Tiis Dalles Daily Chronicle. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. t am, postaob ruruo, m advabcb. Weakly. 1 Tear.. ....I 1 60 0 7 .... 0 80 6 00 8 00 .... 0 50 " 6 months... 8 " ... Dally, 1 year...; " 6 months. " per " Address all communication to " THE CHRON ICLE," The Dalles, Oregon. Fost-Ofllce. ' omc hottrs . General Delivery Window 8a.in.to7 p. m. Money Order " 8 a. m. to 4 p. m. Bunday ii D 9 a. m. to 10 a. m. CLOSING Of MAILS ; ' trains going East . .9 n. m. and 11:45 a. m. " Went 9 p. m. and 6:80 p. m. -DLaije ior wiiaenaaie 7 :au a. m. " " PrlnevtUo 6:80 a. m. u "Dufur and Warm Springs .6:S0 a. m. ' " f Leaving for Lyle ft Hartland. . 5 : 80 a. m. " " " iAntelope ....6:80a.m. Except Sunday. Trl-weekly. Tuesday Thursday and Saturday, t - " Monday Wednesday and Friday. MONDAY, MAY 14. 1894 IJEPUBliICflH STATE TICKET For Congress, Second District, W. R. ELLIS, of Heppner. For Governor, W. P. LORD, of Salem. For Secretary of State, H. E. KINGAID, of Eugene. For 8tate Treasurer, PHIL. METSCHAN, of Grant County. For Supt. Public Instruction, G. M. IRWIN, of Union. For Bapreirte Judge, ( CHAS. E. WOLVERTON of Albany.' - . - ' For Attorney-General, ' C. M. IDLEMAN. of Portland. For State Printer, W. H. LEEDS, of Ashland. For Prosecuting Attorney, 7th Dlst, A. A. JAYNE, of Arlington. For Member of the State Board of Equalization, W. C. WILLS of Crook county. For Representatives, IV. R. C00N,' of Hood River. T. H. McGREER, of Antelope. COTJIsrT- TICKET. For Sheriff, J. DRIVER, of. ainic. IHOS. For County Clerk, ,Jl. M. KKLSA.Y, of the Dalles. For Supt. of Schools, ' TROY Sli ELLE Y, of Hood River. Ft County Assessor, F. H. WAKEFIELD, of The Dalles. F" 'r County Treasurer, WM. MICHELL, of The Dalles. For County Commissioner, A. S. BLOWERS, of Hood River. For Coroner, W. H. BUTTS, of The Dalles. . For County Surveyor, f E. F. SHARP, of The Dalles. For Justice of tbe.Peace, the Dalles, , L. S, DAyiS. , For Constable, the Dalles, A. A. TJRQUHART. PENNO YEB'S SUCCESSES. Pennoyer'e greatest successes are his etump epetches. He. can , lead around by the nose almost any mixed crowd, by force of illusory statementa calcu lated to pler.ee the impecunious, and the toiling masses who have little time, to think. His A lbina- speech .was no ex ception. The truth i 'Pennoyer is the biggest dt uiaogue,,irn: the. state,,:, and were the men he best likes to harangue deprived of their, votes,, be would bave no nse fur them. . Whenever he -uieas tires his intelligence- against statesmen on Diallers of : national policy.be invar lahly Buffers by jthe" contest. , His free silver Sentinif uts have time and again . been proven fatuous. Both , the ; re 'publican and democratic. parties concede that us effect would bring disaster, and no pulic i-.t-n of note .will seriously urge its nd .piion, unless from .the same deimigogiu motives that -influence Sy. -vestur IVmc.yer. Just as transparent is his references to the alleged lavish- ness bi the laot legislature. ,The incon sistency of his acts with his. platform utteritncs' have been shown up time ami agniii by the press all over the state, t'lH it d n?snot affect his set speech in the . lea-t, and with the embellish ments of frt. I.ing anecdotes and jokes lie coniinu-a to create cheap but effective popularity with those classes who con 4rihme to the ranks of the populists, Pennoyer could have vetoed any appro priation he considered extravagant, but hediiln't. Therefore, as a safety valve . be i not. reliable, according to his owo statement. He attacks Judge Lord for drawing more than his constitutional dues, and charges Mr. Galloway with not ren-leriiw services equal to his com peiisatioii, hut besides failing to prove these statements, with singular blind' necs, he d'lea not recognize that he is more vulnerable on these very points than tlie ventlemen he attacks. It is Well known that.Gov. Pennoyer spaces out hiit salnry with earns not legally provided, and as for not rendering ser vices equal to his compensation, what service is he rendering the state by spending five or six weeks in the field booming himself, while drawing the salary " that pays him for being in his office at Salem? ' His Coxey army eenti ments disgrace his station for he poses as their apologist and abettor. His official ' position lends strength to that unworthy cause, which is now growing to be a public menace. Considering all these facts it is high time Pennoyer was retired to private life. Hiaexauiple is not fitting to place before the youth of the land. The governor's chair should not be filled by 8 crank, a demagogue and a disturber of national peace. The Coxey wildcat is show its claws. beginning to There are 9,000 saloons in New York, and 175,267 ' democrats twenty demo crats to each saloon. There seems to be a ponderous tidal wave sweeping over Kentucky, in which Willie Breckinridge will be totally en gulfed. The people are determined that Kentucky shall hot be disgraced again. . It would be in better keeping if Gov ernor Pennoyer would attend strictly to the business of the office to which he is. elected, instead of drawing governor's salary while he is making political stump speeches. . If the governor will give our farmers a dollar a bushel for their wheat, instead of filllinsr the Coxey sympathizers' heads with hosh,he will be attending to something better. NATURE'S PYROTECHNICS. The West Indies Is i be Place to See Them at Their Bost. The phenomenon known as light ning', followed by a rolling-, reverber ating report, recogn ized as thunder, is common to a wide zone of the earth, but it is not generally known ' that there are localities where the vivid flashes and the deafening- peals are in cessant. The most" notable of these continuous lightning districts, says the Pittsburgh Dispatch, is on the eastern coast of the island of San Do mingo, a leading member of the group of the West Indies. ' It is not meant that the lightning- is here continuous the year round, but that, with the commencement of the rainy season, comes this zigzag feature of electric il lumination, which is then continuous day and night for weeks. The storm center is not continuously local, but shifts over a considerable area, .and, as thunder is seldom heard over a greater distance than., eight miles, and the lightning in the night will illuminate so as to be seen thirty miles, there may be days in some localities where the twinkle on the sky is in a continuous succession while the rolling reports are absent. : Then . again - come days and nights when the electric artillery is piercing in its detonations; and especially is this the case when two separate local cloud centers join, as it were,- in an electric duel, and, as some times occurs, a third participant ap pears to add to the elemental warfare. Then there is a blazing sky with blind ing vividness and stunning peals that seem to pin tho listener to the earth. Long before the echoes can .die raway come others, until the auricular mech anism seems hammered into chaos. - : r -. Deafness Cannot be Cared By local . applications, as they cannot each the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure Deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. reafness 19 caused by an inflamed con dition -of . the mucous lining .of the b'nstachian Tube. -- When this tube eets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect bearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the ln-narnmaUon can be taken out and this. tube-restored to its normal condi tion j. hearing will be destroyed forever ; tune. cases out. ot. -ten are caused . bv catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed .condition of. the mucous surfaces. We will eiveOne Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness caused by catanh) that cannot he cured by Hairs Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. ,v F. J. CH KNE Y & Co., Toledo, O- COTTSold by Drnggists, 75c. . Dr. S. F. Scott, Blue Ridge, Harrison Co., Mo., Bays: "For whooping cough Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is excel lent." - By using it freely the disease is deprived of all dangerous consequences. There is no danger in giving the Remedy to babies, as it contains nothing injur ions. 60 cent bottles for sale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists. ' Persons who sympathize with the afflicted will rejoice with D. E. Carr of 1235 Harrison street, Kansas City. He is an old sufferer from inflammatory rheumatism, but has not heretofore been troubled in this climate. Last winter he went up into Wisconsin, and in con sequence has bad another attack. "It came upon me very acute and' severe, he said. "My joints swelled and became inflamed ; sore to touch or almost to look at. TJpon-'the urgent request of - my mother-in-law tried Chamberlain's Pain Balm to reduce the swelling and ease the pain, and to my agreeable snr prise, it did both. I have used three fifty-cent bottles and believe it to be the finest thing for rheumatism, pains and swellings extant, j For Bale by Blakeley Notice. "." . ' All city warrants registered prior to October 3, 1891, are now - due -and paya ble at "my office.: Interest- ceases after this date. I.' irBuRGBTCity Treas. Dated Dalles City, May 1, 1894. TTTANTED Pushina"! Canvasser of nrvf ait. ' dress Libeial salary and expenses paid weekly; rermsnens posuion. fc jauwh a KOa CO., fcuxaerymeo, fortlaud, Or. dawtjy'.SS. RECKLESS WASTE OF LIFE. Few or the IiStnt DlscOTerlea . of By Blenie S-leno Are Vet Ctlllaed. - An tTifjwKt.5riff And t-rt n. ,o.frtA.ln lem luairavbivD o l lit ilih u uusjusuap i peared showing what .a reeUless waste j of life is going on among us all the : time, says Demorest's Magazine. The ; number of deaths from causes prevent-; able by means now woll . known to science is shown to constitute almost the entire death list of one of the j leading cities of the country, where, j after a death rate of CO 7. there were only twenty-five deaths recorded from old age. Seventeen, of these deaths oc- cured from typhoid fever, a disease which should never exist in a civilized country. In the French and German armieb, wnere a modern system- 01 treatment prevails, only one typhoid patient in fifty dies, .. Pulmonary diseases carry oil 243 per sons on this list, and yet it is asserted that even in cases where children in herit a tendency to consumption there is no need for. it to develop if proper precautions are taken in time regard ing exercise, breathing and habits. Stomach troubles claim 155 more vic tims, and' arc attributable entirely to carelessness in eating and drinking a proper regulation of diet, aa it is claimed, being all that would be neces sary to prevent every one of them. This reduces the death rate from a lit1 tie over 19 to about 0 per cent., and, with the natural addition to the length of those lives reported to have been lost through old age, would probably bring up the :average sum of human years to 175 or even higher. The fact is that few of the latest dis coveries of science are utilized to ben efit humanity. People seldom call upon the doctors until their condition has become chronic, and then; to save expense, they rarely undergo thorough treatment. Then, again, we go on eat ing and drinking what we know is the last thing we should think of putting into our tomachs, in utter disregard of the laws of diet. We habitually drink water that is often as certain a poison as strychnine or alcohol; we live under sanitary conditions which render per fect health an impossibility, and, last ly, we load our lives with burdens which, while assisting in no way .to our betterment, sap the very roots of our existence and make life a melan choly pilgTimage. ' Who shall rear a temple to the goddess Hygea and make Methuselahs as common as roses in June? . . ZUNI DANCERS. Plantation Darkles An Nowhere In Com parlson. "The Zuni Indians are the original wing and buck dancers," said George Sherman, a Denver man, to a reporter for the Fort Worth Gazette. "I've seen the genuine plantation negroes in Louisiana and Mississippi and the min strel article, but they are -simply not in it with the Zunis. 1- went to Tucson, A. T., several years ago, one Spring, and we visited a pueblo near where there are many Zuni Indians. A fellow with us asked if -we had ever- seen 'em dance. ' We said we hadn't, and he said we'd missed a treat, for they took: the cake for fancy foot movements. Lie spoke to the old alcalde of the settle ment, and he called two men. They were fine-looking men, not very tall, but -sinewy, supple and well made, Without any preliminaries, they set to, and of all the high jumping, side leap ing, heel-and-toe" work,, sliding,' shuf fling, I ever saw, that dancing was the best. They were light on their, feet, graceful and quick as lightning in all their movements. - They -whirled away from each other, with a pretty heel-tap movement, spun .around at- the same time, touching ; the tips of . their., toes, turned a pack somersault and came down like feathers? keeping 4n perfeat time. "The only accompaniment' they had was a rude sort of tom-tom and the whistling of .a boy. - They danced .for three-quarters of an hour and weren't broken down. ' -j . - r. . "This was on the bare ground mind you. Then a fine-looking boy brought a stone not-more than a "foot; -square, threw it on the; ground,1 hopped, -upon it,- and J gave the finest clog dan.ee and ctouWe-shaffky I'everv.6aw.r.--:IIe had on cheap worn hoes, With-the heels near ly worn off, ut he didn't- mindthot. He spun around on his toes, on his heels; danced with one .. foot held; ;in his hand; jumped . up and clapped his heels together twice, and whirled about on the toe of one foot. Then he beat a sort of tattoo with the heel of one foot, and made some-: fancy move ments with the other. He gave a few wing-, movements - that .. caught, -the crowd. After he. got through with a number of difficult fancy movements he jumped down as fresh as a daisy. There were other .dancers, and for ec centric movements, fancy steps and pretty figures I've never seen the like. 1 understood that Primrose, the min strel, saw these people dance once and got stuck on 'em and tried to get -'em with his show. They would make a great hit." Rheumatism. Lumbago. Sciatica, Kidney Complaints. Lama Back. &c. D3. SASSEM'S ELEGT?,IC CELT With Electro-Magnetlo SUSPENSORY 1 Win cure with oat medtdne all Wnkw ramltiiigr from orr-tjitou of brain nerr foroeat exoemesor lnclis erction, as nerrons debility, sleepletvneas. larifrnor, rheumatism, kidney, lier and bladder compljunta. lame back, lumbago, sciatica, all female complaints, genera) ill health, etc. This electric Belt coutaina Wonderful baprtnaatu OT6T all other. Current ia Instantly felt by wearer or we forfeit $4,000,00, and will cure ail of tho atov diaeases or no par. Thou-i-rd have been cured by this marreloua inrention after all other remedies failed, and we Rive baadred of testimonials in this and erery other State. Onr Pewerfal latprmd KLECTRIO SD8PKITS0BT . the flrrpotest boon aver offered weak men, FREK with all -Brlta. fiealta and Tlnrwaa StiWBKta GUAKirTTKBD la ftO t wOdarv fiend for IUnaM Pamphlet, mailet: .sealed free - SANDEN ELECTRtO CO.. Bo. XT Kiraa l JHJBXIJlKJ OUE., Removed to corner Third and Washington streets, PortXaud, Or. Inie ves Come Chapman Block. Second Street. 9. DCHIXCl, President. . M. Patterson, ' 4Jashier. First Rational Bank. "H E ' DALLES, - - OREGON A General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to Sight v Draft or Check.. Collections made and proceeds promptly .- : . . i ,1 f 11 i- Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold ot rtew York, San rrancisco and Port- : land. OIRBOTOK9. D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. Schknox. Ed. M.,WriLiAM, - -' Go. A. Lisbk. H. M. Bbaxl. - FRENCH & CO., BANKERS. r RAN8 ACT A GKNKBAI, BANKING B U SINKS Letters of Credit issued available in he Eastern States. ' : Sight Exchange and- c Telegraphic rransfers sold on-New-Yorky Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, oociibio , , nan., ouu iwiuua juiu ui vri egon and Washington. , - ... ... - . . ; Collections made at all points on fav orable terma. House Moving! Andrew Velarde ' IS prepared to do any and all kinds of work in bis line at . , reasonable figures. . Has the ; largest house moving outfit ; . - in Eastern Oregon. Address P.O.Box 181, The Dalles OF -WILL BE and The Fifth Annual Sunday, May 20th, 1894, AT OUR USUAL PICMC GROTODS, THIS SIDE OF MOSIEE. -miJSIC BV ' pijlili BRASS BAflD. Games, Races and Singing on the Ground. REGULATOR -will make two trips, the first at 7 a. m. and the second at 9-a. m. The 5ound Trip Tielets, $1.00. Tickets can be procured TH E ! CELt BR KTED AUGUST BUCHl-Hn. Prop'r. I . . f ,ThI wll-known Brewery .is. now, ;tnrmi;-ftif tt beet ilner nrtA: Port aet of the Caac4ea. -The: lateet Appliances lor the Banufactareof 'ood hf-nJtt fnl Eerbave been Introduced, and on. 7 tho first-claae article will be p actl on be market. :. ' - - r Steal No person needs to steal when they, can - buy Clothing and Dry .Goods from us at such low prices as we are selling at. Take What John Pashek, The Merchant Tailor, 78 Count StPt, . Beit door to "Wasco Sun Office. . VHa' Just received the latest styles in Suitings for Gentlemen, and h is large assortment of For ign and Amer ica" Cloths, which be can finish To Order for those that favor him. Cleaning and Repairing a Speeialty. The Rose Hill Greenholise Is still adding to its large stock , . j of all kinds of : . V Greenhouse Plants, And can furnish a choice selec- ". ...."i. ... tion. Also. 'fi CUT FhOWERS and fLOHflli DESIGNS MRS. C. L. PHILLIPS. HarryLiebe, PRACTICAL All work promptly attended to, r and warranted. Can be fonnd at Jaeobsen's' Music store, No. 162 Second Street. . r PHOTOGRAPHER. . Chapman Block, The Dalles, Oregon. I have taken II first prizes. THE - HELD- Children Half Fare. from all the members. ,' (Day WGD16 iioi You Want TIME TA KLE8. Kailrala. " : In efltect August 0, 1893. . : " ' BABT -BOUKD. - o. . arrive. 106 r. a. Departs 11:00 T . wist bound. "o. 1. Arrtvea 3:39 A. M. Departs S:44 A. x. local. .- . , -.. v Arrive, from Portland at 1 r. v. Departa for Portland at S T. U. Two locat frelgSts that carry pastier) gera leave ne for the went at 8:00 A. M., and one for Uie ui at 5-30 A. M. - STAG ES. -If or Prlnevllle, via. Bake Oven, leare daily .ltl.IL For Antelope, Mitchell, Canyon City, leave ally at 6 a.m. ' For Dufnr. Klntraley, Wamlo, Wapinitia, Warm -prings and Tygh Valley, leave daily, ezoept -nnday, at 6 A. M. :Fot Ooldendale, Wash., leave every day of the eek exoept Bunday at 7 a. m. " Office, for all lines at the maUla House. . FUUFESSIONAL. H. RIDDELtrATTOBMBT-aT-LAW -Office Court Street, The Dalles, Oregon. . B. B. DUrUB. " rBAMB SUtlFII. DUfUR, s MKNEFEE AnoEKiTi it law Rooms 42 and 43, ' over Post mce Building, Entrance on Washington Street "he Dalles. Oregon. - - o. BENNETT, ATTORNE Y-AT-LA W. Of iV. Qoe U Schanno's building, up stairs. The alies, Oregon. 1 r. r. mats. - a. s.HCHTiNqTON. , a. s. wiiaon. AYS, HUNTINGTON A WILSON ATTOB- , hxys-at-law omces, Frencn s block over irst National Bana. uaiies. uregon.-- : H. WILbON Attobiibt-at-iw Rooms French .& Co.'s bank builaing, Seoond . street. The Dalles, Oregon. - J. SUTHERLAND. M. D., C. M.: F. T. M. C. il. C. P. and 8. O., Fhysloian and Bor- : (ton. KoomB s ana 4, tnapmau oiock. Residence Mrs. Thorubury'g, west end of Second street. : - - .. .- Da. ESHKLMAN (HOMEOPATHIC; PHVSICIAK. and 6URQSON. Calls answered promptly ' lay or night, city or country. . 'Chapman block. Office cio. do ana wtf D K. O. D. U U A N K - PHYB1C1AK iB 8DS- SB0K. Otlice; rooms 6 ana , ucapman nook. Residence: S. E. e truer :ourt and . Fourth streets, sec nd door from the corner mce hours 9 to 12 A. M., t to 5 and 7 to i P. M ' v -n, MAIL Dsntidt. Ua given for the J painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth ei on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of ae Golden Tooth, Second Street. SOC1KT1BS. S ASnO LODOE. NO. 15. A. F. & A. . M. Meets first and third Monday of each month at 7 DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6..: Meets in Masonic Hall the third Wednesday I earb month at 7 P. M. - f ODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. l Mt. Hood Camp No. 69, Meets Tuesday even- ne of each week In Fraternity Hall: at 7:80 p. r COLUMBIA LUDUK, NO. 6, L O. O. F. Meeta .j everv rnaay evening at ? :au o cioca, in iv. d P.- hall, corner Second and Court nail. streets. iolouming brothers- are welcome. 5. OtorjOH, SeCy. . - H. A. BIUJ.N. O, ' FRIENDSHIP tODGE, NO. ., K.f P. Meeta 1 every Monday evening at 7:30 o'olock, in -tehanno's building, corner of Court and Seoond treeta. Sojourning members are- cordially ln--Ited. - E. Jacobsen, D. W.Vaosb, K. of R. and g. - CO. ' ' VSSEMBLY NO. 41tf7, K. OF L. Meets In K of P. hall the second and fourth Wednes lavs of each month at 7:80 p. m. . .-- - tl'OMKN'B CHRISTIAN TKMPKRENCK ' V UNION will moet every Friday afternoon t o'clock at the reading worn. - All are Invited. THR DALLES LODGE No. 2, 1. 0. 4. T. -Reg-' nlar weekly meetings Friday at 8 P. m., ar K. of P. Halls - J 8. Wiuzlkb, C. T. Dimbmqbb Pabibw, Bec'y. . IKMPLK LODUK NOi , A. O. 0. W. Meets' - in Fraternity Hall, over Kellers, en Second freet, Thursday evening, at 7:i. - J. H. BLAKENEY, W. B MTBBB.Tinancier; M. W ' I AS. NESM1TH POST, No. 82, li. A. R. Meets -J every Satnrday at 7:80 p. M.,in the K. of P. talL -: . AMERICAN RAILWAY UNION, NO. 40. Meets seomd and fourth Thursdays each month in K. of P. hall. 3, W. Bbady, W. H. Jqbbb, Sec y. ' " Frex. It OF L. K. Meets every Sunday afternoon in . I the K, of P. HalL ; I EBANU ' VERE1N Meets every Sunday f evening n the K. of P. Hall. BOF L, F. DIVISION, No. 17 Meets In . K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednes day of each month, at 7:3n p. M. ' THE CH I'KCH KB.' T. r-ETERft CHURCH Rev. Father Broms o esBST Pastor. Low Mass every Sunday at a. M. High Maas at 10:30 A.M. Vespers at ' P. M. ' ... " . T. PAULS CHURCH Uulou Street, opposite Fifth. , Rev. Eli D. BntoliOe Rector. - Services very Sunday at 11 A. M. and 7:30 P. M. Sunday School 9:45 A. M. Evening Prayer on Friday at ':0 ...... . ... L.MRST BAPTIST CHURCH--Rev. O. D.-Tat-, r :IX)B, Pastor. ' Morning services every Sab ath at -the academy at '11- -m.r -6abbaU School Immediately after morning servicea Prayer meeting Friday evening at Pastor resV leuce. Union services in the court house at . M. --' " -" "- - - ClONUKEUATlONAA, CHURCH Rev, W-.-C -CDETiSr Paste. - Sorvlceo every Sunday at 11 v. M. and 7 P. M. Sunday School after morning ervioe. Strangers cordially Invited. Seats free. M i K. CHURCH Rev. J. Wbislbb, pastor. .. Services every Sunday morning at 11 a. m. Sunday School at-12:20 o'clock-p M. Epworth Uiagne at 6:80 P. M. rVayer- meeting every Thuraday evening at 7:80 o'clock. A cordial ln ritation is extended by both pastor and people oalL I .. '".'.. J: . . " GHRIdTlAS CHURCH-'RBV P. H.:McGOPTT Pastor. I Preaching In the Christian church each Lord's Dav at 11 a. nu.and 7:i0 p. m. .All il .11. tw ut.ail - kJ-MJairl THAI. .nTITKRAK Ninth sunday-eobool at 2:80 p.m . A cordial welcome o every one.