CO ;.' " VOL. V. THE DALLES. OREGON. MONDAY, JANUARY 30, 1893. NO. 38. nn A. W. E. GARRETSON, Jeweler. SOI.K AGENT FOR TIIK All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry. Made to Order. 138 Second St.. The Dalles. Or. .COLUMBIA CANDY FACTORY Campbell Bros. Proprs (Successors to .. s. Cran.) Manufacturers of the finest French and Home Made 0-A.asr id i ie s Eaat of Portland. -DEALERS IX- Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish any of these goods at Wholesale or Retail FtESH OYSTBnS4 In Kvery Style. ice Cream and Soda Water 104 Second Street. The Dalles. Or. CU. tf . Yoang, Biacksmiin & vsoon snon General Blacksmithing and Work done promptly, and all .' work Guaranteed. Horse Shoeing a Speciality TMrd Street, opposite me old Lielie Stand. XV. K. WISEMAN. WM. JIAKDERS. Uliseman & Jtoders, Saloon and Wine Room The Dalles, - Oregon. Leading WILLIAM'S &, GO THE DALLES j Rational Bank, Of DAIXKS CITY, OR. ! President - -Viee-Presittan t , Cashier, - - Z. F. Moody Charles Hilton M. A.. Moody General Banking Business Transacted. Sight Exchanges Sold on NEW YORK, SAN FRANCISCO, CHICAGO and PORTLAND, OR. Collections made on favoreble terms at all accessible points. FREfiCfi & CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BU8INE8H Letters of Credit issued available in he Eastern States. Sight Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fav orable terms. Dress-Making Parlors FagMonabre Dre Cutting and Fitting a Specialty. Room 4 over French & Co's Bank. J. Q. DOMESTIC And KEY WEST CIGARS. FRENCH'S FIpE WlMEg and LIQUOR iOOISp J. S. 9CHKNCK, President. H. M. Bnu CashieT. First Rational Bank. :he dalles. - OREGON A General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to Sight Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly remitted on day of collection. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on New York, San Francisco and Port- .. land. DIREOTOHS. D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. Schknck. Ed. M. Williams, Geo. A. Likbk. H. M. Beall. GENTLEMEN ! BEFORE YOU ORDER GOODS OF ANY KIND IN THE FURNISH ING LINE, alT (SLnd $&& me Shirts of all kinds to order, at prices which defy competition.- Other goods in proportion. P. FAGAN, Second St., The Dalles. Sole Asrent for WANNAMAKER & BROWN, Philadelphia, Pa and (lIoa-MaIpng MRS. GIBSON, Prop. SV1ACK, THE CELEBRATED PABST BEER. BLOCK." ONE MONARCHY LESS. Ttie Qneea of The' Sandwich Islands AMcateUne Tnrone. 'TWAS A BLOODLESS REVOLUTION. Split on tbe Proposition to Grant a Lottery Franchise. TIIK MINISTERS WOULMT'T STAND. Tbe United States Appealed . to., by a Commission en Bonte. to Annex tbe Islands. Honolulu, Jan. 18. Cor. A. P. The downfall of. the Hawaiian mon arcbial government has finally occurred. Yesterday a provisional .government was organized, composed entirely- of white residents, who assumed control of all the functions of government and awaits the decision of the United States government whether it will accept the Islands as a portion of its domain. The events which led up- to this situation commenced immediately ' before the departure of the steamship Mariposa for San Francisco January 11th, by the passage of a bill which gave a conces sion for the establishment of a lottery in the kingdom that franchise being given to six people on the promise of an an nual payment of $500,000. This meas ure the ministers would not support and the proposition had the support of only one white man, the other twenty-five votes necessary to curry it being con tributed entirely by natives and half casts. . This act was followed on the after noon of January 12th, after the depart ure of the Mariposa, by springing a vote of want of confidence in the ministry, and which after but little argument was passed by a vote of twenty -five, the exact number necessary. The, defeated ministry had the confidence of the pub lic and of capitalists and the business community, and as a prorogation of parliament had been set . for January 2lst, by the queen herself, their tenure of office was expected to run until 1894. Considerable excitement then followed among the white residents of the islands, which was heightened on January 13th by the appointment of a ministry in which there was no confidence, and by the fact that the queen on the morning of Jan. 14th signed the lottery bill. The climax was reached on Jan. 15th by the queen attempting to promulgate a new constitution, guaranteeing to her absolute authority, but which her new ministiy declined to indorse. The queen made her appeal almost entirely to the natives and half caets to sustain her. There was a public meeting in front of the palace later on. at which the queen announced the failure of her plans, and early in the evening the citizens met, and formed a committee of public safety. On the 16th a mass meeting was held in tbe armory. About 5 p. in., the United States steamer Boston landed 300 men, all fully armed. They marched to the office of the consul-general of the United States. - The marines were sent to the American legation, while the sail ors marched out along Merchant street with two Gatling guns, and camped for a time on private grounds. A1,l day Tuesday, the 18th, the community was in a state of expectancy, looking to the committee of public safety to do some thing to end the state of tension and to secure the rights of all citizens against encroachment once and for all. The ministry fled and the committee read the proclamation to the masses, declaring the Hawaiian monarchical system of government is hereby abrogated,' and Droceededto form a provisional 'govern ment. All Free. ' Those wlio have used Dr. King's New Discovery know its value, and those who have not, have now. the opportunity to try it free. Call on the advertised drug gist and get a trial bottle, free. Send your name and address to H. E. Bucklen & Co., Chicago, and get a sample box of Dr. King's New Life. Pills free, as well as a copy of Guide to Health and House hold Instructor, free. "All of which -is guaranteed to do von good and cost you nothing. Sold by Snipes & Kinersljv ' No Choice Yet. Olymna, Jan. 30.: Special. Tbe ballots todnv for'Unifed States pinnfor THI COMMISSIONERS WOKK. Immediate Action Betas; Taken In the Navy. WASHKrGToN,Jan.30. Special Mott Smith, the representative in Washington of Queen LHIiuokalani, after an inter view with Secretary Foster thought the new government could be maintained without a display force by . the United States. He believed, he said, that the people themselves .would regulate mat ters, and that there . would . be no trouble. Smith had believed the revo lution inevitable, but thought it would sot come so soon. , The Banger and the Mohican have been ordered to sea im mediately, the Mohican direct to. Hon olulu, and the Ranger to proceed to San Francisco and await further orders. The revolution was accomplished without bloodshed.- H. B. Dole, an American, was made president of the provisional government. The commission will reach here Tuesday. Up to the time of the departure of, the commission from Honolulu, all the powers represented in the Hawaiian Islands, excepting Great Britain and Japan, have recognized the new government. . The foreign powers represented at the- islands include the United States, Russia, Germany, France, Austria-Hungary, Portugal, Spain and lta'y, besides most of the smaller European states, Mexico and several of the ' south American republics.. , Tbe committee to negotiate a treaty , of annexation to the United Slates consists of I-orin A. Thurston, William C. Wilder. William R. Castle, Charles R. Carter and Joseph Marsden, S." B. Dole, presi dent of the provisional government of Hawaii, is a son of the late American missionary !o Hawaii, a graduate of Williams college, and has been associate of the supreme court of Hawaii. He is a scholarly man, of acknowledged legal and judicial ability. Must Ceate Interfering. CrsciNATi, Jan, 20. The United States court has taken positive action in the cess of the miners' strike, the re sult of which will be interesting. Some time ago L. C. Black was appointed by the federal court receiver of the Great Western Coal aud Mining Company, operating mines on the Big Sandy liver. When he discharged the check-weigher the mines struck and refured lo let any one fake their- places. Judge Taft has found them in contempt, and issued an o"der that they must ceas-e interfer e nee with the new men and vacale the company's house by the 1st of Feb ruary. The Greatest Building In the World. An astonishing feature of the Colum bian exposition will be one of tbe palaces grouped in the heart of the fair grounds. It is the Manufactures building. It will bear the same relation to this exposition as the Eiffel tower did to that of Paris in-1889, and indeed its possible use as a vantage point from which to see the fair grounds has terminated in the negative the discussion for and against the con struction in Chicago of a rival to the great tower of Paris. This greatest of all the exposition buildings, and of the buildings of the world, will present to Lake Michigan a facade of such a length as to suggest the wall of a city, yet it is so admirably designed, so light and graceful in its effect upon the vision, that its true extent can only be compre hended when its dimensions are ex pressed in figures and by comparisons. It is one-third of a mile long, and to compass it round about is to walk a mile. The roof of it is 1,688 by 788 feet, and' the span of the dome, the largest ever attempted, is 388 feet. The roof is 230 feet from the ground, and the build ing has forty acres of ground floor. Two of the vast machinery halls of the Para exposition could be wheeled through it, and the Auditorium, the building of which Chicago is most proud, could be pushed under this great roof, tower and all. Julian Ralph in Harper's. - Little Jlaneaters. There are other ftsues which will at tack man lsuiles sharks, the worst of Which are not more ferocious than a small tontli American lisli found in the waters of the Orinoco river. It is a lit tle ereatniv. only six or eight inches in length, but in schools it will' - attack hu man beings and eat them up alive if it gets a chance. When you go fishing in that river those fierce pijrmies will take bites out of the fish you catch as-you are hauling them in and yon will do well not to fall out of the boat if you wish to w:aoe beiujj mutilated. Washington Highesfof all in Leavening Power. -Latest U. S. Gov't Report. HOW DAVID GOT THERE Came Pretty Near Estaffiflini a Nev Precedent for TMey. HOW HE PASSED THE DARDANELLS Departure From the Common Custom of Sending a Minister Foreign. CKCI9K IN THE WARSHIP NEWARK. Received by Order of the Saltan am the Imperial ' Yacht Tall a at Smyrna Hla Abode. , Pootxako, Jan. 30. Hon.- D. P. Thompson, U. S. Minister to Turkey, arrived in Constantinople "Dec. 26th. Word was brought here yesterday by Mr. Horace Brown, of England, on bis way home from a trip around the world. . Mr. Thompson completed his trip under ratljer unusual circumstances. He had been instructed to proceed to his post by way of Brindisi, Italy, where he was to meet the American cruiser Newark flag ship of the Mediterranean squadron, commanded by Captain Casey, and hav ing Rear-Admiral Ben ham and staff on. board, and proceed in her to Constanti nople. This was rather unusual, as it is not the custom to send a United States minister to a foreign capital in a man-of-war. Mr. Thompson joined the Newark, December 19, and was received with the honors of a minister, a salute of 21 guns, and prepared to sail the same dcy for Constantinople, but Admiral -Benhain was not sure of the right of a bhip of the armament of the Newark to pass the Dardanelles, and it was de cided to send a dispatch to Constantino ple asking permission for the Newark to come to that city, the answer to be sent -to Smyrna in Asia Minor where the Newark was held. On arriving at Smyrna an answer was icce'ved stat'ng that it would be a bad precedent to set to allow a cruiser of the armament of the Newark to pass the Dardanelles, but that tbe sultan had ordered the imperial yacht Talia, with, two of his staff on board, to proceed to Smyrna and bring the minister to the . capital. The Talia passed tbe Darda- -nelles on the afternoon of Christmas day, with tbe stars and stripes flying, and was saluted by the forts and shore batteries on the way, and arrived at the entrance of the Golden Horn on the morning of the 26th, when the minister was sent on shore in the Talia's boat, with the American flag flying, and was saluted by the Talia's crew on leaving. Abrahim Bey, Dr. Isaac -Pasha and Mr. Gargiu'o went in the Talia to meet Mr. Thompson when he arrived and took np -his abode at the Hotel de Londres. Mr. Brown was' staying at the Hotel de Londres at the time, and says the arri val was made the occasion of quite a demonstration. He says there was quite a little un dercurrent of talk as to why such un- . usual honors should be paid the new minister from the United States by the sultan, as such a reception has not been accorded the minister of any other na tion in his service, and why it was given in this case no one appeared to know. Mr. Brown says he bad just a moment's i conversation with Mr. Thompson, who appeared to be in good health and spirits, but had many important matters to at- j tend to. On the 27th Mr. Thompson i went to the portn with Mr. A. Gargiulo, I first dragoman of the legation, and called upon the minister of foreign affairs, his excellency, Said Pasha, with whom he left a copy of his credentials. On the evening of the 28th a grand dinner was given by the British ambassador to wel come the new United States minister, at which most of the diplomats were pres scnt. Daring the following week he was to be presented to the sultan. , CarDets and furniture at reduced rates at Crandall '& Burget's, next door to Floyd & Shown's drug store,., i " v. .. 'VVv 1 i i VkJ t wrv c , ill. , - . 7T ' - v. 11