C 1 3 VOL. II. THE DALLES, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1891. NO. 49. ritOFBSSIONAL CAKKS. WSt. SAUNDERS Architect. Plans and specifications furnished for dwellings, churcbvM, business blocks, schools and factories. x:taarjreH moderate, satisfaction guaranteed. Of Ulce over French's bunk, The Dalles, Oregon. DR. J. SUTHERLAND Fellow of Tkinity Medical College, and member of the Col lege of Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, Phy sician una Surgeon. Office; rooms 3 and 4 Chan man block. Hesidence; Judge Thornbury's Sec ond street. Office, hours; 10 to 12 a. ui., 2 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. in. DR. O. 1. DOANE PHYSICIAN AND BOB gkom. Office; rooms 5 and 6 Uhnpman Block. Residence over MrKarlanil & French's tore. Milne hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 5 and 7 to If.H. AS. 1JKNNKTT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of- tlcujii Schnmio's building, np stairs. Tho Dalles, Oregon. ' DSIDDALI. Dentist. Gas given for the painless extraction of teeth. AIko teeth set on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of the Uoldun Tooth, Second Street. 4 K. THOMPSON Attormet-at-law. Office ! In Opera House Block, Washington Street, The Dalles, Oregon i . F. T. MAYS. B. 8. HUNTIKUTOK. H.S.WILSON. MAYS, HUNTINGTON A WILSON ATTOB-nkys-at-law. Offices, French's block over First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. B.B.DCFUK. CltO. W ATKINS. FRANK MESIFII. DUFUR, WATKINS & MTSNKFEE ATTOB-nbym-at-law Rooms Nos. 71, 73, 75 and 77, Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. WH. WILSON ATTOBKBY-AT-LAW Rooms 52 and 53, New Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. COLUMBIA QaQdy:-: paetory, W. S..CRAM, Proprietor. (Successor to Cram & Corson.: Manufacturer of the finest French and Home Made CA1TDIES, East of Portland. ' ' DEALER IN Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish any of these goods at Wholesale or Retail OfFESH v OYSTERS In Every Style. 104 Second Street. The Dalles. Or. Columbia Ice Co. 104 SECOND STREET. 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 vs 'Price, and may depend that we have nothing but PURE, HEALTHFUL ICE. Cut from mountain water ; no slough or Blush ponds. Leave orders at the Columbia Caady Factory, 104 Second street. W. S. CRAM, Manager. jiieh i BEjiToji, Office Cop. 3d and Union Sts. Oak and Fir on Hani Orders Filled Promptly! R. B. Hood, Livery, Feed and Sale Horses Bought and ' Sold on Commission and Money Advanced on Horses . let For Sale, OFFICE OF- Tkc Dalles and Goldendale Stage Line. Stnfjo Leaves The Dalles every morning it 7:) and Gotdendule at 7:30. All . relent must be left Mt R. B. Hood's office the evening before. R. B. HOOD, Proprietor. $500 Re-ward! Wo will pav the above reward for any case of Over Complaint, Dyspepsia, Siok Headache, In digestion, Constipation or Costivcnesg we cannot cure with Wesfs Vegetable Liver Pills, when the direction are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fall to give satisfac tion. " Sugar Coated. Large boxes containing 80 Pills, 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and lmi 'tatious. The genuine manufactured only by THE JOHN C. WFBT COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. BLAKEIET tt HOPOntON, Prescription Druggists, 1 75 Second St. The Ialles, Or. CORDWDOD. BARGAINS I IN Outirig Flannels, White Ohanibrays, Satines, Organdies and -ALSO- These goods are marked down to BED RQCK PRICES, as they must be sold to make room for our FALL STOCK. JHLfl JOHTH DAIiliES, Wash. Situated at the Head of Navigation. . Destined to be In the Inland Empire. Best Selling Property of the Season in the Northwest. For farther information call at the office of Interstate Investment Co., Or 72 Washington St., PORTLAND, Or. O. D. TAYLOR, THE DALLES, Or. The Opeta festautant, No. 116 Washington Street, MEALS at ALL HOURS of the DAY or NIGHT. Handsomely Furnished Rooms to Rent by the Day, Week or Month. Finest Sampje Rooms for Commercial Men. . . Special Rates to Commercial Men. W1IX, . GRAHAM, W. E. GABRETSON, ! fiaflinnV . RWRIRT SOI.K A6EM 1WR THE All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. 138 Second St.; The Dalles, Or. REMOVAL. H. Glenn has lemoved his office and the office of the Electric Light Co. to 72 Washingrtoiv St. BARGAINS! - Goods, 37 inch Challies, Ginghams, Zephyrinos-.,-.. Grenadines. PROPRIETOR. D. P. TBOMPSOK' J. S. BCHENCK, H. M. Beall, rreauHit v ice-i'rewaeni. la,anjT. First llalional Ja$. THE DALLES.. OGOREN A Oeneral Banking Bnsiuee9 transacted Deposits reoeived, subject to Sight ' Draft or Check. Collections made and prooteds promptly remitted on day of collection; Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on New York, San Francisco and Port land. . DIRECTORS. D. P. Thompson. Jxo. S. Schexck. T. W. Spakks. - Geo- A. Liebe. H. M. Beali.. FRENCH & CO., BANKERS TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS .Letters of Credit issued available in the Eastern States. -- : . Sight Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fav orable terms. FBOM. THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE KOItREI). ! A Swindling Building Amitalatlou Ktin o Karth liy Post cilice Authorities, j ! 'ChicaW,' Aujr." 1 1 .Alfred Downing, j president,' arid A. 'Tollman, vice-pres-j ident.,t.f the Rational Capital Savings,! Building and Loan -Aw-ocialion of Xorth ; A it f1 . . imri. ni-fi.L-t ' l.ul.ti. 1... I. . ' office Inspector Stuart. : charged with j using the mails tor ininduleiit purines. ! It Js. charged tlio meit, ' who have. Leon f conducting the sisociatioij, have swin- dlei thousands of people from every statein- th? "nnToii Iliat'" they" have f taken in from 2(X),000 to $3-50,000 and j given' notiung in return. The victims; were found amoajr ail classes of people. From facts already in ixgetjsion of the authorities, the ei-heiue well parallels that of the great "Fund" swindle, which was. broken about five years agct." There are still two wen at liberty, they having disappeared several weeks ago, and it is believed they got away with uiost of the funds. For more than six months let-! ters have been received from all parts of the country by the postoffice and . city authorities, protesting that the company was not what it was represented to be ; that it was collecting money and making no loans, Inspector Stuart had ; been working vn the case for four, months. He fouud ' the concern . had agents in; every state in the Union, who were sell ing . the $20,000,000 worth of stock the company had for sale. These agents were sent circulars and documents show ing 'the association " to be gilt-edged. When Inspector Stuart' took'charge of the icase, Lewis F. Mortimer, .general manager and secretary, was apparently the responsible m-.iu, and handled the cash received . in large amounts every dayl,. . Stuart visited the company's office ; frequently, disguised as a letter carrier, ' in order to- secure evidence. several weeks ago Mortimer disappeared and todav, having waited in vain for his return, Stuart decided l- secure tlie other invisible members of the combi nation. - I'liaC FIRE F1KM). A ViHicniiin Town Iim, a "rrow .ICBeape Prom Total liKtructlua. Sew 'LtsBox, Wis., Aug. 11. -Camp Douglae is in ruins, A re was started this evening by the explosion of a lamp in BnffCiro's saloon. It spread rapidly, burning several business houses and the Camp Douglas hotel. It then crossed the Omaha tracks and burned the Com mercial hotel and the lepot, and went on in the residence district. Nine sol diers, -who were camped near by. as sembled and succeeded in saving nearly all tlte goods in the hotels and stores and most-of the business part of the village. Many-dwellings were burned. The wind blew'f rom the south and kept the fire moving very rapidly- When engines arrived from Mauston and Toman, they could do little. ' The losses aggregate $150,000 with small insurance. The tel egraph wires passing through the town were destroyed and the railroad tracks badly warped. A Tramp Becomex a Karon. Sasta Cecz, Aug. 11. A general ro mance has just culminated here. For three or four months two Germans have been living here very much like tramps, with only a miserable little shanty in Blackburn gulch for a home. One .had inquired often, at the postoffice for a letter for Wolfgang Bellestrom. At last the "letter that he looked for" came Friday, the 7th inst. It was addressed to Count Wolfgang Ballestpom and was from the German consul at San Fran cisco, . announcing the death of Wolf gang's father near Berlin, Germany, and the inheritance of the estates and title by Wolfgang, who is the eldest son. Tle 31c Kin ley Kill Did It. London, Aug. 10. The Si. James Ga zette this morning prints the following: "Judging from the returns issued by the board of trade, it looks as though we have already reached the end of good times. The great decline in exports from Great Britain is undoubtedly due to the operation of the McKinley law in the United States. We have been told that the act would eventually prove a misfortune to the United States, but its immediate object is to hit foreign manu factures, especially those of Great Brit ain, and it is plainly evident this object has been attained." A Severe Storm. Leon, la., Aug. A eevere storm last ing an hour and a half struck Leon and Decatur counties yesterday. The opera house and -scboolhouse were unroofed and one house was completely demol ished.. Fences, out houses, sidewalks and trees were broken, and blown away at Davis City, where 8000 people are at tending camp-meeting. Two large trees struck the tabernacle, crushing it to the ground and demolishing seats and stands. An alarm was given in time, and all es caped. . Chicago Wheat Market. - . Chicago, Aug. 12. Wheat opened higher this morning in continuance of the advance at close yesterday and be cause of strong cables and bad weather abroad. December, which closed at 93Jb yesterday, opened at 85 and 95J. In diiTerent parts of the pit the market broke to 94J under heavy selling orders, then rallied to 95, broke again, 95 advanced to 97) and at 11 o'clock was down to 96. PORTLAND'S BIG FIRE, ! Kelly, LUinne & Co.'s Warehouse and Refinery Burned. Thought to be of incendiary Origin. The Railroad Commissioners Report a Low Freight Rate Jr Russell ' Lowell's Death. . Poutlano, "Ailg. 12. A tiro occurred early this morning in the oil refinery and storehouse of Kelly, Dunne & Co., on Eleventh and 'K streets, completely destroying the Luildi ng , and con ten ts. Vhcn the fire had almost burned out flames issued from the broom factory of Zan Bros., one block away and soon this building was a mass of flames. Fortu nately there was no wind and the lire was confined to the factory which will also be destroyed. The total loss will reach $70,000. At 11 'o'clock the lircs were not wholly extinguished but under control A later estimate places the loss at $50,000, fully insured. It is thought by Kelly, Dunne & Co., that the fire was of an incendiary origin. LOW UATE ON l'-KKIfilll'-. State Kailroad Commissioners .Make m 'liig Cat Farmers Demanded tt. Salem, Or., Aug. 11. The state board of railroad commissioners at their meet ing today adopted a rate of 10 ter cent, off the Southern Pacific company's rate on grain on all of that ' company's lines in Oregon. There vi ill be a reduction on green fruit, vegetables, live stock, and lumber, to go into effect September 1. This evening the ' board refused the ihe Southern Pacific further time in which to furnish data of shipments, etc., before adopting or rejecting the schedule of reduced rates as recommended by the board. The tariff sheets as recom mended by the board for the . Southern Pacific's lines in Oregon were adopted and are to go into effect the. 1st of Sep tember. These new sheets will be issued from the state printing office to morrow. A horizontal reduction of 10 per cent, has been made on grain, and on other commodities the reduction will average about 15 per cent. No reduc tion has been made on the merchandise rate, the new schedule affecting only the natural products of Oregon, such as grain, live stock, gree fruit , vegetables, lumber, etc. Should the railway com pany not adopt the rates as recomended the .board will take action through the courts to com pell enforcement of the rates. . DEATH OP J. . BU88EI.L LOWELL. Trie Well-Known Poet and Kditor Passes Away. Boston, Aug. -12. James Russell Lowell, who died early this morning, had impaired health ever since his return to this country in 1885. He never inquired as to the nature of his malady. From, inquiry - it is ascertained that gouf affected him almost constantly of late and that be had sciatica, hemorrhages, and latterly a severe type of liver disease in turn affected him. Mrs. Burnett, his only child, has been with him con stantly. She is his only nefcr .relative except a brother, whose whereabouts are unknown. DEKOItNCED AS THIEVES. The Mayor and City Council of Kanna City Have a Xarrow Escape. Kiksas City, Kan., Aug. 11. The mayor and tity council barely escaped vengeance tonighf. at the hands of a crowd of 800 taxpayers. The excitement arose over a proposition to the city coun cil to purchase the plant of the Electric Light and Power company for $3-10,000. There was much public indignation, it being believed improper inducements were offered to the council. At a mass meeting this evening, presided over by the Hon. J. D. Scroggs, the head of the Kansas City, Kan. bar, a committee of fifteen were appointed to present a pro test. : The crowd joined the committee, and as the march proceeded the excite ment grew until the mutterings of the crowd culminated in shouts of "Lynch them," and "Hang them." The council hastily adjourned. When the crowd found the chamber empty another mass meeting was held. ' The mayor and council were denounced as thieves. Af ter several speeches the crowd dispersed. Dr. Llndsley Paane8 Away. Dr. Lindsley died at 1 o'clock this morning without regaining conscious ness. ' Throughout the,: entire day the attending physicians entertained very little hope of his recovery, although it was thought that if a few hours more passed the injured gentleman might possiby take a, turn for the better, but unfortunately the much-looked-for change in his condition failed to take place, and he expired at the above-mentioned hour surrounded by his family and friends. He apparently passed away without pain, and failed to recog nize any of the. anxious ones grouped around his bedside. The Crops la. Canada. Toronto, Ont., Aug. 12. Reports from all parts of tho province of Ontario state the crops are the best in many years. N'KWSPAPKRS HAVE RIG UTS. Tue Supreme Court of Montana Scores a -Too Officious Magistrate. Helena, Mont., Aug. 11. The su preme courtof -Montana today vindicated the right of a newspaper to publish the news. Judge McIIattoii, of Butte, re cently hauld up Editor J. A. McKnight, of the Helena Journal, for publishing in a gossipy article the words of "an old Montanian"' to the effei.-t that tho Davis will contestants could not get un impar tial trial before' any judge or jury in Butte, where the vast .estate lies, and from which it would be removed if the contest is successful. The court held that contempt of court is confined al most exclusively to acts that interrupt the progress of the business of t he court. The decision says : We are passing upon a question of law as between the rights of citizens and the power of the court to summarily fm prison upon a charge of contempt of court. The iower is given to the court to enforce obedience and respect to the authority of the court. It is not to en force sentimental respect, for that must be gained by other means, and will come to a court where law and order is admin istered with able, fearless and impartial fidelity." The decision is quite a sweeping one, as the article certainly went to the limit in its reflections on the court The pris oner was ordered discharged. The Prince (if Walen on Hygiene. London, Aiig. 11. The seventh an nual session of the international con gress of hygiene opened in St. James hall this afternoon. The Prince of Wales presided. Among the prominent delegates were Professor Pasteur, of Paris, and Professor Koch, of Berlin. The Prince of Wales discussed learnedly on hygiene- -in the opening address, and was loudly cheered.- An immense num ber of papers are to be read, and he number oi foreigners who have promised to speak or read is such as to show that the congress will, in the fullest sense, bo international. Among the many im portant sdbjects is the general questicfn of the means of preventing the epidemic of .a disease from country to country. The subject of tuberculosis will be widely discussed, and papers will be read on the means of conferring an. immunity for bacteriological affection. The sub ject of rabies will also receive close at tention. . Shot While Intoxicated. Tacoma, Aug. 11. A woman known as Lottie Cheers, but whose real name lodging house here today. She had been out on a lark with a young man named Henry Fisher, and both became intoxicated. It is thought she at tempted to shoot Fisher and during the scuffle she recieved a bullet in t he left breast. The woman may recover.. Fisher has disappeared. John D. liingle, a well known busi ness man of Spokane, died today at the Fanny Paddock hospital of' typhoid fever, aged thirty-eight years. He leaves a widow and one child, who are visiting in Rochester, N. Y., hia former home. The body was embalmed and will be shipped east this afternoon. Mr. Ringle was one of Spokane' wealthiest men. He had been ill about four weeks. An Exceptionally Lai ire Harvest. London, ,Aug. 12. The Jjiilt) Neucs this morning commenting on the action of Russia prohibiting the export of rye, says it is reassuring to learn 'the crops promises to yield an exceptonal'y large harvest. Farmers in America the paper declare are masters of the situa tion and it is to be hoped they will use their strength - unmercifully in making corners in the necessaries of life, uever laudible and at the present juncture it would be little short of tiendifh. The Report C'aaRCH an Ailiaucp. New Yoiik, Aog. 12. The I'vxl ears: The advance in the Union Pacific this morning was caused by a report that a plan to carry the floating debt of the road for a 'period of two years was com pleted and that a final announcement will be madeof the details of the scheme. They are said to bt practically the game as' those in the plan used liy the At chison. East Prussia Seriously A fleeted. Berlin, Aug. 12 Chancellor Von Caprivi refused the request to reduce the grain duties. The Russian ukase forbidding the exportation of rye will seriously affect east Prussia - which is almost "entirely dependent up;it Rus sian supplies." Ninet' per cent, of he foreign rye imported into Germany this year catue from Russia. To Develop Deep Vea Fisheries. Winnipeg, Aug. 12. Colonel Engle due and Major Clark are hero enroute to British Columbia with a scheme to settle 60,000 Highland Sn.uh crofters on Vancouver Island. 1 lit y to be en gaged in connection with a gigantic English syndicate which is being formed for developing deep sea fisheries ou tho west coast. Death of a Newspaper Man. Holland . Springs, Me., Aug. 12. Editor Geo. Jones, of the New York Times died at 4 o'clock this morning. A JSIk Failure. Boston, Aug. 12, John M, Plummer, the wholesale rubber dealer, baa failed.