CO i i i i ' i i i - .. i i '" . , v ' ' . ' . . ' I I I I I i , , ,, VOL. VII. THE DALLES, OREGON, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2. 1894. NO. 13. f Dalles Daily Ghronieb. Published Dally, Sunday Excepted. BT tHE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. '. - - - uornet lieeond and Washington Dallee, Oregon. Streets.. The Ter we of Subscription l-Br Year .6 00 . 60 6 Per month, by carrier dingle copy . . . TCMK TABIK8. Kallroada. In effect August 6, , 1893. EAST BODMO. , Arrive. 10:65 P. M. Departs 11:00 tr WIST BOUND. ' ; , Arrive 8:i A. M. Departs 3:44 a. K. LOCAL. l S - ArrivesfromPortlandatlr.it. .;. , Departa for Portland at S P. at Two locai freights that carry passengers leer one for the west at 8:00 A. M., and one for U aat at 6:30 A. K. STAOEa ' ror rriueviUe, via. Bake Oven, leave ddlj at 8 A. M. nw tnu-inna. Mitchell. Canyon City, leve laily at 6 A. H. . . vi 1- W.mtn WanfTlltffL. WATD1 .no. rt Tvih Vallev. leave daily, except . -L -i .. a i w i - j ' V ouuu.,,.....-. - i For Onldendale. Wash., leave every nay ui u eeJi except Sunday at 7 a. m. Offices for all lines at tne u manna nou l-BOFESSIOSAL. Wt H jtlDDEIX Attobnkt-at-Law Office jtl.-court Street, The DaUes, Oregon. i m. . Dunja. fbawb: nnrsx. 'nnFUR, MENEFEB ATTOBNita - T I I . nw,m. j And 43. over Post jflice Building, Entrance on Washington Street ' The Dalles, Oregon. iA. rice in Schanno's building, up stairs. I 1 S. H1SNNMT. iriVBaj.l-Al-m.1T. Of-t The" Dalles, Oregon. r. I. MATS. B. 8.HUNTTNQTOH. H. S. WILSON. ; !TAY8. HUNTINGTON S W ILHUJN ATTOK AL nb ys-at-law Offices, French's block over First National Bank, rh-? Dalles. Oregon.- 'w.1 French & Co.'s bank building, The Dalles, Oregon. Second J. SUTHERLAND, M. D., CM.; F. T. M.C.J M. C. P. and 8. O., rnyslcian ana our' Urim. nml 4. Chflnmftri block. Residence Mrs. Thombury's, west end of Second , street. . D R. ESHELM.AN (HonaoPATBitC) PHYSICIAJI and 6UBGBOW. calls muwwh utouiuuji day or nicrht. eltv or country, umm Office So. 88 and hapman block. VK R. 6.. U exoN , DO ANK PHYSIOIAIt AND STJB- exoN. Office; rooms o ana o uuapmiu Uock., Residence: 8. E. corner court ana fourth streets, secind door trom tne corner, iffice hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 6 and 7 to 8 P. M. .V -- - : - D alDDALJj 1JBKTIST. uas given iui mo rSovi in less extraction of teeth. Also teetn die Golden Tooth, Second Street. et on owed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of SOCIETIES. T1TA8CO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. A. M. Meets T V first and third I Monday of each month at 7 DALLES ROYAL AKUU UUArilK JJ. o. Meets In Masonic Hall the third Wednesday of each month at 7 P. M. TODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. iTX Mt- Hood Camp No. 69, Meets ruesa; lng of each week In Fraternity Hall, at 7: No. 59, Meets Tuesday even- 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. . - EL. Clobgh, Sec'y. H. A. BmJ JT. G. FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P. Meets every Monday evening at 7:80 o'clock, in V sonanno s building, corner oi uran ana dwuuu treeta. bojourmng xnemDers are ooruimiy Au V1 dited. C. JAUUBKKJX, D. W.VAU8B, X.. ot it. and p. v. v. ASSEMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF L. Meets In K. of P. hall the second and fourth Wednes davs of each month at 7:80 p. m. ;-fTOMEN'8 CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE W UNION will meet every Friday afternoon S t ft o'clock at the readine room. All are invited. HARMON LODGE No. 801, 1. 0. G. T. Regular weekly meetings Friday at 8 P. m., a ratemity Hall. All are invited. C. Chbismam, C. T. . R. C. Flsck, Be j TEMPLE LODGE NO. 8, A. O. TJ. W. Meets I JL in Fraternity Hall, over Kellers, en Second ' street, Thursday evenings at 7:80. H. HANSEN, j W. 8 Mybbs, Financier. M. W. I TAB. NE8M1TH POST, No. 82, G. A. R, Meets r J every Saturday at 7:30 p. M., In the K. of P. iHalL I A MERICAN RAILWAY UNION, NO. 40. V V. Meets second and fourth Thursdays each ..month in K. of P. halL J. W. Rbady. f W. H. JdNXs, Sec'y. . Pres. OF L. E. Meets every Sunday afternoon In urn u.. w& a ,i nt i. KHANO VBRETN Mnntji sverv Sunday SiT evening In the K. of P. Hall. try OF L, F. DIVISION, No. 167 Meets In 1 15. K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednes-t-oi each month, at 7:30 p. M. THK CHURCHES. ST. METERS CHURCH Rev. Father Brons obbst Pastor. Low Mass every Sunday at .; a. M. High Mass at 10:30 a. K. Vespers at '7 P. M. rT. PAULS CHURCH Union 8treet, opposite O Fifth. Rev. Ell D.Sutciiffe Rector. Bervices very Sunday at 11 a. k. and 7:80 p. ic Sunday chool:46 A. k. Evening Prayer on Friday at :K0 . TIR8T BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. TlT 7 - lob. Pastor. - Morning services every Sab th at the academy at u a. at. Sabbath jhool immediately after morning services, rayer meeting Friday evening at Pastor's resi eb Union services in the court house at '. M. -CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. W. C. J Cubtis, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11 . k . and 7 P. M. Sunday School after morning rvloe. 8trangers cordially invited. Seats free. IE. CHURCH Rev. J. Whisleb, pastor. Services every Sunday morning at 11 a. m. nttay School at 12:20 o'clock p M. Epworth seue at 6:80 p. at. Prayer meeting every uirsday evening at 7:30 o'clock. A cordial in Ktion is extended by both pastor and people Hi WI8T1AN CHURCH RBY.P. H. McGCPTBT stor. Preaching In the Christian church rd's Day at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. All lially Invited - JGELICAL LUTHERAN Ninth street, r. A. Horn, pastor. Services at 11:30 a. m. school at 2:30 p.m A cordial welcome one. , .- S'" . . . ' ) . F, ?ENOH & CO., 1 BANKERS. TBI dA'T A GEKERALBANKING BUSINESS Lettt rn of Credit issned available in he ; Eastern States. ' Sight ,. Exchange and . Telegraph'c Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Louie, Shu Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle VKash.," and various points in Or- egon and uV)nlngton. ' , Collertiota made at all points on fav orable ierme. v -T'. THE DALLES Rational ir Bank', I Of DALLES CITY, OR. President - - -Vice-President, -Cashier, - - - ' Z. F. Moody Charles Hilton 7 M. A. Moody General Banking Business Transacted. -t; i Sight Exchanges Sold on NEW YORK, i SAN FRANCISCO, CHICAGO ; and PORTLAND, QR. Collections made on favorable terms at ail accessible points. J. 8. BCHBNCK, ' President. J. M. Pattebson, Cashier. "First Rational Bank. THE DALLES. - -' ' - i - 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. Schknck. Ed. M. Williams, ' Geo. A. Liebs. .H. M. Beall. ? . W. H. YOUNG, BlacH&Wap SHop General BlackBmithing and Work done promptly, and all work Guaranteed. Horse Shoeing a Speciality TM Street op. Lielie's old Stsui House Movi ng I Andrew Velarde IS prepared to do any and all kinds of work- in his line at reasonable figures. Has the largest hotise moving outfit in Eastern Oregon. Address P.O.Box 181. The Dalles J. F. FORD, Evangelist, Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes under date oi March 23, 1893: , S. B. Med. Mfg. Co., Dufur, Oregon. Gentlemen : - On arriving home last week, I found all well and anxiously awaiting. Our little girl, eigbt and one-half years old, who had wasted away to SS pounds, is now well, strong and vizorous. and well fleshed up. S. B. Cough Cure has done its worn well, uotn ot tne children like it. Your S.1 B. Cough Cure has cured and kept away all hoarseness from me. So give it to every one, with greetings for all. Wishing you prosperity, we are Yours, Mb. & Mbs. J. F. Fobd. If yon wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and read; for the Spring's work, cleanse your system with the Headache and Liver Cure, by taking two or three doses each week. Sold under a positive guarantee. 60 cents per bottle by all druggists. C. P. STEPHENS, DEALER IN ' DRY -GOODS Clothing . , . ...... Boots, Shoes. Hats, Ktc. v FanGiJ oodg, ,JJo'fiongf Bte., : Etc., Etc. vfbvv ib. avoid.. Sodden, pasiry? ?R0BLf is Solve? by e Iboductibrt. of our NevV Shortening. . .Ellfc faht", en's b . healfi- RrlaundjAndioihAr Zp9rt cant atfora To do REFUSE ALL SUBSTITUTES. N. K. FAS R SANK cV CO.. ST. LOUIS and CHICAGO. NEW YORK. BOSTON. "The Regulator Line" The Dalles, Portlanl and Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Freignur.tt Passenger Line Through Tri-Weekly (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port lands. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a. m., : ; Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, connecting at the Cascade Locks with Steamer Dalles City. - Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland (Yamhill st. dock) at 6 a. m., ; . Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, ' connecting with Steamer Regulator for The Dalles. PASSENGER BATES. Oneway . $2.00 Bound trip ... 3.00 Freight Rates reatly Reduce d. All freight, except car lots, will be brought through, zerith out delay at Cascades. Shipments for Portland received at any time day or night. Shipments for way landings must be delivered before 5 p. m. Live stock shipments solicted. Call on or address, v ; - - W. C. ALLAWAY, . General Agent. B. F. LAUGH LIN, - General Manager. THE DALLES. OREGON ARTICjv SODA WATES AHJ IOE 0EEAM. fsnA'tat rtnA Uirt t wholesale quotations. TOBACCO, : r : C.OAH9 AND : i 8WKET DRINKS Finest Peanut Roaster l'h The Dalles in Specialties 2d Street J.FOLCO At right side Mrs. Cbrtir's DEED OF HORROR TeiTMe Tiaseiy Cansel lir a A FOUR PERSONS BURNED TO DEATH Further Particulars of the Omaha Crime of Saturday Night t- '. , Other News. Omaha, Neb., Dec. 31.t On -the mar ble slabs . at the city morgue, lie the charred remains of the family of John Cummings. ' Father, mother; baby and grandmother are there waiting the out come of the inquest which the coroner began this morning. Nothing in Ne braska's annals approaches the deed for horror. Cutnmings had been in ill health for some time, and deliberately set fire to his own house and caused the death of his mother-in-law, wife and 1-year-old baby, as ' briefly stated in the dispatches late last night. : Little Tommy, when asked how the fire origin ated, said Cummin gs was sitting on the edge of the bed in the rear room, where Mrs. Cummings also was with the baby. Another person in the room was Mrs. Fox, mother of Mrs. Cummings. There was a fuss about something, and Cum mings upset the lamp and closed the door, compelling all the inmates to stay there. " They cried, but he refused to let any of them out. When Philip Nathan, a next-door; neighbor, first saw the flames he noticed Mrs. Cummings trying to open the shutters to the window of .the bedroom. - He heard her cry out and say, ;"My baby is already afire." .. Soon thereafter he saw the woman enveloped in flames. Felzoto'a Plans. Pkenambuco, Dec; 31. The cruiser America is reported off this port, and it is said that so soon as she is ready to put to sea again, both she and the Nictheroy will sail southward. Daring the last few days the Nictheroy is said to have com pleted her crew and made ' all other arrangements necessary to sail. It is rumored that the two cruiaer9 will be re inforced by other vessels, and that the fleet will then sail for Bio, and upon ar rival there the ships and forts will make a combined attack upon the insurgent vessels and endeavor to end the rebellion with one determined engagement. Opening: of the Midwinter Fair Sax Fbancisco, Dec. 31. Tomorrow will be a double holiday in San Francisco. The informal opening of the midwinter exposition will take plaae at 8 o'clock in the morning. . There will be no special feature until 10 o'clock, when a concert will be given at the central court by the Midwinter Fair band. NEWS NOTES. Congress reconvenes " tomorrow. The senate will do comparatively, little until the house sends over the tariff and ap propriations bills. ' William Richardson, the railway mag nate, died in Brooklyn , December 31st from congestion of the brain and an at tack of bronchitis. The Continental - Oil Company, . the Standard's western , adjunct, on ac count of competition, has cut the whole- J sale price of illuminating oil to 7 cents a gallon andthe retail price to. 10 cents. It is reported that the Brazilian rebel, Admiral Mello, has been seriously wounded. It is surmised that a frag ment' of a shell must have struck him when the Aquidaban was escaping from the harbor of Rio and had to run the gauntlet of. the loyal forts at the en trance. - - . . ' The body of Lucy Stone was inciner ated Saturday in the crematory at Forest Hill, Mass. . It was the first cremation in this retort or in the state. It was just 2 :30 when the remains were placed in the retort. At 5 o'clock nothing but a pile of ashes remained. The ashes will be placed in an urn and delivered to Dr. Blackwell, the husband of Mrs. Stone. - " ;. ' ' ' : The house of commons contains one member six years older than Gladstone, Hon. Charles Villiers, who has sat now 53 years for a single constituency. But when, on rare occasions, he visits the club, he can only go as far as the hall, owing to the stairs, and friends cluster around, ears close to his mouth, to catch his whispered mumblings. Even older till is Admiral Jones, of the Greenwich hospital,, who actually bore part in the stupid and criminal Walcheron expedi tion of 1809. Surely there s no other country where men live like this. Karl's Clover Root, the new blocd purifier, gives freshness and clearness to the complexion and cures constipation 25c, 50c. and $1.00. Sold by Snipea & A WASHINGTON LETTER.,- The, President's' Dread of Being; Killed Senator Voorhees Aspirations. , From our Regular Correspondent. . ' Washington, Dec 29, 1893. It is no longer denied by those occupying posi tions which give them an opportunity to know that ' Mr. Cleveland is a badly frightened man. - He fears that some man made desperate by loss of employ ment or failure in business will attempt to kill him for revenge.. It is because of this fear that Mr. Cleveland has tried so hard of late to prevent the publication in advance of his movements outside of the white house. Some weeks ago ser vants were sent to Lakewood, N. J., to put the Cleveland cottage in order and an-invitation was sent to Mrs. Perrine, M-q. Cleveland's mother, to join the Clevelands there 'several days before Christmas and to . spend the holiday week with them. Somebody leaked, and the newspapers published . the pro- jjoeed programme. ' It was then aban doned, the cottage closed and, notice given that the Clevelands would not go to Lakewood at all this winter. ' It was then arranged that the Cleve lands should quietly steal away Christ mas night and occupy for a few days the suite of rooms which had been engaged for them at a Lakewood hotel. Some body leaked again and the publication of the plan broke it up. . Then a. new trip was arranged and carried out so quickly that no advance publication could be made But mark the sneaking manner in which the president of the United States left, the white bouse, and com pare it with the idea of how a courageous man would have done it. The arrange ments were perfected in Mr. Cleveland' private office, only those who were to be hi 8 companions on the duck-shooting ex peditionSecretaries Gresham and Car lisle and Commander Robley -D. Evans of the navy being present. The three gentlemen named strolled carelessly out of the front door of the white house and entered a carriage without being speci ally noticed. At about 'the same time a carriage drove to the rear of the white bouse and a man heavily armed stepped out and held the door open while an other man enveloped in an. immense ulster with a storm collar coming well up under the brim of a big slouch hat stepped hurridly inside. The first man was one of the body guards who never lose sight of Mr. Cleveland when he goes outside of the white house, and the other was Mr. Cleveland himself..- The carriage was then driven rapidly to the wharf and Mr. Cleveland joined his com panions who were in the first carriage, aboard of. a light' house tender which steamed away in two minutes after he stepped on its deck. If any thing could be more absurd or more in dicative of cowardice than these acts of the president your correspondent is at a loss to name it. A new candidate has entered the race for the democratic nomination in 1896, in the person of Senator Voorhees, of Indiana. It would-seem to ordinary minds that his course upon the silver repeal bill, which angered both the silver and the anti-silver democrats, would have been sufficient to have destroyed any hopes entertained by him, but the mind of Senabor Voorhees is not an ordinary one, and he doesn't see it that way. . He thinks his bill for the coinage of the seigniorage in the treasury and the purchase- and coinage of $2,000,000 worth of silver a month will make friends for him in the west ; he has a scheme to catch the south by favoring the repeal of the tax on state bank cur rency, and he expects to get solid with the wage-earners tt all sections by op posing the Cleveland tariff bill. Repre sentative Martin, of Indiana, chairman of the house committee on invalid pen sions, is chief wet nurse for the boom in the house, and he will as far as possible second the efforts that Mr. Voorhees propoees making to bind the soldier vote to him by opposing the pension policy of the administration. - He calculates that his opposition . to civil service reform will . make friends for him among the practical politicians of his party. In short, he proposes to utilize all the methods known to an experienced dema gogue to get the nomination. ' Highest of all in Leavening Power.- Latest U. S. Gov't Report. Senators Sherman and Frye, the re publican members of tne sub-committee on foreign relations which this week be gan the investigation of the relations of this government to Hawaii, under authority of the Morgan resolution, will insist, upon the production of the im portant documents withheld by Mr. Cleveland from congress, and, as the in vestigation is to be conducted behind closed doors and nothing made, public until the investigation has been finished and the recommendation of the com mittee agreed upon, it is difficult to im agine any good reason for the documents not being given to the committee. It is certain that one of the democrats on the sub-committee Senator Gray is famil iar with those documents, and probable that the other two Senators Butler and and Morgan also know their contents ; and there is good ground for the belief that Senator Morgan, chairman of the committee, will join with the republi cans in demanding that they be sent to the committee. The administration men are showing signs of uneasiness nl f. t.liia TTIVOfltTtntiAn anrl nrall t(.a may. ' ' Cab.- NEWS OF THE STATE. Harney county's artesian well is down. some 320 feet and is spouting, but it will be bored deeper in hopes of obtaining a greater flow of water. The contractor was to receive $2.75 per foot for boring 800 feet, and everything furnished him. If plenty of water . is found within 400 ieei, no wiu sum anotner wen some where in the valley. Wool scouring mills are soon to be es tablished at Pendleton, a company hav ing recently been incorporated with a capital stock of 12.000. the obiect of which is to erect mills for ecouring and sorting wool. Such an institution is needed in Crook county. There is no sense in our wool growers paying freight on the grease and dirt there is in wool in its natural state. Saturday last Mr. J. L. Hallett, once structions of the Northern Pacific rail road under the Villard management, died at. 91 North Ninth street, in Portland. He was attended by his wife and two Bons. Besides the members of the family who were at his bedside when death -called him heuct-, lie '.-'has. a daughter, married to oue of Villard's nephews, residing in St. Louis, Mo. The fnnernl will not tftbA nlnnn until Thursday afternoon, presumably to give the daughter an opportunity to be pres- will be at Riverview cemetery, in a sub terranean concrete vault, with vaults 14 inches thick. , ''. Is Grippe During the prevalence of the grippe the past seasons it was a noticeable fact that those who 'depended upon Dr. King's New Discovery, not only had a speedy recovery, but escaped ail of the troublesome after effects of the malady. This remedy seems to have a peculiar power in effecting rapid cures not only in cases of la grippe, But in all diseases of throat, chest and lungs, and has cured cases of asthma and hay ' fever of long standing. Try it and be convinced; It won't disappoint. Free trial bottles at Srjpes & Kinersly.'s drug-store. ' ; .Tne persistent cougn wnicn usually follows an attack of the grip can be per- a . i i i i - . Cough Remedy. . Mr. W.A. McGuire, of McKay, Ohio, Bays : , "La Grippe left me with a severe cough. After using sev eral different medicines without relief, I . tried Chamberlain's . Cough Remedy, which effected permanent cure. I have also' found it to be without an equal for children when troubled with colds or croup, u Fifty-cent bottles for sale by Blakely & Houghton, druggists. - ; ,.- Settlement Requested. i During my absence, all who have un settled accounts with the undersigned are expected to call and settle with Mr. Geo. Krauss, who has my books and accounts.? ' An . early settlement will greatly oblige. Yours truly, . ' - ' Leslie Butlkb. Shiloh's cure, the Great Cough and Croup Cure, is for sale by Snipes & Kin--ersly. Pocket size contains twenty-five doses, only 25c. Children love it. Sold by Snipes & Kinersly. iasjaw - - : 4 Second St., The Dalles. I Kinersly, druggists.