WW VOL. III. PROrESSIONAL CARDS. WM. J. ROBERTS Civil Engineer Gen eral engineering practice. Surveying and mapping; estimates and plans for irrigation, sewerage, water-works, railroads, bridges, etc. Address: P. O. Box 107, The Dalles, Or. WM. BAUNDER8 Architect. Plana and specifications furnished for dwellings, churches, business blocks, schools and factories. Charges moderate, satisfaction guaranteed. Of flee over French's bank, The Dalles, Oregon. i DR. J. STJTHERLAHD FSLLOW- OF Tbtty Medical College, and member of the Col lege of Physicians and Burgeons, Ontario, Phy sician and Burgeon. Office ; rooms 8 and 4 Chap man block. Residence; Judge Thornbury's Bec . ond street. Office hours; 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 ' and 7 to 8 p. m. DK. O. I. DO AN E physician akd iui sboh. Office; rooms ft and 8 Chapman Block. Residence No. 28, Fourth street, one block south of Const House. Office hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 6 and 7 to s P. M. D 81DDALL Dentist. Gas given for the . painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth : set oa flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of tha Golden Tooth, Second Street. s.B.DurUB. so. atkins. nuKmiKim. DTJFTJR, W ATKINS A MENEKEE Attor n its-at-law Room . No. 43, over Post Office Building, Entrance on Washington Btreet The Dalles, Oregon. WH. WILSON Attorn kt-at-law Rooms 62 and 58, New Vogt Block, Second Btreet. The Dalles, Oregon. AB. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of . flee In Bchanno'a building, up stairs. The Bailee, Oregon. 9. r. XT ATS. B. s. bdiStikgtoji. h. a. WTLBOS. MAY8, HUNTINGTON & WIL80N ATTOE-wets-at-law. Offices, French's block over First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. Young & Kuss, Biadcsmttn & waoon shop General Blacksmitbing and Work done promptly, and all work Guaranteed. florae shoeeing a Speiality. .Hurt Street, opposite the old Liebe Stand. d&w Still on Deek. 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 his old patrons. Open day and Night. First class meals twenty-five cents. .', - LK GRIPPE CT73EtXEX By nsing 8. B. Headache and liver Cure, and 8. Jo. Cough Cure as directed for eolds.. They were STJOOZSSSFTJIjXiV - , . " used two years ago during the La Grippe epi demic, and very flattering testimonials of their power over that disease are at band. Manufact ured by the B. B. Medicine Mfg. Co., at Dufur, Oregon. . For sale by all druggists. . The Dalles FTBST 8TBKE7T. FACTORY NO. 105. iP.Tr- AP Qo the Best Brands VlU XiLiVC manufactured, and orders, from all parts of the country filled on the shortest notice. - . i The reputation of THE DALLES CI GAR has become firmly established, and the demand for the home manufactured article is increasing every day. . A. ULRICH & SON. H Gigar : faetopy THE All Right ! -OUR SPRING I IS NOW -OUR LINE - Every STYLE to please the taste. . Every WIDTH to fit the foot. Every PRICE to suit the purse. It -will pay you. to examine our stock before purchasing. A. ftt. WlliLtiflms & CO. DRUGS Snipes Kin ERSLY, THE LEADING Wiesale ai Retail Diipts. Handled by Three ALSO ALL Patent medicines and HOUSE PAINTS; OILS AND GLASS. Agents for Murphy's Fine T Varnishes and the only agents in the City for. The Sherwin, Williams Co.'s Paiats. -WE The Largest Dealers in Wall Paper. Finest Line of "Imported Key West and Domestic Cigars. . i Agent for Tansill's Punch. 129 Second Street, : DEALERS IN : Staple and Hay, Grain Masonic Block, Corner Third and Jtfeu Qolumbia J-lotel, " THE DAXLiES, OREGON. Best Dollar a Day House on the Coast! First-Class Meals, 25 Cents. - First Class Hotel in Every Respect. ' - None hut the Best of White Help Employed. T. T. fliefaolas, Piop. ""B!" flOrth DclllSS, St SITUATED AT THE v' Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center In -the Inland Empire. ' For Further Information Call at the Office of Interstate a D. TATLOB. Tls Data, Or. DALLES, OREGON, THURSDAY, .'MARCH 24, All Right! STOCK OF- and Cliildrens' E SHOES COMPRISES - Registered Druggists. - THE LEADING Druggists Sundries, ARE- The Dalles, Oregon Groceries, and Feed. Court Streets, The Dalies.Oregon HEAD OF NAVIGATION. " Best Selling Property of i the Season tn the' North west, r ' , - t Investment Go., 78 WaMgra, St, Poftlaii, Or! PERCHING TOO HIGH. Salislmry OH Enongh ' to Know Some " : - Things he Don't ri CONGRESS TO ACT WITH FIRMNESS. Uncle Sam's Hand Appears Over the Autograph of Benjamin. NO DIVISION - OF SKSTIMENT. Great Britain's Talk of j Resenting American Interference Pooh. Pooh, Pish. Washington, March 23. The Behr- mg sea correspondence was laid before the senate executive session, at noon. The reading of Salisbury's note refusing to consent to a renewal ol the modus vivendi and making a counter proposi tion was received with ill-suppressed ir ritation, by the 6enate. The note is evasive and equivocating. The presi dent's rejoinder broadly hints that Salis bury has not met the overtures in a straightforward manner. He insists on a renewal of the modus vivendi, without reference to insignificant or irrelevant conditions. He closes with the stirring assertion that if Great Britain declines to aesifit in protecting the seals during the arbitration he will proceed to enforce the laws - and exclude poachers from Behring sea, if the.military force of the United States is required to accomplish it. The note created a sensation in the senate. After half an hour's discussion, the correspondence was referred to the committee on foreign relations. - The gravity of the case led to a renewal of the strongest efforts of the senators to prevent the public from being made ao quainted with the facts until the corres pondence.: progressed further. There was no expression of opinion by the president in his letter of transmittal, but this- is not needed in view of the clearly defined position assumed by him in his rejoinder to Salisbury, which ap peared to meet with the unanimous ap proval of the senators. 1 The debate it self was too short to disclose the official standing of the senators, although there has been nothing in the nature of a di rect vote upon the treaty arbitration, and there is a well-defined opposition to it as a surrender by the United States of her rights as acquired by treaty from Russia. It can be stated the treaty was soon to be ratified by the senate, but a resolution will accompany it reciting that there does not appear to be anv sufficient reason for abatement by the United States of its claims to jurisdic tion pending arbitration, and authoriz ing the president to use all the military arms of the government to insure pro tection of the rights of the United States. A prominent senator who has taken a leading parrln the Behring sea discus sion in the executive sessions of the sen ate said today :-- "You can tell your peo ple on the Pacific coast that there is no division of sentiment on the seal ques tion among the senators. Irrespective of party they are unanimous in support of the administration. They think as if with one mind. The correspondence consists, it is understood, of two notes ; the first being Lord Salisbury's cabled note of the 18th, and the reply from the president, dated yesterday. It is broadly intimated with the implied disposition on the part of Great Britain to resent any interference by this government with vessels flying the English flag en gaged in pelagic sealing' in Behring sea would undoubtedly result in the rejec tion oi is treaty in me present iorm. , -' "Want American Protection. . San Fbancisco March 23. The object of the visit to the United States of Xing Tubnmo of the Gilbert islands, and who is now in. this city, has just come to light. He states that he has long-desired the protection of. the United States, and wants td raise'rthe ' American -flag over the Gilbert islands. " With that -end in view he has come- to this country, but had seen each wonderful Bights since his arrival, and was so lost in bewilderment at the novelty, immensity and magnifi cence of everything that met his eye, as compared with his native land, that his real purpose had been for the time com pletely lost sight of . He wanted to go to Washington to see the "king" ' of this country and have a talk, but be is obliged to return home in a week or two by the same vessel on which he came - and will have no time to make a long trip'.'- King Tubnmo says be likes the Americans, 1892. and feels that his country would be in a much better and more prosperous con dition if under their protection. The king says that if the United States will -accept the proposition- he will in turn accord all reasonable courtesies and privileges. He will give the United States a coaling station in the harbor of the islands where he reigns, and keep it in good repair at all times. He will also assist in promoting the commercial re lations between the two countries. His friends have agreed to lay all his prop ositions before the cabinet at Washing ton. New York Fools. New York,' March 29. Concernine Drayton and Burrowe, the part-your-hair-and-names-in-the-middle thorough breds of the 400 strips, from Europe by Majestic, it was reported at an early hour this morning that they had proceeded to a quiet spot in Westchester county to discuss the situation and, perhaps, have an encounter in the morning. They were accompanied respectively by Mill bank and Freddie Gebhardt. The steamer was: boarded . yesterday, : not withstanding orders to the contrary. D. L. Upshur, son of Commodore Up shur, with a servant, were of the board ing party, j Once aboard, they : rushed about the ship and passed nearly ten minutes before they found Mr. Drayton. Upshur rushed up, and, putting a bun dle of newspaper clippings in his hand, excitedly - said : "Read this ; read it carefully. It is of great importance." In the meantime Drayton was shoved into his berth and the servant put on guard at the door with instructions to let no one in. Upshur "became excited and then rushed through the passage exclaiming, "Can't talk, - can't talk." Those lingering outside the door after he had gone inside could hear frequently the exclamation ! "That's singular, that's singular." And then ' the voice of the man-servant could be heard whinning. "awful,'? "awful." Upshur, when next seen by the reporter, was talking earnestly to her grace, the Duch ess of Marlboro, who was on board. - After the Anarchist Paris, March 24. Late this afternoon the police discovered a bomb factory in Clichy , a northern suburb of the city. The factory was on the second floor of. a bgilding in a court behind a tenement house. Several boxes of chemicals for the manufacture of - explosives, fuses, cartridges, glass and iron tubing, and several bottles of chlorate of potash were found. It is supposed the . factory was getting out bombs for the May day cele bration, as the police have information that the anarchists plan to make violent demonstrations and will attempt to blow up some of the public buildings. . There was no one in -the factory when ' the police visited it this afternoon. .Two men who were caught entering the court were arrested on suspicion. For an Open River. Vancocvek, March 24. Ed. W. Wright, formerly of the Astoria Pioneer and Bulletin, has taken editorial charge of the Independent. Ed is a first class newspaper man, and will make the In dependent one of the leading papers of Washington. He will be devoted to an open river, to secure which he will re quire attention to the channel above the mouth of the Willamette, before any further expenditures are necessary be low that point. - It U Miss O'Shea Now. London, March 24. The engagement will soon be made public of Mrs. Par nell's daughter, Miss O'Shea, with Henry Harrison M. P., who was one of Par nell's most faithful supporters. v He will be remembered in America as one of the committee visiting the states last year to secure funds for 'Parnell. Har rison took charge of Parnell's affairs after his death. . Telerrapnlo Flashes. . : British Columbia proposes to increase the Chinese head tax from $50 to $100. Seattle's new regime is to turn every republican out of municipal office. The Canadian Pacific railway strike is about to terminate. A Japanese "colony is locating in Sonora. v k- - It is Baid thai the reason why Timothy Hopkins has withdrawn from the Searlea will contest is because he found out that the etillman:;' and Hubbard: $11,000,000 partnership allows bib side but $5,600, 000. ' A" compromise! was" affected for $3,125,000. i The ; three' Cass -. : county " judges, serving a term of imprisonment in Kan Baa City for contempt of - court, ' on ' the old bond suit, mysteriously disappeared from jail, but they were out on parole of honor. . NO. 86. GOT IT IN THE EAR. King William Roasting For a. Fight Witt His Ministry. ' : - GERMANY VERY MUCH DISTURBED, Fears that the Kaiser May Vent Him self Outside the Kingdom. HIS VIOLENCE IS INSULTING. Sensible People Favor jt Regency Want to Set Down Hard on the. Cray Monarch. New York, March 23. I am able to give you today, news which is absolutely reliable, reeardine the rjolitinnl Berlin. The emperor has been in such a state of abnormal excitement for the past fortnight that he has shut himself up in his private apartment, and has re fused to grant an audience to any one. The attacks of the press on the Loi Eco laire, and on the troubles in Berlin, still arouse him to anger. But what has ex cited him more than anything else, is a letter from a schoolfellow of the Cassel lyceum, now a professor at Tubingen,' who has always kept on the best possi ble terms with the emperor. In his let ter he sharply criticized the Loi Ecolaire, and said that the speech at Brandenburg would antagonize the emperor's friends, who had placed all their hopes on him. The letter reached the emperor on the 16th. A cabinet council was held on the 17th. During the session the emperor did not say a word, and when he saw that his ' ministers were opposed to his plan he made a sign that he was willing to give it up. When, however, Caprivi said "Your majesty, the order of the day has been passed," he arose and burst into a violent harrangue, in which he in sulted the minister, and used such bitter language toward Caprivi that in a visit to the latter Prince Henry ,the emperor's brother, found it necessary to aDoloeize for the sovereign's conduct. CaDrivi still holds office, but he is very anxious to resign. The entire court insists that- he shall remain at the head of affairs at least until the emperor's health is rfi-es tablished, and the emperor himself is.; really urgent, on the ground that a change would cause confusion in the for eign office. A Berlin dispatch says that the foreign situation has never been more disturbed. Here is the lain truth in regard to the emperor's health? The official dispatches are right in savinir that the emperor has a cold, but they do- not say that the suppurating wound in nis ear, which has been closed since Oc tober, suddenly reopened recently, and a discharge began to flow, causing intense pain, and rendering the emperor so ner vous that his physicians found it neces sary to prescribe for him an entire change of surroundings and solitude. He does not see any one at the chateauHubertus. The Grand Duke Sergius, of Bussia, was in Berlin yesterday, and asked to see the emperor, lie was told that the emperor in accordance with his physician's in structions, could not receive him. In well-informed circles people are talking about the necessity for a recencv: and among diplomatists it ia said that Prince Henry is becoming every day more pop ular. It is possible that the enmeror may return to Berlin, but he is certainlv yery ill now. The official world is be ginning to be very uneasy. Fears are en tertained that William may seek vent for his excitement outside of Germany, and the same fears are entertained in London. In His Langs Today. Berlin, March 24. The TageblaUe re ports Emperor William is suffering from emphysema of the lungs. . No other pa per mentions emphysema, and nothing is known in well Informed circles con firmatory of the report. According to the official statement, the emneror is suffering from at attack of. a kind of in- nnenza. "T ' 'i'lm Washington. - J -;. 7 Washington; March 24. J. F. Hal loran,' president of the Astoria Chambers of Commerce and editor of the Attoriant iB in Washington. It is believed tht gentleman is here for the purpose of op posing the deep-water channel pn ' th Columbia from the sea, for the benefi of Portland. There is no appropriatior provided in the bill for this work, bu ' it ia expected that when it comes to th senate Jvir. - uoipn will tacic on ai amendment for Portland.