in said suit including accruing costs
and expenses of sale; and that plaintiff have a
judgment over against the defendant A. Mowery,
for any deficiency remaining after all of the pro
ceeds of snch sale shall have been applied in
payment of saiu teveral Bums; that upon such
foreclosure sale all of the right, title interest and
claim of you and each of you, and your co-defendants,
and all persons claiming by, through
or under you or either of you or them
in and to said mortgaged premises and every
pxrt thereof be forever barred and foreclosed of
all equity of redemption. That plaintiff be
allowed to bid at such foreclosure sale, at his
option and that immediately upon such sale the
purchases be let into the possession of said
premises and every part thereof, and for such
other and further relief as to the court may
seem equitable and just.
This summons is served upon you by publica
tion thereof in The Dalles Weekly Chronicle for
six consecutive weeks, by order of Hon. W. L.
Bradshaw, judge of the above entitled Court,
which order was duly made at chambers on the
28th day of December, 1893.
DUFUR & MENEFEE,
. 7tw . - Attorneys for Plaintiff.
"' - ' . -.. :
Clothier
.Decidedly the
Gents
FuirnishLirig
'Trunks and Valises, etc., etc.
COB. SECOND AND WASHINGTON. THE DALLES, OR.
H. H. CHMPBELL.,
- Successor to LESLIE BUTLER,
Will constantly keep on hand a complete line of t
GROCERIES, CROCKERY,
Having purchased Mr, Butler's entire Btock, I shall endeavor to maintain the reputation of
, -, the house, which has been : . - .
BEST GOODS AT L0WETT PRICES. - SQUARE DEALING TO EVERY ONE
Call and see me, next door to Postoffice.
Hew Yorlc Weekly Tribune
AND
OJioicest, Xiatest, Clieapest,
Holiday JPreisexits-
SilvePTjuaire, Jcrjucliry, Watches, Books, Toys, Hte.
The public is invited to examine our good before
'.. purchasing elsewhere. ' ,
jje Prices the lowest, and are greatly-reduced. - Closing out the entire Stock
; " ' of Toys and holiday, goods at Cost. i. ';
Second St., Th Dalles, Or. , I- CJ. 3NTiol.elsexji.
The
Wasco County, :
The Gate. City of the Inland Empire is situated at the kead
of navigation on the Middle Columbia, and is a thriving, pros
perous city. ' ' ' ;
ITS TERRITORY.
It is the supply city for an extensive and rich agricultural
and grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer
Lake, a distance of over two hundred miles.
The Largest Wool Market.
The-cich grazing country along the eastern slope of the Cas
cades furnishes pasture for thousands of sneep, the wool from
which finds market here. ' , , -
r". The Dalles is the. largest original wool shipping point .in
America, about SjOOOOOO pounds being shipped last year.
ITS PRODUCTS, x
The salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, yielding
this year a revenue of thousands of dollars, . which will be more
than doubled in the near future.
The products of the beautiful Klickitat valley find market
here, and the country south and east has . this year filled the
warehouses, and all available - storage places to overflowing with
their products.
ITS WEALTH. , :
It is the richest city of its size on' the coast and its money is
scattered over and is being used to develop more farming country
than is tributary to any other city in Eastern Oregon.
Its situation is unsurpassed. Its climate delightful. Its pos
sibilities incalculable. " Its resources unlimited. And on these
corner stones she stands. ' . : - , -
John Pashek,
The Merchant Tailor;
' 76 Court Stttt,
Next door to "Wasco Sun Office. ..
Has just received the latest styles in
Suitings for Gentlemen, ,
and has a large assortment of Fortign and Amer
ican Cloths, which he can finish To Order for
those that favor him. .
Gleaaing and Repairing a Speeialty.
Times makes it all the more
necessary to .advertise. That is
what
f J business :
what the most progressive of our
ness men think, and these same bus
iness men are the most prosperous at all times.
If you wish to reach all the rflople In this neigh
borhood you can't do better tnan talk to them
throueh the columns of the Daily Chboniclb.
It has more than double the circulation ol any
other paper, and advertising in it pays big.
and Tailor.
Finest Line of.'.
Goods,
J
-
Oregon,
YOUR flTTEHTIOfl
Is oalled to the faot that
Glenn,
Dealer in Gleaa, lime, Plasta?, Cement
and Building Material of ell kinds.
Carries tha Finest 1.1a of
Picture piouliigs,
A"r toe found In the City.
ni
CO ashing ton Sttfeet.
Hago