CO 0111 VOL. III. THE DALLES, OREGON, THURSDAY, MAY 26. 1892. Look at the Bargains ! ; : AT THE: OLD AND WELL KNOWN STAND. AlW&iJg to the Foqfc ! . REGULAR Cleariim OUT Sale ! , My Kntire Stock, Consisting of ; Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats and Caps, BEETS' Furnisning GOODS, LaGBS ' EmiiioiiiBiies SOW GOING AT BARGAINS. , And the Sale will be con tinued unfil all is disposed of. - A special opportunity is here afforded for small stores to replenish their stock. ... Call and Price these Goods, ' . AT THE OLD AND WELL KNOWN STAND. 'wat. mer.it NO S ! If you take pills it is b-PCHUHc you have never tried tlio"v w S. B. Headache ana liver Gure. It works so nicely, cleansing the Liver and Kidneys; sets as a mild physic without causing pain or sicknoui, and does not fctop you from . eating and -working. ...-,... ' o try It la to become a friend to It; For sale by all druggists. Voang & luss , - Disaksmiin s wagon sugd General Blacksmitbing and Work done promptly, and all work , Guaranteed. . flopse Shoeeing a Speiaiity TM Street, cpiosite theoll Liebe Stand. MRS. C. DAVIS 4 Has Opened thie REVERE RESTAURANT, In the New . Frame Building on ; SECOND STREET, Next to the Diamond Flooring Mills. " t First Class Meals Furnished at all Hours. Only White Help Employed. . Clothing We have just received another, invoice of Dry Goods, including Satines, Sum mer Flannels and White Goods, which are now ready for your inspection. PEASE Spring Dry Goods, "J The. Largest Variety, - the , Summer Dress Goods, The 'Prettiest Patterns, the Most Fash ionable Shades. See our stock. ' Gents' Furnishing Goods, Collars, Cuffs, Ties, Hats, Etc., We sell "MANHATTAN" SHIRTS. Fine Footwear, In every Size, Price and Width. A new line of Lawn Tennis Shoes. ; ! B. JiL. WlLiliIACQS & CO. DRUGS Sn i pes &, tTHE ; LEADING Itei ;ii Retail Dngsis 1 XX 3RL 33 2HLTX CS- S3 V J: . :Hajidleiby TljresBegisiereil Druggists! ' ALSO ALL THE LEADING . . r , Patent. ffledieines . and HOUSE PAINTS. OILS MID 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. ; v Finest Line of Imported Key West and Domestic Cigars. Agent for Tansill's Punch. - . . 129 Second Street, ; : ; The Dalles, Oregon & MAYS Stock, the Most Complete Best Assorted Selections. Kin ersly. DnmQists Sundries. AKE- a. r. PLEADS FOR HIS UFE. A Very Singular and Unnsnal Cause in Tennessee Court. IMPOSING SCENE IN BROOKLYN. Sixtieth Anniversary ' of the Sunday Schools Celebrated. CAME BACK TO THK PESITESTIAKY Seeking; Pardon for a Crime After Ser eral Years Absence Bombs In California.' . .Jackkon, May 26. On the 10th of March, a year ago, Col J H. Clay King, of the Tennessee bar, murdered a brother lawyer, David H. Poston, in a deliberate and unprovoked manner -in Memphis. He was arrested, trig for the crime, and is now . under sentence of death. . An appeal was taken on points of law which are in themselves of nnnsual interest. By the rale of the sapreme court, attorneys are limited to two hours for argument, but Colonel King has taken, his casfe entirely out of the hands of counsel, and, owing to the peculiar circumstances attending it, the supreme court has agreed to allow him three hours to make his own argument on the appeal from a verdict which con demns him to death. ' The case will come up in the supreme court today. Many distinguished lawyers from every part of the state and from : other states are here to hear him. l Want to Secure a Pardon. . Jekfebsonville, May 26. Sixteen years ago Gov. Williams, then governor of Indiana, gave a convict named Bisot leave of absence for sixty days to visit his mother; who was ill and . not ex pected to live ; on his promise to return to prison at the expiration of that time. Instead he fled the country and went to Mexico, where he .. studied medicine and lived an upright life. .' The mother lived, and has appealed to every governor since for the pardon of her son, but each re fused to do so. Gov. Hovey said he would not even consider the matter ex cept upon Bisot's surrender at the prison.- ; Yesterdy he ; voluntarily ap peared to the prison authorities here to don the stripes. : It is believed that the governer will release him with a few days. On Christmas night, in 1876, Bisot and a young companion killed the city marshal of Bedford. Thev were sentenced for life. ,X ,5 f ; , " Brooklyn Sunday' Schools, j. ; ' New York, May 26. At the annual 60th parade of the Brooklyn Sunday schools yesterday old. men and women who have been pupils and teachers were present. The parade was the finest ever held, the clear sky and mild atmosphere adding greatly to the success.: Nearly 70,000 children marched in the proces sion. There were 170 schools represented and the seventy thousand children were divided into twelve divisions. At the close of the parade the little ones were taken to the different churches and echoolhouses, where they were served with refreshments. . ' Toea Beer Promote Temperance. , Hillsbobo, Or.,- May 26. Hon. W. D. Hare, candidate on the Independent ticket for circuit judge of this district has fot "years advocated beer as a med ium to advance the cause-of temper ance. ' His ' arguments' seem, to have reached the brewers and at the annual convention of the United States Brewers' Association in . Boston, yesterday the session was 'devoted; to reports on " the various' phases of the 'brewing business! The trustees reported that it had been decided to make an : exhibit at 1 the world's fair not only of beers and brew ing, but also to present statistics show ing tbe effect of this greaf industry on agriculture, manufactures, and its ten--dency to promote temperance, etc. It is also proposed to hold .. an, international brewers' congress at that time. The report of the vigilance committee dwelt on temperance legislation in the various states: f ji - a ' . . .... A Chance for Settler. Washington,1 May;' 25. Representa tive Hermann says the president will soon issue orders for the survey of Kla math Indian lands ii Oregon with a view to their allotment in severalty and opening of the surplus, to white settle ment. ., There are several million acres in this reservation!. : ' ' " " ' : : Remonstrances From Washinrtor. Washington, May 26. Senator Alli son of Iowa, yesterday introduced an other remonstrance from the chamber of commerce of Port Townsend, Wash., giving reasons why no applications should be made for coast defense vessels for Puget sound or for the construction of a ship canal from lake Washington to the sound. In the first instance the re monstrance says the land defenses are much better than the vessels could be, and much expert testimony is furnished to prove that assertion. As to the lake Washington canal, it is charged that the project is not intended for the benefit of the public ; that its utility is very much doubted, and that it is only a scheme to revive the land boom." Trletrraphle Flashes. The announcement that the Northern Pacific had succeeded in establishing a line of steamers between Tacoma and China and Japan is cofirmed. There will be three ships, under the British flag and voyages wilt be made monthly in each direction. The Northern Pacific, as a company, will not have any pecuni ary interest in the steamers, the steamship- line taking the ocean earnings. The Northern Pacific overland earnings on the traffic will be interchanged. The steamship line will deliver exclusively to the Northern Pacific, but will com pete for exports from the Pacific coast at all points,'. Washington for Cleveland. j .V Axcoi vER, May 26. There were no instructions accompanying the delegates to the Chicago convention, appointed by the state democratic convention in sesr siori here yesterday. The manifest choice was for Cleveland, and the men tion of his name was the signal for a whoop; Of the delegates, in a rousing speech, Frank K. Lane, of Tacoma said : "They will go knowing that Washing ton is for Cleveland, and they will stand by him until there is no longer any chance of his nomination. But that time they will not see, for the very stars in their courses are making his fight. But whoever may be our leader, we will march under his banner to vic tory." Mr. Lane prophesied victory in the 9tate campaign because of the late legislature, which he characterized as a legislature of a thousand scandals. ' Bomb Miscreants Work. San Fbascisco, May 26. An investi gation reveals a clue to the perpetrators of a diabolism in San Diego night before last, and arrests will be made for blow ing up a non-union blacksmith shop with dynamite. The ' shop was ' on a principal street and owned by a man named George Schmidt, who advertised to conduct the shop independently of the blacksmiths' union, which had- ex pressed the determination to do him up, and it is the general belief that the ex plosion was in direct execution of that threat. The building was completely wrecked", the roof being blown off .and the sides blown out. A night mounted patrol had just hitched his horse in front 'of the building and moved a little way off, and the horse narrowly escaped being struck by the flying timbers. The Pope Protects the Jews. Kome, May "25. Jesse Seligman, of New York, accompanied by Dr. O'Con- nell, rector ot the American college here, i visited Cardinal Kampolla, papal secre tary of state,' with the object of enlist ing his sympathy on behalf of the Jews. The cardinal said ' he - would be most happy to ' do his utmost to aid the humane cause. The pope, he ' added, has always been a protector of the Jews. When persecuted everywhere else, they found refuge in Rome. . ' Orerproduction of Leather - Johnstown , Pa., May 25. On account of the overstocked niaket the tanneries of the United States have decided to close for sixty days, beginning on June 1st. This will take 2,500,000 skins out of the. market. , . ' - . ' i : Glass Works Destroyed. . Scranton, Pa., May 25. Dorfinger's glass works at White Mills near Hones dale, were1 totally destroyed by' fire last night. . The loss is over $100,000. The plant1 was among " the' ' largest' in the United -States.' :: '-'!,'.' ''" ' " . Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest J. S. Gov't Report. - - - . v . : . '.V . ! Li.:.;.:igaro AN INSANE RULER. Emperor William of Germany Away Out of His Head. - SENSE OF THE CZAR AVOIDED WAR. But Such Fortunate Results Cannot be Always Hoped for. . GERMAN PEOPLE AFRAID TO SPEAK ! If the Matter Is Permitted to Kest, Trouble May be Expected Some Day Other News. London, May 26. It has loner been the feeling of the people that something was wrong witn tne emperor of Ger many. The first thing of a public na ture to express the subject is a state ment yesterday in a leading reputable social paper of this city, from which the following is taken: "The Emperor William of Germany, besides having a hereditary predisposition to a very dis tressing form of mental malady, suffers from a painfully 'diseased condition of one side of his head, leading to an occa sional acute crisis, which in a less ex alted patient would be described as In sanity. Despite unceasing efforts to keep the matter a secret, it has become , known that the kaiser, without. con sulting any of his advisers, has twice, within the past six months addressed ; messages to the St. Petersburg govern ment, which, if they had been taken seriously as the acts of a man answera ble for his conductmust have led to an immediate war. The czar, however, ' fully understands the unfortunate men tal condition of his fellow monarch, and, being also anxious for peace, has found a way out of the difficulty by ignoring the messages or pretending to misun derstand them ; but such, a fortunate re sult of these eccentricities cannot, in the nature or tilings, be always hoped ' for.. Were the czar, for instance, desirous of a pretext for a justified declaration of war, the insane act of the kaiser would plunge the nation into a bloody and ex pensive combat, whose outcome no man-. could predict. There is a feeling deep- . ening in Berlin among those familiar with the situation, and it is all the ., deeper because nobody ventures to speak openly of what thousands are thinking. ' ' - .- v a Murdered at a Picnic. Makysville, Cal., May 25. At an in quest held on tbe-remains of Jesse G. Foulk, who was shot at a picnic a week ago, the jury brought in a verdict charg ing W. R. Lane with -murder, -and Lu cian Dynelly with. being an accessory. Lane is now recovering from his wound, and will be arrested. . Dynelly is in jail and makes light of his connection with the crime. -. . A Reading Locomotive. Bckkalo, May 26. -The Reading an-, nounces a new record for engine No. 618, which haule'd the Royal blue line train last Saturday over the 85 miles between Wayne junction and ' Jersey city in 87 minutes, and from Wayne junction to Bound brook, 55 Tniles, in 53 minutes. The engine is a new compound locomo tive of a type which is breaking records right along. '" The Naughty Reading. Hakbisbubu, Pa., May 25. Attorney Gen. Hensel will go before Judge Mc Pherson today and ask for the appoint ment of a master or examiner to ' take testimony in the case of the Cdmmon wealth against the Reading company. The Gratefulness of Republics. . -.Sparta, Mich., -May 25.-: Norman Chinman, an old and poor veteran liv ing near" this . place, ' became tired of waiting for a pension ' that he had - ap plied for,' and committed suicide yester day by shooting, . ' ' '.