CI V.,,.rt . J VOL. II. THE DALLES, OREGON, SATURDAY, NQVEMBER 28, 1891. NO. 141. gy -. 4" PROFESSIONAL CARDS. YtTM. J. ROBERTS Civil Enoineer Gen TT eral engineering practice. Surveying and inaTini 11 v - MtimittM ftnd nlnns for irrigation. (sewerage, water-works, railroads, bridges, eto. Aaaress: u. uox 1U7, Tne uaues, w. WM. SAUNDERS Architect. Plan and niflitnna fumlfthed for dwelLintrs. churches, business blocks, schools and factories. Charges moderate, satisfaction guaranteed. Of- uee over jvrencns oans, ine vriuu. DR. J. SUTHERLAND Fellow of Trinity . Medical College, and member of the Col- ego of Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, Phy sician and 8urgeon. Office; rooms 8 and 4 Chap man block. Residence; Judge Thornbury's Bee- fond street. Office hours; 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m. . - . . DR. O. D. DOANE PHYSICIAN AND BUR GEON. Office; rooms 5 and 6 Chapman Block. Residence No. 23, Fourth street, one block south of Conrt House. Office hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 6 and 7 to i P. M. A 8. BEXNETT. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of- TL flee In Schanno's building, up stairs. The Dalles, Oregon. DSIDDALL Dentist. Gas given for the - rainlesa extraction of teeth. Also teeth net on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of the Golden Tooth, Second Street. A R. THOMPSON Attorney-at-law. Office x In Opera House Block, Washington Street, The Dalles, Oregon F. 7. MAYS. B. 8. HUNTINGTON. H. 8. WILSON. . XCAY8. HUNTINGTON & WILSON ATTOB- jtJL ne ys-at-law. Offices, French's block over First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. U3 LJ -lr8 nJ"CS- DISSOLUTION SKLE We have accumulated a large quantity of , .JS2 ISA! 3XT A. 3NT -3? To dispose, of these we have decided to hold a ON- X.B.SUFUR. GEO. ATKINS. FRANK MBNEFEE. DUFUR, WAT KIN 8 & MENEFEE ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Room No. 43, over Post Office Building, Entrance on Washington Street The Dalles, Oregon. WH. WILSON Attorney-at-law Rooms . 52 and 5$. New Voet Block. Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. SHIPES & KIHERSLY. Wholesale and Mail Diwists. -DEALERS IN- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestii OIG-AHS. PAINT Now is the time to paint your h'ouse and if you wish to get the best quality and a fine color use the ' Sherwin, Williams Cos Paint " For those wishing to see the quality ana color of the above paint we call theii attention to the residence of S. L. Brooks. Judge Bennett, Smith French and others painted by Paul Kreft. Snipes & Kinersly are agents for the above paint for The Dalles. Or. -h COLUMBIA GANDY FACTORY W. S. CRAP.1, Proprietor. (Successor to Cram & Corson.) Saturday; lovenibei? 28. We will include in this sale and at REMNANT PRICES, broken lots of Hosiery, Shoes, Gloves, Buttons and Underwear, We do not intend to realize from this special . sale, even , ' of goods offered, but will make in order to close them 'out; We have been, giving you BIG BARGAINS for the past month. Our immense' sales during this , time show that our friends have hot been slow to avail themselves of the OPPORTUNITIES OFFERED. -; We now propose to give you BARGAINS than' ever and you must not allow this chance to pass by. ." ' REMEMB0R THE DKY Wl AND IT Manufacturer of the finest-French and Home Made k . O A3ST D I IK! S, East of Portland. DEALER IK , Tropical Fruite, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish any of these goods at WholcsiUa or Retail SFHESH OVSTES In Every Style. 104 Second Street. The Dalles, Or. . . Burnefl Put tut Again in Business 1 Wm. ffllGHEItli, UNDERTAKER, And Embalmer, 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. Orders promptly attended to, day or . night. Prices as Low as the Lowest Place of business, diagonally across frtm Opera Block, on the corner of Third and Wash ington Streets, The Dalles, Oregon , d&w FRENCH & CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERALBANKINti BC8INE8S Letters of Credit issued available in the , . Eastern States. Sight Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, bt. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or ejjiin and Washington. , Collections made at all points on nv orable terms. REMNANTS PRINTS, REMNANTS SHEETINGS, REMNANTS DOMESTICS, REMNANTS SHIRTINGS, REMNANTS RIBBONS, . REMNANTS LACES, ' REMNANTS FLANNELS, REMNANTS TICKINGS, REMNANTS TOWELINGS, . REMNANTS DRESS GOODS, REMNANTS EMBROIDERIES,' ' REMNANTS TABLE' LINENS, REMNANTS SILK AND SATINS, " ' REMNANTS CANTON FLANNELS, : REMNANTS DENIMS, REMNANTS GINGHAMS, As it will take a great amount of time and labor to get our Remnants. ih order, we will C LOS E OU R STOR E THURSDAY AN D FRI DAY and will reopen 7, o'clock a. m. Saturday. , . Remember this sale includes " from 10 cents to $2.00. per yard and many pieces of eight and ten yards each. Do not let your , chances like sunbeams pass you by." " ' '.' . -; AN ATTACK EXPECTED. Negroes in Ariansas Eicited Oyer a . Lyncaiiig. ; r , Movembe 28. LL DO YOU GOOD. BOTH MONEY AKD REASON GONE. An Extreme Cold Wave Visits the East- era States. TEXAS ALLIANCE ' REORGANIZED. None of the Old Parties Need Apply Murder and Suicide The Ab ductor! Caught. Gubdon, Arkansas, Nov. 28. Excite ment here is intense, and a momentary attack by negroes is looked for. They say the whites have been.- exercising their superiority too long, and they are going to reverse this condition of affairs. The citizens ail go armed and it is said preparatory to -resist any attack that may he made by the .blacks. The negroes are aroused over Tuesday's lynching. . ... Money and Reason Both Gone. New Yoek, Nov. 28. That the firm of Field, Wiecher Lendley & Co., which failed yesterday . had re-hypothecated securities held by them on a loan of $600,000, and amounting to $1,000,000, developed into a certainty this morning at the stock exchange, 80,000 of Union Pacific Denver & Gulf consolidated first mortgage five's sold out under rule on account of the firm. Upon hearing this fact Judge Dillon sent for assistant Sec retary Burnharn of the stock exchange and had a conference with him. As result of the conference it was decided that the securities would not be good on delivery and notice to take effect Was sent to various bankers. Sidney Dillon said : 'The re-hypothecation of these securities is what I term criminal bor rowing, I don.t think there can be ' any milder view taken of the action at the office of Field, Weichers, Lindley &Co Assignee (JharJes VV. Gould was seen. In reply to a question he said : , VI truly don't know yet in what condition things stand. The condition of Edward M Fields, senior member of the firm, serious, arrangements are being made to send him to a private insane asylum. The Weather In Minnesota. St. Paul, Nov. 28. Dispatches from fifty Minnesota points indicate that the temperature varies from zero at Duluth to 10 degrees below at Halleck, and eighteen below at Moorehead. There was a great snow storm in' Northern Minnesota and North Dakota last week and it is feared that the threshers will have to wholly suspend operation. , The ferries at Duluth and Superior are frozen up, and it is believed that Lake Naviga tion cannot last much longer. A special ditpatch from Winnipeg states that the mercury - is 20 degrees below zero and growing colder. The Texas Alliance. Corsicana, Tex., Nov. 28. The anti sub-treasury members of the farmers alliance in convention here reorganized the order under the original charter. The new constitution ' provides for pro hibiting any man from becoming a mem ber who believes, belongs or aids in any way any ' secret organization that makcB political demands upon its members or in any way exercises any of the distinct ive functions of any political party. Murder And Suicide. Marshaltown, Iowa, Nov. 28. D. C. Thomas, an employe of the Britain Packing Co., shot and killed John Hockeydge proprieter of a boarding house here this morning. Then suicided by shooting himself through the head. There'is no motive for the murder. It is thought Thomas was insane. their return journey .to this city. Crowds of raged and starving peasants wait at the stations along the route to present petitions to the czar imploring help. - ' Charged With Abduction. Kansas City, Nov. 28. Albert King and his wife, Lizzie King, alias Lizzie Smith, were brought before the justice this moruing, charged- with the abduc tion of the son of David T. Beals. The prisoners plead ' -."not gtrilty" to the charge-and as they could not give bonds, were committed to jail. - : t ' . 825,000 Country Residence Burned. Fresno, Calif., Nov. 28. The elegant residence and contents belonging to W. N,Ootfaout, six miles' east of Fresno burned this morning. Loss. $25,000; insurance, $11,000. A faulty flue is sup posed to be the cause. For Want . of Fodder. Odessa, Nov. 28. The latest news from Saratoff and Kasan is to the effect that famine and typhus is increasing. Five thousand horses and eight thousand cattle have been slaughtered on account of the lack of fodder. The Indians Will Vote. . Paeis, Texas, Nov. 28. The Choctaw national party held its convention at Antlers and nominated B. Jackson The present national secretary, for gov ernor. The platform opposes the al lotment. The Fnneral of the Earl of Lytton. Pakis, Nov. 28. The obsequies of the Right -Honorable Edward Bulwer Lytton, British ambassador at Paris who died suddenly in this city Tuesday last, were held today In an English church. A Mine Flooded. Salt Lake, Nov..28. The drain tun nel in the Ontaria mine cut through into the water vein and the mine flooded It is thought that operations can be re- sum ed in about ten days. A YOUNG SCOUNDREL. He CWorofonned His Father and Uncle . and Then RobM Tbei. HE IS PROUD OF HIS RECORD. He Shot an Evening Caller by Order of His Mother. THE MOTHER AND SON IN JAIL. Rhode Island Man Sold His Wife and Now Wants Her Property Stabbed by a Drunken Man. A Cold Wave.. Boone, Iowa, Nov. 28. A cold wave struck this city this morning. The mercury touched fifteen degrees below zero. Killed The Custom' Officers. London, Nov. 28. Three custom offi cers were killed today by the propellor of a steamer they were about to board. A Tool House Assigns. Providence, R. I., Nov. 28. The Providence Tool Co. made a general assignment this morning. ' ' The Bait Act Unconstitutional. Ottawa, Nov. 27. The Dominion gov ernment is advised that the law officers of the imperial government have declared the Newfoundland bait act unconstitu tional. Canada and Newfoundland, it has been proposed, shall submit a joint case to the imperial privy council. .. . Sunk With all on Board. .' Liverpool, Nov. 27. During a heavy fog on the Mersey last night, an unknown steamer ran into a bark, supposed to be the Harmony, off the lightship. The steamer was so badly damaged that she sank almost immediately and the entire crew were drowned. The bark lost a mast aid the hull was seriously damaged. Shot by Incendiaries. ' San Bernardino, Nov. 27. Superin tendent Frye found the Fifth street school on fire last night, and entering the building was attacked by two men, He downed one, but was shot by the other, the ball entering his left arm. The men escaped on arrival of the fire department. . I Caught the Abductor. Kansas City, Nov. 28. Mysterious King," alias Dennis, alias Spinole, who, it is said, returned the kidnapped Beal's child, was - arrested this morning. He is chief conspirator in the abduction and is undoubtedly the man who deliv ered and obtained the $5000 ransom last night. ; - Good Ice Weather. ,; - - ;Marshalltown, Iowa, Nov. 28. The mercury reached 12 degrees below, here this morning. The coldest at this date in manv years. There is four' inches of snow here. . Presenting; Petitions to the Csar. - St. Petersburg, Nov. 28. The un perial family started from the Crimea on Another Priest Writes a Letter. Paris, Noy. 27. The archbishop of Annecy has written a letter similar to. the one which caused the prosecution of the archbishop of Aix. It is expected the government will take notice of the letter, and cause its author to" be prosecuted. Three Slen Killed. London, Nov. 27. A passing steamer ran into a steam launcn crossing ine river Tyne at Shields this morning, crushing the launch to pieces. A num ber of workmen were on Doara tne launch; three were killed and the others rescued. . ' . i Cincinnati, Nov. 27. The criminal annals rarely have such a ' chapter as that added in the case of Reed, a 16-year-old boy arrested here Wednesday night. His father is a well-known broker living in an aristocratic district on Walnut hill. When Reed was 13, he became a cigarette and yellow-covered novel fiend. He soon developed into a first-class tough. One morning, two years ago, the city was startled by the story of a sensational roboery by the use of chloroform of Reed's father. De tectives run the clews down, and found that young Reed had done it. The father declinedjto prosecute, and sent the boy to an uncle in Indianapolis. In a few weeks Reed robbed his uncle of $600 and fled, but was apprehended and sent to a reform school. There he stole tobacco and bribed a boy to bring him chloroform, which he used on the clerk to rob the office safe. He didn't get into the safe, but got enough money to escape, and then went south, where, he boldly declares, be did . many jobs. Wednesday he was arrested as a fugitive from justice. He glor:es in all his , actions, and will never be anything but a thief. ' 'r Shot By a Boy. Elmira, N. Y., Nov. 27. Frances J. Vincent, widow, and her son Albert L. Vincent, of No. 43 West Clinton street, are in jail, waiting the result of injuries to Charles Jones, caused by four bullet wounds. Jones is the manager of the Postal telegraph office in this city and is unmarried. He called at Mrs. Vin cent's and asked if Miss McFarland lived there. It is a double house and that young la'dy had just moved next door. Mrs. Vincent, who answered the call, said shortly : "I know you ; give it to him Bert." Jones, who has an im- Eedomentin his speech, tried to explain, nt before he could do so the boy, who is only 15 years old, drew a revolver and began firing. One ball entered Jones' abdimen, and another lodged in hia leg. The wounded man was found in a criti cal condition by passers-by, and the police were informed. The Vincents were taken into custody, and Jones was removed to the hospital. He Sold His Wife. Providence, R. I., Nov. 27. The re cent death of Mrs. Feitre Vicciene and the settlement of her estate have revealed a queer sttrte of affairs. Two men petitioned for appointment as - adminis trators. One was her husband ; the other, was Frank Baren, her lover. The husband admitted that after discovering the relations which existed between his wife and Baron, he soldaher to the lover; for $150. Afterward, it is claimed, Baren paid another Italian Vld to personate Vicciene, and a divorce was granted to Mrs. Vicciene. Tht courts thought Baren had the best claim to the woman's estate, and he received the appointment. - A Cigarette Factory Burned. New York, Nov. -J. Goodwin & Co.'s cigarette factory! Grand street, was damaged $30,000 by tire this morn- j ing. AU tne employes escapea j safetv. - G. Chicago Wheat Market. Chicago, November 28. Close, wheat, steady : cash, .91 ; December, .92)4 .92 ; May, .91M91. - . : Portland Wheat Market. . 1 Portland, Nov. 28. Wheat, Valley, 1.651.70; Walla Walla, 1.601.65. San Francisco Wheat Market. San , Francisco, Nov. 28. Wheat, season 1.93. ' 1 Stabbed by a Drunken Man. Fresno, Cal., Nov. 27. Fulton Berry, who was stabbed in the neck at Pollasky, was able to proceed to San Francisco Tast night. His wound was severe, the iueular vein being exposed but not cut. It was a narrow escape from death. Berry, is one of the direct ors of the Mountain railroad, and, as an officer, was taking charge of the barbe cue, when the drunken man, who had been taken from the table, stabbed him. A Child-Stealing Servant. , Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 27. At about 7 :30 o'clock lst night a servant of D. T. Beats, the millionaire cattleman, of this city, disappeared from the house, and at the same time the 2-year-old boy pt Air. . Beats was missing. Search was made, but no trace .of either con la oe louna. TV. a Tlina wai-o Tnt.ifA hrit. h:ivp failed to locate either. It is thought the child was kidnaped for a reward. Beats has offered a reward of $50,000 for the return of the child which was kidnaped, and no questions. asked. An Cplum smuggler muicieu. New York, Nov. 27. The grand jury has indicted Chase, the alleged opium smuggler. - . " . - . Killed by Unknown Men. Atoka, I. T., Nov. 27. At Lehigh two unknown men fired into the house of Peter Fleautteaa and killed his wife.