CO THE DALLES.. OREGON. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1892. NO. VI Miiitfoshes. iUDDer iretics and rubbers. A. M. WILLIAMS 5 Saner Bksoksmishing and Work done promptly, And all weait Owaraniaod. Horse Shoeing a Speciality greet opjtetue DltJLieliStaiitj SOCIBVSTK&. A B8KMBLT MO. 4827. K. OF L. Meets In w W ? of P. ball the second and foortb Wednes- aaya oiacb montb at 7:88 p. m. 4- ' . w SCO LODGE, MO. 15, A. F. a A. M. Meet am ana mug Monday of eaco month at 7 DALLZb ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER MO. B. Meets In Masonic Hall In third Wednesday of each monta at 7 P. M. MODERN WOODMHH J OF TSK WOltLD.-a Mfc Hoddeainpo. W, Mt Tuesday wvau tnitof each week in the K. of P. Hal), at 7:30 r. . COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. S, I. O. O. F. Meets ever .Friday -evenlnjr at '7 30 o'clock, in- K. f P. hall, corner Beeond and Court streets. fto)oamtng brothers are welcome. 1 H. Cloooh, Sec'y. ri: A. Biixs.N. O. FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P. Meets .every Monday evening at- ?: o'clock, in Behanfio's buUdlng.-coruer of Court 4nd Second streets. Sojourning members are cordlaUy in vited, w. a. cm, . D. W.Vadu, K. of R. and 8. jC. O. WOMEN'S CHRIHTfAM TKMPERENCE DKION will meet every Friday-af teriiboB at 3 o'clock at the reading room. AU are invited. TKMPLE LODGE NO: 3, X. O. XT. W. Meets at K. af p. Hall, Corner Second and Court tracts, ThuradajLerenings at 7 :80, " . Qbobob Gibobb, W. U MTBBa, Financier. M. W. J AS. NESMITH POST, No. 82, Ck-A.RV Meets every Saturday at 7:80 r. sr., iu the K. of P. Hail. Meets every 8unday aflernoon in .. of P. HalL .., . . VEREI.N Meets every rtanda n the K. of P. Hall. DIVI8IOS, Uo. 17 Meeto iu - Hall-the Bret and- third Weils month, ot .3u b m. k. s - THI CHVKCBB9. ST. fETERS CHCRCH Rev. Father BaoMS OBBRT Pastor. Low Mass every Sunday at A. m.j . High Maas at W:30 A. a. Vespers at If. . t ; .- 1 ,' . -.. . 1 . i 4. DT. PAULS CHURCH Union Street, opposite 0 Fifth. Rev. Eli D.Sutcllfle Rector. Serviees , every Sunday af 11 A-.- at.- a4 730 r. Vt. Bunday School 9 : A. M. Evening Prayer on Friday at ?IR8T BAPTI8T CHURCH--Bev. Of D; Tat- 1 to a. Pastor.- Morning services every Sab bafli at the academy ."at Ml A.-' M. Sabbath; School Immediately i af Car BTOming; servieoa. Payer rneeting Friday evening at.Pastor resi. deiice, P. M. Union services in the.eoart house at 7 ': a" W y Cdbtib, Pastor Serviees every Bundarat 11 A. a. and7r.M. Sunday School after morning ear t Ice. ;8trangerBcordiUy-lnvltai. .Seats free. Mi E. CHURCH-Rev.1 J. -WitKf, paato; Sunday (School at 1:220 o'clock r; . r-Epworth I League at:f-ir.- . Prayed' TPetUtii? 'averv t Thursday venrogwt70 6'cWfcAcordiai in. J Titauon im axscaoee or aota pastor a ud pesple - CHRISTIAN OTTTBCH ,"'. "wr7lrn Pastor. Preaching In the Congregational I Bossnme Rubber E R U S Snipes $l KijerslV. " ' ' V!. -THE LEADING 3BXB.-B ' D R. CSS - Handled, by Thrra Registered Druggists. ALsK) ALL THE LBAXIjr Patent (Dedieines and Druggists Sundries. HOUSE PAINTS. OILS AND GLASS. Agenlyi ipt Murhy'fi .Fijae Varaishei? and the opW agent in -l the 'City lor The hei-win, WiUanos Co's PainW. WJ The Largest Dealers in Finest Linaj of Imporiied Key Wejrt;nd -JLpinestia igart?. Agent for TansillV Punch. " 129 Second Street, e De Dress Cutting and Fitting a Specialty. Roods 4 ret JYenali h Co's Bank. J. o. . DOMESTIC i '. Aaa ' Rt Y' WEST . v CltaAAS. ' ' .i.w..uENCH;S m aVBOOHP "MTBEgiy - loots, mbrek eo ABB - X. The Dalles,' Oregon and nioal-Maling MRS. GIBSON, Prop. .t ' THE 6 E L EBRATE J PABST BEER. BLOCK. . t , ..,XHJ8; PAJjUaB Parlors MACK BRIDAL VEIL erapti'c AecoBBt &I Hie Cfcristiaj Trip tf COi: IDDT AJ OTHXK JOTABLES -J X Mra. Besant a PasacnttrlSra. -Dayia Kaatc to EeatAcaai anow nowi eanaamavx, won OkrlitoM m Train War klas; 0 nraaa By sanaay a fter . aeon If raaala-I. Col. J. B. Eddy, writing of the Christ mas trip to Portland from - The Dalles, says : , "The rotary wejat abead, , poshed by a 0-ton bog. engine,, and ire followed, palled by three engioes. -The track was cleared wjtbout any difficulty as Tar as 'Cascade Locks, but between there and Bonneville two engines bad got stack the. day before ftndyoor,, rotary had v0 ahead, dig them put and,ppll them. iacW to Cascade Locks again before we could get through... v J nst as we are get ling an der way odco more the tender of oar plow jatuped the' track.' That accident and the drifts on tbe way, to Multnomah falls kept ne in BonoeTille all night. There we' struck a drift, so . heavy that : tlie pog engine cotild) not force the plow into it. Our three engines were, called into, use, and, with their assistance, the sra.v was cleared to Bridal Veil ia two hours. Tbe big drift was' struck at Lat ourelle falls, where a deep , cut . was drifted full of snow to tbe height, of an engine smokestack, and for a distance of about SCO yards. The snow, was packed hard by rain and wind, and the rotary plow, poshed by four engines, could make bo headway against, it. .'Filially, as night drew on, a number of section men got up os top of the drift and broke tbe crnet with shovels. Vtnd with their help-, the plow, went slowly forward. Every able-bodied man aboard the j train who could wield a shovel pitched in and worked with a will. All wanted to get through by 8unday after noon, if .possible.. The .women and children gathered on top the. Jijg drift to witness the grand, .sight at. tha re$ry snowplow under, full -head of steam, teariag tbe huge of jnow Jntsuiall fragments. If yon can imagine 100 powerful streams of prater, similar to those thrown jbyija Lfije engine, formed into a semi-circle, then you have a faint idea, of the dazplin,g sight ; caused," by ' a rotary .snow plow; at , wofk, i fit - the powerful pressure of four engines was 'too much for the :plow.-, The axle feroke, and we were again forced Z sretorn to Brjdal Veil. When our plow was re paired we went ahead again and reached Portland without farther accident." - 1'8. AnnaX. JJaviaof Chicago, a mis sionary of tbe, Woman's, Foreign Mission Society of the , Methodist Episcopal church, -who isen,.r4oi,rtO Janking, China, was one of the passengers. "We were snow bound , for 84 hoars," she said, "and our experience was rather un ple'asan'tl jWp arrived at" Tbe Dalles Thursday mornipg and started sfop Port land. ' We reached Hood 'Biver but conld get no further and had to return to The Dalles. , We staid there untilthe next train, arrived, Then .the railroad officials took tbe Pullman sleeper on our train, saying that they bad to take them back to Pendleton . . Tben the passengers oi Dotn trains, sao in number, were crowded, into - the.- sleepers and day coaches of the second train. We ex pected to arrive ua -Portland yesterday, and would havedone fo if; tjhe otary snowplow had not jumped tbe 'track RTid .roke oa .Saturday. .About twenty-five passenera walked from Bridal Veil to Fairvjew to take tbe special train. We spent Christmas pleasantly enough. The passengers in' one of the cars ob tained a tree, which they decorated. In the evening Mrs. Besant delivered a lec ture. The company did all in its power to make the 'passengers comfortable. .Wewere especially grateful to Conductor Com an v who made a number of trips to the city to obtain hot coffee for us. Tbe passengers made up a purse of $50 and presented it to him in recognition of his services." . ' ' .' '' : " ; .. .. . I, " ' . : ; - Ths Jtebels Toy. Bubnos Atkbs, Dec. 27. The rebels in the province of Corpentes, Argentina Bepulicj have' defeated the provincial trojopa ajii'urbrof ; srmishea and haye-seized theitowns '(Miprcilea an Oaaeroe and the railway Jiaes of . the district,- : v 'i v .. . A4vortls4 funsters. " Following ia the list of letters remain ing in the poetoffice at The Dalles on called for, Saturday, Dec. 24th, 1892. IJerspDS calling for same will give date cm w,hich,they were advertised W Adams Ladrie Anderson (2) Mrs. M Angel (2) Ji M Barnard J F Bradley MiM Mand Carly 8 M Cook. Darling Bros . JohrTDnnlap EdTair' 2 E filbaaai rsOFish Frank P Garlow Tommia -Hanry 2 D-J Harris (2) Edward C Jobasoa UrsO .LMas . Albert .Meier " D E Moray John McAllasaar Miss Bell Allen E C Big bee . Behnie Brown' Sadia Childs (2) Win F Darch J W Davidson John Ehrsmaa James Farley C 8 Ferris H Fisher J E Griffith John Hams Miss Annie Hansen J Johnson' Abbie-L Drum man d Mrs W t Marshall McCafferty : Mrs P M Rngglea ; Charles P, Saunders D C Sherwood ' " E G Spaid : W F Stevenson J B Smith . Robert Thomas A i Walker W.M.Wileon': "i . WallaV-eL. WhitiBore M. T. Kolas', P. M. f John TKawi jf " ' .Mia Lt Ko bison Foster Russell George. Scott iBSbhepard iHarry .Spaplding J W Stewart ;W J Smith-' '- Mrs A J Walk- ;G C WilikiBia R F Wingata .TsTMtthsAet. . Buffalo, Dec. 27. An attorney- baa been retained to. carry the case of Wong Sing pbong, a Chinaman, recently ar rested on tbe Niagara-frontier ooder the exclosiou act, to the TJoUed States su preme co.uxt by a writ of habeas corpus. Wong was sentenced, by the United States commissioner to SO days imprison ment and then to be returned to China.. He claims to have resided in Baltimore, Salt Lake and San Francisco. . faaaata Dying tiki Flies. , St. PsTBB8Bose. Dac. 27. A British consul, who visited ..the ., fanzine -dis trices reports that tlie peasants are dying like flies from hanger and disease, and that there are no eignsf xelieffrpm the hor rors of a hard winter. Cholera is raging severely on. the Circassian snore. There have been hundreds of deaths is the last fortnight. The Dablla T,xflolK. . Dublin, Dec27,V-A'Tmanv named Ke yaus has been arrested at Nenagh,on the charge of being connected with the Dublin explosion.' A.- meeting of the citieensof Cork was held this evening for the purpose, ot denouncing the Dob I'm outrage. The mayor of Cork pre sided. The resolution - was - carried almot ttnanimoiiajy.r Sotae persons showed their dissent by shooting : M Dub lin ' castle ought to be destroyed !" "Down, with castle government?" etc. Telegrajhia fiasltaa. fu A Wichita dispatch reports that por tion of Kansas again in the 'bands of a blizzard. Arrivals - Iron Englewood, last nignt, report wrrioienqsses among stock,: and on the ranges ip No Man's JanUs thousands of cattle,' they say. .have died. : . ' .V - I i Tbe housetops - in. Charleston, ; 8. C. were covered- with. a. thin . coating of snow and sleet yesterday, for the first time in 15 years. The mercury averaged about; threes or fpar,degreee bejlow; ,-the freezing point daring . tbe day, and pedestrians, not being accustomed to ice, had. a time getting along the sidewalks. Takes 1,000 people to buy Dr. Sage's Catarrh' Remedy, at 50 cents a bottle, to make, rap, Jj500. Ote failure r.o - cure would take the profit from 4,000 sales.; Iu makers profess to cure, "cold in tfye head,", and eve,n chronic, catarrh, Vand if they fail they pay $500 for their over confidence ' ' ' Not in newspaper words bnt In hard cash! Think of what confidence it takes to pnt that in the. papers and mean-it. - Its makers believe - in tbe .remedy. Isn't it worth a trial? Isn't any trial preferable to catarrh ? I ' ' , t After all, the mild -agencies are tbe best.. Perhaps. tbje :y'. work'.. more slowly; but they work more jurey.. Dr. Pierce's Pleapant Pellets are an oc.tte agency bnt gut( ,and mild. . They're sugar coated,; easy- to take, never j shock nor derange the system and half their power is the mild way in which their work is done. Smallest, cheapest, easiest to take. One a riose.--'Twenty-five cents a vial. Of all druggists. .... ..... Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U, S. Gov't Report. ' I 'HiHWHIri;i af 5 m m ,. i-bv . .it6&', Lj- OFFICIAL ! One Head Lerel Up i Point My MsUnt Here. THB FACTS BELONG TO THE PEOPLE CoacernLot Delayed Trains and Acci dents an tie Rails. OT aORB SOKK-Or-YOVB-BVaiNBSO. 0rrratt.aa narlva an Bsaslt ky Witakoldlag Ufurmstl.s ar . TrafBe A Il'nlrs. . question ireeiy aiacassea oy im Cbboniclb has, it seems, been taken up by Vice-President Hanrahan,' of the Illinois Central railroad, who has made a move that will meet with popular ap proval. This consists in a circular sent oat to the agents, officers and employes of his" road, in which they are ordered "to furnish to tbe press tbe facts in mat ters in which the public has an inter est." The prevalent practice among;, railroad people is to refuse inrortnatioa. concerning wrecks and disasters on their lines, to the annovance of travelers arid " tne grave' andneedles anxiety of their friends. With all of their business acu men, railroad managers have not"' yet learned, that. the. truth .fullv .told con cerning a disaster is. never so bad. as am, account gathered from ...affrighted pas-, seugers, .veiled in . mystery and over-i aliadow.ed by , uncertainty.- We . hold. tliat.the pubic has a right to pU ano reliable informal ion relative to matters u t'umj coucerning fv, a w any .oc cqrrepres that delay it? mails and di tu,tb or obstruct, its means of traosport-. atioa. .. J -, .. . . ,, . ..Whether such information is witheld. in Jbe. spirit of arrogance, based arxpm , a, "oone-of-your-buBiness" idea, says tha jOregonian , or with -ire view, -of keeping; tjp the confidence; of. the public in b roads, .thus,, .supervised, ' jt is as mis cxeyjoas and futile. , It is equally , im possible, ip this, country, fo muzz e thai p,ce8 or baffle the inquiry, of its agents. Railroad trains are no wrecked or, de layed private! v, and news of such happen ipgs,, together w,ith tbeir , cause, real or sdj posed, and their details, accurate or ipaccurate, according to the source that facnibes .the information,, will certainly reach the public ear. ..Since.thisis true, U ia pjain that., the. corporations derirs; no benefit from witholding inorm'ai'oit upon uieaCfLuaucravauUptuureuver, to in granting it promptly they will do D4 more than, a public duty contingent up. on the service they andei lake to per form in t'je transpo-tatiou business.-' It may be hoped, therefore, that the policr ot Vice-President Hanrahan, oi the It-, lino is Central, as above noted, will le imitated b,' the managers of b.her; rail roads. ' "' - '' "-: '.; '' , ( Ut WU Ksosfli Alone. ' , viregoniajn,,., au ,tne spring ine vnuea States, tieh comuuHsiou will send another carload of eastern fish to . stock thp strean-'s and lakes of .the Pacific north west. Among the varieties that will be brought w ill. . be black, haaa. This ia a- epjendid game fish, bnt it is predacious", and care 'should be taken ' to plant it only in ' lakes and streams where good trout fisbingcannot now Tie bad. Sports men have no desire to give up trout, even to secure black bass. The p'ckerel and pike are ' two extremely voracious fish, and should not be permitted to be introduced here at all.. They would not furnish the sport the black basa would, and would be far more destructive to trout. It Is Bometiiues a good idea to 1- ii- i. ..i. Mexican Troops Jtontad. Lakkdo, Tex., Dec. 27. A battle took place vpsterday near lyon Animas, Mex ico, east of Guerro, . between , 300 Mexi can troqps. and 250 revolutionists, in wnicn toirteen soiiiiers were tuiiea ana many wounded, and several revolution ists were also killed and wounded. "3. A t :r:ti . v -- : r