Ws)t IMks Chronicle. vol. v. THE DALLES, OREGON, SATURDAY, MAY 20, 1893, NO. 132 The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Published Daily, Sunday Excepted. BY THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. Corner Second and Washington Streets, Dalles, Oregon. The Term of Subscription Fer Year 6 00 Per month, by carrier SO ingle copy o FBOFE9SIONAL. HH. KIDDELL Attobnky-at-Law Office Court Street, The Dalles, Oregon. e. b. duitjk. nu.Ni kikefii. DUFUR, s MENEFEE Attorneys - at law Rooms 42 and 43, over Post Office Building, Entrance on Washington Street The Dalles, Oregon. S. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of J.a lice In Schanno's building, up stairs. The Dalles, Oregon. . r. MAYS. B. S.HUNTINGTON. H. S. WILSON. MAYS. HUNTINGTON & WILSON ATTOB-neys-at-law Offices, French's block over First National Bank, i - Dalles. Oregon. YTr H. WILSON Attorney-at-law Rooms VV . 52 and 53, New Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. DR. ESHELM.AN (HoUXOPATHtc; PHYSICIAN and Surgeon. Calls answered promptly, day or night, city or country. Office So. 30 and T7 Chapman block. wtf DK. O. D. DOANE PHYSICIAN AND SUR GEON. Office; rooms 5 and 6 Chapman Block. Residence: B. E. corner Court and Fourth streets, secind door from the corner. Office hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 5 and 7 to & P. M. DSIDDALL Dentist. Gas given for the . painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth net ou flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of the Golden Tooth, Second Street. SOCIETIES. WASCO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. & A. M. Meets first and third Monday of each month at 7 r. x. 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, L O. O.'F. Meets every Friday evening at 7 :30 o'clock, in K. of P. hall, corner Seoond and Court streets. Sojourning brothers are welcome. H. Clough, Sec'y. H. A. Biixs,N. G. FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P. Meets every Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in Schanno's building, comer of Court and Second streets. Sojourning members are cordially in vited. W. 8. Cram. D. W.Vause, K. of R. and S. C. C. ASSEMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF L. Meets in K. of P. hall the second and fourth Wednes days of each month at 7:30 p. m. WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE UNION will meet every Friday afternoon at 8 o'clock at the reading room. All arc invited. Harmon Lodge No. 501, I. O. G. T. Regular weekly meetings Friday at 8 p. M., a Fraternity Hall. All are invited. I. . C. Chrisman, C. T. R. C. Fleck, Se rrVEMPLE LODGE NO. 3, A. O. U. W. Meets J In Fraternity Hall, over Kellers, en Second street, Thursday evenings at 7 :30. Paul Kreft, W. S Myers, Financier. M. W. J AS. NE8MITH POST, No. 32, G. A. R. Meets every Saturday at 7:30 P. M., in the K. of P. Hall. BOF L E. Meets every Sunday afternoon in . the K. of P. Hall. GESANG VEREIN Meets every Sundav evening in the K. of P. Hall. BOF L, F. DIVISION, No. 167 Meets in K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednes day of each month, at 7:80 p. m. THE CHURCHES. ST. PETERS CHURCH Rev. Father Bronb geest Pastor. Low Mass every Sunday at 7 a. II. High Mass at 10:30 A.M. Vespers at 7 P. M. ST. PAULS CHURCH Union Street, opposite Fifth. Rev. Eli D. Sutcliffe Rector. Services every Sunday at 11 A. m. and 7 :30 p. M. Sunday School9:45 A. m. Evening Prayer on Friday at 7:30 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. Tay lor, Pastor. Morning services every Sab bath at the academy at 11 A. m. 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. Whislrr, pastor. . Services every Sunday morning at 11 a. m. Sunday School at 12:20 o'clock p M. Epworth League at 6:30 P. K. 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 Day at 3 P. M. AU are oordially invited Evang. Lutheran ehurchNinth street, Rev. A. Horn, pastor. Services at ll:30"a. m. Sunday school at 2:30 p. m. A cordial welcome to every one. ' CLiflRfl STOHV, Art Teacher Room S, Beltingen Building, Will give Lessons Mondays and Thursdays of edcu W., . .j. ...... PHOTOGRAP H R S. L. YOUNG, : : JEWBLBB : : Watches and Jewelry repaired to order on short notice, and satisfaction guaranteed at the Store of X. C. Nickelsen, 2d St. The Dalle The St. Charles Hotel, PORTLAND, OREGON. This old, popular and reliable house has been entirely refurnished, and every room has been repapered and repaintet and newly carpeted throughout. The house contains 170 rooms and is supplied with every modern convenience. Rates reasonable. A .good restaurant attached to the house. Frer bus to and from ah trains. C. W. KNOWL.ES, Prop. W. H. YOUNG, BiaGKsnUUi & wagon shod General Blacksmithing and Work done promptly, and all work Guaranteed. Horse Shoeing a Speciality Third Street odd. Liebe's old Stand. Chas. Allison, -Dealer in- Headquarters at Chas. Lauer's. Havine had a fine harvest of natural ire the best in the world, I am prepared to furnish in any quantity and at bottom prices. CHAS. ALLISON. 8t CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS Letters of Credit issued available in he Eastern States. Sight Exchange and Teleeranhic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland "Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Uollections made at all points on fav- orable terms. 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. 6. SCHISCK, President U. M. Beau. 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 remitted on day of collection. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on New York, San Francisco and Port land. DIRECTORS. D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. Schenck. Ed. M. Williams, Geo. A. Liebe. H. M. Bball. pfesh Paint I W. C. Gilbert hereby sends His compliments to every friend And enemy if he has any Be they few or be they many. The time for painting now has come, And every one desires a home . That looks fresh and clean and new, As none but a good painter can do. Painting, papering and glazing, too, Will make your old house look quite new. He will take yonr work either way, By the job or by the day. If you have work give him a call, He'll take your orders, large or small. Respectfully, W. C. GILBERT, hr "The Regulator Line" The Dalles, Portland mi Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Freight anil Passepr 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. I'ASSEXGKK BATES. One way $2.00 Round trip 3.00 Freight Dates 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. LAUGHLIN, . General Manager. THE DALLES. - OREGON .A. ISTEW Undertakng Establishment! AMI PRINZ, & NITSCHKE -DEALERS IN- Furniture and Qarpets We have added to our Dusiness a somplete Undertading Establishment, and as we are in no way oonnected with the Undertakers' Trustj our prices will be low accordingly. C. P. STEPHENS, DEALER IN Dry Goods Clothing Boots, Slices, Bats, Etc. FanciJ foods, flofcioiig, Etc., Etc., . Etc. Second St., The Dalles. JOHN PASHEK, Merchant Tailor, 76 Court Street, Next door to Wasco Sun Office. Has just received a fine line of Samples for spring and summer Suitintrs. . Come and See the New Fashions. Cleaning and Repairing order. Satisfaction pna n meed. GHBS. flDflJUS, Shoemaker No Fit, Nfo Pay. IT WILL BE ENFORCED Cleyeland Will Cam Out the Geary Law. AS FAR AS FUNDS ARE AVAILABLE Chinese Attorneys Hope for a Stay of Proceedings, and Repeal of The Law. Washington, May 19. President Cleveland and his cabinet have arrived at a definite conclusion as to the action to be taken with reference to the Chinese exclusion act. The president and mem bers of his cabinet, who have charge of this matter, have decided to put the law into operation provided the attorneys for the Chinese Six Companies do not obtain a stay by bringing forward ad ditional legal obstacles. Attorney Riordan proposes, if possible, to carry back from the supreme court to the cir cuit court, from which the appeal came, the mandate of the court to carry the law into effect. This point may not be successful, but is a very important one. The attorneys assume that it will suffi ciently delay action until congress meets again, and then it is hoped by the at torney of the Chinese, and probably by that government's officials, that at least that provision of the Geary act provid ing for the deportation of the Chinese will be repealed. In the event that no further stay can be secured by the at torneys of the Chinese, there is no longer any question but what the administra tion will attempt to carry out the pro visions of the Geary act just as far as it is possible for them to do with the money on hand tp pay the necessary expenses. This action was determined upon at a conference between President Cleveland and Secretaries Carlisle and .Gresham and Attorney-General Olnev yesterday. She Loves the Chinese. Chicago, May 19. The National Edi torial Association -today chose Asbury Park, N. J., the next place of meeting. Papers were read, and addresses made by Emory Herbert and Colonel F. B. Anthony, of Kansas ; Joseph M. Chap pell, of Ashland, Wis. William E. Pa bor, of Florida, read a poem. Isabella Beecher Hooker was introduced by the chair, and said : "I came here to arouse indignation. My husband writes me that the supreme court has sustained the wicked anti-Chinese Geary act. I protest in the name of Thomas Hooker, one among those who framed the first free constitution on earth. We, his descendants, claim to know something about constitutions. The United States constitution is based on justice to all people. What kind of justice is it tp. prosecute the Chinese as long as they are law-abiding? It is not the justice of Christ. All these Oriental people with their beautiful religion should send missionaries to us to teach us Christian ity. When you destroy the liberty of the Chinamen you insult your God." Mrs. Hooker also spoke warmly against the Sunday closing of the world's fair. EXPORT AND IMPORT STATISTICS. A Very Largo Decrease in the Former and Increase In the Latter. Washington, May 18. The chief of the bureau ol statistics in his statement to the secretary of the treasury reports that the total value of the exports of merchandise from the United States during the 12 months ending April 30th, 1893, Iwere $848,584,427, a decrease; of $162,748,746 from the preceding year. The value of imports during the same period was $926,151,988, an increase of $94,006,617. The exports and imports of gold and silver for the same period and in comparison with the same months ot the previous year were: Gold 189-2-a. 1S91-2. Exports $ no,a,o2r $75,614,762 IU,10J,92U imports 19,541,000 Excess of exports . . . . 1)0,498,026 $26,504,83!) Silver Exports $38,950,757 $29,755,57!! imports 1 23,405.241 18,5'J1,747 Excess of exports $15,495,513 $11,253,826 This showing is the worst made by the government in years. A MISSING HAN FOUND. But He Hail Seen Dead and Buried for Some Time. Riverside, Cal., May 19. March 21 A. Potter, of San Jacinto, left home for Oregon, having $2,500 on his person with which he expected to close a real estate deal. Since that time no trace of him has been found. Eight days after Potter's departure a body was found near this city with a bullet hole in the fore head. At that time no intimation was given that the body was that of Potter, who was not then supposed to be dead. The cororner's jury rendered a verdict and son of the missing man, hearing of the case, made an investigation, and to day the body was exhumed. It was un recognizable, but her son said it was his father and indentified him by his shoes. Mrs. Potter is heartbroken and says her husband was murdered for his money. Others are of the opinion that the body is not Potter's, World's Fair Rates. Chicago, May 19. A meeting of the general managers called to settle the world's fair rates in the west discussed the subject all day and finally left the matter in the hands of the committee of seven, which will report tomorrow. The committee has no power of settlement and will do nothing but recommend. Several roads in the Western Passenger Association are seriously considering a reduction of west-bound rates, if the Atchison persists in reducing its tariff into Chicago. Spurgeon Going to Chicago. London, May 20. Special. Thomas Spurgeon sailed from Auckland, New Zealand, for San Francisco today. He will pass several days in Chicago and assist Dwight Moody in evangelical work in that city. An Armistice Agreed Upon. Washington, May 19. Unofficial ad vices are received at the state depart ment that an armistice has been agreed upon between the government and the revolutionists in Nicaragua. The news is believed to be true. s Students' Excursion. Portland, May 20. Special. The students of the university made an ex cursion on the Harvest Queen to Mult nomah falls and Brownsville today. The object of the excursion is not money, but a gala day for the students and their friends. - Jews In Russia. Mebv, May 19. A new ukase has been issued, expelling the Jews from the Asiatic provinces of Russia. It will cause widespread suffering. ELECTRIC FLASHES. The Infanta' Eulalia is in Washington, D. C. The Pacific Mail and the Panama rail road have settled their difficulties, and the Panama railroad will withdraw its steamer service. The president has appointed John M. Jones of Idaho, receiyer of public moneys, and John G. Brown of Idaho, register of the land office at Blackfoot, Idaho. The boiler of a locomotive at Imenau, Saxe-Weimar, Germany, exploded, in stantly killing five persons and so seri ously wounding eight others that they are dying. The Chinese building at the world's fair was dedicated yesterday. The ded ication consisted chiefly in serving the invited guests caps of strong tea, with out sugar or cream. The reports of the committee on tem perance of the Presbyterian Assembly, now in session at Washington, contem plates with shame the spectacle of a "vast national grog shop" at the world's fair. It favors the establishment by congress of an impartial commission to inquire concerning the liquor traffic, such as has been provided for in the bill passed several times by the senate, but defeated by the liquor interest in the house. The report emphasizes the statement that the church is not a political organization, but if the ques tion of morals becomes a question of politics also the church is not precluded on that account from dealing with it. The report also protests against the sys tem known as the army canteen, in which it is claimed officers and soldiers are detailed as saloon-keepers. While Mr. T. J. Richey of Altona, Mo., was traveling in Kansas he was taken violently ill with cholera morbus. He called at a drug store to get some medicine and the druggist recommended Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy so highly he concluded' to try it. The result was immediate relief, and a few doses cured him completely. It is made for bowel complaint and nothing else. It never fails. For sale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists, lm Go to N. Harris for fine prints ; 20 yards for $1. Highest of all in Leavening NEWS OF THE STATE. Five hundred more Chinamen have arrived in Portland on the Danube. The great quantity of drift wood about Astoria makes fishing dangerous in the river. A Southern Pacific train arrived in Portland yesterday consisting of six tourist cars from California, all the oc cupants of which are bound for the world's fair, yia the Canadian Pacific. Governor Pennoyer has made the fol lowing appointments of delegates from Oregon to represent this state at the anti-trust conference at Chicago, June 5th and 6th : J. B. Eddy, of Portland; J. W. Lewis, of Sparta ; E. M. Waite, of Salem ; J. J. Daly, of Dallas Pendle ton Tribune. The governor has pardoned the follow ing: James McGuire, D. W. Moore and Chas. Pierce, Multnomah county ; Frank Bradburn, Umatilla county, restored to citizenship; Sam Horn, sentenced in 1890 to serve ten years for rape from Portland ; Chas. T. Michels, sentenced to five years for murder from Clatsop. An Astoria fisherman, speaking of the small salmon catch assigns as the reason that the immense quantity of water in the river does not compel the salmon to come inside, as they can get all the fresh water they want outside until the eggs are ripe and they are ready to spawn. In addition to this the fish are certainly growing scarcer. The Agricultural Department. W. J. BUCHANAN. W. J. Buchan an, chief of the agri cultural department of the world's fair, was born in Miami county, Ohio, in 1853. Like most country boys, he attended school during the winter months and worked on the farm in the summer. In 18J0 he removed to Rochester, Ind., and lived with his grandfather, who WIBUCHANAM- was a farmer. In 1871 he learned the trade of making edged tools. He was appointed engross ing clerk in the Indiana house of Rep resentatives in 1872, and served two terms. In 1881 he removed to Sionx City, Iowa, where he has since been prominently connected with the leading enterprises of that city. He was instru mental in establishing the celebrated In December, "corn palace" in 1887. 1891 , he was appointed to the position he now holds. A. B. HURT. A. B. Hurt has been secretary of the agricultural department of the world's fair ever since its organization. He was born in Mississippi and was a member of the legislature of that state when he was 23 years ot age. Later he was secre tary of the commit tee of postofficea and poatroads, and superintendent of railway adjust ments in the post- During the Fiftieth door-keeper of the A..fi.HuRl- office department, congress he was United States house of representatives, an office having more than 150 employes. At t he expiration of his term he removed to Chattanooga, Tenn., and engaged in the newspaper business, and is at pres ent president of the News Publishing Co., of that city. There is nothing I have ever used for muscular rheumatism that gives me as much relief as Chamberlain's Pain Balm does. I have been using it for about two years four bottles in all as occa sion required, and always keep a bottle of it in my home. I believe I know a good thing when I get hold of it, and Pain Balm is the best liniment I have ever met with. W. B. Denny, dairy man, New -Lexington, Ohio. 50 cent bottles for sale by Blakeley & Houghton, lm WOOD, WOOD, WOOD. Best grades of oak, fir, and slab cord wood, at lowest market rates at Jos. T Peters & Co. (Office Second and Jeffer son streets.) Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. Baking LJU.,A.r P. O. Box No. 3. had been