(1.1 ; . ffpi Lilted : Cljmidc VOL. III. ; r , ::;mE:;DALLESQBEGO SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1892. xo SQ - PROFESSIONAL CARDV .,J7 I '- I - ' - ' ! ' ; " " - ' I 1 X infi UtALA f LAlrUlvM. YI7M. J. ROBERTS Civil Enoikkkr j:ii " eral engineering practice, Surveying and mapping; estimates and plana for Irrigation, -.--bj, nM-j-i.ui, nuiuma, linages, etc. "W7M. SAUNDERS Architect. Puma .ml specifications furnished fof dwellings. m"wb, dvuwu ana jacioriea. Charges moderate, satisfaction guaranteed. Of- ncuvu uauf ine uaues, uregon. FIRx.,L?UT?.E,?1-XI)-F,SLLO or TRiNitY . ..iickb, ana menioer of the Col- - lege of Physicians and Surgeons,. Ontario, Pby- sfciian-anU Burgeon. Oflice : rooms 8 and 4 Cfeap- man block. Residence; Judge Thornbury's Se ond street. Oliice hours; 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 T R. O. I). DO A N R-vnTtin.v 6BOS. Offu-: rooms 5 and 6 Chapman Block. Residence No. 23, Fourth street, one a .r . c 1 r"u"' once noura 8 to 12 A S. BESNKTT, ATTORNE Y-AT-LA W. Bee in Scbanno's building, up stairs, dalles, Oregon. Of-Tbe D BIDDALLDbktist. Gas -given for the flowed aluminum ttlflto. Rnnmy - w 1 Hit on flowed aluminum tlete. U Oolden Tooth, Second Street. DaUea'.,OreSUSeB10C-k' Street, F. MAYS. B. 8. HUNTINGTON- fl. 8. WILSON. . 5 f .1E8"AT"iAWL-PlcS?' French's block over - '"""" ui i ne umies, uregon. B.B.DDFCK. GkO. ATKINS. FRANK MCMBF1B. ' XATTFrtR. WiTnvo jc xrwTwdr. . I I ' . " wtriir. ATTOR- JKSSfTT!11- ver Post "fJTl f iV K' o "asnington Street The Dalles, uregon. . W HlWIi?Ii-ATTORNBY-AT-I.AW Rooms t iv i, A mocK.jsecoDd street The Dalles, Oregon. Still on D'eek. Phoenix Like has Arisen , From the Ashes! JAMES WHITE, The Restauranteur Has Opened the Baldwin - Restaurant ON MAIN STREET Where he will be glad to see any and all of hia old patrons. Open day and Night. First class meals twenty -five cents. Und erlakirig Establishment PRINZ & NITSCHKE. v . , DEALERS TS Furniture and. Carpets. ia uur uubinees a COm Dietft Tin f Art A It l'nrf a and as ye are in no way connected with iu uuuwumera- irnei onr prices will be low accordingly. Eempmlipr nnr An Vnrmr. ,i .nnaV next to Moody's bank. Young & Kss, BlaGKsnutn & waooii siod General Blackemitbing and Work done - promptly, and all work j Guaranteed. Conyention Horse Shoeeing a Spciality. TM Street, opposite the old Lieoe Stanfl. NOTICE. E. French hafl fnr aalA a nnmlu. improved ranches , and . nnimproved lands in the Grass Valley neighborhood in Sherman connt.v. . Tlunt bHIi Vu. Jfrycheap : and . on reasonable terms. Mr. rrencn ran lrwMfo oattW. ,nn good unsettled claims in the Bame neigh borhood. : His address is Grass - Valley. NriAiinoii r DRUG S ON I PES K i n ersLy, THE LEADING 1- of TMrd Party Delegates in St Louis. A MOVEMENT FOR A CLOSER UNION. imnese txclusion Act Extension Bill - Passes the Senate. I.KSS DirriC'l'LTT IN KETlTRJilNG, Elopement Canadian Keolproclty Cable to' Japan Etc., Etc. WUtt ifl Ret; oi Mini COLUMBIA CANDY FACTORY W. S. CRAM, Proprietor. Successor to Cram & Corson.) Handled by Three Registered Druggists. . ALSO ALL THE LEADING Patent medicines and foggists Sandries, nuu5t MINIS, OILS AND GLASS Agents forilurphy'sFiiie Varnishes and theonly agents in , ivi cijciwiii, yin anjs to. s l-'aints -WE ARE- The Largest. Dealers in Wall Paper. Finest Line of Imported Key West and Domestic Cigars Agent for Tansill's Punch, . 129 Second Street, .The Dajles, Oregon Manufacturer of the finest French and Home Made East of Portland. DEALER IX - j Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. In Every Style. 104 Second Street. The Dalles. Or. : DEALERS IN:- Stan The Dalles Gigar Faetory ITEST STJJEET. FACTORY NO. 105. iHTinj- A PC o'e Best Brands XlIlU manufactured, and orders from all parts of the country filled on the shortest notice; ; t , The reputetion of THE DALLES CT GAK has become firmly established, and the demand for the home manufactured article is increasing every day. A. ULR1CH & SON. FRENCH & CO., BAN KERS.' TRANSACT A GENERALBANKING BU8INE8H Letters of Credit issued available in the :'' i -Eastern SUtes..' ; '- T Sight Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers scd 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. ' le and Fancu ?mm?, Hay, Grain and Feed. Masonic Block, Corner Third and Court Streets, TheUalles.Oregon THE DALLES, OREGON. ' Best Dollar a Day House on the Coast! First-rCIass Meals, 25 Cents. First Class Hotel in Every Respect. , ; None but the Best of White Help Employed. T..T. flieholsis, Ppop. : - T "asmngion mi r n 111 HS. Washington SITUATED AT THE HEAD OF NAVIGATION. Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center In the Inland Empire. Best Selling Property of the Season in the Northwest. For Further Information Call at tha Office of ' Interstate M 0. D. TAYLOR THE DALLES. -72 WASHINGTON ST. PORTUND. St. Louis, Feb. 19. President -Ron Terrell, of the Confederation of Industrial organizations, will on Monday morning, in the exposition buildin?. call finnU the largest and most important conven tion of workingmen .ever- held in this country. There will be nresent do gates from nearly all if not. every state in the Union, representing the National Farmers' alliance and Industrial union, Knights of Labor, Colored Farmers' alliance, Patrons of Industry, National Citizens' alliance," and other organiza tions of similar character. The conven tion will decide the question as to whether or not there will be in the com ing presidential campaign a third-party ticket with strength enough behind it. tn affect sensibly the fight between the two great parties. This convention is the outgrowth of action taken meeting of the National Farmers' alli ance, in December, 1800. It was then decided to move for a closer nninn between the great industrial organiza tions or the country, , and as a result a meeting was held irr . Washington in Jan uary, 1891, at which were represented the National Farmers ; alliance, : the Colored Farmers'' alliance, the Citizens' and the Knights of Labor, and the Con federation of Industrial organizations was formed.. This body called Monday's conyention for the purpose of deciding on the ways and means of forcing the passage of laws putting into effect the principles of the Ocala platform. Stronger Knot In the Law. Washington, Feb. 19, The senate has passed a bill extending for ten the operation of (,he Chinese exclusion law. The bill passed bv the senate to day extending for ten years the opefa- tivua vi tun viunese exclusion law is a substitute for a similar measure intro duced by Senator Dol Dh. The t!11 ha wider scope than indicated by its title, for in addition to re-enactinar the ent exclusion laws, which are about tr lapse, it contains a section intended to j meet the difficulty treaurv officials ). encountered in returning the Chinese to China, through judicial decisions ad verse to their right to return them fur ther than to .the country from which they entered the United States. Under this construction of the law the treasury department returned a number of Chin ese to Canada instead of to China and they were soon caught, again smuggled apross the line, which it was impossible to guardaat all times, and places. An other new section provides severe penal ties for a return to the United States of Chinese once .sent out of the country.- they had arrived at an agreement, and u it was true that Pauncefote, British minister at Washington, had assured the commissioners that Lord Salisbury would favorably consider any reasonable re quest of . the commissioners. Lbwtber, parliamentary secretary of the foreign office, said, in reply, such meeting had occurred. Blaine had nrevionMv ntinn. lated the Meeting should be informal. "..V J5r aueu inai ne natr no reason to suppose Sir Julian Pauncefote had given the commissioners the assurance Jen nings had referred to. In conclusion, Lowther said be did not know whether or not an agreement had been arrived mt. - raclflc Cable to Japan. Montreal, Feb. 19. Kegardimr the report that the British government would contribute towards the cost of a submarine cable from Vancouver tn Japan, C. R, Hosemer, president of the Canadian Pacific Telegraph company, ia very desirous of seeing a .jable laid be . tween the places mentioned, as the ex isting cable rates of $2.21 and $2.SG per wora greatly restricts business and prac- j tically prohibits it. The cost of onr-h i cable would be about $5.0!)0,000, and the route wottM probably be from Vancouver via the Aleutian islands. Toy In Chicago. Washington, Feb. '19. The world's fair special train, comprising five of the moBi magnificently equipped and lux uriously furnished coaches" ever nut. on the road by - the Pull Company, left the Baltimore and Ohio station at f- 2 :30 this afternoon for Chicago. Passengers aboard the train will be guests of the world's fair citv for th'e'next four days, and are senator and representatives in congress, foreign min isters to the United States, and leading journalists of the national capital. Philadelphia to the Rescue. New- York. . Kp1. m Th;.t-' freight-cars loaded with flour, drawn by three locomotives,-left Jersey City last night on the Pennsylvania road for Philadelphia. The flour was bought by the city of Philadelphia for the relief of the starving people of Russia. On each car was placed a notice reading : "This car contains flour for starving Russians, to be sent by the city of Philadelphia on the steamship Egypt, under the Ameri flag." And the Peasantry Sailer. London, Feb. 19. A disnatch from Vienna to the Chronicle savs that. mof of the corn bought for t he starving peas anty of Russia is still stored in the granaries of that country, and that only a portion' has been distributed to the suffering multitudes of the famine stricken provinces. There have been numerous granaries before in the very regions where famine is now racrino hnt no official action has been taken to re lieve the victims. . The Russian govern ment on this occasion has nA tv.o famine to disguise its policy of prohibit ing the exporation of corn and cramming with food the granaries of northern Russia upon which the Russians could aepend in the event of unsuccessful war. The dispatch says this is understoodto wain i T I - ir- . . V3 w uc, Hi ivusBtau omciai circles. pleoro pneumonia; The Peace Riyer District in Canada Sail - to Be Affected. ' PRIXCE OF WALES OFF THE TURF. Storms in the United Kingdom Increase in Their Severity. OF IMPORTANCE TO MARINERS. Letter From the Pope The Door keeper Knocked Down Uales oft . Portugal. - London, Feb. 19. A great sensation has been caused in the agricultural world by the report of a serious outbreak of pleurD-pneumonia in the Peace-river district in Canada. If the report be true the outbreak will greatly affect Scotch farmers; who largely import Can adian stock cattle in preference to Irish cattle, owing to their immunity from disease. The Prince of Wales has de cided to close his connection with the turf. All hia entries have been can celled for three months. He had sev eral remarkable horses in training and a. handsome profit was expected for the first tiyie in the history erf his stables. Increasing in Severity. London, Feb. It). The snow storms which have prevailed recently through out the United Kingdom have increased in severity. In several places in the southwestern part of England the snow is several feet deep. Many accidents are reported from various English towns with storms onjand and sea, throughout the week. In Yorkshire the weather . was the coldest, in thirty years. A bliz zard is raging today equal to that of last year. Snowstorms of unusual violence are raging in Ireland, and railway trains are being delayed. Near Limerick there are drifts four feet high. At Queenf town a heavy gale prevails. Handsome Girl Slopes. Waterbcrv, Feb. 19. Miss Annie Corrigan, a well-known young lady, eloped Tuesday with, Gordon H. Clark, jr. . Miss Corriganfs relatives received a telegram from her saying she and Clark had-been married in New York city. Miss Corrigan is the heroine of a shoot ing affray which occurred last summer: Joseph Laiidry, a young ' French-Ameri can, naa become infatuated with Miss Corrigan, and ereatlv annoved her with his attentions. One ' night Landry fol lowed Mies Corrigan and Mr. Clark, who were engaged at the time, and, reaching a dark street, drew a revolver and fired two shots at the girl, one of which hit her in, the head, Jmt .inflicted ; only,, a scalp wound.. Laqdry then .turned the revolver otipon ..himself .'and , tfred Vfonr shots into his head, and died soon after. iniitw yorngan nas neen voted the hand somest girl in Waterbury at several fairs. .... . The Kaatocks Foolery London. Feb. ' 18. Jennines. in the commons, asked if the government had any information . concerning the ference at Washington' between Blaine, American secretary, of state, and the Canadian commissioners to ar ran ere a basis for a reciprocity agreement, whether . . Kombs In Sicily. Messina, Feb. 19. A loaded bom,b was discovered last night outside the Spanish consulate in this city. A fuse attached to it was burning, but was quickly extinguished, with remarkable presence of mind and courage, bv the finders. The police immediately began a search for the dynamiters, who must have been close at hand, but no arrests are yet made. The men are supposed to be members 6f an anarchist society act ing in sympathy with anarchists in Spain. . Letter From the Pope. Pabis, Feb. 19. Catholic newspapers published an encyclical .letter from the pope addressed to the clergy. ; The Pope declares any form of government good, provided it tends to further public welfare'ahd is therefore the duty of all Jto accept the legally-established govern ment. and not. attempt to. change its form. ..The Pope concludes by expies sing himself in favor of the maintenance of cordiality and urges the union of all Frenchmen in developing the greatness of France. - - . -.::, Aa AdTtrtlnment. i Chicago, Feb. 19, Two Chicago idiots will In a few; days undertake a daring feat. They wUl stow themselves away in Captain Paul BoyntonVrubber suits and attempt to cross the lake, - which is about sixty miles wide. They are Henry Smith and Charles Burton, . both well known hunters and fishermen. Terrific Gale oft Portugal. j Lisbon, Feb, la.-A.; terrible gale ' is raging off the southwest of Portugal. Several i vessels, dragged their anchors and drifted about helplessly. An earth quake shock' was also felt at Algarve today. . A Merchant Marine Board. Washington, Feb. 19. Two bills of much interest to mariners were passed, by the senate today, one of which aims to carry out the recommendations made by the international maritime congress The more important of the measures provides for the establishment of a mer chant marine board to be under the-. direction of the treasury department to recommend to the secretary of the treas ury, any changes in existing laws or the enactment of new ones necessary for the protection oi tne interests of the e-overn- ment, and the benefit of the .merchant marine of the United States, for the lenci oi me mercnant marine from any harsh or injurious laws operating to its detriment. The other bill" provides for the plainer wording of - vessels, the smallest letters .need to be not less than four. inches in size. "Is That So?" " Washington, Feb. 19. The bill to provide a permanent system of highways in the District of Columbia, outsido of Washington, was taken up, and the pro vision authorizing the issue of 3 per cent, bonds gave rise to a debate in which the financial policy of the government, was discussed at great length. - Berry, of Arkansas, in the course of his remarks declared: "We have arrived at that condition that the United States cannot pay the ordinary expenses of the govern ment and meet the interest on the debt without borrowing monev." No action was taken on the bill, and the senate adjourned until Tuesday. - Secretary Foster Objects. Washington, Feb, 19. Secretary Fos ter has put himself on record against the proposed transfer of the revenue marine service from the treasury department to the navy department in a letter laid be fore the senate today. ' The letter is in reply to a resolution to the senate ask ing the secretary of the treasury to cam. m unicate to, the senate any information in his department in reference to the ex- pediency of the transfer, and. to express his opinion whether the public service nuuiu uc (jnjruuieu py uuen cnanges. Possibly. Served Him Right. . - DesMoinks. "Feh. 1ft. Renntor TTinr, knocked down and severely chastised Doorkeener TT f RelireT in the oanat chamber immediately after adjournment tsii : I. L l. dllt.iea U f fhn f t-i tnl ia aTao a namotn-r correspondent, and in a recent letter re- faMuu4 i A 1 1 U il 3 - 1.1. .1. ivu i iuu a iiutrrtiiits ttiiu a oiaci- guard. j. The affair grew out of the story that Finn vimteri a Vhit.vhonol Jiv. Saturday night. '