tut. VOL. III. THE DALLES, OREGON, TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 1892. NO. 84.r PROFESSIONAL CARDS. WM. J. ROBERTS Civil Enoikkeb Gen eral enrineerlnK practice Surrey! ng and mapping; estimates and plans for irrigation, sewerage, water-works, railroads, bridges, etc. Address: P. O. Box 107, The Dalles, Or. WM. BAUNDER8 Abchitbct.' Plans and specifications famished for dwellings, ' churches, business blocks, schools and factories. Charges moderate, satisfaction guaranteed. Of Bee over French's bank, The Dalles, Oregon. . . DR. J. SUTHERLAND Fbixow or TmmitY Medical College, and member of the Col lege of Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, Phy sician and Burgeon. Office; rooms 8 and 4 Chap man block. Residence; Judge Thornbury's Sec ond street. Office hours r 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to and 7 to 8 p. m. DR. O. D. DOAKE PHYSICIAN and SOK esow. Office; rooms & and e Chapman Bloek. Residence No. 23, Fourth street, one block south of Court House. Office hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 6 and 7 to S P. M. DBIDDAIX Dimtist. Gas given for the . painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth set on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of th Golden Tooth, Second Street. S.B.DBFUB, 010. ATKINS. VBANK KElf BFBJtt DUFUR, W ATKINS 4 MENEKEE ATTOR-XBTS-AT-LAW Room No. 43, over Poet Office Ballding, Entrance on Washington Street The Dalles, Oregon. ' W. H. WILSON ATTOBNET-AT-tAW Rooms 62 and 68, New Vogt Block, Second Street. The Dalles, Oregon. A 8. BENNETT, ATTORNS Y-AT-LAW. Of- nee in Schanno's building, up stairs. The Bailee, Oregon. P. T. MATS. B. B. HENTIKQTOH. H. a. WIL80W. MAY8, HUNTINGTON A WILSON ATTOB-MBTs-AT-LAW. Offices, French's block over First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. Young & Kass, Biacksniiifi& wagon stiop General Blacksmitbing and Work done promptly, and all work . Guaranteed. Horse Shoeeing a Spciality. TIM Street, opposite the oM Liehe Stand. dbw Still on Deek. Phoenix lake has Arisen From the Ashes! - - JAMES WHITE, The Kestanranteur Haa Opened the Baldwin - Restaurant ON MAIN STREET Where he will be glad to Bee any and all of his old patrons. ". ' Open day and Night. First class meals ' " twenty -five cents. LH GRIPPE Bv nsine B. B. Headache and liver Cure, and B. B. Cough Cure as directed for colds. They were STJOOSSSTTTIiXiV naed two vears saro during the La Grlnne epi demic, and very nattering teetimoiiiahrof their power over mat disease are at nana, .nanuiact- ured by the 8. B. Medicine Mfg. Co., at Dulur, uregon.. rot sale oy an aruggisis. The Dalles FACTOR NO. 105. rjr A T Q, of the Beet Brands Xv7aJCvO manufactured, and orders from all porta of the conn try .filled on the shortest notice. ' . .- . Th refutation of THE DALLES CI GAR has become firmly established, and the demand for the home manuiacturea article is increasing every day. . " A. UL.RICH & SON. faetppy All Right! -OUR SPRING Ladies', Misses' FINE SHOES IS NOW COMPLETE. -OUR LINE Every STYLE to please the taste. Every WIDTH to fit tlie foot. Every PRICE to suit the purse. It -will pay you to examine our stock before purchasing. R. JVL WlLiLiIflmS & CO. DRUGS Snipes &. Kin ersly, THE LEADING WloU ii Retail Drnpts. dP U H E 33 BL U G S Handled by Three Registered Druggists. . : ! ALSO ALL THE LEADING Patent ffledieines and HOUSE PAINTS, Agents for Murphy's Fine .Varnisbes and the only agents in the City tor lhe fcsherwm, -WE The Largest Dealers in Wall Paper. Finest Line of Imported Key Agent lor lansiii s unch. 129 Second Street, -: DEALERS IN:- Staple aid Hay, Grain Masonic Block, Corner Third and flew Qolumbia . J-lotel, THE DALLES, OREGON. Best -Dollar -a Day First-Class Meals, 25 Cents. First Class Hotel in Every Respect. - ' None but the T..T. SITUATED AT THE Destined .to be the Best Manufacturing Center In .the Inland Empire. : For Further InformatJon Call at the Office of Metstate Ifiir tinent Go . , a D. TAYLOB, Tie Dalles, Or, ! STOCK OF- and CMldrcns' COMPRISES - Druggists Sundries, OILS - AND GLASS. Williams (Jo. s Paints. . ARE- , West and Domestic Cigars. The Dalles, Oregon lies, and Feed. Court Streets; The Dalles.Oregoh House on the Coast Best of White Help Employed Nicholas, Pvop. HEAD, OF NAVIGATION. :. ' Best. Selling Property of ' the Season In the North- K-fasMnitoa, SWPortlaiia.Or. All Right LrlOCe AN OLD BOND CASE. Scheme : of Alleged Capitalists of Twenty Year's Standing. SUDDENLY TURNS UP IN COURT. odges Who Have Resisted Payment to be Tried for. Contempt 1NNOCESI THIRD PARTIES." The Dangers Incident to Laxity in tlie Issue of Bonds by Public ' . Officials. ' Kansas City, Mo., March 22. A very interesting case is on trial here just now. It is an action to punish eix leading and influential citizens for contempt. ' Over twenty years ago it was proposed by out side alleged capitalists to build the Te beau and Neosho railroad. - To aid the enterprise St. Clair and Csbs counties each voted $750,000 in bonds. The road was never built and the counties repudi ated the indebtedness. The bonds, how ever, fell into the hands of innocent third parties, who brought suit and ob tained judgment against each county; Up to the present time the counties have successfully resisted the collection of tke . judgment. Recently ' ' United States Judge Phillips ordered the county judges to make a special tax levy for the purpose of liquidating the indebtedness The county judges as well as the people of the counties were determined not to pay for what they did not receive and declined to make the special . levy. J udge runups declared tbem. to be in contempt of his court and ordered them to appear before him March 8th to re ceive . their sentences. . The ludges pleaded lor time in wnicn to arrange a compromise and . Judge Phillips gave them until today. So intense is the pop ular prejudice against paying this rail road debt, that rather than incur the odium that would attach to the ; respon sibility of providing for its payment, the county judges, six in number, will suffer the punishment for contempt unless they arrange a compromise with the holders of the bonds. Win. B. Morrison's Status. Chicago, March 22. That a prophet is not without honor save in " his own country has a pitiful exemplification in the case of the veteran tariff reformer, Col. William R. Morrison. But for the malignant hatred of the democratic poll ticians in Illinois, ana especially in Chicago, Morrison would be among the foremost if not the foremost of the can didates for the presidential nomination Mating him because tney nave never been able to uee him, realizing that if he were made president he would he presi dent, they are ready to send the' presi dential - nomination anywhere but to Illinois. Much of this unfriendliness of politicians grows out of Morrison's early and courageous fight in the house for tariff reform. In 1885 Morrison stood almost alone as'a tariff reformer. , Presi dent Harrison had not yet taken up the tariff issue. The honors that Morrison then won have been .lost- to him. The opposition and resentment engendered have stack by him. . One Man Compels s Lack Out. Joliet, HI., March 22. The nail mill connected with' the . Lambert barb-wire mill is still closed on account of a strike, throwing out 100 employes. ' This may result in closing the barb-wire mill, em ploying 1,000 men. Tbe strike was pre cipitated by the manager hiring a new night superintendent and giving the former one his .old machine. He took the machine, .but later changed his mind and told the employes he was discharged Mr. Lambert says he thinks the strike is the outcome of the Lockport demon- etration, which was held to - encourage the locked-out men of the Grant barh- wireniir. -V ' '- '.' ':. Deadly Explosion. - East , Jobjdak, Mich., March 21. A boiler in the East Jordan mill exploded this morning, .instantly . killing Simon Carney, i Peter Sheldon,'. John Brown Bert Cook and Emanuel Hunt, and serf ously injuring four otners, and more or less badly hurting a score more. The mill is a total wreck; Lobs $10,000. v Storm On Halifax. ; Halifax N. 8 March .'21.-r-Durihg storm last night the bark Sylvan went ashore' near Yarmouth. " Five' men 'lost their lives. v. "'''.'. r Rockefeller's "Thank Offering." Titdsville, Pa., March 22. Referring to the forlorn situation of .affairs here amongst independent oil producers, and the recent thank offering made by John D. Rockefeller, $1,000,000 to the univer sity of Chicngo, the Citizen says : "He epeaks to 65,000,000 people, and .comparatively-few of tbem know that every dollar of this 'thank offering' to God has been wrong from the . reeking ruin of Rockefeller's men engaged in the petrol eum industry. Here are families left to struggle with poverty because their heads have been driven to ; suicide- by hopeless losses in their business of pro ducing petroleum. : Here are properties which a few months since were worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, now being sold by the sheriff at from 10 to 20 cents on the dollar.. For .these things the Standard oil trust, of which Rocke feller is the head, is directly responsible. Last August the trust lowered the price of oil in every producing field ia Pennsyl vania from 5 to 20 cents a barrel. . Since then the producers have not been able to get more. than 65 cents - per barrel, and average price has been less than 60 cents. Oil properties are - now unsaleable and producers cannot get 'the cost out of their ; production." The - standard Oil trnst has since appointed a committee, within themselves, to wind up affairs, and dissolve. .... -. 'Human Depravity. ' . Indianapolis, March 22. At the . fun eral of one of the .victims of the fire which destroyed the female reformatory March 1st, Minnie Johnson, one of the three girls who had been suspected of starting the fire, confessed she did it Minnie was sent up front Richmond two years ago on conviction of theft. When all by herself she ignited an ironing cloth at a gas jet, and threw it upon a shelf under a slairway. From - this started the fire which wrecked ' the building. In her confession she said she had not intended to ; fire the building, but simply to create a scare to get even because Patsy Williams, a colored girl, had been separated from her. Between them an '. unnatural ' intimacy ; had ex isted. The Kansas Judges Committed. Kansas City,. March 22. Late this afternoon Judge Philips, of the United States circuit court, sentenced .Judges Ray, Blaine and George, of Cass county to jail until they make some arrange ments for the payment of bonds voted by that county twenty years ago, in aid of the Tebo and Neoshi railroad. He also imposed a fine of $500 on each of the three. The sentences of the St. Clair county judges were postponed until Monday. ' Retaliation. Washington, March 22. Senator Higgins today proposed an amendment to Senator Morgan's Canadian retalia tion measure, so as to provide that the exclusions shall extend to goods which are intended (o be conveyed in transit from the United States, or any port therein, through Canada, to places or ports in the United States,- and to ex ports from Canadian ports. Still in the Dark. Washington, March 22. It is known that Lord Salisbury has sent a note to the state department concerning . the Behrine sea controversy, but it is hot known what is in it. Columns of specu tative comment would not throw light on the subject. . - . Blizzard-Notes. Lock Haven,' Pa., March 21. Last night was one of the coldest of the winter in this section, the mercury ranging from zero here to 5 below at Bellefonte. . ANOTHER IOWA BLIZZARD. Des . Moines, March 21. A severe blizzard is raging in Northern Iowa. Public Building. St. John's, N. B., March 21. The custom-house, a large stone structure. has been burned. Loss $300,000. - - The Oldest Gunner Dead. The oldest gunner in the United States navy, the venerable George Sirian, died the: other day in Portsmouth, Va. His life -was full of - romance . and adven tures. Born in 1817, on the. Greek isle of Ipsalia, he -was' made & homeless or phan by the attack and massacre by the Turks of the inhabitants of that island in 1825. " The bombardment of the Turks by the old Constitution "Old Ironsides' saved, the lives of a large number, and he was among eleven boys who survived and were brought away by that gallant old-vessel.-. He was brought home by Lieutenant Randolph, of Riphmond, the executive officer of the ship. ' y ' Later he was taken by Mr. Marshall. gunner in the United .States-navy, from Lieutenant Randolph and by him taught gunnery and pyrotechnics. ' At the age oi twenty ne entered ine navy as a gun ner, and fat many a hard fought battle afterward showed -that -the - blood of the Greeks, famous at .Marathon and Ther mopylae, at Platea and Mycenae, stall lived in his veins, New York Ararad. THE DALLES PORTAGE. Strong . Hone That the Riyer May. he '.Open in Two Years. PLANS OF THE ENGINEERS. A Permanent Improvement That Maybe Made Available at Once. ONL TWO YKARS MORE TO WAIT. The Bland Bill Takes up the Balance of This' Week in Idle Talk tost If Won. Washington, March 22. The musty files of the board of engineers, relative to the dalles portage, must now come out of their pigeon holes at no distant day, and we shall see what we shall see con cerning this subject. It may be said without fear or doubt, now that the Cas cade work is finally and fully" provided for that the dalles must be provided for soon, and in such way as to secure the completion of the work both at the Cas- : cades and at the dalles at about the same date. In Oregonian circles here- " one thing is not lost sight of. Gov. ' Pennoyer's letters assisted very much to enliven the issue, and briDg about the . desired results, and while it is quite probable no appropriation will be made for the dalles portage this session, - the . senate will do much necessary work,, un- . der the bills introduced by Senators Mitchell and Dolph, and this will make the final work all the more ready' of ac complishment. It has all along been contended, by members most deeply in terested, that there could be no use for permanent improvement at the dalles, until the cascades work was finished, but so soon as this latter improvement was assured, then work at the dalles should rapidly proceed. The - cascade canal will no longer engross the atten- . tion of the engineers. . It has passed out of their hands completely, and they have . already in view plans for a boat railway ' which can be completed in five years, and can be used as a means o' transpor tation any time after six months work of construction upon it. All this should be encouraging signs of the times for Ore gon, and especially so for Eastern Ore gon; The appropriation bill will not be seriously tampered with, as was to have been expected, by the anti-"billion dol-. lar congress" factionists, but it is gen- -erally admitted that no separate hill can possibly pass the house, in view of the immense sum which is now given Ore gon in the general bill under considera tion. Worse than Wasted. Washington, March 22. If the demo- . crats in the house would listen to tlie voice of reason, they would not waste a moment of time discussing the silver bill. Since it is absolutely certain that the president will veto the act if it passes, -nothing is to be gained by the discussion in a party sense leyond what has been gained already. It is possible that the public will hear soon that this subject -has been indefinitely postponed, and the responsibility will rest upon the presi dent who has next to officially pledged himself to veto the act if it passes. But, of course, this week having been agreed upon, the house proceedings will be more than usually interesting, as the Bland silver bill is the special ordei 'for three days, beginning today. . A large number of members desire to speak on the question, and an effort will be made to reach an agreement between the friends and opponents of free coinage,- .' provided that the debate and consider- , ation of the bill by paragraphs shall run the whole week. Xo understanding has . been reached, however, as the silvermen : wantthe agreement to include a stipu lation that a vote shall be taken at the' end of the week without indulgence in filbnstering tactics ; but the anti-free coinage democrats are not, as a body, . willing to bind themselves in this par- -tienler.--' - . , . The Wholesale Murderer. " - Adelaide, Australia, March 21. The police ' here have identified Deeming, -alias Williams, as the author of a rob bery committed here in. 1888. ; At that, time he was living in Adelaide under the alias of i Ward,-, The day after the jrob-, bery Deeming, accompanied by his wife and. two children ..sailed for St. Helena, en route to Cape Town. '.' ""'"JFer Sale. ; A good number. 2 Cal graph, at W. U. Telegraph office. Price .$65. 3-14-lw