(I ) r 7 THE DALLES, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1895 NO 49 VOL. VIII n (1 sssaxSr- Read the Answer In the Stars. At 5fe On fleeount of Sickness in fly Family, And physicians recommending a change of climate, iny entire stock of be Sold 20 Per There -will also Toe a reduction made in prices of Pho tographs in order to use up stock on hand. BWIL-DINO 1 O R SKLE. Chicago Photograph Gallery, Second Street, Opposite May & Crowe's Hardware Store, The Dalles. F. FORTIN, SOCIETIES. WASCO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. A V first and third Monday of each month at 7 DALLES BOYA1. ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6. MeetB In Masonic Hall the third Wednesday of each month at 7 P. M. WASCO TRIBEj NO. 16, I. O. R. M. Meets every Wednesday at 7:80 P. M. in K. of P. Hall. Sojourning brothers are cordially invited to attend A, A KELLER, 8, D. S. DUFUR, C. of R. TODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. lit. Hood Camp No. 69, Meets Tuesday even- tag of each week in Fraternity Hall, at 7 : p. m. COLOMBIA LODGE, NO. 6, I. O. O. F. Meets Vj every Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in I of P. hall, corner Second and Court street Sojourning brothers are welcome. H. Clqpoh, Bec'y. H. A. Biixs,N. G. FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 8., K. of P. Meets every Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in Schanno's building, corner of Court and Second streets, sojourning memoera are coraiauy in vlted. W. L. BRADSHAW, D. W.Vapbe, K. of R. and 8- C. C. ASSEMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF L. Meets in K of P. hall the socond and fourth Wednea days of each month at 7:30 p. m. TTTOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE UNION will meet every Friday afternoon at 8 o'clock at the reading room, au are lnyiwu, ttittdm innr.t tkgrkk OF HONOR. NO X1 25. Meets in Fraternity Hall, Second street, every Wednesday evening at 8 o ciock. Mas. B. J. Russell, C. of H. Miss Coba Jolks, Financier. rTWTR DALLES LODGE No. I. O.O.T. Reg- J. ular weekly meetings Friday at 8 P. M . a' K. of P. HalL J. S. WlNZLEB, C. T, Dinbmobb Parish, Dec'y. TVEMPLK LODGE NO. 8. A. O. U. W. Meets J. 1 in Fraternity Hall, over Kellers, en Second treet. Thursday evenings at 7 :3U. O. F. STEPHENS. W. S HTiia. Financier. M. W TAB. NESMITH POST, No. 82, G. A. R. Meets fj every Saturday at 7:uu r. k., in roe ui r. HalL T OF L. E. Meets every Sunday afternoon In MJm tne& oi r. uau. GESANG VEREIN Meets every evening in the K. of P. Hall. Bundat T- OF L. F. DIVISION. No. 167 Meets in X K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednes day of each month, at 7 :80 r. M. PKOFK38IONAL. H. H. RIDDELL Attornbt-at-Law Office Court Street, The JJauea, Oregon. B. B. DTJFUB. FBAKB KBNBFBB IMIFntt. A MENEFEE ATTOBSBT8 - AT- J law Rooms 42 and 43, over Post Office Building, Entrance on Washington street i ne panes, Oregon. J. B. CONDON. J. W. CONDON. -inwnniw Jb -oxrTirTJ ATVORNEYB AT LAW J Office on Court street, opposite the old court house, The Dalles, Or. B. B.HUNTINGTON. H. 8. WILSON HUNTINGTON & WILSON ATTOBNBTS-AT- 11 law Offices. French's block over r-irsi na tional B ank . Dalies. Oregon. H. WILSON Attoknsy-at-I.AW Kooml French & Co.'s bank building, secona Street. The Dalles .Oregon. M. C. P. and 8. O., Physician and Sor geon. Rooms 3 and 4, Chapman block. Residence Mrs. Thornbury's, west end of Second trees. Dr. Miles' yala Pills cure Ksmralsla. Where can I bar Dry Goads, Clotblngr, Ft, Boots and Shoes to my best adrantage ?" the Money-Saving Distributing House of M. HONYWILL, Boss Cash Store. Cent. Below Cost. Proprietor. DOORS, WINDOWS, SHINGLES, FIRE BRICK, FIRE CLAY, LIME and CEMENT, Window-Glass and Picture Moulding". FRENCH & CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS Letters of Credit issued available in the Eastern States. Bieht Exchange and Teleeraphic Transfers sold on Hew YorJt.Unicago, bt, Lotus. San Francisco. Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. - (Collections made at all points on jav orable terms. E, JACOBSEN BOOK and MUSIC CO THE LEADER IN Pianos and Orpns, Books NOTIONS, STATIONERY. Call and get his prices. Bells PIANOS on easy monthlypayments, and is prepared to meet any iunrjbniiuA. THE DALLES OR (Mill Foa) Infants and Children. Castoria. promotes Digestion, and overcomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, and Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep n&tnral. Castoria contains no Morphine or other narcotic property. " Castoria is so well adapted to children chat recommend it as superior to any prescription known to mo." i. a., aboeib, ju. d.. HI boutn uxrora di., jsroojuyn, . i. Vnr Mveral Tears I have recoTJimenaed your Castoria,' and shall always continue to do so. Edwin F. Pardee, M. D., 125th Street and 7th Ave., New York City. uTho nut nf fiuttnrla. Is so nnlversal and its merits so well known that it seems a work of ipererogation to endorse it. x ew are b in digent families who do not keep Castoria 35? easy reach." Cablos IIabttn, D. D., New York City. Thb Centacb OoMPAirr, 77 Murray Street, N. Y. Tlos. F. Oates, Henry C. Payne, BECEIVBBS. Henry C. Rouse, Ml ORTHERN i 1 PACIFIC R. R. Pullman Sleeping Cars Elegant Dining Cars Tourist Sleeping Cars ST. PAUL MINNEAPOLIS DULUTH FARGO TO OR AND FORKS CBOOKSTON WINNIPEG HELENA and BUTTE Through Tickets CHICAGO WASHINGTON PHILADELPHIA KEW YOBK BOSTON AND AIL POINTS EAST and SOUTH For Information, time cards, maps and tickets, call on or write to W. C. ALLAWAY. Agent, The Dalles, Oregon, A. T). CHARLTON. Asst. G. P. A. 255, Morrison, Cor. Third, Portland, Oregon. WEST INDIAN REVOLT Fires of Civil War Lighted in Cul)a. UPRISING SEEMS TO BE GENERAL Ibarra In the West and Guantanamo la the Bast Headquarters for Kero lntlonlsts Plenty of Arms. Havana, Feb. 26. The governor-gen eral has pnt into effect the public-order law throughout the island. This law provides for the immediate punishment of anybody taken in the seditious act. Some twenty-four men have defied the authorities and called for rebel t cruits at Ybarra. near Matanzas, and trouble is reported also from Guanta namo. It is also reported that several revolutionary parties rose in arms in different parts of the island. The governor-general yesterday issued a proclamation suspending the constitu tional guarantees. There is great ex citement - throughout the island, and many well-known separatists have been arrested. It is reported here that there has been an engagement between the government troops and the insurgents. rCBTBBB PAEIICCLAES. Tales Told by Cipher Dispatches ceived In New York. New York, Feb. 26. Cipher dis patches received here by members of the Cuban revolutionary party, to whom the date set for the uprising has been known since February 9th, told that the revolution had been begun, Jose Marti, twice banished from Cuba because of his hate of Spanish domina tion. and General Maximo Gomez, who commanded the eastern wing of the Cuban rebels in the revolution of 1868, left New York two weeks ago for Vera Cruz, and news received from Cuba last night tells that they have landed, and their arrival was to be the signal for an uprising, It was here in New York that the rev olution was planned and it was from here that the order was sent which lighted the fire of civil war in Cuba Cuban leaders here are in.league with the revolutionists of the Islands and with sympathizers in the United States, Mexico and South America republics, and have been long preparing for the event. The insurgent forces in Matanzas, near x Darr, wnere one wing oi ino pa triot party raised its standard, are un der the command of Major-General Julio Sanguily. The point mentioned is about sixtv-six miles east of Havana, on the west end of the island. The scene of the other uprising men tioned in the Havana dispatches, Guan tanamo. is on the east end of the island, and the fact that these widely separated places are given prominence is accepted by Cubans in New York to mean that fha nnriaincr haa extended thronchotlt thn inland, and that the S Danish author- ities are attempting to belittle its extent. The revolutionary forces in the eastern Rpction of the island, which includes I Guantanamo, are commanded by Briga dier-Ganeral Guillermo Moncada. It is estimated that he can raise 4000 men, The Spanish forces number about 18,000 regulars, of which about 6000 are sta tioned at Santiago de Cuba, and are within reach of the rebels at Guanta namo. The bulk of the remaining Spanish troops are stationed at Havana, and so are near the scene of General Sanguily's starting point, Ybarra, Men who are high in the councils of the Cuban party, and who were in structed with the date set for the upris lng say that the arms which have been smuggled into Cuba during the last few weeks, ana wnicn were landed - near Matanzas and . other points, and those Highest of all in Leavening which are already in the possession of the patriotic forces of General Gomez, would be able to arm 3000 men at once and many more within a short time. A Great Trade Destroyed. Chicago. Feb. 26. Speaking of the decree just issued by the French govern ment nrohibitine the importation of American cattle, Kelson Morris, a well- known packer, said : "We shipped $18, 090,000 worth of cattle and produce to France alone last year, and this great trade is absolutely destroyed by the or der of the French government. I knew this was coming, and with the excep tion of . three boat loads, not any cattle or any product has been sent to France in the last ten days. The effect of the German and Belgium embargo had been to reduce the price of cattle of the classes shipped to these countries by $10 a head, and this French edict will even more unjustly affect the stockyards. This has been the effect on prices notwithstanding the fact that the sup ply of cattle has been cut down two thirds on account of the lack of feed. The effect on the product is even greater than the effect on the live-cattle trade, especially as far as France is concerned. We were shipping 7000 cattle a week and as many more in addition in the form of product. France has been taking a great deal of lean cattle for soups, and this class will be very injuriously affect ed by the new edict, while as dressed beef and pork products the result will be even more far-reaching. Over a Dead Man's Body. Hazelton, Pa., Feb. 26. With a jug of liauor and a lackDot on the table, a party of gamblers were found playing cards at Suear Loaf yesterday, while on the floor lay the body of a murdered man. Philip Schaup, the murdered man, was a mine toreman, living at sugar Loaf, a mining village two miles east of here, and populated by foreigners. The news reached here yesterday that Schaup had been found dead a few hours after he had started to see some of his work men. His father-in-law, Willian KIngleben, and several friends went at once to Sugar Loaf, where they learned that the bobv had been carried into Mike Sink ers' house. It was here that the search ing party interrupted "the gamblers. Thev claimed they had found the body in the woods a short distance away, and then carried it into the house. The gamblers, who were foreigners, de clared that he was alive then. Dr. Smith expresses the opinion that the man had been poisoned. An autopsy will be held, Decidedly Unique Answer New York, Feb. 26. A special from Cincinnati, O., says ; Mary T. F. Fierro, wife of John W. Fierro, a wealthy artist, on Saturday filed a petition for divorce, alleging neglect. Yesterday Attorney Oden O'Neil filed for the husband the most uniaue and advanced answer and cross-petition ever filed in these courts John says Mary is a devout believer and disciple of woman's rights, and that her pursuit and study ot this subject has in- duced her to absorb a bitter hatred for I BOClBiy us uu" .., ""f--''J for mankind, Mr. Fierro alleges that his wife thinks it is his duty to support her in absolute idleness, her conception of the rights of married woman being that she shall have all the rights assumed by the stern er sex. relezating the irksome duties of household work to others Further, he says, his spouee is a be lieverin spiritualism, and consults me' diums who pretend to advise her of bis "shortcomings" and the manner of treatment that should be meted out to him. On this account he asks for a divorce, denying all her charges. Liberal and Conservatlre Spealc in Parliament. for It London, Feb. 26. In the commons to- day Everett; liberal member of parlia. mont, offered a motion recitiDg that the house views with apprehension the erowinc divergence between gold and Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report i 1 III innff !73 J& i )S r I 02avsuzzi cane to suppose that an imitation offers the customer any guarantee like the original does. Take Cotiolene for example. The Fairbank Co. discovered it, perfected it, and spent thousands in making its merits known. It is plainly to their interest to make and keep it what it is to-day the most popu lar shortening in the world. But when you come To accept &rv these guarantees all disappear, and the housekeeper is at the mercy of an imitator who deals on others reputation and wno profits only by others' loss. To ensure having good cook ing ana neaitniui looa sties tight to COTTOLEsne ana let all imitations severely alone. Bold in S and ft pound peJla. Made only by The N. K. FairbantC Company, ST. LOUIS sod Colcago, New Tork, Boston- silver. He urged the government to co operate with other powers in placing gold and silver on a common ratio. Everett further eaid England was not justified in bankrupting her debtors by her course regarding silver. Chapia (conservative) seconded Everett's mo tion and severely arraigned the govern ment for its course toward silver. ; He predicted that bimetalism would be vic torious at no distant date, because it had justice and truth on its side. Symptoms of kidney troubles should be promptly attended to; they' are nature's warnings that something is wrong. Many persons die victims of kidney diseases who could have been saveu naa mey issen proper irccauuuun. The prompt use of Dr. J. H. McLean's ' Liver & Kidney Balm has saved thous- ' ands of valuable lives. If you have any derangement of the kidneys try it- Price $1.00 per bottle. Sold by Snipes & Kinersly, druggists. JFor Aerial NTieation. Washington, Feb. 26. In the senate yesterday Brice reported, without rec ommendation, a bill authorizing the sec retary of the treasury to pay the sum of " $100,000 to any inventor who shall prior to 1900 construct vessels that will dem- - onetrate the practicability of safely nav igating the air at a speed of 30 miles an hour, and capable of carrying freight and passengers. Trans-Siberian Railway. San Fkancisco, Feb. 26. O. P. Wia- semsky, chief engineer of construction of the trans-Siberian railway, arrived on the Gaelic from the Orient. He is ac companied by his secretary and chief assistant. "We are going to St. Peters- burg," eaid he, "to make a report on the work done on the new railroad which is to connect Vladivostock with St. Petere i k i . Ann :t r td. m!I constructed, and I shall ask for a bill to pay for the construction of 300 more miles, now surveyed and staked, ihe total length of the line is about 4000 miles, and it will take eix or seven years to complete it." Exposure to rough weather, dampness, . .. . nnM At. ia ant in Krino fn ATI attack of rheumatism or neuralgia; chapped hands and face, cracked lips and violent itching of the skin also owe their origin to cold weather. Dr. Mc Lean's Volcanic Oil Liniment should be kept on hand at all times for immediate application when troubles of this nature appear. It is a sovereign remedy. 25c, 50c and $1.00 per bottle. We wish to state to our patrons that One Minute Cough Cure is a safe and re liable remedy for children troubled with croup, colds, hoarsness and lung trou bles. It is pleasant to take and quickly cures. Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co.