The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, November 20, 1897, Image 2

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Th3 Dalles Daily Gfcrcsiste.
The only Republican Daily Newspapei on
Wagco County.
EASTERN OFFICE 230 to SS4 Temple
Court, N. Y. City. E. KATZ, Agent.
SATURDAY
NOVEMBER 20, 1S97
THE LAGGARD LAW.
"Kelsjiv Porter was hanged at
j
UnioD, in this state, yesterday for
the murder of an old man named
Berjjamin Mache, his wife and son.
There was no doubt as to who did
the killing, Porter surrendering him
self to the sheriff and telling him his
story ot the crime:' Porter claimed
that he acted in self-defense, that the
son, Ben Mache, had commenced
shooting at him, and that he only
shot to Drotect ' himself. Whether or
not there was any truth in this state
ment, it was evident that when he
hnt the old DeoDle. who were in a
sled, their backs were toward. him.
The case was tried in February, 189G,
and Porter found guilty. His attor
neys appealed to the supreme court,
and the decision of the lbwer court
was sustained.
We of Oregon are prone to give
California a rub occasionally on ac
count of her slackness in punishing
criminals, and in doing so the Dur
r&nt case is .most often commented
upon. Arc we really in any way
ahead of our southern neighbor?
Durrant has been much in evidence
for two years and a half, and the de
lay in inflicting punishment on him
is a cause of public clamor. In his
case there has been an abiindanfce of
money, and every delay, every de
vice that human ingenuity could
coDjure up has been brought into
plav. Yet Durrani's case, has not
been much longer delayed than
Porter s. "' ' '
Public sentiment about Union
seemed to be somewhat in Porter's
favor, though why, it would be hard
to say, and a strong effort was made
to procure a commutation of his sen
tence through Governor Lord. The
latter found no sufficient reason for
interfering, and so the law took its
couise, and as cold-blooded a mur
derer as even Durrant himself was
swung into eternity nearly two years
afier the commission of the murder.
As at present arranged the com
mittee . of Portland's business men
now making the tour of the Inland
Empire, will stop here Monday after
noon about 3 o'clock. The commit
tee states that no attempt was made
to interview The Dalles citizens be
cause it was Sunday. This is all
right, being better than no excuse,
and we are pleased to state that the
committee has changed its plans so
that instead of passing through The
Dalles Sunday, as was at first intend
ed, their home-coming was put off
one day. We are glad of this, and
we hope our business men will unite
io giving the webfooters a warm wel
come, such an one as The Dalles can
give u it win. Uur interests, or,
for that matter, all Oregon's interests,
are tied up with those of Portland.
btae is the state's best girl, and we
would all like the tailor-made, be
witching little damsel if she would
let us, but we want no flirting. We
want her Jto stand in solid with us,
and when she does she will find in
Eastern Oregon an ardent swain, who
will not only buy her theater tickets,
but put up for the oysters- and such,
- besides.
Love-scorned young man, take
courage. Rejoice and be glad. You
may have run big livery bills, paid
for a theater or two, bought a few
tons of ice cream and - exhausted all
your most patient and charming ar
tifices in a vain attempt to win the
tender regard of your best girl, but
despair not. There yet remains to
you a recourse that is full of promise.
A New York woman, Mrs. Nack, has
given the secret away. She stated
to a . jury recently that she never
loved her hero until he choked her,
and declared: he choked her into
loving him. To insure success in
love-making it is only necessary to
learn tbd "Nack" of it. Pendleton
Tribune. "
The Ileppner Times, published by
E. M. Shntt. recently of Antelope,
is the "baby '1 newspaper of the state,
the first number ar pearing Thursday.
The paper is bright and presents a
neat appearance. Shutt is a hustler,
and will get the news, if there is any
at all to get. v,
THE GREATEST INVENTOR.
A Drummer Telia a. Story About the
, Wizard of Menlo Park.
A Blue line train was making a blue
streak through the New Jersey air, with
the cowcatcher of the locomotive point
ed toward New York city, and a drum
mer was talking right along ahead of
it as easy as. the bird- flies, saystheNew
York Sun. ' --
"I want to say to you, gentlemen,"
he was saying, "that Thomas Edison
is the greatest inventor in the world,
not only in the quantity of his inven
tions, but in the quality' of them, and
every new thing he turns out he gets a
patent on it before it is dry. Sensible
man is Tom, and a great snap is a pat
ent when the monopoly in it is yours,
gentlemen. I know what I'm talking
about, for I had one once that was a loo
loo, only it wasn't big enough. But
I'm getting away from my tale, as the
dog remarked when he barely got his
hind legs from under the wheels. I was
in Edison's town the other day and
heard a new story on him. New to me,
anyhow. Man over there that I sell
goods to, and won't lie except when the
fishing season is on, told me, as an illus
tration of how absorbed Edison is in his
business, that one day Mrs. Edison came
to her husband in great glee and an
nounced that the baby had a tooth. '
" 'Very' well, my dear," replied her
husband, never stopping a minute from
his work. 'I haven't got time to bother
with your affairs. You just run along
and get a patent on it and have ' it
charged to my account.' "
THEY HELPED JIM.
He Was Only a Little Bootblack and
Had Been 111.
The rich men who build hospitals are
not the only benevolent ones. The shoe
black of whom Dr. Talmage tells this
story showed a spirit of sweet un
selfishness: ' , . '
A reporter sat down on one of the
city hall benches and whistled to one of
the shiners. The boy came up to his
work ' provokingly slow, and had just
begun, when a larger boy shoved him
aside and began the work, and the re
porter reproved him as being, a bully,
and the boy replied: - 'Oh, that's all
right. I am going to do it for 'im. You
see, he's been sick in the hospital more'n
a month ; so us boys turn in and give im
a lilt.'
'Do all the boys help him?' asked the.
reporter.
'Yes, sir; when they am t got no
job themselves and Jim gets ones they
turn in and help 'im; for he ain't strong
yet, you see.'
" 'How much percentage does he give
you?' asked the reporter.
"The boy replied: 'I don't keep none
of it. I ain't no such sneak as that.
All the boys give up what they get on
his job. I'd like to catch any feller
sneaking on a sick boy, I would.
"The reporter gave him a 25-cent
piece, and said : 'You keep ten cents for
yourself, and give the rest to Jim.' .
"'Can't do it, sir; it's his customer.
Here; Jim."'
DECAY OF ANIMAL MATTER.
It la Some think More Than a Simple
Chemical Change.
A great 'many .proofs, now more or
less familiar to most people, show quite
clearly that the decay of animal or regr
etable matter is not a simple chemical
change, inevitable in the nature of
things, but a. violent interference with
the natural course on the part of hos
tile organisms, says Longman's Maga
zine. The bacteria, which produce de
composition, are very minute plants,
which grow, like mushrooms or molds,
upon organic matter, and which repro
duce their like with incredible rapidity.
Tyndall showed long ago that the
spores of these plants exist in myriads
in the. air, floating everywhere around
us; that they occupy all crannies and
empty places on the surface ,of the
earth, and that they swarm in their
millions in all ponds and puddles. An
easy way of proving that these spores
alone, and the -plant colonies which
spring from them, are the cause of
putrefaction may be obtained by boil
ing beef tea in a test tube, so as to kill
the bacteria, and then, while the liquid
is still steaming, closing up the mouth
of the tube with a prug of eotton wool,
which admits the air but strains out
the germs of the putrefactive organ
isms. Under these conditions the beef
tea will keep good for years, but if you
remove the plug it will begin at once to
putrefy. : ...
Bnctitii'i Ariuo amtii.
The best salve in the world for cuts,
Urmaes, sores, nicers, salt rheum, fevt
aores, tetter, chapped hands, ehUblaine
corns, and al! skin emptioD", and posi
tively cuia piles, or no pay required
It is guaranteed to eivfl perfect satisfac
tion, or nioriey retunaed. Price 25 cents
per Iiot. . For sale oy ' B'akeley and
Homihtou, drucz'sts.
a , , , ,
o r ---- i
'
o : t
! - ' ' '
9 I - . ill i .S'wA r-
& : : .
3
Tho Best I
2 SmoklngTobacco Klado I
f S p eg a I peatu r
Of
1 r
i j. i-
V reasonable prices. T
Wholesale.
tUines and Cigars.
THE CELEBRATED
ANHEUSER
HOP GtOIjD
a nnaneor'.'Rnc Tolr-
j. iiiiw wwu vj-jtj. aumiu
beverage, Tinequaled as a
STUBLING & WILLIAMS,
"There is a tide in the affairs
leads on to fortune"
The poet unauestlonablv had reference to the .
Closing Out Sales of
AT C RAN DA Li.
Who are selllne those goods
MICITELBACH BRIOK.
ii
- '
J
10 03
this year in, valuable
articles to smokers' of
BlackwelS'o
Genuine
a
Tobacco
Yon will find one coupon in
side each 2-onnce bag, and two
coupons inside each' 4-ounce
bag. Buy abag, readthecoupoa
and see how to get your share.
9
s
The Chronicle office is the
Job priptip
Dpartrept.
I 1
We have better facilities-for
doing; artistic, work in this line
than any office in Eastern Ore
gon," and this branch of our busi
ness is in the hands of expert
workmen. ' )
omparisop
a -i: 1 . ji 1 1. . a
- BUSCH and
SEER anddfnUt?ottIes.
TTnrtna a nnri.olnnhnliA
j. mvamu, u aw4a imwavuv
tonic.
of men which, taken at its flooa
Furniture and Carpets
&, BURGET'S,
out at reatlv-red uced rat
- - LTNICJN ST.
Regulator Line
Tt3 ralles. Fortiani and Astaria
ITavigation Co.'
strs. Regulator Dalles City
I FREIGHT AND PASSENUER LINE
. BBTWKKS' "
Tbe Dalles, Hood River, Casoade Ixicks and Port-
lana aaiiy, except &unaay. -
GOOD SERVICE, LOWEST RATES
,( BOINTPVALLEI
Are you going . , . : .. T
( EASTERN OREGON?
It so, save moiiev and enjoy a ceautiful trip on
the Columbia. The wa-t-bourid train arrives at
The Dalles in amnle time for vaesengers to take
tha stpamer. arrivintr in Portland in time for the
outgoing southern ana .wormern train; Jiast-
bonna passengers arriving m loe uaiies in time
to -take the East-bouod train.
For flutter nil ormatipu apply to .
J. N. HARNEY, Agent, .
Oak Street Dock. Portland, Oregon,
Or W C. AIXAVVAY,-Gen. Agt.,
The Dalles, OreBon
EAST and SOUTH via
The Shasta Route
OP THE ' ' ' . ' '
Southern Pacific Cdmp'y.
Trains leave and are due to arrive at Portland.
OVERLAND EX--)
press, Salem, Rose- '
burg, Ashland, Sac-1
6:00 P. M
J rameuto, Ogden,San I
s v..nn;But VI w. .... ?
. . u ... .... ... ....1. .
9:30 A. M
Los Angeles.El Paso,
New--- Orleans am
VEast
8:30 A. M.
Roseburg and way- sta
tions '4:30 P. 31
I Via Woodburn fori
Mt. Angel, Silverlbn, j
West Scio, Browns- V
viUe,Springneld and j
Natron j
Daily
except
Daily
except -Sundays.
Sundays;
17:80 A. M;
(Cor vail is and way)
(stations i t
(McMinnville andj
t 5:50 P. M
tt:S0 P. M
t 8:25 P. M
( way smuuiia. . . .
Daily.
tDaily, except Sunday
nday.
DINTNG CARS ON OGDEN ROUTE.
PULLMAN BUFFET 8LEEPER3
AND SECOND-CLASS SLEEPING CARb
Attached to all Through Trains.
Direct connection at San Francisco with Occi
dental and Oriental and Pacific mail steamship
lines for JAPAN and CHINA. Sailing dates On
application.
Rates and tickets to Eastern points and Eu
rope. Also JAPAN, CHINA, HONOLULU and
AUSTRALIA, can be Obtained irom
J. B. KIRKLAND, Ticket Agent.
AUlUUgil A IV. K (. V UlUUKjlM 1UIIU BUTCk nuuc
through tickets to all points in the Eastern
States, Canada and. Europe can be obtained at
lowest rates from
J. B. KIRKLAND, Ticket Agent.
All above trains arrive at and depart lrom
Grand Central Station. Fifth and Irving streets
YAMHILL DIVISION.
Passenger Depot, foot of Jefferson street.
Leave for OSWEGO, daily, except Sunday, at
a. m.i 12:15, 1:45, 5:25, 6:45, "8:05 p. m.
(ana u:su p. m. on eaturaay oniy, ana s:4u a. m.
and S:30 p. m. on Sundaya only), i Arrive at
Portland ohIIv at 7:10 and 8:80 a m.; and 1:30,
4:15, 0:35 and 7:55 p. m., (and 10 a. m , 3-15 and
o:iu p. m. on sunaays oniyj. .
Leave for Sheridan, week davs. ut4:30p. m
Arrive at Portland, 9:30 a. m.
Leave for A1RL1E on Monday. Wednesday and
Frioav at 9:40 a.m. Arrive at Portland, Tupb-
I dav, Thursday and Saturday at 3:05 p. m.
Except Sunday, Except Saturday. '
R. KOEHLER,
Manaeer.
, H. MARKHAM,
Asst. G. F. & Pass. Ast
Joseph SHAWOU
has ope::ed a
. IN THE EAST END, in the Colum
bia Feed Yard, opposite Saltmarsbe"s ,
Stockyards, where he is ready to do
All Kinds of Harness Work.
As we keen no servant girls and don't snort a
norse ana Dnggy, we can unaerseii anyone in
thecity. Being a practical harness-maker, we
iqo our awq work, camage-trimmln
g a spec
ialty. For sample of our work, look at the Tl ma
tilla House 'Bus.
EV f.1 ARK ET.
FRUIT, VEGETABLES,
POULTRY, -FISH
AiTD GAME. V
ChickenB Dressed to Order. '
. Promt Delivery to any part ,
of the city. '
A. N. VARNEY,
Phone 12. Third and Washington Sta
' takeT ti. '
Came to my place last epring, a roan
pony, branded O on right hip: Owner
can have the same by paying all charges.
" '. i S. A. Kl.NYOS, .
oct20 Ira Tygh Valley, Or.
VflLIt PflPERI
Just Received
5000
Rolls of Wall Paper. The
best patterns.- The most
beautiful colors. , -
New Invoice
of Taints and Oils. Any
color or brand supplied.
rKinersly : Drag Co.
DOORS,
WINDOWS,
SHINGIiES,
FIRE BRICE,
FIRE CLAY,
LIItlE, CEMENT,
Wiridow-GIass and
Picture Moulding.
Dalles, Moro and Antelope
STAGE LINE.
Through by daylight via Grass Valley, Kent
and Cross Hollows.
DOUGLAS ALLEN, The Dallas.
C. ML. W HITELAW, Antelope.
Stages leave The Dalles from Umatilla House
at 7 a. m., also from Antelope at 7:30 a. m. every
Monday, n ednesday nno naay. .connections
made at Antelope for Prineville, Mitchell and
E tints beyond. Close connections made at The
alios with railways, trains and boats.
Stages from Antelope reach The Dlles Tues
days, Thursdays and Saturdays at 1 :S0 p. m.
KATES or FARE.
Dalles to Deschutes.-.....--..... 1 00
do Moro.. ..- 1 50
do Grass Valley... 2 25
, do Kent. 3 00
do Cross Hollows. 4 50
Antelope to Cross Hollows . . .... 1 50
do Kent. .- 2 00
do Grass Valley . . 3 00
do v Moro : 3 50
do Deschuees. 4 00
do Dalles 5 00
J. 8. SCKBNK,
President.
H. M. Bkaix,
Cashier
First national Bank.
THE DALLES - - - - OREGON
A lieneral Banking Bnaineaa transacted
: Deposits received, -subject to Sight
: Draft or Check.
Collections made and proceeds promptly
remitted on dav of collection'.
Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold oa
New York, San Francisco ani ort
, land. ... . ...
OIRBOTOKS
D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. Schbnck.
Ed. M. Williams, - Geo. A. Likbk.
H. 54- Bkaix. ;
T8 CoipMa PacRing Go.;
PACKERS OF
PORKandBEE F
MANTJFACTTJBJSB8 OF
Fine Liard and Sausages.
- : - -: k " ' -
; Curersof j BRAND
HAMS &BACON
DBIED 'BEEF. ETC. " ,
Harry Liebe,
PBACTICAL
All work promptly attended to,'
. and warranted. -
;- . . : ..
174 VOGf BLOCK.
Sops