cn A 1 VOL. II. THE DALLES, OREGON, MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1891. NO. 53. PROFESSIONAL . CAltDS. WM. SAUNDERS Abchitbct. Plans and specifications furnished for dwellings, churches, business blocks, schools and factories. Charges moderate, satisfaction guaranteed. . Of fice over French's bank. The Dalles, Oregon. DR. J. SUTHERLAND Fellow op Trinity Medical College, and member of the Col lege of Physicians and Burgeons, Ontario, Phy sician and Surgeon. Office; moras S and 4 Chap man block. Kesidence; Judge Thornbury's Sec ond street. Olflce hours; 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m. DR. O. D. DO AN E PHYSICIAN AND BUR GEON. Oflice; rooms 5 and 6 Chapman Block. Residence over McFarland & French's store. Oflice hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 5 and 7 to 8 P. M. AS. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of . flee in Schanno's building, up stairs. The Dalles, Oregon. DSIDDAIX Dentist. Gas given for the . painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth set on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms : Sign of the Golden Tooth, Second Street. AR. THOMPSON Attornky-at-law. Office . in Opera House Block, Washington Street, The Dulles, Oregon f. P. MAYS. B. S. HUNTINGTON. H. 8. WILSON. MAYS, HUNTINGTON A WILSON ATTORNEYS-at-law. Offices, French's block over First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. X.B.DUPUK. GEO. W ATKINS. FRANK MEKEFXE. DUFUR, W ATKINS te MENEFEE Attor-NBY8-AT-LAW Rooms Nos. 71, 73, 75 and 77, Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. w H. WILSON Attorney-AT-LAW Rooms 02 and 53, New Vogt Block, Secord Street, Dulles. Oreoron. The Dalles, Oregon. COLUMBIA Qapdy :-: paetory, W. S. CRAM, Proprietor: (Successor to Cram & Corson.) Manufacturer of the finest French and Home Made CAFDIBS, . East of Portland. DEALER IN Tropical Fruits, Nufs, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish any of these goods at Wholesals or uetaii In Every Style. 104 Second Street. The Dalles, Or. Columbia Ice Co. 104 SECOND STREET. IOB ! IOZ3 ! X03EJ X Having over 1C30 tons of ice on hand, we are now prepared to receive orders, wholesale or retail, to be delivered through the summer.. Partita contract ing with ns 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 orders at the Colombia Candy Factory, 104 Second street. W. S. CRAM, Manager. Office 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 Aloney . Advanced on Horses left For Sale. OFFICE OF- The Dalles and Goldendale Stage Line. Stage Leaves The Dallea every morning at 7:30 and Goldendale at 7:30. Ail . freight must be left at R. B. Hood's office the evening -before. R. B. HOOD, Proprietor. $500 Reward! We will pay the above reward for any case of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, In digestion, Constipation or Costivcness we cannot cure with West's vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fail to (rive satisfac tion. Sugar Coated. Large boxes containing 30 Pills, 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and imi tations. The genuine manufacture! only by THE JOHN C. WFST COMPANY, CHIGAGO, ILLINOIS. . , BLAKELBI HOCOHTON, Prescription Druggists, J 70 Second St. The Dallea, Or. dies BEITOtl BARGAINS! -IN- Outing Flannels, White Goods, 37 inch Challies, jt . . Chambrays, Satines, Ginghams, Zephyrines,"' Organdies arid Grenadines. -ALSO- Sib uiiM, Jerseys, 1 These goods are marked down to BED ROCK PR I CES, as they must be sold to make room for our FALL STOCK. jMQRIflD fiOHTH D AMIES, Wash, Situated at the Head of Navigation. Destined to be Best JWanuf aetuiinc$ Center In the Inland Empire. Best Selling Property of the Season in the Northwest. For further information call at the office of Interstate Investment Co., Or 72 Washington St., PORTLAND, Or. O. D. TAYLOR, THE DALLES, Or. The Opera Restaurant, 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. Special Rates to Commercial Men. WILL S. GRAHAM, W. E. GARRETSON. Leaiig- Jeweler. SOLE AGENT FOB THE All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. 13S Second Bt The Sillei, Or. . REMOVAL. H. Glenn has lemoved his office and the office of the Electric .Light Co. to 72 Washington St. ' - BARGAINS I FEU PROPRIETOR. D. P. Thompson' J. S. Bchknck, h. M. Beall, President. Vice-President. Cashier. First Rational Bank. THE DALLES. - - - OGOREN A General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to Sight Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly remitted on day of collection. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on New York, San Francisco and Port land. DIRECTORS. D. P. Thompson. . Jno. S. Bchknck. T. W. Sparks. Geo. A. Liebb. H. M. Beall. FEflCH & CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BUSINE8S 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 termn. 7 .- BOYCOTT PRONOUNCED. Lum Out, of Chicago, iu the Future Will Not bo Recognized. Chicago. Aug. 16. Lum Out, a Chinese of this city, is in a serious pre dicament. An order has been promul gated throughout the city that he must be boycotted. All good Chinamen are ordered not to talk, trade or associate with him. Lum is a laundry man, who has embraced the Christian faith, and converted a number of his countryman. He established in his laundry a Sunday school, where meetings are held every Sunday. The cause of the trouble is that certain Chinese merchants believed Lum furnished information to the treas ury agents, which led to the detention at Winnipeg of several Chinamen, who re turning irom a visit home, they we e recently stopped, it will be remembered, at Noche, Manitoba, and although they had passports, it was believed the papers were the property of others, and that they were trying to break into the country for the first time. When the news of their arrest reached Chicago, the colony here began to hunt for the informer and it was finally determined Lum was the guilty man. He had -been seen conversing with treasuty agents and also paid visits to the government build ings. Despite his protestations of in nocence, a boycott has been pronounced against him and some wanted to kill him, but the mandarin would not hear of it. What so greatly incensed the colony leaders was that the information given the treasury agents was false, so they say, the men arrested being bona fide residents of Chicago. From infor mation gathered this evening, it is be lieved their story is right, and that the Chinamen will be allowed to come lo Chicago. ' Accidentally Drowned. Fresno, Cal., Aug. 16. News has been received here this evening of the acci dental death by drowning of W. J Simpson, well and favorably known here. Simpson, in company with his brotber-in-law, W. J. Perry, left Sanger this afternoon on the way to their homes at Big Dry creek, where simpson is pro prietor of the wayside store. After leav ing Sanger they stopped at Church canal to take a bath. The water was running lull head, ana while bathing Simpson was taken with cramps and disappeared betore .ferry could render any assistance. A messenger was dispatched to shut off the water at the beadgate,asthe body has not yet been recovered, bimpson was about 28 years of age and leaves a widow and two children. More Serious Than Reported. St. Cloud, Minn., Aug. 15. The storm proves to have been more serious than at first supposed. All corn and standing grain in its path is utterly ruined. Hailstones crushed them to the ground, and the grain in shocks has also suffered severely. Many fields were badly bruised and cut about the head by hail. In some places the bail is fifteen to twenty inches deep on a level. Win dows on the exposed side of the houses were smashed. JNo conservative esti mate can be made of the damage accom plished, but it must be heavy. Canada's Rights. Halifax, Aug. 16. The Secretary of the board of trade today received from Sir Charles Tupper a cablegram stating that the British colonial office authori ties are of the opinion that the treaty existing, between England and Spain en titles Canada to any reduction extended to the United States by Cuba and Porto Rico till June 1 next, when the treaty expires. Severe Flectrie Storm. Hastings, Neb., Aug. 15. One of the worst electric storms known for years visited this city last night. The wind raged furiously and the rain fell in sheets for two hours. Hundreds of peo ple took refuge in their cellars in antici pation of a cyclone. Fully twenty cot tages in different parts of the city were wrecked and immense damage was done to the fruit crops. . Traced to a European Account. Nfw York, Aug. 16. The recent sell ing of the Northern Pacific bonds . and stocks has been traced mostly to a Euro pean account, especially to Germans. It is believed they have been influenced to sell by the bearish positions taken by Villard on his return to this country, and the falling of in earnings recently has also been a bearish factor. The Loss Will be Heavy. Philadelphia, Aug. 16. The large paper warehouse of U. G. Elliott & Co., was badly damaged by fire at an eaily hour this morning. The fire was first discovered in the basement, where an immense amount of paper was stored. Loss is not known but will prove very heavy. - Stiekney Makes a Sale. . 'Chicago, Aug. 16. A. B. Stickney, the well-known-St. Paul railroad man, has disposed of his tract of 650 acres of land, to twenty packers of this city, not including Armour, Swift and Morris. They propose to open an immense btock yard on the new location. Specie Exports and Imports. . New York, Aug. ,16.-rTbe export of specie from New York for the last week aggregates $134,751, of which $1300 was gold. Imports of specie ; for the same time aggregated $49,547, of which $38,968 was gold. TERRIBLE LOSS OF LIFE Another Railroad Wreck in Which a Larger Number of Passengers Lose Their Lives. ! Trading on the Chicago 'Change Just as Wildly Nervous as it Was Satur day Big Prices Paid. Harvesting Well Under-way all Over the Northwest Lack of Storage Facilities Reported. Bebxe, Aug. 17. Yesterday another wholesale loss of life by a railroad acci dent occurred on the Jura Simplan rail road line near the village of Zolofekan not far from this city. A special train carrying a large number of excursionists from the country districts to this city, on the way here was run into by the Paris express while side tracked to al low the latter to pass. The accident resulted in a large number of passen gers being killed. The exact number of dead and wounded is not known, but twelve corpses have already been recov ered . from the ruins and it is known many people have been seriously in jured by the collision. No loss of life is reported among the paesengers of the Paris express. The majority of the pas sengers aboard the excursion train be long to towns in the vicinity of this city. It is thought no American travelers are among the killed. The accident is thought to be the result of carelessness of the railroad officials. CHICAGO ALL EXCITED. Both Sides Satisfied the Prices Are Too High. Chicago, Aug. 17. The exciting scenes in wheat and corn which char acterized trading the latter part of ' last week was renewed at the opening of the board of trade this morning. Trading was just as wildly nervous as it was Saturday. The bull fever is still on this morning and trades inflamed with the prospect of higher prices, as a result of excited higher cables, when the bell tapped for the opening of business, at once became - a pandemouium from which came these figures for December wheat inside of ten minutes at 1.13. This was the top figure on the early bulge. Then prices began to weaken and at 10 o'clock had declined to 1.074. A bulge to 1.13 was accompanied by the wildest excitement and . some sales are reported as high as 1.14. The succeed ing period of weakness was the result of free selling by both longs and shorts. Conservative traders on both sides are satisfied the prices are too high for safety and far above the export basis, and they must be brought together before a bene fit on foreign shortage on which the boom was founded can be realized. The consequence of this was that prices reacted until 1.05 was reached, that be ing the lowest point this morning. It reacted to 1.07, sold off to 1.06: At 11 o'clock it was comparatively quiet at 1.06. Wheat continued weak and at 12:15 December was quoted at 1.03. THE WHEAT OUTLOOK. The Promises of a Biff Yield are Store Than Fulfilled. St. Paul, Aug. 17. Harvesting is well under way all over the northwest and the promises of a big yield are more than fulfilled. Wheat averages from twenty-five to thirty bushels to the acre and the increased yield from in creased acreages makes 150,000,000 bush els minimum, the product of the two Dakotas and Minnesota. Other grains are close to wheat, oats especially turn ing out well. Great trouble is exper ienced in procuring labor to handle the immense crop,- and the railroads are hard at work preparing to handle the grain. Lack of storage facilities will compel the great majority of farmers to dispose of their grain soon, and trans portation facilities- will be taxed to their utmost. The weather for harvesting is all that could be desired. Lively Time In New York. New York, Aug. 17. When tho pro duce exchange openei this morning there was an anxious crowd of brokers present. Reports from Chicago. Lon don, Liverpool, Pans and Berlin indi crted an excited feeling and 'advance over Saturday's prices. When the gong sounded there was a rush to the wheat pit and pandemonium broke loose. Th-3 first bid for December was 1.17. Within five minutes after the offering the ex citement began to decrease and prices fell off to about yesterday's closing. .. The Storm Was Furious. Wilmar, Minn., Aug. 16. The? hail storm which passed over the eastern por tion of this county cut down standing grain. The storm was furious. It rooted up trees and broke down sheds. The hail broke a number of windows. ' FATAL IllTNTINJ ACCIDENT. A Boy -while Shooting (ironHe vu Lake Washington is Instantly Killed. Seattle, Wash., Aug. J5. Leonard Addleman the 16-year-old sun of John F. Addleman, a farmer living at Hough ton, on the east side of Lake Washing ton, accidently phot and killed himself this morning at 0 o'clock. The charge entered the right side two inches below the nipple and ranged upward through the lungs, causing immediate death. The boy, in company with his father and uncle, were out grouse hunting, and while the three were standing on a log, the nncle saw a bird and told Leonard to shoot it. The boy had an old muzzle loading rifle charged with bird shot, and askeii his father to exchange guns for the ehot. The father objected, but the boy persisted and he finally advanced towards him with the intention of handing the gun. Leonard proceeded to set the old gun down behind the log. when the hammer caught, he gun weut off and the charge entered his body. He fell back, but not before his father was on the spot. Throwing his arms around his parent's neck he said, "Oh, papa," then kissed him twice upon' the cheek and expired. When the news was brought to his mother, she became pros trated with grief and is now in a critical condition. AN EXCLUSION 1STEKUITTB1). A Canadian Steamer With a Large Crowd Aboard Libeled for Dcltt. Seattle, Aug. 16. The steamship Islander was attached this evening on a writ sworn out by the Edison General Electric Company, of Portland, who al leged that the owners of the vessel were indebted to them for $600 worth of lights put in the steamer. The Islander is a Canadian vessel and this is the first time that she has been in American waters for many months. The steamer had a crowd oi iw excursionists on board and was ready to leave for Vic toria, when the attachment was served on Captain Irwin by a deputy sheriff. The steamer was delayed almost two hours, but the agents finally succeeded in depositing a bond and the vessel left for Canadian waters. The Islander's regular run between Victoria and Van couver, B. C, and she is one of the lar gest and finest steamers in the North west. RESULT OP BAD COMPANY. A Double Murder on Board an Illinois Freight Train. Texas City, 111., Aug. 16. Mike Weitzel, Otis Johnson and a dissolute female named Ballentyne, while return--ing from Eldorado on a freight train this morning, engaged in a fight. Johnson was easting a watermelon and Weitzel struck him with a slung shot. Johnson made a slash at his assailant with a khife disemboweling him. The 'woman, who had been with Weitzel some time,, seized a hatchet and made a rush at Johnson, cutting a gash across the left cheek and cutting the upper lip and up per front teeth from his face. She was only stopped from hacking him to pieces by a 6tranger, who saw the row, and pulling a revolver told her to desist or he would kill her. Johnson is under surgical care here but will die. Weitzel died this noon at Carmi. Of an Incendiary Origin. Terre Haute, Ind., Aug. 16. A fire early thjs morning destroyed the ma chinery of the mine of the new Pittsburg Coal company at Alum Cove, Sullivan county. The company estimates the loss at $100,000, with two-thirds insur ance. There has been a' strike at the mine for a week past, and it is thought the mine was set on fire. It will be several months before work can Le re sumed. Tlie Artist and the I'ooclle. A certain portrait painter in tiiis city who has acquired quite a reputation as an artist, was complimented on his life like work. "Yes," he said, "I suppose it is creditable now, but was not always so. I remember the first job I ever had. A wealthy lady came to see me and wanted her full length painted. I did the best I could, but that was nothing to brag of. When the lady came to look at the picture she gave a cry of disap pointment. " 'Why, that's not at all like me,' she said; 'I shall not take it!' "I issured her it was a perfect like ness, and declared that even her little poodle would recognize it. 'I'm w illing to take that risk,' she said, 'I'll bring my dog with me this afternoon, ami if he recognizes me I'll take the picture.' Later in the day she brought in the canine, and' the sagacious little animal after surveying the portrait for a mom ent, ran up and licked the painted hand. My lady took the picture without any further objections." "But the likeness must have been strik ing," I said, "to deceive the dog." "Not necessarily," said the artist; "I took the precaution of rubbing a Eiece of bologna sausage over the hand efore the dog arrived."- Welcome. The horse market in the cities is dull. The reason is that electricity is taking the place of horses in propelling street cars. Thousands of horses were for merly worn out on horse cars annually. There are not many offices that seek the man, but a good many of them are looking for pretty stenographers. Elmira Gazette.