The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, March 14, 1894, Image 2

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    The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
OFFICIAL PAPER OF DALLES CITY.
AMD WASCO COUNTY. .
SUBSCRIPTION BATES.
BY KAIL, POSTAGI PRXPAID, IK ADVANCI
Weekly, 1 year. , $ 1 60
6 months.
. 0 75
. 0 60
s " .'.
Daily, 1 year. .'.
" 6 months
per- "
. 6 00
'. 8 00
. 0 50
Address all communication to " THE CHRON-
ICLE." The Dalles, Oregon.
Post-Offlee.
' OPTICS HOURS .
General Delivery Window v. 8 a. m. to 7 p.
Monev Order "... 8a.rn.to4D.
Sunday G D. ...- i .8 a. m. to 10 a. m.
CLOBING Or MAILS
trains going East.. 9 p. m. and 11:45 a.m
" " West 9p.M. and 6:80 p. m.
Btage for uoidendale 7:bu a. m
" Prlnevillo 5:30 a. m.
"Dufurand Warm Serines ..5:30 a. m,
" tLeaving for Lyle&Hartland.. 5:30 a.m.
' " " JAntelope... 5:30a.m.
-nxcepi ounaay.
tTrl-weekly. Tuesds'v Thursday and Saturday,
I . juonaay Wednesday ana rnaay
WEDNESDAY, - - - MAR. 14, 1894
The Indians who nave been tried as
soldiers have been found wanting. What
they want mostly is rations.
If Great ' Britain is dallying with
Nicaragua the United States has a right
to interfere. There is a doctrine that
disapproves of such international flirta
tions.
A Colorado man 6ued another for the
alienation of his wife's affections. ' The
jury returned a verdict for $100,000.
Successive trials have brought the sum
down to $25,000, and another trial is -in
progress. It io believed that bv . the
time the delicate matter has been adju
dicated for good the husband will find
ahimself ssessed for having permitted (he
affections in question to get away from
him. .
A citizen oi Victoria, described as
author, soldier, diplomat, athlete and
gentleman, recently slapped the face of a
consul there. . For this divertisment he
paid a fine of $2, which divided amongst
author, soldier, diplomat,' athlete and
gentleman, made the reasonable sum of
40 cents each. The consul naturally
was overawed. No one individual can be
.expected to calmly fce a mob.
The moBt conspicuous result of the
panic and the long financial depression
is the passing of so many great railroad
properties into the hands of receivers.
In other words, a larger proportion of
railroads failed than of anv other kind
of business. This is a very striking
fact,' not only of commercial importance,
but of importance in many other ways
as well. ' Mr. Simon Sterne, the distin
guished railroad lawyer of New York,
I who is among our clearest writers upon
.great' economic subjects, publishes in
the March Forum an article of unusual
' breadth and interest, analyzing the--causes
and the consequences of these ex-
teniive failures. He shows that they
J . 2 a i 1 1 n
- ro u u ju great measure tu uuu miau--cial
methods, sometimes to vicious
financial management ; but that in ad
dition to all other causes we have not
developed men of sufficient ability to
manage these great properties as fast aB
the properties have been built that re
quire such management. In other
words, our rapidity of consolidation and
construction has been much greater than
the development of men able to manage
the great properties that we have con
structed. It is the opinion of a good many
Chicago people that the ridiculous farce
of attributing the numerous fires at the
world's fair grounds to the efforts of un
known incendiaries might as well cease.
The buildings as they stand are of no
particular use to anybody, and, as they
must be removed from the park by a
. certain date and the expense of carting
them away would be very considerable,
fire is'as good a medium as any other to
bring about their removal from exist
ence. -There is something sad about
destruction in anv manner of those
superb white palaces, which in their
aggregate grouping made a picture of
splendor and beauty impossible to des
cribe in words; but if they are to be
destroyed, fire is the quickest way out of
the dilemma. ' It would, however, be
better for the people in power to
come out honestly in favor of burning
the - palaces down than to affront
the intelligence of thinking people by
mock expressions of grief when one or
mnrA ftf t.hn Vinilrlifiya avu itinin nw.
. through the alleged efforts of a visionarv
- incendiary.. The tramps that are said to
eieep in the buildings would hardly
pply the torch to their places of habita
tion. Be honest; Messieurs les Park
Commissioners; burn' down all .the
.buildings at once, and be done with it.
Deserving; Fraise
We desire to say to our citizens, that
lor years we have been selling Dr.
.King's New Discovery for Consumption,
'Dr. King's New Iafe Pills, Bucklen's
Arnica Salve and Electric Bitters, and
have never handled remedies that sell as
well, or that have given such universal
satisfaction. We do not hesitate to
guarantee them every time, as we stand
ready to refund the purchase price, if
satisfactory results do not follow their
use.. There remedies have won their
great popularity purely on their merits.
Snipes & Kinersly's druggists. , .
. . Now is the tim to kill squirrels. Sure
Shot at Snipes & Kineraly's.
Haworth, printer, 116 Court St. , tf
THE CAMEB00NS.
V
Country That Is Giving
many Much. Trouble.
Qer
i African Territory About Which. the
English Government Is Vitally Con- :
cernad The Dispute About -Its
Boundaries.
"Battle in the Cameroons," says a re'
cent cable. What and where are the
Cameroons? This from the New York
Herald -will elucidate a little:
The Cameroons is a territory on the
night of Jiiafra, West . Africa, one
nunarea ana ntty thousand square
miles in extent, and with an estimated
population of two millions. It has
coast line of one hundred and twenty
miles between the CampoTiver and the
Kiodel.Key, is bounded on the north
east by a treaty line running- north
east to the east of Yola, on the upper
ISenue, and on the- south by a line run
ning' inland, due . east from the mouth
of the Campo river, to about . the me-
idian of longitude fifteen degrees east,
vhich may be regarded, as the eastern
jr inland limit oi the so-caued pro
tectorate." . -
In 1892 there were one hundred and
sixty-six whites, of whom one hundred
and nine were German and thirty -one
English. It became a German pro
tectorate in 1884,' and is placed under
an imperial governor, ' assisted by a
chancellor, two secretaries and a local
council of three representative mer
chants. ' The country is fertile, and
numerous valuable African vegetable
productions grow in profusion. Plan
tations of cacao and tobacco have been
farmed by a company, and numerous
factories carry on an active trade in
ivory and palm oil. On January 1,
18SS, an import duty was imposed on
European goods, and from this the
revenue is mainly derived. The chief
town is Cameroons, and in the South
Batanja, Bimbia and Bakundu Town
are other important trading stations,
and Aqua Town and Bell Town are the
principal native settlements. The im
ports and exports are quite large.
In April last, Mr. Henry M. Stanley
wrote to the peace association a letter
in which he attributed . the increase of
trade in 1892 at African ports under
German administration to the growing
practice among . German merchants of
importing into Africa small, arms and
ammunition. These materials of war,
he said, were sold to the slave traders
and. do inestimable damage. Mr. Stan
ley inculpated also the Portuguese in
his charges. He appealed to the Euro
pean nations to suppress the traffic in
arms carried on by the Germans and
Portuguese. Unless this step be taken,
he added, all efforts to stop the slave
trade would be useless.
In February a German expedition.
which was under the command, of
Freiherr von Stetten, proceeded from
the Cameroons coast up the river San
naga to Balinga, whence it traveled to
the thickly populated district of Tikar
and reached Ngaudere and Yola.
Treaties were concluded with the na
tive tribes in the districts passed'
through. This reappearance on the
coast, the Kreuz Zeitung pointed out,
was peculiar in view 6f the statement
made by members of the expedition
that Lake Tchad was their goal. It is
a fact, though at present an inexplica
ble one, that German expeditions fail
to reach the more easterly portions of
the Hinterland of the Cameroons. . The
expedition returned in September. .
England and Germany had a long
dispute about the boundaries of the
Cameroons, which was settled in May
last. The third section of the agree
ment reads: "The German colonial
administration engages not to allow
any trade" settlements to exist or be
erected on the right bank of the Bio
del Bey Creek or waterway. In like
manner the administration of the Oil
rivers protectorate engages not to al-j
low any trade settlements to exist or
to be erected on the western bank of
the Bakassy peninsula from the first
creek below Arsibon's village, to the
sea and eastward from, this bank to
the Rio del Rey waterway."
. According to the German view the
new agreement is a purely fiscal one,
intended to enable the British and
German administrations to cope with
the widespread smuggling, which was
especially detrimental to the Camer- ,
oons. There had been no question ot
altering the frontier laid down by the
provisional agreement of 1890, which,
in consequence of disagreement be
tween the two governments, left the
Rio del Rey out of . count and settled
the frontier as a straight line running
from the upper end of the waterway
to the rapids of the Cross river. But
this indefinite "upper end" has now
been fixed- as above set forth. Much
satisfaction was expressed in Berlin at
the pledge given by the English gov
ernment not to allow trade settlements
on the Bakassy peninsula, which other
wise would have afforded an excellent
base for contraband operations.
A Dismantled Monitor.
The monitor Saug-us, that took part in
Admiral David Porter's bombardment
of Fort Fisher in December, 1864, now
lies dismantled at a Philadelphia wharf
awaiting a purchaser who needs a coal
barge. Her armor -has been stripped
off and the spinning turret removed.
The Saugus was one of .the. monitors
that, casting' anchor within range of
Fort Fisher, opened fire' upon it, and
in little more than an hour demolished
all but the bomb-proof portions of the r
lort. Jie attacking fleet consisted of
thirty-five regular cruisers, five iron
clads and a reserve of nineteen other
vessels. According to Gen.. Grant
it was "the most formidable armada
ever collected for concentration upon
one given point." The Saugus was
built during the latter part of the war.
In 1891 she was sold by the government
to a Philadelphia firm, which made the
purchase with the object of reselling'
to some South American state in need
of a second-hand warship. The nego
tiations failed, and the Saugus was then
dismantled. She had been built to last,
for it was necessary to use dynamite in
the work of unsheathing her hull. .
Fair
We are notified by E. C. Masten, sec
retary of the Midwinter Fair Association,
iuac on presentation at ins office in
Portland of receipt for subscriptions, the
pro rata offered will be promptly made.
Receipts may be forwarded to him
direct or through any local bank.
Emile Schanno,
- . ' M. A. MOODY, '
Subscription Com. for The Dalles, Or.
Use Mexican Silver Stove Polish.
tub stuMing Greeudouse.
-
Having enlarged our Floral Garden and In
creased our already large collection of
POTTED PMflTS, 1?0SES, &e,
We wish to announce, In addition, to the
public, that we have made a specialty of
Pansy Plants and Forget-lMots,
file We Will Sell at Seasonable Prices.
We also have a fine selection of Dahlia Bulbs,
which for beauty are unexcelled. We are pre
pared to furnish on short notice Cut Flowers
for wedding parties, socials and funerals.
MRS. A. C. STUBLING & SON.
s
E
E
D
S
E E D
S
E
E
D
S
Alfalfa Seed, Clover Seed,
Red Top Seed,
Timothy Seed, Garden Seed.
Hungarian Gran Seed,
Orchard Grass Seed,
Millet Seed, Seed Wheat,
Seeds In Balk,
Seed Barley, Seed Potatoes,
Seed Corn, Seed Oats,
. . AT .'
-J. H. CROSS'
Hay, Grain, Feed, Seed and Groeerj Store.
E E D
FRENCH & CO..
BANKERS.
TRANSACT A -GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
Letters of Credit issued available in . he
Eastern States.
Sieht Ezchanee and Telecranhic
Transfers sold on New "York, Chicago, St.
Louis, San Francisco. Portland Oresron.
seattie vvasn., ana various points in Or
egon and Washington.
Collections made at all points on fav
orable terms. .
J. a. BCHXNCSL.
J. M. Pattxbsok.
President.
Cashier.
First Rational Bank. .
THE DALLES. - - - OREGON
A General Banking Easiness transacted
Deposits received,- subject to Sight
Draft or Check. , , . '
Collections made and proceeds promptly
reuubrcu on uay oi collection.
Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on
new York, San Francisco and Portland.-'
DIREOTOKS.
D. P. Thompson. Jsro. S. Sc&enck..
Ed. M. Williams, Geo. A. Likbe.
li. M. JUKALL. ;
C. P. -STEPHENS,
oh:a.l,eci in
GOODS
Clothing
Boots, Shoes, Hats, Etc.
Fancij Gfoodg, jJotioiifS,
Kte.,
Kte.,
Kte.
Second St., The Dalles.
Harry Liebe,
PRACTICAL
All work promptly attended to,
and warranted.
Can be found at Jacobsen's Music store, No. 162
. Second Street.
John Pashek,
The Merchant Tailor,
7S Count Street,
.i m
N eit door to 'Wasco Sun Office.
gayH.au 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.
Cleaning and Repairing a Specialty.
nuu-.!
Times makes it all the mor
necessary to advertise. That Is
what the most proeressive of onr
- Dusiness men think, and tnese- same bus
iness men are the most prosperous at all times.
If you wiBh to reach all the reople in this neigh
borhood you can't do better than talk to them
through the columns of the Dally Crbonicui
It has more than double the circulation ol any
other paper, and adveiUa ng in it pays big;
To Subscribers to the Midwinter
Watchmaker
Jeweler
-AND-
41-
Wasco County, - - - Oregon, ,
The Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the Jbead
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 along the eastern slope of the Oaa-"
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.! - v
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.
t 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 mcahulaUtt. Its resources unlimited. And on these
' corner "tones k1i -r inds.
THE CHRONICLE was established for the ex
press pin-pose of faithfully' representing The Dalles "
and the surrounding country, and the satisfying
effect of its mission is. everywhere apparent. . It V
now leads all other publications in Wasco Sher
man, Gilliam," a large part of Crook, Morrow and
Grant counties, as well as Klickitat and other rl'e- :
gions north of The Dalles, hence it is the best '
medium f or advertisers in the Inland Empire. ,
The Daily Chronicle is published , every eve
ning in the week Sundays excepted at $6,00 per
annum.' The Weekly Chronicle on Fridays of
each week at $1. '50 per annum.
For advertising rates, subscriptions, etc., address
THE CHRONICLE
Tlie
PAU L KRE
-DEALERS IN-
PA I NTS, , OILS AND GLASS
And the Moat Complete and the Latest Patterns nd Designs in
. .iSL-'Xj.X-a' ,; JE JL 'E jES:E3L"v
. Practical Painters and Paper Hangers. None but the best brands of tht
Sherwin-Williams and J. W. Masury'g Paints used in all our work, and none but
the most skilled workmen employed. Agents for Masury Liquid Paints. No
chemical combination or soap mixture. X first class article in all colors. All
orders promptly attended to.
w Paint Saeg ooraar Third
Tribune
PUBLISHING CO.,
FT A CO.,
ana W an&uigtou fcts., Tap Dalles Ores-oa
Publish sd Dally, Sunday Excepted.
si
THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO.
Osrnsx Beoond and Washington Btreets, The
- Dalles, Oregon.
Terms of Subscription
fer Year $e qo
Par month, by carrier.. ........ 50
Slng-lecopy -. 5
TIME TABLES.'
' . Railroads.
, In effect August 6, 1893. J
aST BOUKD. .
Ho. 2, Arrives 10:55 p. at. - Departs 11:00 r at.
1 WS8T BOUND.
So. 1, Arrives 8:39 A, at. Departs 8:44 a. m.
, ,. LOCAL.
Arrives from Portland at 1 P. at.
. Departs for Portland at 2 p. at.'
Two locai freights that carry passengers leave
one for the west at 8:00 A. at., and one for the
ast at 5:90 A. M.
r ' HTAOK8. - ,-;
- ror Pniievlue, via. Bake Oven, leave dally
t 6 A. X. 7y
For Antelope, Mitchell, Canyon City, leave
lally at 6 A. at.
For Dufur, Kingsley, Wamlc, Waplnltia, Warm
springs snd Tygh Valley, leaye daily, except
Sunday, at 6 a. h.
' For Ooldendale, Wash., leave every day of the
eea except Sunday at 7 a.m.
Offices for all lines at the Umatilla Aouse.
fUOFESSIONAL. .
h;
H. EIDDELL Attornky-at-La Office
Court Street, The Dalles, Oregon.
a. ft. DnrcK. ikiki mNini.
DCFUR, at MENEFEK Attoknkys - AT
law Rooms 42 and 43, - over Post
jtnt-e Building, Entrance on Washington Street
The Dalles, Oregon. '
. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LA W. Of
nee In Schanuo's building, up stairs.. The
ialles, Oregon.
f AYS. HUNTINGTON & WIL80N ATTOB
yV nk vs-at-law Oflices, French's block over
First Nations) Bank.
' Dalles. Oregon.
T H. WILSON Attobnt-at-law Rooms
TV French Co.'s bank building, Second
street. The Dalles, Oregon.
J SUTHERLAND, M. D., C. M.; F. T. M. C;
M. C. P. and .8. O., Physician and Sur
geon. Rooms 3 and 4, Chapman block.
RoKtriannA Mi. Th'nrnbnrv's. west end of Second
street. -
DR. ESHELM-AN (HOMEOPATHIC; PHYSICIAN
and Sukgson. Calls answered promptly,
lay or night, city or country. Office So. 86 and
. .Chapman block. . -. wtf
DR. O. D. DO AN E PHYSICIAN AND BUB-
SSON. Office; rooms 6 and 6 Chapman
3 lock. Residence : B. E. corner Court and
Fourth ' streets, sec nd door from the corner.
Office hours to 12 A. M., 2 to 5 and 7 to 8 P. M.
DSIDDAIX Dkntibt. Gas given for the
painless extraction of teeth. .Also teeth
mi on flowed aluminum plate.. Rooms: Sign of
the, Golden Tooth, Second Street....! . '. -
SOCrETIKB.
w
ASCO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. A A. H. Meets
first and third Monday 01 each month at 7
DALLES ROYA1, ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6.
Meets in Masonio Hall the third Wednesday
of each month at 7 P.' M. '
VfODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. .
me Of each week in Fraternity Hall, at 7:80 p. m.
COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 6, I. O. O. F. Meets
every Friday evening at 7:80 o'clock, in K.
of P. hall, corner Second and Court streets.
sojourning brothers are welcome.
tt. ulopqb, pec y. t. a. mujiff. .
FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P. Meets
everv Monday evenlne at 7:30 o'clock, in
schanno's buildinar. corner of Court and Second
atreeta. Sojourning members are cordially in
vited. . - .. jacobsen,
D. W.Vacss.K. of R. andS. C. C,
ASSEMBLY NO. 4827, K- OF L. Meets in K.
of P. hall the second snd fourth Wednes
iRYS'of each month at-7:S0 p. m.
VXTOMEN'8- CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE
V V UNION will meet every Friday afternoon
st 8 o'clock at the reading room. All are invited.
rpBB DALLES LODGE No. 2, I.O.G.T. Reg
I ular weekly meetings Friday at 8 p. X., a
K. of P. Hall. J. S. WmzLBB, C. T.
Pinsmore Parish, Bee y.
npRMPLE LODGE NO. 8, A: O. O. W. Meets
Jl in Fraternity Hall, over Kellers, en Second
treet, Thursday evenings at 7 :SU.
W. B Mybbs, Financier. M. W.
J AS. NE8MITH POST, No. 82, Q. A. R. Meets
every Saturday at 7:30 p. m., in the K. of P.
nau. -
AMERICAN RAILWAY UNION, NO. 40.
. Meets second and fourth Thursdays each
month in K. of P. hall. J. W. Rbady,
W. H. Jones, Bee'y. Pres.
B
OF L. E. Meets every Sunday afternoon In
the K. of P. Hall.
ESANG VE REIN Meets every
Sunday
evening in the K. of P. Hall.
BOF L, F. DIVISION, No. 167 Meets la
K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednes-
lay of each month, at 7:30 P. at.
THE CHtJBCHKS.
ST. PETERS CHURCH Rev. Father Beons- '
eaasT Pastor. - Low Mass every Sunday at
7 A., m. High Mass at 10:30 A. M. - Vespers at
TP. at. -
ST. PAULS CHURCH Union Street, opposite
Fifth. - Rev. Ell D. Sutciifie Rector. Services
every Sunday at 11 i. X. and 7:80 P M. Sunday
School 9:45 A. at. Evening Prayer on Friday at
7:80- - - .
tTORST BAPTI8T CHURCH Rev. O. D. Tat
JJ lob, Pastor. Morning services every Sab
bath at the academy at 11 a,- at. Sabbath
School Immediately after . morning services.
Prayer meetinr Friday evening at Pastor a res
dence. Union services in the court bouse at
M.
COSttKKOfllUnAli VM.U1MJJ1- KSV. W. O
CVBTis, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11
a. at. and 7 P. at. Sunday School after morning
tervioe. Strangers cordially Invited. Beats free.
j E. CHURCH Rev. J. Whislxb, pastor.
. I - HervicesevervSnndav norninffat 11 m.
Sunday School at 12:20 o'clock p at. Epworth
League at .6:80 p. at. Prayer meeting every
Thursday evening at 7:80 o'clock. A cordial in
vitation, is extended by both pastor and people
to all.
CHRISTIAN CHURCH Rxv.P: H. McGuffxt
Pastor. Preachlne in the Christian church
each Lord's Day at 11 a. m. and 7:80 p. m. . All
are ooroiaiiy inviieq - -
EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN Ninth street,
Rev. A. Horn, pastor. Servioes at 11:30 a.m.
Bunday-sobool at 2:30 p.m . A cordial welcome
House
Moving!
Andrew Velarde
IS prepared to do any and all
' kinds of work in . his line at
-. reasonable figures. Has the , - '
largest house moving outfit
in Eastern Oregon.
; '
Address P.O.Box 181, The Dalles