The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, January 24, 1895, Image 1

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VOL. VIII
THE DALLES, OREGON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1895.
NO. 21
M.
SOCIETIES.
w
A8CO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. A A. M. Meets
orat ana tmra Monasy 01 escn montn at 7
r. m.
DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. .
Meets In Masonic HaU toe third Wednesday
at each month at 7 P. M.
WA8CO TRIBE, NO. 16, I. O. R. M. Meets
every Wednesday at 7:30 P. M. In K. of P.
Hall. Sojourning brothers are cordially Invited
b attend A, A. KELLER, E,
P. S. DUFUR, C. of R.
ODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD.
Mt. Hood Camp No. 59, Meets Tuesday even
ing of each week in Fraternity Hall, at 7 :30 p. m.
H "COLOMBIA LODGE, NO. 6, I. O. O. F. Meets
Vy every Friday evening at 7:80 o'clock, in K.
of P. "hall, corner Second and Court streets.
Sojourning brothers are welcome.
H. Clouoh. 8ecy. ' H. A. Bills.N. G.
RIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. ., K. of P. Meets
every Monday evening at 7:80 o'clock, in
jchanno's building, corner of Court and Second
treeta. Sojourning members are cordially in
. Tlted. W. L. BRAD8HAW,
D. W.VatJbs, K. of If. and B. O. C.
-V S8EMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF U Meets in K
. - of P. ball the second and fourth Wednes
Jays of each -month at 7:80 p. m. .
WOMEN'B CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE'
UNION will meet every Friday afternoon
t 8 o'clock at the reading room. A 11 are invited.
FERN LODGE, DEGREE OF HONOR, NO.
25. Meets In Fraternity Hall, Second street,
very .Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock.
Mas. Maktb Bbioos, C. of H.
Mas. B. J. Russin,, Financier.
rpHE DALLES LODGE No. 2, I. O. G. T. Reg
A ular weekly meetings Friday at 8 P. M., a
K. of P. HalL J. 8. Wwtut, C. T.
DrugMORK Pabibh, Sec'y.
"TTEMPLE LODGE NO. 8, A. O. O. W. Meets
1. in Fraternity Hall, over Kellers, en Second
treet, Thursday evenings at 7 :3U.
C.F.STEPHENS,
W. B Mtib, Financier. M. W
JAB. NE8MITH POST, No. 82, G. A. R. Meets
every Saturday at 7:80 P. M., In the K. of P.
Hall.
B- OF L. E. Meets every Bunday afternoon In
theK of P. HalL
EBANG 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
day of each month, at 7:80 p. u.
THI CBCECHE8.
OT. i-ETERB CHURCH Rev. Father Brons-
O oust Pastor. Low Mass every Sunday at
7 a. M. High Mass at 10:80 A.M. Vespers at
1 r. m. -.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. TAT
lok, 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 res'
lence. Union services in the court house at
P.M.
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. W. C
Cubtis, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11
n. and 7 P. M. Sunday School after morning
service. Strangers cordially invited. Beats free.
ME. CHURCH Rev. S. Whislxb, pastor.
Services everv Bundav mnnlnr at 11 a. m.
Sunday School at 12:20 o'clock p u. Epworth
League at 6:30 p. M. Praver meettni even
Thursday evening at 7:80 o'clock. A cordial in
vitation Is extended by both pastor and people
EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN Ninth street,
Rev. A. Horn, pastor. Services at 11:80 a.m.
dunday-school at 2:80 p.m A cordial welcome
PHUFESsiODAL.
II H. RIDDELL ATTOBNT-AT-LAW Office
Jl Court Street, The Dalles, Oregon.
S. B. DOFTJB. PBAHX. iiNim.
CUFUR. A MENEFEE ATTOBNBTB AT-
law Rooms 42 and 43. over Post
race Himaing, Entrance on Washington street
1 n iatie. Oregon.
t. B. CONDON. J. W. CONDON.
LONDON & CONDON. ATVORNEYB AT LAW
V7 Office on Court street, opposite the old
court house, The Dalles, Or. -
B. S. HUNTINGTON. . - H. S. WILSON.
Hl'NTlNGTON & WILSON ATTOBNKYS-AT-law
-Offices, French's block over 'lrst Na
tional Bank Dalles. Oregon.
vv
VT H. WILSON Attobnbt-at-law Rooms
French A Co.'s bank bulldlnsr. Second
atreet. The Dalles, Oregon.
J SUTHERLAND, M. Jj C. M.; F. T. M. C.
. M. C. P. and S. O., Physician and Bur
geon. Rooms 3 and 4, Chapman block.
Residence Mrs. Thornbury's, west end of Second
street.
Jfcadarhe and X&uralaia cured by Dr.
MILES' PAIN PILLS. "One cent a dose."
Pain haa no show with Dr. lilies' Pain P1IU.
Men's Overcoats.
Honywill,
Importer.
DOORS,
WINDOWS,
SHINGLES,
FIRE BRICK, .
FIRE CLAY,
LIME and
CEMENT,
Window-Glass
and
Picture Moulding.
JE31. G-LENU,
FRENCH & CO.,
BANKERS.
TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BU8INE8S
Letters of Credit ironed available in the
Eastern States.
Sight Exchange and Teleirra.nMr
Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St.
Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon,
Heatue wasn., ana various points in Ur
esron and Washington.
Collections made at all points on fav
orable terms.
J. 8. BCHSHCK,
J. M. Pattbbsok,
Cashier.
President,
First National Bank:
THE DALLES, - - - OREGON
A General Banking Business transacted
Deposits received, Bubject to Sight
Draft or Check;
Collections made and proceeds promptly
remiroea on aay 01 collection.
Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on
Mew York, ban xrrancisco and Port
land. k
DIRECTORS.
D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. Schjbnck.
Ed. M. Williams, Gbo. A. Likbb.
H. M. Bkall.
Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co.
deaubs in
mb Dniis GfiBmicals
1 ' FINE LINE OF
' and DOJSESTIC GIGflSS
At Our Old Piles cf Business.
AT COST.
Men's Suits.
Two Nebraska men are feeding -1600
cattle near Union, to be shipped East in
March. Twenty tons of grain and 11
tons of hay are required daily for the en
tire number, which creates quite a mar
ket for feed. " '
For Infants and Children.
Cmtorltt promotes Digestion, and
overcomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour
Stomach, Diarrhoea, and Feverishness.
Thus the child is rendered healthy and its
sleep natural. Castoria contains no
Morphine or other narcotic property.
" Castoria is so well adapted to children that
I recommend it as superior to any prescription
known to me." H. A. Abohkb, M. D.,
. Ill South Oxford St., Brooklya, N. Y.
M For several years I have recommerl3ed your
Castoria, and shall always continue to do so,
as it has invariably produced beneficial results."
Edwin F. Pardbk, M. D.,
125th Street and 7th Aye., New York City.
"The use of 'Castoria Is so universal and
ita merits so well known that it seems a work of
supererogation to endorse it. Few are the in
telligent families who do not keep Castoria
within easy reach.
Carlos ILihttn, D. D.,
New York City.
In Csntaub OoKPAjrr, 77 Murray Street, N. Y.
Instructions were received ' by 'Judge
Page of Astoria, Tuesday morning from
the 'officials at Washington to not send
the bark Glahdinorwig to another port
to be disinfected-but to have the local
health officers fumigate her throughout
and then release her from quarantine.
- Ores Oaks
From little acorns crow. 90 also do
fatal diseases spring from small begin
nines. Never neglect svmntoms of kid
ney troubles; if allowed to develop they
cause much suffering and sorrow. Dr.
S. H. McLean's Liver and Kidney Balm
is a certain cure for any disease or weak
cess of the kidneys. - A trial will con
vince you of its great potency. Price
$1.00 per bottle. Sold by Snipes & Kin
ersly, druggists.
Hilda Johnson, a girl 15 years of age,
living at Olalla, Kitsap county, took
strychnine Sunday morning, and died in
two hours in great agony. She wanted
to live in Seattle if she etaid on earth
at all.
Many stubborn and aggravating cases
of rheumatism that were believed to be
incurable and acc epted as life legacies,
have-yielded to Chamlier nin's Pain
Balm, much to the surprise and gratifi
cation of the sufferers. One application
will relieve the pain ami suffering aud
its continued use insures - an effectual
cure.-: 'For sale by Blakeley fe Houghton
Druggists. -.
ESTRAYED.
Please inform the undersigned of the
whereabouts of a cow branded 11 on the
left side, with dew Ian- cut up. . Don1
recollect ear marks and other brands on
her. . . jan2tf . , - Robt. Mats.
Ail pain banished by Dr. Miles' Pain Pills.
ANOTHER MAN IS SHOT
Thomas Carney Wounded by
a Soldier.
RECOVERY IS ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE
They Demand. Immediate Relief From
tbe Blockade Notes of the
Strike.
Brooklyn, Jan. 23. Thomas Carney
was shot in the side by a soldier this
afternoon. Carney had . thrown bricks
from the roof of a building on the soldiers
below. He will probably die.
Brooklyn, Jan. 23. At least one life
has been sacrificed by the strike of the
motormen and conductors of the trolley
lines. Henry Ahns. who for disregard
ing a command to halt, was shot by the
militia last night, died today. The in
jured can be counted by scores, but
most have been kept under cover in
order that they may not be prosecuted
by the police for creating disturbances.
This is the tenth day of the big strike,
and still the result hangs in the balance.
The railroad companies can operate their
lines as far as mechanical arrangements
go, but up to the present they have se
cured only about 400 new men.
At 10:45 o'clock car No. 304, of the
Court street line, and 300, of the Halsey
street line, came down Third avenue to
the Fifty-eighth street depot. There
were 25 non-nnion men on each car,
drawn from the Court and Halsey street
lines. Four police officers rode on the
cars, while two mounted policemen rode
in the rear of each car." The cars Were
escorted by companies I and F. of the
Second regiment, while two .other corn
panies of the same regiment guarded the
Fifty-eighth street depot. Both- cars
were run into the Fifty-eighth street de
pot, through crowds of strikers, who
jeered aud hooted the non-union men.
The strikers were driven off by the
troops, and the windows and doors of
houses in the vicinity ordered closed
The police drove workmen employed on
a number of new buildings, in course of
erection on Fifty-sixth and Fifty-seventh
streets, from the buildings, and placed a
guard of policemen there to prevent the
strikers from carrying off the material
used in construction of buildings, for
purposes of obstructing tracks.
A committee of citizens of the seven
teentb ward who were appointed at mass
meeting, held last night, waited on the
mayor this forenoon and asked that im
mediate relief be afforded them'. ' Bev,
Dr. Laven was the principal spokesman,
The following resolutions, which were
adopted at a meeting last night, were
presented
"Resolved, That we protest against
the monsl er monopoly of the railroad
systems of our city, and that they be
compelled by tbe city authorities to run
their cars in compliance with their char
ters, and that in the event of their non
compliance the city authorities take con
trol of the roads so that the people may
have immediate and permanent relief.
It is now the ninth day since any car
has been operated in tbe seventeenth
ward, and all business has been practic
ally destroyed at a great loss to our citi
zens, and we demand immediate relief."
In every quarter of the city the wires
were cut during the night, and the
stables and power-houses were subject to
a desultory bombardment of stones. A
few of the malefactors were arrested on
many lines.
The Myrtle avenue line opened about
3 o'clock this morning, three policemen
guarding eacb car. Soldiers were sta
tioned at all cross streets for a distance
of 30 blocks from the depot. Every win
dow was ordered closed, and no one was
allowed to stand in the streets. The car
went on its way downtown without mo
lestation..
Highest of ail in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report
)3XJ
Until 9 o'clock the number of cars in
operation was about half that of yester
day. The Fu.ton street and Flatbush
avenue lines succeeded in getting only
one or two cars through to the bridge,
for tbe reason that the wires had been
cut and the men refused to repair them.
The companies are also short of motor-
men.
Despite the assurances of Mayor
Schieren that the military force in
Brooklyn is sufficient to do all that is re
quired of it, it is believed he has made a
request for additional troops to be held
in readiness for an emergency.
The excitement began- today about
9:30, when a wagon load of about a
dozen non-union men arrived in charge
of troop A, of New York. At Fifty-first
street and Third avenue, the strikers'
headquarters, a lot of stones were thrown
at the troops and wagon, but the troops
charged the mob and drove them back
into their headquarters and down the
side streets.
Fifty rioters had a fight with the mil
itia at Fifth avenue and Twenty-fourth
street. '- One soldier got a black eye,, be
ing hit with brass knuckles. Red pep
per is freely used by rioters, and many
policemen and soldiers are suffering from
sore eyes. :-y "' - "
During the night pickets At Twenty-
fourth street and Fifth avenue were fired
oil by the rioters. None of the soldiers
were Injured. They fired in the direc
tion whence the shots came, but proba
bly without effect. "'
At 8 :15 today a crowd gathered in front
of the Bushwick Cottage hotel and jeered
at the non-union men at Ridzewood de
pot. , Com panies G and D, of the Seventh
regiment, charged on the mob and suc
ceeded in dispersing it. No shots were
fired. - ' . . - -
Blue Jackets In Che-Feo.
London, Jan. 23. A dispatch from
Che-Foo says that sailors from all for
eign Warships have been landed to pro
tect the consulates. -
Advices to the Pall Mall Gazette, un
der date of December 4th, published
this afternoon, report that a panic ex
isted then among the inhabitants of
Che-Foo, on account of the proximity
of Japanese soldiers to the city: The
Chinese troops were said to be upon the
point of mutiny. It is added that ow
ing to diplomatic' objections the plan
was not to land any bluejackets from
foreign .warships without nrgent neces
si ty for so doing, but signalmen ashore
and afloat were to remain on the look
out day and night.'
The correspondent says : "All male
foreigners, numbering about thirty, are
armed, and are able to hold the Chinese
in check:-until" help" arrives,- but God
help outlying American missions.'' :
Senator Palmer Wishes the Mortgage
. Fald in Silver. -
v Washington, Jan. 23. Senator Pal
mer introduced a bill today ' directing
that the senior mortgage "bonds of the
Union ; Pacific railroad be payable in
silver dollars. The bill provides further
that if there are not enough silver dol
lars coined and in the treasury the sec
retary may " cohr from bullion in .the
treasury enough to meet the deficit.
do-not expect to see the bill passed this
session," said Palmer, "but it will serve
to counteract the proceedings com
menced in the federal courts of St. Louis
to foreclose these senior mortgages
The Illinois senator thinks the proceed
ing in court is in the nature of a menace
to force congress to pass a bill extending
the time of the payment of its debt to
the government. '
Further Proceedings Against the Union
Pacific Railroad. . .
Lincoln, Neb., Jan. 23. Proceedings
in foreclosure against the Union Pacific
railway similar to that instituted at St
Louis, were begun yesterday in the fed
eral court before Judge Dundy by F. G
Dexter and Oliver Ames, trustees of the
mortgage bondholders. The plaintiffs
set up that the company defaulted on
the interest of July I, 1894, and contin
ued in' default until November 27th,
when the receivers offered to pay the
defaulted interest. Plaintiffs relate the
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A t. ar
It
RnochaV
At Your Door.v v
A trne improvement always receives
a welcome in the average American
home, the most home-like borne in tbe
world. The coal stove, the gas, the
water, the sewing machine and the
clothes wringer have found an entrance
everywhere. Another candidate now
appears. It is
the new vegetable shortening and sub
stitute for lard. Thousands have found
this as great a blessing as its predeces
sors. It is now at your door. Will you
accept its proffer of better cooking in
your kitchen, better food on your table,
better health in your household?
Cottolsne is sold in 8 and (
pound pails, by .all erocera.
Get the connlne. Hade by
The N. K. Fairbank
Company,
ST. LOTJXS and
Chicago, Hewlork, Bostea.
appointment of the receivers October
13, 1S93, by Judge Dundy, and allege
that therefore all property of the railway
is in the hands of the court.
It Sray Xo as Much for Vow.
. Mr. Fred Miller, of Irving, 111. J writes
that he had a Severe Kidney trouble for'
many years, with severe pains in his'
back and also that bis bladder Was af
fected. He tried many so called Kidney
cures but without' any good result.
AJ year ago he began the use of Elec
tric Bitters and found relief at oncel
Electric Bitters is especially adapted to
cure of all Kidney and Liver trouble and
often gives almost instant relief. One
trial will. prove our statement. Price
only 60c. for large bottle. At Snipes St
Kinersley's Drug Store.
Solely' for Protection.
Washington, Jan. 23. Admiral Car
penter has cabled the navy department
that he landed the marines at Che-Foo
for tbe protection of the consulate. He
reports that commanders of the French
and German warships pursued the same
course. '
A dispatch from Minister Denby re
ports the Chinese peace plenipotentia
ries will leave- Shanghai on the 28th
inst. by the French mail steamer for
Japan. - . .
Carlton Corn well, foreman of the
Gazette, Middleton, N. J., believes that
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy should
be in every home. He u?ed it for a cold
and it effected a speedy cure. He eays :
"It is indeed a grand remedy, I can rec
omend to all. I have also seen it used
for whooping cough, with tbe best
results." 50 cent bottles for sale by
Blakeley & Houghton Driigists.
Broker Qaljrley Secured S16.000 From
tbe Peqnonnock National.
Bridgeport, Conn., Jan. 23. It was
learned last night that another bank
had been caught by Broker Quigley.
The Peqnonnock National bank has a
loan of $16,000, and $26,000 in bonds as
collateral. Cashier Prindle says the
loan was made before the firm of Quigley
& Tuttle was dissolved and that he will
hold Tuttle's property to protect the
bank. Cashier Prindle has not exam
ined the bonds and thinks that Bome of
them may be genuine.
There is good reason for the' popu-,
larity of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy.
Davis & Buzard, of west monterey.
Clarion Co,, Pa., say: "It has cured
people that our physicians could do
nothing for. We persuaded them to try
a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Rem
edy and they now recomend it with the
rest of. us." . 25 and 50 cent bottles for
sale by Blakeley & Houghton Druggists.
Dr.! 'Miles Kibti Plasters cure KHETTW-A-TISM.
WEAK BACKS. At druggists, only ,
Dr. Miles' Pain Pills core HeursJaia.
.wv . ., mm
m- it