... - 1 .: VOL. III. THE DALLES, OREGON, SATURDAY, APRIL 2, 1892. NO. . PROFESSIONAL CARDS. WM. J. ROBERTS Civil Ekgineek Gen - eral engineering practice. Surveying and mapping; estimates and plana for irrigation, sewerage, water-works, railroads, bridges, etc. Address: P. O. Box 107, The Dalles, Or. , WM. SAUNDERS 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 OF Trikitt Medical College, and member of the Col lege of Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, Phy sician and" Surgeon. Office; rooms S and 4 Chap man block. Residence; Judge Thornbury's Sec ond street. Office hours; 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m. D R. O. D. DO AN E PHYSICIAN AND SCB- vuxi. vun. iuuuh u uu u viittpiuau Block. Residence No. 28. Fourth street, one block south of Conit House. Office hours J to 12 A. M., 2 to 5 and 7 to S P. M. DSIDDALL 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.DUrCB. GEO. ATKINS. FRANK XEKEPEE. DUFTJR, W ATKINS A MENEFEE ATTOR - keys-AT-law Room No. 43, over Post Office Building, Entrance on Washington Street The Dalles, Oregon. WH. WILSON Attorney-at-law Rooms 62 and 53, New Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. AS. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of . flee in Schanno's building, up stairs. The PaUes, Oregon. f. r. MAYS. B. S. HUNTINGTON. H. 8. WILSON. MAY8, HUNTINGTON & WILSON Attob-netb-at-law. Offices, French's block over First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. Young & Kass, BlacKsniitii & wagon SHop General Blacksmithing and Work done pronjptly, and ' all . work Guaranteed. florae Shoeeing a Spciality. TM Street opiiosite the old Lielie Stand. ddiw Still on Deek. Phoenix Xiike has Arisen FromtheAsh.es! JAMES WHITE, The Restauranteur Has Opened the Baldwin - fjestaorant ON MAIN STREET Where he will be glad to see any and all of his old patrona. Open day and Night. First class meals twenty -five cents. If you take pills it is because you have never tried the S. B. Headache and Liver Cure. It works so nicely, cleansing the Liver and Kidneys; acts as a mild 7hyie without causing pain or sickness, and does not stop you from eating and working. :. - To try It la to become a friend to It. For sale by all druggists. .-; , The Dalles PTRST STREET. ' PACTORT -NO. 105. ' . - . i ' - V fJCt A PC the Best Brands VlVJxllVkJ manufactured, and orders from all parts of the country filled oA the shortest notice." The reputation of THE DALLES CI GAR has. become firmly established, and the demand for the home mannfactured article is increasing' every day. A ULRICH & SON. Gijaf Faetofy All Right! -OUR SPRING .Ladies', Misses' and Childrens' FINE SHOES IS NOW COMPLETE. -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. jvi. wmwflms & co. Regular Clearing Out . Sale. MY ENTIRE STOCK, CONSISTING OF CLOTHING, DRY GOODS, BOOTS AND SHOES, Hats and Caps, Gents' Furnishing Goods,; Laces and Embroideries. WILL BE SOLD And the sale -will ' be ! continued until all is disposed of. - - ' A special opportunity is here afforded for small stores to replenish their stock. N. HARRIS, At the Old and Well Known Stand. DRUGS Snipes :& KiNERSLY, -THE LEADING Wine il Retail Driisis - Handled by Three Registered Druggists. . : -ALSO ALL THE LEADING Patent medicines and Druggists Sundries, HOUSE PAINTS OILS AND GLASS. 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, , The Dalles, Oregon : DEALERS IN: Staple and Faiiey Unties, : Hay, Grain and Feed. ; Masonic Block, Corner Third and All Right! STOCK OF- COMPRISES- AT BARGAINS. ARK- Court Strests. Th3 DallssfOregDn. NEW YORK'S SCANDAL Gnssie Astor as Chief. Actor ia a Pros jectiye Tragedy. HEKRY VAXE MILBAXK MEDIATOR. Drayton's Friends are Opposed to Pub lishing Minute Details. THE WHOLE SELECT 40O AKOISEU Terms of the Separation as Dictated by Mrs. Drayten to Her Husband.. The End. ' New' York, April 2. On Thursday, Harry Vane Milbank published a state ment as the friend of H. A. Borrowe, which seeks to justify the position taken by Borrowe, in connection with the Dray ton-Borrowe scandal, saying, among other things, that the agreement en tered into between Mr. Drayton and his wife, dated October 28, 1881, contained the following clauee : . "The wife has an income of $35,000 per annum under all circumstances. ' She retains , one-half, and agrees that the other half be depos ited with trustees, $5000 of which shall be paid to the husband, and $12,000 to herself . for the ; maintenance of '. the children.. Out of the money, she receives the wife is to keep up the establishment for the husband and family. The hus band's $5000 is for his personal expenses, such as clothing, amusements, travel ing, medical attendance, etc. The wife agrees, should she hold any written or verbal communication with Mr. H. A. Borrowe," that the $12,000 for the chil dren shall be paid to the husband, and he shall have control of the same and of the children. The husband on his part, agrees that for the $5000 he will go to Europe with his wife, and make his dwelling with "her there."" Mrs. J. Cole man Drayton, . who seems to be the excuse for the scandal and the duel which did not take place between her husband and Borrowe, is the second and the smartest of the thxee charming daughters of William B. Astor, who shone in New York's social heavens at the same time a few years ago. All three made fashionable and what were supposed till now to be happy marriages. J. Coleman Drayton comes of good New York stock, and at the time he married Miss Astor was practicing law. Whether or not the money " which came with his wife took away the keenness of Mr. Drayton's zest for legal distinction is not known, but the courts of New York have not seen so much of him as Euro pean courts of daintier fashion since his wedding day" Although the Draytons have a beautiful home in this city, they' have of late years spent most of their time abroad, principally in London and Paris, at the latter place a leader in society' at the American colony. " It seems to be the feeling that Mrs. Dray ton has been much abused. According to the ' newspaper gossip -of .the .day. When Miss Gussie Astor was a -New York belle her dominant characteristic was modesty.. So marked were the sim plicity of her manners and the engaging candor of her life that a portrait of her, pressing a milk-white dove to her bosom, was circulated among her friends, with the title "Innocence" beneath it. - . Not an April Fool., . Hamburg, April 1. Prince Bismarck is 77 years old today, and in this city, as throughout Germany, theanniver-" sary is being celebrated with enthusiasm. Bismarck is at Frederichsruh with the princess, his wife and his son, Count Herbert and the countess. - The prince has recovered from his recent attack of illness and is able to enter with' interest into the events of the day. VEarly in the day the reveille was sounded nnder the window of the' prince's apart men tl by the Ratzberg Jaeger." Every train brought large numbers of delegates, in cluding ' several Hamburg guilds and representatives of organizations in all parts of the empire. Tenants of the estate have testified - their loyalty by birthday gifts,- more acceptable to the prince from sentiment than value, and messengers are kept . busy iq the deliv ery of telegrams. . " - ,. t In-the Senate'. ' , Wasktngtox, April I. Senator Mor gan's resolution for an inqury into the operations of the silver laws, offered yesterday, .came up, but at Morgan's request it-was laid over until Monday. After routine morning ' business, the Indian appropriations bill was taken up. " - . - Poor Marian Dudley. " Milwaukee, April 1. For some time it has been quietly talked among the friends of Marian V. Dudley, the poet ess, that she was consigned to an insane asylum without ..proper examination. Yesterday the state board of control was in the city, and it was said that the members, came for the purpose of inves tigating, complaints made by Mrs. Dud ley herself relative to her confinement. She claims perfect abililty to care for herself and alleges that she was commit ted with the object of giving to other people the control of her property, which is said to be valued at. $10,000. The, complaint as to the mental condition of Mrs. Dudley was made by "her aged hus band last January, and after a private examination by the physicians she was committed to a private asylum without a jury trial and without an opportunity to be heard in her own defense. ' Spreckels not in It. Philadelphia, April 1, The opposi tion which has developed among the wholesale grocers, sugar . brokers and others interested in this city, by the ab sorption by the sugar combination of the three sugar refineries of this city, has crystal ized into a movement to make a fight in congress against the trust. The first step will be the intro duction in congress of a bill in the house to repeal the duty of one-half a cent, on refined sugar, . which, it is claimed, .serves no other purpose now, since there is but one interest, but to allow the trust to control the prices absolutely of both refined and raw sugars. An effort has been made to build a new independent refinery, but the projectors " have found it rather difficult to secure subscriptions to the stock of the enterprise on account of the well-known methods of hostility employed by the trust to crush out rivals. A Heavy Sal rage Claim. Has Fraxcisco, April 1. The steamer Keweenaw, Captain Jenkins, which was towed in Wednesday night with the loss of a rudder, will have a heavy salvage claim to meet. The amount is said to be not less than $75,000. The disaster happened about eix miles west of Point Reyes at 9 o'clock on Tuesday night, and at 4 a. m. on Wednesday the stern post was also carried away. The vessel is now lying at the wharf and discharg ing a cargo of coal valued at $19,500. The ship itself is worth a little over $200,000. During the storm the vessel rolled helpless and rudderless in the trough of the sea, which swept clean over the upper decks, wrenching pipes and iron stays badlv and smashing sky lights. . - . . . ; Bnchtel Highly Honored. New York, ' April 1; The king of Greece has conferredon John D. Buchtel, of this city, the cross of Chevalier of the Royal Order of the Savior. This is an exceptional honor hitherto not bestowed upon an American. - Mr. Buchtel has received from the Greek minister of for eign affairs at Athensthe silver cross of the Knights of the Royal Order of the Savior, and also a diploma signed in au tograph by King George I, and counter signed by L. Delyannis, Greek minister of foreign affairs. The honor was recent ly conferredon Prince Bismarck. Pretty Bongn Boxing. Bublixgton, la., April 1. One of the longest and most stubbornly-contested fights ever fought in this part of the country resulted in a draw. The con testants were John Worley, of Burling ton, and Jack Davis, of Keithsburg. The first six rounds were cyclone fight ing and for the next twenty it was give and take with lightning rapidity. - After about four hours' fighting the count of rounds ceased to be kept, and at the end of the fifth hour the battle was called a draw. Both men were terribly punished. . The Fakir and His Pills. Chicago, April 2. Four boys on the west side " have ' died from swallowing sugar-coated pills, left on the door steps at houses by a fakir. The boys followed him up, and when he left a box, con taining four each of the sweet-covered pellets, at a door, the boys would take them. One of the boys devoured the contents of forty-four boxes. . The Evangelical Church Fight. Cleveland, April 1. The -Dubs-Bowman Evangelical church bishops' fight was again- passed on today by the cir cuit court. . Judge Upson held that the general conference of the Bowmanites at Indianapolis was the true general conference.-- ' Pound Dead in Bed. - Washikgtosj, April 1. Charles Drake, ex-chief justice of the court; of claims, was found dead in bed this morning at his residence in this city. . He was 81 years old. - - - ; Death of an Ex-Confederate. Atlanta, Ga.,1! April 1. George N. Lester, attorney-general of Georgia, is dead. He Was a member of the Confed erate congress. THE CHICAGO BOMB. Mncn More Destrnctiye Missile man the French Bomb. - A CLUE TO THEIR MANUFACTURE. Schooled in the Use of the Materials, canjbe Prepared at Home. THOSE OF PARIS FliOM CHICAGO. Police" Aware of their Manufacture, Vet Unable to Trace TTp their blsposal. v Chicago, April 2. Since the arrest of the anarchists Ling, Spies, and Parsons, in 1887, their trial and sentence to death or the penitentiary, Chicago, has not ; been accused of being headquarters for -the bomb-throwing school, etc., but for some time past there' has been con siderable comment in police circles, about a "dynamite school"-in the city. It will be recollected that the Alarm, the paper published by Spies & ParsonS.gave formula and directions for . . making -bombs; This school, it is said, takes-the pupil in and actually instructs in all the details of manner, feature and use of ' the deadly weapons. There is said to be . ia Boston a similar school. -The stories concerning the Chicago bomb factory seems to find corroborating evidences, within a few days 'past, by dispatches from Paris to the effect that the bombs which have been found there were made ' on the Chicago model. The police in- . spector of this city, when questioned concerning the -dispatch, said he was aware of the fact that bombs were made in Chicago, vastly more destructive than anything that the French dynamiters have ever constructed said he : "On one occasion a carload of bombs were taken away from a certain place where they ' were manufactured, and no one has yet been able to locate them. T believe they are in the city ready to be used in case of -trouble. There is another lot of about 900 bombs secreted, but where the police " have not yet been able to tell. I believe these bombs are divided up among , the most faithful and trustworthy of the an archists. Besides this stock which I believe is etored in the city, there are' additional resources for the people -who use them. At present there are probably -200 men in the city who know " how to make bombs, and can make . them on their own kitchen stoves at night. The whole mechanism of the thing is so aim- -pie that the poorest kind of a mechani -. could easily make one' in an hour." . There is scarcely a leader in the labor movement in Chicago who does not be lieve in the necessity of force to attain success in that movement. The major ity of them say It is almost impossible- '. to win a strike without resort to force.. As a rule the American mechanic and the foreigners who have become Ameri- " ' canizedbelieved in using force against : men who attempt to take the places of the striking workmen. Fortunately there is no prospect of any trouble in. -Chicago at present. The prospect was- ., never better for a long continued agree- -ment between the workinmenof the city and their employers. - Road to Sioslaw. . Eugene, Os., April 1. The Siuslaw ' and Eastern railway company has sub mitted a proposition to the people of this county for the. construction of a line of railroad from this city to Florence. The proposition asks that a free right-of-way through the city and a subsidy of $100,000 be given by - the people,, for which the "company promises to build the road and have it in "operation in a . reasonable length of time. The. matter, is being considered by the leading citi zens, who seem to.be making a decided ' effort to secure the required amount..-; A Perfect Tornado. Kansas City,. April 2. It is esti mated that $1,000,000 would not cover the damages of the tornado of the past forty-eight hours, in this state, Kansas ' and Iowa. ' Tonawanda was wiped off " the face of the earth, and ' Augusta "was -buffeted ont of all semblance to its for mer self. The town was asleep when the storm swept down, and not a house or 'building was left standing. The storm raised everything in its path and . left dead bodies lying in its wake. Four bodies'" haye .been recovered from the ruins, v , ' - - - - , .' . ' - " Another cut in gcods today at the store of N.Harris. :. . .