The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, December 05, 1900, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Chrrnifrli.
VOL. XII
THE DALLES, OREGON, WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 5, 1900.
NO. 405
I) c D a II co
SUIT WAS DISMISSED
I). C. O'Reilly Drops Case Against the
Colitmliiu Southern.
Mono, Or., Dec In the case of
Druku C. O'Rollly vs. Columbia South
em, K. V., hytle, ut ul., h demurrer to
the complaint uitB sustained sonic time
ii(!o mid today ii petition for u rehearing
thereon was denied, whereupon the
pluintiir abandoned mid dismissed the
Hiiit.
I'ri'Hlili'iit I.ylln'x View Of It.
K. 10. Lytle, preBident of the Culunihiii
Southern ltiulwuy, being (iiieBtiotiud by
an Oregnniun reporter with reference to
to the dismissal of the O'Reilly Hint,
said :
"Wo regard thiB dimiilsMil hh n great
victory uud a vindieution. The coti't
siHtuine.d u ileiiuirrer to .Mr. O'Jitiilly'H
complaint on u ground which lit! could
not cure by itnieudnieit und there was
therefore nothing for hivu to do but dis
miss thii Biiit. It ifl n very easy mutter
to ruab into court und hcuho others of
fruud und niHCiility, uud then to udvertiva
thesu churgett in the publiu press, but it
is quite uuother mutter to prove mid
eiluhlish tlie charges in u court of juatice.
"I have refruiued from saying any
tiling for publication while thin litigation
huh pending, became 1 do not believe in
trying u luwsuit in the papers. Now,
however, that the litigation Iiub ended,
I fuel jiiHtlfled in replying to the false
charges bo freely circulated ly Mr.
O'Reilly auinat me uud all others con
nected with the management of the road.
Mr. 0Keilly'H charges related to the ex
tension of tlie compuny'B line from Moro
to Bhitniko, the wuik on which wiib be
gun nbout a year ago. He claima this
line wuh expuiiHively built uud that the
building of the line waa made tlie excuse
for robbing: the treaaury of tlie company
of largo huiiib, aggregating $275,000. It
ia a sufficient answer to Uieae charge!! to
Buy that this extension wiib built at a
total coat to the company, including
righta of way, of $!M0O u mile. O'liollly
wuh in charge of the construction of the
comiiauy'ri line from Wasco to Moro und
Shuniko extension wiib built than when
O'Ueilly built from Wasco to Moio.
"The suit j list dismissed never hud any
business in faet und O'Reilly knew thie
ut nil times. Wo are well nware of the
purpose lor which this suit was brought;
it is sufficient to any that it wos not
brought for tlie purpose of redressing
J uny wronga which O'Reilly thought he
hud sintered."
A Mtory of Tivmity Yar Acu.
I he bunch-grass IiiIIb of the Inland
Empire are justly reckoned among the
richeBt und most prolific wheat lands in
tlio world; mid yet twenty-five years
ago scarcely one settler in a hundred
could be convinced tlmt thev would ever
be worth u bean excepting for a Block
range. The writer waa forcibly remind
ed of thie the ottier day when a prosper
ous Sherman county farmer, still young
in years, us well us looks, said in his
hearing: "I took up a bunch-grass
claim near Grass Valley less than twenty
years ugo, and just as soon as 1 was old
enough to obtain a filing. J was camped
in a little tent on my claim, when about
the noon hour one day a stock buyer
from the Sound rode up and asked what
alio there was for him to get his din
ner. 'If you can put up for once with
what I have to put up with all the time,
ou are heartily welcome to the best I
have got.' The stranger staked hie
horse on tlie bunch-grass, while I pre
pared the sow-belly mid beans. As he
lit his pipe after dinner be looked ut me
pityingly and asked: 'Whut in the
world are you doing here, young fel
low'.'' 'Going to make a home tor my
self,' whs my answer. 'My God, man,
you don't mean to Bay that'." 'But I
do,' said I, while my lips trembled sus
piciously, for I honestly doubted that
human capacity was equal to the under
taking. 'Have you got nny money?' he
hissed out with an enrnestnessa that
showed that he meant ever word he
saiil. 'N'ot a red cent,' was my answer.
'Then you'll Btarve to death ue sure as
the world.'
"I never felt in lower spirits in my
life than 1 did when the stranger mount
ed his horse und left me again alone in
the bunch-grass wildernesss. I wub
more tiian half convinced he was right
and very little urging would have made
me pick up my traps and leave. But I
didn't leave, and the v.erv ground on
that lino cost the company $11,000 a w hich my tent was pitched, and on
mile for construction and 1 1.000 a mile I which the Htranger picketed his horse.
additional for rights of way. The country
and on which he assured me I would
Mtnrve In dentil, vieldell inc inwt vnnr
is slmilur in botli cases and rails ui 1 . forty-fivo bushels of No. 1 wheat to the
other materials were far higher when the I acre."
CAST0B1A
AVfcficlnble I'rcpnralionTor As
similating llicl'ootl aiulllcgula
ting lite Stomachs aiutBowels of
Promotes Digcalion.CltcerfuI
ncss and nest.Conlains neillier
Oj)itim.MorpUiuc norIUicruL
Not "Nakc otic .
Mvpr oTfiMMrXtMl'SlPtraaK
Mx.Seiuut '
Kotktllf Salu -
iWurtivlutlrSHfo
flaiiMMionr
Apctfecl Remedy for Constipa
tion , Sour Stomach, uimrliocn
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
ncss mil Loss or Sleep.
IVieSiiuilo Signnlurc of
NEW YORK.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the .
Signature jALp
l CXACT COPV OF WRAPPER.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
Ye Yule-tide
Days
are near...
mas.
With Thanksgiving-day in the past, our thoughts easily turn to the coming Christ
Plan to make this day as happy and as full of good cheer as can ho for is it not the
holiday of all holidays? This store will contribute its mite, ly bringing to your doors the
best of everything in its line, and offering its wares at prices the most reasonable.
Baby Quilts...
$1.95.
snow-flake cotton
Made 36x48 inches, and edged with a 2h
Made of fine fig
ured silkelene and
filled with pure
soft and light as down.
inch ruffle.
Head Rests.... Fillcd ,with sills
K floss and covered
7 DC. with heavy quality
satin plain or figured; bound with silk
cord.
Fancy with hacks made
, . of tapestry can-
Cushion TOPS Vas, plushes, ve
lours, satin and fancy silks, and mercer
ized sateens. Good assortments at 25c
and up to $1.50.
Pillows for same, fined with
silk floss and covered with cambric mus
lin, 50c and 75c; filled with eiderdown,
$1.25 to $2.25, according to size.
Wait for our Grand Opening of
CHRISTMAS DOLLS.
Next Thursday, Friday and Saturday we will eell
39 pairs of Ladies' Patent Leather Lace Boots,
worth $0.50 a pair, at
$2.00 per pair.
SEE WINDOW.
Sofa Pillows.
An elegant assortment. Pillows of nil
kinds and qualities. Pillows large and
email; covered with silkalene, fine sat
eens, denims, silks and satins; plain
colors, fancy figures and others beauti
fully embellished in silk and tinEel work.
Our pillows are filled with pure white
cotton, silk flose, feathers or down.
35c to $6.50.
Drapery Silks
Plain and fancy, 50c to $1.00 per yard.
Silkelenes
A complete new line at 12.lc and 15c.
Tapestry
Portieres
Lounge Covers
and Table Covers
Suitable Christmas presents.
FURS! FURS I
A. M. Williams it Co. Furs are known
to be right! They have that reputation
are bought on that reputation and are
sold on that reputation. The three items
here mentioned speak for the entire line:
At $5.00
we show a handsome
Collarette o f sheared
coney, trimmed with a 5-inch band of
blended muskrat; made with a deep
storm collar and lined with a good qual
ity brown satin.
At $7.50
a 12-inch Collarette of
thibet conev, trimmed
with brown bear; deep storm collar;
brown satin lining.
At $10.00
a 12-inch Collarette
of black sheared
coney; long tabs trimmed with ten tails;
lined with a good bright satin.
The few Wool Waists left over from
last weeks' sale will continue to sell at
the special prices of
75c, $1.50, $2.25,
Regularly $1.25 to $4.75.
A, M. WILLIAMS t COMPANY
McariiKtia Koute FeaMlile for a Canal.
Wasiuxotox, Dec. 4. Tlie report of
the Isthmuin Canal Commission, submit
ted by the president to congress today,
gives us the unanimous conclusion of
that body that "the most practicable and
feasible route for an isthmian canal under
tlie control, management and ownership
of the United States is that known as the
Nicaragua Route.
Tlie commission estimates the cost of
this canal at $1!00,540,000. This estimate
is much in excess of any heretoforH made
and is due to increased dimensions and
other features not heretofore considered.
The commission also estimates the cost
of a canal by the Panama route at $14-,-812,570,
according to one route, or $150,
1178,258 according to another route. As
between the Nicaragua and Panama
routes, the commission sums up a num
ber of advantages favorable to the former.
It states also that under the concessions
given by tlie government of Columbia
to the Panama Canal Company that
government is not free to grant the nec
essary rights to tlie United States except
upon conditions made by tlie company.
The report is a document of about
17,000 words, almost as long as the
president's message. Although the work
of the commission is not yet completed,
muny of the Held parties still being out,
yet it lias been sufliclently advised to
make it practicable to present this pre
liminary report giviug the essential find.'
i"S8.
"I have used Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and find
it to be it great medicine," says Mr. K.
S, Phipps, of Poteau, Ark. "It cured
mo of bloody flux. 1 cannot spcok too
highly of it." This remedy always wins
the good opinion, if not praiee, of those
I who use It. The quick cures which it !
lellVotfl even in the most severe casiB
1 nuiko it a favoralte evoiywhore, For
j sale by Blukeley, the druggist.
DoWitt's Witch Ha.al Salvo will
quick')' Ileal the worst burns and scalds
and not leave a scar. It can he applied
to cuts and raw surfaces witli prompt
and soothing efleot. Use it for piles und
skin diseases. Uuwaio of Worthless
counterfeits. Sold by Clarke & Talk's
P. 0. Pliai uincy.
Cuturrli Cauuot He Cured.
with local applications, as they cannot
reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh
is a blood or constitutional disease, and
in order to cure it you must take inter
nal remedies. Hali's Catarrh Cure is
taken internally, and acts directly on
the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's
Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine.
It was was prescribed by one of the best
I physicians in this country for years, and
is a regular prescription. It is composed
of the best tonics known, combined with
the best blood purifiers, acting directly
! on the mucous surfaces. The perfect
combination of the two ingredients is
what produces such wonderful results in
curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials,
free.
F. J. Chunky & Co., Props., Toledo 0.
Sold by drruggists, price 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best. 12
A Village Itlurkmnltli Saved Ilia I.lttlu
Huu'k L.lf.
Mr. H. II. Black, the well-known
blacksmith at Grahaiusville, Sullivan
Co.,N. Y., says: "Our little son, five
years old, has always been eubject to
croup, and so bad have tlio attacks been
that we have feared many times that he
would die. We have had the doctor and
used muny medicines, but Chamberlain's
Cough P.emedy is now our sole reliance,
The 1'oriu Kicau Legislature.
Sax Jl'a.v, P. 1'., Dec. 4. The Porto
Kicau house of delegates mat today in
joint session with the executive council.
The two bodies adopted a resolution to
cable greetings to President MeKinley.
Governor Allen's message points out
that the finances of the island are in a
satisfactory condition, showing a balauee
or $1,583,609. The receipts from May to
October, inclusive, were $1,041,000,
Governor Allen suggests improvements
in the revenue laws and recommends the
I establishment of more schools and the
reorganization of the judiciary.
If you want a bargain in groceries,
ring up Bob Teague, next door to M. T.
Nolan. Phone No, 3. n30-7t
Mrs. Mary B. Huntington has per
ferted arrangements whereby the fire
insurance business of the late firm of .1.
M. Huntington & Co. will be continued
by her. She will bo pleased to renew all
expiring policies issued by J. M. Huut
iugton & Co. and to write such'further
insurance as may be entrusted to
her. Office at Huntington A Wilson's
law office. nSO-lw
llnu'l Knit It III,
Just wet the att'ected part freely with
Mysterious Pain Cure, a Scotch remedy,
and the pain is gone, Sold by Clarke &
Falk.
For sprains, swellings and lameness
there ia nothing so good us Chamberlain's
Pain Balm. Try it. For sale by Blake
ley, the druggist.
j It seems to dissolve the tough iuucuh
and by giviug frequent doses when the
thecroupy symptoms appear we have
found that the dreaded group is cured,
before it gets settled." Theio is no
danger in giving tins romedy for it con
tains no opium or other injurious drug
nud may bo given as confidently to a
babe as to an adult. For sale be Blakeley,
the druggist.
Do not get scared if ycur heart troubles
you. Mot likely you suller from in
digestion, Kodol Dyspepsia Cure di
gssts what you eat uud gives the worn
out stomach perfect rest. It is the only
preparation lenott n that completely di
gests all classes of foods ; that is why it
cures the worst cases of indigestion and
stomach trouble after everything else
has failed, It may be taken in all con
ditions and cauuot help hut du yon gcod.
Sold by Clarke & Fulk.
Special bargains in warm, winter
goods straws, fascinators, hoods uud
mittens, ut the New York Cach Store.
Distinguished Testimony
No secret society in the world stands higher in noble aims and charitable
accomplishments than the Knights of Pythias. That order is doing great good,
aim one oi its nnest institu
tions is the Ohio Pythian
Home, at Springfield, Ohio,
which is ably presided over
by Superintendent I.e Fevro
and his wife, Mrs. Callie I.
I,e Fevre, the matron. The
latter has recently written a
letter, which will command
widespread attention because
rxf 4ltr .I...!.. ..o.l llf, I
writer. It is as follows: '
"Messrs, W. II. Hooker &
Co., New York- Last year I
at the suggestion of a friend,
lor u serious, long-standing
throat difficulty and extreme
ly hard cough. Had used
many well-spoken of prepara
tions without relief. I can
honestly say that Ackei's
Kiigli.su Remedy removed the
difficulty and stopped the
eougu. i m i not pmci uin Cm uv , l E Fl;VKEt Mfttron ohlo ,,ylta ,I(,mo
in unv mwi u limit iiuwu wur .,t .,
ties, and at least one-half of the last is still on hand. I also consulted phy
sicians with no permanent results." (Signed) Cai.uk I. I-i: Iuivki:.
The friend to whom Mrs. I." Fovro refers us having suggested Acker's
Kuglish Remedy is Mrs. W. B. Chilton, wife of the president of the '1 roy
Transfer Co,, of Troy. Ohio, where this remedy has accomplished many other
cures in Tliioat and hung Troubles. In conversation with an acquaintance
Mrs. I.e Fevre also said- "If you will call on Mr, H. Schauss, a prominent
china and art merchant of Springfield, Ohio, you will find that lie, too, has had
any amount of experience witli Acker's Knglish Remedy iu his family, and
tuinks tliey cannot Keep huusu wmwiu u
W WW
Ai'ker KiiKUoii Kcnieuy sum "y " BiuirB
that your money will bo refunded in case of failure. 5C, soo- $ outtlu in
United States and Canada. In lCngland, is. -! . , d., and s. 6d.
11V (ittlAorfcc the uiioie iwurtmfie. II'. 11. UOOKlUi A CO., i-roprktQii, Aew 1 ori.
For sale at Blakeley's Pliarmaoy.