The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, September 27, 1900, Image 1

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VOL. XII
THE DALLES, OREGON, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 27, 1900.
NO. 347
.nr.. ... i 'i 'W"
ItHtlill .IMI 1
AM'tfclablcl'rciinwIionrorAs
siiiiilnliiiK ilicFooikuKlRcfiitla
ling llio iUonuicUs mulBowcIs of
IVusuiiios Dicalioii.Checirnl
ncss.nmlKcsl.Conlains neither
Opmm.'MorpIiinr norlincral.
ftox'N vrcotic.
Vffjw . 01' JlrXMCSLVtrCltSIt
jIU Uf.iiia
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JhfrmuM
IhCoityiutlrJafu
tinilut Wntrr
Jliijww Haver.
ApeirVcl Itemctly I'orConsUpn
llun, Sow Stoniach.DinrrJhoca
ttkms .Convulsions, icvcrish
ncss niut Li iss of Sleep.-
Facsimile Sitfimhire of
KKW YORK.
exact copy or wrapper.
rii ii ii i r a I
VII I I I J I I I r I
IS COMPLETE
11 M rim ii I o ;ii ii fkittri f ifinnft v ttu
Mlooillcsh PiijhtiiiK Spirit Gone
Humeri All I'ropcrty and Fieri to
Neutral Territory.
Sew Yjuk, Supt. Jtt. A diupntch to
& lf.i..,l.l f- I . 4 . ......
b i win ii.ii ini ion mi ii
tft'i'j illi.I.... 1 i.-.i ,.f - .1
w-uiruwvu.u mmliy ei.tuu'd kuunmu
i . ri ..... . .
imi it EllUl nilD 14MHI UU VWtD l
--'f, bill' tllttllJIII
Eviilencu of the cneuiy'p destructive)-
i 9 I'Vti.-vwlmro' ti Iks www. Tho
i.l.FMU ll'l.l l.m... .1.. !,...! .1
-' " ui-i'ii iiviiuiimcti, iiiu siurur,
Mini Him uiniii.-gieaiiu inoicu mm
rnoii m. i ... .i t , i . . . . . i
'!" wu-ii iiicu uiu i.mwiiy
1 1 . in" v. 1 1 1 Li i Huiu'iUM ui-ini;
ii iii", niuuim iiii'iu uuiim iui in
iiiili... it .. i . . .
ii.i'jwip iruu nuu is.nou mutitiori.
t 11,1. l..4 . I . . . .
''i' W.V IUITU IB mi ciioruiouu
- "im.il UIU uui'lB IIHVU MIU1IUIU
TliOiliivaatatioii inoliuh'H Imiuliudti of
W3i triK-KH nnd cuirliino?, w'liiuli
-ii iiiiiiiuu. iciuouuti v i mi
Hill nl i.l.fr..n ..f ..... i . ...
- - r.iuiL-t, viuiniiitr, Hiuttniiimon,
-im ir(IVlHIOIIH,filll!l) ilBHUl,Hr, cof-
"i KP. Iloiirnild Htiitimu.i v. 'riiiiimiiiiilfl
uto uttll Inunlnp. Gciior.il J'olu-
n-Turmi iiuiKiieiiB oi louoiuo.
v; TIio wliolo of tlm Suliili riiihvny
ram i. .. . . . . .
--.iiuiiiy uiucko'i witii roiiini; biock,
"Dlny w a v from Hurliorlnn T flit IP II t
H U .... i i . . ...
--v?iiiiii mo muflt Hour l-uiib mill
vii.iji:u HioroB. in the Urocadilo
l there wure v1b11io liternllv uoiob of
a IIiiBl. l .
: K"ii nimmiii t on. whuoiib.
tnar... 1 "
""'" mi stores 'of ovorv sort. At
oommipoort there wore. iienldoB tlio
- b oiuiuh, nuiuirmlB of tons of hiu
nitlon. Tho enemy hud left etutidinu
y tente.
e ureat wnBte in the rfleclBof the
8t" ae ovident. Furiiituro. trunks.
n nn nl . . . -
"" cioining nnd other articles
lyliiu about in everv direction. In
rOlln l.l ...
ucu oi mo river were enor-
quantities of stores, H.mnunllion,
""i cannon uud foodstuff.
AIyB00d imllna
n do the rest of the work of
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature 5 Ar
In
Use
Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
THt CENTAUR DOMHNV. NEW VOHK CITV.
lutuifictition fur (security.
If Generul Bullur nnd tho others move
on to HtT.u the pitsacc, neither Viljot-n,
tho new conitunndunt.generul with
Steyno nnd PchulkberKer, nor Koetze,
with tlm rent of tlio derelicts from
Koo..mtiiioort, cun esiwpo through tho
inouiitaiiiB towitid Lydenbur' uiul I'iet
erahiUK, liilu to remuin in Hie low
veldt at this eeueon of tho year spella
death foi men uud cuttle.
Tho l'orluyuofu linvn disarmed nil tho
liner refUKOCS tuken.
Fifty truulilonds, with ncailj 500 tons,
huvo hiiun dumped down on the ieinnd
of iShcUVoii.oirLouienco Miuquee.
The IrinliAmricHii inercennrioe nie
crnmorini: for pay, mid thrtfiilenint; tho
Iloer oiliuiivlH.
The (innl collapse of the Uocr army
may he Funimaiiiivd as follows :
When tlio Doers, tiumberinir L'OOO.
ovnctMted Koonmtipooit, they look upl
pot-itioua between tho Lobombo ratine
and the river. They hiul i;ood positions,
and could have made a capital Hand,
hut owiiiL to tho (UkorKaiiiK.Uiou and
lack of dioeiplino they weiu pievalent,
they were only half-heurti'd.
WishinK to avoid n conlltct and uu
necenuary tiloodsheil, the Hntifih consul
Kcnoial comHilted tlio JMrtuKuote gov-ortior-i-encral,
Senor Mmhndo, aa to the
beat course to bo pursued to atiaiu this
end. Ho asked Hint emi-iearies should
be suit up with nn hiUIiobb to tlio liners
pointinR out tho u3elefHn'EB of continu
ing their resl-staneo and the absolute
needleHBtiesa of polnp on further. He'
eidep, if they continued to light there
who n fear of the natives rieinir.
Ovvinfi to the fact that the Portuguese
hnd lioon most kind to the lloera, and aH
they had guaranteed their maintenaiico
and repatriation and promised to send
Itiem buck to their country free of
cliaru'e, tl Bclietno succeeded beyond
tho wildest hopes of its originators.
Instead of dozens coining down to
Louroiico Maupifz, 2500 arrived in this
wise. Diplomacy, therefore, triumphed
by bringing the war to a speedy and
bloodless close.
'My baby was terribly sick with the
diiirrh(ua." says J. Ii. Doak, Williams,
Oregon. "We were unable to cure him
with the doctor's assistance, ana as a
last resort wo. tried Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoia Remedy. I am
happy to say it gave immediate relief
and a complete cure." For sale at
Blakeley's drug Btore.
(subscribe (or The Chronicle.
(For
GEER POURS IN A
LITTLE HOT SHOT
Answer to a Frantic Kansas Negio
Biyanite Editor.
Sam:m, Sopt. 'JO. Oregon's obsole'o
section of tho constitution relative to
colored people fcems to bo a burning is-
I sue in the Kaneno state election. Gov
j oi nor Geur ia in receipt of another letter,
enclosing him a copy of the Colored
Citizen, a democratic paper published
i at Topeka, by a negro, which has kept
standing the obnoxious eection from
Oregon's constitution with tho heavy
I black-letter heading : "Oregon's Black
j Iaw. Worfo Than Disfranchisement,
! or Tillnianiani. That State Gave Mc
Kinley 10,000 majority, and Kefuses to
Kepeal the Following Law." Governor
Geer answers the last letter and refers to
the newspaper in question in the follow
j ing chnracterietlc style:
j "Your letter of tho 21-st inst., with a
! copy of the Colored Citizen, of Topeka,
id at hand. 1 had just received a similar
j lsttei from a gentleman in Parsons, Kan.,
i calling my attention to the desperate
I Etiatts to v Iii oil the democrats of Kansas
aro reduced for campaign material. 1
will enclose to you a copy of my answer
to him.
In addition to that letter I wish to sny
that the mental depravity of the negro
who will, for any reason, justny tne
treatment of his race in tho Southern
states by what this editor calls 'Tillman
ism,' is past comprehension or character
ization. 'Tillmanlsiu' stops nowhere
short of the admission made by Senator
Tillman himself in the senate this year
when lie declared that 'We stuffed the
ballot-hoses, we shot them and wo are
not abhamedof it.' Your Colored Citizen
says that this obsolete Eection of our
constitution is 'worse than disfranchise
ment or Tilhuanism.' Hut the diO'erouce
is that that section of our constitution
was never enforced, while 'Tillmanisiu'
is, and whatever eUe is not kuowu by
the uveiago voter of this country, he
does know that this section was repealed
and rendered null and void by tlio
adoption of tho 1-lth and 15th amend
ments to the Federal Constitution. The
principle of tho 'consent of the governed'
in its larger and truer sense ia in opera
tion ovoiy where in this country save in
that portion where Mr. Bryan will re
coive nearly all of his olectorinl votes.
"J desire to say, further, in regard to
this Kansas matter, that since discover
ing that you have a negro in your state
who is so uiiapprecintive of the great
privileges conferred upon himself by the
republican party aa toindoieeand apolo
gize for the treatment of his race in tho
Southern states, I believe it should have
this obsolete section of our constitution
ongrafted into its own oiganic law and
rigidly enfoiced. 1 would bo in favor or
enforcing it hero if wo had such negroes."
Sail Ai'i'lili-nl H (Halter City.
Baki:i! Citv, Sept. 20. Tlio 2-year-
old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Maicus died this morning from Injuries
received yesterday afternoon in a very
peculiar manner. A neighbor, In pass
ing tlio houho, discoveied the child
haneinir bv its neck from tho swing in
tho shed at tho rear of tho Marcus house,
nnd which was used for the amusement
of the children. It is supposed that the
little ono had either attempted to climb
into tlio awing or had been left sitting in
it by sonio of the older children, and
had slipped, twisting tho rcp about her
neck.
When found the child's feet werojust
oil tho ground und its -body cold. A
nlivflician resuscitated tho child to Hie,
but it went into spasma and died this
morning.
Jlowiutl AIUHt IHi Tin- JIlx Crime,
Fkankfout, Ky., Sept. 26. The jury
iu the case of James Howard on trial
for alleged complicity in the Goebel as
sassination, this morning rendered a
verdict of guilty, with the penalty fixed
at death. The jury retired at 9:10, and
returned with its verdict at 9 :43. The
courtroom was crowded with spectators,
almost trembling with suppressed ex
citement. Foreman Crutcher, of the
juiy, passed the written verdict up to
the clerk, and It was read by Deputy
Clerk Elliott. Howard did not display
A
made up in a
men from 5 to
pounds. Your
the least anxiety, and apparently was
unconcerned. The verdict wa? a surpiise,
as the general public were led to believe
that the jury was divided on the question
of guilt or innocence of tlio defendant.
One of the jurors stated to the Associated
Press that a number of ballots were
taken, but the first ballot resulted in a
unanimous vote in favor of a verdict of
guilty. After that the ballots yesterday
were aa to the degree of punishment.
Ten members voted for tho death
penalty, while two voted for life im
prisonment. The first ballot today re
sulted in a verdict, the two jurors who
had voted for life imprisonment gave in
to tho majority and voted for the death
penalty.
Aftei the verdict had been rendered
Howard was remanded to jail, where he
was followed by his bosom friend, John
G. White, who seemed almost paralyzed
by the verdict. Howard's cheeks also
blanched as he stood up to accompany
the jailer back to his cell. The jury
consisted of nine demacrats, one re
publican and two antl-Goebel democrats.
Uruve Men Full
Victims to stomach, liver and kidney
troubles as well as women, and all feel
the results in Iosb of appetite, poisons in
he blood, backache, nei voiuness, head
ache and tired, listless, run-down feel
ing. But there's no need to feel like
that. Listen to J. W. Gardner, Idaville,
Iud. llu says: "Electric Bitteie are
just the tiling for a man when he is all
run down, and don't care whether he
lives or dies. It did more to give me
new Etrength nnd good appetite than
anything 1 could take. I can now eat
auything and have a new lease on life."
Only 50 cents, at Blakeley's drug store,
livery bottle guaranteed.
Tulntut W ISM-umiiiiiiilmteil,
Lai'sanxk, Switzerland, Sept. 20. A
secret eiiculnr, addressed by Joannioitie,
the Metropolitan of Kiefl' to all, tho
Russian archbishops, virtually excom
municating Tolstoi, tho Russian novelist
and social reformer, is published here.
It declares that Tolstoi is an avowed
enemy of t lie church and therefore, un
less ho recants, the Holy Synod will pro
hibit celebiation of all divine services
and expiatory masses in the event of his
death.
Ice Cream and
Oyster Parlors
Mrs H. L. Jones has opened ice
cream and oyster parlors in Carey Bal
lard's old stand. She carries
A full line of Candies,
Nuts and Cigars.
The placo has been thoroughly ren
ovated, and a shaioof the public patron
age is solicited.
Mrs. Annie Luckey,
Hair-Dressing
and Shampooing
Facial Treatments and the MORMON
TREATMENT. Room 59, (bird floor,
Umatilla House. Hours from 6 to 12 a.
in, and 1 to 6 p. in.
OUR FALL STOCK
of tho Celebrated "Pickwick Clothing"
is now complete. Wo show all the new cloths in all the unusual
sizss. Those who have worn our suits in the past know it ia no idle boast
when we say that mo give a better-lltting and a better-made suit at half
the price your tailor charges you.
Here's proof Come in and prove it :
full-weight, dark gray Oxford, pure worsted
4 - bntton round sack suit, in sizes from
0 feet in height, and weighing from 105
tailor's price Is $31.00 our price only . . ,
SIEET US!
October 9 to
This will be the greatest event in tho history of the City of Wheat,
Wool ami Fruit and an Open River to tho Sea. The products of this pro
lific region will bo on exhibition, and farmers, flockmasters and nil others
will witness an exhibit that will be botli interesting and instructive.
SPECIAL SOCIAL ATTRACTIONS!
BAND CONCERTS EVERY DAY!
A NOVEL STREET PARADE!
Excellent 'entertainments day an i night. Fivo 'days of sight-seeing
and pleasuro.There will bo ample accommodations for all guests. Come
and The Dalles will entertain you.
Producers from all sections requested to make exhibits. No chargo
for space in the tair buildings. No entrance fee.
Reduced Rate3 on all Railroads and Steamboat Lines.
COME TO THE DALLES.
aTOVa"J A lOOTAi l IX A. S'JL'TA f.TA lAIAUlAI AAtAU'lAIA I Af A' Al J.I J. Al -ATM
1 9 V V V v vVvvvvv vwv V V V V v v S vp
!g. STUBLiiplG, !
H ' WlIOI.i:AI.i: AND II ETA II.
l WinBs.LinKCkers !
5'
- ? . i
Family Orders will receive prompt attention.
t
It
Next door to A. M. Williams & Co.
Phone 234, THE DALLES, OREGON.
i lj
JACOBSEN BOOK & MUSIC CO.
Subscribe for The
Ready
for
the
Man
who
is
"hard-to-fit."
Cheviot Cloth-
30 to -IS chestfor
to SCO
$15.50
Not on the Midway, but at the
Gateway of IheGre'at INLAND
EMPIRE THE DALLES,
at Tin:-
13 inclusive.
Something New.
150 new selections of Instrumental
CIbbbIc Music, grading from "First A,"
easiest, to "Sixth O," moat ditlicult.
We are making a special sale of
' 50 per cent, off
marked price. Call while you cau
make your selections.
Chronicle.
1