The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, August 17, 1896, Image 1

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VOL. IX
THE DALLES, OREGON, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1896
NO 192
THE VITAL QUESTION
Senator J. Sherman's Great
Speech at Colnmbus.
THE OHIO CAMPAIGN OPENED
' Ten Thousand People Listened to a
llaUi Statement of the Financial
Issues of the Ray.
Coi.uMr.i's, ()., Ausr. 15. The Kepub
lican campaign in Ohio was formally
opened today by two monster meetings
in this city. The orators were Senator
John Sherman, Senator-elect J. B. Fora
ker and Hon. Stewart L. Woodford of
Brooklyn, I. Y. The meetings were
held in an immense tent on East Broad
street, the city Laving no auditorium
large enough to accommodate the crowds.
" At the afternoon meeting, fully 10,000
people were crowded into the tent. The
large attendance was a great surprise, as
it was feared the extreme warm weather
would interfere. Governor Bushnell
presided at the afternoon meeting. The
governor made a brief speech. He said
. the people from all parts of the state
were present to open a campaign that
will elevate to the highest office in the
gift of the' people of the United States a
distinguished son of Ohio that man
was William McKinley. The speaker
reminded his hearers that no Ohio can
didate for the presidency, except the
first and greatest of them all, Abraham
Lincoln, was a native of Ohio.
RALLYING TO M'RINLSV.
Populist of Klickitat Who Will Vote
the Republican Ticket.
GtoLDENDAi.K, Wash., Aug. 15. J. M.
Coney, a resident of Goldendale, who
represents an extensive portion of the
Populist party in Klickitat county, and
, voted for James B. Weaver four years
ago, today he declared be would vote
this fall for McKinley and Hobart. He
believes the success of McKinley and
the party that was tried so many years
the only remedy tbat will bring to the
poor man prosperity. Mr. Coney be
lieves the Populist party has retrograded
by an alliance with the party with a
record of failures and a syndicate capit
alized at over $500,000,000 by silver
mine owners. Mr. Coney said :
"The Populist party came into exist
ence to right the wrongs that bad been
perpetrated by corporation greed i but
now it is in the act of aiding the greatest
corporate greed ever known,'' -
' Andrew Jackson Murphy, an old-time
newspaper man, and at one time editor
of the Populist paper in Klickitat, also
a candidate on the Populist state ticket
four years ago, has joined the Republi
can club.
Albert Madsen, a prominent Demo
crat, who ran on the Democratic ticket
two years ago for office, has joined the
McKinley Club, and wears the McKin
ley bat.
- Sixteen to One vs. Nothing to Eight.
The Wiley B. Allen Company have
posted up their show window a letter
just received from George E. Gnswold,
of the firm of ,Lyon & Healy, Chicago,
who, by the way, is a great silver man,
bat who writes that he has a good gold
story to tell:
A silver man asked an Irishman if he
knew what 16 to 1 meant, and the Irish
man said : "You bet your life I am
the man that knows."
"Well, what is it?"
"Well," he said, "you are blowing
and spouting about 16 to 1 before elec
tion, and after election it will be nothing
. to ate (eight). - " v
TALKED TO HIS EMPLOYES.
A Railroad President Speaks
on the
Money Question.
Kansas City, Aug 15. A. E. Stillwell,
president of the Kansas City, Pittsburg
& Gulf railroad, is the first employer of
any large number of men in this vicinity
to begin an active and open political
campaign among the men whose labor
he hires. Today all the railroad's shop
men in Pittsburg, Kansas City and in
termedmte points, besides many other
employes of the road, altogether num
bering several hundred, were given a
free holiday and transportation to Fair-.
mount Park. When they ; arrived, Mr,
.Stillwell appeared before them in' the
Absolutely Pure.
A cream of tartar baking powder. Highest of
all in leaveuinft strength. Latent Cuited States
Government Food Report.
Koyal Baking Powdke Co.. Ken: York
auditorium and deliverd an earnest ad
dress in opposition to the free-silver
"craze," as he termed it." Mr. Stillwell
declared tbat the free-silver .agitation
had done more harm to the laboring
man had taken more bread out of his
mouth than the civil war. He assured
his employes tbat they would never see
any free-silver men at the bead of any
great enterprises that develop the coun
try and give work to the laboring men.
NOTICE.
To Axl WnoM It May Concern :
By order of the Common Council of
Dalles Citv, made on the Sd dav of Au
gust, 1896, and entered of record in the
records of Dalles City on the 4th day of
August, 1896, notice is hereby given that
the sidewalks on the following streets
have been declared dangerous by said
council on said 3d day of August, and
the said Common Council will proceed
to make the improvements as herein
after stated, on said streets, or parts of
streets, so declared dangerous, after
fourteen days from the first publication
of this notice, to-wit, August 7, 1896;
and the cost of such improvements of all
such sidewalks, and of each of them,
will be charged and levied upon the
property adjacent thereto and directly
benefited thereby, as by charter pro
vided. The sidewalks declared dangerous and
about to be built are as follows, to-wit:
1. .to bulla a sidnwalk on the west
side of Court street from Second street
to the alley, along lot 5 in block 4. '
z. lo build a sidewalk on the south
side of Second street, between Gonrt and
Union streets, along lot 3 in block 6.
3. To build a sidewalk on the north
side of Second street from Union street
east 72 feet, along lot 8 in block 4, and ' on
union street from becond street to the
alley, along lot 8, in block 4.
4. lo build a sidewalk on the north
side of Fourth, along the property now
occupied by W. E. Garret son.
6. . lo build a sidewalk on the north
side of Fourth street, along lot 4 in
DIOCK Z.
6. To build a sidewalk on the north
side of Third street, along lot 6 in block
5, and on the west side of Washington
street, along lot 6 in block 5, from Third
street to alley.
7. To build a sidewalk on the north
side of Alvord street along lots 3 and 4,
in block 2, between Laughlin and Fed
eral streets.
8. To build a sidewalk on the east
side of Washington street, along lot 12
in block A, and on the north side of Ful
ton street, along lots 9, 10, 11 and 12, in
block A.
9. To bnild a sidewalk on the north
side of Second street, between Washing
ton and Court streets, along lot 9, in
block 3. .........
All of said sidewalks will be built and
constructed in accordance with the pro
visions of the charter and ordinances of
Dalles City. -
Dated this 7th day of August, 1896.
' Gilbeet W. Phelps,
Recorder of Dalles City.
Wanted.
Mrs. Drews is prepared to furnish
board and lodging for four or five pupils
attending school in The Dalles at $12
per month. Apply at residence, corner
Court and Tenth streets. ' agl2-dlm .'.
- Redaction la Wood.
The Dalles Lumber Co. will ciose oat
their stock of 16-inch stove wood cat
ready for stove at $2.00 per cord in order
to obtain yard room for fall stock. -
jly25-dlm.
Bnokien'o Anac SsIts.
The best eal ye in the world for cuts,
braises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fevei
sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all skin eruptions, and' posi
tively euros piles,, or no pay required
It ia guaranteed to give perfect satisfac
tion, or money tefnnaed. Price 25 cerftg.
per box; -For bale oy " Blakeley and
Houghton, drntre'ste.
;Jfo more BOILS,, no more PIMPLES
Use Kinersly's Iron Tonic. The Snipes
Kineraly Drug Co. Telephone No. 3.
. ' Ihe, face That Kills.
'"Every. ..time . I com?" to the United
States," said Mr. Hugh Jamison, of Lon
don, England, "I find fresh cause for as
tonishment in the marvelous encrsry of
the Yankee nation. It seems to me that
the people work on this "side for the
sake of work, they appear to regard it
not as a means to an end, but the end
itself. This universal rush and hurry
impresses itself very forcibly on Eu
ropeans. Some years ago I was visit
ing' a friend in Russia, which is a very
quiet country indeed, and, the conversa
tion turning on London, some one re
marked upon the unceasingr activity
and pres3 in the British capital, and how
the people hurried along the street during-
the busy hours of the day. An old
Kussian thereupon, with a grave shake
of his head, observed that he had been in
London once, and that nearly all its cit
izens were mad. I wonder what this
old gentleman would have thought if he
had ever made a pilgrimajfe to Chicago ?
Now, it is questionable in my tniud
whether this traffic pace is a healthy
thing. for a people. Isn't it the pace
that kills? Why not leave something'
for succeeding generations to do? Your
rich .men, instead of settling' on big
country estates and helping- to improve
the rural districts .sppin to nil fliii.r in
the cities, and to continue adding- to !
their fortunes. The mania-for work, for
active endeavor, seems never to- leave
them, and their children inherit the
same tendencies.'V-Washington Post.
A Jewish Wedding: Feast.
There were a great many people coming-
and going- that day at the house
of the wise Rabbi Isaac Ben iVassnr. 1
They were not all Cana people, by any
means. The bridal feast was spread
in the large front room opening upon
the porch, and all who had a rijr!it to
enter were welcomed heartily. Pood
was plentifully provided, but the mer
riest hour of each a,y would Ik; after,
sunset, when, the day's work being
done, . all the invited guests would
come. The bridegroom was continual
ly present, to receive congratulations
and good wishes. With him vvre sev
eral young men of his more intimate
friends; but decidedly the most impor
tant figure , in that room was Isaac
himself." As master of the house and
as 'ruler-of the feast, he sat at -the
head of the long table provided for
the occasion. IIis dress was as simple
as ever, but it seemed to have under
gone a change, he wore it with so grand
an air. He appeared to be .happy, -and
be received great respect from the
throng of people who came to congrat
ulate him upon the marriage of his son.
So the marriage feast went on until the
midday was pnst and the shadows be
gan to lengthen in the streets' of Cana.
W. O.. Stoddard, in St. Nicholas. - .
Still an Open Question. -
In discussing new words and ; the
fact that even well -educated persons are
always coming. upon doubtful terms,
there is a storr of Col". Colt, of revolver
fame, who refused to be daunted even
by a word which did not exist. The
colonel was sitting on the veranda of a
Saratoga .hotel narrating some of his
experiences in Turkey when he went
there to place a 'contract. As he talked,
a pompous person, a judge from some
remote interior region, walked by the
group, occasionally stopping for a mo
ment and then passing on. Suddenly h:
paused, with the serious purpose of
speaking, and asked in solemn, slow
and measured tones: "Does the sultan
cf Turkey,- sir. abatiate himself in his
intercourse with distinguished foreign
ers?" As quickly as if "abatiate"were
as familiar to him as the word" "re
volver, Col, Colt replied : . ""I cannot say,
of my personal knowledge He may
have that reputation." Then as the'
judge, apparently satisfied, passed on
out of earshot, the colonel turned to
the group and asked: "What in time
did he mean?" K very body laughed, but
nobody knew. Outlook.
. Money In lreams.
Here is "a strange true tale," with
the, scene in Georgia, near the flourish
ing town of Covington:. A few years
ago a negro woman living near Coving
ton lost a son, by deaths A week or so'
ago the woman had a dream in which
the son appeared to her and told her
that if she would go to a certain comer
of the house and dig she would find a
flat rock, underneath, which .she would
find a lot of silver money. The woman
awoke and was so much wrought- up
over the vision that she aroused some
of the family and went at once to the
designated spot and began to dig.
Soon the flat rock was reached and re
moved with trembling hands and high
expectation! A small box was re
vealed; this was taken out and opened,
and, to the wonder and astonishment
of all present, it contained 30 silver
dollars. Atlanta Constitution.
There's more - clothing destroyed ' by
poor soap than by actual wear as the
free alkali .rots them. Hoe cake is
pure. .'" . jly24-i
Only
I
O
August 20th is the Last Day,
The day set for the beginning of our Removal,
and the end of our Great Sale. Until then every -
-item in the store remains as it is: m
GREAT LY REDUCED!
"
For Infants and Children.
Castoria promotes Digestion, and
overcomes Flatulency, -Constipation, Soar
Stomach, Diarrhoea, 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 (hat
!t recommend it as superior to any prescription
Itnown to mo." H. A. Archer. M. D.,
Ill South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N.Y.
For several yean, - uavt. reooinmeriaed your
Castoria, and shall always continue to do so.
as it has invariably produced beneficial remits.' '
Edwh F. Pardee, M. D.,
125th Street and 7th Ave., JSew York City.
"The use of 'Castoria is so universal and
its merits so well known tbat it teems a work of '
supererogation to endorse it. Few are the in
telligent families who do not keep Castoria
within easy reach."
Carlos Martth, D. D.,
New York City.
Thx CKsruna Compact, 77 Hurray Street, N. Y.
Pacific
Co.,
Second and
; Washington
Streets, opp.
French's
Bank.
We are" now settled in our new quarters, and
are prepared to do all kinds of work in our line.
We make Corsets. Ladies' Dress Reform Waists,
Misses' and Children's Waists. Abdominal Bands
or Supports of various styles. These goods are
all made to order; a (rood fit guaranteed or no
sale. Why not patronize home industry? If this
western country had ten per cent, of the money
paid eastern and foreign manufactures it would
make us all rich. Why not keep the money at
home by building up industries at home. Fac
tory ana office at corner Second and Washington
; entrance at First National Bank. . . .
Help Wanted Stale.
Wanted Solicitors for campaign book "Bry
an, Sewull and Free Silver," authorized by
Bryan, written by K. L. Mctcalf, editor Omaha
World-Heiald,- appointed author by Bryan.
Contains speeches and plntform. A bonanz for
agents, a free silver mlue for workers. Only
1.60. The only authorized book. 50 per cent.
Credit given. Freight psid.- Outfit free.- Begin
now with choice of territory. Permanent, prof
itable work for '96. Address, The National
Book Concern, Star Building, Chicago.
. .. - ug9-lra
Ten More Days f
OF THIS
GREAT
PRICE
CUTTING
A M WILLIAMS & CO
x th re
ipes-'&iersly Drug Co.
Drugs, Paints,
Wall Paper,
Glass. Etc.
129 Second St.,
THE DALLES, - - OR.
FRENCH & CO.,
BANKERS.
TRANSACT A GENEKAL BANKING BUSINES
Letters of Credit issued available in the
Eastern States.
Sight Exchange and Telegraphic
Transfers sold on New York, Chicago,
St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Ore
gon, Seattle Wash,, and various points
in Oregon and Washington.
Collections made at all points on fav
orable terms.
Harry Liebe,
PRACTICAL
All work promptly attended to,
and warranted.
Chlebcatei'a F.njrD.h DtaKud Braad.
ENHYROYAL PILLS
Oriel aoi mc! Only Oeaoine.
Arc, olr&T reliable, ladies ask
DntffadJrt tor' CkicAcMtmr a Knniik fHst-
ntowd Brtctut to Ktd aod (.'oU metallic'
Itieift, MUod wlia blue ribkon. Take
tvnw una tsMiamm. i i'rwKiB,or KM
Relief 1W rMl !, t UiUr, by retain
i or
X3)
uThe Regulator Line'
Tie Dalles. Portland and Astoria
Navigation Co.
THROUGH
Fieigat and Passenger Llns
Through Daily Trips (Sundays ex
cepted) between The Dalles and Port
land. - Steamer Regulator leaves The
Dalles nt 8 a. m., connecting at the Cas
cade Locks with Steamer Dalles City.
Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland
(Oak si-cet dock) at 7 a. m., connect
ing with Steamer Regulator for The
Dalles.
ASSKKUKR KATES.
One wny
Round trip
..2.00
.. 3.M
Rates Greatly Reduced.
All freight, except car lots,
will be brought through, ivith
out delay at Cascades.
Shipments for Portland received at
any time day or night. Shipments for
way landings mast be delivered before .
5 p. tn. Live stock shipments solicted.
Call on or address.
W. C. ALLAWAY
General Agent-
THE DALLES.
OREGON
fnUODD POlSOrj
A fntHI it B mm Primnrr " -
I j is caredinl6to35days. You can be treated at
ihomoforsnuiepriceundersnmeRTuanui"
I Jfty. If you prefer tooome here we willeoa.
l in m i if trad to par rai lroad f areand hotel bllluad
Dochanre, if wo f ail to cure. If you have taken mee
cury, iodide potash, and still have aches and
ains. Mucous Fatchea in mouth. Sore Throat,
icnples. Copper Coloreii Spots, Ulcers on
any part of the Toody.Malror Eyebrows falilDar
out, it Is this Secondary JULOOO I'OISO-J
we guarantee to enro. We solicit the most obsta
nate cases and challenge the world for
ease we cannot cure. This disease has alwars
baffled the skill of the most eminent physi
cians. 01300,000 capital behind our uncondV
tional guaranty. Ahsolute proofs sent sealed ott
application. Address COOK KHOY Cfik
303 Abtaonlo Xenaple, C1UCAJUO, 1LI .
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