9u Kit VOL. II. THE DALLES, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1891. NO. 123. ' ... PROFESSIONAL CARDS. WM. J. ROBERTS Civil Engineer Gen eral engineering practice. Surveying and mapping; estimates and plana for irrigation, sewerage, water-works, railroads, bridges, etc. Address: P. O. Box 107, The Pillion, Or. WM. SAUNDERS Architect. 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 Surgeons, Ontario, Phy sician and Surgeon. OHice; rooms 8 and 4 Chap man block. Residence; Judge Thornbury's Sec ond street. OHice hours; 10 to 12 a. in., 2 to 4 and 7 to p. ni. DR. O. D. DO A KE PHYSICIAN AND SUR GEON. Ofliee: rooms 5 and 6 Chapman Block. Residence No. SI, Fourth street, .one fclook south of Conrt House. Otlice hours to 12 A. SI., 2 to 5 and 7 to i P. 1. S. BENNETT, ATTORNEV-AT-LAW. Of J. dee lu Scbanuo's building, up stairs. The Dalles, Oregon. DSIDDALL Dentist. Gas given for the . painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth set on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of the Golden Tooth, Second Street. VR. THOMPSON Attorney-at-law. Office . in Opera House Block, Washington Street, The Dalles, Oregon F. P. MAYS. B. 8. HUNTINGTON H. S. WILSON. MAYS, HUNTINGTON & WILSON Attor-neys-at-law. Offices, French's block over First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. B.B.OUFUR. GEO. ATKINS. FRANK MENEPEK. DUFUR, W ATKINS & MENEFEE ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Room No. 43, over Post Otlice Building, Entrance on Washington Street The Dalles, Oregon. - WH. WILSON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Rooms 52 and 53, New Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. SNIPES & KIHERSLY, Wholesale ani Retail Drugjisls. -DEALERS 1N- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestir CIGARS. PAINT Now is the time to paint your- house nd if you wish to get the best quality and a fine color use the Sherwin, Williams Cos Paint For thoee 'wishing to see the quality And color of the above paint we call their attention to the residence of S. 1. Brooks, Judge Bennett, Smith French and others painted by Paul Kreft. Snipes & Kinersly ' are agents for the above paint for The Dalles. Or. COLUMBIA CANDY FACTORY W. S. CRAM, Proprietor. . - (Successor to Cram & Corsoa . Manufacturer of the finest French and Home-Mode oAir r)i is s, East of Portland. t DEALER IN Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Oau fnrnish any of these goods at Wholesato or Retail Ff?ESH OYSTEfS-rS- . In Every Sty la. 104 Second Street. The Dalles. Or. REMOVAL. ' H. Glenn has removed his office and the office of the Electric Light Co. to 72 Washington St. Burned Out Tint Again in Business ! Wm. miGHEkli, UNDERTAKER, And Kmbulroer, has again started with a new and complete stock of everything needed in the undertaking business. Particular . attention paid to embalming and taking care of the dead. Order promptly attended to, day or night. , Prices as Low as the Lowest Place of business, diagonally across from Oners Rlock. on the corner of Third and W sali va liiKton Street, The Dalle, Oregon qgw - $20 REWARD. w I7ILL BE ym VOR ANY INFORMATION T leading to the conviction of parties cutting the r"pcs or ln any way interfering with tht i wire poe or i-uni-s ot urn cukctbic light Oo. H. (ilSN, HP 1'WSL MAN'S OPINION. He Giyes His Views 011 the Results of tfie Recent Election. THINKS THE TARIFF IS SETTLED And Free Silver Will Be the Issue in the Next Fight. a A HA!) MAN ARRESTED. The Irish. Vtite today Want the Lands Allotted The Convicts ltcturn to Charleston. Clkvelanu, Ohio, Nov. 0. In an in terview on the recent elections, Senator Sherman said : "In. the first place so far as the republican party is concerned, the result in Ohio fixes the silver ques tion as one issue of the next presidential contest, and decides it so far as this state is concerned. I am convinced that free coinage will be passed by the congress which assembles in December. I also believe that such a bill will be vetoed by President Harrison. That wilf naturally make free silver a feature ' of the next presidential fight. In fact it will be the leading issue, upon which there is a vast difference of opinion in both parties. - "It is exactly like tariff local condi tions and interest govern the sentiment and action.- I doubt verv much whether the democracy in the national conven tion will proclaim for free coinage. If they should there will be no other issue of any significance in the next campaign. The financial battle that we fought in Ohio will then be transferred to the nation and contest such as we have never seen will be the result. The tariff will be a prominent but not vital point in the contest. The tariff question is practically', .settled for the time being butCirftljtlways boa source of agitation as long as the government lasts. During the next session of congress it can hardly be considered, but in the next campaign it will be the leading issue with silver." An All-Kound Man. San Fbancisco, Nov. 6. H. L. Bates acting as agent for the state of Oregon, arrested John Davidson, a machinist at Vallej'8 yesterday. The prisoner will be taken to Oregon. Davidson cashed at Ladd & Tilton's bank in Portland a check on a Seattle bank for $175, and the Ladd & Tilton's bank afterward discovered that Davidson had no funds in the Seattle bank. Coining to San Francisco, Davidson enlisted in the navy and was assigned to the cruiser Charleston from which ship he deserted in San Diego. The Irish VoU Today. Cork, Nov. 0. An election is being held today for a successor in parliament to the late Charles Stewart Parnell, who represented Cork City in the commons. The "Parnellite candidate is John E. Redmond, and Martin Flavin, a butter merchant of this city, is the' McCarthyite candidate. The influence of the priest is with the McCarthy ites. . In ' order to avert any possible disorder the polls this morning were strongly guarded by the police. ' Indian Land Question. Mubkaoie, Ind. Ter., Nov. 6. Sarah Ellis and other Cherokee Indians filed a petition asking for the apportionment allotment of the Cherokee lands. Joel B. Mayes, chief of the nation, t and others made the defendants' petition and asked for the allotment of 14,000,000 acres equally among the five tribes of the nation. The enit is the largest case ever brought in the United States court. Tiie Convicts Return to Charleston. Nashville, Tenn., Nov. 6. One hund red and. twenty-seven of the released convicts have been returned to Nash ville. The miners in the coal creek dis trict are still in a ferment. Their act of releasing the convicts does not seem to have satisfied them and unless other de mands are made by them are conceded, a strike may occur. Emphatically Denied. Troy, N. Y., Nov. 6. The Troy Times publishes a dispatch from. Frank HLs cock at Syracuse, saying that the state ment that he had been tendered the portfolio of secretary of war is without the elightest foundation. . - , y THE 8TR1THBLA3JE WRECKED. Instructions Received from the Owners for ihe Deposition of the Wreck. Astoria, Nov. 4. The wreck of the British ship Strathblane on North Beach has caused more comment among shipping men than any disaster that has occurred for years. Many hold the Union . Pacific culpable, asserting that the company's tugboat should have been outside the bar. Captain Troup, who has charge of the boat, say that they ' do not prowl around the ocean all night, but circulate at a radius of twenty miles and return inside when ships are not sighted. . . The pilot schooner remains outside the bar all the time, but the heavy fog probably hid the Strathblane from view. The prevailing impression is that the Cape Disappointment light ship could not be" seen in the fog, and Captain Cn.tbell wandered out of the course. The wind which, Major Hand bury says, was blowing fifty miles an hour at the time, carried her on the beach, and the wreck resulted. Edward McKee, resident manager of Meyer, Wilson & Co., received a telegram from J. and A. Allen, of Glasgow, the owners of the wrecked vessel appointing him agent, - with instructions to save the wreckage. Mr. McKee, subsequently received the following dispatch from C B. Upshur, his Astoria agent : "Vessel total loss. , Crew not here but will be over today." The crew will probably report to Brit ish Vice-Consul Cherry at Astoria, as the wreck occurred in his district. It is not known whether the Strath blane was insured, but several insurance men eay they have trustworthy informa tion that her owners carried no insur ance. She was valued at $05,000. ' THE CANADIAN CABINET. . Radical Charges in the l'ersonnel of the Government Officers. Ottawa, Ont. Nov. 5. The cabinet differences have been arranged and the political crisis is over temporarily. At the conference this morning the secre tary of state, Chapleau, agreed to con tinue in his present condition for the time, and to succeed the Hon. Edgar Dewdney as minister of the interior when the latter retired to become lieutenant-governor of British Columbia. J. A. Ouimette, ex-speaker of the house of commons, will succeed Chapleau as secretary of. state. A. R. Angers, at present lieutenant-governor of Quebec, will become minister of agriculture, re placing Senator John Carling. Examination of Train Wreckers. Auburn, Cal., Nov. 4. The examina tion of A. G. and F. J. Roberts, on a charge of train wrecking in connection with the accident near Colfax, October 12, was commenced today before i J nst'C Gwynn. General Superintendent A. N. Towne, of the Southern Pacific, and a number of railroad employes testified that the accident was caused designedly by pulling the spikes and removing the fish-plates from the rails. Roberts' house is a short distance from the scene of the wreck and one witness testified to seeing Al Roberts at the sleeping-car Santa Cruz, where it lay in the ditch. It was proved that it would take only seven minutes to put the track in condi tion to cause the accident. All Quiet in Brazil. Rio Janeiro, Nov. 6. The situation of affairs here today are reassuring. The troops which have been guarding the telegraph offices since .the disturb- ance commenced have been withdrawn. Complete order prevails and the usual amount of business is being transacted. The prosperity of the country is unim paired by the recent occurrences. A Disagreeing Jnry. San Francisco, Nov. 5. After being out twenty-onS hoars and failing to agree upon a verdict, the jury in the case of Herman Anderson, charged with manslaughter, was this morning dis charged by Judge Murphy. Anderson stabbed hia brother during a drunken row, July 3, last. The Farmers' Alliance President. Washington, Nov. 5. President Polk, of the farmers' alliance, speaking of yes terday's election, said he was not sur prised by the result in Ohio. He saw no reason why McKinley "should fail of election when one considered the fact that $1,000,000 in cash had been sent into Ohio to aid him in his campaign. The Latest From New Turk, New York, Nov. 6. The latest re turns received by the associated press indicate that the senate will stand as follows : Republicans 17, Democrats 14, Independent Reps. 1, Assembly Reps. 60, Assembly Dems60 and Independent Democrats 2. . . ' Heavy Judgment Against Steel Com- New York, Nov. 5. Judgment for $125,000has been entered against the Scranton Steel company on notes for pig j iron furnished by W, K. liart & (Jo., ot Philadelphia. : Chicago Wheat Market. "Chicago, November G.' Close, wheat, ferm; cash, .96; December, .97; May, 1.04.? ; . Weather Forecast. San Francisco, Nov. 6. Forecast for Oregon and Washington: Rain in Western portion. San Francisco Wheat Market. .,(.,.,....?,. , . ow t. . 47, shot his wife tn the head nt 235) Last San Fbancisco, NoW 6.-W heat, Twefth Btreet. An hour later he wa buyer, '91, 1.S4K; season, l.S9?4. ' ! found hanjring to the top of a dumb- Portland wheat Market. " j waiter on the roof of 109 Second nveiuie, ; quite dead. Mrs. Kramer was taken to Portland, Nov. 6. Wheat, V alley, I jjellevue hospital, where hei condition i 1.55; Walla Walla, 1.45. ' - ! pronounced critical. . ( IS MAD AT WILLIAM. j The Czar . Passed Twice Through Ger- mauy Without Stopping. IT WILL BENEFIT THE COAST. California Trying to Catch the National Editorial Convention. A NKISUASKA TKAIN HELD UP, The Express Company Donate 83,000 to the Scheme Doubt the Brazilian War Report. Paris, Nov. 5. Day before yesterday the czar passed through Germany with out stopping. He went ftora his yacht, the Polar Star, to a train which was in the station at Dnntzic. The czar and there is no longer any doubt of it by any European diplomat wished to show the antipathy with which William II in spires him. In one month he has crossed Germany twice without exhibiting a desire to see the German sovereign. Last week Emperor William had offered to pay his respects to William Alexander at Dantzic, although it was for the Rus sian emperor to go to Berlin, because the German emperor had been twice to St. Petersburg. The czar positively re fused to see the kaiser until the last moment. Then again the weather was so bad the Polar Star had to defer her departure from, Copenhagen for two days. The czar preferred to take a voy age of ten hours by eea rather than one ' of three by land, "in order not to pass through Berlin. Proof, therefore, is given that not only does the czar not wish for the political friendship of Ger many, but he seems to wish to be on bad terms personally with the emperor of Germany. . WILL BENEFIT THE COAST. Effort Being Made to Have the National Editorial Convention Meet in j, . ; , - , j. California." "" -------' - Sax Fbancisco, Nov. 4. An effort is now being made to have the National Editorial association meet in annual convention next spring at some point in California. The convention this year was held in St. Paul. Representatives from New Orleans and from Ashville, S. C, asked for next year's convention. Scipio Craig, of Redland, urged Califor nia and the suggestion was favorably received. Finally the choice of place and date for the next convention was, referred to the executive committee This committee will meet in Cincinnati next month,, and a delegation of Cali fornia men are going there to further press the invitation extended. Mayor G. M. Francis, of the Napa Regitster, Duncan McPherson, of the Santa Cruz Sentinel, R. A. Marshall, of the Los An geles Citizen, and Mr. Craig will proba blv go. From all that is known it isi thought likely that the mission wilU prove successful. Train ltohoery in Nebraska. Omaha, Nov. 4. The Kansas City ex press train on the Missouri Pacific road, was held up by six masked men about . 10 o'clock last night, one mile .west of West Side, eight miles from this city. At that point the train had to stop be fore crossing the Fremont, Elkhora fc Missonri Valley tracks. Two of the men boarded the engine, and . witln cocked revolvers commanded Engineer' Hall to get off the engine. The others boarded the express car, and, upon beinjr refused the keys to the box, proceeded to break it ojen with tools which they had secured from a section house. While two of the men worked on the strong box, the others compelled the passengers to keep their seats. The thieves secured about $3500 from the safe and then getting off, ordered the train to pull out. They then disap peared in the darkness. The sheriff and police are out after them. ltepoits Believed Sensational. London, Nov. 4.-Conflicting dis patches are arriving here from Rio Ja neiro. It was first reported that the Brazilian congress had resolved that a necessity existed for the proclamation of martial law, and the dictatorship should be established. This cablegram was followed by one which stated that the congress, had been dissolved, and that the city of Rio Janeiro and the, province had licen placed under the operation of martial law. In tdis city ; ! both reports are considered as being j highly colored. Husband Dead and Wife Dying. New Yokk.'Nov; 4. Shortly after 10 t.liia mnrnlnff .Inhn Krimifr. afpd