41 w THE DALLES. WASCO COUNTY, OREGON. SATURDAY. APRIL 16. 1898. VOL. VIII. NUMBER 24. ARE FOR INTERVENTION Senate Practically Agrees on a Resolution. VPT NO DECISION REACHED AS It Will Also Declare la Favor of Be qalrloff the Immediate Kruu tlon of the Island by Spain.. Washington, April 12. -r The senate foreign relations CaWrh Cure be sure you get the gen committee is understood tO nine- It is taken internally, and made , , ., , in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. nave prwuvaiiy ueaueu uu resolution declaring lor lm . mediate intervention and re quiring the evacuation of Cuba ' by Spain. Washington April 12. f . A. The foreign relations com mittee resumed its sitting this morninfr. Thev immediately i ,1 i e f 1 iuuk. up we las ui ""ii- ing a resolution denning its idea of the course to be pur sued in the present complica tions with fopam. . iney are hopeful of being able to report today, but the report may be delayed so as to afford an op-1 Dortunitv to hear General A as Lee. The committee Is finding it a Very difficult task to reach an agreement on the terms of the resolution. There is by no means the same unanimi ty as when they first met and decided to renort the Foraker . . ." ,, . ,. .. resolutions. The indications at the beginning of today S session were that there would be a return to the Compromise proposition which was made prior tO the reception of the message. The committee remained together un til noon, and then adjourned till 3:30, to hear General Lee. A formal vote was taken, but the committee knew what its report would be when it adjourned at noon. The result was not made public. The best information obtainable is that it will be a declaration for immediate intervention, and that no action on the part of Spain short of evacuation of the island will satisfy this country. TBI HOUSE COMMITTEE . No Agreement Beached and No Report to Be Made Today. Washington, April 12. The Demo crats of the house foreign affairs com mittee have agreed on a resolution of independence and armed intervention The Republicans are divided still. The house comniitta will make no report to day. Washington, April 12. The foreign affairs committee of the house took a re cess at noon until 3 o'clock this after noon. They expect to have General Lee before them at that time. The Repub licans are coming together on a resolu tion for intervention. ; GRAIN ON THE RISE. Kxlrsordlnary AdTsnoea Booted on the Produce Exchange. San Francisco, April 12. Both bar ley and wheat have made great and ex traordinary advances on the .produce exchange call board. The advance in May wneat irom baturday's figures is - 10c a cental, or $2.05 a ton, and in December options 16c a cental, equiva lent to 3 20 a ton. - . In barley the advance is 12 and 10c a cental, while since Thursday May htB ' gone up from $4.15 to $1.44, or 18 ic a cental, equal to $3.65 a ton, and D cember from $1.25 to $!., or 15c a cental, or $3.15. a ton. . , WOODFORD TO COME HOME Oar Minister to Bpaln Will Probably - Leave Madrid Today, ' Madrid, April 12. It is stated that United States Minister Woodford leaves Madrid today. It is further alleged that he will be accompanied to the frontier by an eecort of gendarmes. The foreign embassadors met at the Italian embassy today. 1 It is understood the meeting was called, as a result of news from Washington. : Beware of Olomcou (or C.tarrh that ' Contain Mercury, As mercury will sorely destroy the sense of smell and completely .derange the whole system when entering it through tuo mucous nuriacea. oucu . urucieu sboald never be nsed except on prescrip tions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good yoa can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Clieney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, act- p mooa-na mucous surfaces of the system. In hnvincr Hall's Testimonials free. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by Druggists. Patriotic Indiana. Appleton, Wib., April 12. A delega tion of a dozen Indians from the Oneida reservation is endeavoring to make ar rangements for the enlistment of a num ber of Indians in caee of war with Spain. They are disappointed in not being able to find anyone with authority to enlist them. The Shakers of Mount Lebanon, a community of eimple, honest, God-fear' ing men and women, have prepared the Shaker Digestive Cordial for many years, and it is always the same, simple, hon est, curative medicine that has helped to make the Shakers the healthy, long lived people that they are. . The Shak ers never have indigestion. - This is partly owing to their simple mode of life, partly to the wonderful properties of Shaker Digestive Cordial. Indices tion is caused by the stomach glands not supplying enough digestive juice. Shaker Digestive Cordial supplies what's wanting. Shaker Digestive Cordial in vigorates the stomach and all its glands o that after awhile they don't nee'd neip. as evidence 01 me. nonesiy 01 I Soaker-Digestive Cordial, the formula is printed on every bottle. Sold by druggists, price 10 cents to 1.U0 per bot tle, Sheep marking paint ; ready for use. Tw0 color8 black and red- Wh you should use our sheep paint. Maa th . rnA First, be cause the colors are ground tboronghly in pure linseed oil by fine machinery fcw I color. With, the Droner amonnt of drvers added to give it binding and lasting .nH". wblfcb Prevent it from washing economical , because it is always ready for use. We guarantee our sheep mark ing paints to give satisfaction. Try it and be convinced.' Clarke & Falk, agents, The Dalles, Or. Decline of the Alaska Rath. Tacoma, April 12. Tbe Steamers AI- Ki and City of Seattle left for Alaska ports today, both passenger and freight lists being very light. The former car ried 75 passengers. The steamer Aus tralia has withdrawn from the Alaska service and will carry wheat to San Francisco. v . .: Free Fills Send your address to H. . Bncklen & Co., Chicago, and get a free earn pie box of Dr. King's New Life Pills. A trial will convince yon of their merits. These Pills are easy in action and are particularly effective in the cure of.Con- stipation and Sick Headache. Eor Ma laria and Liver troubles tbey have been proved invaluable. They are guaranteed to be perfectly free from' every deleter ious subBtance and to be purely vegeta ble. ' They do not . weaken by their action, but by giving tone to stomach and bowels greatly invigorate the sys tem. Regular size 25c. per box. Sold by Blakeley & Houghton Druggists. (2) Thousands of euffererj from grippe have been restored to health by One Minute Cough Cure. It quickly cures coughs, colds, bronchitis, pneumonia, grippe, asthma,' and all throat and lung diseases. Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co. ... sheepmen, A t ten tlon 1 : Clarke & Falk have securod the agency lor toe la rWata Sheep Dip, Mixes instantly with cold water. ' 1 ' ' v If youtf grocer doesn't sell Schilling's Best tea, tell us his name, what kind you want (Japan, English Breakfast, ' Oolong, Ceylon, or Blend) , and what size pack-' age you want We'll see that you get it Don't send us any money. We don't sell at retail. '-'. V..;. ...V san Francisco ; ' to, Schilling & Company COMMUNICATION IS INTERRUPTED Cnliaiis Cannot Notify Comrades in tne Fielfl of Eyents at VasMngton. NO VESSELS I MOVING AT PRESENT Cable Connection With Havana I. Also Cut Off Spaniard Are Bnsily Engaged In Fortifying Mediterranean Islands in Anticipation of War. Key West, April 13. Agents of the Cuban inanrgentB are trying to commu nicate the probable action of congress to their associates In the field. They may get news across the gulf by means ot a boat from other ports. No .vessels are leaving Key West for Havana, and. none have arrived from there.- Though cable messages are sent, no answers are re ceived. Nothing has been received since General Lee's departure from Havana. FBEFAK1.NO JTOB WAR. Spain Fortifying and Manning Her Med iterranean Islands. Madeid, April 13. As the result of long, important cabinet council last night, the Spanish war office is actively engaged in fortifying and manning the Mediterranean islands of Spain and placing other portions of the kingdom in a state of defense. It is understood in struction9 have been . cabled Captain General Blanco to- carry suspension of hostilities into practical effect "accord ing to circumstances in each district.' The cabinet refused to recognize the right of the United States to intervene in Cuba. ; K1CTUEROY HAS BEKN PURCHASED Government Bays the Warship, Subject to Inspection by Committee. ' New York, April 13. A Herald dis patch from Washington says-: Admission is made at the navy de partment that the Brazilian cruiser Nictheroy has been purchased subject to an inspection by a naval committee to be appointed by Minister Bryan. The Nictheroy, which is equipped with a dynamite gun, will, naval authorities say, be available for Biege doty, provided she is still in good condition. She was built at Newport News five years ago and sold to Brazil six months after her completion, being converted for that government into a man-of-war. She is a steel vessel of 7080 tons displacement, and her one screw prepels her at the rate ot 19 knots an hour. Her engines and boilers are protected by coal bunk ers, and her armament consists of one 15 inch pneumatic dynamite gun, one 4 inch quick-fire gun two 3.9-inch quick' fire guns, eight 6-pounders, ten 1-pound' ers and four Howell torpedo tubes. By the terms of the contract under which she will be sold to the government she will be delivered at any point 'on the coast of the United States that the de partment may designate. " 1 . . There has been some talk in naval cir cles of holding the Nictheroy at Rio Ja neiro until the arrival of the Oregon and the gunboat Marietta at that point so that tbey may shift a crew to her and convey her to Key West. These vessels, however, will not reach Rio in less than 24 days, and if war were declared in the meantime and the Nictheroy had become the property of this government, Brazil would be compelled to refuse to deliver her. If the Nictheroy should leave Rio and war be declared a few days after her departure, the officials say the Spanish government might eend the torpedo-boat Temeriario, which is still In Montevideo, after the American ship in order to seize her as contraband of war, and should She risist, the Spanish wocld make an effort to sink her. The department has determined, how ever, that it is to the interest of the gov ernment to have the vessel in American waters before the sale is confirmed, and by this means it is believed we cannot possibly enffer toss. , BOT ASSENT TO RECOGNITION. The President Determined to Veto Res olntlon for Recognition. . Washington, April 14. The presideut is determined to veto the1 Cuban resolu tions if they carry a provision for recog nition of Cuban independence. He stated this today to a senator who called on him. .Washington, April 14. The action of tbe.house yesterday in adopting the Cu ban! resolution made the eenate today the storm center of the war elemente. The. galleries were packed andthoueands were turned away.. Hale presented a memorial, calling at tention to the necessity of repealing some of the present navigation laws in the event of war. The laws, he said, prevent our merchant vessels from sail ing under, a foreign flig, while every Spanish merchantman would be under the French flag. : Our ships would there fore be preyed upon by Spanish priva' teera. '" Penroee presented the following tele gram from Philadelphia: "The house resolution is dishwater; the Davis resolution is satisfactory; re' member the Maine." -.- A message was received from the house transmitting to the senate the Cuban resolution passed bv the house by unanimous consent. The resolution yesterday reported by the eenate foreign relations committee was laid before the eenate. and Turner (Wash.) beean a speech, in which he sharply criticised the administration for its vacillating, irresolute, cowardly and pusillanimous policy in the Cuban ques tion." He said tbe developments of. the past two weeks had shaken his faith in those who held the president's ear and confidence. - Turner declared bimBelf strongly in favor of the minority resolution, main taming congress could not delegate to the president power to make war, and vehemently attacked the president for delays in serding his message to con gress, charging that the delay was not due tfc-treneral Lee's request, bnt to tbe fact that ArchbiBhop Ireland cabled the Vatican in the hope that tbe pope might bring about a peaceful solution of the difficulty. Turner ridiculed the diplomatic nego tiations of the administration, and de clared with bitter sarcasm that with Euch diplomatic agents as we have rep resenting the United States, the Madrid government might eventually, for a suit able indemnity, absolve this country for blocking the harbor of Havana with the shattered bulk of the Maine. Hoar followed Turner. . He said this was no time lor impassioned rneiorir, and manifestations of approval greeted the sentiment. He said that Turner, who represented only half a state, wae making MnKinley, who represented 45 states, the subject of the same kind of objurgations that were , inflicted upon Washington. Hoar thought the Maine affair was enough to justify war. . Still he thought honorable reparation might possibly be secured without war. Turpie followed Hoar with a speech for the recognition of the Cuban repub lie. AT THE CAFE VEBDE9. Second. Spanish Torpedo-Boat Flotilla . Kxpected Pally. New York, April 13. A dispatch to the Herald from St. Vincent, Cape Verde islands, says : The secend Spanish torpedo flotilla is expected daily by the officers of the tor pedo-boats now in port. Portuguese war vessels are expected to arrive here within a very short time.- The governor of the Cape Verde islands, it is'said, will remain at St. Vincent nntil advised that the differences have been settled. The name of the transport with tbe torpedo boats is the Ciudad Cadiz, Another Dirty" Fight Ahead. .Sax Francisco, April 13. Articles were signed last evening bv represents Uvea of Tom Sharkey and Jim Jeffries for a contest to take place May 4. Alex. Greggains was selected as referee, and it was agreed tbe men should be read7 at command of the referee, and that hit ting with one hand free is permissible. It was further agreed that the pugilists may bandage their hands if they desire. Two Ships for the NTy. Washington, April 13. The navy de partment has decided to buy the trans Atlantic liners St. Paul and St. Louis. It is understood Captain Sigsbee will be assigned to commrnd either the. St. Louis or the St. Paul. ' ' - Baeuea't Ansa nlr The beat salve in the- worid for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers', ealt rheum, fevel sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cuius piles, or no pay required It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion, or money refunded. Price 26 cents per box. For sale Dy Blakeley and Honghton, druggists. - - REGARDED INEVITABLE Spain Will Have a Eight on Her Hands. MORE DENIALS MADE BY SPANIARDS Proof, It Is Claimed. Can Be Fnrnlthcd That Havana Harbor Was Mot mined Opposition Press Brings Weyler - ' Out as the Prospective Savior cf Spain. Madrid, April 14.-The newspapers here regard war as inevitable. Tbe lat est dispatches lrom Washington have created profound excitement throughout Spain. The Spaniards protest against the "odious imputation" that Spanish officers are responsible for the loss of the Maine. It is asserted that proof can be furnished to show that no torpedoes have ever been laid in Havana harbor. Tbe official Gazette tomorrow will pub lish a decree organizing a national sub scription to increase tbe strength of the Spanish fleet. ' : The featnre of the opposition press is an endeavor to bring Weyler to the front and make him champion of the canse of revolution, under the guise of the savior of national honor. Weyler today un doubtedly has numerous followers, and even the newspapers which, ever since his return from Cuba, have violently de nounced him, are now lauding the for mer captain-general of Cuba as tbe man who can save the nation. Weyler si Madrid. Madbid, April 14. Weyler. arrived here today, apparently having been called. by the government. He consid ers war with the United States- as ineV' i table. -S . -. . WILL KOr GIVK BP CUBA. Spain Determined to Resist Any Such Demand It Made. London, April 14. According to special from Madrid today, a Spanish minister has declared in an interview that should President McKinley notify Spain to evacuate Cuba this government will immediately and emphatically re fuse, arid is folly prepared to take the consequence?, lhe government does not regret according an armistice, as it there' by proves its position from an interna tional iH)int of view and makes it more difficult for the United States to inter vene without putting itself completely in the wrong. ' There was a big revolntionarv demon stration at Valencia, capital of the Span ish province of that name, yesterdav evening. A large crowd assembled, a red flag was waved and the "Marseil laise" was sung. Tbe police dispersed the people who took' part in the demon stration and captured the red flag. . ' I was reading an advertisement of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar rboe Bemedy in the Worcester Enter prise recently, which leads me tp write this. I can truthfully say I never used any remedy equal to it for colic and diar rhoea. I have never bad to use more than one or two doses to cure the worst case with myself or children. W. A. Stroud, Popomoke Citv, Md. For sale by Blakeley & Honghton. A little boy asked for a bottle of "get up in tbe morning as fast as you can," the droggist recognized a household name tor "DeWitt's Little Early Risers" and gave him a bottle of those famous little pills for constipation, eick bead- ache, liver and stomach troubles. Snipes Kinersiy Drug Co. The farmer, the mechanic and tbe bi cycle rider are liable to unexpected cuts and bruises. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve is the best thing to keep on hand. It heals quickly, and is a well known cure for piles. Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co. La Plata Sheep Dip, proven by every test to be the best non-poisonousfluid dip in the world ; guaranteed to cure scab, itch, sore throat, lice and hoof-rot. Clarke & Falk, agents, The Dalles. : Ask your Druggist CATARRH , ' for a generous IO CENT TRIAL SIZE. Ely's Cream Balm contains no cocaine, mercury cor any other injurious drag. It Is quickly Absorbed. Gives Belief at once. It opens and clonuses XV 1 T) the Nasal Passage. COLD 'N HEAD Allan Inflammation Heals and Protects tbe Membrane. Restores tbe Senses ot Taste and Smell. Full Size 60c ; Trial Size i.oc. ; at DmtnriBts or by mail, it V.BKO'i'KEKS.sl Warren Street, ew Tort Royal makes the food pare, , wholesome and dellcioas. POWDER Absolutely Pure ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., EW YORK. ENGLISHMAN OF ROMANCE. Sir Edwin Arnold's Life In the Flow ery Kingdom. Sir Edwin Arnold, who legalized liis union with a fascinating Japanese widow by an English marriage service in London recently, wa always cosmo politan in his ideas. Surely no English man born and bred has ever succeeded in merging his own individuality into that of other people's as the anthor ot "The Light of Asia" "and "The Ligfit cf the World" has done. When Hexras in India in his young days his work showed his intense sympathy wit&tlia Buddhists', and in the preface ta "The? Light of Asia" he wrote: ''TB is book was written by one who loved India,anct the Indian people." , For two score of years he was Eng lish to the core of his heart in the edi torials he wrote-for the London Tele graph, and in lfeOOhe came to America, seemed quite able to understand ns (aa few of his countrymen could do), and then he went on to Japan and immedi ately began to live a la Japanais. He lived in a native house, left hi shoes at his door, slept on a thick quilt and, they say, ate in trne Japanese ?tyle. In his bedroom he had a cheap European washstand, two Japanese chests of drawers of white wood and black iron work, end the usual sliding cupboard, into which his bed was pus when it was rolle'd up in the daytime--. ' The walls of the room were of tissue paper panels powdered with silver"' maple leaves, and a clear glass belt ran around the room "at a height incondtr-' cive to propriety," as one correspondent of the day remarked. The drawing-room was glass paneled from door to ceiling, and the only thing' in the whole house that hinted at other . civilizations was an American stove, which stood in' one of the corners. With such surroundings it is .not much wonder that the impressionable poet found himself going through the ceremony of tea drinking with lis . charming companion of the hour, and that he was content to accept the cere mony as a bona fide marriage is f ribnte to his kinship with genius that since the world began has ever flaunted a little the staid laws and regulations that ordinary folks .find necessary to com fortable existence. It was in Japan, by the way,:that Sir Edwin' began "The Light of the World," and, indeed, completed it, too, during his stay of several years. Phil- . adelphia Kecord. WOMEN AS TEACHERS.. The Proportion "Largest In the United States and Smallest In Germany. There are in the United States, roagb- ly speaking, 350,000 school teachers, and of this number 120,000 are men -and 230,000 are women. In other wtirds. there are nearly twice as many female as male teachers, and the disparity is increasing year by year. According to tbe last official census of Prussia there were 68,000 school teachers in the kingdom, of whom 9,000 were women and 59.0CO men. It is evident, therefore, that the Prussian preference is for male teachers. In all Germany there are, including the government, church and private schools, 135,000 teachers, and the number of pupils is nearly 10,000,-" 000. There are 140,000 , teachers im France, of whom 65,000 are men and 75,000 are women, the number of eacbr .... being subject to about the same ratio of increase. There are,' it is supposed,, about 100,000 teachers in Great Britain but authentic figures are lacking. . ironical If s. ' If a man does you an ill turn he will never forgive you for it. . If a man re-leases a piece of property he takes a fresh grip on it. If people didn't have bobbies .the , world would soon cease to revolve. If a man once uses porous plastershe . is apt to" become much attached to them. , .' ' If hope assumes the guise of an eas-- ter bonnet it springs eternal in'thefe-s.- male breast. ' If it is necessary to write to anyone you don't care two cents for, use a postal card. . . . - , ' ' 'If we listen to the troubles of other people it sometimes makes us better . satisfied with our own. It two sou's find they zr bnt a ' single thought it is -useless to waste any time contemplating matrimony- If a man marries a wo main because she has more sense than he hast he is ; never allowed to lose sight of the fact. Chicago Evening News. X