The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, October 29, 1897, Image 1

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VOL. X
THE DALLES, OREGON. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 29, 1897
NO 251
WILL NOT BE BARRED
Alaska Military Reservation
Open to All Comers.
REPLY OF SECRETARY ALGER
Any Company May Operate at St.
Jtllchael. Upon Obtaining the
War Department's Consent.
Washington, Oct.' 28. Senator Mc
Bride, of Oregon, saw the secretary of
war and the president today regarding
the report that the new military reserva
tion in Alaska would create a monopoly
for the two transportation companies
now operating between that territory
and points in the United States. He
was assured there was no such intention
in the order ; that no one would be ex
cluded from the territory or prevented
from engaging in any business on the
reservation. Secretary Alger said he
would telegraph the chamber of com
merce of Tacoma to that effect. The
intention of the order was 6olely that of
protecting life and property in the terri
tory, and any company or person enter
ing the territory would be given the
same rights and privileges allowed com
panies or persons already, operating
there.
Senator McBride said he had no doubt
there would be no trouble for any
persons operating in Alaska, and the
assurances of the president and secretary
were sufficient to quiet all apprehen
sions that might be felt either in Oregon
or Washington.
The first formal protest against the
creation of St. Michaels military reser
vation reached the war department from
Tacoma as follows :
"Hon. Secretary of War We ask for
a reconsideration of your order setting
apart a military reservation at St.
Michaels, believing that should it stand
it must work to the detriment of thou
sands of our citizens and give a mon
opoly to the two companies now located
there.
"Citizens' Committee, Tacoma,
"By George Brown, Secretary."
Secretary Alger made the following
reply:
"Telegram received. ' The military
reservation at St. Michaels was estab
lished in the interests of the security of
life and property, the preservation of
order and the protection of legitimate
business interests. No monopoly was
given or intended to any company or
persons. Any proper company or.
person who desires to conduct a legiti
mate business there will, on application
to the war department, be given per
mission to do so."
NEMESIS ON HIS TRACK.
Trouble Probably Ahead for Wejler
v the Recalcitrant.
New York, Oct. 28. A dispatch to
th,e Herald from Havana says :
General Weyler has been ordered by
his government in Madrid to remain in
Havana until General Blanco arrives.
This may mean that Weyler is to be
eent home under arrest for refusing to
obey the order to give his command to
General Castellanos. General Weyler
wanted to sail two days before General
Blanco could reach Havana.
General Castellanos, . in the face of
General Weyler's resistance, was abso
lately helpless so far as assaming com
mand was concerned, but be sent a
special messenger to Key West and tele
graphed the whole situation from there
to his government. It is owing to this
discussion that General Weyler has been
told to wait for General Blanco.
General Weyler is using every means
-Cuts .
For Cuts, Bimply apply two or three
times a day, using enough of the Salve
to cover the wound well. No injury can
come from the direct application of the
Salve to the open wound, as there is not
an ounce of poison in a thousand pounds
of Garland's Happy Thought Salve.
"I cut HV hand on a niece of tin. Garland's
Happy Thought Falve cured it up in a st ort
uuut. i tmQi is is ioe Dest saive l ever usea.
t F. SIMPSON, Mt. Vernon, W.sb.
Absolutely Pure.
Celebrated for its great leavening strength and
bealthfulaess. Assures the food against alum
and all forms of adulteration common to the
cheap brands.
Royal Baking Powder Co. Kiw Yore.
to win sympathy here.' On the way he
employs the power he has concentrated
depends to a very considerable extent
the stability of Spain in Cuba. If he
chooses to resist Blanco's authority, the
latter will need a strong force behind
him before he can land in Havana. If
there is not serious trouble it will be
because Senor Sagasta and his ministers
bend their knees to General Weyler, for
the indication is that Weyler will not
submit quietly to them.
That the Spanish government antici
pates a disturbance is evinced by the
fact that it has telegraphed to General
Weyler to diBband the volunteer forces.
This morning the captain-general called
to the palace the colonels and read them
a telegram from Minister of the Colonies
Moret, stating that the services of the
volunteers would not be longer required,
and that they were to be disarmed.
After an excited consultation the
colonels agree to send a considerable
dispatch to Senor Moret expressing
their indignation and stating that they
would not be responsible for the actions
of the men if the news was conveyed to
them.
If trouble does occur nere it will, not
be a matter of a day ; it will be a matter
of only two or three hours.
Next to a man-of-war, Americans here
would like to see Consul-General Lee.
WHALERS STILL HATE A CHANCE
Icebound Vessels In the North Sea May
Get Out.
San Fbancisco, Oct. 28. Arctic nav
igators and operators of whaling vessels
say there is stiil hope that the Belve
dere, Orca, Fearless, Rosario and Jeanie,
the five vessels that were caught in the
ice west of Point Barrow, about October
1, will get out, but that hope is a very
faint one. Their release from the ice
pack would have to come very soon after
they were inclosed by floes or their
bones would before spring be drifting in
the prevailing westerly currents toward
the . Siberanean coast. Nothing but
heavy southeasterly gales, which would
drive the ice back from the land, would
save them, and at this season of the
year such' winds are very rare in the
Arctic circle.
The Newport, the Jesse H." Freeman
and the Wanderer, that spent - laet
winter in the Arctic, were to come home
this fall, but nothing has been herd of
them west of Point Barrow, and it is
thought that they, too, have been caught
in the ice.
There are no supplies of any kind at
the Point Barrow station for the frozen
in whalers. Should they require assist
ance the nearest point to. which they
can look tor relief is Herechel island,
400 miles away.
When the fleet of 18S9 was frozen in
off Heraldis the United S tatea govern
ment equipped a relief station ftt Point
Barrow and laid in a beautiful supply of
provisions. Not long ago the govern-
$200C
Perhaps, we really oughtn't
to say ' that Schilling's Best
baking powder is the best in
the world, because there are
baking powders in the world
that we haven't heard about.
It is though.
A Schilling St Company
San Francisco - 2011
ment came to the conclusion that the
place was a useless expense and sold
everything for $6000. The last of the
supplies went, on the Jeanie to the
Pacific Steam - Whaling Company's
vessels at Herechel island.'
THE MAN WHO BOARDS.
Some Thing That Hake Him Con
template Matrimony, j.- - -
The troubles of a man who ftotrla
begin with A and end with Z and be
tween is a pandora box full of difficul
ties. Now there is the question of towels;
Jones is decent enough to take a bath
at irregular intervals of some 24 hours
and has some fine, large 'altogether"
bath towels which he intends shall
cheer but not irritate after he rises,
dripping like a mermaid or a half
drowned cat-, from the chill morning
tub. But they disappear and in their
place he finds some heavy pocket hand
kerchiefs, with large holes in them,
which he ascertains are-sufficient to dry
him down to the third float ing rib when
he uses extraordinary prudence and the
remote and fringy corners. Otherwise
he must start the day feeling as though
he was in a heavy perspiration. It dis
courages the aquatic duty of a citizen.
Then there is the matter of matches.
This is a small but at times a burning
question. When a man comes in tired,
puts on slippers and gets out the light
est novel on his shelves and snuggles
down in a big chair for a long, quiet
evening and a pipe, and carelessly
reaching for the match safe finds it
empty, he sits for a moment in a fever
ish frame of mind. Then he rises sol
emnly and goes down three flights of
stairs for matches, but finds the box is
empty and the landlady gone to bed.
In the darkness of the lower hall,
alone with some dozen vicious rocking
chairs clustered around his unprotected
ankles, he murmurs a blessing on the
lady and her assistant and laboriously
ascends to search the bathroom. Foiled
there he prowls into another's room,
which he finds has a new and feminine
occupant and precipitately retires, feel
ing that worst of, anguish humilia
tion. He cusses the pipe and throws the
book into a corner, and the lamp then
displays a fading tendency.
. Grim, haggard, furious, he stands
watching the glow turn a sickly pallor
and flicker, then burn in a ring of
smudgy fire at the wick. He remem
bers that he has asked the chamber
maid :it four different and fervid times
to keep that lamp full of oil and even
slipped a quarter into her hand hoping
it would work a change. Again is he in
the darkness and all the evil that is in
his nature (or has been instilled there
by having to eat v.armed-over rare
roast beef under the 'guise of steak)
seethes in his chest.
Some of the troubles are small, like
the piece of chicken at the Sunday din
ner, and there are others which are
great and vast like the Monadnock
block. With Jones one- of these latter
is a difference of opinion respecting the
most convenient, desirable and alto
gether choice location for the wash
stand. He has ' certain preferences
which in his timid, hesitating way he
exhibiLs by putting the stand where he
wants it. . lie takes a proud, complacent
survey of his domsstic domain as he
leaves in the morning. At ryght he re
turns to find that the washstand is oc
cupying another site. He puts it back
and continues doing it for three succes
sive nights and then comes a time
when flesh can bear no more and he
tramps downstairs and demands to se
the chambermaid. '
She is out and he forgets it in the
morning-, but that night his furniture
is in the prim, maddening regularity
which he detests and the maid is ar
raigned. She could not open the ward
robe door, she explains, with the wash
stand where it was. . Open the ward
robe door! What was that girl going
into that place every day for and get
ting his coats white with lint from her
dust cloth?
And then Jones goes away and sulks
and meditates matrimony. Chicago
News.
r
Underground City.
In Galicia, in Austrian Poland, there
is a remarkable undergroundcity which
bears out this description, as it has a
population of over 1,000 men, -women
and children, scores of whom havenever
seen the light of day. It is known as
the City of the Salt Mines, and is situ
ated several hundred feet -below the
earth's surface. It has its town hall,
theater and asembly room, as well as a
beautiful church, decorated with
statues, all being fashioned from the
pure crystallized salt rock. It has well
graded streets and spacious squares,
lighted with electricity. There are
numerous instances in this under
ground city where not a single individ
ual in three or four successive genera
tions has ever seen the sun, or has any
idea of how people live in the light of
day.
(Hood M
011)11)
When yon slip on your trousers see that they fit from the
hip to the heel. PANTS THAT PLEASE are the K. N. & P. Co. kind. Our
Fall stock of refined ' and confined creations -await your verdict. Made
ngnt, tneyu stay right. That's the way our prices are, too ngnt."
Han't tha safeguard and
a written guarantee.
You're
Not compelled to
paT high and fancy
prices' to
these qualities,
however,
secured
just a5 Qood
a fit can be had
at $1.'50, $2.00 and "
$2.50. Our $3.00
and $4.00 Trous
ers are
Stylist?
Uearers.
See our Window.
SUMMONS.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT of the State ot Ore
gon for Wasco County.
The Oregon Railroad & Navigation Company, a
corporation organized under the laws of the
State oi Oregon, Plaintiff,
va
Thomas J. Bulger and Bulger, his wife,
whose given name is, unknown to plaintiff;
n. L. Gates. George Gardiner and Fannie .
Gardiner, Defendants.
To Thomas J. Bulger, Bulger, whose given
name is unknown to plaintiff, George Gardi
ner and Fannie E. Gardiner, defendants.
IN THE NAME OP THE STATE O V OfiEGON
you and each of you are hereby required to ap-
Fiear and answer the complaint filed againBt you
n the above entitled action on or before the
first day of the term of the above entitled court
following the expiration of the time prescribed
in the order lor the publication of this sum
mons, to wit: on or before the 8th day of No
vember, 18U7, that being the first day of the next
regular term of said court, and if you fail to so
appear and answer the complaint of the plain
tiff, for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to
the court for the judgment prayed for in id
complaint, towit: For the condemnation and
appropriation for ft right-of-way for a railroad of
a strip of land one hundred feet wide over and
across the following described lands: Commenc
ing at a point 1190 feet north from the southeast
corner of the southwest quarter of section six,
township two norm, range eight east, in Wasco
county, Oregon, thence north 70 feet to point;
thence north 86 degrees 34 minutes east, 280 feet
to a point in the north boundary of the right-of-way
of the Oregon Railway and Navigation Com
pany, now Oregon Railroad and Navigation
Company's right-of-wav: thence southwesterly
along said north boundary of said right-of-way
to the place of beginning, containing 2i-10O acres.
Also another tract of land si'uated in said sec
tion six, described as follows, to-wit: Com
mencing at a point in the south boundary of the
right-of-way of the said Oregon Railroad and
Navigation Company, which point is 1175 feet
north and 290 feet east of the southeast corner of
the southwest quarter of section six, township
two north, range eight east; thence north 86 de
grees and 'H minutes east, 815 feet to a point on
the south boundary of the said right-of-way;
. thence on a curve to the left with and along the
said boundaiy of said right-of-way in a westerly
course to the place of beginn tng, containing
47-100 acres; said land to be used for the re-location
of the railway of said plaintiff's across said
premises as provided by section 3241, Hill's An
notated Laws of the State of Oregon. And plain
tiff will also take judgment for its costs and dis
bursements in this action.
This summons is Berved upon the defendants
above named by publication thereof in The
Dalles Chronicle by order of Hon. W. L. Brad,
shaw, Judge of the Seventh Judicial District of
the State of Oregon, made at chambers in Dalles
City. Oregon, this 25ih day of September, 18U7.
W. W. COTTON,
J. M. LONG and .
W. H. WILSON,
scpttb Attorneys for Plaintiff.
Men Yo
rk Weekly Tribune
FRENCH & CO.,
BANKERS.
TRANSACT A JENERALBANKING BUS1NES
Letters of Credit issued available in the
Eastern States.
Sight Exchange and Telegraphic
Tranefers sold on New York, Chicago,
St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Ore
lion, Seattle Wash,, and varioaa points
in Oregon and Washington.
Collections made at all points on fav
orable terms. - .
Farmers and Villagers,
FOB
Fathers and Mothers,
FOR
Sons and Daughters,
FOR
All the Family.
With the close of the Presidential Campaign THE TRIBUNE recognizes the
fact that the American people are now anxious to give their attention to home and
business interests. To meet this' condition, politics will have far less epace and
prominence, until another State or National occasion demands a renewal of the
fight for the principles for which THE TRIBUNE has . labored from its inception
to the present dav. and won its greatest victories.
Every Dosmble effort will be put forth, and money freely spent, to make THE
WEEKLY "TRIBUNE pre-eminently a National Family Newspaper, interesting,
instructive, eutertainins and indispensable to each member of the family.
We furnish "The Chronicle" and XT. Y. Weekly Trib
une one year for only $1.75.
Write your name and address on a postal card, send it to Geo. W. Best,
Tribune Office, New York City, aci a sample copy of The New York Weekly Trib
une will be mailed to vou. i
Uascoffl
al ehouse Company
Headquarters for Seed Grain of ail kinds.
Headquarters for Feed Grain of ail kinds.
Headquarters for Rolled Grain, ail kinds.
Headquarters for Bran, Shorts, S?Slf
Headquarters for "Byers' Best" Pendle-
Q Y H "1 Oil T - This Floor is manufactured expressly for family
AA " . use : every sack is guaranteed to give satisfaction.
We sell our goods lower than any house in the trade, and if yon don't think so
call and get our prices and be convinced.
Highest Prices Paid for Wheat. Barley and Oats. -
v