en VOL. II. THE DALLES, OREGON, WEDESD AY, JULY 1, 1801. NO. 14. If YOU are looking for Call in and we will Ladies' or Misses' poed-licj Shoe -in Button Only $1.00 pet Pait, All sizes. . Just the thing for this warm weather. HOW ABOUT THOSE 37-Inch bo cheap, at JWgFARLiAND KOTH DHLiLiES, Wash. Situated at the Head of Navigation. Destined v. - - Best JVIanuf aetuting Centei In the Inland Empire. test Selling- Property of tlie Season in the Northwest. For farther information call at the office of 'Interstate Investment Co., 72 Washington St., PORTLAND, Or. O. D. TAYLOR, THE DALLES, Or. vColumbia Ice Co. if 104 8EOOND STREET. Having over 1000 tons of ice on hand, we are now prepared to receive orders, wholesale or retail, to be delivered throng!) the summer. Parties contract teg with ns will be carried through the m tire - season without advance . in raid, and may depend that we have 'toothing but PURE, HEALTHFUL ICE, Cut from mountain water ; no eloueh or afcnbi ponds. Leaive orders at the Columbia Candy factory, 104 Second street. W. S. CRAM, Manager. P. P. THOMroo.V J. 3. BCBKMCK, H. 11. Bbaix, Preaiaeni. VKe-rresiaeni. (jaenier. Hist national Bank. DALLES. - - - OGOREN xal Banking Bnsiness transacted ts received, subject to bight JJraft or Check. . . ons made and proceeds promptly emitted on day of collection. lght and Telegraphic Exchange sold on lie.w xorfc, ban Francisco and Fort ... . . . land. ' - .. V - DIRECTORS. j, P. Thompson. ' Jho. 8. Schknok. T, W. 8PABK8. Gxo. A. Libbi. H. M. Bcall. - rehch & CO., BANKERS. ' iJUSSACT 4 GENERAL BAH KING BUSINESS . tter of CreditlSsued available in the Eastern States. " - - Eight Exchange and : Telegraphic f Aisferssoldon New York, Chicago, St. ) t.ifl, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, kittle Wash., and various points in Or .jn and Washington. -:. . i . 'lections made at all points on av- be term. v V A a give you one in a or Lace- Challies & FRENCH'S to be W. E. GARRETSON. Leafii-?-Jeweler. SOIK AGENT FOB THI All Watch Work; Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. 138 Heoond St., Tha Dalle, Of. 1891: ICE! 1891. The Dalles Ice Go., Cop. Third and Union Streets, . Having a sufficient quantity, of Ice to supply the city we are now prepared to receive orders to be delivered during the coming summer. Parties contracting with ub can depend on being supplied through the entire season and may de pend that we have nothing but ,' FUBE, HEALTHFUL I0E Chit from mountain water ; np slough or slush ponds. ' . We are receiving orders daily and solicit a continuance of the game.' . " H. J. MAIES, Manager. Office, corner Third and Union streets. $20 REWARD. WILL BK iAii W A NTT rN FORMATION leading to theeoiilotion of parties ratting e ropes or in any r inT rinpr with tbe wir". poire or iampe 4of Th iucnic Lisar Co. ) . H. GLENN. f J Manager CLUBBED TO DEATH. That's What Will Happen to the Re publican Party if Brice's Advice is Heeded. i . Iowa Republicans in Session. No Public Debt Statement Can be Got At Other News. New .York, July 1. Chairman Brice, chairman of the National Democratic Committee, has written a letter of warn ing and advice to his fellow members of the National Committee. The ' letter embodies advice in. regard to the associa tion of democratic clubs, and the neces sity of the National Committee co-operating with them. "The plan of campaign, of the republi cans," he says, "is a colossal system of clubs to be maintained and supported by unlimited means drawn from the pockets of beneficiaries of the monopoly policy. "inis system,' ne urges "can only be met by an equally extensive system of voluntary democratic clubs, that is, the associations of people in their several neighborhoods, for the defense of their rights and interests against those bonded to assail them." Brice thinks the approaching struggle is to be one mainly between clubs, and this is greatly to be desired that a nni form and perfected system of democratic societies throughout the country be or gauized and put in intimate association with each other before the beginning of next year. .- IOWA EEFUBL1CANS. A "Large and Harmonlovt tttate Cobt tiou Using; Held. Ckdak Rapids, Ia., July 1. One of the most enthusiastic Republican conventions , ever assembled , in Iowa convened in this city to-day. The con vention was as distinguished for its har mony and good feeling as have been -conventions in 'recent years their discord. and dissensions. Among the . audience were many persons of state and national reputation. Mrs. J. Ellen Foster, the representa tive non-partisan Woman's Christian Temperance Union heads a delegation of enthusiastic lady republicans who occu pied private boxes. Promptly at 11 o'clock Chairman Mack of the state central committee called the convention to order. John Stone was chosen as temporary chairman. In assuming the chair Stone made a stirring speech which was interrupted many times by applause. Having thanked the convention for the distinction of being called upon to preside over it he said : "A most im portant crisis is upon us. The political power of the state is at stake." "The good results achieved by the re publican party during its rule of thirty years is endangered. The democratic party of Iowa is in battle and in am bush." For governor, . Hiram C. Wheeler of Odebolt, Sac county, was nominated on i the first ballot. Mart Become Citizen or Iee. London, July 1. The Odessa corres pondent of the News says : Governors Kieff, Podolia and Volhynia have issued a -decree announcing that all foreigners in those provinces must either become naturalized citizens or leave the country. The decree is aimed at the populous German colonies adjacent to tbe Aus trian frontier. Decreased Southern Pacific Earalaft. . San Fhancibco, July 1. The South ern Pacific company's earnings for May were total $3,941,225, a decrease of $214, 875 as compared with the gross earnings of May, 1891. A Good Appointment. .' Salem, Ogn., July l.-r-Governor Pen noyer to-day appointed T. J. Davidson, (democrat) of Salem, county . judge of Marion county, vice Wm. Waldo, resigned.- ' . '- " More Chilian Fighting. Iqciqub, July 1. There are rumors of heavy fighting between the forces of Huasco and Coquimbo both on land and Weather Foreext. . San Francisco, Jaly ,1. Forecast for Portland, Oregon and Washington, colder except nearly stationary temper ature at Spokane and Fort Canby. Chicago Wheat Market. Chicago, IJL. July 1. Close, wheat strong cash 94i6)4; July, 92; December, 89. : . San FraneiMO Market. . . San Fra'ncisoo, July tl Wheat, buyer '91, after August first 1.66. , IN MEMORIAL Noble Words Fitly Spoken at Mr. At water's Funeral Exercises. The following were remarks made bv Hon. W. Lair Hill at the funeral Of Mr. Atwater on Sunday last : - Friknds : A. little more than five years ago two lawyers, wuose acquaintance reached back more than twice that num ber of years farther, sat conversing, and tbe conversation ran, a-) on many prev ious occasions it had run' between them, nron the ereat problem which tbe heart of man has struggled with from time be fore there were, so tar as we can tell, systems of religion ; the problem which even yet the human intellect seems - to have made little progress In solving: Whence we are, why we are; and what we shall be. In this speculative strain, and with the sort of solemn sympathy whicth bis-, question always brings be tween those who talk of it, the conversa tion ran, until one of them said : "When I shall have met the inevitable, I should desire that there be no great pageant about my burial. I should desire that no oration be spoken ; but I should de sire that a lawyer should say some kind things to a few friends who might gather at that place ; because, of all the profes sions and of all tbe guilds amongst men, there are none where men know each other so well as lawyers know each other ; and because the lawyer's life is a contin uous course of investigating and study ing the intentions, tbe motives, the im pulses that Kovern human conduct. And I believe? ' he added, "that they have generally arrived at the conclusion that most men are as good as their or ganizations and surroundings will allow them to be. I want such a man to speak of me." Today all that is visible to human .eyes of him who thus spoke lies in this narrow casket, in the sleep that shall never be broken, and tbe other comes with loving hands to drop a flower on his tomb to lay a little stone on tbe monument of his memory. . Joseph K. Atwater. whose body lies here, was born in the province of Nova Scotia in 1837. When he was but a little child bis parents removed to the United States, and settled m the state of wis- cousin. , There Joseph was reared ; there he received . tbe education- which tbe schools of that western country gave ; and there he began his career as a man. When he had attained to his majority, pursuing -an aptness for letters - whieh he had developed in his school days, be became the editor of a newspaper at the town of Jenerson. Wisconsin. This en terprise he carried on until the war of the rebellion broke out. Then, follow ing that impulsiveness . which was al ways, before and after., a characteristic of his life readv to make anv sacrifice he gave up hie newspaper to go to the defense of his country, entering the army as a lieutenant and serving two years, during which time he was pro moted to the position of captain in the First Wisconsin cavalry. At the end of two years he resigned his commission in the army, and returning home entered as a student the law office of . Angus Cameron, then an able and distinguish ed lawyer, afterwards United States sen ator from the state of Wisconsin. - After admission to the bar he removed to Min nesota and entered upon the practice of the profession. In 1870, while yet very young, he was elected a member of the legislature of the state of Minnesota. After his term as legislator expired, and in the year 1874 bocame to Oregon, set tling in Portland. Then my first ac quaintance with him began, an acquain tance which soon ripened into the warm est friendship.- In 1877 he came to Tbe Dalles, Wjhicb has been his borne ever since. , In the nature of our constitutions are the beginnings of what we shall be. We do but build on foundations which are laid we know not how.- Nature did much for Mr. Atwater. I recollect him when we first became acquainted, before ill health bad impaired his vigor, as you who were here in tbe early years recol lect him one of the most brilliant men to whom it was my privilege, to whom it -was your privilege, to lis en. He had a mind capable ot the quickest grasp, able to comprehend in tbe shortest time, and with the briefest statement, all the details of any matter which might be brought before him. Indeed, I think, amongst all the men with whom I have come in contact in thirty years of asso ciation with men in a profession where contact means attrition, I have met no man who seemed to grasp all of a com plex and complicated matter with a cel erity that this man did. And his power of expression was but the counterpart of that quickness and thoroughness which marked the attention of bis mind always." A whole complication of matters could be by him condensed into a single sen tence, yet without that involvement which oftentimes obscures the idea. Clear, lucid, no one could hear and not understand. So with his pen.- He was one of the most facile writers I - ever knew. His sentences needed no modifi cation ; they fell round, complete. '. And deeper than all these gifts lay the gift of a large heart and generous mind. He could not wound. - In the temptations that come in the court room (I speak of him . now as a brother in the profession of law, for that has been his life and mine) ; in the conflicts that come in the court room he was the readiest of all of us at repartee, and the ony one of us who in repartee never wounded. His wit was a perennial fountain, but it was of that most happy kind that made even his adversary feel better for the thrust. So keen was his sense of humor that sometimes, the most serious things took on, to him, a humorous -aspect. He would laugh at that which others would think was a serious thing to himself. He was among the few men I have ever known Who could laugh at his own dis comfiture heartily with another even with his adversary : and he would often repeat the circumstances over to others, with colorings against himself, in order that Others- might also enjoy a laugh at his expense. And this same generosity controlled his ideas of business. Mr. Atwater put nothing away. He made no effort, to acquire wealth, although he might, have acquired it. His talents would have brought it. Neither was he ambitious of position. That to which so many men are attracted as the central idea of their existence, and for which so many men sacrifice the sweetest relations in life, had no attractions for him. I have talk ed with him many times on the subject that so many lawyers find dear to speak of, the ambition for fame, position, dis tinction. . He would none of it. bo clearlv he saw the littleness of all human enterprise;-that even the am bitions of mankind were to be laughed at. This took away one inspiration to effort, so that often to him there came discouragements,- and he would speak of them. " There is nothing to be gained by the daily strife of labor," he would say. "It comes to nothing, why should we not lay aside our armor and reet." Amongst all the people with whom be came in contact, in a life of contact with men. I dare say not one today cherishes an ill thought of tbe man who lies here. And this because he was a gentle, loving and forgiving man. I dare say, too, that when the hour. came, to part with this life, if he could have recalled all the relations he had sustained with men, he would have found not one bitter thorglit " I . 1 I - l-1 1 . iTi. againBt a unman oeing. socii a me, such a character, compels respect, esteem and cherished memory. We shall al ways cherish the memory of such a life, no matter what trifling defects t !) may have been. Here lies a man whose memory every one who knew bini re spects, and those who knew him mwt intimately were most attached to him None knew him to turn away from him To know him once, to know him well, was always to feel a personal intercut in his welfare. When death calls a friend awav we are startled into taking up again the old problem of the tomorrow of death. It would be difficult to speak much of that for me, at least, to speak much of t hat. But there is that to be said yet in which is the strength of hope. True, no one can eay that knowledge, derived from human investigation has ever brought forth any information upon the subject of our future Blank darkness is all that we can see when we look into the future with only the light of the inves tigations of science. And even the book which we call the word of God does not bring consolation to all. But there is strength and hope in the fact that far back of all systems of religion man has believed that his life is not the end of all things. Whatever may be the opin ion of men about systems of religion, whatever one may say of the theologies, whatever word or form of words we may employ to designate the Power above us that mat:es righteousness, whether we name it God, or let it go unnamed, and whatever we may think of the. origin, of this visible universe about us, the hope of immortality does not depend on these views. It is a thing apart from notions of theology. Here lies a man who had no relations to the church, but I know that in his thoughts (for the subject I now speak of was a subject of his fre quent conversation he was a religious man. Systems of theology, systems "of religion are but the garb but the cloth ing that men have put around that in nate knowledge of our relation to the Power above us, which is at the center of all systems of religion, and is religion's self. The clothing may change as our dress changes with tbe fashion of the time, but the central thing of faith in a blessed future remains through all time through all the de structions of systems. It did not owe itself to them: it will survive them. Tbe believe of a future life takes hold upon a proposition that science fails to reach ; for tbe mind grasps at once tbe fact that the conditions of this problem are outside the reach of human intellect. Whether I reason of God, and whether I accept as revelation the book we receive as such ; though I deny the one and re ject the other, I still must see that tbe question to ' be solved as to my future life is not touched by any of these. Science can give no explanation-that will enable one to grasp the thought of mind developed out of matter. - 4 hatever be the possible connection of the two, we see the future life-only by faith. Man has believed it as far back as we can trace. The savage, whose system of re ligion made God a vengeful being like himself, whose thought connected future life only .with war, and -the chase, tstiil giasped the belief in immortality, and only degraded it bv his. low ideas of sys tem. As crude theories fadeaway, aud crude it eas of the conflict between scienct. and religion die out, the grasp of faith, becomes stronger. The euect of all this perception of the impotency of tbe .in tellect, has been, to strengthen faith, which thus finds out that iucannot rely upon science to solve the question Faith fears science no longer, for they operate in different sphere?. Faith, then, that belief which ta&us hold instinctively without other premise than itself and draws tbe distant to ns, is the faculty by which, above and beyond all our senses, we see the truth. Faith in the tomorrow of death, faith in the bright awakening from this sleep, has. pierced, and will ever pierce, the dark ness tliat hangs over the leaden stream. It brings to our vision the forms of those we loved" here, and we see them extending "bands and welcoming as; and then we know that this which we have laid in this casket is not our friend that was ; this is but the garment he was here clothed with. But faith goes on beyond this vision. It shows us . the bridge by which we too shall pass over and grasp the hands that wait to wel come us. It is tbe support of patience. Our part now is simply to bear the bur den. - : Here lies one who thought it wrong to jostle a brother bearing bis burden along tbe journey of life. But he goes' away ; and these follow. And while they look across with the eye of faith and see him reaching out to welcome them, saying to them, he shall only wait a little until they come, strengthened by the assur ance that by and bv they will go, to complete the duty that calls them here. Faith makes light the duty here ; and duty brings tbe healing to ' our grief. r riends, here is not the loved one that is gone, lie is over there, i ou have du ties before yon. Turn vou to the work of the living, 4tnd he whom you mourn as dead will await vou. You will go over by and bv, with duty done, to be welcomed Dy him on the other shore. Nothing more can be said. He has gone to rest. All the toil and struggle that made life hard to htm, all tbe struggle with, his own weaknesses are over and now he rests, and how the tired cherish the though r of rest ! Rest, good friend, and fare well ! HHW THY COM K TO ITS. Keport of the Immigration Uanu for Wabhingtojc, July 1. Immigration into the United States from 1820 to 1890 is tbe subject of a special report which has been prepared by the chief of the bureau of statistics of the treasurer's de partment and will soon be published. The arrivals of immigrants from 1820 to 1890 have reached 15,641,688; Ger many and Ireland are the countries sending tbe greatest number of emi grants. The only leading countries from which arrivals have fallen off during the past ten years are France and China.' The yeav of thelargum immigration yet re ported, is tbe ontt that' ended June 30, 18!), when arrivals Mere 788,992. Im migration from Italv bus steadily in- cnuififHl until in li0, when it was 520, 000. Of arrivals 611 per cent are males. The greatest proportion of females come from Ireland, the smallest percentage of females are from Italy and Hungary. CAFITOL HEWS. John W. Crawford to he Umatilla In dian Agent Copyright Granted. Washington, July 1. The president today appointed John W. Crawford agent for the Indians, of the Umatilla agency. ' The President today issued a ' procla- .. ... r . i in anon providing ior tne grunung oi copyright in the United States of citizens or subjects of Belgnm, France, Great Britian and Switzerland. Mo Public -Debt Statement Available. Washington, D. C, July 1. In view of the proposed change in the method of stating the public debt the treasury, offi cials refuse this morning to make any estimate of the change in the debt itself since June 10. It is understood, bow ever, that there has been a slight in crease in tbe debt eo far as cash in in the treasury applicable for its payment is concerned. The reduced cash balance results from unusually heavy expendi tures during the month. ' Reforming Gamhlt-rM. Columbus Dispatch. "I had rather a remarkable experience arhfn T nrna chnnlnm in t K nrmv " r. marked one of the ministers at the Pas tor's Union. "What was it?" "I had been working and talking to the boys about gambling, and they fin ally turned all the cards in the camp over to me. The next day they' were paid off. The following day I wus pass ing out and saw a blanket spread out, with two lumps of sugar on one corners, and about half the money in the ramp spread out.1 "What wt ia they doing?" ' "They were betting on which lump of sugar a fly would first light, and all the money on the blanket changed bands on the result." 'Wh:tt did you say to the boys?" - "Issid: "Here, liovs, come get your cards.' " "Hani times is an old humbug. Times are good. Plenty of money iu the coun try. Bnniness is better than it ever was. The Philadelphia Ledger, thegreat finan cial organ of the United States, Bays: "The amount of money in circulation now is oignty-seven millions greater than it was a year ago ; the total -volume of currency at this time is 1.1,304,000,000, or nearly 1 24 for each man, woman and child of the 63,000,000 of inhabitants. . ily increasing until It has risen from an average of $16 per capita two years ago, to $24 at the present time, as above ' stated. J . P. T.- Brnum, the great showman, was not only himself a strict, abstainer from intoxicating drinks, but, be . was also a strong advocate of temperance; He used, in the days when the lecturer flourished, to lecture on temperance. He was once in tbe course of an address interrupted by someone, who shouted out: "How does whisk v affect a man, externally or internally?'' The quick re ply was: "Eternally." ': One of our subscribers asks us the in terrogatory where the phrase "he isn't in it" comes from. As Ltr back as we are able to trace, it was originated by Noah," who used the remark derisi-rely in referring to some profane person who had criticised the building of the ark. Condon Olobe. Wealth is not bis who gets it, but his who enjoys it.