The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, January 30, 1894, Image 2

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    Tne Dalles Daily Chronicle.
OFFICIAL PAPER OF DALLES CITY.
NO WASCO -COUNTY.
SUBSCRIPTION BATES.
BY KAIL, roSTASN FUPiH), IN ASTAXCI.
Weekly, 1 year. 1 60
6 months. 0 75
0 60
ItailT.lmir. - 6 00
6 months. 8 00
per 0 60
Address all communication to THE CHRON
ICLE." The Dalles, Oregon.
Post-office.
oftick HOURS
General Delivery Window 8 a. m. to 7 p. m.
Money Order " 8 a. m. to 4 p. m.
Sunday ii D. " 9 a. m. to 10 a.m.
CUMING OF HAILS
trains going; East p. m. and 11:45 a. m.
" West 9 p.m. and 6:30 p. m.
Stage for Goldendale 7:30a.m.
" " Prineville 6:30 a.m.
" "'Dufuraud Warm Springs. ..5:30 a.m.
" f Leaving lor Lyle A Hartland..6:30 a. m.
" " " J Antelope 6:30 a.m.
Except Sunday.
fTrl-weekly. Tuesday Thursday and Saturday.
I " Monday Wednesday and Friday.
TUESDAY,
JAN. 30, 1894
THE SUBJECT OF ROADS.
Writing on this subject, Prof. J. W,
Spencer of Georgia says in a recent re
port:
In transportation a team cannot con
vey a load greater tnan it can a raw
over the worst Dart of the roads. It is
not saying too ranch that the cost of
bringing much ot the cotton to rnartcec is
double or treble what it should be if the
roads were in good order. Indeed, the
cost of these few miles of transportation
is commonly greater than that of con
veying it from the market to the sea
board. Half of this cost, at least, could
be saved with good roads, and thus one
application of poor roads alone is seen
to cost the state $450,000. In one county
there were 10,000 horses, the feeding of
which at twenty-five cents a day cost
$70,000 for four weeks. During four
weeks the roads were in such a condition
that teaming was out of the question.
The horses were idle in the stable. It
cost the county at least this amount ti. e
bad roads.
Prof. Spencer favors the state govern
ment taking charge of the highways and
working the entire convict force of the
commonwealth upon them constantly.
He concludes as follows :
- It has been estimated that the loss
occasioned by bad roads costs the United
States no less than $350,000,000 a year.
What people do not directly pay for
they do not feel, but he who provides
against losses is the thrifty and well-to-do
man, and so with Btates; for extrav
agant wastes and the gloomy side of bad
roads ought not to be perpetuated. The
bright side of good roads is not merely
in direct profits, but the increased value
of lands and the increased com
fort in traveling. A country
without railroads is cheap today. A
district from which it costs more to con
vey the product to the nearest market
than from it to the markets of the world
must also be cheap. The cheapness,
is overcome by good roads.
We would earnestly desire that every
farmer in Wasco county take the same
view of this matter as Mr. Spencer.
No worse roads exist anywhere than in
Wasco county, and by merely repairing
the bad places in them they can be
made practically good. To let them re
main as they are is the policy of losing at
the bung hole more than is gained at the
spigot. It would pay Wasco county to
expend $10,000 on roads. A great amount
of time, work and money is lost every
year because of roads almost impassable
in the winter time.
The Navajo Indians of Arizona own
1,500,000 head of sheep. There are 16.
00 Indians in the tribe. These have
also sent a protest against the passage
of the Wilson bill.
Representative Tarsney, of the ways
and means committee, says there is a
misconception regarding the income tax.
"The bill exempts all incomes of $4,000
and less," he says. In other words, a
man who has an annual income of $4,000
pays no tax. A man with an annual
income of $4,100 pays a 2 per cent, tax
on $100, which is the excess above $4,000.
Senator Vest secured a ruling from the
chairman that hereafter petitions against
the Wilson bill can -only be read by
unanimous consent. Both the senator
and the ex-president are doubtless
almost crazy by the continual din in
their ears against the measure, and, as
unanimous consent is a hard thing to
obtain with a democratic majority for
this purpose, it will probably end the
reading of these petitions in the senate
The right of petition among the masses
thus loses its potency and at democratic
hands.
The hundreds of hundreds of anti
Wilson bill petitions have had the same
effect on the democrats in congress as a
cat-o'-nine-tails possesses. They have
been lashed and goaded by them until
they are nearly desperate. With the
supreme energy of a dying man' they
have refused to hear these petitions, and
hope by stopping up their ears, and not
listening to the wails of the people, the
cry for bread, and the plea for work, to
get through the Wilson bill with the
least possible talk about it. To this end
they annihilate their own sense of judg
ment, hush their own reason, and des
perately trust to luck that the bill will
prove to be not so bad as painted. -
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1 The best salve in the world - for cuts,
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t is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac
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- ONE FAMILY PROVIDED FOR."
It Includes the Monarch of Every Eu
ropean Country.
Intimately as the ruling families of
Europe were allied Dy blood and mar
riage in the middle of the sixteenth
century, when Mary I. was queen of
England, the prese nt day displays still
more intimate and widespread connec
tions between them..
Take the English royal family as the
starting point; It is connected, first,
with Germany by Empress Freder
ick. . The . present emperor is Queen
Victoria's grandson. The duke of Ed
inburg married into the. Russian fam
ily. The prince of Wales - married a
princess of Denmark, which house is
also connected with Kussia.
Denmark produced the present' king
of Greece. ..
The representatives of the Wettin
family have been, during the present
reign, the prince of Wales, Ernest II.,
duke of Saxe-Coburg; Leopold II., king
of Belgium; Ferdinand, prince of Bul
garia; Albert, king of Saxony; the king
of Portugal, grandson of another prince
of Coburg, who, by marrying the queen
of Portugal, became king of that coun
try. The English family again is connect
ed with the Oldenburgs, thus bringing
in the Scandinavian family. The king
of Denmark's daughter is the princess
of Wales.
There are also George I., king of
Greece;. Ernest, duke of Schleswig
Holstein, the grand duke of Olden
burg, and Alexander ni., emperor of
Russia. Alexander III. again is a
Romanoff.
In other directions, again, the em
peror of Austria enters into this royal
family, and on his side also the grand
duke of Baden,, the queen regent of
Spain and her little boy king.
In fact, there is not a royal family in
Europe at the present day which is
not more or less intimately connected
with the rest by kindred or by mar
riage. . .
Krause's Headache Capsules.
A remedy used with unvarying success as a
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Are you willing to work for the causa
of Protection in placing reliable infor
mation in the hands, of your acquain
tances ?
If you are, you should be identified
With ,
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PROTECTIVE TARIFF LEAGUE.
, 138 w. 230 St., New York.
Cot this notice out and send it to the League,
taupgryour position, and give a helping band, ,
A sedentary occupation,
plenty of sitting down and not
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Dr.. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets
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Magazine
FOR 1894.
The Best Literature,
The Newest Knowledge,
and Fully Illustrated.
15 Cents a Copy.
Only $1.50 a Veal.
Some of the features are:
The Edge of the Fataie.
The AlarvelB 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
the subjects.
True IlaiTi?atives
of Adventure, Daring
. and Hardihood..
Ieopard hunting In Northern Africa, Lion
hun inp: 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 ($100,000,000 a year).
Human Documents.
Portraits of famous people from childhood
to the present day.
Shoit Stories. .
And by the best writers obtainable.
Rotable Serials.
By
IJobeft Xtouis Stevenson
and
William Dean fiouuells.
Among the contributors for the year are:
PpofessoB Otrummond,
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, -fivehdsseon
pafpaf,
Bret fievte,
Rudyafd KipliDQ.
Oetave Thanet, '
BndMta Iiang,
. W. O. fiocuells,
Gilbert Parker, '
F- H. Stockton,
Joel Chandler Harris,
Conan Doyle, "
I?. Ii. Stevenson. .
Charles R. Dana,
Hrehibald Forbes,
- and many others.
15 CEfiTS R COPY. - Sl.SO R YEfli?.
Remit by draft, money order or
1 registered letter.
S.S. IWeCIiOtE, liimited,
743 & 745 Broadway, N. Y. City.
The Dalles Ghtonlele,
-and-
JBeClare's JVIagazine,
a whole year for $2.25.
Adrees,
CHRONICLE PUB. CO.,
THE DALLES, OK.
Guardian's Notice.
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned
has been appointed by the County Court of
Wasco County, Oregon, guardian of the person
and estate of Lars Careen.
All persons having claims against said Lars
Larsen are notified to present the same with the
proper vouchers to the undersigned, at the office
of Mays, Huntington & Wilson, within six
months from the date hereof.
Dated at Dalles City, this 6th day of Jan., 1894.
J10w5ptl , W. T. WISEMAN.
The DaUes Daily Chronicle.
HAS A FAMILY OP
2000 KEADEES.
They read The Chronicle to get the latest and
most reliable r.ews. And they read every line
that is in the paper. .. That is what makes the
Chronicle an invaluable advertising medium.
The newspaper that . goes to the family
firesides is the one S- that the advertisers
of today patronize ' when they desire to
reach the people. When they want your trade
their announcements will be found in the paper.
Look over our columns and observe the verifica
tion of the truth of this assertion. Remember,
w trade of a family of two thousand
g- is worth asking for through these S
' . columns, espcially so at onr very '
Qtyeap fidvQrt$T)f IJats.
WEBSTER'S ' I
INTERNATIONAL
EnHrtlyKcm. JjTfJTItfWAjitY
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vuuvctuin iuq uu
tory, spelling, pro
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meaninc of words.
ALibrnryinltself. 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 etc., etc., etc.
This Work is Invaluable in the
household, and to the teacher, scholar, pro
fessional man, and self -educator.
Sold by Alt Bookseller.
G.
& C. MerrUua Co.
WEBSTER'S
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fraptitc reprints of ancient DICTIfflffiKSf J
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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. Taylor 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,
tbe 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 writ, and herein
described as lollows, to-wit:
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 bo much thereof s 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 feec, and 21.65
costs in said suit, together with exists ofaid
writ and accruing costs of sale.
T. A. Ward,
BherifT 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,
. Plaintiffs,
vs."
Augustus Bunnell and John R. Foster and
David Robertson, partners do:ng busi
ness as Foster & Robertson, and Mrs. 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
filed 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 marie and executed by the de
fendant, Augustus Bunnell, to the above named
plain tin's on the 19th day of October, 1888, upon
the following descrited real estate, situated in
Wasco county, Oregon, to-wlt: The south half
of those certain lots commonly known as the
Bickel lots in Trevitt's Addition to Dalles City
on the road from said city to the U. S. 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
described as follows, to-wit; Commencing on
the east line of Liberty street at a point on said
line 170 feet southerly from the touth Jine 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 Buch foreclos
ure decreein 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 11,000.00 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,
$20.00 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 suoi for attorneys' lees in this suit to
foreclose said mortgage and collect said note,
and the further sum ot $13.75 Insurance prem
ium upon 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
agsinBt 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 Bale and become
the purchasers thereof at their option, and that
npon such 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 upon yon, the said
Augustus Bunnell and Mrs. D. E. Price, by pub
lication thereof, by order of Honorable W. L.
Bradshew, 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-Tmright shoulder ""j . 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, Kingsley Or.
A CJr and BaJ
Will be
AT THE
East End Hose Co
Toi7day upiij, pebruary 5, 1894.
Music by Birgfe d's Orchestra.
Committee of Arrangements. "
H. L.KTJCK (Chairman). R. E. SALTMAESHE, B. WILSON.
-C.B.ADAMS, W. H. LOGHHEAD (Sec'yl.
Reception Committee.
. M. SHOREN, :
F. KRAMER,
Floor Managers.
H. J. MAIER,
B. E. WILLIAMS,
A. C. WYNDHAM,
J. S. FISH,
A. W. FAKGHER,
jus.
J. P. McINERNY,
b.w. h:blm sg co.,-
- DEALERS IN -
FWiioro TV7T aH f rsi r mo vi-1 PUMJolr.
A' -jj muiuuico anu uiiciiiiuaioi
Film Tnilfit Snaiis. flmriTis. KmsliRS. PRTfirniRrr. F.tfi ' '
r ;
Pure Wines and Liquors for Medicinal Purposes.
. Compounding: Physicians' Prescriptions a Specialty.
r No. 105 Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon.
Opposite Columbia Candy Factory,
Hew York Weekly
-AND-
41-ON
Wasco County,
' The Gate City oi the Inland Empire is situated at the head
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. - 7
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. 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 -corner
stones she stands. ." ' '
John Pashek,
78 Coalt Stft, .
Next door to Wasco Sun Office.
Has lust received tbe 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. .
Cleaflifia and flepairiog a Specialty.
Times makes it all the more
necessary to advertise. That is
what the most oroirressive of our
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 you can't do better than talk to them
through the columns of the Daily Chboniclk.
It has more than double the circulation oi any
other paper, and advertising in it pays big
The Merhcant Tailor,
rTTL
given by the
No
3:
ARMORY,
F. W. L. SKIBBE,
L. S. DAVIS.
A. BUCHLER,
J. HARPER,
woksley;
F. EPP.
1 - 1 - j 1
Oregon,
YflUft UTTEJlTiOfl
Is called to the fact that
Dealer in Glass, .lime, Planer, Cement
and Building Material of all kinds.
- Carrie tk rineat X.in t
To be found in the City. -fJUashington
Street
72
Hugh
Glenn
PidtuiB juomaings,