Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (March 6, 1895)
CO s I I . VOL. VIII THE DALLES, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH G, 1895 NO 55 When in Call at the Dry Qood5t Agency of the BROWNSVILLE CLOTHING-, BLANKETS, &c On Account of Siekness in py family, And physicians recommending a change of climate, my entire stock of BOOTS SHOKR Will be Sold 20 Per Cent. Below Cost. There "will also "be a reduction made in prices of Pho tographs in order to use up stock on hand. BUILDING .'F0R-; SHLE. Chicago Photograph Gallery, Second Street, Opposite May & Crowe's Hardware Store, The Dalles. - F. FORTIN, SOCIKTIKS. w ASCO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. & A. M. Meet! urst ana uura Monday of each month at 7 DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6. Meets in Masonic Hall tbe third Wednesday of each month at 7 P. M. WASCO TRIBE, NO. 16, I. O. R. M. Meets every Wednesday at 7:30 P. M. in K. of P. Hall. Sojourning brothers are cordially invited to attend A, A. KELLER, 8, D. 8. DCFUR, C. of R. MODERN WOODMEN OP THE WORLD.. Mt. Hood Camp No. 69, Meets Tuesday even ing of each week in Fraternity Hall, at 7:30 p. m. COLOMBIA LODGE, NO. 5, I. O. O. F. Meets every Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock, In K. of P. hall, corner Second and Court streets. Sojourning brothers are welcome. H. C lough, Sec'y. H. A. Bills.N. G. FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. ., K. of P. Meets every Monday evening at 7:80 o'clock, in Sohanno's building, corner of Court and Second streets, sojourning memners are cordially in vited. W. L. BRADSHAW, D. W.Vapsb:, K. of R. and 8 C. C. ASSEMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF L. Meets in K of P. hall the second and fourth Wednes days of each. month at 7:30 p. m. TPERN LODGE. DEGREE OF HONOR. NO. -E 25. Meets in Fraternity Hall, Second street, every Wednesday evening at 8 o'ciocjc. ' Mbs. B. J. Edsbzll, C. of H. Miss Cob a Jolis, Financier.' rpHE DALLES LODGE No. 2, I.O.G.T. Reg- JL niar weekly meetings jrriday at 8 p. K., a' J. OI r. XT (ill. J. D. V LXLKH, Kj. X Dinbmobb Pabibh, Bec'y. 'pEMPLE LODGE NO. 3, A O; U. W. Meets JL In Fraternity Hall,' over Kellers, n Second ireet, innrsaay evenings at 7 :su. C. F. STEPHENS, W. B MTIM, Financier. : . M. W TAB. NESMITH POST, No. 82, G. A. R. Meets Tf every uaturaay at 7 itu r. M., in tne jl. 01 r. B OF L. E. Meets every Sunday afternoon in uw a. 01 r. uaii. GE8ANG VEREIN Meets every Sundai evening tn the K. of P. Hall. O OF L, F. DIVI8ION. No. 167 Meets in AJ. K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednes day 01 each month, at 7:30 r. M. . C COLUMBIA CHAPTER, TJ. D. O. E. 8. Meets ' in Masonic hall on the second and fourth Tuesday evenings ot each month. Visitors cor- aiaiiy inviiea. MRS. MARY 8. MYERS, W. M, MRS. ELEANOR CKOSSEN, Secy. : PKOFKSSiONAl. H H. RIDDELL ATTOBNIT-at-Law Office Court btreet, me lnuies, Oregon. 4b. DTJFua. ninmxim, nOFDB, A MEKEFKK ATTOBNBTg - AT- IJ law Rooms 42 and ' 43,' ' over Post Office Building, Entrance on Washington Btreet me uai les. Oregon. . , J. B. CONDON. J. W. CONDON. LONDON & CONDON. ATVORNEY8 AT LAW jJ Office on Court street, opposite1 the old court nouse, rne uaiiea, ur. B. .HUNTIRSTON. H. S. WTLSOIC. TTDNTINGTON b WILSON ATTOBNBT8-AT- jj. law umoes, frenens diock over nrsi na tional Bank .-. Dalles. Oregon. VT H. WILSON Attobnbt-at-law Rooms v . French b Co.'s bank building. Second oirect, 1-nf uaiiea, Oregon. ; t- T BUTHERtAHD, Mi I O. It.; F. T. M. C. Hridence Mrm. Thornbury's. west end ot Second Doubt lotfyii, Boot5 Sfyoes Always up to Date, Style, Shape, Quality, Price. JW. Proprietor. "The Regulator Line" He Dalles, Portlani and Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Freigni anti Passenger Line ' Through. Daily Trips (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. - Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a. m.4 connecting at the Cast cade Locks with Steamer Dalles City. oteamer Danes .taty leaves .Portland (Oak street dock) at 6 a. m., connect ing witn steamer Regulator for The uaiies. PA88EKUEK KATEs. One way. . , .$2 XX) . 3.00 Hound trip. . Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. All freight, except ' car lots. will be brought through, with out delay at Cascades. : Shipments' for Portland received at any time day or night. Shipments for way landings must be delivered before 6 p. m. Live stock shipments eolicted. Call on or address, W. C ALLAWAY v ' General Agent" THE-DALLES, OREGON E, J1C0BSEN BOOK and : MUSIC CO., THE LEADER" IN ' Pianos and Organs, Books, ! NOTIONS,' STATIONERY. 1 Call and tret his -brlceal Sells PIANOS on easy monthly payments, and is prepared to meet any COMPETITION. ... THE DALLES OR JOHN M. KANE, ; Physician and Surgeon. 1VDFTJB, OREGON. i TAte Htmse Snraeon. St. Vinfint'ii TTabmI tjtl n Portland, Oregon. aep28 HOlYWlLkli, Importer. Xor Infanta and Children. Caatoria promotes XMgeatlon. and overcomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour Stomach, . JMarrhcea, and Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep natural. Castoria contains no Morphine or other narcotic property-. "Castoria Is so well adapted to children chat I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me." H. A. Asobir, M. D., Ill South Oxiora Bt Brooklyn, . Y. M For several ears I hare reoommeilSed tout Castoria, and shall always continue to do so. as it has invariably produced beneficial reautts.1' Edwij F. fARDaavH. D., 135th Street and 7th Are New York City. "The use of 'Castoria' is so universal and its merits so well known that it seems a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the In telligent families who do not keep Castoria witnin easy re&ca. Ckmxm Uabtttt, D. D., New York Cjity. Ths Cbitaob CoJCPAirr, 77 Murray Street, N. Y. Tlos. r. Oaies, Eeary C. Payne, Henry C. Eonse, RECEIVERS ORTHERN I 1 ft PACIFIC R R. n s Ptillmaii Sleeping Cars Elegant Dining Cars Tourist Sleeping Cars T. PAUL ' . MINNEAPOLIS DULCTH FARGO GRAND CORKS CROOKSTON- TO HELENA and BUTTE Through Tickets CHICAGO WASHINGTON PHII.AnBI.PHlA -"KW YORK BOSTON AND ALL POINTS EAST and SOUTH For information, time cards, maps and tickets, call on or write to W. C. ALLAWAY. Aeent. The Dalles, Oregon, OB A': T). CHAEIiTON. Asst. G. P. A.. 255, Morrison, Cor. Third, Portland, Oregon. Mil DIVORCE IN HIGH LIFE Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt Set Free by the Court. SHE IS AWARDED HER CHILDREN Vanderbilt Said to Han Heaped Unbear able Indignities Upon Her In the Presence of Their Friends. New Yokk, March 5. Judge Barrett has granted absolute divorce to .Mrs. Alva Vanderbilt from William K. Van derbilt. The decree by Justice Barrett awards the custody of the children to Mrs. Vanderbilt, it being provided that they shall be educated in the United States. Action was begun January 3. last, and the defendant put in an answer denying the charges. Edmund Kelly, who was appointed referee to hear and determine, filed re ports January 18, and February 5 and 25. Hearings were had at special terms of the supreme court before justice Barrett, on a motion to confirm the reports, and the question of alimony. Vanderbilt on the latter day tendered the plaintiff a deed whereby he conveyed property in satisfaction for the claims fcr alimonv. Joseph H. Choate, William Jay and William Adur were counsel for the plain tiff, Anderson, Howard and Murray for tbe defendant. It is said the break between Mr. and Mrs. Vanderbilt came at the close of a yachting trip on the Valiant last sum mer, during which it is alleged that Mrs Vanderbilt was subjected to indignities in the presence of .their friends that made it impossible to longer defer action It is alleged that Vanderbilt's relations with Mile." Neustretter were openly paraded by him , with the purpose of forcing his wife to take cognizance of them. Vanderbilt's friends assert that prior to this yachting trip his behavior to wards Mrs. Vanderbilt had always been considerate, and he had conducted him self in an exemplary ' manner. They assert that he had no. affection for Mile. Neustretter and was in no sense fascin ated by her. Though the fact has been known some months that the Vaoderbilts were agreed upon the general proposition of a divorce, it was not known by the public until the decree was filed today that proceedings had been begun Vanderbilt met Miss Smith, who afterward became bis wife in 1878, when he was 29 years of age. It is understood the settlement upon Mrs. Vanderbilt includes the marble palace at Newport, the residence at Fifty-second street and Fifty-eighth avenue and money ' and securities that will make her an income of $300,000 a year. Bnsiness Block Blown All Over an In dlana City. Andebson, Ind., March 5. The most destructive natural gas explosion in the history of the Indiana gas belt occurred this morning when a $75,000 business block on Courthouse square was blown all over the central part of the city. In the building were a clothing store, Prather's shoe store, Handle's drug store, business offices, and a hall On the upper floor. -. . , . Fire followed the explosion, which was like an earthquake, and tbe debris began burning fiercely. The entire fire department was called out and prevent ed the fare reaching the new courthouse. Attorney Ballard and County Com missioner Me teal f lived in rooms above the store, and it is feared they perished, The loss on the building and its con tents will reach $400,000. : The fronts of all business bouses in the neighborhood of the explosion were demolished, paved streets were ripped Highest of all in Leavening Power. open and telephone cables torn down. In addition to the demolition .of the Terhune block the explosion did much damage. The courthouse and other buildings were struck by missiles. The fire had little to work on save wreckage. The contents of the stores are scat tered everywhere,- and not so much as a respectable line of samples could be se- lacured from the ruins. The building and contents were covered by an insurance of more than $200,000. N , More Lives Lost. NkwYobb:. March 5. Mrs. Rose Ken- nelty, aged 50, perished by fire today in the eix-etory flat building on 370 Colum bus avenue, and for a time forty other occupants of the building were in great peril. '-, Mrs.' Kennedy lived with her brother, Martin Connelan, on the sixth floor. Cpnnelan . and - his wife reached the ground by the fire escape and appealed to two men ascending to save their two children. The men rescued the little ones, but made no search for other oc cupants of tbe flat. Thomaa Dougherty, aged 22, was burned to death in the boarding-house, 208 avenue A, which took fire during the night. : - LI Hnng; Chang Began I s Journey Today. London, March 5. A Peking dispatch says Li Hung Chang Btarted for Japan via Tien Tsin today. He is completely restored to favor with the emperor and empress, with both of whom he had sev eral interviews. He- is intrusted with full powers to negotiate peace. If sue- cessful many reforms will be instituted in China. Chang's chief rival, the em peror's tutor, Wung Tung Ho, is now out of favor. . Mr. . Patrick, . American tutor to Li Hung Chang's children, will, act as priv ate adviser to the interpreters who ac company the mission. ; The Captured Warships Yokohama, March 5. The .captured Chinese warships have arrived here, Reports of tbe Japanese commanders are favorable to raising the sunken war vessels of China at Wei-Hai-Wei. The Japanese abandoned the Shan Tung peninsula, including Wei-Hai-Wei, after destroying the fortifications. John Wild, alia? Howie, the American who planned to blow up the Japanese warships in a novel manner, and having been released . on parole, has been brought to Japan for trial. Spread From Hot Springs. Bublington Junction, Mo.-, March 5 Black smallpox is raging in Nodaway county. The disease was brought from Hot Springs, Ark.; by the corpse of a citizen of Maryville, who was under treatment at. the epringa. The coffin was opened at his father's house, and again at the church. The funeral was largely attended. - Sunday, twenty cases were reported. The ecbools were closed and the city quarantined. ... Carried to Springfield, Illinois, Springfield, March 5. The state board of health yesterday received notice of a smallpox scare at Mattoon. - Mrs, Peter Mason was at Hot Springs with her husband, who was a consumptive, They returned to Mattoon a few days ago and Mr. Mason died. The funeral was held Saturday and was largely attended Mrs. Mason is now ill with smallpox, Crime In Wisconsin. Chiphewa Falls, Wis., March 5.- After purchasing a revolver in - the store of A. Moses, yesterday, two well-dressed men loaded tbe weapon, and then delib erately shot tbe proprietor of the store when be went to make change. The robbers then knocked him insensible. stole $100 and escaped. Their victim is seriously hurt.' ' ' ' ; fatally Burned. , ; New, Yobk, March ,5. Harry Casey aged 46, bricklayer, who lived at 298 Avsnue A, was . mortally burned at a fire which started in' that building at 1 :35 this morning. A man named Mike, whose other name is not known, is miss iDg. ' Latest U. S. Gov't Report mm 4a fs'ffze best Short ninp - -far aljcootyng pwpottt. Only he<hFol Shoftinituj . uncomorTjxfce feafut of "fbo much fiefinc" from food. cool(ec in. iarcL food cooKed in, icIicaCfe delicious, healftfuf, comforting. J) O YjOU US e CoTTO L B M 6 1 , . MADE ONLY BT TUB N. K. FAIRBANK COrlPANY ST. LOUIS and .Chicago, Sew York, The Lick Trust. San FBANCiscor March 5, Tbe Lick trust is in condition to. be wound up in three months. By the expert's report made today, the trustees have realized over $4,700,000, making insignificant losses. They distributed nearly $3,500, 000, for the purpose of the trust, and have on hand property worth over $1,- 200,000 ready for distribution S)100 Seward SlOO The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that silence bas been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Cure is the only posi tive cure known to the medical frater-: nity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treat-" ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying tbe foundation of the' disease, and giving the patient strength': by building up the constitution and' as-"' sisting nature in doing its work. The' proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. . Send for . list of testimo ' nials. Address, : : ; F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. O. v; Sold by all druggists, 75c. The Sugar Bounty. Washington, March 5. Numerous y claims for sugar , bounty have already reached tbe treasury department. . The supreme court has decided that tbe Cherokee national council cannot discriminate against any class of citizens . in the Cherokee nation in the distribu- ; tion of money derived from the sale of Cherokee lands. . . , . . . A Secret. -. , If all the ladies knew thesimple secret .. . 1 , f J A J!. ordered liver, there would be fewer sal- -low faces and blotchy skins- This im- . portant organ must be kept, active and ' healthv to insure a clear and ' rosy color. Dr. J. A. McLean's' Liver & Kidney Balm as a purifier, beats' all the creams and lotions in existence and will pro duce a more permanent effect. Removes yellow tinge in the skin, wind on the stomach and that dull, billions feeling which so surely indicates the torpid liver. Price . $1.00 per bottle. Snipes Kinersly Drug Co. S.ffAMt.ll hv flu. ' ' Chicago, March . 5. r . Mary Sohan, 1 ft J TtAha- npnli.tlft OCU AA u u n-uww, , r . . s-j oi p; i den avenue, were found dead today in their sleeping apartment. The 'gas was turned on fallv'It is believed that-death was 1 accidental, -as th i girls) ibad fair income from relatives East. . V '.- :... . ::; A-i : : --: 4