ljromclc VOL. V. THE- DALLES, OREGON, MONDAY, APRIL 10, 1893. NO. 98. Ualles Do You Wear Shoes? We can fit your foot. We can give you any style. We can show you every width. We can sell you every size. WE CAN and WE WILL save YOU money on every pair of SHOES pur chased from US. See oaf Shoe Display, Genter Counter. Seed Wheat, " Oats, " Corn, " Rye, " Potatoes, Garden Seeds, Grass " Seeds in Bulk. -AT- J. H. CROSS' Hay, Grain and Feed Store. YOUfl flTTEjmOIi Is called to the fact that Hugh Glenn, Dealer in Glass, Lime, Plaster, Cement and Building Material of all kinds. Carrie" tlie Finest Line of Picture Mouldings To be f oand in the City. 72 Washington Street. COLUMBIA Candy Factory, Campbell Bros. Proprs - (Successors to W. S. Cram.) Manufacturers of the finest French and Home Made O -A- 1ST DIES, East of Portland. DEALERS IN . Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars anc Tobacco. Can furnish any of these goods at Wholesala or Retail AFRESH OYSTES-r0- In Kvery Style. Ice Cream and Soda Water. , 104 Second Street.The Dallee, Or. THEN WE CAN A, M. Williams Sl C9 "The Regulator Line" Tie Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Frsiglit aufl Passenger Liiie Through daily service (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and" Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a. m. connecting at Cascade Locks with steamer Dalles City. Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland (Yamhill street dock) at 6 a. m. con necting with steamer Regulator for The Dalles. PASSENGER KATES. One way $2.00 Round trip 3.00 Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. Shipments received at wharf any time, day or night, and delivered at Portland on arrival. Live stock shipments solicited. Call on or address. W. C ALLAWAY, General Agent. B. F. LAUGH LI N , General Manager. THE DALLES. - OREGON JOHN PASHEKj Merchant Tailor, 76 Count Stueet, Next door to Wasco Sun Office. Has just received a fine line of Samples for spring and summer Suitings. Coie ant See tie New Fashions. Cleaning and tepaiiring to order. Satisfaction guaranteed. INTEREST YOU ! FREHCtf 8t CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS Letters of Credit issued available in he Eastern States. Sight Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fav rable terms. b. SCHBNCK, President. H. M. Bball Cashier. First Rational Bank. VHE DALLES. - OREGON A General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to Sight Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly remntea on aay oi collection. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on .Hew iorK, &an Drancisco and JPort land. DIRECTORS. D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. Schencx. Ed. M. "Williams , Geo. A. Liebs. H. M. Be all. THE DALLES Rational Bank, Of DALLES CITY, OR. President - -Vice-President, Cashier, - - - Z. F. Moody Charles Hilton M. A. Moody General Banking Business Transacted. Sight Exchanges Sold on NEW YORK, SAN FRANCISCO, CHICAGO and PORTLAND, OR. Collections made on favoreble terms at all accessible points. T H E ARTIC CANDY FACTORY SODA WATEE AND I0E 0EEAM ranriioe anrl Nntr wholesale vauuiGo aim nuta quotations. TOBACCO as.1 Specialties CIGARS AND SWEET DRINKS Finest Peanut Roaster In The Dalles 2? Street J.FOLCO At right side Mrs. Oborr's restaurant. FOR COAST DEFENSE The Great Snip Indiana in the Naval Review. THE SHIP'S POWERFUL ARMAMENT She Is the Strongest War Vessel Ever Constructed by the Amer ican Government, Washington, April 9. The Indiana will participate with a host of others, new and old, in the naval review in New York harbor on the 27th inst. The Indiana is the eighth warship that the Cramps have launched and is the largest ever sent from their ways. Up to this time the New York, with a tonnage of 8,003, was the largest. The Indiana is the first of the first-class bat tleships to be launched, and her sister ship, the Massachusetts, which is from six weeks to'two months behind the In diana in construction, will be the uext. The Indiana is 848 feet long1 on the water line and is 59 feet 3 inches beam. Her displacement is 10,400 tons, but with a full supply of coal and stores on board she will draw 24 feet and dis place 11,000 tons of water. She will be propelled by twin screws and her en gines will be three in number, having 10,000-horse power. They will be of the triple-expansion type vand will be built abreast in water-tight compart ments, and will give a speed of from 15 to 16 knots, the guaranteed speed being 15 knots. The armor will be as nearly impervious to shot as it can be made. The water-line armor belt will be of 18-inch nickel steel and will extend 190 feet along each side amid ships. At the ends of the armor belt is an armored bulkhead athwartships which is to bo 14 inches thick, and above that and the water line is to be a casemate, belt 5 inches thick. Above the athwartships belt will be two redoubts, one at each end, forming the basis of the revolving turrets. These redoubts will be 34 feet and 0 inches outside diameter and 12 feet high. Over the armor belt and over the bow and stern will bo a flat protected deck plated with 2-inch steel. At each of the four corners of tlie 5-inch case mates rises up a redoubt 8 feet high and plated with 8-inch steel. These redoubts will be surmounted by turrets, each 8 inches thiek, and besides the armored turrets there is to be an ar mored pilot house or conning tower. The total weight of the armor is to be 2,085 tons. The armament of the Indiana will be as follows: Four 13-inch guns. 40 feet long, mounted in pairs in the two main turrets; eight 8-inch guns, mounted in pairs in the four turrets at the corners of the casemate; four 6-inch runs. THE BATTLESHIP INDIANA. mounted in broadsides with special inter bulkheads back of them; twenty 6-pounders and rapid-firing guns; eight 1-pounders and Gatirag guns and 6 tor pedo tubes. The armament has some strong1 points possessed by none of the battleships or cruisers now afloat. One is the height of the guns from the water line, which will enable them to success fully attack the unarmored ends of for eign warships. The 13-inch guns are 18 feet above water line and the 8-inch guns are 28 feet above the water line. Another feature is that the armament of either the Indiana or Massachusetts will throw a greater weight of metal than any vessel afloat. Either will be able to throw 6,400 pounds at one dis charge of her main battery alone, which is 1,000 pounds more than any other warship, foreijrn or native, is capable of discharging. There will be a single military mast, with two fighting' tops and a lookout, and means will be pro vided for going up inside the mast. The Indiana is one of three sister ships, including the -Massachusetts and the Oregon, authorized by act of con gress of June 30, 1890. The general de signs for the three steel sbjps were ready on the day the act authorizing them was approved. Three months later the bids for constructing them were opened. The Union iron works of San Francisco offered to build one for 83,240,000, or two for $0,400,000; the Risdon iron and locomotive works, also of San Francisco, one for $3,275,000; the Bath iron works, one for $3,149,000; the Cramp & Sons company, of Philadel phia, one for S2,990,000, and the other two for 85,780,000. The latter company also bid $3,120,000 for a ship twelve feet longer than in the department's plans, which were followed exactly by all the preceding bids, and $3,040,000 for the other two. This last bid being lower than that of any other, was accepted for the Indiana and Massachusetts. The law required that one of the ves sels should be built on or near the Pa cific coast, if it could be done at a fair cost. The Union iron works, in view of the bid of the Cramps, agreed to build the Oregon, also adding twelve feet, for $3,180,000, and this was accepted as reasonable on calculating the cost of carrying to San Francisco material only obtainable in the east. The Indiana's keel was laid in 1891. A Former Kan Will Wed. Haktfohd, Conn., April 8 It was an nounced today that Miss Louise Marie Wilcox, formerly of this city, and Dr. Thomas P. Conlon, of Brockton, Mass., will bo married in the hotel Bartholdi, New York, May 11. The announcement was a surprise. Nearly 10 years ago Miss wilcox, who is very pretty, entered Mount St. Joseph's convent. When she was graduated it was. with the honors of her class. In 1885 she became a sister in the convent and two years later took the black veil. Her name in religion was Sister Celesta. A year ago she said she had tired of her life as a nun, and wished to mingle with the world again. She secured a special dispensation from Pope Leo XIII and left the convent. Miss Wilcox then removed to New York, where she has since been a teach er of music. Her mother said today tliat she had met Dr. Conlon in New York, and that the marriage would be a love match. Elegant Headquarters for Callfornlana. Chicago, April 8. The finishing touches are being given today to the in terior of the spacious mansion on Michi gan avenue to be known as the palifor nia Columbian Club, and which will be the headquarters for visitors from the Golden Gate during the coming summer. It is a six-story structure, with luxuri ous cafe, drawing-room, smoking-room, billiard-room and library. ELECTRIC FLASHES. The U. S. senate will adjourn Tuesday. The president notified the senate of his desire to raise the rank of James B. Eustis, lately confirmed minister to France, to that of ambassador. It is suggested that at each place in the country where Arbor Day will be celebrated this year that a tree be planted in honor of the new secretary of agriculture. It was expected that at 8 o'clock this morning every union man working- for the World's Columbian Exposition company would quit work. The force is estimated at between 4,000 and 5,000 men. Unusual interest is being taken in the coming session of the trans-Mississippi congress, to meet at Ogden the 24th inst. Letters and telegrams from prom inent men from all parts of the West indicate there will be a large attendance. Eleven hundred machinists, boiler makers, blacksmiths and helpers in the shops of the Santa Fe road struck this afternoon for an advance in wages and other demands with the fellow-workmen in the same lines along the entire sys tem . ' From Boston comes a dispatch to the Evening Post stating thatWilliam Lloyd Garrison and other leading independents there are thoroughly disgusted with Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General Maxwell's rapid removal of republican postmasters, and that there is earnest talk of a public protest soon unless the policy of the administration is changed. Secretary Hoke Smith has rendered a decision on the question of revoking the permits recently granted to the Big Blackfoot Milling company and the Bitter Root Development company to cut 50 per cent, ot the timber from gov ernment land in Montana. The permit is modified so as to restrict the cutting to four sections, and the time to Janu ary 1st, 1S94. In the matter of the late Choctaw war Agent Bennett said the Choctaw govern ment will never bring their would-be murderers to a trial, but will uphold them in their unlawful acts, and that it will be assisting in a so-called judicial murder to permit the militia to make arrests in the Choctaw nation. In view of these facts he strongly urges that the nation be placed under martial law. Money to Loan. I have money to loan on short time loans.. Geo. W. Rowland. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. A&sommsx pure THE PERU INCIDENT No Attack Was Made Upon the United States Consnlate. AN ACCOUNT OF THE AFFAIR The Riot Was Started by an Anti-Masonic Element, and Several Were Injured. New Yoek, April 8. The Herald's Valparaiso correspondent cables that he has investigated the report that a United States consulate in. Peru had been attacked by a mob, for which an apology has been demanded by the United States government. He says the attack was mainly directed against Free Masonry. He says the correspond ent at La Paz telegraphed him the fol lowing account of the affair : "March27th a party of American stu dents who were on the way to the Chi- cago fair, attended the funeral of Senor Cazardia, a Chilian merchant of La Paz. The funeral services were held in the Masonic temple. This enraged the anti-Masonic populace, who attacked the building. They were armed with revolvers and stones. The attendants at the funeral were driven out and the ceremonies were suspended. . The mob then set the building on fire and it was burned to the gronnd. The residence of Senor Mendez, a custom-house offi cial, who was believed to sympathize with the Masons, was sacked and bnrned. Six soldiers fired on the mob and wounded several of the rioters ; but the authorities on the whole remained inactive. The attack was mainly di rected against Free Masonry. There were no attacks upon or demonstrations of any kind against the American con sulate." The! Distribution of Seeds. Washington, Aqril 8 Secretary Mor ton has already begun to realize some of the vexations attending the seed distri bution assigned by law to the depart ment of agriculture. Seedsmen are anx ious to know what will be the policy of the department in regard to the pur chase of seeds for distribution. In reply to inquires addressed to him on the sub ject, Secretary Morton has said his pol? icy would bo to purchase seeds mown in the United States in the open market, the quality arid price being the only question he would consider. A Decision Favoring the Engineers. Macon, Ga., April 8. Judge Emery Speer today rendered a decision in the United States circuit court here upon the petition brought by members of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, praying the court to direct the receiver of the Georgia Central railroad to carry out the contract with the Brotherhood which was in force when the receiver wasappointed. The petition was granted. A Leader. Since its first introduction, electric bitters has gained rapidly in popular favor, until now it is clearly in the lead among pure medicinal tonics and alter atives containing nothing which per mits its use as a beverage or intoxicant, it is recognized as the best and purest medicine for all ailments cf stomach, liver or kidneys. It will cure sick head ache, indigestion, constipation and drive materia from the system. Satisfaction guaranteed with each bottle or the money will be refunded. Price only 50c. per bottle. Sold by Snipes & Kinersly. Daniel Morgan of Connecticut will be nominated for treasurer of the United States. Guaranteed Cure. We authorize our advertised druggist to sell Dr. King's New Discovery for consumption, coughs and colds upon this condition. If yon are afflicted with a cough, cold or any lung, throat or chest trouble, and will use this remedy as directed, giving it a fair ttial, and ex perience no benefit, you may return the bottle and have your money refunded. We could not make this offer did we not know that Dr. King's New Discovery could be relied on. It never disap points. Trial bottles free at Snipes & Kinersly's drug, store. Large size 50c and$l. Balding Powder