The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, September 27, 1894, Image 3

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Sl J0 jS
We are Still In It,
and You Know It.
1 OURI.
QPECIKL
Saturday, Sept. 29th.
SHLE. ...
"Cotton is King."
Bleached Cottons.
Ballardvale 5c
Hope 7c
Blackstone 7c
Fruit of the Loom ... 7c
Lonsdale 7c
r
Unbleached Cottons.
TTtica C 4 Jc
LL ...... ..'..5c
Pepperell R .....6c
D wight Anchor 7c
Indian Head . .7c
) Wide Sheetings.
Bleached Pepperell, 8-4 ...16cc Bleached Pequot, 8-4 20c
Lonsdale Cambric 10c
Lowest Prices ever named on Domestics.
ALL GOODS MARKED IN
I
PLAIN FIGURES.
PEASE & MAYS.
DRY CORD WOOD,
HAT and GRAIN",
HEATING-STOVES,
COOK STOVES,
STEEL RANGES,
GROCERIES,
PROVISIONS,
all at the lowest prices at
We are selling more goods than ever,
for the simple reason-that
Our PRICES are RIGHT.
We pay more for Produce than any
, . other dealer, in The Dalles.
Consult Your Interests,
anfJ Trade With
MAIER & BENTON.
JOLES, COLLINS & CO.
Telephone No. 20.
THE RELIABLE FIRM.
EUROPEAN HOUSE,
Best Hptel in the City.
NEW and FIRST-CLASS.
PHOTOGRAPHER.
Chapman Block, The Dalles, Oregon.
I have taken 11 first prizes.
The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
-entered a the Poetofflce at The Dalles, Oregon,
as second-class matter.
Clubbing List.
hroiiel tad If. T. Tribiee. . .
" ltd Wtellj Oregoiiu
Regular Our
price price
..$2.50 $1.75
. 3.00 2.00
Iioral Advertising.
10 Cmii per line for first inseriion, and 5 Cents
oer line for each subsequent insertion.
Special rates for long time notices.
All local notices received later than S o'clock
rill appear the following day.
THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 27. 1894
SEPTEMBER SAYINGS-
Leave. Krom the Notebook or Chronicle
Reporters.
The constant drop of water
Wears away the hardest stone;
The constant gnaw of Towser
Masticates the toughest bone.
The constant cooing lover
Carries off the blushing maid;
Ana the constant advertiser
Is the one who gets the trade.
Wahoo Wasp.
Do not forget the meeting tonight.
The weather predictions this morning
are for tomorrow occasional rain.
Dr. John M. Kane, late home surgeon
at St. Vincent's hospital, Portland, has
located at Dafur.
The Ladies of Honor had a very
pleasant party at Fraternity hall last
evening.
Wheat dropped a cent a bushel in
Portland since yesterday, and is quoted
at 38 cents, or 63 per hundred pounds.
The city hall has been treated to a
coat of paint, and the insides have also
bad a general overhauling and cleaning.
Senator Dolph will address the citi
zens of The Dalles and vicinity, concern
ing local matters, at the courthouse this
evening, at 8 o'clock.
Mr. Samuel Collier, chief of the Port
land division of the mail service, has
been deposed and Mr. J. H. Richardson
is now occupying that position.
The Fitzsimmons-Creedon fight came
off at New Orleans yesterday. The
4 '" Australian knocked Greedon out in two
rounds. Creedon was not in it at all.'
Col. Thompson inspected the staff,
hospital corps and G company of the
Third reuiment last night. After in
specti jn the armory was cleared and the
boys indulged in a social hop. lasting
until midnight.
Sheriff Driver this morning served
i copies of an information filed against
the banks to compel them to show what,
if any, funds are in their possession un
called for, and which under the law
should eBcheaf to the state.
Elder J. W. .Jenkins will preach at
Dufur Saturday evening and Sunday,
both morning and evening, Spt. 29th
and 30th, and not the second Sunday in
October, as previoucly announced. Sub
jects, "Conditions of Church Prosper
ity;" "Christian Liberality ,",or Church
Finance," and "An Angel's Conception
of Christianity, ..r Hie Wor.la of This
Life;" Acts v :20.
The city rw'ph'r has 1 ts of business
today. One fUrlaiivHly drunk and
two just drunks, art- aleepiiii; off the re
stilts of their too aideut wooing of the
flowing bowl, and will be tried when
their eeparate and individual mentalities
get back to earth. At 4 o'clock this
afternoon a case of drunk and disorderly
conduct will be tried, a Miss Doe being
the party charged.
County Clerk Leavitt of Klamath
county is going to test the salary law
enacted at the last legislature, and the
result will be of interest to every county
in the state. He collected $57.75 for
fees during July and August and de
clined to pay the same over to the treas
urer, claiming he was entitled to the
fees, whereupon the court refused to
allow him his salary. The matter will
be carried to the supreme court.
Quiet Amusement.
A gentlemanly little fight occurred on
the sidewalk in front of Maetz & Pundt's
last night. One of the parties knocked
the other down, he falling in a chair
which upset, and, then the knocked
down party kept on falling, breaking the
rounds out from between the chair's legs,
and inserting his body tightly therein.
Whereupon the other party fell on him
and pounded him until he got tired and
quit. Neither party said a word while
the fight was going on or. afterwards, for
when it was through, the victorious
party walked away while the other got
up and washed the blood off himself
without making any explanations.
We Can Take Care of Them.
The drouth in Nebraska and ,the
Dakotas is causing quite an emigration,
and hundreds of families are seeking Ore
gon as a future home. They are mak
ing no mistake, for crops never fall in
Oregon, nor do cyclones devastate it.
Wasco county should do something tow
ards advertising her resources and catch
ing some of the new comers. With
the area that can be devoted to fruit
raising, Wasco county can support 100,
000 more people and then have room for
more.
It Won't Work.
Mr. F. A. Younz writes us to the effect
that he does not believe the story
printed in The Chronicle the other day
concerning the poisoning of foxes, and
then of birds from eating the carcasses.
He says that he has poisoned coyotes for
years, and the cats and birds eat the re
mains of the deceased wolflets with im
punity. We agree with Mr. Young for
we do not believe the storv either, fnr
one reason because we did not invent it.
We adopted, and adapted it, from a
letter in the Oregonian.
I migrant. Arrive.
. Friday evening's train brought a car
load of home-seekers from South Dakota
and Iowa. The car was brought to the
city over the Union Ry. There were
about thirty-five people in the car.
They have been shown about the country
and so far as we are able to learn, are'
well pleased and no doubt many of them
will locate here. Union Republican.
Real Katate Transactions.
The following deeds were filed for rec
ord today: '
United States to Levi M Monroe, ee
nwj, 8w nej, nej awj and nwJi
sej, sec 19, tp 2 n of r 11 e ; receiver's
receipt. ,
United States to Fred Howe, ew of
8eJ, sec 27, tp 3 n of r 10 e; patent.
Wain ' sacks for sale at the Wasco
warehouse. tf
Query.
'What ought to be done with parties
who have been married and who say
they have been divorced, and who are
both staying in his house on his ranch?"
The above "queery," somewhat mis
spelled and written on a postal card,
reached us yesterday. The communica
tion was unsigned ,. but ' as it dealt only
with an abstract and interesting ques
tion we save it from the waste basket.
We admit frankly that we. do not know
how to answer the question, for one
reason because it is too indefinite. The
questioner does not say, for instance,
whether the parties had been man and
man and wife, or not. He doeB not state
the sex of the parties, so that we have
no means of knowing whether they are
both grass widows, grass widowers, or a
grass widow and a grass, widower. We
do not know the premises hence can
reach no definite and satisfactory con
clusion. ' Presuming ' however that the
parties were formerly man and wife, and
are now divorced from each other, we
would say that the situation is peculiar;
but outside of the fact that the theory is
demonstrated that people get along
better when not tied to each other, than
when they are, we see no reason why
the same roof should not cover them.
As each of them has proved "rank
pizen" to the other, they can be let
alone with as much propriety as if they
had never been married at all. We
know two brothers back in Illinois,. one
of whom was named James and the
other John. James got rich by attend
ing strictly to bis own business, and
John accumulated a fortune by letting
other peoples' business'alone. There is
a moral to this story that is not difficult
to find.
The Remains of Colgate Foand.
A Missoula, Montana, dispatch of
Tuesday states that the Missouhan pub
lishes the particulars of the recovery and
burial of the remains of George Colgate,
the deserted cook of the notorious hunt
ing party beaded by Wm. E. Carlin, son
of General Carlin, late commander of
the Department of the Columbia. The
discovery was made August 23, by Lieut
enant Elliott, eight miles below the spot
where the desertion occurred on the
Clearwater river. All that remained of
Colgate's body was the thigh bone and
one leg. These were mangled and
gnawed by wild beasts. At the same
spot also was found a match box, fishing
lines and other articles identified as Col
gate's property. Lieutenant Elliott was
sent out on his mission by General Otis,
present Commander of the Columbia, to
which office he makes full report, there
being many points tending to prove Col
gate's desertion by the Carlin party was
cowardly."
Moving a Town.
The town of Gold Beach, in Curry
county, is being moved across the river.
A large bar formed in front of the town
and boats were unable to get anywhere
near the town, hence the necessity of
moving the town to the boats. In re
gard to the matter the Gazette of that
pliice says : "This week will see all the
buildings to be moved safely across the
river. The Edson house, adjoining the
Gazette office, went Tuesday night, the
small building adjoining the hotel,
known as the old printing office, went
over Wednesday night, and the hotel
is now being loaded on the scows. It
will take some time yet to place the
buildings permanently in their new
locations, but already the other side of
the river shows up as a town, the whole
water front and building showing plain
ly from this side,"
PERSONAL MENTION.
Senator Dolph arrived on the local
passenger today.
- Hon. A. R. Lyle of Cros9 Keys, Crook
county, is in the city. '
T. A. Hudson is again confined to his
bed with malarial fever.
Superintendent Gardner, of the Boys
and Girls' Aid Society of Portland, is in
the city.
Mrs. Biggs and Miss Deming, who
have been visiting friends in California
for three months, arrived home yesterday.
COMPLACENT CHINA.
Condeacentlon Toward. Wayward Voting
Nations LUa America.
It is not easy for the outside world
to understand that the position of
China toward foreigners is one of phil
osophical condescention, and that
nothing' could be more genuine than
the Chinese sense of mental superiority
in dealing1 with human affairs, says
the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. During
one of the controversies between this
country and China about immigration a
Chinese editor put the case in this way:
."We must remember that we are the
oldest nation and that America is one
of the youngest. We who. have been
so favored as to inherit a high civiliza
tion from our wise rulers of antiquity
and have been blessed with the sublime
teachings of our great sages, ought to
be patient with the excited caprices of
a nation in its unthinking' childhood.
If we maintain a calm attitude and do
not allow ourselves to get angry over
the pranks -of a young country, why,
in course of time America will change
and grow wiser and abandon her pres
ent foolish conduct. Nations learn by
experience, just as children do, and we
ought to maintain our dignity and wait
in patience while America advances to
a state of maturity and learns to man
age things in a proper and judicious
way."
This is the tranquil tone of Socrates
sending away a spoiled child, admon
ished, but pardoned and unspanked.
The Heir to China's Throne.
The birth of an heir to the Chinese
throne at this time is an event of more
than ordinary importance to the peace
of. the empire. Kuang Hsu is the first
emperor of the present dynasty whose
right of occupancy is not based upon
actual descent. His predecessor, Tung
Chin, died childless in 1875, after a
reign of only one . year. He left
several brothers, all having children,
among whom a strife at once arose as
to the succession. After several weeks
of ' contention and intrigue a compro
mise was effected by which the young
widowed empress and her unborn child
were put to death, and the present em
peror, then two years old, and the son
of the "seventh prince," who was a
was a brother of Tung Chih, and him
self one of . the contestants for the
throne, was chosen by a family council.
In order to correct the succession, the
dead, emperor was supposed to adopt
this infant as his son and successor.
and an imperial decree to that effect
was promulgated throughout the em
wire. Kuang Hsu has been an invalid
prom his birth, and his death at any
time would occasion no surprise.
pit a 5aerifiee.
-OCR-
Supfimer Dry Goods,
Clothing, Hats,
Shoes, ' Etc., EtcV
NOW IS THE TlMjt TO SECURE -
TERMS STRICTLY CKSH,
In" anticipation of a renewal of business activ
ity, we have bought an enorrnous line, of Men's
Underwear and Overshirts for Fall and Winter,
which we have placed on the market' at prices
to suit the times. -
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.
Feed wheat for sale cheap at Wasco
Warehouse. tf.
JOHN C. HERTZ.
pipe.
Tyillipery.
FALL OPENING
ON-
Saturday, Sept. 29:
A Fine Display will be giveh in Fall Styles of
Millinery. Second door from corner of Union
and Second Streets.
MRS. M. "Le BALLISTER.
V ImJ W and AUCTION ROOJVT.
' Odd. Ward, Kerns & Rouertson's Liyery Stabls, on Second St.
Second-hand Furniture Bought Sold.
Money Loaned onJewelry and other Valuables. -
AUCTION EVERY SATURDAY.;T..11.,4-pkt..P!
erty placed with me at reasonable commission. Give me a call.
TTOOP. -