1 f VOL. II. THE DALLES, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1892. NUMBER 38. CHICAGO IS SINKING. Tiie Board of Trade IMn Setting ttte Precedent THE BLUE CLAY STRATUM BROKEN. It is not Strong Enough to Support Such Massive Structures. FfECT OF DBEDOING TflE K1VEB. To Increase Displacement Will Cause That Much More Settling of Building. Chicago, Aug. 26. The statement that the board of trade building is sink ing iuto the ground, and that it has al ready gone down eight inches, is not surprising to those who are acquainted with the nature of the soil of this city. The foundations of such structures as . the board of trade building- are on the blue-clay stratum which underlies the city. While this blue clay is strong enough to sustain the ordinary building, it is not sufficiently strong to support, without yielding, such massive struc tures as some of those which of late years have been erected here. Of course, where the bunding settles evenly, no serious results are likely to arise from anything that can now be foreseen. It is only where they settle unevenly, as in the case of the board of trade building and the government building, that the results are really serious. Engineers say that there are evidences that the weight of the buildings resting upon the blue-clay stratum is gradually forcing the bottom of the river upward In many places in the river the bine clay has been dredged out repeatedly, to riee -tip again in a few weeks.. It has been assumed by the engineers that to dredge the river to any great depth, as has been suggested at different times in connection with the drainage policy, would increase the displacement of blue clay in the river, and consequently cause the settling of the great buildings just that much more. BENEFITS OF AN Ol'EX 1UVEK. What Might be Experienced Through out The Inland Empire. - From toe Spokane Review. The portage railroad at the cascades, built by the state of Oregon, was com pleted last year in time practically to open the Columbia from The Dalles to the sea before the shipment of the grain crop 1801 began. The immediate effect of this was telt throughout the entire section tributary to The Dalles, and was marked by a marked increase in the business transacted. The following fig ures from The Dalles Chronicle show to what extent this increase grew in a single year. in lsau the total shipments 01 g'am, flour, feed and mill stuffs were 462,150 pounds. Last year it was, of wheat alone, 10,313,596 pounds, requiring 51C cars for transportation. In 1891 3,000 000 pounds of wool was Ehipped from The Dalles; this year it will exceed 5,000,000 pounds. Careful estimates place the prospective shipments of wheat from the Dalles this venr at flO.000.000 pounds, an increase of 79.204,655 pounds over the aggregate shipments of the two previous years. The acreage tributary. to The Dalles has been greatly increased. New settlers have been encouraged to aid in develop ing the country, and all industries have been stimulated by the better opportu nities afforded for reaching market and the cheaper transportation rates which competition has granted. the benefits which have occurred to that section from the building of the portage road would bo experienced throughout tho Inland Empire were the entire river opened to navigation. The thousands of acres now under cultivation would be increased to tens of thousands, the flocks and herds would grow in pro portion, and all lines of industry would feel the quickening influences afforded by an open waterway to the sea. The resources of the great section drained by the Columbia and Snake rivers are manifold, and while to the railroads is due much of the prosperity now experienced in this territory, the fullest development can not be had until both streams are loosed from th'er rocky fetters and water transportation affords a cheap and safe means of reaching the ecuuuaru. JUSTICE IN EQliADOR. THE . PORTLAND EXPOSITION. Gross Indignities Heaped Upon an Am erican Citizens. SUIT TO BE BROUGHT FOR DAMAGES. The Only Explanation is That be Was Mistaken For Another Man. e TOLII TO GET OCT OF THE COUNTItY. Remarkable Resemblanee to an English Swindler Account For the Brutality. The Last Strike. Buffalo, Aug. 26. An evening paper giving an account of the final ending of the strike here savn "The. 1nt strltrn brought blood from the nose of the ,,!an of edncat5on experience, it is a Grand Master Sweeney." He was met Theosophy I Spreading. Review. Theosophy is close in line with voodooism, faith in Indian thera peutics and trust in the Chinese doctor's unique ideas about the human form and how to keep it in health. And since several thousand oth rwise intelligent people look with awe upon a rabbit's foot obtained in a graveyard, and other thousands will buy a nostrum heralded as an Indian herb cure, in preference to a standard preparation of some Dhvsi- by a crowd of strikers yesterday de manding that he declare a strike from New York to Chicago. Words ensued, and Switchman Quinn, pf the Nickel Plate yard, struck Sweeney a ferocious blow, knocking him down. The blood flowed in a stream from Sweeney's nose. V4U1UU gut ma leaaera Dead against a telegraph pole and punched and pounded him until pulled away. Much excite ment prevails. A visit to various rail road offices elicited the information that the roads will not take back the strikers to their old place in the body. Many will not be taken back at all, and all ujusb uiHKe tueir applications soon, as the new men will be considered m the same order as other applicants. matter of small wonderment that the osopby has obtained a foothold in this country and is spreading. All the dis coveries that have been made in nature in fifty centuries have done nothing toward opening the sealed book of fu ture existence. The scientist of today knows no more about the bourne from which man cometh and that toward which he journeys day by day than was known by the cave dweller of prehis toric times. Washington, Aug. 2G. A sailor named Edward Carlin formerly employ ed by tho Pacific Mail company, a citi zen of the United States, has entered a claim with tho state department against the government of Equador for $50,000 damages. Carlin says he went to Equa dor in 1888. At Cuanco, an interior city", he was siezed by the police author! wen ana tnrown into tue vilest sort of a dungeon, where he was brutally treated for several months. He was then forced to work in the mines for a year, and after that was returned to prison, where he was kept nine months more. He was then released and told to get out of the country. The only explanation of fered for the indignities heaped upon him was that he was the wrong man. After his release Carlin discovered that he bore a remarkable resemblance to an Englishman who had swindled a number of people, and it was on this account he had been arrested. Carlin's story has been corroborated by a number of Am ericans and Englishmen at Cuanco and has a good case. v " --'.' . tbe'hojik rclk hill. The Forerunner of the Great Chicago I Worldg'Falr This Tear. THE TOURISTS ELYSIUM t It Main Linos Given by a Prominent London Paper. London, Aug. 24. The Chronicle this morning give the following as. the main lines of the home rule bill, as believed to be agreed upon between Messrs. Gladstone, McCarthy and Dillon : First That the present land legisla tion shall not be disturbed for five years. Second That the police and judiciary shall be in the bands of the Dublin par liament. Third That the balance of the Irish A private note from the business-like and operoso superintendent, R. W. Mitchell, of the Portland exposition, in forms us that premiums this year ex ceed, in amount and number, those of all former years, notwithstanding the alleged fact that "times are as hard as the winter of 1881." The Portland Industrial exposition for this ycaf will be the repository of the Chicagd exposition of 1893. This should be sufficient inducement to sug gest to every enterprising man, woman and child in the state that an unusual effort be made towards presenting some thing from every part of the state, to the - end that . the same, at the proper time, may be forwarded to Chicago. They will give free storage and take good care of any and all exhibits at the close of tho Portland exposition, which exhibits are intended for Chicago. Par ticipation mean 8 a rehearsal for the great showing of 1893. Mr. Mitchell says: . ' - j "Twelve counties have already signi fied their intention of coming in with county exhibits. It is our desire to give every county an opportunity to show what it boosts of, and what it has in toe way ol inducements to settle ment. To enable each county to ex hibit, the different transportation lines have given greatly reduced rates. . These rates took effect August 16th and are as follows : AH articles for exhibition at the Portland expositions on which full tariff rates may be paid to the exposi tion, will be returned free-to- point of origin, if on the railroad line, and to junction point: if on an originating or connecting line. All that is required is that the shipper shall present, within five days of the close of the exposition, certificate, signed by the secretary, stating that the articles have been on exhibition, andhaye not changed own ership".' " . The only exclusion Js race horses. Articles of a perishable nature that, for any reason, may. not be re turned, and ,on which full tariff rai have been paid to the.exposition, will, be treated as follows; Consignees of such articles shall be refunded amounts paid, on presentation, and surrender to the agent of the original expense bill, accompanied by a certificate from the secretary of the exposition to the effect that the goods were on exhibition, have not been sold, and no revenue - derived from them. . I . '., ;. "The Portland industrial Exposition was never started with the idea of mak ing money, or a holy .show of itself; it was organized for the benefit of other people. We believe' it should : be ' sup- Report No. 1 From The National Editor ial Association.-. - EDITOR HUGH LINDSAY'S VISIT, Though Small in Population The Dalles is Large in Generosity. A CBAND TBIP UP THE COLUMBIA, Visit to the Cannery And Other Points : of Interest in Company With Mr. '; K. Sehanno. North Powder Grain. TT ! TV 1 , viiiuu nepu oiican. Last Sunday a Republican representative visited the great wheat-growing country in the vi cinity of North Powder. The crops . in tnat section are going to be immense. It does one good to look upon the oceans of waving grain, such as is to be found mere, we walked through a field of wheat on the Davis Bros.' ranch, in which the grain measured from three to five feet high, and so thick that it would scarcely stand alone. This field is one land a quarter miles in length and con tains about 300 acres. Last year this jSeld produced an average of forty-seven Bushels of wheat to the acre. This is pnly a sample of the thousands of acres hf growing grain in that productive sec- ion. The acreage tills year is much arger than last year and large tracts of pew lands are being broken every year. When , that entire section baa been laced under cultivation the quantity of pain that It will produce, will be aston Jibing. '.' K. of P. Election. Kansas Citv, Aug. 26. The supreme lodge of the Knights of Pythias elected the following officers yesterday: Su preme chancellor, W. W. Blackwell.of Kentucky ; supreme vice-chancellor, Walter B. Richie, of Ohio; supreme prelate, T. Blackmer, of California supreme master of exchequer, F. J. Willey, of Delaware ; supreme keeper of records and seal, L. C. White of Ten se; supreme master-at-arms, J. H Lyon, of Kansas; supreme inner guard. A. C. Gardner, of New York ; supreme outer guard, John H. Thompson of nnaiungton, v. j. . . . . . . church fund shall be at the. disposal of P?1 not 111 mxaT ana.8ty,e Dut ,n the Irish legislature. plain, every-day sort of way. It is will- Fourth That thi F.noii.h' "gto, and has, for the past four years, general of the bill of 1880 shall be dis- afc least' earned support- This year, Densedwith ' it will present a dress rehearsal, eo far Fifth That on the other hand there M lne racmc northwest is concerned, of shall onlv be one nefam ffonaif mant I nat is expected ox ns at Chicago. We and the Irish parliament ehall not have ave a prett? biS exposition. It power to levy separate duties. wm ue aneaa 01 anything yet given to Sixth That there nlmM h mwoi e people ot uregon, rich or poor. For vote to be exercised on the advice of the English ministry. beventh That thirty Irish members shall be retained at Westminister. The Chronicle believes that Gladstone abandoned with great reluctance the idea of a receiver general in deference to the wishes of the McCarthyites. Bow It Applies. lacoma Aews. The peoples party of King county "resolved" that the Wash ington canal would be a benefit to the whole nation ; on the same principle, we suppose, that axle grease on the axle is a benefit to the whole wheel. the first time, we have. succeeded in getting manufacturers to agree to operate their exhibits; and this alone will attract like a new hat on another woman. All the exhibitors are in with us, and we anticipate a real good time. Come and see us on press day. We will be busy, but will be on deck. Yours for an Enlightened Press. "'..". c R; w- Mitchell. Col. Chapaians Bill... - . . Tidings. Col. vi W, Chapman, of Portland, is out with the draft of a bill to be presented to the, Oregon legislature, providing for the establishment of some arbitration to prevent labor strikes in eeas jczpoanding. tnisEtate. The question will undoubted- It Was the Washington IndenamlAnt I ly Come before the lepitilatm-e at ita npvf uiuue jsemocrac. 1 see tnat X nomas which develnnml thonnlo or), ! it, I session, nnrl lnn oot o W. . , Inventor Thomas Edison. The Huntington. Pa.. Dailv Local News of August 4th, gives the link in the journey ' homeward, "frbni ' Portland toCelilo, of that section in which its editor, Mr. Hugh Lindsay belonged, on the return trip of the National Editorial Association, June 1st. Mr. Lindsay says : The scenery along the route be tween Portland and The Dalles is grand beyond description. For twelve miles we course along the Willamette river to ita junction with the famous Columbia river, where a magnificent view can be had ofMt. Hood, Mt. St. Helens, Mt. Adams and Mt. Ranier, a little farther on ie Fort Vancouver, an army station beautiful for location. Next rises be fore us the stately palisades of tho Co lumbia, and following in quick succes sion come bold and impressive rocks, charming glens, solemn crags, and the enchanting waterfalls, Oneonts, Bridal Veil, and Multnomah. At the latter the train stopped as If to bathe us in the glory of the scenery. The beautiful fall springs from a height of 828 feet," plunjr ing down the mossy mountain side, and spreading into spray and foam the water finds its way into .the-bosom of the mighty Uolunlbia. Reaching the cas cadea, where the vast volume, of the river comes dashing through the solid mountain walls, the excursionists trans ferred to take a steamboat ride farther dp the river to The Dalles. There are many legends told of this romantic sec tion, once the home of the Chinook. Twelve miles below The Dalles is Mem aloose island, bleak, bare and rugged, the burial place of the Indians, and where Victor Trovitt, an eccentric Or egon pioneer, was buried at his own re quest and a white monument has been erected- to mark tho spot. ; While surveying The Dalles, we made the acquaintance of Mr. Emil Sehanno, a retired wealthy citizen, who kindly prottered to escort H. II. McQuillan and wife, of Massachusetts, and self and wife, to the salmon fisheries, about two miles up the Columbia. The invitation was accepted, and after a drive behind a beautiful pair of sorrels through sand dunes made by the wind driving the sand from the banks of the river for a great distance inland, we arrived at the fishery at 5 o'clock in the afternoon, just as the fifty Chinamen were quit ting work in the canning process. -: The cannery we visited was known as The Dalles Packing Co., owned by Ever ding & Farrel, established in 887, with $100,000 capital. The gentlemanly man ager, J. H. Havely, informed us they have fifty-three Chinamen employed under contract with a boss Chinaman, and the workmen make from $1(J to $30 a month. The legal season for catching i salmon is from April 10th to August 10th. Since April ' 20th this cannery has put up about 400,000 pounds of sal mon. There are forty-eight cans to a case.. Last year they' put up 10,000 cases, but they expect to put up 35,000 this year. Their capacity is twenty-five tons per day, but in' 1800, which was an extraordinary year for salmon, one wheel caught forty-one tons in ono day. This is not as big a story ns the one told by George Francis Train, who eaid he visited the dalles many years ago, and ' the run of saimon was so groat in the Columbia river that he wnlked across on the backs of thelish. We asked the proprietor of tho hotel about this story, and ho said that Francis Train did not walk across the river, but he did get half-way over on the backs of the sal mon, and then got frightened and turn ed back. The redoubtable George Frau ds Train is still living, however, and he and tho landlord can fight it out. It is an actual fact, whether our read ers believe it or not, that we saw salmon that weighed sixty pounds caught in one of these wheels. We wanted to bring one home to convince any who might be disposed to doubt their veracity, but didn't want to bring more than wc could carry. If you doubt us take tho first op portunity and goto the Dalles. We had . the pleasure of sampling one of the small fry salmon, which was kindly pre sented to us, and never tasted a better flavored fish. It is near the cannery that you see the gorge from which the dalles takes its name. - It is two and a half miles long, but the depth has never been fathomed. The river above is from 2,000 to 3,000 feet wide, and in flood time is often a mile in width, but for this two and a half miles the great body of' water is compressed into a narrow oloft about . 130 feet across. Tho water in the Col umbia comes from the melting snow in I the mountains ; during a June rise the water has risen here sixty and seventy feet. The river was getting on a high when we were there, and we thought of the denizens of the Juniata valley in the memorable flood of Juno 1st, 1889, when the river rose, twenty-five feet, but sympathy with the people of The Dalies, would be useless, as the flood is a ferti- ' lizer and never does so much harm as it : does good. - - ." Low Freight Necessary. Astorian. Every cent .that . is added' to the price of wheat here gives an im pulse to its production. It is cheap I transportation that has enabled the Dakota grain grower to raise wheat profitably hundred of miles west of Du lutb. It is cheap transportation .that permits the Kansas wheat growers to . compete successfully in foreign markets with those of Oregon and Washington. There was a time when the grain grow ers of the west raised small crops and received scanty returns therefor. - They now raise immense crops and make fair profits. . All that is due to low freights.. Like progress will take place here when low freights enable our farmers to make more money by growing wheat. I , Unlimited Resources. Seattle Telegraph, And now we are fold that the foothills of the Cascades are the natural home of the honey bee. Emigrants fnotn the limited east, when they come here, will please bear in mind the sentiment, "If you don't sot! what you want, ask for it." There may be things which this bounteous west does not produce, but we have no use for them. Bad for the Third Party. - union-journal. The wheat ctod of Washington this year will put $25,000.- V0 in the pockets of Washinirton'a broers. It will also take all the curl lit of the hair of the assistant democ Icy, otherwise known as the peoples Edison Is rated at $3,000,000," said 8. J, TT 1 1 -r . m . . nouw), "i Knew xom wnen ne was a barefoot boy living at Fort Gratiot, Mich. He was always tinkering' with telegraphy, and once rigged up a line from his home to mine, - a block away. I could not receive very well, and some times 1 would come out, climb on the fence and hollow over to know what he said. ..; That: always -angered him. he seemed to take It as a reflection upon his telegraph line." . L'onfldence In New York. Dispatch, 24th. Dr. Cyrus Edson, the sanitary superintendent. tavn: - r j Personally I feel very seenre iir regard to the cholera, and dread tho epidemic very much lers than Iwould one of ty phus fever.' It would be absolutely Im possible for an immigrant to come into this country with the latent cholera which might develop after he passed (he quarantine." Will Beat the West Then. I'ress-Times. When- the state of New York has to settle damages for the switchmen's strike, it will encounter a bigger Buffalo Bill than can be found in the untamed west. What Will be Done. Review. Whether the Olympia con- i . Ml r l . r ,. ... . veuuun win iaii into tne aitcn. or whether It will throw Hazzard in it and tarn its back upon both, or whether it will take Lewis and the canal pill sugar- coated, are questions beyond the ken df any living man. In a general way, how ever, it is generally safe to wager that Inland Empire to display hostility to an of progress in the right direction by an at open river. The editor of that .paper is I tempt at general arbitration than in any now a candidate for the Washington lee- other way yet suggested. The strike is a islature on the democratic ticket.. In a powerful weapon, but it ia a two-edged late issue of his paper he says : one, and its execution is felt most sev- - For the sake of the trreat mam nt nnr erels bv those whn ccicM it TIia manor. ftl Pablic i8 always affected by a.strike of against whom, cronifo aii i nnn .Y" "J"!?"iiuae, ana tne unmeet is one of the mighty Pacific dashes her crestort in "hich tho state has. the most vital in- foam. let us arise as one nun and hnrl I terest. - If there hn a T.raMlral mufo every boodling candidate to the dust of in legislation it cannot be found too soon. tnt 't-ds to bring capital and la- anility, it necessary, to tmrnnin rWth ""L "1LU uuser unison ana toieaa to ami- struggles with our enemies on thft flnrvra I cable adjustment, rather , than hnntlla oi our Bwienouse ana prove to the world contention over noints of difference, is that the common. neoDle of . WanhfnbnSnn i ii. i j ... .. . nave riKnts ana aare maintain them in just demands If Bro. Mays was left to interpret that expression on the stump he would per baps say that it meant a vote for him self. The people, however, will inter- surely in the line statesmanship. of wisdom and true , Explained at Last, . ', ; , Tacbma News. -There are 165 saloons in.Seattlej according to nenercurT of ires wie sentence ainerenuv. ana snow I that nitt, xv j- in. -.i : : tha -ABtruJw. tA- M. - vi j ...... . , ... . T ' M ami.:,. W " " uu nuu muiimunron election aftV witn rlcin I mno K.. a .... 1 I I , a vuv muni iwr ecuuuncre muuucr. - I wmte ballots. - . - t they royalT CUBIC. INCH cr Baking Po .vJci Will produce One Hun dretl cubic inch.:; of leav ening gas, and will raise one third r.?ore biscuit han thc quantity of any other baking poyvder, and will make them lighter, sweeter, purer and ; more . wholesome. Sec U. S. Gotfi Report on Baking Powders, . 13.