ST , ? teSaa" .aFJ Crf' . VOL. IV. THE DALLES. OREGON. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 12, 1892. NO. 1022 W. E. GARRETSON. Leaauig - Jeweler. SOLE AGENT FOB THE All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. . 138 Second St.. The Dalle.. Or. ich and Bach Pianos. Recognised as Standards of the bigh- eet 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 so. I am acquainted with Dr. Vander pool (having been treated by him for cancer), and have used his blood medi cine, known as the S. B. Headache and Liver Cure, and while I am 75 years old, and have used many pills and other remedies for the blood, liver and kid ' neya, I must say that for a kidney tonic in B rights 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 loan's friend and family doctor. JOHN PASHEK, I - Tailor, Next door to Wasco San. Just Received, a fine stock of Suitings, Pants Patterns, etc., of all latest Styles, at Low Prices. Madison's Latest System used in cutting garments, and a fit guaranteed each time. Ie pairing and Cleaning Neatly and Quickly Done. CHAS. 6TUBL1NG. OWEN WILLIAMS. Stubling & Williams. The Germania, - ' SECOND ST., THE DALLES, - OREGON "Dealers in Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Milwaukee Beer on Draught. Hi. H. Voang, BiacksmilU Wagon shop General Blacksmithing and Work done promptly, and all work Guaranteed. Horse Shoeeing a Spciality TbM street, ojpsite the oil Liele stall The St. Charles Hotel, . - PORTLAND, OREGON. This old, popular and reliable house has been entirely refurnished, and every room has been re papered and repainted and newly carpeted throughout. The house contains 170 rooms and is supplied with every modern convenience. Bates reasonable. A good restaurant attached to the house. Frer bus to and from all trains. C. W. KNOWLES, Prop. uiei Clothing. Vjv- Our pall (Jpe Of Clothing and Furnishing Goods is now complete. You can 5aue TOT)ey By seeing our stock before making your purchases. IUUq DRUGS Snipes & -THE LEADING win u Retail Ironists Handled by Three Registered Druggists. ALSO ALL THE LEADING Patent (Dedieines Bnd 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 J. O. FlflE WfflEff DOMESTIC And KEY WEST CIGARS. FRENCH'S 171 SECOND STREET, WM. BUTLER & CO.. : DEALERS IN Building Material, Rough and Dressed Lumber. Lime. Plaster. Hair and Cement. A liberal discount to the . trade JEFFERSON STREET, between Second ' 'JV- Kinersly. Druggists StifidMes, ARE - MACK, and LIQUOR THE CELEBRATED PABST BEER. BLOCK. : THE DALLES, OR. in all lines handled by us. and Railroad. THE DALLES, OR HITTING FOR TREASURE Buried in Santa Ana .Near Gonzales. Fifty Years Ago. ' MRS. MAYBRICK IS INNOCENT. What the Review of Reviews Proposes to say in its Next Issue. NEW YORK BURIED IN BUNTING. The Imposing; Karal Pageant on Hudson River Witnessed by a the Million People. San Antonio, Tex., Oct. 11. A Mexi can named Calos Villada has arrived at Gonzales from San Luia Potoai, Mexico. He states he ia a direct descendant of Santa Ana. He ia in search of several hundred thousand dollars buried treas ure, which, according to a chart in his possession, was buried on top of a mound a mile east of Gonzales, and was placed there by Santa Ana 50 years ago, while camped at that spot on his inva sion of Texas. The Mexican's story is received with credulity at Gonzales and a large force of men are assisting him in excavating for his treasure. Is Mrs. Maybrick Innocent. London, Oct. 11. In the next issue of the Review of Reviews, Stead, its editor, will have an article beaded, "Ought Mrs. Maybrick to Be Tortured to Death?" in which he reopens the whole case of the unfortunate American woman, now undergoing sentence of life imprisonment in a working prison for the alleged poisoning of her husband, a wellknown Liverpool merchant. Stead saya both he and Sir Charles Russell, ftbe---attorney-general, received from South Africa copies of the death-bed confession of Harry Wilson j" who de clared that he, with a woman whose name ia not given, placed arsenic in the medicine administered to Maybrick dur ing his last illness. A Triumphant Sneeess. New Yobk, Oct. 12. Yesterday the people of New York,. Brooklyn and Jer sey City turned out andlined up along Fifth avenue to witness the parade of schools in honor of the Columbian anni versary. Today they line up on each side of that great grand thoroughfare, the. Hudson river, to witness the impos ing naval parade. To even a greater ex tent than necessary the city is buried in bunting and the fashion has extended to the sight seers themselves, almost every one displaying the national colors on the lapel or elsewhere as personal adornment. All parts of the cities sur rounding New York harbor, except those bordering on the route of the parade, are almost deserted, it is estimated that not less than 1,000.000 people were massed on both shores from the battery to Grant's tomb to witness the stately procession as it moved grandly up the broad waters of the majestic Hudson river. The start was made at 12:30 o'clock from Gravesend Bay in three columns, 300 yards apatt. The foreign war vessels occupied tne center, witn a United States vessel on either aide as an escort. As the line entered the Narrows a salute of 21 guns was fired from either shore. ' ' - . ' A Corner on Ballots. Pierre, Oct. 11. Considerable anx iety iB felt in regard to printing ballots under the new Anstralian law. . They must be printed in the state, and only nine days remain for the work. The large fast presses in South Dakota are few, and only one firm in the state has enough paper of the kind required, and it ia holding off for better terms.' r Falling to Pieces. New Yokk, Oct. 11." The advisory committee of the Western Traffic Asso ciation tried to hold a meeting here this morning for the purpose of endeavoring to patch up their differences, but were nnable to secure a quorum and adjourned sine die. It is believed this amounts practically to a disbandment of the asso ciation. Dangerous Act. Niagaba Faxls, Oct. 11. Niagara gorge will be crossed on a 4 -inch steel cable Wednesday afternoon by Clifford Calverty, aged 22 years, and bailing from Toronto. Calverty expects to cross it in less than seven minutes. He will also do feats in mid-air, one of which is banging by bis toes. He will carry a 20-foot balancing pole. PLAIX TALK TO CORPORATIONS. An Important Rulxnc; Respecting Certain Irregularities on The Pacific Coast. A Washington dispatch says an impor tant ruling was made by the general land office yesterday. Through either negligence or incom petency of the South ern Pacific's Washington land attorneys, thousands of acres of land in California, as indemnity selections by the Southern Pacific, -aro forfeited by the latter by reason of defective filings, and its entries will be canceled unless the railroad can succeed in straightening out its land af fairs, which are said to be in a very bad fix.- Forty -thousand acres of Railroad company's indemnity lands in California were cancelled yesterday, 8200 being in the Visalia district and 30,000 in the In dependence district. The general land office today sent a letter to Henry Beard, Washington land attorney for the de funct California and Oregon railway com pany, yesterday in which Commissioner General Stone said : "In reply to your verbal request to be informed as to what list 8, if any of your pending indemnity selections are defective or invalid under the department requirements. I have to advise you that a hasty examination ot those now pending show that all, with two or three exceptions, are defective for want of a proper specification of losses, while some . are absolutely invalid for want of any specification whatever. The amount embraced in these lists aggre gates 5,000,000 acres, while something like 180,000 acres are now pending on appeal by the company from rejection of local officers, which are in . the same condition. Hence, before these lists can be favorably acted upon, it will be neces sary for the company to make them conform to the departmental require ments as heretofore stated. Should, however, the company neglect or refuse to comply with said demand and fail or refuse to make its list selections conform to the requirements of the rules of the department, such of them as are defective when reached in the order of business will be held for cancelation, and such as are valid will be canceled." A similar letter was sent to Beard as attorney for the Southern Pacific and the defunct Oregorf and California railway compan ies. In the case of the two last named roads 1,5000,000 acres of land filings are defective or invalid, and will be canceled unless the companies can make them conform to the requirements. - A VERY CLOSE CALL. ' A Passenger Train Saved fro: tlon by a Tramp. Destrue- Paesengers who wished to go to Port land Friday morning were delayed five hours at the Btart and the train did not get into Portland until 11 a. m. The cause of the delay was a slide in the Blue mountains, and it furnished some thrill ing incidents. That the train Vas not hurled to destruction, and the passengers killed, was owing to the exertions of a tramp to save, them. . He reached the point ahead of the train, and seeing the danger built a fire on the track and commenced to remove the obstruction. He had been over the track the day be fore and knew about when the express train was due, so that when he heard it coming he seized a brand from the fire and dashed down the track to meet it. The engineer saw him, reversed his engine and almost brought the train to a standstill, when it struck the rocks. The place where the accident happened was on the side of a bill where the road bed is built on a shelf cut out of the rock. At this point the road curves. Had the engine struck the obstruction at the speed at which it was running, the whole train would have been thrown into the ravine below. As it was, the forward trucks of the tender were thrown from the track. As soon as the passen gers understood the situation and saw in what peril they had been placed, they made up a handsome purse for the tramp. . Hun Be Locked I'p. . New Yoke, Oct. 11. At the annual meeting of the Northern Pacific, to be held here October 20th, the New York holders of preferred stock will demand that the $3,347,000 consolidated mortgage bonds set aside for preferred stock be locked up for a series of years. The Philadelphia holders will request the appointment of a committee of stock holders to examine the physical and financial condition of the property. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. CAUSE FOR ARGUMENT- Tne French Canadians of Three Myers Complicate Matters. LIKE THE M0XKEY UP A TREE, They . Go Crazy ; When -Told the Facts of Their. Unclean Condition. : THE AMERICAN CONSUL MOBBED. Perhaps a Trifle Too Eccentric Hut the ' Canadians Should Not Re fuse Good Advice. " Montreal, Oct. 11. Further particu lars have been received here from Three Rivers of the trouble the American con sul, Colonel Nicholas Smith, is having there. In his consular report Colonel -Smith commented on the style of living of the French Canadians in a manner that they consider not justified by the facts by long odds. On September 17th Consul Smith sent a report which was published in the abstract of the sanitary reports of the official organ of the marine hospital service of the United States. He stated that the town of Three Rivers contained few sewers and no paved streets, and there were charges of filthi ness; Colonel' Smith's literary style was not appreciated by the people of Three Rivers, and late on Saturday night, while he was in bed, a riotous mob of 2000 people surrounded his house with the intention v of wrecking it. Colonel Smith strongly barricaded every entrance and succeeded in keeping them out, but a shower of stones, smashed every window in his residence. The entire police force-was sent to his rescue and dispersed the. mob, which gathered 'again on a public square and burned Colonel Smith in effigy. In the early morning another attack was made on the house, but a strong cordon of the police surrounded it and their intended victim escaped.- The police are still guarding the house, for public feeling runs very high, and should Colonel Smith appear on the street he stands a good chance of being mobbed. The French Canadian press all over ' the province has taken the matter up, and Consul Smith's recall is peremptorily de manded. The matter has been br'ought to the attention of the state department at Washington and the Ottawa govern ment. Smith is a son-in-law of Horace Greeley and was appointed by the pres ent administration. He is said to be somewhat eccentric in his behavior. Current Topics. Several American girls are winning honors as sculptors in Chicago, and it begins to look as though it were no longer necessary to go to Rome for such work. The greatest genius is said to be Miss Julia M. Bracken. Hers is the -genius that defies environment. Born on the banks of Apple creek, near Gen eral Grant's old home at Galena, this ' unpretentious young girl has drawn ever since she can remember. It was her carving on her brother's discarded cigar boxes that first attracted serious atten- tion to her talent and- led her to the Chicago Art institute. We really must decline to credit the story that Chauncey .M. Depew ever thought of missing the chance to make a speech at the Columbus fair dedicatory ceremonies. We are pretty-credulous, but that yarn won't go down. - If Judge Gresbam is going to vote for Cleveland, as report now credits him with the intention of doing, let us hope ' that he will come out flat-footed over his signature and say so. A repetition of the hubbub raised over his rumored willingness to accept tne people's party nomination for president would be very wearisome just nor when the public mind is occupied upon matters much more important. ' atari TV n