VOL. V. THE DALLES, OREGON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1893. NO. 63. nn ackenfosheso lubbsr irctics and rubbers. A. M. WILLIAMS & CO. The Dalles Gigaf : Faetory FIKST STHEBT. FACTORY NO. 105. fTf A T C of the 3684 Branda VXvJTx.XVO manufactured, and orders from all parts of the country filled on the shortest notice. The reputation of THE DALLES CI GAR has become firmly established, and the demand for the home manufactured article is increasing every day. A. ULRICH & SON. COLUMBIA CANDY FACTORY Campbell Bros. Proprs (Successors 10 Y. s. Cram.) Manufacturers of the finest Krench and Home Made East of Portland. DEALERS IN Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish any of these goods at Wholesale or Retail tf-FflESH OVSTEl?S In Eierj Style. Ice Cream and Soda Water. 104 Second Street. The Dalles, Or. the Dalles AND PRINEVILLE Stage . Line J. D. PARISH, Prop. Leaves The Dalles at 6 a. m. every day and ar rives at Prineville In thirty-six hours. Leaves Prineville at 5 a. m. every day and arrives at The Dalles in thirty-six hours. Carries the U. S. Mail, Passengers and Express - Connects at Prino-ille with Stages from Eastern and Southern Or egon, Northern California and all Interior Points. . Also makes close connection at The Dalles with trains from Portland and all eastern points. .' Courteous arrrers. . . Good accommodations along at road. . . First-class coacles and torses used. " Express matter Handled win care. All persons wishing passage must waybill at of fices before taking passage; others will not be received. Express must be waybilled at offices or the Stage Co. will not be responsible. The company will take no risk on money transmit ted. Particular attention given to delivering express matter at Prineville and all southern points in Oregon, and advance charges will be paid by the company. - - STAGE OFFICES; K. SJonel A Go. Store. , Umatilla House. Prineville. - The Dallas. '9 er FREflCfi 6t CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GKNEBALBANKING BUSINESS 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. J. d. SCHKNCK, President. H. M. BKALl. Cashier. First Rational Bank. YHE DALLES. OREGON A General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to Sight Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly V remitted on day of collection. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on New York, San Francisco and Port- .''' land. DI RBOTOKS. D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. Schsxck. Ed. M. Williams, Geo. A. Likbb. H. M. Bball. THE DALLES Rational Bank, Of DALLES CITY, OR. President - -Vice-President, 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. iossamers, Money to Loan ! Six Per Cent. Interest. " Six Years' Time, and : May be Paid On or Before Maturity. Sinking Fund or Building and Loan Plans. The flew England National Building, Oregonian Building, Portland. Or. JOEL G. KOONTZ, AGENT, Tlie Dalles, Orogon. DSP Agents Wanted! Address the Portland Office. loo "The Regulator Line" Tie Dalles, Portland ana Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Freignt and Passsnger Lies Through daily service (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator . leaves The Dalles at 7 a. m. connecting at Cascade Locks with steamer Dalles City. Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland (Yamhill street dock) at 6 a. m. con necting with steamer Regulator for The Dalles. . PASSENGER RATE!. One wav " $2.00 Round trip 3.00 Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. Shipments received at wharf any time, day or night, and delivered at Portland on arrival. Live stock shipments solicited. Call on or address. W. C. ALL AWAY, General Agent. B. F. LAUGHLIN, General Manager. THE DALLES. - OREGON PHOTOGRAPHER. First premium at the Wasco county wr utsab portraits sou views. Loan & Investment Ass'n, WASHINGTON BOUND CMM and His Party Will Start for the Capital Tnnrsflay. , NO SPEECHES WILL RE MADE Stevenson's Friends Keep the Train Waiting Half an Hour to - Shake Hands. ake woonN. J.",Feb. 27. Mr. Cleve land has completed the arrangements for his trip to Washington, but he has not announced his plans. The pro gramme, however, comes from an au thoritative source and probably will not be changed. President-elect Cleveland will leave Lakewood on Thursday morn ing at about 11 o'clock in a special train, consisting of a fast engine, two parlor coaches, a baggage and a dining car. From Lakewood the train will run to Redbank and then to Elizabethport, where it will be. switched on to the main line of the New- Jersey Central and make an uninterrupted run to Philadel phia. ' There will be a change of engines here, and the only stop will be made at Baltimore. Orders have been issued to the train dispatchers along the line to sidetrack everything for Mr. Cleveland's train, and if that is done it is expected fast time will be made between Lake wood and Washington. Bloomikgton, 111., Feb. 27. All Bloomington was astir early this morn ing to bid farewell to Vice-Presidentelect Stevenson, who was to start on his journey to Washington for the inau gural. Stevenson and his family ar rived at the depot at 7 -.30, but the great crowd would not be denied and it was 8 o'clock before Stevenson could finish the round of hearty handshakes from friends and neighbors, and a great farewell cheer arose as the train pulled out. John Buskin, the great lecturer and art critic of London, England, has be come an imbecile. He was born in 1819, his father being a London merchant. Physically weak, his mental powers have been remarkably great. His earli est literary efforts appeared when he was only 15. He graduated from Ox ford in 1S39, and four years later pub lished the first volume of "Modern Painters," criticism of which brought him prominently before the public. He turned his attention to English archi tecture with a view to reforming it, in which he succeeded in a marked degree. He studied the best architecture of Eu rope, particularly Venice, and in 1851 published his "Stones of Venice," illus trated by himself. Very popular among his works are "Ethics of the Dust," "A Crown of Wild Olive" and "Sesame and Lilies." A Brave Engineer' Heroic Deed. Philadelphia, Feb. 27. Unmindful of his own danger, Dominick R. Torpri, a railroad engineer, last night plunged into a deep ice-covered pond at Fairhill station, and, after an awful struggle, succeeded in rescuing little Willie Temp lin, aged 6, from death. The child, while playing with others, threw a stick on the ice and then attempted to walk out and recover it. When twenty yards from the shore the ice gave way and the child disappeared beneath the surface. At the same instant freight train No. 45 passed along the embankment, at the bottom of which the pond had formed Engineer Torpri stopped his engine, and, rushing down the steep bank, jumped to the -rescue of the drowning boy. Fighting his way through the ice and water, which is fully 15 feet deep, he finally succeeded in reaching the child, and, nearly perished, he - was drawn ashore by some of his fellow trainmen. The child was carried to' the residence of Eugene Small, where he had been staying, and was restored to consciousness. The brave engineer was rushed to the hospital on a special train and last night was pronounced out of danger. Dr. Henry Wheatland Dead. ' Salem, Mass., Feb. 27. Dr. Henry Wheatland, many years president of the Essex institute, died today aged 81. His brother George Wheatland, died just a week ago. Mr. Wheatland was super intendent of the museum of the East Indian Marine Society from 1837 to 1848, and trustee of the Peabody academy of science, and of the Peabody museum of American archseology fllnd ethnology of Cambridge. She Married a Chinaman. Norwich, Conn., Feb. 28. Kwai Pahnles, at one time a student in the free academy here, and Miss Elizabeth Standish Jewett, of this city, were yes terday united in marriage at the home of the bride's brother, Professor F. F, Jewett, in Oberlin.Ohio. KwaiPahnles is a native of China and was sent here by the government when very young to be educated. He entered the - free academy here and became thoroughly Americanized. It was while he was a student here that he became acquainted with Miss Jewett, of Norwich, who is s daughter of the late Dr. Charles Jewett, of Norwich town, the temperance lec turer. His bride is highly educated and accomplished. The couple will reside in Brooklyn, N. Y. . The Tln-Plate Industry, i Washington, Feb. 26. Special Agent Ayer has submitted another report to the treasury department on the Ameri can tin-plate industry. The report shows the total production in tin and terne-plates for the six. months ending December 31, 1892, was 30,709,216 pounds, against 2,236,743,. pounds pro duced during the corresponding period of the previous year. - The report states that the Temescal tin mine in Southern California, and the Harney Peak mine in South Dakota, have suspended oper ations, and suggests, inasmuch as it now seems probable the tin mines of this country will not be developed in the near future to the extent that will afford an adequate product of the metal, it is worth while to consider whether or not, in the interest of tin-plate manufactur ers, that the law which imposes a duty of four cents per pound, on and after July 1, 1893, on cassiterite and bar block and pig tin, might be advantage ously repealed. Missing. San Fkancisco. Feb. 27. It is thought that A. R. Church, member of the firm of Dolline & Co., leather deal ers, of this city, and Eugene Frost, sec retary of McNears' electric street road in Oakland, have been drowned. Both men who live in Oakland, went to Al- viso Saturday night to shoot ducks. They hired a small flat-bottomed boat and went out among the tules Sunday morning. They did not return with the boat,which was found bottom up. Church did not appear at his office here this morning, and Frost has not been home. Nothing has been seen or heard of the missing men since they started out hunting. Thanks not Given. West 8ide. The appended address of thanks to President Fulton, of the senate was found in the senate chamber today. It was at Senator Cogswell's desk, and it is very likely that gentle man would have read it before adjourn ment Saturday morning had it not been for Friday night's differences. The ad dress reads: ' "The seventeenth biennial session of the legislative assembly of Oregon is now about to close. Our work for good, or ill, is nearly done. Though we have met and mingled together as senators with differences of opinion and with ideas that conflicted upon many positions, our intercourse has been marred by no per sonal quarrels, no factional feuds and no strifes, and will not leave bitter memor ies, remorse, nor regrets. Happily, ex treme partisan politics seldom had an occasion to disturb our serenity, or ' in terfere with our labors, and therefore, while still holding tenaciously to our political convictions, we can part in the sincerest personal friendship, and with respect for the opinions of each other. This gratifying conclusion of our labors is in a great measure due to the fairness, the wisdom,' the forbearance and the goodfellowehip of our presiding officer. All these qualities he has con stantly exhibited, and has thereby con tributed largely to make our labors easy and harmonious, and our session euc cessful. In bis trying position he has ever been impartial, courteous and kind, though firm, and is therefore entitled to the thanks of the members of this senate. I therefore move that the thanks of the senate be extended to the Hon. C. W Fulton, president of the senate, for his uniform courtesy, ' fairness, firmness. and industry, as its presiding officer during the present session." ' Karl's Clover Root, the new blood purifier, gives freshness and clearness to the complexion and cures ' constipation. 25c, 50c. and $1.00. Sold' by Snipes & Kinerely, druggists. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. 1 V J&&& Inaugural Address. New Yokk, Feb. 27. St. Clair Mc- Kelway, editor, of the Brooklyn Eagle, has been for several days at Lakewood, N. J. During that time he has had sev eral conferences with President-elect' Cleveland. He tonight writes his paper as follows : "Mr. Cleveland's inaugural address, as president of the United States for the four years from March 4th next, will contain about 1,700 words, and will be more general than specific in character. Mr. Cleveland has carefully written out what he desires to say, but will speak at the inaugural without manuscript. His utterances upon the financial policy, the tariff and economy will be decisive. Confidence in democratic principles as being able to deal with the problems of labor and capital, of sectional divisions and political unrest, will be expressed. The abolition of federal interference with elections in the states will, it i said, be treated as the recognized de-. cision of the people. The pension de partment, the new navy, a rigorous quarantine and the regulation of Immi gration will probably receive attention. The president may not refer openly to the question of annexation of Hawaii, but he will take a conservative stand and not act hastily. Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland will go at once to the execu tive mansion after inauguration, and not to any private residence, as has been, stated. President Harrison has had the white house put in admirable condition. He has been in correspondence with Mr. Cleveland, and the latter greatly ' appre ciates the kind, provident and hospita ble spirit which the retiring president has shown for the comfort of the family of the incoming executive." An Unappreciated Verdict. Telegram. The jury in the trial of Frank Ohleg schlager brought in a verdict at 4 -.20 o'clock Saturday afternoon charging the defendant with murder in the second degree. The jury was out just 55 min utes, and took four ballots. When the verdict was read the murderer's sisters and old father almost collapsed with joy. They fell each upon the other's neck and wept rapturously. Ohlegschlager him self seemed almost the only wholly in different person in the court room. He simply looked about as" though an auctioneer had shouted "sold." He did not even appear glad; but with an idi otic gaze when asked what he thought of the verdict, asked what a verdict is. When the word was defined to him he replied that he did not know how he felt, and that his lawyers were handling the case.. The murderer will be sentenced tomorrow, morning to imprisonment for life. "Das vas der pest poy I got," said the old, gray-haired father, between ' bis sobs, "and I vas glad he will not pe hanged." 1 -'" - ' - Coyote Chase. ' Eugene Guard. The chase advertised to come off at the Stewart race track this afternoon was attended by about seventy-five peo ple in spite of the rain. One coyote had died, leaving but one to answer the roll call, and even this had only three feet to use. There were five or six dogs and they caught the wild animal. Yes, they couldn't help it. A flea can catch a pig if the pen is small enough, and enough fleas can make said pig exceedingly un comfortable. The sports (?) released the coyote the first time to see the dogs over take it and five of them kill it. It was a very successful affair. Joseph V. Dory, of Warsaw, 111., was troubled with rheumatism and tried a number of different remedies; but says none of them seemed to do him any good; but finally he got hold of one that speedily cured him. He was much, pleased with it, and lelt sure that others similarly afflicted would like to know what the remedy was that cured , him. He states for the benefit of the public that it is called Chamberlain's Pain Balm. For sale by Blakeley & Hough ton, Druggists. Ai Bstray Bay Mare. Came' to my place last fall a bay mare about five years old, with small white spot on right side, also white spot on left hip, star in the forehead, with some dim brand on left shoulder, weight about eight hundred pounds. Owner can have the same by proving property and pay ing costs. V. J. Kelly, 15-Mile creek. T lsa. M - aT a