2 3 The Dalles Daly Chronicle. OFFICIAL PAPER OF DALLES CITY. ' AND WASCO COUNTY. SUBSCRIPTION KATES. BT KAIL, POBTAG PRIPAID, IK ADTASCX. Weekly, 1 year. f 1 BO 6 months. . . M g Dally, 1 year " 6 months. per " Address all eommnnlcation to " THE CHRON ICLE," The Dalles, Oregon. 0 75 0 50 6 00 8 00 0 GO Foit-Offlce. OPTICS HOOBS General Delivery Window 8 a. m. to 7 p. m. Money Order " ..8 a. m. to 4 p. m. Sunday ti Ji, " 9 a. m. to 10 a. m. CLOSING OF MAILS trains going East 9 p. m. and 11:45 a. m. " " West 9 p.m. and 6:30 p. m. Stage for Golden dale 7:30 a. m. " " PrinevtllG 6:80 a.m. "Dufur and Warm Springs. ..6:80a. m. " fLearing for Lylefc Hartland..6:S0a. m. - " "Antelope 6:30 a.m. Except Sunday. -Trl-weekly. Tuesdav Thursday and Saturday, i " , Monday Wednesday and Friday. MONDAY, JAN. 22, 1894 A tax of $10 a year 'on bachelors be tween the age of thirty and sixty years is proposed by an eastern paper. De linquents wonld be sold for taxes at a public sale and the old maids could bid them in. ' The most startling bit of news that has been wafted westward by the wires for many a day is to the effect that John X. Sullivan is sober. The cause of Mr. Sullivan's sobriety is not given, but something awful must have happened to his throat. In The Forum for February Mrs. Josephine Shaw Lowell and Dr. Lyman Abbott write of methods of relief for the unemployed articles that grow out of their long experience in studying and working out plans that will not defeat the main purpose of charity. The democrats want cotton protected and wool free. This at ;leaat is meant by the defeat of Henderson's amend ment Saturday by a vote of 116 to 63 to substitute the existing rates on agricul tural products for the agricultural schedule of the Wilson bill. The reason is obvious. The southern democrats believe in bolstering up their own in dustries at the expense of northern ones, and there is no better way to do it than the" republican policy of protection. "No man ever refused the nomination for the presidency, and I would not. I am in the hands of my friends. Give me some soup." These words were Tittered by Hon. Tom Reed. The ex- epeaker and leader of the republican minority in the house was seated in the house restaurant at Washington when he made the statement quoted. Two questions had been asked him ; one, if he would make a fight for the presiden tial nomination, was put by a well known politician, and the other by the waiter, who inquired what the Maine man wanted to eat. CARRIED HIS. LUNCH. A bond issue of $50,000,000 sounds very strangely in a time of peace. The people, now suffering acutely from the long continued depression, and a great share of them out of employment, are to be further subjected to a direct tax on account of the incapability of the admin istration to run the government. The treasury is empty and it is proposed to further deplete it by reducing the na tional revenues nearly a hundred million dollars per annum in the matter of tariffs. Now, of all times, is the worst to meddle with the tariff. Business was satisfactory on present lines until this agitation was commenced. Wages were good and work plentiful, but when the threat contained in the Chicago platform bid fair to be realized, business became unsettled, as it always does under great proposed economic changes, and from a season of unparalleled prosperity came suffering and want, caused by mills shut ting down and wages discontinued or re duced. These are undisputed facts. Let os get back to the prosperity of two years ago, which the American people abandoned for a theory and a baseless desire for change. A Snake That Hade a Meal of His Own - Caudal Appendage. "Talking1 about snakes," said the man who bad worked as a telegraph lineman in South America, "you ought to see the sarpints they have down there. Me and my partner ran across a snake one day; we was working on the line and we thought at first that it was a log. It had just eaten some big critter, for there was a lump in its body, and it didn't show any more in terest in us than if we were sticks. We got a big crate that had come to the village near us, full of dishes, and took it and a bottle of chloroform down to his snakelets. "We knocked him out with the chloroform, and after a good deal of work got him coiled up in the crate. Then we carried the crate on a wagon to the station with, us and took him into camp on the train. He waked up next day, but the cuss wouldn't eat. He just laid there and sorrowed, and nary a bite would he even take out of a lamb we gave him. In about two weeks he began to look thin, but he still kicked on eating, so we put him and his crate in an outhouse and left him for two weeks more. When we went to look at him again he had changed position and was now coiled around in such a way that he could get his tail in his mouth, and he had about a foot of it swallowed, just to keep his stomach braced. I suppose. "We moved just after this, and we took ' Nero, as we called him, with us, carrying the crate with ns in a freight car. The car -'was an old one, so we were allowed to run it off on a siding at the station that we made our head quarters, and here we left him while we traveled inland to run a line. It was a month before we grot back, and we both made a break for the car, but gosh darn me, would you believe me, there wasn't more than a foot of that snake left. He bad swallowed and di gested about nine feet of himself, and he took off six inches more before he died." "Gentlemen : Please send Krause's Headache Capsules as follows: Two boxes to Flora Seay, Havanna. N. Dak. Two boxes to Li 111 e Wilcox. Brookland, N. Dak, I hare always been a great sufl'erer from headache and your capsules are the nnlv li i it c that raliavH m 11 Yours very truly, Flora Seat, Havanna, N. Dak. Sold by Blakely & Houghton. Shiloh's Vitalizer is what you need for dyspepsia, torpid liver, yellow' skin or kidney trouble. It is guaranteed to give you satisfaction. Pria 74c Sold by Snipes & Kinersly, druggists. mere are some queer specimens among the populists, says the Union Scout. In perusing the Union County larmer we notice that several corres pondents advocate boycotting all other papers and reading only their own kind of literature. We have had an impres eion heretofore . that such narrowness only prevailed among the rigidly ortho dox, but it seems it works in politics as well. If a majority of our people were built after that fashion the wheels of progress would turn backward and the minds of men stagnate for want of ac tfon. The advocates of that idea have already retarded the growth of the world at least five thousand years. But they have had their day and the old world "swings, triumphant, down the ringing grooves of change." Any man who can not stand the arguments of an opponent is of no earthly benefit to mankind. . The best thing these fellows can do is to start a little party of their own, and herd off to one side by themselves. "I have been troubled with liver com plaint, kidney disease and bad blood for a long time. I have used Simmons Liver Regulator, and it has done me more good than all the medicines I ever took. . "Geo. H. Pbatt, U. S. Dep'y Col., 21 Dis't.Ga. Gucts., ana 5K M A H i'-M $L00 per BotQoT'gg? Cures ConfrJis, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Croup promptly: relieves Whooping Cough and Asthma. F t Consumption it bas no rival; has cured thousands where all others failed; will cuke vou if taken In time. Sold by Drug-grists on airoarsnteo. For Leme Back or Chest, use SHILOH'li fLASlEB. 85 eta. H 1 L 0 H 9 ATAR R H 'remedy: lia-re vou Catarrh? Thiremedv is arun.ran teed to cure you. Price 50cts- 1 elector trez For sale by Snipes Ss Kinersly. Easily, Quickly, Permanently Restored. WEAKNESS, NERVOUSNESS, DEBILITY, and all the train cf evils from early errors or later excesses, the results of overwors, sicicness, worry, etc. Pull strength. development and tone given to every organ and Tvortlnn of the bod v. simple, natural methods. Immediate Improvement seen. .Failure lmpossioie. 2.000 references. Buuk. explanation and proofs ERIE MEDICAL CO. BUFFALO. N. V. Rheumatism; Lumbago, Sciatica, Kidney Complaints Lame BacK, etc. m. SUSDCK'S ELEGTBIC BELT With Electro-Magnetic SUSPENSORY Win cure without medicine all Waafcnm resulting from over-taxatlou of brain nerve forces t exceeees or indis. cretion, as nervous debility, sleeplessness, languor, rheumatism, rlriiir-- Iinp uul filarlrlflr flnmnlaintiL lame back, lumbago, sciatica, all female complaints, general 111 health, etc. This electric. Belt contains jToiiderral Improvements over all others. Current is instantly felt by wearer or we forfeit ft&,OOQ.OO and will cure all of the above diseases or no par. Thou CndB have been mrrl H thta nrvlnna Inwntinn after all other remedies failed, and we give hundreds w. wiwuivuuii ui una ana every ocner state. Our Powrfal Imnroved aXKGTRIO BTKUPElfRORY. the greatest dooq ever offered weak men. FBKB wlthal Belt. HmIU. as TImtmu Btremrth GUAJUrtTEKD la GO t Us fiend for Illua'd Pamphlet, mailed, sealed free . 8ANDKN ELECT RIO OO.v Ho. Xt Kirs Street J01fcXIAJH( OJ&. T3 YOU NEED ANY JOB PRINTING, NO MAT TER HOW MUCH OR HOW LITTLE, GIVE THE CHRONICLE JOB DEPARTMENT YOUR PATRONAGE AND BE HAPPY. YOU WILL GET THE BEST, AND THE BEST 13 GOOD ENOUGH FOR ANY BODY. USE LOTS OP PRINTER'S INK AND BE. PROSPEROUS. D01PT BE FOOLED by the dealer who brings out some thing else, that pays him better, and says that it is " just as good." Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is guaranteed. If it don't benefit or cure, you have your money back. No other medicine of its kind is so certain and effective that it can be sold so. Is any other likely to ftV J MOW WSU , As a blood-cleanser, flesh-builder, and strength -restorer, nothing can equal the "Discovery." It's not like the sarsaparillas, or ordinary " spring medicines." At all sea sons, and in all cases, it purifies, in vigorates, and builds up the whole system. For every blood-taint and disorder, from a common blotch or eruption, to the worst scrofula, it is a perfect, permanent, guaranteed remedy. Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures Catarrh in the Head. JVIagazine FOR 1894. The Best Literature, The Newest Knowledge, and Fully illustrated. 15 Cents a Copy. Only $1.50 a YeaP. Some of the features are: The Edge of the Future. The Marvels of Science and Achievement, presented in a popular way. Famous People. Their life-stories told by word and pictures the materials being in all cases obtained from sources intimately connected with tne suDjects. Tf ue Nappatives of Adventure, Daring , and Hardihood. Leopard hunting in Northern Africa, Lion hun'ing in Algeria. Tiger hunting in In dia, Elephant nuntingln Africa, and ad ventures in me upper Himalayas. Great Institutions. The longest railroad in the world. The Hudson Bay Company. The Bank of Eng land. The business of the greatest mer- cnani iiuu,uuu,uuu a year;. Human Documents. Portraits of famous people from childhood so ine present oay. Short Stories. And by the best writers obtainable. Rotable Serials. tobept Itouis Stevenson and William Dean Hocuella. Among the contributors for the year are: Professor? Deummond, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Hvehdeaeon pavvav, Bret Hevte, P,udyatd Kipling, Oetave Thanet, findKem Iiahg, ' Tor. D. Hocuells, Gilbert Patkp, p.' P.. Stoekton, Joel Chandler Harris, Conan Doyle, R,. It. Stevenson. Charles R. Dana, .Rrehibald Forbes, and many others. 15 CET4TS R COPV. - $1.50 R YEAP,. Remit by draft, money order or registered letter. S. S. JVIeCIiTjFlE, Iiimited, 743 & 745 Broadway, N. Y. City. The Dalles Chroniele, TwAv1, and JdeClwe's JIagazine, - a whole year for f 2.25. Adresa, CHRONICLE PUB. CO., THE DALLES, OR. The Dalles Daily Gteniele. HAS A FAMILY OF " -Ai yTy . . 2000 EEADEES. They read The Chronicle to get the latest and most reliable news. ' And they read every line that Is In the paper. That la what makes the Chronicle an invaluable advertising medium. The newspaper that . jy goes to the family firesides is the one that the advertisers of today patronize 1 when they desire to reach the people. When they want your trade their announcements will be fonnd In the paper. Look over our columns and observe the verifica tion of the truth of this assertion. Remember, , . a trade of a family of two thousand . Sj is worth asking for through these S- columns, espclally so at our very Guardian's Notice. Notice is hereby eiven that the nnilrKionvf has been appointed by the County Court of imauuuiuuLy, uregon, guaraian oi tne person and estate of Lars Larsen. All persons having claims against said .Lara Larsen are notified to present the same with the proper vouchers to the undersigned, at the office "OJO UUUUUKMJU 56 TliUUU, W 1 LZJ1I1 SIX uiuuujH i rum me aitce nereoi. Dated at Dalles City, this 0th day of Jan., 18W. jiunoiJU w. X. W1SKA1A.N WEBSTER'S INTERNA TIONAIt J3&FL. DICTION AR Jl GraM Educator "VnahriuCcC." Ten veara eme' in revising, luy ed itors c::;)i-;--d .ami ya.j-: 3 y--v r 1 more iag.a ow,uju Everybody should own 4his Dictionary. It an swers all questions concerning the his tory, spelling, pro nunciation, and meaning of words. A library in Itself, it also gives 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 jetc., etc., etc. This Work is Invaluable in the household, and to the teacher, scholar, pro- xessioiuu man, ana seix-eaucator. A Grand Bail Sold by All Booksellers. G. r C. Merriatn Co. Publishers. Springfield, Mass. m "WEBSTER'S TNTFRWmONAT. 1 rhiSaSSeTt Dicriawy editions. V C3"Send for free praepectas. .ALL THE NEWS TWICE A WEEK...., ' YOU THINK, YOTJ WILL CONCLUDE THAT WE ARE AT PRESENT OFFER ING A RARE BAR GAIN IN READING MATTER. $1.50 A YEAR FOR YOUR HOME PAPER. .ALL THE NEWS TWICE A WEEK.... SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of an execution and order of Hale issued out 01 tne Circuit court of the State of Oregon for Wasco County, upon a decree and judgment made, rendered and entered by said Court on the 24th day of November, 1893, in favor of plaintiff, in a suit wherein The Amer ican Mortgage Company of Scotland, Limited, a comoration. was nlaintiff. and Gennra F. Ar. nold, Kizzie A. Arnold and O. D. Taylor were ueienaanrs, ana to me airectea sua delivered, commanding me to levy upon and sell all the lands mentioned and described in said writ, and hereinafter described. I did on the Rth dav rf January, 1894, duly levy upon, and will sell at puDiio auction to tne nignest Diaaer, tor cash in uhuu, uii Daturuay, tne lOth day of February, 1894, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the front door of the County Court House in Dalles City, in Wasco County, Oregon, all of the lands and premises described in said wiit, and herein described as lollows, to-wit: - The southeast quarter of the southwest quar ter, and the southwest auarter of the southwest quarter of Section one (1), and the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of Section two (2)i in Township one (1 South, of Range twelve iui aub(. oi me wiiiameiie menaian. contain- in one hundred and twenty '120) acres of land, an 01 saia premises situateu, lying ana Deing in Wasco Countv. State of Orecron. Or so much thereof s shall be sufficient to 'sat isfy the sum of $384.54, with interest thereon at tne rate of 10 per cent, per annum since Novem ber 24th, 1S93, $50.00 attorney's fees, and $21.65 costs in said suit, together with costs of said writ ana accruing costs of sale. X. A. WARD, Sheriff of Wasco County, Oregon Dated at Dalles City, January 11th, 1894. anl3w5t SUMMONS. East End Hose Co. No. 3, AT THE ARMORY, V Topday 5yii7, pebruary 5, 1894. Music, by Biigf eld's Orchestra. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon ior tne county ot wasco, Maximilian Vogt and Philipine Chapman, 1 .riaintins, vs. Augustus Bunnell and John B. Foster and David Kobertson, partners doing busi ness as Foster & Kobertson, and Mrs. D. E. Price, Defendants. To Augustus Bunnell and Mrs. D. E. Price, of tne aoove-namea aeienaants In the name of the State of Oregon : You and each of you are hereby notified and required to appear ana answer tne complaint oi piaintins filed herein ueainst vou in the above entitled cause and Court on or before the first day of the next regular term oi tne circuit jourt oi tne State of Oregon for Wasco county, next follow ing the final publication of this summons, to wit: on or before Monday, the 12th day of Feb ruary, 1893, and if you fail so to answer, for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief prayed for in their complaint, to-wit; For a decree of foreclosure of that certain mortgage deed made and executed by the de fendant, Augustus Bunnell, to the above named plaintiffs on the 19th day of October, 1888, upon the following described real estate, situated in Wasco county, Oregon, to-wlt: The south half of those certain lots commonly known as the Bickel lots in Trevitt'B Addition to Dalles City on tne rona irom saia city to tne u. a. garrison as f ormerlv traveled, and beinir the same Tirfm- erty conveyed by Griffith E. Williams and wife to said Augustus Bunnell by deed duly recorded at page 353 Book "E" of Deed Records for Wasco county, uregon, ana particularly Dounaea ana described as follows, to-wit; Commencing on the east line of Libertv street at a nolnt on said line 170 feet southerly from the touth line of Fourth street at a point on said south line where the same is intersected by said east line of Lib erty street; thence southerly and along said east line of Liberty street 60 feet; thence easterly and at right angles with said first line 104 feet; thence northerly and parallel with said east line of Liberty street 60 feet; thence westerly to the place of beginning, said premises being in block '"D" of Trevitt's Addition to Dalles City; and that said premises be sold under such foreclos ure decree in the manner provided by law and according to the practice of this Court; that from the proceeds of such sale the plaintiffs have and receive the sum of $1,000.00 and inter est thereon since October 19th, 1888, at the rate of 8 per cent per annum, less payments made upon said notes as follows: $80.00 paid March 10th. 1890: $120.00 paid February 25th. 1891. 120.00 paid December 21st, 1891; $83.36 paid January 2d, 1892, and $16.64 paid October 7th, 1892; and the further sum of $100.00 as a reasonable su .a for attorneys' lees in this suit to foreclose said mortgage and collect said note, and the further sum ot $13.75 insurance prem ium uoon the buildings upon said premises paid by these plaintiffs, and $4.00 taxes upon said premises which have been paid by plaintiffs, to gether with all costs and disbursements made and expended in this suit, and that if any de ficiency shall remain after all of the proceeds properly applicable thereto shall have been ap plied in payments of plaintiffs'' demands as aforesaid, that plaintiffs have a judgment over against the defendant, Augustus Bunnell, for any such deficiency ; and that upon such fore closure sale all of the right, title, Interest and claim of said defendants and each and all of them, and all other persons claiming or to claim by, through or under them or either of them, in and to said mortgaged premises and every part thereof, be forever barred and foreclosed from the equity of redemption ; that plain tins be al lowed to bid at said foreclosure sale and become the purchasers thereof at their option, and that upon such sale the purchaser be let into the im mediate possession thereof, and for such other ana further relief as to the court may seem eq uitame ana just. This summons is served upon you, the said Augustus rsunneii ana airs. u. a. race, oy pub lication thereof, by order of Honorable W. L. Bradshaw. Judtre of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Wasco County, which order was duly made and entered at Chambers on the ztn aay oi Decemrjer. isw. DOF0R & MENEFEE, d30w7t Attorneys for plaintiffs. LiOST. 1 Bay Horse, four white legs and white face, branded on right shoulder '' Weight, 850 lbs. 1 Bay Horse, small star in forehead branded on left shoulder with J C over T. Weight, 850 or 900 lbs. Finder will be rewarded. J4d4w JOHN LOWE, Klngsley Or . Will be given by the Committee of Arrangements. H. L. KUCK (Chairman). R. E. SALTMARSHE, B.WILSON. ADAMS, W. H. LOCHHEAD (Sec'y i. R. E. WILLIAMS, A. U. W I JN Did AM, J. S. FISH, A. W. FARGHER, J. P. McINERNY, Reception Committee. M. SHOREN, F. KRAMER, Floor Managers. H. J. MAIER. JOS. WORSLEY, F. W. L. SKIBBE, L. S. DAVIS. V F. EPP. A. BUCHLER, J. HARPER, Hew York weekly Tribune -AND dm hq am 4iO N LY $1.75. ' . The Wasco County, Oregon, The Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the head of navigation on the Middle Columbia, and is a thriving, pros perous city. v. ' 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 along the eastern slope of the Cas cades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheep, the wool from . which finds market here. . . 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 corner stones she stands. . John Pashek, The Merhcant Tailor, 76 Coort Strtst, Hext door to "Wasco Sun Office. 3Has just received the latest styles in . Suitings for Gentlemen, and has a large assortment of Foreign and Amer ican Cloths, which he can finish To Order for those that favor him. Cleaaing and Repairing a Specialty. PT TLL Times makes it all the more necessary to advertise. That is what the most urogressive of our business men think, and these same bus iness men are the most prosperous at all times. If you 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 Chboniclb. It has more than double the circulation oi any other paper, and advertising in it pays big YOUR ATTEJ1TI0JI Is oalled to the faot that Hagh Glenn, Dealer in Glaag, lime, Plaster, Cement ' and Building Material of all hinds. Picture loiilfliiigs, To be found in the City. 72 Cdasfaington Street