Clil J(Hl'L v VOL. VIII THE DALLES, OREGON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1895. NO 36. BOSS CASH STORE Agency of the BROWNSVILLE CLOTHING, BLANKETS, &c. On fleeount of Siekness in JJy Family, And physiciana recommending a change of climate, my entire stock of Will be Sold 20 Per Cent. Below Cost. There -will also "be a reduction made in prices of Pho tographs in order to use up stock on hand. BUILDING F R S M E . Chicago Photograph Gallery, Second Street, Opposite Mays & Crowe's Hardware Store, The Dalles. F. FORTIN, . . . . Proprietor. SOCIETIES. TT7ABCO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. fe A. M. M V first and third Monday of each month .Meets at 7 DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6. Meets in Masonic Hall the third Wednesday of each month at 7 P. M. WASCO 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 to attend A, A. KELLER, 8, D. S. DUFUR, C. of R. MODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. Mt. Hood Camp No. 69, Meets Tuesday even ing of each week in Fraternity Hall, at 7 :30 p. m. COLOMBIA 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. H. Clough, Sec'y. H. A. Bills.N. G. FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. ft., K. of P. Meets every Monday evening at 7:80 o'clock, in gchanno's building, corner of Court and Second treets. Sojourning members are cordially in vited. W. L. BRADSHAW, D. W.Vausb, K. of R. and 8 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. TITOMEN'8 CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE T T UNION will meet every Friday afternoon at 8 o'clock at the reading room. All are invited. TnERN LODGE. DEGREE OF HONOR. NO. X? 25. Meets in Fraternity Hall, Second street, every weanesaay evening at o ciock. Mrs. B. J. RU88EIX, C. of H. Miss Coba Jolks, Financier. rpHE DALLES LODGE No. 2, I. O. G. T. Reg L ular weekly meetings Friday at 8 P. M., a' K. of P. HalL J. 8. Wimzlib, C. T. Dinsmokb Pabibh, Bec'y. THEMPLE LODGE NO. 3, A. O. D. W. Meets m. in fraternity nan, over Kellers, en secona nreet, i nursaay evenings at 7 :au. C. F. STEPHENS, W. 8 Myers, Financier. M. W TA8. NE8M1TH POST, No. 82, G. A. R. Meets every eaturaay at 7 :oo r. M., in tno a., oi tr. T OF L. E. Meets every Sunday afternoon in the K of P. HalL GESANG VEREIN Meets every evening In the K. of P. Hall. 8unda T OFLF. DIVISION. No. 167 Meets in JJ. K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednes day oi each month, at 7 :3u p. it. PROFESSIONAL. H H. RIDDELL Attobsrt-a.t-La.w-Office . court street, xne Ataxies, Oregon. S. B. DUFUR. FRANK. XtNIRI. rvUFTJR, MENEFEE Attorneys - AT- XJ law Rooms 42 and 48, over Post '.mice Building, Entrance on Washington Street 1 oe uaiies. Oregon. J. B. CONDON. J. W. CONDON. CONDON & CONDON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW Office on Court street, opposite the old court Douse, me uaues, ur. B. S.RUNTINOTOir. H. S. WILSON. HUNTINGTON & WILSON ATTORNS YB-AT-law Offices, French's block over irst Na- tlonal Bank Dalies, Oregon, 7 H. WILSON Attoknbt-at-law Rooms . French & Co.'s bans, building, Second oliwl, i ne uauea, Oregon. J SUTHERLAND, M. I C. M. ; F. T. M. C. M. c. P. and 8. O.. Physician and Bar. , . on. Rooms 8 and 4, Chapman block. Residence Mrs. Thombury's, west end of Second urn. Dp. Miles' Pain Pills cure Neuralgia. DOORS, WINDOWS, SHINGLES, FIRE BRICK, FIRE CLAY, LIME and CEMENT, Window-Glass and Picture Moulding1. 2E3I. O LIE ZEST 2sT FRENCH & CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BU8INEBS Letter? of Credit issued available in the Eastern States.' Sight , Exchange and Telegraphic rransferssoldon JSew York:. Unicaeo. St. Louie, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or. egon and Washington. Collections made at all points on f av orable terms. ' E. JACOB3EN THE LEADER IN Pianos and Organs, Books, NOTI ONS, STATION E R Y. Call and get his prices. Bells PIANOS on easy monthly payments, and is prepared to meet nnv rOHPRTITION. 16 THE DALLES OR Samsonian Traits as Great strength and endurance axe the chief virtues of Straus, Glaser & Co.'s "KAST IRON" Clothing. Economy in. price and good appearance com plete what should be your choice, when you buy clothing again. We sell "KAST IRON" we know it's GOOD. M. HONYWILL, Im-porfor. For Infants and Children. Castoria. promotes Digestion, and overcomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, and Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep natural. Caatoria 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. Abceik, M. D., Ill South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T. " For several years I have recommencled your Castoria,' and shall always continue to do so, as it has invariably produced beneficial results." Edwin F. Pardbb, M. D., 125th Street and 7th Ave., New York City. "The use of 'Castoria is so universal and Its merits so weU 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." Cabins Mabttn, D. D., New York City. Thb Cxntaur Company, 77 Murray Street, N. Y. A Splendid Offer. Our clubbing arrangements with the Sau Francisco Examiner entitles those subscribing for that paper in connection with The Chbonicxe to all the benefits of their premium offer, that is a num bered receipt and choice of premium pictures. The price of the Examiner is $1.75, the price of The Chboniclk $1.50, and we send you both with all privileges as above etated for one year for $2.25. VTotlce. On and after Dec. let, 1S94, all county warrants issued by the county clerk will be made payable to order, and no county warrant will be stamped or listed by the county treasurer unless endorsed by the party to whom said order is issued. By order of the County Court. A. 8. Blowers. G. C. Blakeley. County Com'r. County Judge. Do you want Thb Chronicle and San Francisco Examiner for a year? If so send us $2.25 and you can have them, 156 papers for $2.25 or less than a cent and a half a pioce. If you would rather have the New York World, we will send you that and the Semi-Weekly Chron icle one year for $2.25. The World is also a semi-weekly so you will get 208 papers for $z.zo. Help -wanted. $12.00 a day to agents' selling the Royal White Metal Plater or taking or ders for plating. Trade secrets, formu lae, receipts, ect., furnished free. A good agent can make two to three thou sand dollars per year with the Royal Plater. For terms, etc., address Gray & Co., Plating Works, Columbus, Ohio. . Notice. Lost, One red and white heifer, 3-year-old in the spring; branded w on the hip; marked smooth crop off the right ear and slit and under bi t in the left ear. Alo one almost red 2-year-old heifer, branded on the hip same as red and white heifer's brand. Any one letting me know where they are will be rial d for their trouble. Aaareta tnpt buuiiihisll, anlt-lra Jndsrsby, Wasco Co., Orscon, ( is. ons BEFORE THE SENATE The President Furnishes a Number of Documents COMPLIANCE WITH A REQUEST The Locbooki of Naval Tassels Caanet be Obtained, Bat Reports af Tbelr Commanders Are Snbmltted. Washington, Feb. 11. The president today eent the following message to congress : - "To the senate : On the 8th day of January I received a copy of the follow ing senate resolution : .Resolved, that the president be required, if not incom patible with public interest, to com municate to the senate all reports, docu ments and other papers, including logs of vessels, relating to the enforcement of regulations, respecting fur eeals, adopted by the governments of the United States and Great Britain, in ac cordance with the decision of the tri bunal of arbitration convened at Paris, and the regulations under which said re ports are required to be made, as well as relating to the number of Eeals taken during the season of 1894 by pelagic hunters and by lessees of Pribyloff and Commander islands;, also relating to to steps which may have been taken to extend said regulations to Asiatic waters, the North Pacific ocean and Behring sea and eecure the concurrence of other nations in said regulations, and further, all papers not heretofore published, in cluding the communications of the agent of the United States before said tribunal at Paris, relating to the claims of the British government on account of the seizure of sealing vessels in Behring sea." "In compliance with said request, I herewith transmit sundry papers docu ments and reports, which have been re turned to me by the secretary of the state, the secretary of the treasury, and the secretary of the navy, to whom said resolution was reierred. - "I am not in possession of any further information touching the various sub jects embodied - in such resolution. It will be seen from the letter of the secre tary of the navy, accompanying the papers, and documents sent from his de partment, that it is impossible to furnish at tnis time complete logbooks of some of the naval vessels referred to in the resolution, but I venture to express the hope that the reports of the command ers of such vessels as are herewith sub' mitted, will be found to contain in sub stance so much of the matters recorded in said logbooks as are important in answering the inquiry addressed to me by the senate." VGroveb Cleveland." An International Cable. Washington, Feb. 11. A bill to in corporate the International Pacific Cable Company, for a cable from California to the Hawaiian islands, thence to Japan and other points in the Pacific, and on the mainlands of Asia and Australia, was introduced in the house today by Representative Charles W. Stone, of Pennsylvania. The incorporators are: William Al vord, Samuel T. Alexander, Hugh Craig, William H. Symond, Alfred S. Hartwell, Edward B. Pond, John Irwin, Ray Stone, A. G. Hawes, Herman Oelrichs, Charles R. Bishop, G. W. McNear, Lewis B. Parrott, W. M. Buckner, C. L. Taylor, O. D. Baldwin, Henry F. Allen, W. J. Adams, John D. Spreckela. . The bill proposes to give the company the right to hold requisite connections, land, offices and stations, and to exercise such powers as may be granted by any other government, with the provision that nothing in the action shall be con b trued to commit the United States to any financial liability or guarantee of carrying out its contracts. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report . Will Fay Principal. Washington, Feb. 11. The house committee on Pacific railways gave a hearing today to representatives of the companies. Ellery Anderson, receiver and government director of the Union Pacific, A. A. H.. Boisevain, who repre sent foreign holdings in the same com pany, and C. H. Tweed, of the Central Pacific, presented a proposition of the corporations to settle their government debts by the payment of the principal, by which arrangement the Union Pacific would pay the United States about $33, 500,000, and the Central Pacific about $27,500,000. Representatives ot large interests in New York city, among them President Fitzgerald, of Mercantile Trust Com pany, and J. P. Morgan, a member of the reorganization committee, have been sent dispatches asserting that a bill authorizing the secretary of the treasury to accept cash payment of the principal of the Union Pacific debt in full satisfac tion of all claims upon it, would be ac cepted and carried out by the company. The proposition was formally made by Boisevain, for the Union Pacific today. Anderson said the re-committal of the Reilly bill by the house without action and the failure of congress to give the executive branch any instructions as to the protection of government interests left the whole matter in a very unsatis factory condition. Central Pacific Representative Weed was not prepared to make the same pro posal in behalf of that company, but said if the parties who might advance tne principal of the debt could be pro tected by holding a government lien as security for their advances, the same terms could be carried out by the Cen tral Pacific. Such security was neces eary in hia opinion on account of the ex istence of liens prior to the government lien. Baptlsna by Immersion Xbrongrb a Hole lu tbe lee. Lancaster, Pa., Feb. 11. With the thermometer hovering near zero, the Baptist River Brethren, or Dunkards cut a hole in the ice at Conestoga creek at Earlville yesterday, and bantized Miss Groff and Miss - Lizzie Stump, of Bareville. The Rev. John Graybill and the candidates stood waist deep in the icy water, asking and .answering ques tions in Pennsylvania German. Then there were prayers, and tbe final plunge of the candidates' heads under the' sur face of the stream, until their entire bodies were submerged.. Another prayer was offered 'that their names might be written in the hook of life, and tbe ceremony which occupied five min utes, was over. Oyster-Growers Hope the Weather Will Moderate Gradually. Sea Island Citt, N. J., Feb. 12. The oyster-growers throughout South Jersey are worried over the continued cold weather, and say that unless it. moder ates gradually, they will lose hundreds of dollars. The bays in which the oyster grounds are situated are frozen solid and the ice reaching to the bottom has caught thousands of bushels of bivalves If a sudden ' warm spell should follow this extremely cold weather, the ice will carry the oysters away and deposit them in the creeks and thoroughfares. A. Case of Mistaken Identity In Chicago Chicago, Feb. 11. Robert Robson was passing along West Madison street last night when a man rushed up to him, and without a word, seized him by both ears and bit off his nose. Then with a shriek the assailant shouted "My God it's the wrong man!" and ran away. A bystander found Mr. Robson 's nose, and it was put on again, and fas tened with courtplaster. A physician was called, but he expressed doubts as to the probability of tbe nose growing again. ' A Chicago Washerwoman Makes Plucky Fight. Chicago, Feb. 11. The laundry com bine, comprising all the big firms in the business undertook to freeze out little Miss Mary G. Hennesy because she would not join the association. The If you must draw the line at and have, like, thousands of other people, to avoid all food prepared with it, this is to remind you that there is a clean, delicate and healthful vegetable short ening, which can be used in its place. If you will USE instead of lard, you can eat pie, pastry and the other "good things" which other folks enjoy, without fear of dyspeptic consequences. De liverance from lard has come. Buy a pail, try it in your own kitchen, and be convinc ed. Beware of imitations. The genuine is sold in 3 and. 5 pound pails by all grocers. Made only by The N. K. Fairbanks Company, ST. LOC18 amd Chicag6,KewVork, Boston. combine sent agents to Miss Hennesy'ss customers and in some cases did washing free, to drive her out of the business. Miss Hennesy retaliated by suing sev eral of the conspirators for $10,000 dam ages, and a jury has awarded her $6,000. The case will be appealed by the com bine, but Miss Henmssy will fight it to tbe last. Marvelous results. From a letter written by Rev. J. Gun- derman, of Dimondale, Mich., we are permitted to make this extract: "I have no hesitation in . recommending Dr. King's New Discovery, as the results were almost marvelous in tbe case of my wife. While I was pastor of the Baptist Church at Rivers junction she was brought down with Pneumonia succeed ing La Grippe. Terrible paroxysms of coughing would last hours with little in terruption and it seemed as if she could not survive them. . A friend recom mended Dr. Kingis New Discovery ; it was quick in its work and highly satis factory n results." Trial bottles free at Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co's Store. Reg ular size 50c. aud $1.00. "I offer thee," exclaimed the prin ce in the story, "my crown. Wilt share it with me?" The beautiful maiden smil ed. "Sure thing," she answered. ''Why shouldn't 17 They are wearing; men'styles in everthing." Town Top ics. A Secret. If all the ladies knew the simple secret that a had complexion is due to a dis ordered liver, there would be fewer sal low faces and blotchy skins. This im portant organ must be kept active and healthy to insure a clear and rosy color. Dr. J. A. McLean's Liver & Kidney Balm as a purifier, beats all the creams and lotions in existence and will pro duce a more permanent effect. Removes bad taste in the mouth, offensive breath, yellow tinge in the ekin, wind on tbe stomach and that dull, billions feeling which so surely indicates the torpid liver. Price $1.00 per bottle. Snipes Kinersly Drug Co. Indian Chief (to prisoner) You say you are a foreign tourists? Prisoner Yes. "And have you a title?" "Yes." "And you are unmarried?" "Yes." "Well, I will let you go; but you will have to run the gauntlet of American heiresses all the way back from Denver to New York." New York Weekly. O. W. O. Hardman, Sheriff of Tyler Co., W. Va., appreciates a good thing aud does not hesitate to say so. He was almost proBtrated with a cold when he procured a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. He says: "It gave me prompt relief. I find it to be an invalr nable remedy tfor coughs and colds." For Eale by Blakeley & Houghton, Druggists. COTTOLENE