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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1894)
VOL. VII. THE DAJLLES, OREGON, SATURDAY, APRIL 7, 1894. NO.-93-. 73 GOT STARTED AT LAST OaiM's Contmaent of the Mnsffial . Army. WERE DRIVEN OUT BY THE POLICE They are Now on Their Way to Join . Their Comrades-Frye Stranded at St. Louis. Oakland, Cal., April 6. Early this morning Chief of Police Schaffer, sup ported by 250 men. made a formal de mand on Colonel.Baker's contingent of the industrial army located in the taber nacle to vacate the place and proceed to Sacramento in box cars provided for them by the railroad company. They refused, and the officers thereupon broke into the tabernacle and arrested a num ber of malcontents, including command er Kelly, one of their leaders. Later on the chief of police addressed the men, asking them once more to leave. They again refused unless commander Kelly was released. Kelley was eventually re stored to liberty, and the army formed in line, marched to the depot ard left for Sacramento at 4 a. m. - It took considerable time to get the '600 men loaded on the train, . but by 5 'o'clock about all had been - stowed away and the deputy sheriffs began to leave the grounds. About . 80 men were put in each car, which did not make' travel ing very comfortable. The train finally got op its way a little after 5 :30 and Oakland was rid of its first Beige of an industrial army. Tney Arrlre at Sacramento. Sacramento, April 6. The army , was received at the racetrack by the chief of police, the sheriff and their forces. After the men had washed : themselves, they were fed with soup, coffee, bread and cheese. The army was worn out, and after eating went to sleep in the grandstand. The men will not be per mitted to leave the' race track . until their departure. ' The . authorities do , not now anticipate any trouble,' and will pay the ' cost of transporting the army out of the city 'tomorrow taorning, the expense being $600. . . , ' 3 Ho Knew Too Much. Denver, April 6. Jack Crowber, an associate of gamblers and thieves, known as Aspen Jack, was found dead Septem ber 13, 1893, in a lodging house. His face was black and blue and covered with clotted blood as if he had been strangled. It was supposed he was murdered by his criminal associates when they learned he was a Pinkerton detective, as he had evidence on which they would be sent to the penitentiary. Irish' Jimmy Sharon, a gambler, who was found dead last week, occupied the room next to the one in which Crowber was murdered, and the detectives have concluded he was also murdered, because when intoxicated he dropped remarks indicating that he knew who killed Crowber. Dave Bill and Tariff. Washington, April 6. The announce ment that Senator Hill will deliver his peech on the tariff Tuesday nextx is re ceived with much interest at the capitol. It is expected that Hill will thrust thorns into the side, of the administra tion. ' He will - undoubtedly- ' inveigh against the income tax and against the policy or lack of such which has been given to the bill. . Just how much he will find to object to, and how strongly he will put it, will be one of the factors in determining the ease with which the tariff bill will pass the senate. ' Senator Hill has maintained just enough secrecy about- the nature of his remarks to arouse curiosity. ... " . Plenty of Italian Wines. Washington, April 6. Discouraging reports come from consular agent Cas- tellamare, of Italy, as to the enormous wine crop. The grape crop' is so abun dant in many districts that there are not barrels and demijohns sufficient to hold the juice, and cisterns , are filled with wine. The great French wine crop, by reducing the market in that country for Italian wines, will compel large exports to other countries. Master 'Workman Sovereign's Opinion Ds Moines,- la., Aprii 6. Master Workman Sovereignspeaking in regard to Coxey'e army, said it will either re sult in a failure or a fight, with the prob abilities in '.favor of the former.-- .He thought the imprisonment of members of the army at Alleghaney City- was prudence on the part of the authorities in dealing with Coxey's followers and the avoidance of any cause for an appeal to the national 'conscience, which, he said,' would rally to ' his support in less than SO days an army greater than all the' civil authorities of the .United States could disperse. . Keernlts From Homestead. - ' Homestead, Pa., April ,-'6. Home steaders have become excited over the speeches of Cuxey and Browne. A num ber of recruits here, estimated at 5,000 camped over night in the ice bouses Several members were discharged for quarreling over a sack of tobacco.' This morning, after- a sumptuous breakfast, Camp Homestead was left be hind and the army, 500 strong, beaded by a local band and an' escort of citizens. departed fir McKeeBporf. Stranded at St. Louts. St. Louis, April 5. General Fry and men have been forced to leave the city, They have stopped -"outside the limits to await developments,' as ' the; railroad won't carry them. The men are prac tically without food. -'' O. W. O. Hard man, Sheriff, of Tyre vx., vv. va., appreciates a good.:. mg and does not hesitate to say bo. He si almost prostrated with a . cold when h procured a bottle of Chamberlain': Coutfh Remedy. He says : "It gave me prompt relief. I find it to be an invalu . able remedy for coughs and colds.". For sale by Blakeley & Houghton, : drug gists.' ;: " .- - r- : . Now is the time to kill squirrels. Sur Shot at Snipe's & Kinersly's. Use Mexican Silver Stove Polish A National Bank Bobbed. Eldorado, Kan., April 6. The Ex change National bank of this" city -was robbed of $15,700 a few. days ago. The officers kept it a secret until today, in hope of catching the robber, but they have as yet failed to do so. There was no force used on the vaults, and it is supposed to have been the work of some one -who understood the combination. There is a reward' of $4,000 offered for the thief and the return of the money. ' ."'.' Advertised Letters. Following is the list of letters remain ing in the postoffice. at The Dalles un called for, Saturday, April 7th, 1894, Persons calling for same will givedate on which they were advertised : Barber. Mrs Leo Starr, Thomas ' & Dillon, A P " . Chamberlain Fnlwider, Mr J W . Harris, Mr J V Hastings. William Holmes, air J L, Klein, Mips Magtrie Lindholm, Maria X2 Lnggan, Miss Julia King, red M Orr, Sallie Steis, Mrs John Voegeli, Miss Liz- Wilkerson.MrsHes abety - - ter Weigle, Mr Christian .' M. T. Nolan, P. M. When Baby -was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria.; . When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. Go to the Columbia Packing Co.'s Central Market ' for choice sugar cured ham. at 12 cents a pound. - Ask your grocer for Columbia Packing Co.'s smoked meats and lard.' Insist on their prices and accept no substitute. Boneless ' hams . at 11 cents: select breakfast bacon at 12 cents per lb chice kettle leaf lard, 5-lb pails, 55 cents 10-1 b pails at $1 at the Columbia Pack ing Co.'s' Central Market. ' There is no necessity for buying East ern smoked meats and lard when you can secure a better article of home pro duction for less money. ' Call . at the Central -Market and examine the Col umbia Packing Co.'s meats and prices and be convinced. , If you want any kind of garden seeds grass seed or field, call at If. H. Camp bell's, where you can get what 'you want at reasonable rates.' Next door to the postoffice. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U.S. Gov't Report 11 flBZteg a '13 -oj3 wiu as , the bills" and never excell ed. "Tried and proven" i3 the verdict o f millions. S immo ns Liver Regu-y-v f lator is the f-? rrZ9 on y Liver . J-JCllCf and Kidney medicine to which you can pin your m t faith for a man mild laxa tive, and purely veg etable, act ing directly on the Liver and Kid- ' neys. Try it. Sold by all Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder to be taken dry or made into a tea. '. The King of Liver Medicines. " 1 have used yourSlmmons Liver Regu lator and can conscienclously say it is the klnnof all llvor medicines, I consider it a medicine chest in Itself. (iso. W. JACK SON, Tacoma, Washington. y-EVEET PACKAGE-S Has Ue Z Stamp fat red on wrapper. Pills NOT BLOWN OFF BY THE WIND. Chicken Feather Disappeared as the Re sult of Jcctriclty in the Storm. - About a year ago the telegraphic dis patches contained an account of a windstorm in Missouri which not only blew down houses and fences and caused great loss of life but actual ly stripped the feathers from a rooster. The correspondent stated that not even the pinfeathers ' were left, and his description of how the cock next morning strutted forth, napped his naked wings and crowed with a some what - aisngurea- but - still - m-the - ring style caused considerable merriment. It was reasoned that a wind of such force would have blown the fowl to Jericho, and the writer was set down as a Munchausen. Scientific research, however, sustains the story, but ascribes the rooster's condition to an other cause. A writer in Der Stein der Weisen says: "Among the most aston ishing- effects -of whirlwinds must be reckoned the well-supported facts that on their cessation birds exposed to them have been found stripped of their feathers, and people with every shred of clothing- torn from them. - These effects cannot possibly be ascribed to the wind. The force necessary would have sufficed to transport the objects away bodily. JNumerous similar oc currences were observed in Prance in the tornadoes which prevailed there three years ago, and these were grad ually ' brought under investigation, Over the whole region affected trees were found rent in a manner which could not possibly have resulted from the wind. These were, first, oaks split down the center for a length of twenty to twenty-five feet; second, poplars and beeches for lengths of six to twelve feet were shivered into sticks of uni form thickness (for example', a beech tree sixteen inches in diameter was split into more than five'Jiundred sticks a cen timeter thick, two centimeters, broad and three and a half centimeters long) third, firs and other resinous trees had their stem's cut clean through, leaving almost even surfaces.' These phenom ena and others of kindred nature can be ascribed only to electricity." PIZARRO A BAD MAN. Pern's Conqueror Was a Criminal If 1'hre- nology Counts for Anything. A new argument in favor of incinera tion appears in the recent discovery that the cranium of Pizarro, the con queror of Peru, has such peculiarities as to warrant scientists in forming- the lowest opinions of his moral, charac ter. Some three hundred and fifty years ago, . says Harper s Weekly Pizarro was assassinated. in Lima and buried in the cathedral there. Reports made to the bureau of ethnology at Washington say that his remains, when lately disinterred, were found to be mummified, and were identified as his by unmistakable marks. Sad' to say, his skull reveals to modern sci ence all the craniolog-ical signs and tokens of a bad man. One bump pro claims nun murderer; another, thief: a ridge verifies all the stories of lias Casas of his cruelties to Indians; a hollow shows where his bump of phi lanthropy fell in. His skull has even the notorious "fossa of Lombroso, "which," says Mr. Kene Bache, "mod ern criminologists have ' never dis covered except in confirmed and habitual-enemies of society." History has dwelt more upon fizarros energy than his benevolence, and has never pictured him as a bland gentleman who went about doing good. But not.even Las Casas makes him out such a malefac tor as his surviving skull does. It is too bad the south didn't have Tiilman 33 -years ago coming the 12th of this month. . Photos per dozen at gallery over postolBce. ; .- . . - ' - , - . .. C. W. GlLHOCSEJf CUT PRICES Q SADIES' and GHmDM'S FIJiE SHOES, - . ; ' OF THE WELL KJTOWN " .,.''' - . . ' ,D. M. Hough, C P. Ford and Williams & Hoy t makes, Including the celebrated "TRIMBY & BREUSTER" ; CORK SOLB SHOES! Former Price . Present Price Ladies' Lace, Patent Tip, all sizes $G 00 $4 35 Button ' "' " 5 50 4 10 ' " Cloth and Kid Top vv. 5 00- - 3 85; Patent Tip,. Welt and Turn Soles :. 4 50 3 45 " ." " " . ............ . ..v.... . 4 25 , ' 3 25 Waukenphast, Welt and Turn Soles...;...... i 4 .00 , 3 20 Patent Tip, Turn Sole 3 75 . 2 80 Plain Toe, Welt .....:....:.:... 3 50 2 70 Patent Tip and Plain .- 3 00 2 35 Kid, Patent Tip, 5 to 7 1 50 1 25 " " 8tol0 1 75 150 " " ii to 2 ... : .: : ..-.....: 2 -50 ,2 00 Oxford " 8 to 10i. 125 -105 Oxford, Gen. Russ, 11 to 2 .; 2 25 2 00 Can furnish the above styles in widths from A to EE. A. M. WILLIAMS & CO. Childs' . n Misses' A CEMETERY FOR PET DOGS. London Has One Many Gravestone with Tender Inscriptions London has a pet-dog cemetery. In this town- when a very dear and be loved doggie dies he must be buried all alone by himself, because the regular cemeteries have officials and lot own ers who object to receiving other than human corpses withm their gates. The London dogs' cemetery is near the Victoria gate in Hyde park. . In the rear of the gate-keeper s lodge is a plot of ground which looks like a tiny garden. In the midst ' 01 the flowers, however, are a number of small marble tombstones. Arranged n rows, each bearing some tender in scription, with tiny gravel paths be- iween- and an arch of ivy to greet the spectator, one counts about forty of these pretty tokens of remembance. "Poor Little Prince is the inscrip tion over the grave of the duke of Cambridge's dead-and-gone pet. "Others among the dead have " the names of Jack, Tip, Topsy, Flo, Sprite, Vic, Darling and Zoe. Each grave has its well-trimmed bushes of evergreen, and here and there are ornaments in the shape of large white shells. Very few people in London, apart from those whose pets sleep - their last in this peaceful little spot, are aware of its existence. Should it bo duplicated on "this side of the Atlantic, there is no doubt the tiny burial plots would be readily sold. The Pet Dog society, for instance, would naturallj be interested in such an institution, and many tender-hearted women and some animal-loving men would be glad to bury their dead pets in just this sort of a place. : - ' Kuins of a Prehistoric City. A party of prospectors who were re cently on the Colorado desert in seach of a lost mine found the ruins of a pre historic city. There were walls and re mains of stone buildings. For a dis tance of four hundred and twenty feet in length by two hundred and sixty feet in width gigantic pillars quaintly carved to represent dragons' heads and serpents stood in the sand, supporting on their tops huge slabs of granite weighing many tons. The ornamenta tion resembled Egyptian sculpture and showed a great degree of skill. The ruins are to be carefully examined by an exploring party, and it is thought that important discoveries will yet be made. . " , 1 Mrs. Emily Thorne, who. resides at Toledo, Washington, says she haB never been able to procure any medicine for rheumatism that relieves the pain so quickly and effectually aa Chamberlain's Pain Balm and that she has also used it for lame back with great success. For sale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists. Winter Fael. We still have a large supply of Hard Wood, including Oak, Ash, Maple and Crab Apple, all dry and suitable for family use to be sold cheap. March, 1894. - ' Jos. T. Pktees, & Co. . Sere Shot Squirrel Poison at Snipes & Kinersly's. - V. ' Silver for Infants and Children. . . --jtAV ,. . . TtijuTY years' observation of Castoria. with the patronage of millions of persons, permit na to spealc of it without finessing. It is Tvnqnf stirmahly the test remedy for Infants and Children tho world hoa ever Imown. It in harmless. Children liko it. It gives them health. It will save their lives. Tn it Mothers hay osmefhing 'which is absolutely safe and practically perfect mm a efcfld'i med'einew Castoria destroys Woran. r Castoria allays Feverlshness. , Castoria prevents vomiting Soar Curd. Castoria cures Piarrhcea and Wind Colic ' Castoria relieves Teething Tronhles. Castoria enrea Constipation and Flatulency. C.tstorfa nentralfaes the effects of oarhonio acid gas or poisonons svtsv ". Castoria does not contain morphine, opium, or other narcotic property. Castoria assimilates the food, regnlatoi the stomach and Dowels, rivi-nq: healthy and patnral sleep. Cst,oria is pnt np in eno-siao bottles o-nly. It is not sold in bulk. Don't allow any one to sell yon nnythins e1o on the plea or promise - that it is"jmt aa good" and "will answer every pnrpose." . See that, yon ft O-A-S-T-O-R-I-A. The fao-simile signatnre f is on every wrap-ner. ChHdren Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. -'THE CELEBRATED CO LU M B Ik BREWERY, AUGUST BUCHLER. Prop'r. Ask your dealer Stove Polish.. for Mexican Haworth, printer, 116 Court St. tf This well-known Brewery is now turning out. the best, Beer nnd Portc rant of the Cascades. The latest appliances for 'the manufacture of rood health f'.il P.or hare l-wn inTotlmwd. and on r t.h. HrxT-class article will he p'aced on ) nrti ' ' '' ' ' -' What ? Hand-Corded Corsets, Health Reform Waists, Nursing Coreetf, Misees' Waists, Children's Waists, Shoulder Braces and Hose Supporters made to order. Where ? At the Pacific Corset Company's Factory, north east of the Fair Grounds. It desired ench garment will be Kited before being finished. Call at the fac tory and examine our goods, or drop a card in the office, and our agent will call and secure your order.