TiiQ Dalles Daily Chronicle. BUBUCBIPTION KATES. BY KAIL, POSTAGX TV.KTi.lD, IN ADVANCE. Weekly, 1 year 1 BO 6 months. 0 7 s " . o et' Daily, 1 year..... "8 months. 8 Ot per " 0 ! 'Address all communication to THE CH ROM ICLE." The Dalles, Oregon. Post-Offlce. OFFICB HOOKS '"-General DellTery Window 8 a. m. to 7 p. m. Money Order " 8 a. m. to 4 p. m. Sunday ii 1 " 9 a. m. to 10 a. m. CLOSING OF MAILS trains going East 9 p. m. and 11:45 a. m. " West 9 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. Stage for Goldendale.... 7:30a. m. " " Prinevillo. 6:30 a. m Dufuraud Warm Springs. ..6:S0 a. m. t Leaving for Lyle & Hart land.. 5:30 a. m. " "(Antelope 6:30 a.m. Except Sunday. Tri-weekly. Tuesdny Thursday and Saturday, i " Monday Wednesday and Friday. WEDNESDAY, - MAY 9. 18S4 JfEPUBIilCflfl STATE TICKET For Congress, Second District, W. R. .ELLIS, of Heppner. For Governor, W. P. LOBD, of Salem. For Secretary of State, H. R. KINCAID, of Eugene. For State Treasurer, PHIL. METSCHAN. of Grant County. For Supt. Public Instruction, G. M. IRWIN, of Union. For Supreme Judge, CHAS. E. WOLVE ETON ef Albany. For Attorney-General, C. M. IDLEMAN, of Portland. ; For State Printer, W. H. LEEDS, of Ashland. For Prosecuting Attorney, 7th Dial., A. A. JAYNE, of Arlington. For Member of the State Board of Equalization, W. C. WILLS of Crook county. For Representatives, T. K. COON, of Hood River. T. H. McGREER, of Antelope. OOTTItTT'Sr TICKET. For Sheriff, THOS. J. DRIVER, of Wamic. For County Clerk, .-A. "SI. KELSAY, of the Dalles. For Supt. of Schools, ' TROY SHELLEY, of Hood River. For County Assessor, F. H. WAKEFIELD, of The Dalles. For County Treasurer, WM. MICHELL, of The Dalles. For County Commissioner, A. S. BLOWERS, of Hood River. For Coroner, JV. H. BUTTS, of The Dalles. JFoi County Surveyor, E. "F. SHARP, of The Dalles. For Justice of the Peace, the Dalles, L. S. DAVIS. For Constable, the Dalles, A. A. URQUHART. The most needful, thing to be done at this time is to restore confidence. If "the entire republican ticket is elected that end will have been attained. Nobody haa raised one word of pro test against the invasion of this country within the last ten days by a foreign army 1,000 strong, and no wonder; the Army is composed , of pretty Irish girls who come to make .war npon American fcearta. It is said .to have been the fin est aggregation of . feminine beauty ever landed in New Yori. " A woman speaking at it woman's suff rage meeting is quoted assaying: "Apian goes slowly around a subject, while a woman jumps over. Well, that depends entirely on what the subject is. For in stance, a man is not going very slowly .around ar pretty womau, if there i any clinnce to get real close to her quickly ; nd a woman isn't going to jump over a live m iuse, unless there are walls in every other direction. Win. P. Lord, the able jurist, who now fills the office of chief justice of the supreme court of .Oregon, is the repub lican nominee for governor of this state, and there is little doubt but be will be elected. Win. P. Lord ,was born in Dover, Delaware, in 1839. After grad . inting with high honors from a school ait Fairfield, N. Y., he began the study of law, and his natural taste for his pro fession made him a most 'successful at torney. It was not until after the war, in which he participated, that he was Admitted to the bar. In 1866 he became lieutenant in the 2d regiment U. S. ar tillery and served in California, Wash . ington and Alaska. . In 1868 he removed to Salem, practiced law for some years, became city attorney, state senator and since 1880 has been judge of the supreme court. In free trade eras of the United State, as many people now living can Attest from their memory, wages for or diuary labor . averaged 50 cents' a day, and the hours were from daylight till lark, and the times were so badly out of joint that nothing was thought of it. The laboring class toiled on uncom plainingly, until un'er a system of pro tection to American labor, wages came up, hours were lessened, and comforts and even luxuries were introduced into every" American home. A few days auo the workmen on the Great Northern system tied the road up from one end of the line to the other, because of a griev ance of low wages. But the lowest of thepe wages, as compared to old free trade wages, were nearly 300 percent greater. The lowest waea of the Great Northern men were $1.30 a day, re duced since the advent of a democratic administration from $1.75. There is but one way to bring back good wages and comforts for the American work men and that is to vote for them. . Vote for protection and against' competition with degraded foreign labor. Vote for every man who represents that ticket, he he high or be he low. Vote the ticket straight. Be emphatic. NEGROES IN BARBADOES.: They Die Rapidly of Consumption Euro peans Safe From the Disease. In Barbadoes the chief enemy of the black race is consumption, of which many of them die, though it is practi cally unknown there among Europeans. The cause Is simply that all negroes, without exception, hermetically seal up their huts at night, partly from fear of mysterious ghosts or "duppies," partly to keep ' out mosquitoes, and partly again because they wish to keep out cold. For, strange as it may appear, the naturalized West Indian negro shiv ers in a temperature of seventy-four de grees, and, on the rare occasions in win ter when the thermometer falls to sev enty degrees, he is blue with cold and almost incapacitated for work. No doubt he is warm enough in his hut at night, with every shutter closed and every chink and cranny stuffed with rags, but nature avenges herself for this exclusion of her purifying oxygen by colds and coughs. The negro has quack remedies and balsams by the dozen for these, but All The Year Round says they do not save him from the tubercle that soon forms in his lungs and eats his life away. After all, he is a little missed; he has had a short life and pleasant one. His relatives will feel a pride in covering themselves with crape, of color almost as black as their own complexions, for crape is "de rigueur" among the ncgress es of Barbadoes. lie will probably leave after him six or seven children, mostly illegitimate, since the black la dies have strong objections to the bond of matrimony. . But here the question of pounds, shillings and pence does not intrude itself as it docs at home. It costs so little to bring up a black baby J that there is really no reason whatever for its parents to consider its future. When it grows up, an hour's work or so a day will keep it in food and clothes. So, in the streets of Bridgetown,' the happy little black imps swarm like flies, and the island has the densest popula tion, per square mile of any place in the known world th;rt is, if what they say about Chinese statistics be true. MAMMOTHS OF SIBERIA. Frozen When T!cy Diutl, TUoir lion a Jfow Cover the Vast Plains. In his book on "'The Mammoth and the Flood," Sir. llowcrtfi advances a new" theory with regard to the remain? of mammoths and other large animal in the soil of Siberia. ' All over this great plain, wherever the ground is frozen hard, are found mammoths and other animals preserved very fresh, sc that the wolves and bears can feed upon their remains. These mammoths have been found from the eastern border clear to tht Obi river. They have been found undet . conditions which 'make it certain thai they could not have lived unless the sur roundings and climate had, at the time they existed, been entirely different from the present conditions. The re mains of the plants on which they feed are als: found, and southern contempo rary shells arc discovered with the re mains, pointing to climatic conditions which no longer exist. Mr. Howorth believes that this pla teau is one of the most recent feature in the known physical geography of the world, and that its rapid elevation caused the tremendous change of cli mate which has enabled the bodies ol great beasts to be preserved intact as we find them, no says that unlesi tliese animals had been frozen immedi ately after -they died, and remained frozen to this day, they would certain ly have decayed and disappeared. A single Siberian summer sun would have destroyed them completely. It is known that further east the bones of great an imals have been found seventeen thou sand feet above the sea under condi tions which Falconer declared to be ab solutely incompatible with their mode of life. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, ". When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. -When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. ' When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. A wind blowing at the rate of nine teen miles per hour exerts a pressure of but one and four-fifths pounds to the square foot. - Chronio Looaeaeti of the Bowels. Results from imperfect digestion. The cause lies in the torpidity of the liver, and the cure is take Simmon's Liver Regulator to aid digestion, to stimulate the dull and sluggish, liver and to regu late the bowels. , Rambler bicycles are the best. Good second-hand wheels for sale cheap. . Mays fc Cbowk, v Agency F. T. Merrill Cycle Co. THE LAW AND THE DOG. Two Interesting; Decisions of Questions tin Mssaaohnsntts Court. If one interferes with two dogs that are fighting and is bitten oy one : of them he cannot recover; damages un less he shows that he was in the exer cise of due care. The full bench of The supreme court lately so held, accord ing to the Boston Transcript, ' in the case of Artemus Hodgson against Charles H. Hodgson and William T. Tapley. The three parties live in Dedham. The plaintiff was out riding, accom panied by his two dogs. A shepherd dog owned by the defendant followed the carriage and got into a "fight with one of the plaintiff's dogs. ; He went up to the dogs and seized the defen dant's dog, when it turned on him and bit his hand. The suit was .brought under public statutes, chapter-102, sec tion 93, and the plaintiff claimed he was not obliged to prove at the trial that he was in the exercise of due care. The court holds that he was and says: "In the case at bar the plaintiff volun tarily Submitted himself to danger and we have no doubt that the ruling of the court below was right." - Another dog-bite case to call forth an expounding of the law is that of Jesse O. Boulester. of Rockville, against Charles W. Parsons, of Wal pole. The bite in this case was in flicted upon a hbrse,"which died in con sequence and the plaintiff sued for his loss. The plaintiff's brother was driv ing an express wagon, drawn by a pair of horses, along a country road; and in the rear of this wagon was another horse attached to a single wagon. The defendant's dog ran out of his master's yard' and bit the horse attached to the single vehicle. , . The defendant co ntended . it was negligence on the part of the plaintiff to lead a horse harnessed in a wagon behind as was this one, and thereupon the plaintiff requested the court to in struct the jury in substance as follows: "A man has a right to lead a horse in the way and manner described, and the mere fact that he was so leading a horse is not such evidence of negli gence as would preclude the plaintiff from recovering in this action for the bite of the dog." The judge at the trial refused so to rule, and submitted the question to the jury whether the method of traveling adopted was neg ligent and was such as" to induce an attack by the dog. The jury found for the defendant, and to the refusal of the court to rule as above the plaintiff excepted. The full court sustains the plaintiff's exceptions and says: "We are of opinion that the ruling requested should have been given in substance. While the doctrine of contributing negligence has been often said to ap ply to an action on the public statutes, chapter 102, section 93, and we have no doubt it does apply where the plaintiff incites or provokes a dog, and it may be in other oases, the doctrine has' no application to -the case at bar. The leading of a horse behind a wagon -was simply a condition and not in any sense a contributing cause of the in jury. To hold that the ques tion whether leading a horse behind a wagon should be submitted to the jury as evidence of negligence on the part of the plaintiff in inducing an attack by a dog, would render it necessary to submit to the jury the question wheth er the .color of the horse or of the wagon, or of the clothes of the driver might not have induced an attack. The law does not pay this respect to the characteristics or prejudices of dogs." A Queer Volume. One of the most singular volumes ex tant is the manuscript diary of James II. It is preserved in the imperial li brary in Paris and is filled with reflec tions on the course he should ha ve pur sued in order to retain the English throne. He 6ays in one place: "I did not retire from the battle on the Boyne from a sense of fear, but that I might preserve to the world a life that I felt was destined to future greatness." The regular subscription price of the Weekly Chronicle is $1.50 and the regular price of the Weekly Oregonian is $1.50. Any one subscribing for The Chronicle and paying for one year in advance can get both The Chronicle and Weekly Oregonian for $2.00. All old subscribers paying their subscrip tions for one year in advance will be en titled to the same offer. ' Bale of lionets. I will sell on the 20th day of May, 1894, $8,000 in bonds of Hood River school district, bearing 7 per cent inter est, payable semi-annually. They will either be sold in parts of $1,000 each, or the entire $8 000 ' at one time, or any number of the eight bonds of $1,000 each, to the highest bidder for cash. These bonds are redeemable in twenty years or after ten years if convenient for the district. William Michell, Cniuity Treasurer. The Dalles, May 9, 1891. dawt!5 Rheumatism, Lumbago.' Sciatica. Kidney Complaints. - - Lama Back, &c. D3. SAKDEH'S ELECTRIC BELT With Electro-Magnetic SUSPENSORY. xiKtcs m a?niBi Mcn x nrTCBicnis a - - WW cure without medicine all WaakaM resulting from over-taxatlou of brain nervo forces t excesses or indifr eretion, as ue irons debility, aleepleftrrnees. Languor, rheumatism, kidney, liver aad bladder complaints, lame back. InmbagQ. soiatica, all female complaints. general 111 health, etc. Thla electric Belt contains TTstDSWrfal iBnraTMiMt s-nmr- ski I nthnni Pnrront im instantly frit by wearer or we forfeit $6,000,00, and will ou re all of the atwre diseases or no par. Thou- nds have been cured by this marrelouslnrention arter all other remedies failed, and we Rive hundreds of testimonials in this and every other state. Otir Pwwfal ImBra XUlfTRIC SUSFK!fSHKT- the greatest boon svr-r offered weak men, fkeb with all BHr. Healta aaa Tlgaroaa Stressta GUABAKTKKD In CO t 90asN Send for IUiu'ii Pamphlet, maUec" .sealed, tree. -.- SANDEN ELEOTRIO CO., Bo. M JCUraa SU-eet, JOJtTIAJi JQ) OR. Removed to corner Third and Washington ... streets. Portland, Or. SJDOQG It Looks Chapman Block. Second Street. J. if. 8CKENCK. 3. M. Patterson, Cssoler. president. Fftst Rational Bank. HE DALLES, - - - OREGON l General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to Sight Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly remitted on day . of collection. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on inew i ore, oan rrancisco ana fore land. DIREOTOK9. D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. Schxnck. Ed. MjWilliams, Geo. A. Liebi. rl. M. ttE&LL.- FRENCH & CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A f3ENEEALBANKINU BO8INES8 Letters of Credit issued available In he Eastern States. Sight . Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers sold on New "York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, ixraU v egon and Washington. - Collections made at all points on fav orable terms. House Moving! Andrew Velarde IS prepared to do any and all kinds of work in his line at ' " reasonable figures. Has the largest house moving outfit in Eastern Oregon. Address P.O.Box 181,The Dalles -WILL BE Sunday, May The Fiftti Ipiiaal fflaiy Mnie . OF THE - GESJ1I1 GESflliG lElftill PjilOJIlE : f AT OUR USUAL' PICNIC GROUNDS. music sv Ftiiiii 13$ass bad. Games, Races and Singing on the Ground. The REGULATOR will make two trips, xthe first at 7 A. m. and the rjoufid Trip Tielets, $1.00. Tickets can be procured THE CELEBRATED CO LT J MB I jH. BREWERY AUGUST BUCHLER, Prop'r. This well-known Brewery is now turning obi- the best Hwr and Porte east'of the Casrdes. ' The latest appliances fojr the manufactine'ol good health' . ful Beer have been introduced, and on. t the first-dins article will be p'aeeil oo he market. . .. - . : '' YKI) a Little Funny To spell it backwards, and it isn't so funny after all. By the way, we have the largest stock of it in Dalles City, and will be pleased to have you see it. " - f5 Rs 4sisv sstp John Pashek, The Merchant Tailor, 76 Court StMt, Next door to Wasco Sun OfSoe. aTJSHav JuBt received the latest styles In Suitings for Gentlemen, and h-s a large assortment of Fort led and Amer ican Cloths, whicb be can finish To Order lor those that favor him. Cleaning and Hepaifing a Specialty. The Rose Hill Greenhouse Is still adding to its large stock ol : all kinds of r . Greenhouse Plants, And can furnish a choice selec- -- tion. ' Also .; CUT FLOWERS and FORiHi DESIGNS MRS. C. L. PH5LLIPS. Harry Liebe, PRACTICAL All work promptly attended to, and warranted. Can be found at Jnoohsen's Music store, Vo. 102 Second Street. PHOTOGRAPHER. Chapman Block,- The Dalles, Oregon. I have taken 11 first prizes. - - HELD- 20th, 1894, second at 9 A. m. ' ; Children, Half Fare. from all the members. TIME TAKLKS. Itallroadn. In effect August e, 1893. AST BOOHS. ' o Arrive 10:85 P. M. Departs 11:00 r M. WBHT BOOKS. o. 1. Arrives 8:S9 A. U. Departs 8:44 A. M. ' ''- LOCAL. ' '" Arrives from Tortland at 1 p. m. Departs lor Portland a4 2 F. K. Two locai freights that carry passengers leave ue or tbe went at 8:00 a. and one for tbe ar at 5:30 A. M. ' 9TAOB9. ..... ' for Prlnerille, via. Bake Oveu, leave dally (6 A. X. For Antelope, Mitchell, Canyon City, leave ally at 6 A. K. For Dufur, Kintraler, Wamlc, Waplnltla, Warm prings and Tygh Valley, leave daily, except unday, at 6 A. M. For Goldendale, Wash., leave every day of the eek except Sunday at 7 A. M. , Offices for all lines at the tlmaMlla Rouse. - FKOFB3SIONAL,. II. H. RIDDELL attorhbt-at-Law Office Court titreet. The Dalles, Oregon. - a. b. dufub. - ruHHiHiru. DUFUR, : A MENEFEE ATTOBNSYS . at- ' law Rooms 43 and 48, over Post mce Building, Entrance on Washington Street "he Dalles, uregou. t ..... : S. BENNETT, ATTOKNE Y-AT-LA W. Of- flee in Schanuo's building, up stairs. The miles, Oregon. r. P. MATS. B. S.HU1CTIMQTOH. a. 8. WILSON. f AYS, HUNTINGTON & WILSON ATTOB .VI. hbts-at-law Offices, French's block over irat National Hank. ' i Dalles. Oregon. vv r H. WILtJON Attobhbt-at-law Booms 1 . French Jt Co.'s bank building. Second street, me uaiies, Oregon. SUTHERLAND, M. D., C. M.; F. T. M. C. M. CP. and B. O., Fhyalolan and Sur - areon. Rooms 8 and 4, Chapmau block. Residence Mrs. Thornbury's, west end of becond street. - '- ' ' - - DK. KSHKLMAN (Homeopathic; Physician And KnBAioff CaIIs answered oromntlv lay or night, city or country. Omce So. 86 and DB. O. D. D O A N E PHYSICIAN AND SUB sbon. Office; rooms 6 and 6 Chapman iloek. Residence: B. E. corner Court and Fourth streets, sec nd door from the corner Office hours to 12 A. M 2 to 6 and 7 to P. M DbLDDaLL. Dentist. (iu given for the painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth wi on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of ne Golden Tooth, Becond Street. SOCIETIES. VT ASCO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. A A. M. Meets V first and third Monday of each month at 7 M.. i i ' DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6. . Meets in Masonic Hall the third Wednesday f each month at 7 P. M. (TODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. jj. Mt. Hood Camp No. 69, Meets Tuesday even ngof each week in Fraternity Hall, at 7:30 p. m. COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 6, I. O. O. F. Meets every Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock, In K. . ol P. hall, oorner Second and Court, streets. Sojourning brothers are welcome. . . B. Clqush. Bec'y. - H. A. Bills.N. G. FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P. Meets - every Monday evening at 7:80 o'clock, in Hchanno's building, oorner of Court and Seoond . ftreeta. Sojourning members are cordially In cited. - - -. - E. Jacobsbu, , D. W.Vacsb, K. of R. and 8. CO. S8EMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF L. Meets in K A. - oi Jr. nail uw bwuuu iuu AtiuruA nnunr lavs of each month at 7:80 p. m. WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCB UNION will meet every Friday afternoon t 8 o'clock at the reading room. A 11 are, invited. THE DALLES LODGE No. 2, I.O.O.T.-Beg-, ular weekly meetings Friday at 8 p. at., a K.ofP. HaU. J. 8. Winzlbb, C. T. Dinsmobb Pabibh. Seo'y. - "TVKMPLE LODGE NO. 8, A. O. U. W. Meets X. in Fraternity Hall, over Kellers, sn Second ttreet, Thursday evenings at 7 :80. - . J. H. BLAKENEY, W. B Mybbs. Financier. M. W TAB. NE8MITH POST, No. 82, G. A. B. Meets tf every Saturday at 7:80 P. in the it. oi tr. RalL AMERICAN RAILWAY UNION, NO. 40. Meets second and fourth Thursdays each month in K. of P. haU. J. W. Rbapy, . W. H. Jonbs, Sec y. ' Pres. B OF L E. Meets every Sunday afternoon In . the K. of P. HaU. GESANG - VEREIN Meets every Sunday evening In the K. of P. Hall. BOF L, F.-DIVISION, No. 167 Meets In K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednes lay of each month, at 7:3UP. M.. . TITB CHTJKCHK9. O T. METERS CHURCH Rev. Father Bboics O eBBBT Pastor. Low Mass every Sunday at t A. K. High Mass at 10:80 A. K. Vespers at P. U. ' .-,T Pint A f'TTTT RntT TTnlnn atroot. nnnnrita O Fifth. Rev. Eli D. Sutclifle Rector. Services scnooi: A. M. t-vemng rrayer on rnaay a. . ou .... fTVIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. TiT f lob, Pastor.- Morning servioas every Sab oath at the academy at 11 A. M. Sabbath School immediately . after morning services Prayer meeting Friday evening at Pastor s res' lence. Union services in the court house at ' P.M. CONGREGATIONAL -CHURCH Rev. W.. O Ccbtis, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11 a. sr. and 7 P. at. Sunday School after morning ervioe. - Strangers cordially invited. Seats free. iri E. CHURCH Rev. J.-Whiblbb, pastor. Al m Services every Sunday morning at 11 a. m. Sunday School at 12:20 o'clock :r u. Epworth Leagae. at SjSO p.-m.- Prayer meeting -every Thursday evening at 7:80 o'clock. A cordial in vitation is extended by both pastor and people toalL- -tHRISTIAN CHURCH Rorv.P. H. MoGuftbt, KJ Pastor, neacmng iu me uunauau cuuivu each Lord's Day at 11 a. m. and 7:&0 p. m. All are wrdially invited - ' ' ' EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN Ninth street, Rev. A. Horn, pastor. Servloea at 11:80 a-m. Sunday-school at 2:80 p.m, A oordial welcome o every one.