C'J Citr VOL. III. THE DALLES, OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH 28, 1892. NO. 89. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. WM. J. ROBERTS CIVIL Engineer Gen eral engineering practice. Surveyina-and mapping; estimates and plans for irrigation, sewerage, water-works, railroads, bridges, etc. Address: P. O. Box 107, The Dalles, Or. WM. SATJKDEK3 Architect. Plans and specifications furnished for dwellings, churches, business blocks, schools and factories. Charges moderate, satisfaction guaranteed. Of fice over French's bank. The Dalles, Oregon. DR. J. SUTHERLAND Fellow or Trinity Medical College, and member of the Col lege of Physicians and Burgeons, Ontario, Phy sician and 8urgeon. Office; rooms 8 and 4 Chap man block. Residence; Judge Thornbury's Seo . end street. Office hours; 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m. .- Tv B. O. D. DOANE physician and sub LJ eoh. Office; rooms 5 and 6 Chapman Block. Residence No. 23, Fourth street, one block south of Conit House. Office hours 9 to 13 A. M., 2 to 6 and 7 to 8 P. M. D6IDDA1X Dentist. Gas given for the painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth set on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of the Golden Tooth, Second Street, . B.B.DOrUR. CIO. ATKINS. FRANK KENEFEB. ' DTJFUR, W ATKINS & MENEFEE ATTOB-NBYs-AT-LAW Room No. 43, over Poet Office Building, Entrance on Washington Street The Dalles, Oregon. WH. WILSON Attorney-at-law Rooms 52 and 53, New Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. A B. BENNETT. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of- flee in Schanno's building, up stairs. The Bailee, Oregon. V. P. If AYS. B. S. HUNTINGTON. H. 8. WILSON. MAT8, HUNTINGTON it WILSON Attorneys-at-law. Offices, French's block over First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. Yoang & Kass, BiacKsntiiH & wagon Sfiop General Blacksmithing and Work done promptly, and all work Guaranteed. Horse Shoeeing a Spciality. TIM Street opposite the old Liene Stand. dtw Still on Phoenix Like has Arisen From the Ashes! JAMES WHITE, The Restauranteur Has Opened the Baldwin - Hestaufant 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. JEH.m 1 NO ! ! II you take pills it is because you have never ; -. .. inea me . S. B. Headache and Liver Cure It works so nicely, cleansing the liver and Kidneys; acta as a mild physic without causing pain or sicitness, ana aoes not stop you irora eating ana worsang. To try it la to become a friend to It. For sale by all druggists. " The Dalles FACTORY NO. 105. rTf" A "DO of the Best Brands XVjXx--lA)IO manufactured, and orders from all parts of the country filled on the" shortest nonce. Tvl Mrvntofinn of THE DALLES CI GAR has become firmly established, and the demand for the home manufactured article is increasing every day. - ' A. UL.RICH & SON. DeGk Faetopy. All Right! - OUR SPRING Ladies', Misses' FINE SHOES IS MOW COM PLETE. -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. A. VL. WmiilflfllS & CO. Regular Clearing Out Sale. MY ENTIRE STOCK, CLOTHING, DRY GOODS, Hats and Caps, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Laces and Embroideries. WILL BE SOLD And the sale will be disposed , qH . . . i . . A. special opportunity stores to replenish their stock. r . N. HARRIS , i . . .... ... . . . . . ... . . . At the Old and Well Known Stand DRUGS - Snipes &, THE LEADING mm it Retau Drip. Handled by Three ALSO ALL Patent ffledieines and HOUSE PAINTS, Agents for Murphy's Fine Varnishes and the only agents, in the City tor The bherwin, -WE The Largest Dealers in Wall Paper. Finest-Line of Imported Key Agent lor Tansill s Jf unch. 129 Second Street," : DEALERS IN : Hay, Grain Masonic Block, Corner Third 2nd All Right! STOCK OF , and Childrens' COMPRISES - CONSISTING OF BOOTS AND SHOES, AT BARGAINS. continued until all is . r ; 1 is here afforded for small Kin Registered Druggists. THE LEADING Druggists Sundries, OILS AND GLASS. Williams tJo. s Faints. AKE- West and Domestic Cigars .The Dalles, Oregon anuhancii; HSR and Feed. - Court Strssts, Th3 Datlss.Oregc? WANT THE TEST MADE The Silver Bill to Come up Again Under Clote Rule. ' PURELY A POLITICAL ISSUE NOW. Deeming Confesses the Work of the - "Ripper." A Nymphomaniac. HORRIBLE RECITALS OF CRIMES. Illinois, Nebraska, Kansas, Kentucky and Missouri in Another Fierce Storm. Other Washington; March 28. Today, or tomorrow", an effort will be made to again bring the silver bill up in the house,, by adoption of the "cloture rule," to force a vote. All the democratic papers of the east opposed to free coin age are holding the republicans respon sible for endeavoring to secure a vote on the direct question. .It may be that the republicans will not vote as a unit on this matter, ' but it is probable that enough of them will so on record to adopt the cloture rule, and then when tne vote comes direct on tne free coin age issue they will stand Bquarely on republican platforms opposing" the Band bill. : It is said that, senators are anxious that the bill, cloture rule and all; shall be kept out of that body, as there are but ten republican senators to vote for free coinage. The republl cans of the house who voted to table the bill based their action on the ground that the proceedings had reached a stage where the democratic party could no longer dodge the question, and that the vote on the motion to table would how.as..faHy,aiKl . plainly where the party stood as a vote direct on the pas sage of the bill would have done.' A very large majority of the democratic members voted for free coinage, while but eleven republicans yoted for it, and these from silver producing states. Of the democrats who voted to table the bill, many are avowed free-coinage men, but want to postpone action Until after the presidential election. The demo cratic party is as fully committed to free coinage of silver as the republican party is committed against it, and the platforms that will be made- by the two parties - in June will accentuate this difference still more sharply. There is a sentiment against any further agita tiori of the matter, and there are people who do not want the bill to go to the president as it probably would in case it passed the house. Speaker Crisp said Saturday he did not think the rule relative to the bill could be brought into the house and called up today, but but that it would probably come up tomorrow. A Murderer -of Women. Melbourne, - March 26. The Argus announces that Deeming has confessed to the murder of his wife and four chil dren at Uenham V ilia, Kain Hill, near Liverpool, and he has also confessed to the murder and 'mutilation of the last two women whose bodies were found in the purlieus of Whitechapel. Deem ing's appearance closely tallies with the description given the Whitechapel fiend Jack, the Ripper," and, although he does not admit the killing of the other Whitechapel victims, it is believed when he finds all hope of escape from the clutches of the law cut off he will con fess not only these murders, but others of which the police- know nothing. It transpires the unfortunate woman whose body was found, together with four chil dren, under the floor of the residence was not Deeming's first wife. ' Some years ago a sensation was - created in Australia by the mysterous disappear ance of the wife and two children .of a man who then went ... by r the name of Williams, but who ; turns out ;to. be Deeming. The family resided in Sydney. There was. a grave suspicion of foul play at the time, but-the bodies were not found, but the essential proof of ' murder being lacking the matter: was allowed to drop. Deeming subsequently went to England and married the woman whose murder be now , confesses. . The Argus s&yB Deeming makes no mention of his object in mutilating the bodies of the Whitechapel victims. President Eliot Backs Down. - Boston! March 28. A special to the Advertiser from Salt Lake, says the re port of President Eliot's Mormon speech was not correct. His side claim that he spoke with reference to ' Mormonism alone, claiming, that "as polygamy has been completely abandoned as a doc trine of the Mormon church, and- has been made a crime by the voters of the Mormons, ' he thought tbey should now be treated regarding their property rights and freedom of thoughts and wor ship precisely like the Roman Catholics, Methodists or any religious denomina tions." To this the Salt Lake Tribune claims that the first report was perfectly fair, and stated the speaker's sentiments correctly. Moreover, the same reporter was complimented a day or two after wards by a prominent saint for - giving so fair a. statement of what was said in the Tabernacle March 16th. A steno graphic report in the Deseret Neves sub stantiates this. -Besides, the reporter was with President Eliot the following day and there was no complaints what ever from him. Work of Saturday's Storm. Omaha, Neb., March 28. Communi cation by telegraph and telephone has been almost entirely cut off in the city by the severe snow storm now raging. Poles in all part of the city have been Drosen down and tne mass of wires is blocking travel. The street-car service has ' been abandoned. The storm started early this morning with rain, which quickly turned to snow, with a driving wind from the north. It is un doubtedly the-worst storm of the season. ARDS DRIVEN THROUGH BRICK WALLS. Cerro Gordo, Ills. March 28. A dis astrous cyclone visited this vicinity to day. A track 200 feet wide was swept through the most thickly inhabited par's of the country. Barns and outbuildings of all descriptions were demolished, but fortunately no lives were lost. The damage to property will be very heavy, but no accurate estimate can be made at this time. Boards and rails were driven through the walls of brick houses as if shot out of a cannon. " twenty-five buildings ruined. . Monticello, 111., March . 28. A tor nado, accompanied by - a severe hail storm, visited Piatt county today, dam aging many thousand dollars' . worth of property " and ' leveling tmildinge. -The tornado swept over Cerro Gordo, near here, and destroyed twenty-five build ings. . Barns and out-houses were car ried from their foundations and des troyed. No loss of life is yet reported, but there were many narrow escapes. BOUGH IN KANSAS. Kansas City, March 28. Dispatches report a severe wind and rain storm throughout the state. At Leavenworth houses, signs and fences ' were blown down. The telegraph facilities are im paired so that the details from other points are not obtained. The wind blew a gale here but caused no damage. DAMAGES IN OTHER PLACES.' St. Louis, March 28. Dispatches from the greater portion of Missouri report severe rain and wind storms today Many instances of ' minor damages. which aggregate considerable, are re ported. The storm has also reached into Aakansas and the Indian territory. . KENTUCKY CAUGHT IT. Springfield, Ky., March 28. Several farm houses were demolished here this afternoon by a storm which prevailed throughout this section. : Ezra Wantf to Come Back. Portland, March 28. Ezra Durand the Portland organ dealer, who skipped recently is in Mexico.' He has written to one of bis confidential clerks for list of persons to whom slock was sold and promising if tbey would not prosecute him criminally to return to Portland and settle up. He says he is making $300 a month selling pianos in Mexico with an early prospect of $500 and possi ble $1,000. His proposition cannot be accepted according to law, and. it doubtful if he tells the truth concerning his prospects. Oregon Prima Donna Dead. Portland, March 28.: Pretty little Louise C. Edgar, whose charming voice was an attraction in music loving circles of this city when Jennie Winston first appeared at the Casino, now New" Park died in New York last week. She was a native of Portland, ' greatly admired and. has at different times been connect-" ed-with leading opera companies of America.-( . .. , C. P. B. Steamers Tied up. Seattle, Wash.i. March ' 28. Steam boat men from the Columbia river and sound say the Puget sound -and Alaska steamship company" will pay the Union Pacific $300 a month for withdrawing its steamers from the sound. This will save the Union Pacific $650 per month, as it now pays the Northern $250 for wharf accommodations and $100 for office ex penses here per month, which will be clear gain, in addition to the subsidy. INGLAND HAS NO RIGHT Salisljury -Intentions Why Care, we for his Intentions? . LET HIM PERSIST IX REFUSALS. The Whole Controversy a Blunder From Beginning to End. IHFIDENCK V. THOUGHTLESSNESS Bight Vhlch we Acquired From Rus siaEngland has no Sort of Standing Minor Mention. New York, March 28. The question has been raised, and is one which must be. insisted .upon soon: "What has England to say about seals in Behring sea, anyhow?" Well informed people have insisted from the first that it was a mistake to consider the idea of arbitrat ing with England as to a right which we acquired from Russia, and in which Eng land had no sort of standing. It was an exhibition of characteristic British im pudence to make such a proposition, and of characteristic American thoughtless ness to entertain it,' for the fraction of a second. In doing so we consented to the" impeachment of our own title, to a slur upon the integrity of the transaction by... which this title was conveyed to us, and to the admission of England's right to enter a claim in the premises. It was a miserable blunder from . beginning to end. It is not too late, however, to withdraw from this sinister- entangle ment. Thanks to Lord Salisbury's latest performance in the field of his peculiar . diplomacy, and to the interlude of plain, -straightforward American assertion, with which Mr. Harrison has favored us, there seems fb W a perfectly legitimate opportunity for us. No one can com- - plain if we take advantage of this oppor tunity to retire from the whole wretched complication and stand once more upon our rights and our - recovered manhood. If Great Britain wishes to take the re sponsibility of a fight, let them begin. It will react upon them with such force as to shatter royalty, bankrupt their kingdom- for damages, and cause the world to admire brother Jonathan as he has never been admired before. - Mexican Justice. City of Mexico, March 26. Six men, who were caught recently pulling spikes from the track of the Mexican Ceiitral railroad, were summarily shot by sol diers of the rural guard. The poorer class of Mexicans have been in the habit of stealing the spikes and selling them. for 4 cents apiece. , A Swiss Village Burned. Berne, March 28. The village of ' Level, in the canton of St. Gall, has been almost entirely wiped out of existence by fire. More than sixty cottages are al ready destroyed. The people are utterly helpless to stay the progress of the. " flames. Telegraphic Flashes. Snow fell briskly in Grass Valley, Cal., . last night. Saturday's storm was practically severe all along the coast of New Jersey... The District of Columbia is to make up a cargo of foodstuffs for the starving Russians. The Ellis island investigation will let Assistant Secretary Nettleton, of the treasury, out of his. place. London seems to be quite solicitous concerning the fate of Americans,' in . the event the silver bill fails. The democratic delegates to the" Min nesota state convention, are instructed for Cleveland. The vote is 445 to 4 so far in seventy-five counties. . - Deeming was started from Australia yesterday. Several attempts were made to lynch him, women especially acting violently. -Deeming's lawyer denies that his client has confessed. - - y . ' Severe storms are again reported in -North Wales, "England and Scotland, with drifts from two to five feet high."' The storm is terrible off Berwick, and it' is feared the Newcastle steamer .has foundered, with loss of lives. ' B. L.. Upshur, the "son of his father" : young man, who figured so conspicuous ly last week as the friend of Drayton, in the Burrowe scandal, was locked up in a New York station house yesterday, and booked on a charge' of drunk and disor derly. . . ...