01 mix TrS'V'i VOL. II. THE DALLES, OREGON, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1891. NO. 88. kg PROFESSIONAL CARDS. WSI. SAUNDERS Architect. Plans and specifications furnished for dwellings, churches, biiHiness blocks, schools and factories. Changs moderate, satisfaction guaranteed. Of fice over French's bank, The Dalles, Oregon. DR. J: SUTHERLAND FlLLOW Of Trinity Medical College, and member of the Col lege of Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, Phy sician and Surgeon. Office; rooms 3 and 4 Chap man block. Residence: Judge Thornbury's Sec ond street. Office hours; 10 to 12 8. m., 2 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m. DR. O. D. DOANE FHV8ICIAS AND SCR gkon. Office: rooms 5 and 6 Chapman Block. Residence No. 21, Fourth street, one block south of Conrt House. Office hoars 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 5 and 7 to 8 P. M. 8. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of J . lice in Sohanuo's building, up stairs. . The bailee, Oregon. ,'..' DBIDDA1X Drktist. as given for the . painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth set on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of the Golden Tooth, Second Street. . A R. THOMPSON Attornby-at-law. Office JV in Opera House Block, Washington Street, The Dalles, Oregon 9. T. KAYS. B. S. HUNTINGTON, a. 8. WILSON. MAY8, HUNTINGTON & WILSON Attob-3CKT8-AT-X.AW. Offices, French's block over First NaUonal Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. B.B.DUFTJR. OKO. WATKIH8. RANK HKNBF1K. ' DUFUR, W ATKINS & MENEFEE ATTOB-NRYH-AT-LAW Koom No. 43, over Post Office Building, Entrance on Washiiigton Street The Dalles, Oregon. rj H. WILSON Attobk by-at-law Rooms T . 52 and 53, New Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. snipes & wmi Wholesale 'and Retail Bmiisls. -DEALERS IN- Fme Imported, Key West and Domestjf PAINT Now is the time to paint your house and if you wish to get the beet quality and a fine color use the Sherwin, Williams Co.'s Paint . For those wishing to see the quality and color of the above paint we call their attention to the residence of S. L. Brooks, Judge Bennett, Smith French and others painted by Paul Kref U v Snipes & Kinersly are agents for the above paint for The Dalles, Or. COLUMBIA CANDY FACTORY W. S. CRAM, Proprietor. (nccsswr to Cm k corsoi.) Manufacturer of the finest French and Home Made . ... i i East of Portland. -DEALER IX- Trapeal Fruits, ids,. Cigars and Tobacco. Can famish unr of these goods at Wbolesala or Retail OrFRESH -f OYSTERS In Every Style. 104 Second Street, The Dalles, Or. 'J f". Nicholas & Fisher BARBER SHOP. Hot and Gold Baths! - :v REMOVAL. H. G-lenn Uas removed his office and fthe office of the Electric Iiight to 72 Washington St.;' J $20 REWARD. 4- 1 WIIX BE PAiw rO 'R ANTf INFORMATION leadlnor to theoo-ivlctioaf Darties cutting Uw ropes or In any it raj interfering with the wire pole or fauns H of Turn hjmo Lisar Co. r IB. fUMKB, AMD - OUR FALL STOCK Is Complete with the Latest iSovel ties in Dress (ioodsv Trimming, etc. And we are Offering Them at Very . ('lose Prices. Call and Inspect our Stock ' Before Purchasing- Elsewhere , and see Some of Our Bargains. - jiFiLiii - florth Washington SITUATED AT THE HEAD OF NAVIGATION.. Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center in the Inland Empire. ' .! For. Further Information Interstate Investment Go., 0. 0. TAYLOR. THE DALIES. 72 WASHINTON ST., PORTLAKD K. BETTINCEM, i. 'r Retailer and Jobber la - Hardware, Tinware, GraniMare, Retailer and Silveroiape, Cpockeryi jGlasscdaFe, Etc AGENT1 THE GARLAND STOVE. . Pumps, Pipes, .Plumbers and Steam Fitter's Supplies. All Tinning, Pltimbing, . Pipe Work and Repairing ' 1 will be done on' Short Notice, and at the Lowest Prices. . s i Second Street, next door to Snipes & The Ope?a Restaurant, No. 116 Washington Street, MEALS at ALL HOURS of the DAY or NIGHT. - Handsomely Furnished Rooms to Rent by the l)ay, Week or Month. Finest Sample Rooms for Commercial Men. Ow.?' t 7 Special Rates to Commercial Men. WILL S. GRAHAM, Hot -:-and :- C61d-:-Baths. VIO SSCONO 8TBBST. i F1ED6H. Dalles, Washington Best Selling Property of the Season in the North west. Call at the Office of Jobber la . i-. . A .,'?''-.. .- FOR 1 4 Kinersly. THE DALLES. PROPRIETOR. $500 Reward! We will pay the above reward for an j ease oi Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, In digestion, Constipation or Costivenesa wecannot cure with West's Vegetable liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fail to give patmfao- uun. sugar uweu. - urge oozes containing 8C Pills. 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and 1ml. tations. - The genuine manufactured only by THK JOHN C. WFST COMPANY, CH1GAGO, BLAKSXET HOUGHTON, ' FrMCTlpttom Drvactata, 17S ImomI KU Tb KHULlea, Ox. MORE 1'. P. MONEY. The Union Pacific Creditors Held a Meeting Today in Which Jay Gould ; Was the Leading Figure. To Settle the Searles Will Case A ' Fiendish Act Reported in Indiana , Fatal Balloon Ascension. Negro Rioters in Arkansas Drive out Cotton Pickers and Burn Property Other minor Mention. New Yoke, Sept. 26. The creditors' committee of the Union Pacific railroad met today and after an adjournment it waB announced that four-fifths of the $5,500,000 collateral trust notes for the extension of the floating debt have been subscribed for. Jay Gould subscribed $4,000,000. The Union Pacific troubles are now considered out of the way. One credi tor's committee said subscriptioas to notes will probably close . Monday. He says Gould is now the firmest friend the company possesses. r . - - To Settle the Searles Will Case. .Sew York, Sept. 26. A special from Salem, Mass., says the rumored heanngs in the Searles will case may not be re sumed and that-negotiations for a settle ment' will be reopened before October 14th. The contestants have learned through the papers brought out in the hearings that even if they should win eventually the legal entrenchments of the other side are so many that the liti gations would be very long. This makes it 'probable that a settlement will be sought. - ' A Fiendish Act. Indianapolis, Sept. 26. A Birdseye, Indiana, special says: "Mrs. Harmon, a woman of loose character, living 'at Menton was last night visited by a body of thirty men, who tied her to a post and applied fifty lashes to her bare body. Her body was cut from head to foot as if by a knife. There if? a gash across her abdomen twelve inches long and so deep as to leave her bowels exposed. The community is greatly enraged. I A Fatal Balloon Ascension. Mount Pleasant, Mich., Sept- 26. i As a result of a balloon ascension late yesterday afternoon Lewis B. Earl of Marshall, Mich., is . dead and . Frank Thayer of this city is suffering from a fractured arm and several internal in juries. The accidents were caused by the giving way of the trapeze ropes. Xa;ro ICIotff 'In Arkansas.. M A bin a j Sept. 26. Forty "armed ne groes in St. Frances township drove all the cotton pickers from the field and burned the gin houses. They had threatened to drive all the pickers out and burn all the gin houses before. The sheriff is on the ground with warrants for the arrest of the leaders. Much' ex citement prevails. ' 3fo More Applicants Wanted. San Fkancisco, Sept. 26. Lei and Stanford, jr., says the university rolls have been filling up at such . a rate re cently that there practically remains no room for more applicants. Over 1000 applications have been received, and many "of them from .the east.. : Three hundred and twenty students have been examined . and accepted , among these being 6ixty young women. Caught on a Crossing;. Indianapolis, Sept. 26. The west bound limited mail on the Panhandle today struck a carriage at a crossing near Centerville, Ind., in which. were Joseph Black, his wife, and two daugh ters. Black, his wife and one daughter were killed and the other daughter fa tally, injured. They were on their way to attend the races at Cambridge. Killed the Marshal."' ' Tahlbquabv Sept! ;26. United States Deputy Marshal Wilson was fchot and instantly .killed by Samnel Downing, a Cherokee, whom the marshal " bad gone to arrest on a charge of celling liquor, Officers have gone to the -scene of the murder t .1' ' Minnesota Fires About Over. ' ": "'St Paul, Sept. 26. Reports from vari ous parts of the state indicate that the danger from fires is about over. In some portions the flames are still des troying grass and timber. No loss of Hie is reported. An Elevator and Mill Burned. Gkbenville, 111., Sept. 26. A fire. this morning consumed the Cole elevator and export mill. The flames are beyond control. The loss will amount to $125, 000 with au insurance of $70,000. . Terrible Suffering; for Water. Guthrie, O. T., Sept.. 25. Every courier from Chandler brings a thrill ing tale of the . sufferings for . water. Fully 100, people are more or less seri ously, ill. Seventy horses have died for lack of water, and hundreds more are suffering . terribly. L. D. .. Woods, of this city, lias been shot dead in the Sac and Fox country. A number of men from Stillwater have, founded a town in the Sac arid Fox ' country, calling it Saclahoina, and are already publishing a newsaper. Tho Jaw opening that res ervation . specifies thatit shall be a homestead ; entry," and the Saclahoina men will be compelled to leave, as a town cannot be legally laid out. The Fort Hall Military Reservation. Washington, Sept. 25. An order was today issued by the commissioner of the general land" office for the . survey of the Fort Hall military reservation at . Poca-1 tello, Idaho, upon the request of Senator Dubois, who is in the city. The survey is preparatory, to the allotment of the lands in severalties to the Indians on the Umatilla reservation at Pocatello, which have heretofore been in the way of the development of that town.'' It is said the Union Pacific Railroad company is considering the problem of building shops at Pocatello. Reported Capture in Oregon. San Francisco, Sept. 25. A Sacra mento special says that it is reported that the men who murdered Mrs. Green field at Napa some months ago and dan gerously wounded Captain Greenwood, have been captured in Oregon or Wash ington. . Police Captain Lee, when asked concerning the rumor, said that the sheriff of Napa county told him the men had been captured, but who they are, or where they were captured, Lee would not state. 'o Settlement as Vet. New Yoke, Sept. 25. The reports re cently sent out from Chicago to the ef fect that the differences between the Un ion Pacific and J. B. Haggin, owner of the Anaconda copper ' mine, had been adjusted, ' are authoritatively denied here. It is understood the negotiations to that end, opened some months ago, are still pending, but no one in a posi tion to know will venture an opinion as to the outcome. .To Help the Farmers. . St. Paul .Sept, 25. Owing to a scar city of farm laborers in. the . Red river valley, North Dakota,. the Great North ern is making special rates for thresh ing outfits and carrying five men with each. Without additional help, thou sands of acres of wheat will not be threshed before the snow flies. Hun dreds of men can get work at from $2 to $3 per day. Deaths by the Kzploslon. Newark, N. J., Sept. 25. Later re turns from the explosion at the Italian celebration last night, place the number of dead at six and the wounded at twenty. The killed were frightfully mangled, and the wounds of the injured are terrible, it is not likely toe ueatti list will reach more than seven or eight ' Chinese Rioters at It Again. Paris, Sept. 25.- The office missions Catholiques, at Lyons, has received ad vices from China to the effect that the natives attacked three monks . at North ern Chunsi,' and that nothing has been beard from the vicar apostolic. Fear is entertained for the safety of the monks and ninety inmates of the Chunsi or phanage. ' - A Liverpool Theater Horned. Liverpool, Sept. 25. The Gaiety theater burned this morning. The first alarm sounded at 8 a. in., and two hours later, bnt the bare walls and iron col umns of the buildings were standing. Will Have to Fay Damages. : Ottawa, Sept. 25. It is ascertained theBritieh government will have to pay the Canadith sealers, damaged on ac count of the modus vivendi, $500,000 and may be as high as $700,000. . Chicago Wheat Market. Chicago, Sept. 26. Close, wheat firm, cash 95; December 97. Portland Wheat Market. . Portland, Sept. 201' Wheat, valley, 1.55 J Walla Walla, 1.45. . . -. Weather Forecast. San Francisco,' Sept. : 26. Forecast for Oregon and Washington : - Light rains in Northern Oregon and Washing ton coast. ' ' ' ' .; ' ' ' San Franoiace Wheat Market. ' ! San Francisco, Sept. 26. Wheat buyer '91, 1.73; season, 1.81. ,. ' The wife of Consul - General New, whose eon Harry married Miss McLean, the actress, the other day, traces her lineage back to Pocahontas. Jacob Steel, the oldest man in Penn sylrania, died at Uniontown last Mon day 4 He was 108 years old, and cast bis first vote for Thomas Jefferson for president. TWO YOUNG THIEVES. A Dishonest Young Clerk and His Con federate Steal a Gold Brick And Get Captured With it. The War Feeling in Europe Great Britain and Germany Will Have a Large Exhibit The Work of a Coward Nobody Else's Business Wants to Retain His Office. New Yoek, Sept. 25. John S. Fitz gerald, of Brooklyn, tried yestesday to sell a gold brick worth $273.03 to a money broker. Fitzgerald's strange ac tions finally led to his arrest. He said he obtained the brick from a clerk named Miles, with Handy & Harmon, bankers of Nassau street. . Miles was arrested when he left work, and on being confronted with the proof of his guilt, confessed that he stole the brick and gave it to Fitzgerald to sell, and that he had been steadily stealing from his em ployers for the past three months. Miles and Fitzgerald were both locked up at police headquarters. Miles refused to say how much he had stolen, saying he preferred to inform his em ployers so they could regain possession of the property. Miles is eighteen, and lives at Bayonne, N. J. He came from California a year ago, and says he knew Fitzgerald in San Francisco. Fitzgerald refuses to talk. Tho War Feeling in Europe. Paris, Sept. 25. Although the belief prevails that war will soon break out, nobody anticipates that it will be a war between France and Germany. Last night's advices from Constantinople state that the foreign residents are more aroused than they have been for years, and that no doubt ia entertained that Russia will soon attack tho Turks. So nmnnnnntil in this belief that some of the foreign residents are preparing to leave Stamboulfor Italy and thus.escape being crushed between the combatants. The Prince of Rueiss has ordered that all socialists and other agitators shall be driven out of the principality. . Large Exhibits at the World's Fair. Chicago, Sept. 25. England and Ger many have each applied for about five acres of space in the world's fair build ings for their exhibits. The applications: were made today by Sir Henry T. Wood and James Dredge, representing the government of Great Britain, and by Herr Awerinuth, a royal commissioner from Germany. The requests made by the foreign commissioners have stag gered the world's fair officers. They ex pected England and Germany would be largely represented at the fair, but the thought never occurred to them that these two powers would ask for ten acres of space. The Work of a Coward. Nkwakk, N. .1., .Sept. 25. Last night Ernest Lehman, aged eighteen, poisoned and killed his sweetheart, Annie Bush, aged eighteen. Lehman intended, to commit suicide, but his courage failed. He has been very despondent of late Last night when he called upon Annie he was unusually gloomy. He procured a bottle of soda water, and unknown to the girl,, mixed some paris green in it' which she drank. Lehman then drank some of the mixture, but not enough to kill him. He was arrested in Elizabeth this morning. Nobody Else's Business. Constantinople, Sept. 25. The Rus sian minister had a long conference with the sultan in regard to the circular to the powers relative to the passage of the Dardanelles by Russian vessels. The wording of the circular is said not to be satisfactory to the Russians who claim that the incident was a matter of settle ment Detween Russia ana rursey aione, and that neither country owes anybody else an explanation. Wants to Stay In Office. City of Mexico, Sept. 25. President Barrilas, of Guatemala, it is stated, is afraid of assassination, but ' is deter mined to declare himself dictator before surrendering the presidency, and even may provoke a war with Salvador in or der" to realize his dream'. '. A Great Match Race Made. Lexinoton, Ky Sept. 25. The race between Allerton and Nancy Hanks at the Lexington meeting next month is now a certainty, both ' Williams and Dobie having accepted the association's offer of $5000 for the first horse. The race will be trotted either October IS or 14. Hopelessly Insolvent. ' Melbourne, Sept. 25. Inquiry made into the affairs of the ' Australian Mer cantile Company shows the institution is hopelessly insolvent. The assets are placed at $200,000 and the liabilities are estimated to be $690,000. ,