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About The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947 | View Entire Issue (July 31, 1891)
ri ffl r fet ir II srir fir itt r & Cl j VOL. 1. THE DALLES, OliE(iON, FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1891 NUMBER 33. THE War in tenessee. Xo Fighting as Yet but the Situation is a Grave OneThe Attorney General Complicates Matters. A Race War. Probable between Lum bermen and Italian Subjects . The Bruisers WillFighL Kkoxville. Tenn., Julv 24. There is .scarcely doubt but the troops will move from Cool Creek before noon today. Two gatling pins will be mounted on COAL Oil. AND -NATIKAI. CAS. Startling- IMarovery bjr a Farmer on Hi L.mnd near Nolfu. Pkndleton. Or. July 24. Sour.' time ago John S. Vinson noticed a peculiar oily covering on the water of a spring at his place near Nolfu, which could be skimmed off like cream from a pan of milk. On punching a bole in the ground with a stick and placing a match at the top of the bole, a flash was the result. Vinson kept his discovery quiet, and has since been prodding about his place in search of a similar phenomena. He now writes to a friend in Pendleton that he has discovered natural gas and coal oil in a number of places on his laud. He will have the discovery examined by an expert, and will endeavor to secure the services of E. G. Locke, of the Un ion Pacific, on his return to Pendleton. The thermometer registered lOo in ; intense excitement has been caused i tltom tliia mni-nincr nnr-.n rhf rpi-pinfr llf flat cars and thus enter Cool Creek. .But the ehude here todav and yeterday 102. was formed headed by a hand and Cleve- ; the newg of ,he ki!ling 0i Deputy Sheriff HONORS T CLEVELAKD. Itfcept l:in The Ex-President Tendered at Cape Cnd. Sandwich. Mass., July 25. Sandwich today extended a cordial recept ion to ex President Cleveland who has chosen Cape Cod as his place of residence dur ing the summer mouths. The occasion was not confined to the local hounds of Sandwich and Bourne but to Cape Cod, whose residents irrespective of politics and summer visitors united in a wel come. This morning a .special train having on board Governor Russell 8nd staff and other invited quests stopped at Buzzard Bay from where Ex-President Cleve land was escorted. Here a procession 'A iSATlON. Deputy Sheriff Poor Killed and Cowboy Dangerously Wounded Running in Chinese the Cause. A SL Louis Judge Decides that Pool Selling is all Right Details of the Latest European Horror. law cannot effect. Protective laws may undoubtedly create a home market and thus enhance the value of the uro- i ducts of the farm but they surely cannot j effect the price of these commodities in foreign countries. Xo protective law I can change the higher law of supply and j demand and it is this law that event- Poeti.a.nd, Julv 27. A special to the ufllly fixes the price of wheat or any- Evening Telegram from Seattle says that i thing else for that matter, in the foreign THE SURPLUS FIXES THE PRICE, j and suggested that if the man would! ... . . , , I only ship bis wool by the Regulator, the I ;wW' VTr-vrT .; ZT-'-.i We consider it verv si Iv 'ndeed to at- : a,,f.,.pS.a f . f- W A- SALNDEKs architect. Plans niid , . . success ot ttie new navigation company i f specihr.it ions furnished for dwellings, tribute the high price of wheat that is in ' -nnlH 1 0,o, Tn u " j churches, business Uwts, schools and factories. protective for the farmers of this conn- ! f l 1 ' "hW .h,W wm: riT.. uf" ' try to the MiKinler bill. There are some tilings mat mat mnun taiKed ot ..r,o,,n ,.a- k i - .u.i . uu'. i wir CAUiail.tlll.iu PROFESSIONAL CARDH. pletely we failed to grasp the "lo2i; and i fifte "ver French's bunk. The Dulles, Oregon mathematics of the Times-Mountaineer : there is not much danger of bloodshed as the miners say that not a gun will be fired. ; f'SIMPLT A POSSE. FIGHTING IN THE MOI'NTAINS. I'n- A Bloody Mexican War Carried on known to the Ontslde World. ! lanfl u'aa ocwir-tprt it a Inrtrr iiiif the reception was held The Tennessee- Militia Mich Disgusted . at the Attaraay General' Decision. K.NOXTIL1.E, July 24. there is no change in the situation this afternoon. The troops still remain in Knox ville and all is quiet at Coal Creek and Briceville Another and final conference will proba bly be held this; afternoon between the governor and representatives of the min era. The opinion ot Attorney General Pickle, rendered this morning with re gard to the right Of the' governor ; under I In bands of fifty Chicago, July 22. According to the statements of two young Mexicans, now in Chicago, there is a bloody war raging in the mountains of Mexico, unknown to the outside world. It has been sup posed that with the death of the great leader of the Yaqui Indians, Chief Cajeme, the Indian wars in Mexico had closed. According to the story told this has not been the case. Thousands of Yaquis are stronelv intrenched in the mountains, and troops, which are stationed at all towns along the Yaqni river, are powerless to reach them to protect the lives and property of citizens. or more the laquis wnere , Go. W. Poor at Woolry last night and make raids on the towns and have fierce fights with the troops. The condition ol affairs is said to be daily growing most alarming. the law to call out the 'state 'militia is to the effect that the governor cannot call oat the militia, fbut they may be used as a posse. This complicates the situation, an rtiA mflitfo IaaI tKor aro n nrlT- nr ... . ., Nbw Yobs. July 23. Flour Closed more obligation toserve as a posse than Jfrn for spring and winter pat- ptner citizens.Of the stia, and that it is I ents. with an improved demand for The Mew York Grain Market. lowering to the dismitv of the military lower brands oiar. mr!, ' sA far them Wheat Options cad be seen no danger of an serious trouble any where today. BUYING. WINCHESTERS. . V f . - Kaoxrllle Hardware Stores Selling Im : anense- .eta of Arms- Kjjoivildk, Tenn.. July 24. An in vestigation shows that in the past twenty-four hours there has been an unusually large number of calls at the Knoxville "hardware stores for Win chester rifles. It is said that there are 500 men in the vicinity of Williamsburg, Ky., ready to come to the aid. of the miners at Coal' Creek. It is known that - a telegram was received from Appena, a mining town, proposing contributions of . money and also men if necessary. At ' no time has the situation appeared more serious, though there will be no conflict until i the governor moves the convicts.- were strong in the morning dealings and advanced sharply on a good buying, due to the announce-. ment of the break in the trie canal, and 1 which, it was said, would take several days to repair The Cables were firmer, and foreign houses were buyers to a moderate extent. Ihe market under went a decided change in the last half of the day, and the advance was more than wiped out nnder a selling . to 'realize. The closing figures were .(c lower. Snot lots closed steady. Snot sales of of No. 2 red winter at 9?4c; No. 2 red winter, July, 97r'c; do August, 95c: do September, 95c; do October, 96,0. I.OOKINtt rOK INFECTED FKriT. i the wuundinc of CowIhjv Terrv and In welcoming Ex-President Cleveland ! Custoni Inspector Baird and Deputy In on behalf of the citizens of Cape Cod, j speotor Tav)or Holden is under arrest. Governor Kussell warmly eulogized , The Rhootnj, is 8aia to n!ive over Cleveland's administration and closed ! the eaptnre o a band of chinamen who with the assurrance that Massasehusetts , were SUir,ggcd into tbe TjnUud believes in sound currency. In replying gtateH from victoria. Terrv Holden and to the toast "Onr Neighbors" the ex- j Poor were and the atorv is that president returned thanks for neighborly ! Deputv Inspector Buchanan and Baird intentions of the inhabitants of Capejwere jeaous Gf each other's partv and Cod and speaking of the presidency said j they ,aid in ambnsb for them. fhirtv he.hadagainreturne.lto the people to , gho'la were exebaneed between the two ........ . ship subject to the same rule of behavior , The g jury charged Baird and which should apply to his fellow coun- j Bucnanai) with the death of Poor. try men and his return should be ac- ; corded the same fair and decent treat ment. The New York people, however, ap pear to believe that once out of office we are constantly engaged in plotting for our own benefit and end. Not only to destroy the party to which we belong but to subvert popular liberty and utterly nproot free American institutions. NKWS BY' CAULK. KAfK WAR IX PROSPKCT. renatayleaalw lumbermen, and Italian Laborex Will Probably Fight. , Glen Hazxl, Penn., July 24. A race ' War-whir h threatens the diolomatic com- the board has authority to condemn in DlicationV similar toThose erowine ont fected fruit and to prosecute dealers who Offleem of the State Horticultural Board Keeping: a Sharp Lookout. Inspector Varney and Secretarv Allen of the State Board of Horticulture, visit tbe commission houses every two three days to see if infected fruit is of' fered for sale. Since they ordered 100 boxes of bad California fruit returned thev have had no trouble. Thev find that the commission men are in sym path v with -them and aid them in their efforts to keep infected frnit out of Ore gon.' Fruit dealers are also anxious have tbe law inforced. While thev suf fer Nt hardship at present. Sec re tar Allen is confident that they will be bene' fited in the long run. Under the law Over Two Hundred People Killed in Ihe St. Maude Collision A Horrible Kxecutlon. Paris, July 27. It is now reported that 200 people were killed or injured as the result of the St. Maude collision yes terday. Many of the unfortuifite peo ple were imprisoned beneath the wreck, and drowned by firemen who poured tor- obeoon crop report. rents of water upon the wreck and i seemed to be utterlv unaware' that they Wheat Turning- Ont Better Than wu) . , , Expected. were drowning the people they were at- I ratnntinnf fit raoona Pn .V., n- Tr.lv 9 TllA lmn W"lfMg fcv of the New Orleans affair, exist here Some days ago in a drunken row between : some lumbermen and 'x gang of Italian railroad laborers, Horace Fisher, a lnra ber.uan, was stabbed and killed by Paolo . Passu zzi who escaped to the Italian camp where he has since been protected. The Italians flung persist in selling it. CONCERNING the railways Time to the "breeze and defied the lumbermen - to interfere with Paasuzzi. The lum bermen are thoroughly aroused and . threaten to kill - every Italian in tbe neighborhood. 'They have notified the Italians that unless Passuzsi is delivered to the jail for trial inside of five days, U:ey will come prepared to take him at ; the point of Winchester rifles. The - Italians have appealed to the Italian consul at Philadelphia, who has de manded protection for Italy's subjects. lay Gould Traveling- West, This in Searth of Health. inicAGO. July zz. Jay Uould an party arrived at 4:50 o'clock this after noon, on the North Shore limited, and departed for the Rocky mountains the flag of Italy the Omaha limited, over the Rock Is TO . IMPORT SKILLED LABOR. The' land, at 7 p. in. Mr. Gould is very much under the weather, and thin, pale and haggard. He Is not in nearly as good health as when he was W est in March and seems to feel the effects of the heat very much. Mr. Gould's visit West solely in searth ot health. He was ac companied by younger children, his private physician (.Dr. .Munn) and t. rl H. Clark, first vice-president and gen eral manager of the Missouri Pacific and Union Pact he railways. Kansas' Alliance Judge. Topkka, Kan., July 22. Judge McKay the alliance judge who has been sum moned before the supreme court to an swer a charge of contempt of court, ar rived here this morning. To a reporter tins aitemoon McKay said : ihe stories about the Htinnywell case have been all one-sided. It is not an alliance fight. The statement that the Superintendent of Immigration Sajs. If Can,- be Done. washkcto-s, Jnly 24. The superin tendent of Immigration has rendered a v decision ton the application of the stamp- alliance in secret session is dictating to !i company of St. Louis to be permitted m7 conrt.i8. falsei .Hnywell is of nn- :J4 " lajii j i'u i .v sonnd mind, and is not competent to to import -Wiled labor for their tin manage his affairs. I think the supreme pirn mum, to ine eneci mat tne immi- court will uphold my action when it has t ration law plainlv intends that skilled heard the other side of the case labor may be imported into the Cnited Mates to. do work in an industry not yet t-rfiablishcd, provided skilled workmen rrf that industry cannot be found among ar own people.. Therefore tbe lmpor 'trttion. will be permitted as such cannot 1 found in the United States. In rest! fating a Murder. Bbidokpobt, - Calif., July 24. S. B. Hopkin, formerly depnty United States marshal i arrived here last evening and this morning cbmmenced taking testi mony ur 5fard to the murder of Ah Quong -Tia, the Cfiinaman who was killed and brutally chopped to pieces by Indians on tbe 9th day of Jnne last. The Chinaman had murdered an .Indian )y the name of Poker Tom, and had cnt )is body into .pieces, salted it down, cooked it, and had fed the Indians a por i!on of it i which so exasperated them " that they cut and mnrdered his body in tii same manner. A Railroad Collision. Secretary Blaine Still Improving. Wasaingtoj.-, Julv 22. It is learned through reliable sources that Secretary Blaine is gradually preparing to resume charge ot the state nepartment anairs, He now has bis private secretary with him, and is getting together the loose ends of his work. It can hardlv be said that he is actuallv at work vet. and the most he will undertake for some time, if his health continues to improve, will be merely in an advisory caoacitv. The awakening of interest in his work has not, it is said, retarded his recovery, but it seems to be beneficial to him. This being the case, it is believed he will be able to resume his position in the ad ministration in the fall. : - PeSTer Will Head the Alliance Ticket. topkka, Kan., Julv 'ss. The rumor that Senator Peffer was fignring for the nomination for nresidt-nt b the ipoiilt') paity in mn was connrmed today. The AUxance ArtDoeaU. tne peonie s oartv organ in Kansas, raises his name, aud, in an editorial states that Kansas took tne initiatory step in the new move ment, and was entitled to the honor. Until it was known that Senator Peffer desired the nomination, the nrefareni. Dk.vvek, July 24. The Narrow Guage among the alliance men seemed to be : : east bound express from Sslida on the or President Polk of North Carolina. Denver 4 Rj0 Grande railway collided Senator Pefler's friends Bav that the with the broad Salt Lake Express going s8 b5j. enoneh for a ..rSsidentml ..ndi- . . X n r rt ,.. 1 . i ? I i . " wni m icw mi 1Kb ww varusie eariy inis uaw morning. V The trains were running at full speed with heavily loaded engines and front coaches. Both trains were a-otnpletely wrecked and four killed. persons The Kehring Sea Matter. Cape, may, July 22. S. V.' White, more tamilharly known as "Deacon White," of Wall' street, has arrived here by appointment with the president, and will call upon him tomorrow. It is under stood that White's appointment is rela tive to the contract that the government has with the North American commer cial companv, for the privilege of catch- A Chance for Hall and Fits. Gbans Rapids, Minn., Jnly 24. The Pokegama Athletic association of Grand Hapids has decided to offer $10,000 for ing seals in Behring sea the Hall-Fitzsimmons fight with or -without gloves, the club to furnish a guarantee that the fight will not be in terfered with. Wanted to Jflope With His Step-Daugh ter. Bektox. Tex.. Julv 22. Last nieht B. Williamson shot and. killed his wite and W. Hamilton. He is being pursued by a large posse. A short time ago Will iamson eloped with his 11-vear-old step- lnt was brought back. He Tbe ft ports in Court. SjPacl, July 24. Hall and Fitzeim- - innlLlnrl f hotr nn-n en.tti. I danehter. nndJim Carroll, were arraigned in the municipal conrt this morning but the kiHed her and also Hamilton. All con cases were continued. - cerned are negroes. crop i bulletin issued by the Oregon weather bureau today says the weather conditions ! have been favorable to ripening of grain. ! The harvest is now begun all over the j state. Wheat in every section is tnrn- j ing out better than was expected. In few sections smut is reported but not toj any great extent. The oat crop is re-! ported to be a good one. The codlin market. It is no disparagment of the McKinley law to say that it deserves no credit for the price of grain that is in profcpect. If the grain fields of Europa and India had yielded as abundantly this year as they have done in years gone by all the protective laws on earth would not have very materially raised the price of a commodity whose former cheapness was attributable to its over abundance, more than to anything else. The man who has a thousand bushels of wheat to sell where only five hundred is wanted, must take what he can get for the surplus five hundred, while the man who has only five hundred where a thousand is needed can name his own price for all he has got to sell. It is the surplus, therefore, in the markets of the world or its absence that fixes the price of the remainder, and this year the pros pect now is that there is going to be no surplus. given in its issue of last evening. A "thousand sheep on a thousand hills" signifies only one on a hill, and not a total of a million sheep. Our cotemporary should study mathematics and try and comprehend the rules of logic. So it appears, after all, that the man has only a thousand sheep, though why he should plant oue on eveiy hill top of the thousand hills of Grant county, is what we cannot find out, unless, as is quite possible, the cayotes may have got among them and " stampeded them. We're going to study logic and mathe matics, however, and then we'll know all about it. rvR. J. SUTHERLAND Fellow of Tkimty 1 Medical C'ollt-ce, and niemiiei of tile Col- leareof Physicians nnd Surpreonn, Ontario, I'hy siciiin and Surgeon. Office: rooms 3 mid 4 Chiip man block. Uesidoncc; Judge T hornburv's Sec ond street. Gttiee hours; 10 to 12 a. m.", 2 to 4 ana i to s p. in. WHAT HE KNOWS ING. ABOUT FAR3T- WE CAN BEAT THE WORLD. A COMMENDABLE ACT. Today the town hall at St. Maude pre sents a fearful spectacle. The blackened bodies have beua placed in rows upon the floor and tables until in some cases the remains are little more than a heap tf iMnrlpra intfirmiirpr! u-ir.h nnrtinnu nf IimDS. One pile of charred limbs and human cinders is especially conspicuous, con- One of the tuoet important industries of the great state of California is her grape culture. , Lands adapted for rais ing grapes command prices ranging from a hundred to five hundred and a thous and dollars an acre. Here, in Oregon, there is a stretch of country,- bordering on the Columbia, from the John Day river to the Multnomah countv line. that, for raising grapes is not excelled j w hen Governor Merriatn interposed by any part of California. The truth of ! to stoP tfae slugging match the other day this statemsnt has" been demonstrated ! iu St- Paul he performed an act for which a hundred times in a hundred ways. I he wU1 bave the grateful thanks of every Xo one acquainted with the country pre- j rl'ght minded citizen, without respect of tendB for a moment to deny it, and .yet i chl8f creed or party. These beastly ex many of these lands can be purchased ! hibitions of brute force and mis-called today for five to twenty dollars and acre, j science are becoming thoroughly dis- Where is General. Varney and Emile Schanno and Uncle Jerry Rusk and the Oregon Horticultural Society and tbe State Entomologist? The Timen-Mottn-taineer has made a discovery and here it is : "The forthcoming pest ol" the coun try is the Hessian fly which is develop ing its propensities in ' the orchards of the different portions of the state." Shades of Ciucinuatus and Horace Greely! That's what a man gets by "studying logic and metaphysics." That beats the city belle who supposed that cow's milk was obtained by pumping it out of the cow, and using the tail as a handle. That beats the editor who ad vised farmers t exterminate the wevil from iheir grain bins with a shot guns. We shall not be surprised to soon.hear of the devastating effects of horse flies on the green corn, or type i lice on printer s e3'es. I K. O. 11. UOA E PHYSICIAX AND HVR- J GEON. otlice; rooms 5 aud 6 :ha.rii:in mucit. store, i P. M. Residence over McFarland & French Oflice hours S to 12 A. hi., 1 to 5 and 7 to S. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. im tlce in Sehumio'8 building, up stairs. Dulles, Oregon. Of The DSIDDALI. E?."nhT. Gas given for the painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth :t on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of lit. noiuen lootu, isecona sireer. t R. THOMPSON ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW. Ortic j. V. in Opera House Block, Washington Street, i ne mines, uregon r. P. MAYS. B. S. HUNTINGTON. H. 8. WILSON. AT AYS, HUNTINGTON & WILSON Attob . I KB ys-at-law. Offices, French's block over . 4ii wuuuusi xajiK, ine jiaues, Oregon. E.B.DCrCB. GEO. WATK1N8. FRANK MKNEPBE I-Vl FUR, W ATKINS A MENE1EE ATTOlt i s sbys-at-law riooms Nod. 71, 73, 75 and 77. ' 1 AJiw-jk, oa-uuu otrcei, luc uaues, Oregon, V7 H. WILSON Attobnky-at-law Rooms t t tK ana jew v ogl ttloct. Second Street, i tit LfHiieH, Oregon. Phil .Wiliig, 124 UNION ST., THE DALLES, OR, Keeps on hand a full line of MEN'S AND YOUTH'S Ready Made Clothing. Pants and Suits MADE TO ORDER On Reasonable Terms. i t ,.(.uni: ..j ivl.iln ntko,o tr. cn,rn r-aarcnta i:,ii i .. i sustinsT. 1 hev are a blot 11 non the civ mom is ooing someaamage nops are placed Jn ft heap , ferior can had for little over tfle gov. ( ilization of the age and ought to be as quite promising, ihe peacti crop win j esecation of yonng and j ernment price, and, even excellent fruit j repugnant to the taste of anyone entitled be the largest on record. ; D , acconiDlices of Mere Ber- I and grape lands can be had for the tak- ' be called a gentleman as a Roman land in Courberer's murder, took piacelingnp. A resident of this city, who j gladiatorial murder or a modern Span- this morning on the place de Laroqnettervpent his first twenty-eight years on the ! ish DQU fignt- Berland walked calmly to the guillotine, iJlhine and the remainder of an extended j hut. o dMini9ti atrmro-U trinlr nlacp nn life on a favorer! ci-ane-raiRinff npptinn nn i E W MARKET FOR HOG PRO- LITTLK, KI T OH t A Brutal Fight Between Light: Weight t on Long Inland. New York.- Julv 25. A nrize fieht remarkable for its astonishing brutality- j the scaffold. Dorre made no resistance, took.place this morning at a sporting No 800ner had the heads 01 the mur resort on Long Island between Tim Tom- j dercrs rolled into the basket than the allv and Bill Hoeeart. litrht weitthts. ! crowd forward and with a mighty When time was called they went at it Call and see my Goods before Durchasing elsewhere. S. L. YOUNG, ( Successor to K. KECK.i ft like game cocks, hammer and tongs. Tomally by a lucky blow caught Hog gart on the jugular rein and knocked him out. Neither one was satisfied with the result and it is thought they will meet again. The Result of the Latest English Elec tion. London, July 25. The tory press com menting on the result of the Wisbeck parlamentary election concedes that a liberal victory menaces greatly the union cause. The Chronicle says : "The result is due to the conservative candidate adopt- ing the protection cry. Tbe laborers recognize that protection for the fanners will not increase their wages. They voted for the Gladstonian candidate be lieving that radical measures had better be intrusted to a radical government. A GIGANTIC DEAL. rush and. broke through tiie cordon of soldiers and policemen and began a dis gusting scramble for an opportunity to view the work of the guillotine. A Itl'N ON A BANK. of Vlltard Oh tains Control of all the Street Car Lines in Milwaukee. Milwaukee, July 25. Henry Villard, by another deal consummated today has obtained control of every International Transportation line in the city except the one on the short electric road. The Villard people have erected the largest electric power house in the world here more than sufficient for all purposes yet developed with control of all the btreet car tracks. The People's Home Savings Bank San Francisco Having Jtard Luck. ' San Francisco, July 27. A iun was began on the People's Home Saving bank this morning and several thousand dollars paid back to depositors. The bank commissioners have begun an in vestigation of the bank's affairs. Ac cording to its report of July 1st tbe People's bank has a capital stock of $1,000,000 of which one third is paid up. There is due depositers who number about 8000 the sum of !f 190,000. The bank's officers state that the in stitution isjperfectly solvent. Two of the San Francisco morning papers have di rected the attention to the bank within the past two days, contending that the 8 nte bank examiners had not made a proper examination of the bank's affairs. the Mississippi river, remarked to the writer that he had been engaged in grape culture and vineyard work all his life and that he never saw a country that excelled this for raising grapes. These facts are so well known to the people ot this section that they require DUCTS. A late dispatch from Paris says that it is believed that the government has de cided to accede to the request of Minis ter Reid to remove the embargo on American pork, as it is known that the government nas agreed to introduce a no proof. The only strange thing about j bill modifying the general tariff law of them is that thev have not been taken advantage of to a greater extent. IRfSH SENTIMENT CHANGING. Lincoln's Daughter to he Married. London, Jnly 25. The engagement of Mary Lincoln, the eldest daughter of Robert Lincoln, United States Minister to Great Britain, to Charles Isham of New York, is announced. The wedding will be solemnized in this city during the comingautumn. The prospective bride groom was formerly private secretary to Lincoln. ' -AT SPORT OF THE WAVES. A Catamaran Capsizes on Long Island Sound With Mnch Loss nf Life. New Haven, Conn., July 27. The Catamaran "Typhoon," having on board Judge Hugh Daly, his little niece, Capt. Geo. Austin, Clarence Beebe and Rufus Sbephardof this city were capsized ig Long Island Sound last night. Capt. Austin and neice were rescued bv a The Irish party in the British parlia ment are manifesting a surprising willingness to accept a local government bill from the tories. Precisely what the bill contemplated will grant to Ireland is, as yet, a matter of mere conjecture, but the chief secretary has intimated that it will be based broadly on the English and Scutch acts and if such is the case" it is believed that the Irish members cannot consistently refuse to support it. It is contended on all hands that Ireland cannot reasonably ask for more liberty of action than England and Scotland are content with and Irish members have many times asserted their willingness to accept the same privileges and the same degree of local government that England and Scotland enjoy. To the downfall of Parnell is generally ascribed the amazing change of attitude of the Irish members to the government party. It is even asserted j tbat Mr. Parnell has actually stood in I the way of homo rule for several years I pact by reason of bis refusal to accept J any measures originated Dy tne tories. There is now, it is said, a wide-spread feeling that by the downfall of Parnell I the most serious obstacle in the way of Mty 1881 and fix the duty at 20 francs per hundred kilos on all salted pork, ham and bacon imported from the Unit ed States. This would mean a tariff duty of less than two cents a pound which is by no means prohibitory. It would also mean a largely increased market and better times for the pork in dustry of the United States, especially, too as it is likely to be followed by the opening of, the German markets to the same product. - DE ALER IN SrGLOOKS, JJewelry, Diamonds, SMEflWriRE, :-: ETC WflTGHE Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repaired and Warranted. 165 Second St.. The Dalles, Or. J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Abstracters, Heal Estate and . InsoraDee Agents; Abstracts of. and Information Conceiv ing. Land Titles on Short Notice. Land for Sale and Houses to Rent Parties Looking for Homes in COUNTRY OR CITY, OR IN SEARCH OF Bugiqe Location, Should Call on or Write to na. Agents for a Full Line of LeaSiii Fire Insnrance Companies, And Will Write Insurance for J A1TT J!L20TJlrT, on .all . . DE3IBABLB EISKB. Correspondence Solicited. All Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or . Address, J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or. 5MPE5 IWfLl Wholesale anil Retail Druisti. -DEALERS IN- Fine Imported,. Key West and Domestic PAINT Now is the time to paint your house and if you wish to get Jthe best quality and a fine color use the Sherwin, Williams Co.'s Paint For those wishing to see the quality and color of the above paint we call their attention to the residence of S. L. Brooks, Judge Bennett, Smith French and others painted by Paul Kreft. Snipes & Kinersly are agents for the above paint for The Dalles. Or. N. THORNBUKY, Lute Rec. U. S. Land Office. T. A. HUDSON, Notary Public MORE HANGING OR FEWER MURDERS. A NEW Dndertakinor Establisliment ! steamer. It is thought tbat the others are lost. The last seen of Judge Daly, ! home rule, which must come gradually Beebe nnd Shephard they were clinging j has been removed. ' to a wreck, with the waves threatening j 1 Whisky . Trnt to Cnncentrate Mano- .actorles. Chicago, JulyV 24. It is stated at the International Revenue office that the whisky trust has decided to concentrate all the whisky manufactories at Peoria iy sale from time - to- time - to outside honscs. The object of concentration is economy in operation and reduction in the working force. A Millionaire Woman' Death. - Mktucg, Mass., July' 25. Mrs. to carry them under at any moment. .Jndge Daly is one of the leading repub lican politician of Connecticut. Shep hard is a well known banker of New Haven. Beelte belonged to one of the citv's best families. Governor Boles' Letter of Acceptaaee. Des Moisks, Iowa, July 25. Governor Boies' letter accepting the democratic nomination was given to the press today. The issues of the campaign are dis cussed. Special stress is laid on prohibi tion and tariff but the letter is somewhat ; nou-committal on free 'coinage of silver i which was endorsed by the democrats ! at the Ottum wa convention. WHERE THE MONEY. Hopkins Searles, wife of E, F, Searles I the New York architect and widow of J A Texas llaxe. Dallas, Texas, July 25. A fire broke ! . i t u r- is i the Millionaire Hopkins, of the Pacific i oufc "u 'u,,r UOU3C slope, died here this morning as the re. j on Commercial street early this morn suit of an attack of grippe. Her first I ,n Pd V1 to the Benbrock fccnool turmture company, the lirew- grippe husband left an estate valued at $60,- 000,000. Mrs. Searle.s wealth is esti mated at ijHO.OOO.OOO. The Italian Consul's Views. s PHtLAnELPHiA, July 24. The Italian consul here shvs the rfnrr (if r tliiwifc. 3""pe" ened race war at Glen Hazel is exagger ated hut he admits that there has been correspondence about the matter passed between him and the district attorney. erst Storage Company's warehouse and Wolfe and Co.'s cotton gin. Five hund red bales of cotton in t he gin was des troyed. The estimated loss is $2,000 ,000. Want lntles Removed. Ottowa, July 24. A petition signed by 15,000 members of the order of pat- u-onsof Industry was presented the do- j minion house' of commons praying for the removal of import duty on binder twine, salt and sugar, and setting these articles on the free list. will Have no Prize Fight. Minneapolis. July 25. The chief of police has issued an order that hereafter no glove contests shall occur at the thea ter Comique or Pence opera bouse. The administration is evidently opposed to sparring unless conducted under club auspices. - A contest was to have been held at Pence opera house tonight. Chicag-o Wheat Market. Chicago, 111., July 27. Close: wheat firm cash 914 i September, 88 The Chicago Tribune lately .published a brief table which is of considerable in terest to every student of-the liquor question. The population of Chicago, is in round numbers 1,200,000. A recent report of the citv board of health gives the number of firms and persons en gaged in- various occupations. From that report the Tribune takes the figures in the following table, which ehows the number of inhabitants to each sal non, meat market etc.: Saloon, 217: meat market, 770; lawyer, 450; cigat shop, 900; grocery, 377; drug store, 2,000; doctor 700 ; office holder, 120. The office holders are at the head of the procession and the saloons come next; Notice the great jump there is from "the saloon to the grocery and meat market, both of which cater to the prime necessity- of mankind food. The Tribune remarks that "there is one municipal and gov ernment employe for every 120 Chica goans, men women and children ; that is a good record, and it shows where the taxes go." But there is one saloon for every 217 people men, women and children in Chicago and this shows un doubtedly, where a great deal of the money goes. LOGIC AND MATHEMATICS. It is a sad commentary on the admin istration of justice in the United States that only 102 persons were legally exe cuted for the 4,290 mnrders committed in the year 1890 while 126 persons were lynched. Statistics clearly show that tne man wno commits a murder nas a better chance of escaping than the man who steals a loaf of bread. There is surely something wrong when the execu tions by lynch law are twenty-five per cent greater in nnmber than by organ ized justice and all the hangings put to gether are not three per cent of the number of murders. There ought to be more hangings or fewer murders. PRINZ & NITSCHKE. DEALERS IS Furniture -and Carpets. We have added to our business a complete Undertaking Establishment, and as we are in no way connected with the Undertakers' Trust onr" prices will rbe low accordingly. Kemember our place on Second street, next to Moodv's bank. U.S. -Land Office Attorneys, Rooms 7 and 8, 17. S. Land Othce Bunding, - THE DALLES, OREGON. with Two days ago our evening coutempor- : ary told ur of a man in Grant county who had "a thousand sheep on a thous and hills, etc." We supposed that "a thousand sheep on a thousand hills" meant a million" and that the "etc" meant some more that he did not count, Klngsley Items. The hot winds are getting away the crops! J A three months school closes tomorrow j after a four-months hard struggle to find the lost day, with Profes.-or Pitman as teacher. Robert Kelly has gone to Portland on j business. ' Johnny Whitten has given up the idea of ever finding water in his newj well after digging a depth of thirty-eight i feet. "The devil take the water j witches," so thinks Johnny. Ira Americk has nearly filled the Ath ens feed stable with rye hay. Emerson Williams is clerking for E. Keiley during Mr. Kelly's stay in Port land. If Robert stays much longer Emerson will have to have his pants and hat made larger. - John Russell is hauling .lumber from f juviupcuu o luiii fj . uui iu a uuupe 111 Grass Valley for his eldest son Mr. Sherman Clark and Misa Mary E. Hillman, of Oak Grove, were married at the residence of Chas. Fralev. one- and-a-half miles east of Kingsley. Luck to the happy couple wherever they may go. ' . The widow Baxter has the finest crop on Tygh Ridge. The farmers are making hay quite lively. There will be lots of feed on Tygh Ridge this winter. Mr. James Cox has gone to The Dalles with his wife for medical treatment. C. G. Abott has just had his hair shingled. He had quite a large fleece to contend with in hot weather. Robert Kelly has forty acres of corn which looks fine. C. G. Abott is getting his stock ready to take in the fairs this fall. The Sunday school is moving along nicely with Jerry Vaughn acting as superintendent. Everybody is invited to attend. Rasp. For Sale at a Bargain. A GOOD- Traction Engine Has only been run sixty days. Buffalo Pitts Thresher Only used two months. Chopping Mill, Capable of 15 to" 20 tons per day; cost $31. . ... ' The above will be sold on easy terms. ' W. L. WARD, The Dalles, Or. Filings, Contests, And Business of all Kinds Befor the Local and General Land Office Promptly Attended to. , Over Sixteen Years Experience. - WE AXSO do a General Heal Estate Business. All Correspondence Promptly Answered. Health is Wealth ! BANKERS. TRANSACT a generalbanking businebs De. E. C. West's Nerve akb Bkaik Tbat xent, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dlzzl- Headache, Nerv ous Prostration caused by the us I ot uleuiiol or tobacco. Wakefulness, Mental Do I pressloii, Softening of tbe Brain, resulting in in-' t sanitv nud Ictidinar to mfserv. derav and death. Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power in euner sex, involuntary .Losses ana spermsy orrhrpa caused by over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment, f 1.00 a box, or six boxes for $6.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of prioa. WE GUARANTEE SIX-BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by $5.00, we wiQ send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effect cure. Guarantees issued only by BLAKEtEI 4 HOl'OHTON, ' - Prescription Drug-gists, 175 Second St. " The Dalles, Or. ! Letters of Credit issued available in. the E.iHtem States. Sieht Eschanee and Telegraphic Transfers solden New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections mr.de at all points on fav orable terms. D. P. Thompson' J. 8. Schenck, H. 1L. Beau President. Vice-President. Cashier. First M0 Bant THE DALLES, OGOREN Fine Frnit Ranch for Sale I ACRES OF LAND, FOUR AND K HALF IOU miles below the town of Hood River, on the Columbia. 4ti fruit trees most in bearing, 200 grape vines in bearing, half an acre of black berries, one acre of strawberries, 3 or four acres of corn and 2 of clover. There will be about 4000 pounds of blackberries this year, also big crop of peaches grapes, apples, etc. Fine irri gating facilities with water all on the place; 1200 feet of Hume, two reservoirs, over 400 feet of water pipe, conveying water into bouse. Be tween S and 9 acres in cultivation balance in woods. Most of land lays well and can be culti vated. Price $2,3l0- Call on at ranch or address F. R. ABSTES. . Hood Kiver, Oregon. $20 EE WARD. w ftL BE i-Au FOR ANY INFORMATION leading to the conviction of unities cuttine rones ir In niiv wnr intnrfeHno- u'it). tto wir - Doles c- Idm'ns of Tux Electric r.ir.iiT Co. H. GLENN. ii ullage! A 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 Kew York, San Francisco and Portland. directors. Thompson. Jno. 8. Schenck. . Sparks. Geo. A. Liebb. H. M. Beall. $500 Re-ward! We will pay the above reward for any ease of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, In digestion, Constipation or Costiveness we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictlv complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fail to give satiBfae tiuii. Sugar Coated. Large boxes containing t Pills, 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and imi tations. The genuine manufactured only b TH EIOHN C. WFST COMPANY, CH1GAQO. ULAKELET HOUGHTON, Prescription Drngrlata, 175 Second St. The Dallas, Or.