CJJ VOL. II. THE DALLES, OREGON, MONDAY, AUGUST 10, 189f. NO. 47. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. WM. 8AUNDER8 Architect. PlanH und specification!) furnished tor dwellings, churches, business blocks, schools and factories. Charges moderate, satlsfnctlon (juurunt!. Of tioc over French's bank. The Dalles, Oregon. DR. J. 8CTHERLANW Fkixow of Trinity Medical Colletfe, and member of the Col ( lege of Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, Phy sician and 8un(eiu). Office; rooms 3 and 4 Chap- man block. Residence; Judge Thombury's Sec ond street. Office hours; 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 and 7 to 8 . m. D R. o. 1. DOAXE rHTSiciAN ' Nr scb- qbon. umce; rooms 5 and 6 chapman Block. Residence over MeKarlaud & French's store. Office hours v tit 12 A. M., i to & and 7 to P.M. . AS. BKXNETT, ATTORNKV-AT-T.AW. Of- dee in bohsiino's building, up stairs. The Italics, Oregon. : DSIDDALL Orktist.' Gas given for the . painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth set on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of the Golden Tooth, Second Street. A S. THOMPSON Attorkkt-aT-iaw. Office . In Opera House Block, Washington Street, The Dalles, Oregon P. P. MATH. B. R. llBNTIMGTOK. H. S. WILHOK. MAYS, HCNTIXOTON t WILSON ATTORNEYS-at-law. Offices, French's block over First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. B.B.DUrUR. OSO.WATK.IH8. FRANK. MBKKFBB. DO FUR, WATKIN8 A MENEFEE Attor-NKYH-AT-I.AW Rooms Nos. 71, 73, 75 and "7, Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. WTI. WILSON ATTORKRT-AT-tAW Rooms 62 and S3, Now Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. COLUMBIA ' Qapdy :-: paetory, W. S. CRAM, Proprietor. esoccessono Cram 4 Corson.: - ManufiM-tureT ol the finest trench ami Home Made o.A.2sr id i ms; Kant of Portland. llEAI.HK IN Tropical Fruits, Nats Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish or Retail any of thewe goods at Wholcaala OYSTERS In Every Style. 104 Second Street. The Dalles. Or. Columbia Ice Co. , 104 SECOND STREET. JCOH I XOXlt IOH! Having over 1000 tons of ice on hand, we are now prepared to receive orders, wholesale or retail, to be delivered through the summer. Parties contract ing with us will be' carried through the entire season without advance in price, and may depend that we have nothing but ' ' PURE, HEALTHFUL ICE, Cut from mountain water ; no slough or slush ponds. Leave drders at the Columbia Candy Factory, 104 Second street. W. S. CRAM, Manager. PIEU 0EIIT0I1. Offiee Cor. 3d and Union Sts. Oak and Fir on Hand. Orders Filled Promptly. R. B. Hood, Livery, Feed and Sale Horses Bought and Sold on Commission and Money Advanced on Horses left For Sale. OFFICE OF- The Dalles and Goldendale Stage Line. Stage Leaves The Dalles every morning t 7:90 and Goldendale at 7:30. All freight muBt be left at K. B. f. Hood's office the evening before. . .... R. B. HOOD, Proprietor. $500 Reward ! We will pay the above reward for any case of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, 8ick Headache, In . digestion, Constipation or Costivenens we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are Surely vegetable, and never fail to give satisfae on. Sugar Coated. Large boxes containing 30 Pills, 26 cents. Beware of counterfeits and imi tations. The genuine manufactured only by THE JOHN V. WFST COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. BLAKKIKV HOUGHTON, Prescription Druggists, 175 Seeond St. Th Dalles, Or. WD BARGfllltSI -IN- Outing Flannels, White Goods, 37 inch Challies, Ohambrays, Satiues, Ginghams, Zephyrines, Organdies and Grenadines. ALSO- Sim Mcraar, Jerseys, Etc. These goods are marked down to BED ROCK PRICES, as they must be sold to make room , for our FALL STOCK. PICFflBLP JSLOHTJ4 DflliliES, Wash. Situated at the Head of Navigation. Destined to be Best Manufacturing Center " In the Inland Empire. Best Selling Property of the Season in the Northwest. For farther information call at the office of Interstate Investment Co., Or 72 Washington St., PORTLAND, Or. O. D. TAYLOR, THE DALLES, Or. The Opera festautfant, No. 116 Washington Street, MEALS at ALL HOURS of the DAY or NIGHT. Handsomely Furnished Rooms to Rent by the Day, Week or Month. Finest Sample Rooms for Commercial Men.' I Special Rates to Commercial Men. WILL S. GRAHAM, W. E. GARRETSOH, Leafluig Jeweler. SIH.K AGEXT 1'Olt THE All Watch Work! Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. 138 Seeond St., The Dalles, Or. REMOVAL. H. Glenn has lemoved his office and the office of the Electric Light Co. to 72 Washingtoii St. ; 'L .. :::..a - . ... i BJHGJIIHS! & PROPRIETOR. D. P. THOM PHOK' President. . 8. BCHENCK, H. M. BKAIX, Vice-President. Cashier. First national Bank. THE DALLES. .- OGOREN A General Banking Business transacted J deposit e received, subject to bight Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on mew xorK, Ban iranciaco and Port land. DIRECTORS. D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. Schbnck. 1. V . tePABKS. Geo. A. Liebe. H. M. Bkall. FRENCH 8t CO., BANKERS. TEAX8ACT A GENEBALBANKIXG BXJ8INE68 Letters of Credit issued available in the Lastern States. - Sight Exchange - and Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle wasn., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fv orable term". 1 , MICH. THURSDAY'S EAltTHOll AK.E. Further Particulars Brought ly a Trap per from the Culf of California. Yuma. ' Ariz.. Amr- 9. f! Smit.h in I Mil Amprimn trnnnpr 'iiWinTiiMini xr ! A - - I , , a Cocapah Indian, returned from the Galf of California, and Rives additional details concerning the earthquakes and j ; tidal wave of Thursday last. About 6 j o'clock thut inorninjt a heavv shock- Vas I felt -near th Lordo colony in the state of Sonora," Mexico, on the Colorado river. The sky darkened and a terrible thunder storm fame up. A huge wave from the gulf 'was driven inland, and fences and landing places were washed away. - - A second eart hquake shock caused, the earth to open in many places. Some of he -jassnres were four to seven feet wide'-and from twenty to thirty feet long ' and seemingly fathomless. Men were thrown to the' ground by the force of this shock. About a mile from LiOrdo they noticed a fissure in the raid- die of the river tied, into which the Uol-. orado was pouring with much noise. A third shock of earthquake destroyed three small habitations of colonists and cracked others. No human life was lost but a large amount of live stock was killed. The damage done by the earthquake in Sonora is principally to the herds of cattle in that region. The settlements there are small but it is feared that J. Milton, Or. Larsen and T. Thursen, who went down to the gulf several weeks ago, are drowned, as no trace of them can be found. . FATAL STORM I" WISCONSIN. Two ltoys Crnslied to Dealh and Sev eral Pereons Injured. Ashland, Wis., Aug. 8. This after noon there was a disastrous wind and rain storm here. The Swedish Baptist church was torn from its foundation and the roof blown off a block. Many small buildings were blown from their foundations, and half a dozen yachts moored in the bay were torn from their fastenings and wrecked upon the shore. At Washburn, on the opposfte side of the bay, a circus tent collapsed, and in the panic which ensued among the spec- I tators of the performance in the tent, two email boys were crushed to death and a number of people seriously in jured. The postoffice building also col lapsed, two women being injured, one seriously. The roof of the Omaha ele vator was torn from the building and de posited in ' the bay. Many thousand feet of lumber was blown into the water. The derrick and hoisting engines at the :coal docks were blown over. It is esti mated the damage at Washhurn is $50,000. j Dressed Iike Chinamen. Sax Fhascisco, Aug. 9. George Ross, a well-known shipwright, who returned from Forrest Hill today, sayK that last Thursday he was held up near Auburn bv two masked highway wen, dressed like Chinamen. One carried a double- barreled shotgun and the other a revol ver. One of the men spoke Chinese. The robbers secured $44. Not a Case or Manslaughter. Tbuckke, Cal., Aug. D. An au topsy, performed today on the body of Michael Lanahan, showed that he died from chronic alcoholism and not from wounds inflicted by Malcolm McDougall. Lanahan died in July last, and McDou gall, with whom be had a fight, was committed on the charge of manslaugh ter. One Dead, the Other Dying;. Redding, Cal., Aug. 9. A girl and a boy aged 5 and 3 respectively, children of Chas. Pifkschek, were- horribly burned this evening while trying to light a fire in the kitchen stove. i'likschek.'s sister, wno was sick in tea at the time, had tier bands badly burned while trying to put out the fire in the children's clothes. The girl has died, and the boy is not expected to live. Fell Under the Wheels. New Whatcom, Wash., Aug. 9. Mar tin Fitzmiller today had his leg crushed below the knee and his head injured by falling under the wheels while trying to get aboard a train on the Cornwall rail road at Jamieson's station. Physicians amputated the leg below the knee and also three fingers. The patient is rest ing easy. ' Appointed by the President. Cape May Point, N. J., Aug. 10. The president today appointed Richard Cotts. of Shannon, New York, minister to Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Salvador. This is a new South American missi created by the last -congress. Thrown From a Baggy. Portland, Aug. 10. I)r. A. L. Linds- ley, who was thrown from a buggy yes terdav .while returning from church. still lies unconscious at the residence of his daughter in this city. His condi tion is regarded as critical. Minister Douglas Resigns. Washington, Aug. t 10. Frederick Douglas, United -Slates minister - to Hayti, tendered bis resignation to the department ofstate. He gives no rea eon for the action. Chicago, Wheat Market. Chicago, 111., Aug. 10. Close, wheat firm ; cash, 90? ; Sept., 89. San Francisco . Market ( - San Francisco, . Aug. 10. . Wheat, buyer l, 1.63; season, 1.68. SPOKANE'S BIG FIRE. Lodging House is Burned to the Ground, Causing Loss of Life and Property. The Inmates Jump From the Windows and Receive Internal Injuries. A Panic Stricken Crowd. Spokask, Wash., Aug. 10. At 3:30 this morning u patrolman on Second street saw flames issuing from Conway's lodging house, at the corner of Second and Mill. He immediately turned an alarm and the department responded at once, but before an engine arrived the building was a mass of flames and the inmates were flying for their lives. It is not known how many persons were in the building, but all but one known to have been inside have been accounted for. The hook and ladder truck was immediately called into use to save the lives of the inmates. Chas. Johnson, a man about GO years - of age, was taken through the second story window on Mill street. He had been suffocated to death. His face was burned almost be yond recognition. Just across from him on the cast side of the burning building was a negro named Washington, a bar ber his hands and arms were terribly burned, the skin being entirely pooled off; He will not recover. ' A man named Green jumped from the third story on the Mill street Bide and is in jured internally. He lay on the pavement just across from the burning building and made piteous appeals to the by standers to fetch a doctor. He can hardly recover. A few yards Iron) him layJ.'H. Dwyer, . another inmate who had jumped from the third-story win dow. His injuries were a broken arm. Wm. Clifford jumped from the third floor and escaped unhurt. Frank Brown threw his trunk from the second story and jumped after it. ' His trunk was smashed to pieces but Brown was un hurt. The building wae almost entirely gutted, leing a large three-story tinder box. riad there been a west wind the entire block would have gone. The fire is supposed to have been of incendiary origin There seemed to be no person whose duty it was to attend to the suf ferers, as they lay on the street their groans adding to the panic of the crowd. In the Hands or His Friends. Washington, Aug. 10. A special says : "A man who talked with (Jongar of Ohio, a member of the national re publican committee, is authority for the statement that Blaine's health permit tine, he will be in the bands of his of his friends when the nominating con vention meet in ls'JZ. ' Killed While Doing His Doty. Chiulicothe, O., Aug. 10. While Officers Hall and Von Kennell were at attempting to arrest George Duhlmey who was trying to kill his wife, Duhlmey shot and killed Hall and slightly wounded Von Kennell. Von Kennell re turned fire and fatally wounded Dnhlmev. Whisky the Cause. Atlantus, Mo., Aug. 10. Last even ing frank uoney ana several others quarreled over a pint of whisky and a fight took place in which Homer, son of Hon. J. L. McCullough, was shot in the wrist, Frank Coffey killed and Robert Stanley cut so bad he"will die. Another Kallrond Collision. New Haven, Aug. 10. Nine Italian laborers were seriously injured, two fatally, in a railroad collision near Bran ford on the New York, New Haven and Hartford railway this morning. Drowned at the Beach. Astoria, Aug. 10. The cruel waTes at Clatsop Beach claimed another victim yesterday in the person of Mrs. P. W. Parker, the wife of the proprietor of the Astorian, who was drowned while bath ing at a treacherous place on the beach. Almost Unknown to Science. San Francisco, Aug. 9. Francisco Solfonni, who was suffering from en largement of the bones, died, yesterday. The disease from which he suffered is al most unknown to science, and but about a dozen cases of it are recorded. The name given to it in recent treatises is "acromegaly.' The outward symp toms are enlarged bones, the body and head growing to enormous proportions. The dictionaries, as late as 1889, do not give the name of the disease. Solforini was hurried in Potter's field. - Some of the doctors. are thinking of digging him up and investigating his ailment. Engineer and Brakeman Arrested. SvBACUBEj N. Y.," Aug. 9. Thomas Tobin, conductor, and Edwin Connolly, flagman, of the freight train which col lided with the express at Montesuma Thursday, were arrested today upon a telegram from the coroner of Cayuga county. The Weather. San Franoisco, Aug. 10. Forecast for Oregon and Wahington, fair ; except light rains at Port Canby. NATIONAL " FOI.ITIC8. Curiosity a to Quay's Attitude Toward Hlalne Ills Conrn Criticised. New York, Aug. 9.-rTlie Washington correspondent of the Herald sends the following regarding Quay's attitude toward Blaine: "Has Matthew Stan ley Quay broken with the administra tion? That' is a ) notion very mttch discussed by politicians just now, in j view of the fact that Senators Quay and Cameron are credited with being ready to turn over the Pennsylvania delegation to James G. Blaine in 1892. Those best informed sind most conversant with the history of Quay's standing at the White house assert that he and the president -are still on good "terms, but that the ct national chairman has been feeling the pulse of the party in his own state, and finds himself unable to contend with the tide of enthusiasm that has set. in for Blaine. Rather than play on the losing side, he yields to pressure, and has a dream that Blaine is the. coming man. There is some criticism here on Senator Quay's course. It is argued that, as ho haft received pretty much all he asked forit would be the'eorrect .thing for him to make the Haraisou fight in Pennsyl vania. On the contrary, the Blaine men, who are rejoiced over the report that Quay has practically declared for the Plumed Knight, assert that the jun ior Pennsylvania senator is not in Har-. rison's debt, that his services in 1888 have not been fully, requited and that he can with perfect propriety espouse the candidacy of another, especially when the state is overwhelmingly in fa vor of a more popular candidate.' NKARING THE KM). The Columbia River Salmon Fishing Season Closes at Midnight Monday. Astobia, Aug. 8. The salmon season on the Colombia river 'closes at 12 o'clock midnight Monday. Correct footings give the total pack on the river for the year, 375,000 cases, a shortage of 60,000 cases on the pack of 1890. The Associated Press correspondent there has an authentic telegram tonight from New Westminister, B. C, that the total British ' Columbia pack including the Frazier, Skeena and Naas rivers and their inlets is 210,000 cases. The British Columbia pack of 1890 was 410, 000 cases. Hanging too Good for Him. Rochester, N. Y., Aug. 9,-r-Edward M. Sage, the village blacksmith at Pitts ford, was arrested today on complaint of bis wife and daughter that he had been criminally intimate with the latter for over a year. It is stated that the mother had been aware of the fact for some time, but under the threat of death from Sage, she failed to reveal the condition of af fairs until forced to do so from Sage breaking in the door of their sleeping apartment last night and brutally beat- . ing the mother. The daughter is a handsome girl of 18 years. Sage was held without bail. The Desperadoes Escaped. ''Carlisle, 111., Aug. 9. In a free-for-all fight Jiere tonight between Thomas McLaren " and Toby Klceder, two local youngsters, and City Marshal Kinestnith, assisted by several citizen?, who were trying to arrest them, Kleeder hit Anthony Huder in the head with :i -stone, fracturing his skull. ,He then turned and struck A. F. For on the back of the head, cutting him badly. J. Di.ly was accidentally shot by the mar- , shall, but his wound is not serioup. A reward has been offered for the two des peradoes, who subsequently made their escape. - Work in the Fields Suxpended. St. Lawrence. S. D., Aug 9. The hottest weather ever experienced here has prevailed for three days past. So intense was the heat, that men and ani mals have 8uccuuibnd in many instances, and harvest work is entirely suspended throughout the middle of 'the day. At 1 p. m. yesterday, the mercury rose to 108 and 110 degrees in the shade. Late wheat suffered terribly and some of the fields will not be cut. Other wheat is all right. Corn is suffering for rain. Unless showers come soon, or a cool wave, but little will survive the ordeal. 'James Kussell I-oivclI 111. Cambridge, Mass., Aug. 10. James Russell Lowell, the eminent poet, dip lomat and scholar, is dangerously ill at -his residence in this city and it is felt that he cannot recover from the general breaking down of his vital forces which has now set in. BRIEF TELEGltAMS. One more of the nine fugitives who escaped from the insane asylum at Auburn, New York, Thursday, was cap tured yesterday after a long chase. Calvin Page has arrived' in Boston with his two daughters, whom he re- covered from the Pinto Indians, who held them captives for twelve year). . In Indianapolis, Ind., a iive-story building, occupied by the Hclweig chair factory, was totally destroyed by fire last night. , Loss, $100,000; insurance, $47, 500. ., The suit of Mrs. Mitchell against Fred. Sharon for $50,000 for slander, alleged to have been uttered by him in connection withthc. Livingstone letters, has been transferred to the United States circuit court, and will be tried probably in, November. ,