" ' J" - - 1 'i '- - '" - VOL. III. THE DALLES, OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH 14, 1892. NO. 77. FROFISSIONAL CARDS. WM. J. ROBERTS Civil Exgimkkk Gen - eral engineering practice. Surveying and mapping; estimates and plana for irrigation, aewerage, -water-works, railroads, bridges, etc. Address: P. U. Box 107, The Dalles, Or. WM. SAUNDERS Abchitbct. Plans and specifications furnished for dwellings, churches, business blocks, schools and factories. Charges moderate, satisfaction guaranteed. Of flee over French's bank. The Dalles, Oregon. . DR. J. SUTHERLAND Fellow of Tkikttt , Medical College, and member of the Col lege of Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, Pby , sician ana Surgeon. Orace; rooms 8 and 4 Chap man block. Residence; Judge Tbornbury'e Sec ond street. Office hours; .10 to 12 a. m., 2 to A and 7 to 8 p. m. - DR. O. D. DOANE fhtsicia akd sob obom. Office; rooms 5 and 6 Chapman Block. . Residence No. 28, Fourth street, one block south of Const Houne. Oflice hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 6 and 7 to P. II. D6IDDALL Dbntikt. Gas given for the . painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth et on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of the Golden Tooth, Second Street. B.B.DUFCR. GEO. ATXIKS. FBAKK KBKEPII. DUFUR, W ATKINS MENEFEE Attok-xiVB-AT-LAir Room- No. 43, over Post Office Building, Entrance on Washington Street The Dalles, Oregon. WH. WILSON Attoenet-at-law Rooms 62 and 63, New Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. A 8. BENNETT. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of nee in Schanno's building, up stairs. The patles, Oregon. F. rMATS. B. B. HUNTTNQTON. K. S. WILSON. MAY8, HUNTINGTON A WILSON Attob-mbts-at-law. Offices, French's block over First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. Voang & Kuss, BlaGKsmitit & Wagon Sop General Blacksmitbing and Work done promptly, and all work Guaranteed. - Horse Shoeeing a Speiaity. TMrfl Street opposite tbe old Ldebe Stand. dAw Still on DeGk. Phoenix Like has Arisen Prom the Ashes! JAMES WHITE, The Restauranteur Has Opened tbe Baldwin - Restaurant ON MAIN STREET Where he will be glad to see any and all of bis old patrons. Open day and Night. First class meals twenty -five cents. LK GRIPPE By using 8. B. Headache and Liver Cure, and S. B. Cough Cure as directed for colds. They were Used two vears aeo dnrinv the Tji Grinmi eni- demio, and very flattering testimonials of their power over uist disease are at nana. -. Manufact ured by the 8. B.- Medicine Mfg. Co., at Dufur, Oregon. For sale by all druggists. .- - - The Dalles Gig-Faetofy -WU-iiST STEKH3T. FACTORY: 1STO. 105. rTC A of Best Brands VXVXxjlXVKJ manufactured, and orders from all parts of the country filled The renntation of THE DALLES CI. OAR has become firmly established, and the demand for the home manufactured article is increasing every day. - '" A. ULRICH & SON.' A. A. Brown, . Keeps a full assortment of and Provisions. which he otters at Low Figures. SPECIAL :-: PfllGES to Cash Buyers. Hiked Cash Prices for lm anfl other Produce. 170 SECOND STREET. Staple and Fancy Groceries DRUGS Sn I PES & Kl N ERSLY, -THE LEADING- Wlotat ai Retail Duaists. Handled by Three Registered Druggists. : . ALSO ALL THE LEADING . Patent ffledieines and Druggists Sundries, HOUSE PAINTS. OILS AND GLASS. f Agents for Murphy's Fine Varnishes and the only agents in the City for The Sherwin- Williams Co.'s Paints. -WE The Largest Dealers in Wall Paper. Finest Line of Imported Key West and Domestic Cigars. Agent for Tansill's Punch. . 129 Second Street, : DEALERS IN:- Staple and Fancy Hay, Grain Masonic Block, Corner Third and flew ;.. Qolumbia . j-lotel, THE DALLES, OREGON. " ; Best Dollar a Day f) . First-Class Meals, 25 Cents. First Class Hotel in Every Respect. , Sj - . : j None but the Best of White Help Employed T. T. Nicholas, Pvop. SITUATED AT THE . Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center in the Inland Empire.' " For Further Information Call at ths Office of '.' ' Interstate Investment Go., 0. D. TAYLOR THE DSIUS. ANEW Dndertaking Establishment ! PRINZ & NITSCH1CE. -DEALERS IN Furniture and Carpels. ' : We have added to our " business a complete Undertaking Establishment, and as we are in no way connected with the Undertakers' Trust oor prices will be low accordingly. - Remember our place on Second street, next to Moody's bank. ARE- The Dalles, Oregon BriBS, and Feed. Court Streets. The Dalles.Oregon House on tHe Coast! HEAD OF. NAVIGATION. ' f Best Selling; Property of' the Season in the North west.' ; ' : - ' ' ..." :i;ri-: 72 WASHINGTON ST. FC3TUG. (hoc HEARINGS ARE CLOSED Tie Boar, of Engineers Dressed Down , to a Fine Point. COM BATTED BY MR. HERMANN. 4 '""'" Effort to Leave out an Important Oregon Appropriation. THE COQIILLK CASK RECITED. Mr. Herrnun Sbowl Tht the Koftrd of EirUten art not Infallible Orecon all Right. "Washington, March 14. It is now known that farther hearings, from dele gates sent to the capital to urge this or that appropriation, before the committee of the house on great waterways pro jects, is closed. The first practical con sideration of the bill by the committee was held on Saturday. . Of course the public are not advised of what occurred, but enough is known to scive Oregon- ians in Washington to understand that the most important parts relating to the Columbia " river are . preserved. Representative Hermann has contested every point in the interest of Oregon, inch by inch, and one of the committee has said to an Oregonian that "Oregon is all Right." It has leaked out -that he rather sharply criticized the board of engineers Saturday, when the committee proposed to leave out the appropriation for the Siuslaw, upon an estimate that the project would require at least 300,000. As such a large sum could not pass congress where the commerce Is so limited as at Siuslaw,' the committee thought best upon the engineers show ing to reject Siuslaw entirely. This brought out a most earnest protest from Mr. Hermann, and a long discussion followed. Mr. Hermann, with much feeling, antagonized the engineer's con clusions and demonstrated how in the case of the Coquille river in Oregon, a larger waterway and more difficult to control at its entrance, only $10,000 was first appropriated, and that this sum not only " purchased the plant but ex tended the work toward the sea in spite of the engineer's report, and that for three different congresses no appropria tion exceeded $10,000. -He also cited the reports to show the. remarkable re sults at once obtained. He criticized the engineers for their unnecessary es timates, which in many ways acted as a discrimination,' and, when brought up in congress, produced a prejudice against tbe Siuslaw. He demanded fair treatment for all, and after his argument was concluded, on motion of Gen. Catching8,,of Mississippi, the action of the committee was reconsidered and Siuslaw was retained for continued ap propriation. It is a victory to retain it in the bill. . Oil On Troubled Water. i Washington, - March- 14. Senator Sherman expressed himself Saturday in a private conversation on the. Eehring sea controversy. As he is chairman of tbe senate committee on fore ign relations his views may be taken as oil to soothe the troubled waters. He says : "I re gard the treaty now pending with the highest favor. It is an. example of ar bitration, which ought to be adopted in controversy with two countries boundby so many ties as Great Britain and tbe United States. War or even contention between them for a cause so- trival as one year's fishins for seals would be a crime against civilization. Manifiestly, it is the interest and desire of each to preserve the. Alaskan seal fisheries from destruction by Canadian poachers. The cupidity of a few vessel-owners, pending arbitration,' -threatens to disturb the peace and amity of - two., great nations. Diplomacy ought to be able to provide Borne modus vivendi during the present season. It may be unpleasant and un gracious for Great Britain... to . resist by her ships and sailors the reckless" acts of a few 'of her subjects, for 'whose conduct Lord Salisbury disclaims any responsi bility, but we are under no" such 're straint and are' able to prevent such, poaching ob the rights that we . pur chased of Buseia, and which Russia and the United States have openly' asserted and enjoyed for 100 years.''. ' ' .' -. Circuit J adrti to no Confirmed. Washington, March 14. It is thought that Senator Hoar, .chairman of the judiciary committee of the senate," will be well enough to attend meeting of bis committee today,' at which time they are to take up the nomination of the circuit judges, made some time ngo, and probably act one way or the other upon them. There is no opposition ' of any moment to any of the judges except Judge Woods, of Indiana. The opposi tion to him ' is mostly of a partisan stripe, although it is said that some very serious charges have been filed, of which the republican members feel . the necessity of taking some notice. There is some opposition manifested to Judge McCoriuick, of Texas, bat it is not seri ous enough to' affect -the action of tbe committee. There is no' doubt of the quick confirmation of W, B. Gilbert, of the ninth. Telegraphic flashes. - " Two years ago A. B. Gillespie, the postmaster at Rock Creek, Wyoming, almost murdered a man who criticised his service. Saturday C. B. Griffin, a waterworks employe, ' complained be cause Gillespie refused to hand out his family mail to him. Griffin was ordered oat of the place, but before he reached the door his head was smashed in by the postmaster with an iron bludgeon. Gillespie is in jail, and two surgeons are working over his victim. The mine horror near Brussels was augmented by fire on Saturday, and all hope of rescuing the imprisoned miners has been abandoned. The fire shot through the shaft in an immense col umn, with tremendous roar, illuminat ing the country around for a great dis tance, and destroying surrounding build ings by the beat which soon spread into a consuming conflagration. All the heavy 'machinery at the mouth of . the pit was destroyed, and fell crashing down the shaft. Colonel A. K. McClure, of the Phila delphia Timet, in a conversation in Charleston, S. C, says Hill cannot be nominated. If be were, every Northern state would help to defeat him. 'He would have the largest majority against him in New York of any state. "The only possible achievement of the Hill movement is to defeat Cleveland, and even that might not be successful. Suit has been filed in New Orleans on behalf of the heirs of one of the Italian Mafia, who assassinated Chief of Police Henessey, against W. O. Parkinson and others claiming damages of $100,000, for killing one of the brigands in the Prrish prison a year ago. This is a specimen of - Italian Mafia modesty. They should ask more. Secretary Blaine's condition is so pre carious that many of his best friends admit that he must soon retire from the cabinet. As soon as be is able to travel be will go south, and remain until the season opens at Bar Harbor. The Storm' Path. " The superintendent of the New York Central railroad stated that the main tracks were clear of snow and trains were running with an average delay of two and a half hours ; but that the storm at Syracuse had not abated, although the wind is not so high. The thermometer ranged down to 30 degrees at Clinton, Miss., Saturday. Ice formed and the ground was frozen. It is feared that great harm will be done fruit trees, as they are in full bloom. It is denied at the office - of the state board of agriculture that the late cold snap injured winter wheat in Kansas. It was not far enough advanced to be affected by the cold. A blizzard is raging in Northern Austria and Hungary. . Snow has made the roads impassible, and trains are im bedded. Traffic in -Vienna was sus pended for hours. , , The cold wave touched New Iberia, La., Friday night, and the mercury fell to freezing point. Heavy frost and ice were seen Saturday morning. Women's Luncheons. It is noticeable that at the luncheon rooms of ' the - several woman's ex changes, as well as at several of the res taurants in the shopping districts, broken orders are possible.' This is especially true of . . the menus of . the exchanges, which are ' managed by women solely for women. ' - It is a concession to an ac cepted ; fact that women ' ordering ' and -eating alone greatly dislike to pay for a moutnlul more than can be consumed. One croquette, a half, serving of salad.' chocolate without bread these are some of the -ways a woman adjusts her bill to her appetite. New1 York Times.- Wkm Dullness la Profitable. . Ho are things' in your business?'? '.' "DbII, rm glad to report." . "Glad to report?" "Yes;- rm a saw sharpener.'' Kate Weld' Washington. t , MURDER BY LYNCHING. Missouri Ails Two Victims to tlie COBTt Of JUdB Lmcii. - MISSOURIANS ON THE RAMPAGE. A Pretty Good State for Law Abiding People to Emigrate From. REPOKTS COMCEBKINO GEN. ALGIK. BlalTcd out, if He Qnits, yy Trumped I'p Army Scandal Hew to Cool ' On an Ardor. Bayvillb, Mo., March 13. The life less form of a colored girl was found dangling from a tree on the road near here Saturday, and was identified as that of the 15-year-old servant of W. R. Heimer, who resides near here. The girl became offended at the action of a colored man employed in the house,' and in seeking, revenge, decided to put "Rough on Rats" in his coffee. She put poison in the coffee intended for the family meal, and nine persons drank the concoction and all are nearly dying. The girl acknowledged she intended to kill the colored man, and said she did not care particularly who else suffered. Friday night a guard started to take her to jail at this place, but fell in with a masked party who relieved them of the girl and strung her up to a tree at tbe first crossing. ANOTHER CASE. Ozark, Mo., March 13. It has just been learned that John Bright, who killed his wife a few days ago, has been captured, tried, convicted and executed, Judge Lynch presiding. VTll.sn utfi nunruvu Warbensbdbq, Mo., March 13. Dur ing a family quarrel Joseph Emery was shot and killed by his brother, Charles, yesterday. - POUNDED TO DEATH. Bjctleb, Mo., March 13. In settling a dispute with fists Robert Johnson . pounded Samuel Keen to death. Reports Concerning Alger. New York, March 14. A press dis- ffAr'a fripndfl hflve nnrcrialal Kim nrtf ft allow his name to come before the con vention as a candidate for president, fearing that his rivals will make it un pleasant for him becauee of the alleged scandal created in army circles by the indictment of dead generals. The fact is his record ran he Hhon-n to m nniv but his friends think it would work in jury, as a lie always travels faster than the truth, in politics as well as other things. If he declines, his enemies will say that "the discovery of this record has had a great deal to do with cooling the ardor of Gen. Alger as a presidential candidate, and a great many of his friends think he can no longer be con sidered in the race." Iong;lass Will Represent Haytl. Washington, March. 13. Frederick Douglas, who kas been' selected by the government of Hayti as the representa tive of that country a. the World's Col umbian Exposition, has -received his commission -and has accepted the po sition offered to him by the government of the country to which he was a short time ago accredited as the minister of the United States. Mr. Douglass, who is naturally much pleased by the honor thus confered upon him, ,is greatly, in terested in tbe duties of his new position, and is determined to use every effort to make the display from Hayti folly com plete. A Riot in Vienna., Vienna, March 13. Thousands of workiDgmen today joined in the annual procession to the graves of the victims of the rebellion of 1848. The police for bade "Speeches. Many .socialistic sym bols were deposited on the monument. Everything was orderly until on return ing to the city, when the police broke into the- procession to arrest a man. This incensed the crowd,- and - instantly the police and processionists had a ser ious collision, in which the police were finally victorious. - ' ' ' " From reports received from Germany and Spain it learned very heavy snow storms are prevailing throughout .those countries. Telegraphic communication between ' France and Spain, is inter rupted. : ' ' 4". ' ; . .