'CO-. -fit- . J - -C .1. . VOL. IV. THE DALLES. OREGON, WEDGES DAY. :BEPTMBERfel892 NO. 902 v 4 - . , , - . ..--.'- , i Y W. E: GARRETSOK. LBBdhUI , , . sole Agent fob the All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made "to "Order. 138 Second St.'. The Dalle. Or. Kranich and Bach Pianos. Recognised as Standards of the high est grade of manufacture. . JUDGE NELSON'S DECISION. Speaking of -patent medicines, the Judge says: "I wish to deal fairly and honorably with all, and when I find an article that will do what it is recom mended to do, I am not ashamed to say eo. I. am acquainted with Dr. Vander pool (having been treated by him for cancer), and have used his blood medi tine, known as the 8. B. Headache and Liver Cure, and while I am 75 years old, and have need many pills and other remedies for the blood, liver and kid neys, I must eay that for a kidney tonic in Brights disease, and as an alterative for the blood, or to correct the action of the stomach and bowels, it is a very su perior remedy, and beats anything ' I ever tried. " J. B. .Nelson, - Yakima, Wash.' At 50 cents a bottle." It is the . poor man's friend and family doctor. JOHN Next door to Waaoo Sun. Just Received, a fine stock of Suitings, .rants ratterns, etc., oi all latest Styles, at Low Prices. Madieon's Latest System used in cutting garments, ana a nt guaranteed each time. Repairing and Cleaning Aeatly and Quickly Done. CHAS. 3TUBL1XU. OWEN WILLIAMS. Stubling 8. Williams, The Gef mania, SECOND ST., THE DALLES, - OREGON "Dealers in Wines. Liouors and Cigars. Milwaukee Beer on Draught. W. 8. Young, BlacKsmitn&wagoQSHop General Blacksmithing and Work done promptly, and all work Guaranteed.' Horse Shoeeing a Speiality Third Street, opposite tne old Liebe Stand. The St. Charles Hotel, PORTLAND, OREGON. This old, popular and reliable house has been entirely refurnished, and every room has been repapered and repainted and newly carpeted throughout. The house contains 170 rooms and is supplied . with every modern convenience. Rates reasonable. A good restaurant attached to the house. Frer bus to and from all trains. C. W. KNOWLES, Prop. Jeweler PASHEK, JHeicMt - Tailor, Clothing Our pall IJpe Of Clottiing and Furnishing Goods is now complete. You. cari ' . 5aueT09ey By. seeing making 6- no lUiin DRUGS S N I PES &, Kl N ERS LY. -THE LEADING Wholesale mil Mill IHiiis Handled by Three Registered Druggists. ALSO ALL THE LEADING - ... .?. Patent ffledieines 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 AKE- Dealers The Largest Finest Line of Imported Key West and Domestic Agent for Tansill's Punch. 129 Second Street, J. O. FlflE WlfflEjj) DOMESTIC And KEY WEST CIGARS. FRENCH'S 171 SECOND STREET, WM. BUTLER & CO., -DEALERS IN- , Lumber, Lime, Plaster, A liberal discount to the trade JEFFERSON STREET, between Second Building our stock before your purchases. Wall Paper. in Cigars. The Dalles, Oregon MACK, and LIQUOR THE CELEBRATED PABST BEER. BLOCK. THE DALLES, OR. Rough and Dressed Hair and Cement. n all lines handled by us. and Railroad; THE DALLES, OR Williams 4 loo NEW ALBANY Mi B. Hill, Attorney And Councellor at-Law. After Election. - THE ATTORNEY OF CORPORATIONS. - . .": ';'-v The Last Sail Driven Into The Trans- continental Coffin. HAH N lOT ALL ITS' USEFULNESS. Date of The Final Burial Fixed For January lit, The Limit of 90 Day Notice. . Albany,' Sept. 27. Within, a few months, probably when the present campaign closes, the shingle of "David B. Hill," attorney and councellor-at-law will be hung out in Albany, and the senator will become part and parcel of the profession and population of Albany. Senator Hill's practice will be confined to cases in the court of appeal and the general term, and it is understood that he has been promised the legal business of several large New York city corpora tions. . : ' , Death of The Awsoeiation. CaicAGO, Sept. 27. President Manvel, of the Atchison road, today destroyed any doubt of the withdrawal of his line from the transcontinental association by making an official announcement of the fact. The reasons for withdrawal are summed up in the acknowledged fact that the association has lost all its use fulness and will in any event die a natu ral death on January 1st from: the de fection of the Canadian Pacific, Northern Pacific and Great Northern.' The withdrawal- of all others transcontinental lines is anticipated before October 1st, as that will be tUe limit when the . 90 days' notice required will be effective on January 1st. Weather Report. Portland, Sept. 28. B. S. Pague, local forecast official of the weather bureau appears at the helm again, and on issuing the last of weekly crop reports today says : "This ends the regular weekly crop-weather reports of 1S92; they will be resumed next year with the opening of the growing season. TVe take this opportunity to thank the large corps of correspondents throughout" the state for their promptness and faithful ness in reporting so accurately their crop-weather conditions, and trust that next year they may again be with ns in our work. The season has been very successful in all productions for the Oregon farmer, and these bulletins have been of valne to the public. The month- Iv bulletins will, as usual, continue to be issued." Of the weather . for Eastern Oregon the past week, Mr. Pague says: "The (temperature has been deficient dnring the past week, and frosts occurred on the higher elevations. Fresh snow fell in parts of the Blue mountains on the 23d. . General rains prevailed during the week and amounted to from 0.25 to 0.80 of an inch. The rain has been of great benefit : it has cleared the atmosphere of smoke, it has given the graes a start and has softened the earth sufficient to allow of fall plowing to begin.. Reports indicate preparations for an increased acreage of grain for next year. Corn, is ripe and ready to be gathered. . Late peaches are ripening and are of good quality. A Youthful Fiend. San Jose, - Sept. 27. Johnnie Navar- ette, a 6-year-old boy, was playing among the rubbish at the city -dump yesterday. He found a beep bottle, and called a cpmpanion. The other lad, Nathan Hackelback, who is fourteen years old, coveted Johnnie's prize. Johnnie vowed he would not give it up. At this the other seized the little boy by the shoulders, and held him over a portion of the refuse which was burning, with his bare feet dangling in the blaze. The little fellow writhed and screamed under the dreadful torture, but the .tor mentor laughed, and it was only when he was tired out that he let the boy go. Almost crazed with pain, the boy made his way to his father's residence. He was immediately taken to a physician's office, where his injured feet were dressed.- They presented a sickening appearance. Hia tormentor was ar rested. ., T " - t uot. r lower . aeciaes toai coai, iron, etc., can be : carried , cheaper by canal than by rail, , . , . . , Buffalo, Sept. 28.-Gov. Flower and State Engineer Scbenck. have returned from a tour of inspection of ' the .Cham plain canal. Gov. Flower said tonight regarding the trip: - "Ot the sixty-four miles of ' the Cham plain canal thirty miles have a water depth of six and ' a ialf. feet, and thirty-four miles a depth of four and ; a half feet. - The heavily flaS en boats carrying aboat 160 tons, I noticed, dragged on the bottom in the four feet of water, and ! am satisfied that prudent appropriations should be made annually to dig out the canal so as to provide at least six feet of water. The money need not all be appropriated in one year. -1 have no donbt whatever that the heavy freight such as coal, moulders, sand, iron ore, and lumber can be earned much cheaper by canal than by rail". ! Otherwise the canal was found to be in good condition." The governor will make a tour of mspection- of the Erie canal next month. Too Confoundedly Prosperous. ' Beardstown lllinoiau. When a lead ing democrat declared in conversation recently that the "country was too con foundedly prosperous," for easy cam paigning, he inadvertently paid a high tribute to the satisfactory . condition of things under republicanism and protec tion denied at other times, yet never theless, serviceable in demonstrating the true situation to be one. of absolute certainty for republicans ' and' total eclipse for the democracy in November. Had it rained all summer, as it did in the spring, or sudden drought' followed the rainfall and burned up what had not been drowned it would be easy to cam paign in the interests of free trade and democracy. But the only thing in - the calamity line that they can charge up to the party in power is the cholera, which is charged up to protection, because bo many free trade victims come to America to avoid starving over there. ' Features of the Campaign. . Tacoma News. . Adolphus B. Hanna, candidate for United States eenator. eays that C. W. Griggs, supposed candi date for United States senator, is buying up people's party leaders and doing all sorts of wicked things with that myster ious $100,000 which is on tap in the Griggs' cellar. The Post-Intelligencer, which has a candidate for United States Eenator, says that C. W; Griggs, who is supposed to have a candidate for United States senator, is going to "fix'.' thou sands of railroad men for the democratic ticket because he knows "Jim" Hill, who employs them. And all this time poor Griggs is laid up at home trying to get the kinks out of his back caused by his .recent accident. V . - Town Burned. . '' Sioux City, Iowa, Sept. 27. The town of Howard; the county seat of Miner count?, on the Southern Minne sota railroad, was nearly wiped out by fire yesterday afternoon; . It caught in a livery stable, and spread so rapidly be fore a high wind that the people barely escaped from ithe building. Mr. . and Mrs. B. Ailsworth were caught in the building and killed. More than fifty buildings Jwere destroyed Loss, $100, 000. Sale of Cattle.. Long Creek Eagle, . H. Y." fBlacwell has contracted 1,000 head of stock cat tle to Evans & Curtner, of Ft. Dermit, Humboldt county, Nevada.' Henry will endeavor to fill this contract from the stockmen of Grant county, and will make the delivery on November 1st. Many such sales of cattle as this and good times should prevail again among our stockmen. Much Excitement in Michigan. St. JosEPn, Mich., Sept. 27. There is much excitement here over the case of a man named Wed, five miles in the country, said, to be suffering every symptom of cholera. The public echoojls are closed. ' j Knight and Day. ' Long Creek Eagle. A. Knight has been appointed postmaster at John Day, and will enter upon his duties of the office October 1st. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. NOT -STAMPED OUT. Hoping Against , tie ' Fate of Cholera in -'New Tori City. CASES DEVELOPED YESTERDAY. The- Bohemia t of: the --PestShip- Line . - Contributing her Quota. A PKOVIDESTIAL INTERFERENCE. A . Oroundless Scare In Chicago Ii. . cltement in Michigan Suspected ' ; Case in Texas. - New York, Sept 27. Two new cases ot cnoiera were reported on the steamer Bohemia this morning, the first in seven ' days. The patients are two Bohemian children, aged 7 and 8. The latter, has since died. - The steerage passengers were to have been removed from the ves sel yesterday but rough weather provi dentially prevented. At noon three more cholera patients were, lemoved from the steamer Bohemia, Carl Gass man and two children. (First cabin passengers of the Scandia and Bohemia arrived at quarantine at noon on the tug Evarts, of the Hamburg-American line, en route to the company's dock at . Hoboken. There are 28 from the Scandia, and 10 from the Bohemia. .. A Scare in Chicago. Chicago, Sept. 27. The ofScera of the. city health department were considera bly frightened last night by a man who : entered the health' office in the city hall and said: "I am sick, and I want to be sent to the hospital. They turned me away from the Michael Reese and Mercy hospital because they though t I had the Cholera. ' It you gentlemen cant do something for me, I'm going out in the street and lie down and you will have to . take care of me then. I have money enough to pay any expense that may be incurred and I demand to be sent to the hospital." The sick man was William Forney, collector for the Standard Oil company in New York,' and a nephew of John W. Forney, secretary of war under Grant. He left New York city Friday on the Pennsylvania - limited express and is on his way to San Francisco on -business for ' the company. " He was taken sick on-the train, and the con--' ductor, fearing he' was affected with cholera, put him off the train. -The next train, however, picked him up and brought him to the city. A r-eporter ' rang up Dr. O. N. Huff, and the latter hurried down town and examined the patient. He said. the man did not have ' the cholera. Forney was then put to bed in one of the big hotels upon assur ances from Dr. Huff that he was not ill with the cholera. Ralls for Coos .Bay. San Francisco, Sept. 27. Agents of the steamer Emily entered into a con-, tract yesterday to transport 400 tons of steel rails to Mareb field, Or., for the Coos Bay and Roseburg railroad, which is to be built as soon as possible to Co quille city, a distance of about twenty two miles. The road is built ten miles out of Marshfield and graded for eight miles more. As a starter the Emily will take up 10U tons of ' rails when she sails for Coos bay tomorrow afternoon. Com. Feck's Report.' Albany,' Sept. 27. In the supreme court today an application for a manda mus to compel labor commissioner Peck to produce certain papers was referred to Judge Edward in the special. term, for the second Saturday in October. Peck filed a long affidavit, reciting that , the information in his report was ob tained under a pledge of secrecy. .."'' Suspected Cases In Texes. ' San Antonio, Sept. 27. The 'state health officers report to Governer Hogg of having attended two suspected cases of cholera. ; One died Sunday. TO '.- -.'''. '