(1 CO -35S, WGS' "fir XV 1 1 1 1 AW i k THE DALLES, WASCO COUNTY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MARC fl 18, 189(5. VOL. VI. NUMBER 13. IS SUING FOR FEACE Italy Has Opened Negotia tions With Menelek. s MATTERS PROCEEDING SMOOTHLY It la Kxpected That Peace Will Be Con cluded 8o.ii-Kins Humbert Not Friendless Rome, March 13. Negotiations with TTino- Menelek have been opened. . It 18 anticipated that peace will be concluded before long, and the war office haa coun termanded the instructions sent. to vari ous points for hurrying forward rein forcements to Africa. Tt is admitted that Kinz Humbert at one time was face to face with the possi bility of ontbreaks serious enough to develop into almost anything. This enabled the socialists to obtain conces sions they could not otherwise have com manded. - To cap the peaceful climax comes the pleasant report that Emperor William of Germany, Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria and King Humbert will meet at Genoa in a few days, and a series of brilliant fetes will he 1-fM to demon strate to all. whom it way concern that Italy, instead of being friendless, upon the verge of bankruptcy and encumbered by a tottering throne, is- strong in -the earnest support of Germany and Austria, and will be backed bv Great Britain in any great emergency. A FKESH SENSATION. Governor Bradley Denounced By trie Kentucklan Democrats. Fbankfobt, Ky., March 13. At 11:30 a. m., Sheriff Armstrong arrived, who claimed to have received instructions from Governor Bradley to clear the sen ate cloak-room, in which were Senator Blackburn and h friends, including Jack Chinn. The Blackburn leaders at once drew up a resolution rebuking the governor. . ; Betrie, a republican, asked that a committee be appointed to confer with the governor and see if such an order bad been issued. Bronston bitterly ecored the governor, and Goobel said the governor had no ; right to interfere with the rightB of the senate. "I, for one," he shouted, "am ready to protect my own rights and pri vileges." Sailer said it was the duty of the sen ate out of respect to the governor, to send a committee to find out if he had issued such an order. Brbnston eaid: "Never will a com mittee go to the governor with my con sent, or with my vote. I would de nounce the act of the governor, if it were with the last drop of my blood. It is an outrageous, unlawful, 'treacherous act," he screamed, above the pounding of the gavel and the suppressed hum of many voices. "Let the governor leave us alone. Let us pass resolutions to con- demn the man who is governor by ac cident. I denounce bis actions as a . Kentuckian and as a man." ' Senator Dehoe denounced the reflec tion of the governor as untrue. "I say it to his face," he said, glaring at Brons ton. Then he eat down. ' Bronston jumped up and commenced to unbutton hia vest, but before he could act the presiding officer succeeded in re storing order. Sailer said he was not willing to insult the governor, and moved to refer the motion offered by Bronston to the com mittee on rules. This waa done, and Bronston, Goebef, and the leaders of the Blackburn faction, seeing they had been outvoted, subsided. The governor later denied having given the sheriff any such orders as stated, and Senator Bronston begged the governor's pardon. In the pint assembly the roll-call showed 128 members present : necessary to a choice 65. ' The ballot resulted ; Blackburn 50 : Carlisle 13, Bucker 1. The Republicans again refused to vote. ' The chair announced no election, and the meeting adjourned. MARSHAL. NYE'S. EXECUTION. A North Carolinian Believes That It Did No Occur. New York, March 13. Rev. J. P. Weston, rector of the church of the As cension, at Hickory, N. C, who recently wrote ' a : volume entitled "Historic Doubts as to the execution of Marshal Ney," has informed hia publisher, Thomas Whittaker, of this city, that the theory that Ney was not killed on De- i cember 7, 1815, has been further con firmed by recent researches. ' According to the argument advanced in the book Ney was not hit by the'bul lets aimed at him on the field of execu tion, and was afterward taken to a hos- pital by his friends, whence he fled disguise to America, where he lived as Peter Stuart Ney, a schoolmaster, North and South Carolina till 1846, when he died. - Mr. Weston had learned that a son of Marshal Ney called upon Peter Stuart Ney about 17 years after his arrival in America. A few days ago Weston found that this son was living in a little town near Louisville, Ky. He is 83 jears old He admitted his. identity to Weston He said that he came to this country in 1837, and his father gave him $1000, He entered Jefferson medical college in Philadelphia, where he was graduated During his whole life in the United States, however, be has lived under an assumed name. He said that in the evening after the supposed execution his father visited the house of his mother in Paris and remained a few minutes. He has written a history of his father, which be has placed in Mr. Weston's hands His identity will not be divulged until after his death, when the book is to be published. A Little Girl Drowned. A little dumb girl, the daughter of Frank Beason of Gilliam county, was drowned in a well near the house Tues dav moraine. The following are the particulars, as related by the Fossil Journal: The children were playing outside, running around the bouse, and her 13-year-old brother was the first to miss the child, whose tracks he traced to the well, where a hole in the rapidly melting snow explained only too well the sad fate that had overtaken his sister. He jumped into the well and found the body in four feet of icy water and lifted it out with the aid of bis mother, whom he had frantically called to hia assistance. The father and D. H Smith, who were building fence net far rora the house, were hastily summoned and did all in their power to resuscitate the poor little body, but in vain. Blakeley & Houghton desire ns to pub' lisb the following extract from a letter of Chas. M. Gutfeld of Eeedley, Fresno county, Calif., as they handle the rem edy referred to and want their customers to know what a splended medicine it is "It ia with pleasure I tell you that by one day's use of Chamberlain's Cough remedy I was relieved of a very bad cold. My head was completely stopped up and I could not sleep at night. I can recommend this remedy." A cold nearly always starts in the head and afterwards extends to the throat and lungs. By using this remedy freely as soon as the cold has been contracted it will cure the cold at once and prevent it from extend ing to the lungs. Subscribers to The Chronicle's Books. Free The following telegram was received from the publishers : "New ruling of postal officials sus pends second-class rates on books. Free book distribution therefore suspended Send no more orders." We are also in' formed that some ot the orders have not been filled. To those who have not received their books we make the following proposi tion : Send us your name and address, accompanied by 25 cents, and we will send you either one of the following weekly papers for one year: Oregonian, San Francisco Examiner, Detroit Free Press or New York Tribune. It May Do as Much for You. Mr. Fred Miller, of Irving, 111., writes that he had a severe kidney trouble for many year, witb severe pains in his back and also that hia bladder was af fected. He tried mrny so called Kidney enres but without any good result. About a year ago he began to use Electric Bit' ters and found relief at once. ' Electric Bitters is especially adapted to cure of all Kidney and Liver troubles and often gives' almost instant relief. One trial will prove our statement.' Price 50c and $1.00. At Blakeley & Houghton's Drug Store. A Remarkable Artist. . Prof. Ferguson, the great violinht and specialty artist, who gave such an excellent performance at Dufur last Friday night, has consented, by special request, to give another- in the ' near future, thus extending an opportunity to those who were not so fortunate as to attend on that occasion of listening to. something great in the musical line, and there should certainly be a full house, as a large turn-out is anticipated from the country, notwithstanding - the busy times with farmers.' The date of his appearance is not yet determined upon, but will probably be next month. He will also show in Wamic, Victor, Hay Creek, Antelope and Prineville, so that all can look forward to this event in the near future. A BURGLAR IS KILLED Spokane Man's Deadly Markmansliip. AN AWFUL MINE DISASTER By an Explosion of Ulant . Powder Four Men Are Dead and Two Fatally Injured. Spokane, Wash., March 14. W. R Mann, a prominent insurance man, was awakened early this morning by a burg' lar in his room. He drew a revolver from beneath his bed and fired at the intruder. The robber jumped out of the window, ran about 100 yards and fell dead. Mann says he fired but once, but th robber is perforated by two bullet wounds, either of which would prove fatal. One is -through the breast, the other in the bead. The theory is that wheu the robber fell he sent a bullet through bis head from his own revolver. The burglar is unknown. He is a large man, witb black mustache. Was Identified. This afternoon the body of the dead burglar- was positively indentified by neighbors as Frank Robinson, formerly a farmer, but for a year or more a resi dent of this city, though spending part of his time in Portland. He was for time employed in a second-hand store, but for the past year has been ont of employment much of the time. As he had never been suspected of crim'e here tofore, his friends believe he was driven to the deed by poverty. He attracted attention a short time ago by bringing a suit against a drug company in this city charging that the death of one of his children had been caused by the firm's failure to give the right medicine. Awful Mine Disaster. Spokane, March 14. A special to the Spokesman-Review from . Roslyn, B. C, says one of the most disastrous accidents in the history of British Columbia min ing occurred at the Center Star mine here this afternoon. As a resultof the explosion of two boxes of giant powder four men are dead and two more so sev erely hnrt that they will probably die The two boxes of giant powder were being thawed out in hot water, and the only man who knows how it became ig nited lies at the point of death in the hospital. He came running out. of the tunnel, saying "the powder is on fire," but before he could reach a place of safety the explosion came. Eight men were working in the mine. The dead are Thomas Gibbons, mar ried; Joe Dolan, single; Dan Lynch, single; Mike Ravigan, single. The in' jured are Ed.' Shanahan, single, not ex pected to live: Mike Brooks, single, The saved are M. McClement and i man named Collins. , The Brown Trial. San Francisco, March 14. The Con gregational council, before which Rev Dr. Brown baa been on trial charged wilh immoral and nnministerial conduct, has adjourned nntil Tuesday without finding a verdict. From several infor- mat votes taken on various minor charges it- is believed the council will find Dr. Brown has not been proven guilty of immorality, but will condemn him for nnministerial behavior. The verdict would cost him his present pas torate bnt would not debar bim from any other pnlpit which might be open to him. Kansas for Hound Money. " Kansas Citt, March 14. Under the caption the Republican delegates from Kansas Want Sound Money, the Star this evening prints Interviews on the currency question with those delegates already elected to the national conven tion at St. Louis. Six are reported as having declared themselves unalterably opposed -to the free coinage of silver, three favor it, while one, Mayor Nat Barnes of Kansas City, Kan., says he will stand on any money plattorm the Republican convention may adopt. Seduction In Wages.' Seattle, March 14. The Great North ern railway has made another reduction in the' wages of its .employes, the men affected being agents, telegraph opera tors, cashiers and engine-wipers. The change Is not called a cat, but an equal ization, because some salaries have been raised. The entire coast line in Wash ington suffers from the change. Good Bye, Comet. San Feancisco, March 14. The Per- rine comet, which . was ecbeduled to strike the earth today, failed to arrive. j The astronomer at the Lick observatory says the i-omet last night was 40,000,000 miles away, and no prospect of coming any closer. - HE HAS HIS TROUBLES. Trials of a Messenger Boy for the Tele graph Company. A telegrhaph messenger probably sees as much of the other side of human nature as a doctor. One told an Atch son Globe writer recently that a woman never opened a telegram without turn ing- pale, and,, when the me-ssi.g-? wn not alarming-, they looked disappointed. He delivered about two death nice sag-es a day,four birth mcss:e.!c3,ti frea many business messages, and once in a great while a love message that makes him tired to carry it. He carried one recently to a young- man in town that read: "How are you to-day darling?" - The answer went promptly back by the boy and was to this effect: "I am better, love." He once carried a mes sage of death to a colored woman, an after reading- it her emotion overcome her to such an extent that she caugL the messenger in her arms and soundly boxed his ears. Another cojpred woman refused to open or. sign for a message but walked the floor and beat her breast, and screamed, supposing it an nounced a death. When all the neigh bors had come in, one more venture some than the rest road the message. It was simply a notice that the woman's sjster would come up from Leaven worth that evening to see her. CLEAN" SHAVE. Precautions Which Might Be Adopted for the Safety of Customers. Nothing is easier than for contagion to be conveyed from a diseased to healthv skin during the act of shav ing, and many cases have now been re corded, says the Medical Press, prov ing that diseased processes have in this manner been propagated. Probably the readiest manner available to the barber .for preventing such untoward occurrences would be by sterilizing his instruments" by means of heat, either by steam or boiliug water. Razors should be made so that their handles would not suffer from the exposure to highdegrees of heat, and the rule should beenforced that in no case should any of the "instruments" be used consecutive ly without having first been submitted to the sterilizing process. ' Under this rule, then, each customer would be sure of having' a "clean" shave in more senses-than one. Of course, also, on the principle of a "fresh pot of tea for each customer," a freshly scalded-out lather pot should be included witii each shave. Unless these or similar pre cautions be carried out in barbers shops, cases of the conveyance of in fectious skin diseases from customer to customer cannot fail to occur. Nature Sow Does What Men Have Long Tried in Tain to Do. Nature '.s doing for California vine yardists what they long and fruitlessly tried to do for themselves. It is re ported from many localities that the phylloxera, the most serious pest that has ever attacked the vines, is dying out. The experts have tried every remedy to stay the progress of this pest, but without avail, and six year ago the vmeyardists of the Sonoma and Napa valleys plowed up all their vines and replanted the ground with resist ant stock. The experts believed that all non-reistaiit vines were doomed to destruction by the phylloxera. But reports hove recently come to the state inspector of orchard pests that a ma terial falling off in the ravages of the pest haa been noticed for some time. Vines once affected by it are now al most free. The inspector has beertir. a thorough investigation of the pleas ing phenomena. ; He thinks some nat ural enemy of tie pest has appeared or that some deadly disease has at tacked the phylloxera and is extermin ating it. Whatever is the cause, the re sult will mean great gain for the vine yardists. A Pertinent Answer. An amusing correspondence recently took place between a Wisconsin farmer and a local boiler firm. The farmer wrote, as follows:. "Dere l-'ires I have a 1,000 akers of trees that I want cut. Im pore but Im willing to pay too hundred dolers fer nn engin that will do my work,"" and he went on to explain just what sort of an engine he wanted. The boiler firm saw that the engine neces sary to accomplish the devastation of his virginal forest would cost $3,000, and they informed him to this effect. A week passed and then the following pithy epistle came, from the Wisconsin woods: ' Dere Sires what n all git out wud I want of an engin or boiler if 1 bed $3,000?" Ho-ar to Cure Rheumatism. Abago, Coos Co., Oregon, Nov. 10, 1893. I wish to inform you of the great good Chamberlain's Pain Balm has done my wife. She has been troubled witb rheumatism of the arms and hands for six months, and has tried many reme dies prescribed for that complaint, but found no relief until she used this Pain Balm ; one bottle of which has complete ly cured her. I take pleasure in recom mending . it for that trouble. Yours truly, C. A. Bcrllord. 50 cents and $1.00 bottles for sale by Blakeley & Hough ton's Drug Store. MUNITIONS OF WAR) Bermuda Takes Substantia Aid to Cubans. FORTY TON'S OF AMMUNITION Spanish War, Vessel on the Lookout ror Ber and Other Fill - busters. New York, March 16. The Press this morning says: Despite the efforts of the Spanish con suls, ministers and spies in this country in the face of the loss of the steaniBhio J. W. Hawkins, and the seizure by United States marshals of the steamship Bermuda, the Cubans in this vicinity have now upon the sea bound for the is land, whose freedom is the one thought of their lives, that identical cargo of am munition of the steamship. On another vessel it is understood are a lot of men who are to be transferred to the Bermu da on the high seas. . . . The Bermuda left New York yester day morning. It waa short'y after 8 o'clock when she got up her anchor, 10 o'clock when she passed Sandy Hook and abont noon when she distanced the fleet of newspaper tuga that followed her to sea. The air was filled,with rumors yester day. : Thomas Estrada Palma haa dis appeared from town and Calixto Garcia left his home early in the morning and had not returned at a late hour last night. The report was they had sailed for Cuba, and that it was the intention of the patriots to perfect the system of government in Cuba in order to induce a more substantial support from other countries, including the. United States than that of mere sympathy. This fact did not deter the Cubans from loading her decks down with gun powder and arms for the insurgents in Cnba, and in all 40 tons of ammunition and guns were placed on board the Ber muda and also several cases containing dynamite. : , UN TBI LOOKOIT. Spanish War Vessels Watching for Fili busters Along Florida's Coast. Key West, Fla., March 16. Before the steamships Bermuda, Three Friends and Commodore, each supposed to be carrying a filibustering i expidition to Cuba, reach the island they will have to run the gauntlet of a number of Spanish warships now cruising the east coast of Florida. Three days ago three Spanish war vessels appeared off the south beach of the island of Key West. Since then the vessels have hovered about 10 or 12 miles out, apparently watching for fili busters. Yesterday afternoon the Span ish vice-consul went out to one of the vessels in a steam launch, and it ia sup- posed gave the commander some infor mation relative to the movements of the suspected steamers. Immediately after the vice-consul left the vessel the three cruisers Bailed away to the north. The supposition is that they will patrol the east ' coast of Florida watching for the Bermuda, Three Friends and the Com modore. There is said to be a large number of men encamped on one ot the Florida keys north of here, who expect to be taken by one of the three vessels. The key is in United States waters, however, and it is not believed the Spanish will dare to interfere with the men. As far as known United States officials have received no orders to watch for the sue pected vessels. CHEROKEE BILL MUST HANG. The President Refuses to Interpose in Bis Case. Fobt Smith, Ark., March 16. Satur day's dispatches from Washington eel tied the fate of Cherokee Bill, the most noted outlaw of the territory. The presi dent's refusal to interpose removes Bill's last possible chance, and he will hang on St. Patrick's dav. . On November 8, 1894, Bill and "Ver digris Kid" and a citizen of the territory sacked the town ot Lenepah. - Cherokee Bill, during this raid killed Ernest Mel lon. Bill waa arrested and locked up at Fort Smith and in due time was con-' victed and sentenced to death. While Highest of all in Leavening Power. AB&$&)VEEtt PURE iV S REGUI.ATQR? - THE BEST , SPRING r,sEDiO!s!E Is Simmons Liver Regulator dont forget to take it - The Liver gets sluggish during the Winter, just like all nature, and the system becomes choked up by the accumulated waste, which brings on Malaria, Fever and Ague and Rheuma tism.. You want to vakeup your Liver new, but-he sure you take SIMMONS Liver regulator to do it it. also regulates the Llvei-rfSf it properly at work, when your system will be trfe frrnj poison and the whole body invigorated. " You get THE BEST BLOOD when your system is in Al condition, and that will only be when the Liver is kept active. Try a Liver Remedy once and note the difference. But take only SIMMONS Liver Regulator it is Simmons Liver Regulator which makes the difference. Take It in powder or in liquid already prepared, or make a tea of the powder; but take SIMMONS LIVER REGU LATOR. You'll find the RED Z on every package. Look for it J. H. Zellin & Co, Philadelphia, Fa, he waa confined there be killed a jailer. For this he was also tried and sentenced to death. It is for the first of these crimes that Bill is to hang. Cherokee Bill, or Crawford, has ac quired the distinction of being the only man that has ever had two death sen tences appealed to the , United States supreme court at the same time. DETERMINED TO HAVE A "SCOOP.1 A Nebraska Editors Plan Bis Rival. to Outdo Omaha, March 16. A special from Midvale, Neb., says: Because a rival paper "scooped" bim on an important item a week ago, John Merchant, the editor of a Midvale week ly, wrote a thrilling account of hia own suicide for publication in last Monday's issue of his own paper and swallowed poison half an hour after his contempor ary had gone to press. ' i ' Merchant waa evfdently in earnest in hia effort at self-destruction, for he locked himself in his office-to give the fatal drug time to take effect, and re fused admission to hia foreman, who rushed to his assistance as soon aa be discovered what his employer has done. Appalled at his obstinacy, the foreman lost no time in bursting in the door. Then he summoned a physician. With the latter's help the newspaper man waa finally saved. The opposition came out late with an extra giving a full account of the affair, including its happy termin ation, but Merchant is much cousoled by the thought that the original and really only authentic announcement was on the street in his own paper several hours before his rival was able to reach its subscribers. None But Ayer'a at the World's Fair. Ayer'a Sarsaparilla enjoys the extra ordinary distinction of having been the only blood purifier allowed on exhibit at the world's fair, Chicago. Manufact urers' of other sarsaparillus sought by every means to obtain a showing of their goods, but they were all turned away under the application of the rule for bidding the entry of patent medicines and nostrums. The decision of the world's fair authorities in tavorof Ayer'a Sarsaparilla was in effect as follows: 'Ayer'a Sareaparilla la not a patent medicine. It does not belong to the list of nostrums. It ia here on its merits." Subscribe for The Chronicle and get the news. ' Carlisle to Be Named. Washington, March 16. Secretary Carlisle is a candidate for the presiden tial nomination and a public announce ment to that effect will soon be made by one of the secretary's close friends in the senate. This announcement, how ever, will not be made until 1'resident Cleveland baa formally stated his pur pose not to permit hia name to be used in the convention In connection witb a third term. Latest U. S. Gov't Report lira ti f:U. ' 1 1 r. ff S