". St 8dlt ism (jridit . X rpTTTI T r n . . . . VOL THE DALLES, WASCO COUNTY, OREGON, SATURDAY DECEMBER 30, 1899. NO. 14 DISAFFECTION AMONG TROOPS Klaiii or tie Ottrtarm (Moot c Crotj.'s Meg, THEY DO NOT EXPECT VICTORY Traosvaalers Are Suspicious and the Situation is Grave Joubert Has Recovered. Moudeu River, Cape Colony, Dec. 20. The British naval gang command the whole Boers' position, and possess the exact range of every ttone and bueb. They frequently plant shells with good advantage in the midst of the group of Boers. The Burghers are reported to be returning homo for Christmas. Recent arrivals from Jacobsda! report that notwithstanding the Boer success, the Free Staters do not expect ultimate victory. They complain of the over bearing conduct of General Cronje's men, who are alleged to be better fed and posted in the safest positions. The Tmnsvaalers do not conceal their sua picions of possibli defection of Free Staters and threaten to shoot them at the least sign of wavering. The Free Staters are said to regard subjection to the Transvaal as more to be feared than subjection to Great Britain. Eomblem island are surren.l.n. American garrison from Panay. The funeral of General Lacton will take place December 30. The remains tin oe embarked on the Thomas. transport Pketokia, Dec. 18. General Joubert has recovered, and returned to the front today. London, Dec. 2G. The latest cable dispatches liom South Africa show the situation at the front is practically un changed. With the exception of desul tory artillery practice, to which the Boers did not reply, the British continue to mark time. The Boers heavily bom liarded Lad) smith for a couple of hours Pecetu oer 10, the day after the battle of Tugela river, but little damage was done. Tbey killed one man and wounded two cen of tho garrison. Advices from Cape Town say the New alanders, with General Frencii at N'tauwpoort, were in a tight corner De cember IS. They were nearly surrounded by Boers, and retired under a hail of bullets tired at short range, but sustained only little loss. Among the Boers killed at Storm berg were many of that locality who bad joined the Free State force?. several newspaper correspondents bave returned to Cane Town from Modder river, apparently confirming the belief that mi immediate advance of the British is not nroiected. STILL GET INTO .SKIRMISHES Bad Fire at Koeehurr. Kosebcbg, Or., Dec. 25.-The large vwu-eiory warehouse opposite the depot, lormeny known as the Gangers' ware "uuse, rurneu at 10 o'c ock tonight The owner was Mrs. Josephine, and the lessees Miller & Aikens. The warehouse is a total loss, together with much vain -.--- i. uie macninery, 50 tons of grain and fifteen tons of flour. The loss is about H.U00, fully covered by insurance. The cause of the fire is unknown, but it was evidently incendiary. It origi no. u.l : .. 4 1 i . ... '"c uacs pari oi trie upper story. Energetic work by the fire de partment saved the adjoining ware houses. By prompt work the railway employes removed many cars that were e j posed. SI Indian Women Killed. Sax J.vcixTd, Cat., Dec. 23. It is es- titnated that the damage here caused by the earthquake sill aggregate over 50,- 000. The main shock was prsceded by a loud roaring and awakened many just in time to escape from the doomed build ings. The business street was such a wreck that tons of debris had to be removed before buildings could be entered. At Saboba Indian reservation, six squaws were killed by a falling wall, two fatally, and many seriously injured. The shock caused dry artesian wells to flow larger streams than ever before. Considerable damage is reported in near-by villages. ' Queen' I'lirlatma Tree. London, Dec. 20. The wives and fam ilies of the guards from Windsor, now serving in South Africa, aesembled at St. George's ball, Windsor, this after noon to participate in the queen's Christmas tree celebration. Queen Victoria, the Duke ami Duchess of Con naught, Princess Henry of Battenbnrg, the Duchess of Albany, and others of the royal family were present. The tree, which was 25 feet high, was illumi nated with electric lights and covered with presents, which the members of the household distributed after tea. The queen evinced the greatest interest n the festivities. Disastrous Eartbauake in Sontnern trenching 3'.j miles from his outlying pickets. Metlyien reconnoitered with two squadron and mounted Infantry for two miles along the line, and drew the fire of 'our guns and two Yiikers' ma chine guns. Four hor;es were hit. ' The queen's Christmas message was received with enthmism. Gat; ere is endeavoring to reopen communication with tho Indwe colliers." THE WORST IN MANY YEARS Shock Caused Great Damage at San Jacinto and Hemet Six Indian Women Killed. N. P. WRECK A BAD ONE FID v ( a. Ten Days Have Past and Last Has Just Been Recovered. Body j"ey Are Not Usually Serious, Excepting for Rebels Funeral of General Lawton Took Tlace Saturday. Manila. Deo 20 Colonel Franklin l;e"i of the Thirty-sixth infantry, en 'ontered 150 Filipinos Thursday, near A1tlnos, province of Zamboales, and killed, wounded or captured twenty hl't of them. Tha troops also obtained ""session of rifles and a quantity of '""munition. Ohe American was "'funded. A detachment of the Thirty-fourth nlanlry encountered hand of the 'Mtny Saturday at Aritao, provlnceof kw Viz.aya, and routed them, killing lw nd wounding or capturing thirteen. F'1 Americana also eeized a Quantity of f'nmiinitlon. The Twentv-flrst regiment attacked ' t Filipino outposts Sunday near Ca- "noa, scattering them and killing five F' U'senfmv. T,'s Thlrtv-second regiment Sunday ,J hrush with the enemy from the fountains northwest of Diiialupian. 'IS AttlPrlnan . wn tut rtd . The roops capturtd 125 head of cattle, and ""'gut thorn to Grankl, Bataan prov nee. 1,1 Hie island of Panay, Captain rownell's com mn r of the Twenty- f'h infantry fought the enemy near f ' The rebel . lost heavily and tho f "'"leans captured a number of rifles, relmln k. .! .-... r nil tfl " "U IH-J IIVtM i. ..J Storm In the Lake Iteglnn. Milwaukee, Dec. 25. A 35-mile northwest gale is blowing on Lake Michigan ofT this port tonight, and steamers arriving are thickly coated with icp. Tho steamers Klphicke and Cumberland, coal-laden from Cleveland, arrived today. The Lyons and City of Roiup, also carrying coal, en route from Cleveland far Milwaukee, are still out but no anxiety is felt as to their safely, Hie Chicago Milwaukee liners, plying across the lake, are running on time. The thermometer registers close to zero. Los Angki.es, Cal., Dec. 25. At 4; o'clock this morning a severe earthquake shock was felt over a large portion of Southern California. The undulations lasted twelve seconds. The. entire cen ter of the shock appears to have been at Sun Jacinto, a small town in Riverside county. The business portion of San Jacinto consists of two blocks of two story buildings, some of which are built of brick. Ten or fifteen buildings were damaged, chimneys being toppled over and walis cracked and shaken. The total damage at San Jacinto and Hemet, a small town near by, is estimated at $50,000. The large tourist hotel at Hemet was damaged and the hospital at San Jacinto also suffered. The shock was heavy at Santa Ana, Anaholra, San Bernardino, Riverside and other places, but no particular damage is reported, except from San Jacinto and Hemet. Colored Children Cremated. Middi.ktoh x, Conn., Dec. 20. Three colored children named Dixon, aged 9, 7 and !! years, were burned to death today during ft fire, which destroyed the home of their pa-ents. Tha mother of the children locked the little ones in an upstairs room while she went out to do some errand?. In some unknown manner fire broke out in the lower part of the building. Tho three children were found lu a corner of the room under a blanket. ltoland Iteed 111. New York, Dec. 25. Roland Reed, the actor, Is seriously ill at St. Luke's hospital, suffering from appendicitir, and his road engagements for the holi day week have been canceled. Up to tonight no surgical operation had been performed, and the surgeons had not decided whether or not one would ue ....UIr. Tliev are honefol of re- Ui.uca;. - covery. tlarar Wilde Challenged. Paris, Dec. 2.). Oscar Wilde, who has for some limo been living in Paris, may have to fight a duel. According to the Kcho de Paris, he became involved in an altercation in a restaurant last even ing with M. Richet, the explorer, and as a result cards were exchanged. I. Idle Damage at l.n Angele. I.oh AxfiKi.ES. Cat., Dec. 25.-Tho most severe earthquake ever felt in Los An eetos came at 4:27 this morning. No . .i .. I. rpmrted. There were two shocks, the first being the most pro longed. The shock lasted about twe.ve second-, the undulations being from north to south. H. fc. Trnendell Peed. La Ckohsi:, Wis., Dec &7.-S. V.. Trues.!. II, one of the oldest newspaper ... I the Northwest. died here lonignt. For many years he was various capacities with Press, In St. Paul. Where the Shock Wae Heaviest. Rivkuside, Cal., Dec. 25.--Word re ceived here today says that San Jacinto suffered severely from a shock of earth quake, which occurred tbeie about 4:25 a. m. Every brick building in town is budly damaged. The county hospital, at Bowers, Bhared the fate of other buildings, but the greatest damage was sustained by the stores and business houses. My son has been troubled for years with chronic diarrhoea. Sometime ago I persuaded him to take some of Cham berlain'a Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. After using two bottles of the 25-cent size he was cured. I give this testimonial, hoping somo one similarly afflicted mnv read it nnd be benefited. Thomas C. Bowek, Glencoe, O. Fur sale by BItikeley & Houghton. FIRST REPORTS ARE SUBSTANTIATED Lewiston, Idaho, Dec. 27. Although ten days have passed sit ce the tragic Northern Pacific wreck In Kendrick can yon, and the body of the tifih and last dead trainman has been taken out, the mass of railroad iron has not been cleared away. It is piled so high that it has turned the channel of Pollach crtek. Inquiry into the cause of the wreck, just concluded, shows that tho trainmen were at fault. They had eighteen flat cars loaded with steel rails for the Clear water cut off and two locomotives. They should have divided the train before starting down the tremendous 2 per cent grade in the can von, as the tracks were slippery with a light snow. The heavy load got beyond control, and although the conductor and one brakeman saved themselves by cutting off the caboose,' the train was wrecked, causing a loss of 1100,000, and the loss of five iives. Fire at La Ci ramie. La Grande. Dec. 27. A fire recurred here yesterday morning at 5:30, which completely destroyed the undertaking warerooins of J. C. Henry, valued at $750, together with a stock valued at 13000. Nothing was saved. The building was covered by $500 Insurance, and the stock by 1500. The fire is supposed to have been of incendiary origin. Mrs. Amelia Strang, ot Salem. Salem, Or., Dec. 20. Mrs. Amelia Strang, mother of A. E. Strang, engineer at the insane asylum, and siBter of Mrs Thomas Reynolds and Mrs. Anna Miller, of Portland, died in this city today of lropsy. She was62 years old. V The Absolutely Pure -Powder Made from Grape Cream of Tartar. Baking powders made from alum and other harsh, caustic acids are lower in price, but inferior in work and injurious to the stomach- ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK. Discovery Is Within 200 Feet of Stai;e Koad to Granite Gold is Visible to the Eye. connected in the Pioneer Si'Mi'TEii, Dec. 25. A week ago The Oregonian gave the first report of a rich strike four miles from GraDite. Since then fully two miles of the ledge from which the assay was made has been located. Mr. Murray, of 8utnpter, has made fourteen assays from ore dug out by himself at as many different places along the ledge, the lowest one showing a value of f 4.13, and the highest ,2!1. These assays are of surface croppings, and, following the rule for this section, would indicate an exceptionally rich and extensive voin. The rock is of porphyry formation. The quartz is free milling, gold being visible to the eye. The stage road runs just at the foot of the mountain, not 200 feet frou the original discovery, and the tunnel will start just below and run under this road. Kvery man, woman and child that has ever gone from Sumpter to Granite has passed this way, and seen the spot where now stand the location stakes. All have passed on, many to find good property miles beyond; othere have failed. They call it luck. One man ad there a month before this dis covery was made, and In his ignorance remarked to an old prospector fn the stage that thero might be gold in that mountain. The prospector looked wise and said there was no ore there; the rock was not the right formation. No C'liiiiiReln the Hltuatlnn. London, K-e. 27. The war office has received the following dispatch from Cape Town, dated December 20: "There Is no change In the situation. Methuoii reporti that the m-my'i force has increased and is now engaged In in Oregon Chautauqua Aeseuilillea. Oregon City, Dec. 27. J. W. Gray, ecretary of the Willamette Valley Chautauqua Association, has returned fiom Ssn Francisco, where he attended conference of delegates from tho var ious assemblies. The meeting was hald to select lecturers and entertainers lor the summer assemblies. Theodore Roosevelt, Bishop Benson, Clara Barton, Jubilee singers, and Alton Packard, were tho choica of tho conference. In the event that satisfactory terms cannot be made with all these, selections will be made from a list consisting of Thom as Mc Cleary, Rjbert Burdettn, George W.Bain, Dr. Guns.iulus and Hooker T. Washington. The date for the Glad stone Park assembly was fixed for July 11-21, and the Ashland assembly July 11-20. Kohhed the Mreve. A startling incident, of which Mr. John Oliver of Philadelphia, was the subject, Is narrated by him as follows "I was In a moat 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. . Fortnnately, a friend advised 'Electric Bitters'; and to my great joy and surprise, the first bottle made a decided improvement. I continued their nse for three weeks, and am now a well man. I know they saved my life, nnd robbed the grave of another victim." No one should fail to try them. Only 50c, guaranteed, 'at Blakeley & Houghton's drug store. 6 O. K. N. Haya lllght r Way. Lewihto.v, Idaho, Dec. 27. The O. R. AN. right-of-way agent, Captain Win ter, has completed the purchase of a right of way through Vineland, paying in cash the sum ot $15,000. Tho right of way includes about 15 acres of ground, anil extends along the bank of the Snake river opposite Lewiston. Theie have been so many lalse motions made on the part of the railroads that nobody has a remnant of confidence left in their sincerify. There was a time when a purchase amounting to $5,000 would have caused some interest to be mani fested. Not one person in a hundred believes that the purchase was made, although the money was paid In cash. DeWitt's Little Karly Risers purify; the blood, clean the liver, Invigorate the system. Famous little pills fur consti pation and liver troubles. THE NATION Horrible Star? 0! Ciiitira of Cuban Prisons. ALL DARE NOT BE TOLD Assassins, Brigands, Pickpockets and Young Men and Boys Even Sus pected of Disorderly Conduct, Are All Huddled Together, Sleeping on Bare Stones Covered With Vermin and Disease Germs. New York, Dec. 27. CharlKn T. Lewis, president of tho New Yrk Prison Association, who went to Cuba on behalf ol the state and other organizations in the United States, has madon sensation al report to the secretary of war in re gard to the penal institutions of the island. He contends that this govern ment is responsible, and says that a truthful description of the orisons would arouse universal inligiintion, which would probably be misdirected." After urging tills government, through the war department, to (top tho "in tolerable crutlty and injusticf, which now constitute a national diagrace," Mr. Lew is adds : "Great prisons are overcrowded with men anJ hoys. Assassins, brigands, pickpockets and young men charged with disorderly conduct, or merely su'pscted of slight offenses, are herded tog ther in absoluto idleness and unrestricted Inter course. W it li no change of clothing, no blanket or semblano of bed, many hundreds sleep on bare stone. , where filth and vermin are kept down only by constant sprinkling with disinfectants. "In some prisons tho only disinfectant known is insect powder, and cases of tuberculosis, some of them are far ad vanced, infect the rooms and doubtless spread the seeds ot disease. Moral and physical contagion are promoted on a vast scale together. Most of these prisoners have been proved guilty of no offense. "In this hell upon earth they are held indefinitely while the judges of firbt in stance investigate the iharges. Kirli of these judges has a secretary, who can often secure a dismissal, but the prisoner without monev or influence must wait." territory north of the Z.iinbesi anil England Delagoa bay, is the nioet start ling news of the day. The authority is not official, and the statement of con certed action by the two powers against French and Russian occupation must bo accepted with reserve until the foreign) office confirms it. The alleged payment of 25,000,000 marks for Germany's share in this territorial trade also seems doubts fill. Some disclosure of this kind has bee it expected in diplomatic circles for several weeks, since the necessity for shutting off the supplies of arms and ammunition for the Transvaal has become apparent with prolongation of the war. While the Russian press forecasts the occupa tion of Hetat as tho first consequence of their occupation of D.-'agoa bay, the French journals are cautious to kuow what tho Washington government will do regarding tho seizure of American vessels bv the British navy. Whatever that action may be, reports that Mr. Choate has intervened in the matter are premature and unfounded. The British pr'ze courts will without doubt be allowed to do their work precisely as the American priz operated during the war with Spain, ami questions of contraband of war and neutral rights will be argued in due course. j Russian and French rumors that all n Mitral piwers will intervene if hngland. t.ikes effective measures for closing thet back door niint the entrance of contra band of war into tho Transvaal are colored by the general belief that lher id a secret agreement with Germany re lating to any omer;ji?.cy which may arise on the eas-t coast. WILL SHUT OFF SUPPLIES Statement- Itiut c urate. London, Dt'C 28 inrny al.'egeil disclosures i.f secret D daoi buy agree ments have rrcsiitly been mbmltted to the Britifh foreign office that tiie cfliciale have made it a rule neither to deny nor affirm them, and whin questioned re garding the ethtemt-nt of the L.kal Anzdiger, tho officials adhered to this. ruW but a represeu'.ivo of the Aa-icc'ated Presj gathered that the lidded dis closures were q lite inaccurate. A dis patch to the Times fro 11 Bti.lln com ments on the L-ikal Anztier treaty statement as follows: "When it is remembered that two of Portugal' As'alic possession', Goa anil Damoa, form enclaves of the province of Bouibav, the statements of the Lokal Anzettr t order on the fantastic." lliat Thrnliblne (leailache Would quickly leave you, if you useil Dr. King's New Life Pills. Thousands' of sufferers havd proved their matclilesA merit for Sick 11 nd Nervous Headaches. They make pure blood and strong nerves and build up your health. Easy to take. Try them. Only 2 cents. Money bck if not cured. Sold by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists. 1 The Report is Not Credited in Either France or Germany, but the Paper Publishing It Asserts That Its Source of Information Is Infallible. Nkw York, Dec. "i. A dispatch to the Tribune from London says: The announcement; of the Berlin Lokai Anzdiger that nnder the secret stipula tion of the trraty, Germany will take Portugal's African colonies and the A Thnunaml Tongue Could not express the rapture of A nnie E. Springer, of 1123 Howard St., Phil adelphia, Pa., when she found ttiat Dr. King's New Discovery for Cot.su 111 (it ion had completely cured her of a hacking cough that for many years had made life a burden. All other remedies anil ! doctors could give her no help, but she says of this Royal Cure "It soon re moved the pain in my chest and I cats now sleep soundly, somethiui; I can ic ircely remember doii:g tit fore. ! feel like sounding its praises throughout the universe." So will every one who trie Dr. King's New Discovery foranv trouble of the llin.at, chest or lung. Price M'u andfl. Trial bottle free at Blakeley A Houghton's drug store; every bottle guaranteed. 3