CO She Dalles vol. v. THE DALLES, OREGON, SATURDAY, APRIL 15, 1893. NO. 103. Chronicle. SHOWING NEGLIGEE SHOT WITHOUT WMTCOMS'S COLLAR STAY. Have yoa Seen ow Ileal Spring Stoek? Men's and Boys' Clothing, FURNISHING GOODS, HATS, ETC. "We are Headquarters for . . . SWEET, ORR St CO.'S Pantaloon Overalls and Easy Fitting Pants, Every pair Warranted XOSVER to rip ! M. 7VL FBOFESSIONAL. H. II. RIDDELL Attornby-at-Law Office Court Street, The Dalles, Oregon. B. B. DOrDK. FRANK MKNEFEK. DUFUR, & MENEFEE ATTOBNBYS - AT Liw Rooms 42 and 43, over Post Office Building, Entrance on Washington Street The Dalles, Oregon. A 8. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of i fine In Schanno's building, up stairs. The Dalles, Oregon. T. T. MAYS. B. B.HUNTINGTON. H. 8. WILSON. MAYS. HUNTINGTON & WILSON ATTOK-skys-at-law Offices, French's block over First National Bank. i Dulles. Oregon. WH. WILSON Attobnb y-at-law Rooms . 52 and 53, New Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dulles, Oregon. "TVR. ESHELMAN (IIOMCEOPATHICl PHYSICIAN iJ and Surgeon. Calls answered promptly, day or night, city or country. Office No. 36 and unapman diocje. wtl DB. O. D. DO ANE PHYSICIAN AND SUB gbon. Office; rooms 5 and 6 Chapman Klock. Residence: 8. E. earner Court and Fourth streets, sec nd door from the corner. Office hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 5 and 7 to i P. M. D8IDDALL Dentist. Gas given lor the painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth Kt on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of the Golden Tooth, Second Street. SOCIETIES. w A8CO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. & A. M. Meets nrst ana tnira Monday ot each month at 7 DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6. Meets in Masonic Hall the third Wednesday of each month at 7 P. M. MODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. Mt. Hood Camp No. 59, Meets Tuesday even ing of each week In Fraternity Hall, at 7 :30 p. m. COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 5, I. O. O. F. Meets every Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in K. of P. hall, corner Second and Court streets. Sojourning brothers are welcome. H. Clough, Sec'y. H. A. Bills.N. G. FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P. Meets PHOTOGRAPHER, every Monday evening at 7:80 o'clock, In tt.- . ,- . , Schanno's building, corner of Court and Second , f"Bt Premium at the Wasco county streets. Sojourning members are cordially lh- fair for best portraits and views. vited. W. 8. Cram. : D. W.Vausb, K. of R. and 8. C. C. ASSEMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF L. Meets in K. P St I .flHlP HntPl of P. hall the second and fourth Wednes- "Vy VJls VlltlllV'O IJLUlvlt days of each month at 7 :S0 p. m. " PORTLAND, OREGON. WOMEN'S CHRI8TLAN TEMPERENCE . . - ,. , , , UNION will meet every Friday afternoon 18 Old, popular and reliable house at 8 o'clock at the reading room. All are invited, has been entirely refurnished, and every T . , . T room has been re papered and repainted .H1tS'SU.?7:S-;?15 rd nCWl .Pted thronghonT The i Fraternity Hall. All are invited. house contai ns 170 rooms and is supplied ; with every modern convenience. Kates rpEMPLE lodge NO. 3, a. o. u. w. Meets reasonable. A good restaurant attached kJZ&SBSwS' u Second he hoase- rer bns to from a Paul Kreft, trains. W.8 Myers, Financier. M. W. C. W. KNOWLES, Prop. J AS. NESMITH POST, No. 32, G. A. R. Meets every Saturday at 7:30 p. m., in the K. of P. JJ "Y'OXJIGr JC "evening tn the K. of P. Hall. ; v r..TOXr.VT . , General Blackamithing and Work done OF L, F. DIVISION, No. 167 Meets in j ii . K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednes- promptly, and all work day of each month, at 7 :3u p. h. Guaran teed. Mrs. S. A. Orchard, Carpet Weaver, Offers her services to all who wish carpets They Have Got to Go! Hard times, high prices, and big profits can't exist in this town, because we have got the G-oods, and make the Prices that save the people's money. It is a wonderfully complete assortment of high class goods St CO. THE CHURCHES. ST. fETERS CHURCH Rev. Father Brons gbest Pastor. Low Mass every Sunday at 7 a. m. High Mass at 10:S0 a. M. Vespers at 7 P. M. ST. PAULS CHURCH Union Street, opposite Fifth. Rev. Eli D. Sutclifle Rector. Services every Sunday at 11 A. M. and 7:30 P. M. 8unday School 9:45 A. m. Evening Praver on Friday at 7:S0 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. Tay lor, Pastor. Morning services every Sab bath at the academy at 11 A. x. Sabbath School immediately after morning services. Prayer meeting Friday evening at Pastor's resi dence. . Union services in the court house at 7 P. M. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. W. C. Curtis, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11 A. M. and 7 P. M. Sunday School after morning service. Strangers cordially invited. Seats free. ME. CHURCH Rev. J. Whislkr, pastor. . . Services every Sunday morning at 11 a. m. Sunday School at 12:20 o'clock P. If. Epworth League at 0:30 p. M. Prayer meeting every Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock. A cordial in vitation is extended by both pastor and people to all. CHRISTIAN CHURCH Rev. J. W. Jenkins, Pastor. Preaching in the Congregational Church each Lords Dav at 3 p. m. All are cordially invited Evang. Lutheran church, Ninth street, Rev. A. Horn, pastor. Services at 11:30 a. m. Sunday school at 3:30 p. m. A cordial welcome to every one. CLiAffl STOfY, Art Teacher Room S, Bettingen Building, Will give Lessons Mondays and Thursdays of each week, or of tener if desired. Horse Shoeing a Speciality SHOWING NEGLIGEE SHIRT WITH WHITCOMB-S COLLAR STAY. in "The Regulator Line" Tie Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Freiimag Passenger Line Through dally 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. PAS8BKGIB KATES. Oneway $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 oh or address. W. C. ALLAWAY, General A cent. B. F. LAUGH LI N , General Manager. THE DALLES, - OREGON JOHN PASHEK, Merchant Tailor, 76 Count street, Next door to Wasco Sun Office. Has just received a fine line of Samples for spring and summer Suitings. Come and See tie New Fashions. SERVIA'S YOUNG KING Takes Possession of His Throne and Palace. MOST BRILLIANT COUP D'ETAT The Regents and Ministers Ousted at a Banquet Creates a Sensation. Belgrade, April 14. A bloodless coup d'etat was effected here last night, and King Alexander I, the youthful ruler of Servia, who heretofore governed the country through regents, today rules in his own name. A grand banquet was given at the palace last night. Plans were secretly laid by means of which the regents and the ministry would be ousted without an opportunity of oppos ing. The unsuspecting regents and ministers attended the banquet," and while enjoying themselves at the palace an attachment of soldiers and bodies of police took possession of the ministers' houses and occupied the government buildings. At midnight, while the fes tivities were still in progress, King Al exander proclaimed that he had attained bis majority, and had assumed with the gkupshtina the government of the coun try. As a matter of fact the king had not attained his majority. When the deposed regents and ministers heard the proclamation they were dumbfounded. The king and his advisers acted with great promptitude, and the soldiers, who were in waiting, at once placed the regents and ministers under arrest. The Servian army is loyal to the king. Had it not been the coup d'etat would not have been possible. After issuing the proclamation, and long before day break, the king proceeded to the bar racks, where the troops were under arms, and was received with joyous ac clamations and many expressions of loyalty. The proclamation, which he issued everywhere in the country today, bears the king's signature. In it Alex ander declares the constitution has been lately in sore jeopardy, the rights of citizens imperiled and the constitutional position of parliament so abased that the king must end the unhappy condi tion of affairs. He therefore declares he has come to age, and has assumed the. kingly power. Henceforth, the pro-. clatnation adds, the Servian constitution acquires its full significance. The re gents have been deposed, the cabinet' dismissed and anew ministry appointed. Dokitch is the new prime minister. The Hawaliani. Washington, April 14. It is said in hauling down the United States' flag at Honolulu, Blount followed the instruc tions given him before leaving here to the letter; that the reason for keeping; the fact that he was empowered to do so a secret, was to prevent possible dis order in the islands and keep any other: foreign country from stepping in unex pectedly. Attention is called to these passages in the instructions issued under the pre vious administration by Secretary Fos ter to Minister Stevens, under date of February 11th, 1893: So far as your action amounts to in according, at the request of the de facto sovereign govern ment of the Hawaiian islands, the co operation of the moral and material forces of the United States for the pro tection of life and property from appre hended disorders, your action is com mended ; but so far as it may appear to overstep that limit by setting the au thority and power of the United States above that of the government of the Hawaiian islands in the capacity of pro tection, or to impair in any way the in dependent sovereignty of the Hawaiian government by substituting the flag and power of the United States as a symbol and manifestation of paramount author ity, it is disavowed. After Eleven Years. In 1882 H. M. Mead, an old banker in Waupaca, Wis., was shot and killed in his banking office late at night by a rob ber unknown until recently. For eleven years Piukerton detectives have worked upon the case, and discovered the per petrator by a lawyer trying to dispose of some bonds stolen at the time. The lawyer informed upon the murderer, when cornered, evidently to save him self. This led to the arrest and indict ment of Edward Bronson a hotel-keeper, Samuel Stout a saloon-keeper, and Ted Prior a policeman, all of Waupaca, as accessories before the fact, and Bill Hanskomeas an accessory after the fact. Bronson had been recently working for a lumbering company at Tacoma, who, also ascertained that Hanskome was working at Ruby City, Wash., where his arrest followed at once. Disappeared With His 'Wife's Money. San Feancisco, April 14. The police are looking for Peter B. Gold stone, who disappeared rather strangely last night with $2,000 of his wife's money. Ac cording to the story told by his wife, she was married to her husband March 21. Yesterday "Goldstone induced her to sign a check for $2,000 which he cashed. Last night he took his wife to the thea ter, and during one of the acts left her, promising to return in a few minutes. This is the last she saw of him. It was afterwards learned that he left the city with a woman named Waters. He had been courting the latter previous to meeting the young woman whom he married, on ascertaining that she pos sessed some money. Bearing Sea Argument. Paris, April 14. Carter, of counsel for the United States, continued his address today before the Behring sea court of arbitration. He further dis cussed the law governing the tribunal, and likened the unrestricted destruction of seals to pelagic piracy. He discussed the original rights of Russia in Behring sea, which be claimed were founded on the discovery of the waters by Russian navigators, whose achievements Carter related to the court with the assistance of a large map exhibited on the wall, and which embraced a description of the Behring sea and adjoining regions. Little to . Cheer Them. Washington, April 14. The Ore gonian office-seekers here are in the dumps, and there is little to cheer them They have been here for some time, and yet very few plums have fallen. Sena tor Mitchell has been receiving vast quantities of applications from all parts of the state, and has been filing them. The outside office-seekers, how ever, will not have the benefit of a republican senator in this matter very long, for Senator Mitchell goes to Oregon in a few days. The ap pointment of a minister to Turkey yester day was a sore disappointment to Col. Robert A. Miller, who was here and an applicant for the place. Ex-Postmaster Roby was also an applicant, but it is understood that his friends are now booming him for postmaster of Portland. The fight for the appraisership growB very warm. Mrs. C. W. Johnston is here, and is advocating the claims of her husband for the place. There are numerous other candidates, some with good backing and others with only their own applications and a few indorse ments. But the cool treatment the Ore gon democrats have received at the White House has not been encouraging to them. Will 'Appeal to England or Germany. Boston, April 14. Hawaiian Minister Mott Smith, who is in Boston, says the provisional government of Hawaii will now appeal to England or Germany for support, and each of these nations stand ready to respond to any over tures. ' ELECTRIC FLASHES. Dana Them pson broke the American half-mile swimming record at the Olym pic Club San Francisco, lowering the time from 15:29 to 14:12. Dana is only 15 years of age. China is gathering arms and other warlike material in Chinese Turkestan, adjoining the Pamir country, and Russia has sent a force of Cossacks and artillery to reinforce the garrison at Tionltcha. Specimen Cases. S. H. Clifford, New Cassel, Wis., was troubled with neuralgia and rheuma tism, his stomach was disordered, his liver was affected to an alarming de gree, appetite fell away, and he was terribly reduced in flesh and strength. Three bottles of Electric Bitters cured him. Edwd Shepherd, Harrisburg, 111., had a running sore on his leg of eight years' standing. Used three bottles of Electric Bitters and seven boxes of Bucklen's Arnica Salve, and his leg is sound and well. John Speaker, Cataw ba, O., had five large fever sores on his leg, doctors said he was incurable. One bottle Electric Bitters and one box Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured him en tirely. Sold at Snipes & Kinersly's drug store. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. DR. EMIL HIRSCH. The leader of Jewish Advance Thought in the United States. Dr. Emil G. Hirsch was born in Luxemburg-, Germany, in 1852, and is the son of the late Dr. Samuel Hirsch, who was for a number of years the rabbi of Philadelphia's most important reform congregation. lie came to this country with his father in 1806, and was gradu ated from the University of Pennsyl vania in 1872. He continued his studies in Berlin and Leipsic and returned to America in 1876, in which year he accepted a call from the Congregation Har-Sinai at Baltimore, Md., where he officiated as EMIL G. HIRSCH. rabbi till 1878, when he went to Louis ville, Ky., and became the rabbi of the Adas-Israel congregation in that city. During these first years of his pulpit work, says Frank Leslie's Weekly, Dr. Hirsch became conspicuous as a rad ical reformer, in which course he but followed a line laid out by his illustrious father, who drew upon himself the cen sure of many of his coreligionists for uniting Jews and Christians in mar riage. In 1880 Sinai congregation, Chi cago, secured young Dr. Hirsch as its officiating' rabbi, which position he still holds. Under his administration the religious service has undergone great sweeping changes; all that smacks of the ancient and ceremonial has been done away with, and the climax was reached six years ago, when it was de termined that the Sabbath services should be held on Sunday instead of Saturday. This custom still prevails in the Sinai temple, Dr. Hirsch holding that the "Sunday-Sabbath movement Is the only salvation for Judaism as a spiritual religion." Dr. II irsch is professor of Semitic lan guages and literature in the University of Chicago; was a lecturer at the Ply mouth summer school for applied ethics to the summer of 1S92; he is pres ident of the board of directors of the public library of the city of Chicago; an editorial contributor to several German periodicals, and editor of the Chicago Reform Advocate. Among Dr. Hirsch's published works, the most important are, "The Age of Toil," a contribution to Biblical criticism, and "The Cruci fixion from a Jewish Standpoint." Dr. Hirsch's wife is the daughter of the late David Ainhorn, a distinguished theolo gian, who for many years was foremost in the fight for reform in Judaism. . The Curling Sword Snake. There is a little reptile belonging in Madagascar known as the scimitar snake, that is the curling sword. Run ning along the back from head to tail is a blackish, horny substance, which bends with the convolutions of the snake's body as readily as would a well tempered steel spring, and throughout its entire length it bears an edge as hard as flint and sharp as a razor. They are not poisonous, but when one of them springs on a man, which he likes very well to do, he will soon have a leg off unless cracked on the pate. Some snake specialists claim that the pres ence of this reptile on the island is the reason there are no large quadrupeds to be found there at present, the curling sword in back ages having taken off legs faster than they could be created. Even queens are not exempt from fads. Queen Victoria is extremely fond of two Spanish bullocks of great beauty which she has. had for many years. A young English girl has succeeded in grouping the two animals in a most ef fective manner in a bit of sculpture or dered by the queen, and with which her majesty was duly pleased. In the course of her study of the royal pets the young sculptor grew enviably inti mate with them, even to the extent of having them take lumps of sugar from hor hand. Karl's Clover Root, the new blood purifier, gives freshness and clearness to the complexion and cures constipation. 25c, 50c. and $1.00. Sold by Snipes & Kinersly, druggists. For Rent. A nicely furnished room in good loca tion with or without board. Apply at this office. tf . Baking Powder