THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1892. THE CONTRACT SYSTEM Applied to Hie Cascades and Dalles of the - v ColuiMa. " THE GOVERNMENT BENEFITTED. Work More Efficiently Accomplished, Regardless of Congress. HOUR OF DELIVEBA'CE AT HAND. Activity Shortly Looked for at the Cas cades And Another Tear at The Dalles. Washington-, April 11. In answer to an inquiry from The Dalles, concerning the speedy completion of the Cascade locks under the contract system, Repre sentative Hermann says : "The effect of the contract system is: That the contractor undertakes to do the work according to the plans and specifications within a certain time, and at a certain price, and takes his chances on the ap propriations. As congrees appropriates, he is paid, but the work goes on all the same, appropriation or no appropriation. But of course the liability of the govern ment is fixed, and it is known that the payment is sure. It is to the contrac tors interest to do the work as soon as possible. The war department reports to congress that it could expend $1,500, 000 during the next fiscal year, and $245, 000 the year following, to complete. If this could be done by the red tape and slow process of the government engi neers, a contractor can do it so much sooner, and of course so much less in cost, for this has been fully demonstra ted by our recent experience with the contract system at Galveston, Balti more, Philadelphia and Sault Ste Marie. - Gen. Casey tells me that he has saved . twenty-five per cent, by the contract at Baltimore, which is dredging ; and Gen. Poe, who has charge of the Sault Ste Marie canal and locks, tells us that he will save $1,000,000 on the $6,000,000 es timate for that work. The hour of de liverance is now - at hand. Oar next move can be on the dalles rapids, and we can consider ia another congress not temporary and costly transfer road there, but a great permanent work, which we can insist shall likewise go under the contract system, and thus open up the great Columbia all the way along its navigable water course. Next year the people of Tennessee and Ken tucky will insist on putting the great Cumberland river under the contract system, which opens up 600 miles of contifeious navigation. This was tried this time, but we could not safely in clude anv more great works, and hence excluded the Cumberland." Recognition of Mormons. Springfield, Mass;; April 11. In one of the churches of this city yesterday, a very remarkable incident in the jour ney of the eastern delegates to the gen eral assembly of the Presbyterian church, which is to meet in Portland, Or., May 19th, was alluded to. It appears that a number of the delegates, who go by the Union Pacific, have accepted invitations from the latter day saints to break their trip by spending Sunday at Salt Lake ' city, and worship on that day in the Mormon tabernade. Grave doubts are expressed as to the propriety of this act. It is generally felt that this is an atten tion which the Presbyterians could not possibly reciprocate, and that it involves a measure of recognition of the Mormon church, which is wholly inconsistent with Christian principles ; some Presby terians declare that it will be a serious disgrace te their body. Harrison and Cleveland. j Buffalo, N. Y., April 11. In the long run fair-play in politics brings the only success worth having. There are increasing signs of a Whitelaw Eeid boom for vice-president, but it must be clear as the noon-day sun, that the presi dential candidates for nomination on the democratic and republican tickets will be Cleveland and Harrison respect ively. North Dakota has been added to 'the list of states which have instructed for Cleveland, and it is noticeable that every convention since Hill's New York ob, has been a Cleveland convention. There have been six of them, and they ' send fifty-four delegates. Interviews of Gov. McKinley and ex-Gov. Campbell place both as expressing the opinion that Harrison and Cleveland would be the presidential nominees. The number of persons who hold the same opinion ap pears to be increasing. PoTerty Stricken Boomers. Guthrie, O. T., April 10. As the time for the opening of the Cheyenne and Arapahoe country approaches, the crowd of settlers preparing to enter in creases. Large numbers of negroes are among the.throng of intending settlers and they will be no small factor in the settlement of the new lands. Many are Almost entirely destitute, making the full . distance from southern Arkansas and Mifisissinni on foot. Ucon arrival here they are dependent on the charity of . their more fortunate neighbors. Perry la the Man.. Pomona, Cal., April 11. The mys tery of the robbery of Geo. E. Holden of $8,000 in cash, securities and jewelry, on the Santa Fe overland train, Tetween Albuquerque and Pomona, last Novem ber, lias been cleared up. Holden was robbed of his money and bonds on his way from New York to Pomona to spend the winter.' The man who robbed his satchel is under arrest. Hol den started for New York . yesterday immediately upon the receipt of the telegram concerning' the findings of his bonds in a boarding house in that city. It seems Oliver Curtis Peny, who is confined in jail at Lyons, for the bold robbery of the American Express car near Syracuse, February 21st, is the cul prit. Holden says that he now recol lects a young man answering Perry's description being in another Pullman car on the same train, coming west with him, who represented himself as the owner of a cattle ranch in south New Mexico, and had lots of money to spend buying Indian curiosities along the journey. Holden is sure Perry rode no further west than Prescott junction, where he left the train in the night ostensibly to go to Prescott on business How or when he' had an opportunity to rob Holden's satchel, the latter does not know. GRASPING UNCLE SAM. What a Chilian Writer in Brussels has to Say Ahont ns. BLAINE AND THE LATIN REPUBLICS. The Dream of a New World Zollverein for Both Americas. AN EFFORT TO ALARM EUROPE. Ibanez Firing; the Heart of Great Brit ain, France and Germany With a Chilian Fizz. Brussels, April 11. Senor Maxini illiano Ibanez, the well-known Chilian writer, he reviews the circumstances of the Baltimore dispute between the United States and Chili, and attempts to show that the American government was quite wrong and unjustly exacting from first to last. He recalls the annex ation of California to the. United States ; the Washington cabinet's interference in the war between Chili and Peru, in 1879 ; the pressure exercised in order to induce Peru "to surrender its resources and freedom into the hands of the Amer ican firm of Grace & Donoughmore ;" the medling of the United States in the recent Chilian revolution ; and, lastly, the Washington pan-American congress, where, he says, Blaine attempted to destroy the independence of the South American states through the arbitra tion of a court which would have made the United States master of the fate of the new world's Latin republics. All these facts, besides the proposed Nicar agua canal, are set forth as showing that the United States is resolved upon ach ieving, by might or right, the dream of the New World zollverein which would place both portions of America under its sway. He discards the idea that Blaine's policy was merely inspired by election eering purposes and proceeds to show that it is part and parcel of a general policy aiming at results highly alarming to South American states and European nations, among which Great Britain, France and Germany stand first. Demoralized East-Boand Rates. Buffalo, April 12. The report that the road had already cut the east-bound flour rate down from 20 cents to 17 from Chicago to New York finds ample confirmation. Two lake and rail lines have taken large amounts of flour already ; one of them is reported to have 200 cars, and a third line is said to le in the cut. Add to this the statement that the roads have positively made a rate of h cents on wheat and corn from Buffalo to New York and the situation is already very interesting. Navigation compels the railroad companies to lower their rates. This is the inevitab'e result when water transportation routes are open. 'A Mormon Fake. Independence, Mo., April 11. The basement of the temple of the reorgan ized Church of Latter Day Saints looked like a hospital today. The elders in attendance advertised they would heal the sick by laying on of hands, and many persons suffering with various ail ments were taken to the temple. Some were on stretchers, some on cots and some in chairs. The manner of treat ment was very simple and consisted of "pouring a few drops of olive oil, which had been previously . blessed . by the prophet Joseph, upon the head of pa tients and the laying on of hands. No cures were effected although some pro fessed to experience some relief. At the business the conference decided to hold the next conference at Lima,. Iowa, the home of Joseph Smith. ; YOUNG FIELD'S CAUSE. ProYided for Tbrouli Intercession of Mrs. Garfield. HIS FATHER HER BENEFACTOR. Kindness Awakened in Thankfulness for Favors Received. THE PRESIDENT'S HEART TOUCHED. The Young 9Ian May Hare a Hard Row to Hoe, In his Chosen Field, bnt Is Glad to go. Washington, April 12. Concerning the report that Cyras W. Field, jr;, of New York was to be appointed to one of the several vacancies in the consular service, the Post has this to say : "He decided some months ago that he would like to go abroad in a representative, ca pacity. He expressed a wish for a place in the consular service, and Secretary Tracy and Col. Elliott F. Shepard and other jj-ell-known New Yorkers interes ted themselves in his behalf. They laid the matter before the president, and the latter promised to give it careful consid eration. He did nothing, however, and Mr. Field began to despair. About ten days ago Mrs. Garfield came to Wash ington to visit her daughter. She heard of Field's application, and she heard, too, that the young man was not a little disturbed by the president's delay in act ing favorably npon it. She went at once to the executive mansion and sought an interview with President Harrison. The latter inquired the reason of her in terest. She replied that she owed every thing she had to the kindness of Cyras W. Field, sr. Then she went on to tell the president that after the death of her husband in 1881, Mr. Field inaugurated the movement looking to the creation of a fund for the maintenance of her child ren and herself. Mr. Field himself was a liberal contributor, and through his exertions the amount finally aggregated $300,000, which sum was carefully in vested in her name. It was, she said. the only favor she had ever asked the president, and it was the only one she ever would ask if he would only grant it. The president was touched, no less with her earnestness than with her deep ap preciation of the kindness she had re ceived at the hands of Mr. Field, and he told her that what he bad failed to do for Tracy, Shepard and othersshould be done for her. Then he sent for Mr. Field and had a talk with him. He told him that the pay of consular officers -was beggarly, as a rule, and that in many cases they were compelled to lodge over small retail shops on the continent, in order to live within their income, but he assured him, at the same time, if he wanted to go abroad that the privilege would be given him. Then he told him how few desirable places were left. Mr. Field insisted, however, than he needed the salary, no matter how unremunera tive the places were, and the president told him to go back to New York and await the appointment, and it is not improbable that a secretaryship of lega tion will be offered him. Company F En Route. Ontario,- April 11. Company F, Capt. Powers commanding, arriving here at 6 o'clock this morning, had breakfast and went to Vale under orders from Gov. Pennoyer. .The Vale mob. of cowboys are waiting for daylightf tomorrow, the time for preliminary examination. Five prisoners are in jail and Sheriff Fell is determined to protect them in defiance of all the cowboys in the country. The militia will assist in giving the prisoners a fair examination, which, possibly, they do not deserve, as good men say they should be lynched. Bishop Ireland Approved. Rome, April 11. The Jesuit organ, Civitta Cattolica, having adversely criti cised Archbishop Ireland's initiative in the Stillwater, Minn., affair, the pope has-eent Archbishop Ireland a special note intimating his disapproval of the Civitta Cattolica 's articles, and urging the archbishop to attach no importance to them.. This action of the pope caused much comment here, as he rarely mixes in such disputes. The pope has just re ceived from Cardinal Gibbons an im portant study on the school question in the United States, in which his holiness is much interested. Opera Company Stranded. Sacramento, April 11. At 'midnight tonight the Emma Juch Opera company was still in the cars at the depot, Man ager Locke having failed to raise the amount necessary to transport the com pany to Portland. The members today said they had ' no complaint against Locke, that they had money 'of their own and plenty to eat an drink. - Overproduction In Oil. PiTTSBUROj-April 11. Leading oil pro ducers of the southwest are preparing for a general suspension of drilling oper ations for six months, to bring about an advance in prices. , Accident to Steamers New York, April 12. The steamer Australian, from New Orleans for Lon don, reported with her shaft broken, has been towed from 800 miles- west of Fastnet by the steamer Catalonia to Liverpool. A fire on the-steamer Mon ravia, at Bremen from New Orleans, damaged 300 bales of cotton and com in the after hold. The steamer City of Fitchburg, of the Old Colony line, from New York yesterday for New Bedford, was seriously damaged by fire. The loss is heavy. . The American System. Chihcahua, Mex., April 11. Primary convention, in imitation of the Ameri can system, were held recently through out the state of Chihuahua, and Satur day last a convention of the chosen dele gates was held in city Chihuahua. This convention endorses General Diaz for the third presidential term, and Senor Miquel Ahumanda was nominated for governor by a vote of 39 to 30. Small-Fox in New York. New York, April 11, Three more cases of small-pox were discovered to day, making eleven since Saturday. The cases are mostly in the down-town tenement district. The steampsliip Fulda, from Bremem, which arrived here yesterday, had four cases on board. A CAREER OF CRIME. How it was Started-Now Mm in a Lonely Death. INFLUENCE OF EVIL ASSOCIATION. 1 Takes the Lead of a Gang Which Baffled - - the Police of the World. IS FINALLY LANDED IV PRISON. Turns Informer Is Released Becomes an Opium Fiend Gambles Him- self Away, etc. Chicago, April 12. George Wilkes, King of the Forgers, is dying in Bellevue hospital, New York city. Thirty years ago his rich uncle secured him a posi tion in the bank of Brown Brothers & Co., NewYork. He soon became a fav orite on account of his talent, but was finally discharged from his position of trust because of evil associations. He then started on a bold career of crime, which earned for him the sobriquet of king of the forgers. For twenty years he was leader of a gang which baffled the police of every country in the world, and hundreds of thousands of dollars were secured by the criminals through all kinds of forgeries. King George came to Chicago, his old home, in 1882, when he and his gang committed a number of forgeries on banks in Joliet, Lima, O., and Kansas City. He made $15,000 on one deal. Detectives secured the para phernalia of the whole gang, and the passers of the checks were fonnd, but King George eluded the officers. In 1881 Wilkes was the leader of a band of thieves and forgers in Milan, Italy. They forged and tried to place in circu lation bonds and bank notes worth $1, 500,000. Wilkes was arrested and sent to prison. He secured his release four years later by turning informer against his associates. In 1886 he was arrested in New York for swindling banks in Rochester, San Francisco, Cheyenne and Butte City, but managed to escape con viction, and went to' Paris to lose his ill gotten money, as usual, by gambling. King George has been a victim of the morphine habit for years. A policeman found him lying unconscious in a vacant lot in New York city Thursday night. Some enemy had assaulted him. He was taken to the hospital, where he is now dying. . Drowned in Icy Waters. Boston, April 11. Last evening In structor A. F. Norburg, of the Boston farm school, Thompson island, left this city with ten boys connected with the school, in a sail boat to go to the island. Midway the boat was upset by a squall, and all were thrown into icy water, but managed to cling to the vessel. No relief came, and one by one they chilled through, slipped from the insecure sup port and drowned, until the instructor and eight boys were gone. At the end of four hours the boat drifted ashore with the two survivors. Incendiary for Bobbery. Vienna, April 11. Incendiary fires continue here, but owing to the extraor dinary precautions of the authorities little damage has been done so far. They are attributed to anarchists, but it' is be lieved many of them are set with a view to robbery during the excitement. A similar state of affairs is reported at Lyonfelden, upper Austria. - 1Twu Erar Thus. - Astoria, Or., April ll. Some splen did' salmon, averaging twenty-five pounds each, were at the canneries to day, as a result of the first day's catch ; but in8eueral the catch was small, the weather being cold and the fish scarce. THE DURAND STYLE. A Clereland Man Who Has Prohahly . Heard From Oregon. THE DANGER OF GIVING NOTES. A New Phase in the Methods Used by Swindling Piano Dealers. . THE CLEVELAND MAN IS IN PRISON. Notes Duplicated by Forgery Paid by Pet sons Whose 'Names Were Signed to Them. Cleveland, O., April 13. The case" of B. S. Barrett, a swindling piano dealer, now in the penitentiary, has made any amount of trouble, and suits upon notes given by his customers for pianos have brought out a new phase in the swindle, The genuine notes and some of the forged ones were sold by . him to the Euclid Avenue bank. Barrett kept forged duplicates of nearly all the notes, and when his customers, ignorant of his having sold them, called to pay install ments he gave them receipts and indor sed the amount On the back of the notes held by him. The bank sold the notes to J. C. Ellis after Barrett's flight, for $500 and charged $15,000 to its profit and loss account. Ellis began suit on sev eral notes, alleging that as the paper was held by the bank, payment to Bar rett could not be regarded as payment of the note,. One victim. Mrs. Cunning ham, who holds receipts from Barrett, showing that she has paid $470 for a $450 piano, was sued on a note for $130, which may have been forged. Two notes against her were held by Ellis, one for $140 and the other for $130. A dis pute arising at the trial as to whether one of the notes was not genuine, it was decided to take Barrett's deposition at the penitentiary. Barrett on Jbeing shown the two notes, tore up the one for $140, which he declared a forgery, and handed back the one for $130, which he said is genuine. The attorneys spoke of the snarl as something frightful, and piano buyers who failed to keep their receipts are in much trouble. In one or two cases heard of, Barrett's customers took up notes bearing their own forged signature without discovering the fact, while the genuine notes were held at the bank and are now being sued upon. The individual notes are generally for amounts from $50 to 150, but the aggre gate is over $15,000. Ylllanions Collection of Horses. Cleveland, O., April 13. This morn ing in answer to an advertisement for a horse to represent the drunkards faith ful brute in the play of A Temperance Town, about a dozen of the most villain ous looking horses ever seen in the city were hitched in front of the Lyceum theatre. . They were ringboned, knock kneed, spavined, and. dirty. Most of them had heaves and spring-halt. Their ribs protruded like the hoops of a flour barrel and only one or two-of them could see. Up to noon the manager naa not selected an animal quite disreputable enough to suit bis purpose. The animal finally chosen will perform an important role in tne new play. ' Pretty Close Neighbors. Portland, April 13. The outsider who has a slim Idea of the expansion of this city, will be better informed when an incident is related which occurred to the east side firemen about 4 o'clock yes terday morning. Some person sent in a still alarm to chief Holmes, that a fire had broken out in Holladay's addition. The companies ran to the division, hav ing heard that the Holladay bell had been rung. After looking some time for the fire it was learned that a fire in Van couver had occasioned all the trouble. Some one hearing the Vancouver bell supposed it was nearer home. The fire men returned to their respective houses minus their usual happy dispositions. Emerson Bennett. Philadelphia, April 13. Newspaper discussion upon the death of Walt Whit man has caused the Inquirer to refer in a general way to other noted writers, among them Emerson Bennett. People rarely hear nowadays of Bennett, yet he was widely known twenty years ago as a novelist, his Prairie Flower having reached a sale of 100,000 copies. He is a veteran of seventy and lives in Philadel phia. Mr. Bennett is still a prolific maker of manuscriDt. He writes all night and sleeps all day, as George Sand was iona oi aoing. England in Bearing Sea. Montreal, April 11. The Canadian Pacificjauthorities have received a cable gram to the effect that 250 sailors and marines, destined for the Pacific squad ron, would sail on the steamer Cartha ginian from Liverpool for Halifax, and from there will take a Canadian Pacific special train, which will leave at once for the Pacific coast. It is believed the present detachment is being sent over to reinforce, the crews already doing duty in Pacific waters. Must Re a Sparrow. St. Louis, April 13. The Republic, speaking of the South American trofeles says today: "Three South: -Americas republics are in various stages of inter nal revolution. The white-winged dove, especially assigned to look after the peace of - South America, must be a sparrow." Will Resume at Once. V Manitowoc, Wis., April 13. The loss of the Manitowoc Manufacturing com pany by the fire yesterday will aggregate -$300,000. The special feature of this business, school furniture and opera . chairs, is now in such demand that they , will rebuild and renew business on a larger scale, at once. The Real Thins;. Astoria, April 13. Boom, boom, boom, is the uppermost word and thought here now, since the croakers have subsided, with reference to railway matters, and added additional thousands to the valuation of their corner lots. If buu fjicovjib ci-atc vi vuiua continues, WO expect to hear of investment excursions, gotten up in the boom centers of the 1 west, iot me oDjeci oi visiting Astoria, to find out what the real thing is like. Light-Hearted People. CniCAoo, April 13. In the fury of the late devastating ' cyclones Chicago has marvelonsly escaped. At the Palmer house today an Oregonian was relating the exemptions of his state from such scenes, and he closed by eaying Chicago has the finest and the biggest business houses, but said he :' "The occupants of upper .floors in Chicago's sky-scraper buildings must feel light-hearted when they see a cyclone coming across the prairie."- Southern Floods. New Orleans, April 13. The destruc tion of human lives and property by the floods in northern Mississippi is .appall ing. Huudres of lives are lost. Last night one man rowed several miles in the dark on the river with twenty-six bodies he picked up. The flood came suddenly, and no one was prepared. All sorts of crafts are being improvised to go to the rescue of the survivors perched on i. j... ... .... the highest ground without food or shel ter. The loss of property is over $1,000,- 000. The citizens of Loundes county will petition Congressman Allen to- ask government aid, as their own means are inadequate. The loss of livestock is- be yond computing but will be enormobs. A Christian Burial. Winlock! Wash., April 13. The mur- derons whisky fiend Dick Hancock, who attempted to kill his wife ; and perhaps thinking he had done so, immediately afterwards killed himself, by sending a bullet into his miserable heart; was given a christian burial according to his puts it: "It was amusing in a ghastly way, to see the way in which the people up there vented their indignation, npon the body of Hancock, whom they would have hung again had there been any use in it. They just put him, dressed In an undershirt and trousers, into a common dry-goods box and placed him under the ground without the least semblance of a funeral service." Wyoming Cattle Thieve. Casper, Wyo., 4pril 12. Fighting between the invading army of detectives, employed by the big cattle companies, and the so-called rustlers now seem to be general along Powder river, the army being broken up into squads. The militia has been ordered to be prepared to march to the front immediately. A man from Riverside reports that Sheriff Angus, of Johnson county, swore in 150 deputies' and went Out to arrest the force sent ont by the cattlemen, and that the sheriff tried to take them into custody. Twenty-eight of the regulators and eighteen of the depalies were killed. Every man in the town is a walking ar senal, and the excitement is intense. Doc. Williamson, from Big Horn, basin, reports a great fall of enow there Friday night, and that it is impossible for the army to get in there unless they go in on snowshoes. He says they don't expect any trouble in the Bonanza part of the basin. - - Kew York Incendiaries, New York, April 12. The- esfcteace - of a gang of incendiaries and anarebists, who have been starting fires in tenement houses in Brooklyn since January, was first demonstrated today. Two-men are nnder arrest. One of the accomplices of the gang made a full confession. Their plan was to arrange with dwellers in tenement honses who were overinsured to burn the property for a percentage of the insurance money. V ; ' Hoi man Nominated. Lawbbkckbvro, Ind., April 12. Con- J gressman W. s. iiolman was recomi nated by acclamation by the democrats of the fourth district. Commercial mileage is another name by which railways hope to inveigle con gress into permission for allowing cut rates. All is quiet in Vale. The presence of Company F had the desired effect. Eight militia men are kept constantly on guard at the jail, but little fear is en tertained of an attempt at mob violence. It is expeccted that F company will re turn today in charge of the prisoners. . Another report says that an attack was expected last night and that the cow boys mean business,