WEEKLY fit' If T 1 ml (I toiixck f8 II v i. , Jr-u. n any "jJSJELT 2 VOL. IX THE DALLES, WASCO COUNTY, OREGON, SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 16, 1899. NO. 61 CORNELIUS VAN- laiss (tercel StiKeiil? at Hew M City at a EarlyHsnr Yesterfiay ILLNESS CAME WITHOUT WARNING left Newport Yesterday Apparently In Good Health Death a Great Shock to Citoos of That Place Was Grandson of Founder of Vanderbilt Fortune. Sew York, Sept. 12. Cornelius Van derbilt died at 5 :15 thu morning at his home, Fifty-seventh street and Fifth avenue. Mr. Vanderbilt arrived from Newport with Mre. Vanderbilt at 9 o'ckck last niiflit. He appeared in good health and spirits and retired Boon afterwards. About midnight ho wan seized with a serious stroke of paralysis, the second from which he liar suffered. The house hold was aroused, and telegrams were tent to Dr. James, Dr. Janeway and eeveral other physicians, who arrived in a short lime. Everything possible was done for the patient, but ho grew rapidly worse and died at 5:15 o'clock. Ha was semi-conscious until death. When he died, his wife and his daughter, Gladys, and his son, Reginald, were with hiui. (Cornelius Vanderbilt was the son of William Henry Vanderbilt, and the grandson of Cornelius Vanderbilt, the founder of the famous Vanderbilt fortune. Ho was born November 27, 1813, and upon t!.e death of his father became chief manager of the fortune with his brother, William Kissam Van derbilt. In 1K87 he erected a fine build ing in New York for the benefit of his railroad employes.) Surprise at Newport. Newi-oht, R. J., Sept. 12. The an nouncement of the sudden death of Cor nelius Vanderbilt in New York this morning was a. heavy blow to residents of Newport, among whom he had been a familiar figure for fifteen years. Mr. and Mrs. Vanderbilt left Newport yesterday for New York. On his de parture Mr. Vanderbilt appeared in ex cellent health. He has taken promi nent place in summer life at Newport, nd fits entertainments have been of a must elaborate character. He has al ways kindly nod or word for bis many acquaintances. He was a generous con tributor to local charity and gave an nually a good sum in aid of the lccal Y. M. C. A. His purse was ever open to aid the sick und distressed in Newport, and on his departure In autumn each year he left a considerable fund for die tribution among the poor during winter walla" WALLA SMALLPOX CASES Cost the County, I'p to Date, Over Three Thousand Dollars. 'm.i .k Walla, Wash., Sept. 11. The ""tease of smallpox was discovered In """ Walla May 29. It was traced 'r"m the railroad camps on Snake river, here hundreds of men were engaged in construction of the extension of the 0- K. A N. track up that stream towards 'wiston. At once vigorous measures ere taken to prevent the spread of the "'ease. An Isolation hospital, or pest house, WM e,ubllshed several miles ota the city, snd the doctors were all "'l engaged in vaccinating the people. A meeting of tha iiialnaaa min and heaviest taxpayers was held, and a reso lution was adopted, unanimously, Erecting the authorities to take all P'opnr gteps to prevent the spread of he disease, without regard to cost. From "e first case to the last, which was dis ehrg,., cured a few days ago, seventeen ere discovered and treated In the Uola Hon hospital, all of whom recovered. " the total number, fifteen were traced directly t0 the railroRd camps and the "rounding country. The bills for the care and treatment of thebn mi.f a .. n '"iio smaiipox patients are being audited by the county com missioners, who share the cost with the city council. They aggregate, as far as preeenttd, $3276,02. Some $-100 more will, probably, have to be added. Con trary to the popular belief the nhveicl bill for services during the 100 da..- thev attended patients was only $600. Boy Beggar Murdered. Oakland, Cl., Sept. II. Fred i . -e.son, a Jo-year-old toy, who has been begging in this city for Oliver Lsvigne otherwise known a."Montreal Frenchy was arrested last night, and today con fesstd to the police that Ljvigne is the murderer of another boy bepgar who was with Lavigne previous to young" Nelson becoming his be.gar. According to young .eieon, the victim of Frenchy: anger was murdered in the raiiroad yards at Lirarnie, Wyo., some u-ne in September, 1898. Lavigne is incustodv Will Move Town of Dyea. v ictokia, is. v., Sept. 11. The town of Dyea is soon to be moved across Lynn canal on scaws to Skagway, to augment tne growing town at the head of Lynn canal. 1 he promoters have been work ing on the novel scheme for some time sir. foreman, ol ban trancieeo, who conceivea the plan, has been working quietly at Dyea for torn time, and has secured 320 buildings, large and small A email army of mon has been employed for the work of transporting these houses to Skagway. PETITION TO PRES. LOUBET Paris Is Unexpectedly Quiet, hut Trou lie Is Looked For When De Kou Icde's Trial Opens. Rennes, Sept. 11. The judges o: the Dreyfus court-martial today, by a mu tual agreement, expressed to the preei dent of the republic, thron.h General Lucas, the commander of the army corps at Rennes, their sinceredesire that Dreyfus would not be submitted to a fresh degredation. A state of calm prevails here. All the troops and gendarmes who were quar tered in the town and Its environs have lefr, and journalists and others interest ed in the trial have departed since Satnr day. Cafes which for the last few weeks have been thronged with excited crowds are deserted. This afternoon a solitary gendarme paced up and down before the military prison, and there was not a po liceman or soldier near the Lycee, which last week resembled n btrracks. Work men were busily dismantling the court room and packing chairs, tables and benches on trolley-cars outside. Madame Dreyfus visited her husband in the prison this afternoon, but not (he Blighest interest was shown in the meet ing by the populace. She found him as calm as yesterday. The prisoner smoked his pipe todav for the first time in many days, which indicated that he was in better spirits than could be expected. Mathicu Dreyfus' Next Move. Pahir, Sept. 12. The dossier of the Rennes conrt-mai tial proceedings ar rived here tonight for submittal to the military court of revision, consisting of General Mareillo, Colonel Courbeobouese, Lieutenant-Colonel Li Grene, Major Copp and Major AlIarH. It is said that Muthieti Dreyfus In tends to supplicate Emperor William to order the publication of the documents enumerated in the bordereau. The Thresher Exploded. Colfax, Wash., Sept., 11. The steam threshing-machine of Joo Howoll ex ploded this afternoon. The explosion was caused by smut In tho wheat. No one was Injured. The explosion set fire to the threshing-machine, engine and derrick apparatus, which wire totally lo.trnv.!. Lo.ether with 500 lacks of wheat. . Kulilixl Ilia . A startling Incident, of which Mr. John Oliver of Philadelphia, was me subject, Is narrated by him as follows: "I was in a most dreadful condition. My skin was almost yellow, eves sunken, tongue coated, pain continually In back and sides, no appetite-gradually grow ing weaker day by day. Three physi cians had given me up. Fortunately, a triend advised 'Electric Bitters'; and to my great joy and surprise, tho first bottle made a decided Improvement. I continued their use for threo weeks, and am now a well man. I know they saved my life, and robbed the grave of anotiier victim." No one should fail to try them. Only 50c, guaranteedat Blakcley Houghton's drug storo. 6 IZOLA PROTESTS Cass Before tbc World. LETTER PRODUCES GREAT FEELING Dieyfus Health Is Breaking Nerved Himself During Rennes Trial, but the Reaction Is Such That the Physicians Consider His Case Hopeless, and Say That a Fatal Collapse May Eosue Any Day. New Y'ork, Sept. 13. A dispatch to the Tribune from Paris says: Emile Zola's impassioned protebt azaiuet the Rennes verdict, which appears in Aurore, causes an impression second only to that of his memorable letter. "J'Accuae." The following passages of Zola's remark able document appeals with such irre sistible force tn honest-minded French men, and indicate so clearly the new pnrase upon winch the tragedy seems about to enter, that they are singled out as of paramount importance. Z jla, after stating that the moral Se dan of September, 18U9, is a hundred fold more disastrous than the Sedan of September, 1870, when blood only was lost, points out the national peril caused by the president of the Rennes court martial, when he refused M. Labori's application to take the testimony of the former German and Italian military at taches and thereby prevented the pro duction of the documents enumerated in the bordereau. . Zila affirms his absolute certainty that a number of documents in Ester- hazy's handwriting which I'terhazy furnished to Schwarzkoppen are in the archives of tho ministry of war at Berlin. He declares that "Germany, which to morrow may be an enemy ol t ranee, holds in her hands these irrefutable proafs of the triple judicial error com mitted by the court-martial of 1891, and by the court-martial of 1898, when Ester hazy was acquitted, and by the Rennes court-martial. In case of war, Germany could thus at the very outset dishonor the French army in the eyes of Europe by simply publishing these documents and revealing the abominable iniquity of its chiefs. Diplomacy has already removed the main difficulty. Germany is willing to return the documents enumerated in the bordereau whenever the French govern ment asks for them. These documents constitue new facts which will make necessary a Becond revision of the Drey fus case befoie the couit of cassation. Should the government hesitate to ask for the documents in question, they will nevertheless be surely forthcoming, for ustice shall not have been accomplished before November 23, when my trial be gins at Versailles, even M. Labori will pronounce the pleadings at Versailles, hich it was Impossible for him to pro nounce at Rennes." Mme. Dreyfus fears that her husband's health may soon break down completely. Dreyfus nerved himself up during the Rennes trial, but the reaction is such that the physicians consider his case hopeless ami say that any day a fatal collapse may ensue. Meanwhile the intervention of Presi dent Loubot by according Dreyfus a full pardon, Is regarded by those nearest the president as almost certain, and this would be followed by executing the pol icy of the sponge and wiping out all old scored and reducing the pending trials which originated in the Dreyfus affair to mere empty formalities, releasing De Reroulede and his companions, and liquidating the whole situation by a gen eral amnesty preparatory to the world's (air of 1900. Oregon Pioneer Dead. McMiNSNt ii.i.i, Sept. 12. D.'.W. Mc Call, an Oregon pioneer, died last night after a long illness of typhoid fever. Mr. McCall was possessed of consider able property. Ho is survived by a widow and several children. Larimore's Close Call. Albany, Or., Sept. 12. Eugene Larl more, manager of the Linseed oil works, of Portland, with three other men, were mmining several thousand bushels of flaxseed stored in a barn at Scio this evening when suddenly the building collapsed. Tho men were caught beneath t'ie falling structure but, strange to say, the corner of the building where thev were standing caught against tree and left an aperture of a few feet, enabling the men to escape. Laiimore was slightly injured. , Orders Misunderstood. Oxfoed, la., Sept. 12. Four men were killed and two injured In a head Jend collision which took place today on j the Rock Island, two and a half miles east of here. The dead are : Engineer Quinn. Fireman Poison. Son of A. D. Smith. Iowa Citv. Colored man, not indentified. The injured are: Conductor Brien, slight ; Simon Pierce, serious. The trains were extra freights, and it is said the accident was due to misun derstanding of orders. Burned Baby and Self. Sedalia, Mo., Sept. 13. Mrs. Wil liams, 'wife of a Missouri Tacitac brake man, saturated the clothing of herself and 2-months' old babv with coal oil today and then set fire to the garments. The woman was burned to death, and the babe was fatally scorched. Mrs. WillianiB was a Christian scien tist and for sorue time has been con sidered of unsound mind. HOBOS SOWING SMALLPOX Scattering Germs Broadcast in Inland Empire. Pullman, Wash., Sept. 12. The first death from smallpox to occur in Eastern Washington since the recent epidemic began in Spokane last spring occurred two miles southeast of Johnson last night, when Wilbur Haines, died, after an illness of but five days. Thejdeceased had confluent smallpox, the most ma lignant phase of the disease. He took the disease from association with, his brother-in-law, Chris Hagey, who came to this county from Oregon two weeks ago. Hagey had the disease on the road, but in in a mild form. When Hagey and Croissant, who aho had the smallpox, came to this country thoy beat their way riding in on and under boxcars. One night they were on a freight train on the O. R. & N., when Hagey and another man, whose name is not known, sat together on top of a box car, i he night was cold, and they threw one of Hagey's blankets over their heads and huddled together to keep warm, lhis was at the time Hagey's "blood was bad and he was broken out with sores all over his body," as described by Croissant. That .11 an is at large somewhere. The blankets in which Hagey and his friend slept while camped near the de pot here were stolen, and thus has the disease been given another excellent op portunity to spread among the ho'-os, who are no doubt now scattering the germs in every direction. Tho disease germs have been sown broadcast over the Inland Empire. President Made An Honorary. Chicago, Sept. 13. The Times-Herald says: The Bricklayers' and Stone masons, Union, of Chicago, at its regular meeting last night, voted a card of honorary membership to William Mc Kinley, so that when he handles a trowel in laying the corner-stone of the new government building, O.tober 9, he may not be branded as a "scab." Recommended fur First Lieutenant. Sai.km, Or., Sept. 12. Governor Geer this evening recommended Capttin R. E. Davis, company E, Second Oregon volunteers, for appointment as first lieutenant of one of the volunteer regi ments now forming, vice J. F. Case, who declined the appointment. The recom mendation was made at the request of the secretary of war. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all othe diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it n local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and there fore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrnh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from ten drops to a teasnoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any rase it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testmonials. Address, F. J. Ciiknxy A Co., Toledo. O. tVSoM by Druggist!, 75c. 7 r Absoiuieiypube Makes the food more delicious and whofesome 2l KliHGER HAS MADE REPLY Forecast of Answer to tbe Last Britisn Note. NATURE NOT YET KNOWN South Afn.aa Advices on Subject Are Most Conflicting Message an Im portant One Field Marshal Lord Wolseley Immediately Summoned General Stewart White. London, Sept. 14 A forecast of the Transvaal's reply to the last note of the British secretary of state for the colonies Mr. Chamberlain, now under discussion by the volksraad, has been received by Secretary Chamberlain, but its nature is not known. At the colonial office, a representative of the Associated Press was informed that nothing w ill be given out for the present. It was regarded as significant, however, that the nature of the Boer reply was communicated to the com mander-in-chief, Field Marshal Lord Wolseley, who immediately summoned General Stewart White, former quarter master-general, who is the prospective commander of the British forces in Natal the South Alrican advices are most conflicting regarding tho tenor of Kruger's message of reply to Chamber lain. The Morning Post, in its second edition, prints a special dispatch fron Pietermaritzburg, the capital of Natal, saying that the reply is "truculent, loquacious and blasphemous." The Man Chester Guardian s correspondent at Capetown telegraphs saving that the outlook is of the gloomiest character. Capetown papers themselves take a more hopeful view of the situation, baa ing ineir oenet on the probable ac ceptance by Krnger of the franchise measures suggested in Chamberlain's latest dispatch. But even thev admit it is impossible to learn or foreshadow Krnger's attitude towaids the snz iiaiut? of Great Britain, which, after all, is still the main Issue. Y hatever the nature of Kruger's reply, it is probable that several more stages ol diplomatic pro cess will begone through with before there is definite war or peace, unless of cours, Kruger should take the initiative and raid Natal. It is tl.e possibility of this move that makes definite news of the reply so eagerly and anxiously await ed. A Ihouainid Tuituri Could'not express the rapture of Annie E. Springer, of 1123 Howard St., Phil adelphia, Pa., when she found that Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption had completely cured her of a hacking cough that for many years had made lite a burden. All other remedies and doctors could give her no help, but she says of this Royal Cure "It soon re moved the pain in my chest and I can now sleep soundly, something I can scarcely remember doing before. I feel like sounding its praises throughout the universe." So will every one w ho tries Dr. King's New Discovery forany trouble of the throat, chest or lungs. Price 50c and fl. Trial bottle free at Blokeley & Houghton's drug storo: every bottle guaranteed. Knife Pierced His Heart. Astoria, Sept. 13. Robert West, a prominent citizen of this county and a resident of Westport, acciduntly killed himself this afternoon nnder circum stances that were very peculiar. For the past few years he has been almost totally blind, but tbe loss of his sight did not interfere with his doing light work bout his home. This afternoon he went to the woodhouse in the rear of his residence to cut some kindling with his pocket knife. While doing ro a dog suddenly startled him, i nd be fell with CO.. fw vrm. the knife in his hand, piercing his side and entering his heart. lit) lived but a few minutes after the accident. Th coroner held an inquest, and the jury re turned a verd.ct of accidental death. The funeral and interment will take p'ace at West port on Friday. wnMitiiux crust ok Di.tiuttiorA A rromliiftnt Virginia Editor llail A I -uioat Olven I'p, hut Wit Brought Hark to I'errVrt llrallli by ( hniiiher lam's Colic. Cholera anil IHarrboea Ueuieriy. Head Ills -tutorial. From the Tlimn, UllUtllle, Va. I suffered with diarrhoea for a long time and thought I was past being cured. I had spent much time and money and suffered so much misery that I had al most decided to give up all hopes of re covery and await the result, but notic ing the advertisement ol Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and nlso some testimonials stating how some wonderful cures bad Veen wrought by thh remedy, I decided to try it. After taking a few doses I was entirely well ot that trouble, and I wish to say further to my renders and fellow-suffer ers that I nm a ha!e and hearty man to day an I feel as wall as I tver did in my life. O. R. Moorfl, Sold by B.akeley &. Houghton, druggists. , A DISASTROUS TRAIN WRECK. North Bound Passenger Crashed Into Caboose of Accomodation Train, at Formosa, Near BakcrsGcld. Bakehsfield, Cab, Sept. t4. A disas- trom wreck ccourrtd at Formosa iate- last night. A north-bound Southern Pacific pastenger train ran iutoand tele scoped the cit'Oo;e of the Porterville ac commodation train. The killed are: Mrs. Maggie Maj rs,of Los Angeles. A woman supposed to be Mrs. Larue, of Porterville. The Porterviile accommodation train came in from Porterville and left the ca boose on the main line while the engine and crew went in on the siding t pick. up some cars. The ladies who were killed boarded the caboose as it stood in front of the depot and took their seats'. Tiie engine and some c trs were just being coupled to the cat oose when t he- crash came. The heavy pus ient r eu.ine tore through ths caboose as if it were- cardboard, and tho hap'ets inmates were crushed a id thrown aside. The mail and baggage an I express cai s were derailed and serve;! to prevent tbe heavy train from teleeoping by pctin; ai a buffer to dirair.is i trufoioof I tie impact of the train agtiust the mass of wreckage ia front. The p:issenzer9 on the north-bound train were shaken up and bruised by the jar of the collision and an arm of one man was broken. F"nineer Wright was badly ecaldid by the l nrs'.ing of the in jector lpe, but he will probably re cover. The to lies of ihe women who were killed wire terribly mangle ). Thu disaster is attritu'ed to the fact that H e cab ose of the Porterville train was left on the main trck, which should have hern left clear for the passenger train from the south. Will Go On The Staec New Yobk, Sept. l:'.. The Earl of Yarmouth, who has been spending the summer at Newport, has decided to adopt ihe tta as a irofession, and will make his debut as an uitorinthls city at a very early date. Mr. Chutes Fiohuin bai tngaged him for hi t U reel, i n I be wid make his first appearand on tha pre fess ona" sta.e in "Wheels Within Whoels" at the-Madison-Square theater. I'lajail tint. Pull Head che. Pains it varioui parts of the body, Sinking at the lit of the stomach, Loss of appetite, Feverishness, Pimples or Sores all positive evidences of impure blood. No matter how it became so it must be purified in order to obtain good health. Acker's Blood F.lexir has never failed to cure ScrofuIcu9 or Syphilitic poisons or any other bloo.1 diseases. It is certainly a wonderful remedy and we sell every bottle on a positive guarantee. BlakeleyA Hough ton Druggists. .: