Tne Dalles Daily Chronicle. OFFICIAL PAPER OF DALLES CITY. 1H9 WASCO COUNTT. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. ; BT Mill, KJSTiGB FBXPAIO, IK ADVANCS. Weekly, 1 yew......: 1 59 months. 0 75 8 0 60 Daily, 1 year. 6 00 " 6 months. 8 00 per " 0 60 Address oil communication to " THB CHRON ICLE." The Dalles, Oregon. Post-Office. . omci . BOOBS General Delivery Window ....... .8 a. m. to 7 p. m, Money Order '. .8 a. m. to 4 p. m. ..9a. m. to 10 a. m. Sunday i D, cxosixe or xuu trains going East 0 p. m. and 11:46 a. m. " West 9 p.m. and 6:30 p. nv. ' 8tage for Goldendale. 7:80a.m. " " Prineville ...6:80a.m. " "Dufur and Warm Springs. ..6:S0a.m. " fLearing for Lyle & Hartland. . 6:80 a.m. " " Antelope 6:30 a.m. Except Sunday. tTri-weekly. Tuesday Thursday and Saturday. 1 " Monday Wednesday and Friday. FRIDAY, .v - JAN, 5v. 1894 The democratic party is now on trial for. its life. . The idea! that one man owes another man a living is a crazy notion that' has its origin in the indolence, ignorance and greed of pitiful buman,natore. It. is an idea . that leads , down hill to. outright plunder and downright robbery. Some of our learned men are now at . work on a dictionary of monkey talk, and others are .devoting their time and . energies to the words and meaning of birds and horses. The time may yet come when the talkative man may lec ture his own poultry. The passing of so many railroads into the hands of receivers practically pre cludes the possibility of further railway strikes. The United States courts are now running the roads, and when the court fixes a schedule of wages that ends it. , The power of the government backs the order of the court, and it would be a reckless striker who would want to butt up against Uncle Sam. A few months ago the amount of coin on hand in the national banks was down to the limit; now there is $200,000,000 more than is required by law to con duct a conservative and safe banking business lying idle in the national banks of the United States. ' Confidence is re turning. The people now trust the banks and will soon trust one another. McMinnville Register. Some one has patented a vestibule ar rangement to connect locomotive tenders with trains. The hope is that the train robbers will thus le foiled. - Their usual plan is to clamber over the. tender and compel the driver at the point of the pistol to slow down or stop.' The vesti bule would no doubt reduce risks, but not obviate danger entirely. Train rob bers have many resources and are often quite as inventive as the law-abiding. We are placed under obligations to Hon. ' W. K. Ellis, M. , C, for a copy of the Wilson amended tariff bill, also the majority and minority report of the same. Should the bill become a law it will go into effect on the first day of June next. The Pacific coast is not favored in any of its provisions. If this becomes the law of the land, the wool, lumber, iron and coal industry of the West will be thoroughly paralyzed. The wool especially, as the cost of pro duction is in excess of the value put on it by the free wool basis, which means foreign wool from New Zealand and Australia, can be laid in our markets for less than our sheep husbandmen can afford to do and keep even. Already the bottom is knocked out for the 1893 clip through the free trade attitude of the administration. It is hoped the senate will put it in its little bed when it reaches that body. A monster petition, bearing the names of 150,000 signers, praying for the estab lishment of a national road department, has been presented to the senate. The ' movement for the creation of such a de partment was started some time ago by a well-known manufacturer of bicycles, and this is the second time that the sub ject has been brought to the attention of congress. What is chiefly needed in the agitation for good roads, says the New "Xork Tribune, is the education of the people generally to appreciate their im portance. The rural population have so long been satisfied with what they have in this respect that they hardly hope for anything better. If the demand for better highways can once be created they will be supplied beyond doubt. That the national government can do anything in this direction at present is more than doubtful. At any rate, what ever is needful to i be done can be done by the department of agriculture. The proposal of a department of roads has little to commend it, and we do not ex pect to see it seriously1 considered by congress. The petition is an impres sive one, but many of. the signers must have affixed their names without giving the subject much consideration. ' Sharpsbcbg, Pa., Jan. 27, 1892. Kb J. J. Kktl, . Sharpsburg, Pa., Dear Sib I have used Krause's Headache Capsules for some time and want to testify to their value. - I tried various well recommended medicine, but got no Telief until I used these, and now would -not be without them for ten times their cost. Yours respectfully - Chariest. Sedgwick. Sold by Snines 5t Kihersly. . ' WASHINGTON HESING. Chicago's New Postmaster Always Vfmm m Popular Man. - Foremost among the prominent men of Chicago to-day is Washington Hes ing, scholar, journalist, man of affairs and President Cleveland's choice for postmaster. Clean cut, with advanced ideas on the great problems of the time, cultured, student of things and men, the beneficiary oi the best educa tional advantages of two continents, a recognized leader and to a great ex tent the political guide and philosopher for an element composing- one-third -of Chicago's population, Mr. Hesing can be reckoned with justice among the men who helped make Chicago great and on whom she depends for a con tinuation of her prosperity. Since boyhood his life has been as an open book .to be read., of all men. . His private character, says the Chicago Post, is blameless and his public career unsmirched. . A lovable person ality, a steadfast friend, ' a vigorous 77 I M il l I f!' " m- u it nun 'I T II Hi" l WASHINGTON ITE8LSG. but generous opponent and a thorough going Chijagoati is Mr. Hesing, admired by all who have the pleasure of his acquaintance and respected even by those vvhq differ from him. As man aging editor of the Illinois Staats Zeitung he wields an immense power and exerts a tremendous influ ence among . the German-born and German-descended residents jf Illinois. So potent is this moral force that it is conceded that o him and his father is due much of the crtedit of carrying Illinois into the democratic column in 4892. "NMr. Hesing was born in Cincin nati in 1849, and, with his family, came- to this city five years later. Anton C. Hesing, his father, was soon recognized as one of the leading Ger man residents of the west. Young Hes ing was given every educational ad vantage. He was in school almost constantly until 1861, when ho went to Europe on a protracted visi,t- Upon his return to this city he entered the University of St. Mary's of the Lake, after which he attended the University of Chicago for one term. Mr. Hesing then prepared for Yale college., and was graduated from that institution with, the degree of bachelor of urts in 1870. Leavinsr collese he wont to Europe to study political economy, In ternational las', the science of govern ment and the history of German liter ature. The great fire of 1871 caused him to return to . this city, and on the 31st of November of that year he entered the service of the Illinois Staats Zeitung, of which paper he has for many years been managing1 editor as well as general director of its busi ness affairs. When twenty-two years of age he was appointed on the board of education. He was subsequently reappointed, but declined to serve a second term. In 18S0 he was elected a member of the county board of educa tion, and served as president of that body during h,is term of office. OUR AMERICAN WOMEN. Mrs. N. E. Bronson, of Atchison, Kan., learned typesetting in her fa ther's office '' when a child, and has worked steadily at her trade for over forty years. The International Association of Women Pharmacists has 523 active and 186 honorary members. The first congress of women pharmacists was held lately, in Chicago. ' i ' . Miss Emma LiOVERIng, who has been elected president of the Women's Aid Societies of Maine, is onlji twenty-one years old. . ' She is a lineal descendant of Gen Warren, who fell at Bunker Hill. Mrs. Leland Stanford's family al lowance from Senator Stanford's es tate has been increased from five thou sand to ten thousand dollars per month on her representation that five thou sand dollars per month was inade quate, y A St. Louis woman has lately per fected an invention for making sweet potato flour. The process includes peeling the potato and drying the peel as a food for live stock, drying and grinding the potato into three grades of flour, and also slicing into Saratoga chips. . "WIT OF THE DAY. ' After a woman has been married three weeks she doesn't like to have her husband around the house in the daytime. Atchison Globe. Among other virtues it must be said of- the football player that he doesn't, get- his hair cut in a crowded shop on a Saturday, night. Philadelphia Times. Talkative .Barber "There's one thing that never causes me any sorrow to part with." Luckless Customer "And that is?".. Talkative Barber "A comb. Next .gent!" Buffalo .Cou rier. ' At a school examination the inspec tor asked a boy why the earth turned around the sun on its.own axis. The boy answered with great, promptness: "Because it doesn't want to get roasted too much on one side;": Tid-Blts. Shiloh'a Vitalizer is what you need for dyspepsia,, torpid liver, yellow skin or kidney trouble. ' It is guaranteed to give you satisfaction. Pri"e 74c Sold by Snipes & Kinersly, druggists. . JTJ' & Pi:! ' f.iW mcwT mm a tniii ii .r.Lf GROWN IN OREGON. Clover five feet high. , " Cornstalks fourteen, feet high. " . .- A beet weighing thirty pounds. Timothy seven feet eight finches high: ; A . cabbage weighing fifty-three pounds. , . . ' ! A bunch of grapes weighing sue pounds. , A pumpkin' weighing ninety-three pounds. Alfalfa from a yield of twelve tons per acre. . . - : Hops from a yield of 9,592 pounds per acre. ,"'"". One strawberry ten inches in circum ference.. . ": A watermelon weighing sixty-four pounds. . Aw onion weighing fonr pounds and one ounce. An apple weighing two pounds and fonr ounces.' , A potato weighing eight pounds four ounces. A radish weighing 'nine and one- half pounds. A hill of potatoes that yielded forty three pounds. , A squash weighing one hundred and twenty pounds. . Wheat from a yield of sixty-eight bushels per acre.. ' - SixTr-SEVEN pounds of potatoes from two pounds planted. Oats from a yield of one hundred and, twenty-five bushels per acre. A blackberry bush showing twenty one feet growth this year. A branch from a prune tree thirty three inches long with f arty-six pounds of fruit on it. 1 A plank fifty inches wide, thirty inches thick,, thirty-two feet long, and not a knot in it Backlen'g Ariaca Salve. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores,. ulcers, salt, rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cures piles,, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion, or money refunded. "Price 25 cents (per box. For sale oy Snipes & Kin ersly. - 85cts, OGvts., and Ohws Ccnffhfk ZToiLraensSora Tin oat. Croup r mptiy; removes Wliocping Congli and Astiiui.i.. F t Consumption tt bus no rival; hKSsurod.tliousaud9 wnereall otlier f allot.; will curb you )f taken -in time. Sold by IrugsrteC8 on atrnnrantee. For Lame Back cr CtwhU use SHILOH'tj PLAST&g. 25 eta.- IEME0Y. jSaTe you Catarrh ? Thi remely is guaran teed to cure you. Price SOcti. loieccor treoi . For sale by Snipes & Kinersly. Easily, Quickly, Permanently Rastored. WEAKNESS, i NERVOUSNESS, DEBILITY, ' and all the train of erl!s from early errors or later excesses, tae results of overwork, sickness, -worry.etc. Full strength, development and tone given to every organ and portion of the - body. Simple, natural methods. Immedlatolmprovemect seen. Failure Impossible. 2,0(10 reference. 11... k, explanation and proofs mailed (sealed) free. ERIE MEDICAL CO. BUFFALO. N.V. heumatlsnrif - Lumbago. Sciatica, Kidney Complaints, Lame Back, etc. D3. S&sLTCH'S ELECTING BELT With Electro-Magnetio SUSPENSORY Win cure without medicine all WaknM resulting1 from orer-taxatlou of brain nerre forces t exccMoa or India cretion, as xterrona debility, sleeplessness, languor, rbeamatism. kiduey, lirer and bladder complain ta. muir mu:h, luimjt&tfUs DcuitJt.'n, mil lmituc cvjmiia.inu. J ilia Fonderful Im prortwemt over all others. Current ia lstantlT f Alt h wsmmv oi wp fnrfnifc a&.OOILOO. amri Instantly felt by wearer or 1 will cure ail of the above dlaeaaea or no pay. Thou. :nda have been cured by this marvelona urrentton after all other remedies failed, and we (rive tLODdreda' of testimonials in tbls and every other state, Onr Fovrari-al Implored KLEOTRIC OTSPKXSOKY. tbO prrpiiteat boon ever offered weak men, KBEB with all BfU. UmIUi tm4 Tlnrau Stnortb drJARAHTEBD la CO t SOaarv fiend for UlnaM Pamphlet, mailed , scaJed, trea 8ANOEN ELEOTRIO CO., tto. 1TC Kins AtreeW !MItX JAJfc" JlV ORE. The; Dalles Daily Gtoniele. v. HAS A FAMILY OP -t- 2000 EEADEES. . They read The Chronicle to get the latest and most reliable i ews. And they read every line that Is in the paper. That is what makes the Chronicle .an invaluable advertl ing medium. The newspaper that. . goes to the family firesides is the one 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 onr columns and observe the verifica tion of the truth of this assertion.. Remember, a trade of a family of two thousand is worth asking for through these 5 v columns, espcially so at onr very IRREG TTLABITT! Is that what troubles you ? Then it's easily and promptly remedied by Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They regulate the system perfectly. Take, one for a gentle laxative or corrective ; three for a cathartic. If you suffer from, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious - Attacks, Sick or Bilious Headaches, or any de rangement of the. . liver, stomach or bowels,. try these little Pellets. They bring a permanent cure.. In stead of shocking and weakening the system, with violence, like the ordinary.': pills, they act in a perfectly easy ; and natural way. They're the smallest, the easiest to take and the cheapest, for they're guaranteed. .to i gixe satisfaction, or your money is' returned. You pay only for the good you get.' In every case, of Catarrh that seems hopeless, you can depend . upon Dr. Sage's Ca tarrh Remedy for a cure. . It's proprietor? are. so. sure of it that they'll pay $500 in cash for any incurable case. Sold by all druggists. WEBSTER'S INTERNA TI0NAT, j 4f Grand Educator. biKCCsacr oj i.te " UiiabrlCcC.: ' Ten years spent; in revUiup:, loo cu- itorsc." 1 d,aul more than S300.0JO expended. Everybody should own this Dictionary. It an swers a!l questions concerning the his tory, spelling, pro nunciation, aud meaning of words. A. Ifibrary in Itself. 1 ; also gives the often desired information concerning eminent persons; fagts 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 Invalnable in the household, and to the teacher, scholar, pro fessional man, and self-educator. Sold by All Booksellers, G. & C. Merriam Co. : wSa5Sea.M WEBSITE'S 1 INTERKiOTONAL J Kraphic reprinu ul ancient UILllUNnKl j CSend lor free prospectus. . OTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Timber Land, Act June 3, 1878. , U. S. Land Office. The Dalles, Or., ( Nov. 8, 1S93. . i Notice is hereby given that in compliance with the provisions of the act of congress of June 3, 1878, entitled "An act for the sale of tim ber lnnds in the states of California, Oregon, Nevada and Washington Territory," . Keal 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 NEJ4 of KW, of Section. No. 23, in Township No. 3 8., range No 13 E. W. M., and will otter 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 Begister and Keceiver of this office at The Dalles, Or., on the 15th day of January, 1894. He names as witnesses: George McLeod, Jas per En-ley, Leon Rondeau and Lafayette Davis, all of Kingsley, Or. Any and all persons claiming adversely the above-deacribed lands are requested to file their claims in this office on or before said loth day of Januarv, 1894. I wlO . JOHN W. LEWIS, Register. SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Wasco County. Louis Kiinger, Plaintiff-, vs. v A. Mowerv, Joshua Mowery, Isaac f owery, I - utiv m Jiuiv t'l , .m in in Di ttu v , vuijieriuu Williams, R. Glbons and L. Vander pool, Defendants. To Maria Brady and Catherine-Williams, of the above named defendants: ' In the name of the State of Oregon: Yon and each of you are hereby required to appear 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 summons, to-wit: on or before Mon day, the 12th day of February, 1894; and if you fail so to appear and answer, lor want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the re lief prayed for in his complaint, to-wit: For a decree of foreclosure- of that certain 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 Baid prem ises be sold according to law; that from the pro ceeds of such sale tne plaintiff be allowed to have and receive the snm of $400.00 and interest on said snm at the rate of eight per cent per annum since March 27th,- 1891, now due anil 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 plaintiffs 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 such' sale shall have- been applied in payment of salj ieveral sums: that upon such foreclosure sale all of the right, title interest and claim of you and each of yon, 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 pirt 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 npon-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. . . k DUFUR & MENEFEE, 7tw 5. - Attorneys for Plaintiff. "EST. O- IVielsen, Clothier and Tailor. . . . ; .Decidedly the Gents' - KurriishLing Goods, "Trunks and Valises, etc., etc. ' COB. SECOND AND WASHINGTON. THE DALLES, OR. H.H. Successor to , wiU constantly keep on GROCERIES, Having purchased Mr. Butler's entire stock, I shall endeavor to maintain the reputation of . the house, which has been: i , . . BEST GOODS AT L0WETT RICES. - SQUARE DEALING TO EVERY ONE Call and see me, next door to Postoffice. -AND Clioioest, Ziatest, C?la.o.ro-t, , - EEoIiday Presents. ' j SilvefTjuafc, Jeaaeliry, Watches, Books, Toys, Hte.; . The public is invited to examine our goods before purchasing elsewhere. 0Prices the lowest, and are greatly reduced. Closing ont the entire Stock ' of Tos and holdday goods at Cost. Second St., The Dalles, Or. X. O. KTiolS.lsen. 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 rich grazing country aloug the eastern slope of the Cas cades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheep, the- wool from , which finds market here. . . " '.s i"... The Dalles is the largest original wool shipping "point in America, about 5,000,000 pounds being shipped last year. ITS PRODUCTS. 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 ?oraer stones she stands.' ' : ' - v '. ' John Pashek, The Merchant Tailor, ! 7S Court Street, - Uext door to Wasoo Stin. Office. : ' Has just received the latest styles in Suitings for Gentlemen, and has a lare assortment of Foreign and Amer ican Cloths, which he can finish To Order for those that favor him. , Cleaaicg and HepaMng a Specialty. j"lJ wha! Times makes it all the more neceasarv. to advertise. That 'is what the most progressive of onr I 3 business men think, and these same bus iness men are the most prosperous at all times. If yon wish to reach all the reople in this neigh borhood yon can't do better than talk to them through the columns of the Daily Ckbonicxb. It has more than double the circulation ol any other paper, and advertising in it pays bis- Finest Line of . "LESLIE BUTLER. hand a complete line of CROCKERY, Weekly Tribune SI. Oregon, YOUR flTTEflTIOIl Is called to the fact that ' Dealer in Glass, lime, iiayCemeni and Building Material of all kinds. . ; Carrie tfca Wtoe Ltaitf pippioffiis; To be found in the City. V 72 Cdashington Street.