The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, May 29, 1894, Image 1

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    VOL. VII.
X4IE DALLES, OREGON, TUESDAY, MAY 29, 1894
NO. 138?
'WAKE CUM-TUX MIKA
, They Coma not Understand the English
Lanc :
A GALE ON LAKE SUPERIOR
Altgeld Tired of Anarehtsts-A Fight
Over Religion-High Water in
the Yakima. '
To Arbitrate. Today.
Cripple Cbeek, May 27. The delega
tion from Colorado Springs consisting
of Dr. Slocum, president of the Colorado
college ; C. C. Colaia, president of the
trades assembly; L. W. Bates, presi
dent, a nd Charles Geissler, secretary, of
the car i -enters' . union ; D. H. Hogan, of
' the carp titers' anion, and the Rev. E.
E. Van Surrington, all of Colorado
springe came to tneicity tnis morning,
with the hope that. something might be
done to settle the controversy that has
. arisen in connection with the strike.
The gentlemen reached this, city at 9
o'clock and soon after left for Altaian
for a conference with the miners. They
were very courteously received by Presi
dent Calderwood and other repiv-.-nta-tivea
ef the union. A conference was
held, at which it was stated the delega
tion, entirely of its own responsibility,
had come in the interest of peace and the ;
arbitration of all differences. After a
conference all. the miners in the vicinity
congregated about the building in which
the meeting was held, and Dr. Slocum
addressed them, stating the conditions
upon which arbitration could be brought
about. He was cordially received by the
crowd, and loudly applauded. Be -was
followed by Mr. Van Surrington, who
further explained the reasons which had
brought the delegation, and. then Mr.
Colaia addressed the audience. A meet
ing of the miners' union has been called
for 10 o'clock tomorrow morning, and
there is every reason for thinking that a
committee will be appointed which will
attempt to arbitrate and settle the whole
trouble. The principle of arbitration is
one of the . fundamental ideas of the
union, and it is believed that an under
standing can be reached.
Altgeld for Help. . ,
Spbingfield,; III., .' May "27. The
sheriff of Woodford county telegraphed
Governor Altgeld this evening from Min-
nnlr t Vi M t. n. mnh nf fltrilrftra nra rtHatf rift
ing coal traffic on the Illinois Central
road. He said that he and the munici
pal authorities have done all they could,
and called for help. The governor
ordered two companies of the Fourth
. regiment to start for Minonk at once to
aid the sheriff. All is quiet tonight,
T . 1.1 r r a ,
uub buo - imuoi a remise ku Hiiow coal
trains to leave. " Colonel Bennett, at
La Salle, wires that all has been quiet
there today and this evening. - Assist
ant Adjutant-General Baile, at Fana,
wires that everything is peaceful. ' Two
companies of troops were withdrawn
from Pana this afternoon. Those left, it
is thought, will be sufficient to preserve
order.
THEY COULD NOT SPEAK ENGLISH.
La Salle, 111., May 27. After a con
ference between Sheriff Taylor and his
military staff, it was decided to head the
striking miners off in Peru, and five
companies of militia were ordered to fall
in. The mob was encountered near the
Peru line, and was ordered to throw up
. their hands. . Being , strangers to the
English language, they failed to comply,
and started to run in all directions. The
troops were sent in pursuit, and al
though there were several hand-to-hand
encounters, nothing serious ensued. A
large number of strikers were arrested
The Railroad Suffer Greatly.
Tnni k rrrtiD. 07 T. : !J
here tonight the Chicago & Eastern
raiiroaa, oy aavice of its -counsel, has
decided to appeal to Gevernnr Match
to order out the militia in order to move
the coal train captured bv thn
at Clinton Locks, which the railroad
wanted to take to Danville for its own
use. The local counsel of the road con
sidered the situation grave, so much bo
that an appeal for troops will be made.
All trains from the Evansville & Terre
Haute were held up at Shelburn, south
Highest of all in Leavening Power.
of this city, and examined today by the
strikers. When coal was found the cars
were sidetracked. On the Big Four the
trains were also held up and examined.
The miners' wives are still in charge of
the Big Four coal chutes, and refuse to
let the company put fuel on its engines.
3fow a Coxeylte. ''
Topeka, May 27. H. TT. Artz, who
was removed from the adjutant-generalship
of Kansas by Governor .Le welling,
will lead the Topeka contingent of the
commonweal army to Washington. Gen.
Sanders received a company of thirty
eight men here tonight, and Artz was
elected captain, C. J. Foster first lieu
tenant and C. W. Simpson second lieu
tenant. The company leaves here Tues
day for Leavenworth, arriving there in
time to board the "Commonwealer,"
which; General Sanders says, will start
for St. Louis that day. Captain Artz
saye he wants to make the trip, so that
he can discuss the Coxey movement in-
telligently before the people in the fall
campaign. '.'--
Dawn in Alabama. .
Birmingham, Ala., May 27. Four
more companies of state troops arrived
here this morning and went into camp
at Ensly City, because of threats by
the striking miners. Nearly 1,000 sol
diers are now encamped at Ensly within
a mile of the Pratt mines, the abode of
3,000 strikers. , The strikers do not seem
to be overawed in. the least by the pres
ence of so many troops, as is shown by
two manifestations of violence. Late
last night a parly of strikers, lurking in
the woods, were fired upon by the guards.
About 80 shots were exchanged when
the strikers-fled. So far" as knowh no
one was hurt.
A Bow Over Religion. .
. Palatka, Fla., May 27. This after
noon John Kane was shot in the bead
and dangerously wounded by Ernest
Wolf. Wolfe is a German and a mem
ber of the American Protective Associa
tion, while Kane is an Irish Catholic
Wolf is under arrest and Kane, may die.
About' a' month ago Dun ford and Nix,
American Protective Association agents,
who were trying to organize a lodge of
the society at Palatka, were nearly
beaten to death for saying that all Cath-
.olic women and priests were immoral.
The shooting today was the outgrowth
of that affair. .
' ' Say. Be Will Import Negroes.
Pittsburg, May 27. W. P. Rend, ot
Chicago, operator of the Jumbo mines,
in the Panhandle district, has given his
miners a week to return to work" or sub
mit to having their places filled by im
ported negroes. He has stacks of Win
chesters and boxes of ammunition in
his mine offices to enforce the resump
tion. The miners are realizing that if
Rend could get these mines in successful
operation it would practically break the
strike, and many of the men swear they
will shoot the negroes if they are
brought in. . . r
A. Heavy Gale on Like Superior.
Deer Park, Mich., May 27. A heavy
northwest gale is raging on Lake
Superior tonight, accompanied by a
snowstorm. The tug Albert B. Smith,
because of the cold, was obliged to
abandon her fleet of many million feet
of lnmber in the middle of the lake
today. The Thompson dropped her raft
also, and came in for shelter. .
Sale of Bonds.
I will sell on the 31st day of May,
1894, $8,000 in bonds of . Hood River
school district,' bearing 7 per cent inter
est, payable semi-annually. Thev will
either be sold in parts of (1,000 each, or
the entire $8,000 at one time, or any
number of the eight bonds of $1,000
each , ; to the highest bidder for cash.
These bonds are redeemable in twenty
years or after ten years if convenient for
the district. William Miohell,
County Treasurer.
The Dalles, May 9, 1894..- , . dawtlo .
' . ,
. .'., To Buy Saddle Horsed.
I will be in The Dalles Thursday, May
31st. I want to buy fifty head of saddle
horses, bays and grays, 15 to 16 bands
high, weight from 1,000 to 1,100 pounds,
all gentle under saddle.
d&w . , . Wh. Frazibr.
The Chronicle prints all the news.
; Hawortb; printer, 116 Court St. tf '
-Latest S. Gov't Report.
Pfe
1 had for dinner
was the best I ever ate. .
Thanks to COTTOLENE, the
new and successful shortening.
ASK YOUR. .
' GROCER '
FOR -
; :.: ; it. - ' :
. REFUSE ALL SUBSTITUTES.
k Genuine made only by
N. K. FA! KB AN K & CO.,
ST. LOUIS and
CHICAGO, NEW YOfxK, BOSTON.
Twelve Dollar the Minimum. '
Washington, May 27. Senator Vbor
bees has introduced an important pen
sion bill. It provides that, all persons
who receive pensions, rated by existing
laws at less than $12 per month, shall
have their pensions increased to that
amount. Special provision is made
that no widows' pensions shall be less
than- $12. - -"-' '
35ot Just Now.
San FaANCisco.May 27. Oliver Ames,
a director and stockholder of the Union
Pacific is in the city. - He is accmpanied
by several other Union Pacific officials
and their friends. The party hails from
Boston. ' The party will go to Monterey
tomorrow, and from there to Portland
and then East by the Union Pacific.
Still High. In the Yakima.- ' .
Eixensbueg, May 27. The water in
the smaller, streams is going down
steadily, but is still very high in th
Yakima river. .
Arbitration Possible at Pullman.
Chicago, May 27. Leaders of the
Pullman strike said today that negotia
tions looking toward arbitration are
under way. . -
Bueklen'a Arinca Salve.
The best salve in the world for cuts,
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fevei
sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi
tively cures piles,- or no pay required.
It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac
tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents
per box. For sale Dy ' Snipes & Kin
ersly. ; ''.-' "' : ' : " "
It lz seldum, if ever, thai the world
haz lost a genius for the want ov an ;
opportunity to use him; : but it . haz
often been the case that an opportu
nity haz been lost' for the want ov a
genius.
ooftCottonRoot
COMPOUND.
A recent discovery by an old
physician. Successfully !
monthly by thousand of
Ladies. Is the only perfectly
.safe and reliable medicine dis
covered. Beware of unprincipled druggists who
offer Interior medicines In place of this. Ask for
Cook's Cotton Boot Compound, takt no substi
tute, or Inclose $1 and C cents In postage In letter
and we win send, sealed, by return inniL Full scaled
particulars, in plain envelope, to ladles only. 8
stamps. Address. Pen. Lily Company.
' .'".'-'.. - .. No. S Fleher Blocls. Detroit, IHch.
" Sold in the Dalles by Snipes & Klnergly. -
- j .Dissolution Notice.
. Notice is" hereby given that the part
nership heretofore existing between the
undersigned; under the firm name of
Paul Krelt & Co., has been dissolved by
mutual consent. Paul. Kreft retires
from the business, and the same will be
continued by. D. W. Vause at the old
stand, who will assume all the partner
ship liabilities. '.
Dalles City, Or. May 26, 1894. 0
- Paul Kbbft, .
' . ; D. W. Vausk.
Look at Xbls. .
All county warrants retristered Drior
to May 1, 1890, will be paid at my office.
Interest ceases after the 21st inst.
' Wsti Michki.Ii, County Treas.
Dated May 19, 1894. 2m. "
What
On the
Ladies
Si
Sach
For Gentlemen's Russet Shoes,
HER FATHER'S DINNER.
A Pretty Sight Witnessed on a Xew York
' Street Car.
' Car No. 193 went rattling up Fourth
avenue the other noon at a (Treat rate.
A breakdown . in the Bowery had
blocked the track and delayed travel
nearly half an hour. To make iip the
lost time the horse tore along and the
car bobbed up and down like a sun
baked dug-out dancing on the bay. .
No stop was made to take on passen
gers, nor did the driver slacken speed
until be reached Twenty-seventh street.
Then he began to whistle softly and
study the people along the west eide of
the avenue, lie was a pliorhi.ly-built
man about forty years of atre, hut
weather-beaten, bent and wrinkled
from exposure and unremitting toil.
As the car approached Twcaty-ninth
street it slowed up and the tune became
merrier and louder, savs the Xew York
Evening World. Then both stopped for
a moment and a little girt in a gingham
dress and a Tarn O'Shanter, with danc
ing brown hair and apple-red cheeks,
came up to the front platform and, with
a "hello, papaP '"that made her blue
eyes twinkle and her red chocks dimple,
laid a lunch basket at tho driver's feet.
A passenger" who stepped aside looked
at the child with admiration and at the
man with envy, then gave a sigh and
continued smoking. ' 1 -,:
Like a deer she flew across the cobble
stones, the sun and wind gilding and
tangling her beautiful hair, and reach
ing the sidewalk she waited with her
little hand pressed to her mouth. She
watched the car with childish eager
ness until a figure leaned over the step
and a bronzed face turned smilingly
toward her, and then she threw the kiss
that sweetened the noonday and sea
soned the dinner of a happy man.
Malaria in any of Its Farmt,
Chills and fever, congestive chills, can
be prevented or cured by . the use of
Simmons Liver Regulator, a purely veg
etable medicine, superior to calomel and
quinine. ..."
MEN'S Tailor-Made SUITS, MEN'S HALF HOSE,
MENS' Tailor-Made PANTS, MEN'S NECKWEAR, -MEN'S
OVERSHIRTS, MEN S Gloves and Collars,
MEN'S UNDERWEAR, MEN'S Hats Suspenders,
CL.OS j
At Valties
Lad
ies', Gents'
Is On
Foot?
feet of most of the best-dressed
of this town y on -will find the
Russet
" : color -;':V ;:
The Latest in . STYLE Ve Keep Them
PRICE
eaBSaBnSBBSBaBBBBa-SSSSSBaaSASBSBSSBBSmssaBSSBBaS-BBBS.aMsBBB! t .
WIDTHS B., C and
A. M. WILLIAMS & GO
OLD BURIAL CUSTOMS.
The "Way Funerals Are Conducted by
. Different Races..
The Mohammedans always, whether
in their own country or'. one of adop
tion, bury without -coffin- or casket of
any kind.
The Greeks sometimes buried their
dead in the ground, but more generally .
cremated them, in "imitation ot the'
Romans.
In India, up to within the last few
years, either according to her wishes or
otherwise, was cremated on the same
funeral pyre that converted her( hus
baud's remains into ashes -
Wh;n a child dies in Greenland, says
the Chicago Mail, the natives -bury a
live dog with it, the dog tt- bo n.-e-.l by
the chiltl as a guide to the other world."
When questioned in regard to this pe
culiar - superstition, they will answer.
"A dog can find his way anywhere."
The natives of Australia tie the hands
of their dead together and pull out the
nails; this is for fear that the corpse
may scratch its way out of the grave
and become a vampire.
The primitive Russians place a certifi
cate c-f character in the dead person's
hands, vvhich is to be given to St. Peter
at the gates of Heaven.
- Limit on Natural Mslou. .
The limit , of natural vision varies
with elevation, condition of the .atmos
phere, intensity of illumination ; and
other modifying elements. On :i elear
day an object one. foot, above a level
plain may. be seen at a distance of 1.31
miles; one 10 feet in height, 4,15 miles;
one 20 feet high, 5.SG miles; one 100 feet
high, 13.1 miles; one a mile hig-h (as the
top of a mountain , 05.23. miles. This
allows 7 inches, or to be more exact, 0.99
inches to the mile for the curvature of
the earth, - and assumes that the size
and illumination .of the object is -sufficient
to produce on image.
For Ren,t. "' '-.
Five-room house, in good order and
pleasantly situated, for rent. Inquire
at this office.
IN! G O U T
TJnprecedented in' The Dalles; also'
ununren
Oxford
TJ. ooo
Gome tp Us
for Infants and Children,' .
Csurtorfa promote IHgestion, and'
overcomes Flatulency, Constipation,. Sour .
Stomach, Diarrhoea, and Feverishness.
Thus the child is rendered healthy and its
sleep natural. Cstatoriav contains no
Morphine or other narcotic property.
u Castoria Is CO well adapted to children that
I recommend it as superior to any prescription
known to me." II. A. Abchkr. M. D.,
. - 111 South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. .
For several yean I have reoonimedaed your
Caetorla,' and shall always continue to do so,
as it has invariably prod need beneficial results.
EDWIH F. PiRDSK. M. D.,
125th Street and 7th Ave., New York City.
"The nee of 'Castorta' Is so universal and
Its merits so well known that It reams a work of
supererogation to endorse it. Few are the In
telligent families who do not keep Castoria
within easy reach."
Ciiims Marttw. P. P.,
New York City.
Tax Cxirrxoa OokpaVY, 77 Murray Street, 1T.Y.
! Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat-
tent business conducted for modckatc Fees.
(Our Office is OPFosrrc u. S. Patent Orncr
1 and we can secure pstent in less time than those
i remote from Washington.
J Send model, drawine or photo., with descrlp
tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of
I charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured.
A PAsmirr, "How to Obtain Patents," with
(cost of same in the V. & and foreign countries
t sent tree. Address, . - -
C.A.SHOWcLCG.;
Otp. patent Office, Washington, D. C. ?
S A LE,
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slil
Shoes
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