The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, January 24, 1894, Image 2

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    The Dalles Daily Chr oniele.
OFFICIAL PAPER OF DALLES CITY.
. AND WASCO COUNTY.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
' BY KAIL, PO STAGS PREPAID, IN ADVANCB. .
Weekly, 1 year. I 1 50
6 months..
0 75
" 8 "
Daily, 1 year
" 6 months
per "
. 060
. 6 00
. 8 00
. 0 60
Address all communication to " THE CHRON
ICLE," The Dalles, Oregon.
. Post-office. -
' OPTICS . HOCKS
Qeneral Delivery Window. 8 a. m. to 7 p. m.
" Money Order " 8 a. m. to 4 p. m.
Sunday a n, " 9 a. m. to 10 a. m.
CLOSIHQ OP If AILS .
" trains going East 9 p. m. and 11:45 a. m.
" West 9 p.m. and 5:30 p.m.
Stage for Goldendale 7:30 a.m.
" " Prineville 5:30 a.m.
"Dufurand Warm Springs. ..-6:30 a. m.
" Leaving for Lyle & Hartland.. 5:80 a.m.
" Antelope 6:30 a. m.
Except Sunday.
I Tri-weekly. Tuesday Thursday and Saturday.
" Monday Wednesday and Friday.
"WEDNESDAY, - - - JAN. 24, 1894 1;
ALL HIS CRY IS SOUP.
' There is a vein of humor in the exist
ence of the soup house, brought on
within a year out of unbounded pros
perity, and this is how the editor of the
New York Recorder works it:
Frayer and soup are a curious com
bination. But they go together at present.
Congress is crowded with petitions,
while the country is consoled with soup.
Page after page of the Congressional
Eecord is occupied with petitions,
prayers and protests.
Column after column of the daily
papers In every industrial city is filled
with stories of soup.
"The right of petition is free. Any
body can pray to. congress without
charge.
Soup is also being made free though -out
the country.
Willie Wilson's bill is casting the
shadow of its free list far in front of it.
Free prayers, free soup and free loaves
are already with us, even before we get
free wool and iron and the other free
things vouchsafed to us by Willie Wil
son's bill.
This always was a land of freedom,
and just now it is full of free things that
were never so free before.
Especially soup I
I think this administration will be re
ferred to in history -as the Free Prayer
and Soup Administration.
Congress never had so many prayers
poured into its ears and on to its files as
at the present session.
The Record is mainly made up of
reading matter like this :
"By Mr. Ryan: "Petition of over
1,100 residents and employes in Yonk
ers, N. Y., agoinst reduction of duty on
fur felt hats.
"By Mr. Abbott: Petition of Kos.
Berry and 376 other citizens of Bosque
county, Tex., protesting against the re
duction of the tariff on wool.
"By Mr. Aldrich : Protest of O. Ol
son and others, employes of Kohn Bros.
& Co., wholesale clothing merchants of
Chicago, against the passage of the Wil
son tariff bill."
The freeman's right to pray congress
is thus being freely exercised.
The freeman's need of free soup is also
being largely, in fact almost universally,
recognized.
Verily, it is the most prayerful and
soupy time known in this country with
in the memory of the oldest inhabitant.
The efficacy of prayer when it is ad-
- dressed to a democratic congress is de
cidedly doubtful.
Free raw materials and free soup are
probably predestined to go hand in hand
Tinder this administration at .any rate
until the control of congress is taken
away from it.
There has been nothing, in fact, but
soup on the bill of tare since Mr. Cleve
land became the national caterer.
Soup in Hawaii sable soup.
Soup financially yellow (gold-standard)
soup.
Soup in the silver states mines closed.
Soup in the treasury Carlisle crying
for "relief."
Soup in the railroad world ladled out
by receivers.
Soup in the bankruptcy courts fail
ures unprecedented. ,t
Soup in the mills and factories less
work, less wages, or none at all.
Soup funds in all the cities, and sweet
charity the only business in the land
- (bar the sheriffs) that is not depressed.
. Thus does Willie Wilson stand at" the
tariff tureen and flood the country with
" Boup, while the country floods him in
return with prayers for mercy.
The people will have to wait till next
November. If they vote then as they
are praying now, Willie Wilson's tariff
tureen will be removed and the demo
cratic deluge of soup will be over. ;
Andrew Jackson wrote in 1824: - "It
is time that we should become a little
more Americanized, and, instead of
feeding the paupers and laborers of
England, feed our own.". Apply that
sentiment now and kill the Wilson bill.
'Gsntlkmen: Please send Krause's Headache
Capsules as follows: Two boxes to Flora Beay,
Havanna, N. Dak. Two boxes to Lillie Wilcox,
Brookland, N. Dak, I have always been great
ufl'erer from headache and your capsules are the
only thing that relieves me."
Yours very truly,
Tiara Seat, '
" - . Havanna, N. Dak.
' Sold by Blake y fc Houghton.
- Peanuts!
Cheaper than anywhere else at the
California winehouse.
REFUSED A THRONE.
The Heir Presumptive of Austria Thrown
Over for a Vouni Lieutenant.
Some time ago, says Vienna Letter
in the London News, it was believed
that' the heir presumptive to the Aus
trian throne, Archduke Francis Ferdi
nand, would marry his Bavarian cous
in's daughter? Princess Elizabeth. It
is now heard that the idea existed, and
was much favored by the emperor, but
the young1 princess frustrated - th'ese
plans. - ..
More than a year ago she began to
look approvingly upon a handsome
younpf lieutenant, Baron S . . The
younjr officer began by riding past her
windows a couple of times a day, then
he obtained a room with windows
facing Prince Leopold's palace. In the
winter, at court balls, the lieutenant
danced of teher than any other with the
princess, and in the spring lawn tennis
brought them more together still.
All at once the young: officer was
transferred to a regiment stationed -in
Alsace; and this seemed the tame end
of a romantic story. But in the sum
mer, when Princess Elizabeth staid
with her emperor grandpa at Ischl, she
is 'supposed to have used her .time so
well that the emperor promised to
make the baron a prince, to give him
some landed property, and to allow the
happy couple to marry if their love
was proof against time. r
The princess is nineteen, pretty, per
fectly natural, and very sweet-tempered.
That 'she should have preferred
a union with the man she loves to the
certainty of an imperial throne will
not alienate the sympathies of those
who know her and love her for her
natural grace.
About a year ago I took a violent at
tack of la grippe. I coughed day and
night for about six weeks ; my wife then
suggested that I try Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy. At first I could see no
difference, but still .kept trying it, and
soon found that it was what I needed.
If I got no relief from one dose I took
another, and it was only a few days un
til I was free from the cough. I think
people in general ought to know the
value of this remedy, and I take pleas
ure in acknowledging the benefits have
received from it. Madron Mdstaed,
Otway, Ohio. Fifty-cent bottles for sale
by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists.
Mexican Silver Stove Polish causes no
duEt.
Warner's butter at Maier & Benton's
grocery store. '
Cures CoufrTis, Hoarseness, Sore Tliroat,
Croupproraptly: relieves Whooping Cough
and Asthnio. Ft Consumption Jt has no
rival; has oured thousands w;iere all others
failed; will curb Ton if taken in time. Sold
by Druggists on a auarp.ntoe. For Lame Back:
or Chest, use SHILOH'S 1-LASTKru 25 eta.
HJLO H'mCATARR H
REMEDY,
Iftve vou Ca.ta.rrh ? This reruedv is Jimmn.
teed to cure you. Trice 50 cts. Injector raa
For sale by Snipes & Kinersiy.
Easily, Quickly.
Permanently Restored.
WEAKNESS,
NERVOUSNESS,
DEBILITY,
and all the train of evils
from early erro rs or 1 ate r
excesses, the results of
overwork, sickness,
worry, etc Full strength,
development and tone
given to every organ and
fortlon of tne body,
lmplo, natural methods.
Immediate improvement
seen. Failure tmoossiblo.
2,000 references. Bok.
explanation and proofs
mailed (sealed) free.
ERIE MEDICAL CO.
BUFFALO. N. V.
Rheumatism;
Lumbago. Sciatica,
Kidney Complaints,
Lame Back, &c.
D.I. SASBEN'S ELEGT3ID BELT
With Electro-Magnetic 81T5FENSORY
jLtat-ess jrateaia i itei imprTemenia
Win cure without medicine all Wmuomm resulting from
over-taxation of brain nerve forces t excesses or indis
cretion, as nervous debility, sleeplessness, languor,
rheumatism, kidney, liver and bladder complaints,
lame back, lumbago, sciatica, all female complaints,
general ill health, etc. This electric Belt contains
WoaderftU fmpnmmenU over all others. Current is
Instantly felt by -wearer or we forfeit ai.OOQ.oq, and
will cure alt of the above diseases or no pay Thou
cands have been cured by this marvelous invention
after all other remedies failed, and we give bandied
Of testimonials in this and every other state.
vur rewwnu iaprea buhthw BUarKllsUKT. xnq
fcWlT&Klrat Street, JOXCXIKJtt OOE.
"HYO0 KEED ANY JOB
FEINTING, 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 BE8T 13 GOOD
ENOUGH FOR ANY
BODY. USE LOTS OF
PRINTER'S IXK AND
. BE PROSPEROUS. '
eoctsSWSfHll 3f
$1X0 per BomeT'Nj-jjrs.W'Vy
if
Sr.
I rather, too much for you
the ordinary, bulky pill. Too big
to take, and too much disturbance
for your poor system. The smallest,
easiest to take, and best, are Dr.
Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They
leave out all the disturbance, but
yet do you more good. Their help
lasts.
Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious
Attacks, Sick or Bilious Headaches,
and all derangements of the liver,
stomach, and bowels are prevented,
relieved; and . permanently cured.
They're guarafUeed to give satisfac
tion, or your money is returned.
A " COLD IN THE HEAD " is quickly
cured by Dr. Sage's
Catarrh Remedy. So
f is Catarrhal Headache,
f and every trouble' that
fe I is caused by Catarrh.
JU So Cat.arrn itself.
$500 m cash for any
case which they cannot cure. Sold
by all druggists.
Magazine
FOR 1894.
The Best Literature,
The Newest Knowledge,
and Fully Illustrated.
15 Cents a Copy.
Only $1.50 a Yeai.
Some of the features are:
Tne Edge of the Future.
The Marvels of Science and Achievement,
presented in a popular way.-
patnous .People.
Their life-stories told by word and pictures
the materials being in all cases obtained
from sources intimately connected -with
the subjects.
Tirue Jlaifiratives
of Adventure, Daring
and Hardihood.
Leopard hunting in Northern Africa, Lion
hun'ing In Algeria, Tiger hunting in In
dia, Elephant hunting in Africa, and ad
ventures in the 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
chant (1100,000,000 a year).
Human Documents.
Portraits of famous people from childhood
to the present day. -
Short Stories.
And by the best writers obtainable.
Rotable Serials.
By
Robeft Iiouis Stevenson
and
William Dean Jlouuells.
Among the contributors for the year are:
Professor; Dpummond,
Elizabeth Staavt Phelps,
. - Svehdeason pai'i'ai', -
Bret fiote, ".'"'
Iudyavd Kipling,
Oetave Thanot,
Hndnecu Liang,
Mt. n. Hocuells,
. Gilbert Parka,
p. 1?. Stockton,
- Joel Chandler fiords, " ;
Conso Doyle, -H-
Li. Stevenson. ' .
. Charles A. Dana, .
Archibald Forbes,
v and many others.
15 CET1TS A COPY. $l.SO A YEHf?.
Remit by draft, money order or :
, registered letter.
S. S. JVIeCliUHH, Iiimited,
743 & 745 Broadway, N. Y. City.
The Dalles Chronicle, Twak,
and
JdeClwe's flIagazine,
a whole year for f2.25.
Adrees,
CHRONICLE PUB. CO.,
THE DALLES, OR.
The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
HAS A FAMILY OF
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 advertising medium.
The newspaper that goes to the family
firesides Is the one S- 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 the verifies,
tion of the truth of this assertion. Remember,
. , uia vi A mini i J v ww U1UIUHU1U . i -
Is worth asking for through these
columns, espcially so at our
5heap jf.dvrti5ir) 5ats.
Guardian's Notice.
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned
has been appointed by the County Court of
Wasco County, Oregon, guardian of the person
and estate of Lars Larsen.
All persons having claims against said Lars
Larsen are notified to present the same with the
proper vouchers to the undersigned, at the office
of iinys. Huntington & Wilson, within - six
months from the date hereof.
Dated at Dulles Citv. thiK fifh nf Tnn iqw
'JlOwSptl W.T.WISEMAN. "
WEBSTER'S . I
INTERNA TIQ17AI, 1
Sa&3 DICTIONARY
Qivni Btlatoter. .
"InaZiTKZCctl.-'
Tea year speci
In reviinp, loo ed
itorsci::"C'l,an;l more than f 300,000
expended. .
Everybody
should own this
Dictionary. It an
swers all questions
conceruins the his
tory spelling, pro
nunciation, and
meaninz 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 la valuable in tho
household, and to the teacher, soholar, pro
fessional man, and self-educator.
Sold by All Booksellers.
G. & C. Iferriaxn Co.
JitHistters,
Springfield, Mass.
"WEBSTER'S
DJTERNSnONAL J
BTaloreprrnt ot aSSeut DICriGNAtQf
euiuom. .
Stixid fort recprovpectug.
...ALL THE NEWS TWICE A WEEK.
P
SBEW YOU THINK, YOU
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 sale
issued out of the "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 corporation, was plaintiff, and George F. Ar
nold, Kizzie A. Arnold and O. D. Tavlor were
defendants, and to me directed end delivered,
commanding me to levy upon and sell all the
lands mentioned and described in said writ, and
hereinafter described, I did on the 8th day of
January, 1894, duly levy npon, and will sell at
public auction to the highest bidder, for cash in
hand, on Saturday,
the loth day of February, 1894,
at 10 o'clock In the forenoon of said dsy, 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 writ, and herein
described as follows, to-witv
The southeast quarter of the southwest quar
ter, and the southwest quarter of the southwest
quarter of Section one (1), and the southwest
quarter of the southeast quarter of Section two
(2), in Township one (1) South, of Range twelve
(12) East, of the Willamette Meridian, contain
in one hundred and twenty '120) acres of land,
all of said premises situated, lying and being in
Wasco County, State of Oregon,
Or so much thereof as shall be sufficient to sat
isfy the sum of $384.54. with Interest thereon at
the rate of 10 per cent, per annum since Novem
ber 24th, 1893, $50.00 attorney's fee, and $21.65
costs in said suit, together with costs of said
writ and accruing costs of sale.
T. A. Ward,
Sheriff of Wasco County, Oregon.-.
Dated at Dalles City, January 11th, 1894.
janl3w5t.
SUMMONS.
In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon
. . for the county of Wasco.
Maximilian Vogt and Philipine Chapman,
Plain tiffs,
vs.
Augustus Bunnell and John R. Foster and )
iaviu xiooerison, partners ao ng dusi-.
ness as Foster fc Robertson, and Airs. D.
E. Price, , Defendants.
To Augustus Bunnell and Mrs. D. E. Price, of
the above-named defendants:
In the name of the State of Oregon; You and
each of you are hereby notified and required to
appear and answer the complaint of plaintiffs
tiled herein against you in the above entitled
cause and Court on or before the first day of the
next regular term of the Circuit Court of the
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 Trevitfs Addition to Dalles City
on the road from said city to the IT. B. Garrison
as formerly traveled, and being the same prop
erty conveyed by Griffith E. Williams and wife
to said Augustus Bunnell by deed duly recorded
at page 853 Book "E" of Deed Records for Wasco
county, Oregon, and particularly bounded and
descrioed as follows, to-wit; Commencing on
the east line of Liberty street at a point on said
line 170 feet southerly from the fcouth 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 GO feet; thence westerly to the
plnce of beginning, said premises being in block
'D" of Trevitfs 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
npon said notes as follows: $80.00 paid March
10th, 1890; $120.00 paid February 25th, 1891,
t'JO.OO paid December 21st, 1891; $83.86
paid January 2d, 1892, and $16.64 paid October
7th, 1892; and the further sum of $100.00 as a
reasonable sum for attorneys' lees in this suit to
foreclose said mortgage and collect Bald note,
and the fnrther sum of $13.75 Insurance prem
ium upon the buildings upon said premises paid
by these plaintiffs, and $4.00 taxes npon 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 plaintiffs be al
lowed to bid at said foreclosure sale and become
the purchasers thereof at their option, and that
upon snch sale the purchaser be let into the im
mediate possession thereof, and for such other
and further relief as to the Court may seem eq
uitable and just. '
This summons Is served npon yon, the said
Augustus Bunnell and Mrs. D. E. Price, by pub
lication thereof, by order of Honorable w. L.
Bradshaw, Judge of the Circuit Court of the
State of Oregon for Wasco County, which order
was duly made and entered at Chambers on the
27th day of December, 1893.
DUFUR & MENEFEE,
d30w7t Attorneys for plaintiffs. .
LOST. "
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. '
j4diw
JOHN LOWE, Kingsley Or.
A
Grand
. , . Will" be given by the
East End Hose Co. No. 3;
- AT THE ARMORY, S -
Toi7day pip, February 5, 1894.
Music by Birgfeld's Orchestra.
Committee of Arrangements. -
H. L. KUCK. (Chairman). R. E. SALTMARSHE, - B. WILSON,
-;. C. B. ADAMS, W. H. LOUHHEAD (Sec'yl. Z55"1'
Reception Committee.
M. SHOREN, "
F. KRAMER, ;
Floor Managers.
H. J. MAIER.
R. E. WILLIAMS,
A. C. WYNDHAM,
J. S. FISH,
A, W. FARGHER,-
JOS.
J. P. McINERNY,
Hew Yorii&ek
I AND
LY
Wasco County,
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. - " '
ITS TERRITORY. v
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
;orner stones she stands. '
John Pashek,
The Merhcant Tailor,
7S Count Stvt, -Hext
door to Wasoo Sun Offioe.
Has Jnjjt received the latest styles in
Suitings for Gentlemen,
and hs a large assortment of Foreign and Amer
ican Cloths, which he can finish To Order for
those that favor him. .
Cleaning and Repairing a Specialty.
Times makes it all the more
necessarr to advertise. That is
what the most. Tjroirresslve of our
hnfriness 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 you can't do better than talk to them
through the columns of the Daily Chboniclk.
It has more than double the circulation ol any
other paper, and advertising In it pays big
B;ul
F. W. L. SKIBBE,
L. S. DAVIS.
A. BTJCHLER,
J. HARPER,
WORSLEY,
F. EPP.
$1.75.1
Oregon,
YOUR ATTEJlTIOIl
Is oalled to the faot that
Dealer in Glass, lime, Planar, Cement
and Building Material of all kinds.
Carrie tha Finest Line mf
Picture
To be found in the City.'
72 CUasfaingtoo Street
Hap
Glenn
.V
i