. "11 VOL. V. Dress Goods Wash Fabrics White Gopds Table Linens SHOES Furnishing Goods CLlOTHIKQ Pongee Silks . Drapery Silks Dress Silks Trimming Silks "We would FREJiCJi & CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERALBANKXNU BCBI N KHH 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 termR. J. B. BCHKNCK, . President. H. M. Biau Cashier. first Rational Bank. VHE 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. Sigh and Telegraphic Exchange sold on v New York, San Francisco and Port T land. DIRECTORS. D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. Schbnck, Ed. M. Williams, Geo. A. Libbk. H. M. Bball. THE DALLES Rational ir Bank, Of DALLES CITY, OB. 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. 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-nix hours. . Carries the U. S. Mail, Passengers and Express Connects at Prin-ille with Stages from Eastern and Southern Or- egdil, Northern California and . all Interior Points. Also makes close connection at The Dalles with trains xrom i onianu ana an eastern points. - . Courteous iriTers.' . Gooi accommodations alonz tie road.- : . First-class coacles ana torses used. -. " .-Erpress matter MM witl care. All nersons wishing nassaee must, waybill at of- . rices before taking passage; others will not be received. Exnress must be wavbilled 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 ptuu uy me cumpuiiy. STAGE OFFICES; SC. Blehel St Co. Store. Umatilla House. Prineville. . Tbe Dalles. PHOTOGRAPHER. First premium at the Wasco county fair for best portraits ana views. fce pleased, to have yotx call and line, best assortment, COLUMBIA CANDY FACTORY Campbell Bros. Proprs (Successors to W. S. Cram.) Manufacturers of the finest French and Home Made . xO .A. 2sT DIES, East of Portland. DZAtEES IN Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish any of these roods at Wholesale or Retail In K very style. Ice Cream and Soda Water. 104 Second Street. The Dalles. Or. JOHN PASHEK, rnercnani Tailor, 76 Court Street, Next door to Wasco Sun Office. Has jnst received a fine line of Samples for spring and summer Suitings. Come and See the New Fashions. Cleaning and Impairing to order. Satisfaction guaranteed. Seed Wheat,' " Oats, " Corn, " Rye, " Potatoes, Garden Seeds, Grass Seeds in Bulk. -AT- J. H. GROSS' Hay, Grain and Feed Store. Ui. H. Yoang, BiacKsmiiy wagon Slop General Blacksmithing and Work done promptly, ana all work. Guaranteed. 1 Horse Shoeing a Speciality TMrd Street opposite tlie oil Lielie Stanl Six Per Cent. Interest. Six Years' .-' Money Sinking Fund or Building and Loan Plans. The New England National Building, Loan & Investment Ass'n, Oregonian Building, Portland, Or. JOELG. KOONTZ, AGENT, TTlxo Dalles, Oregon. DSP- Agents Wanted! Address the Portland Office. THE DALLES, OREGON, Ctjut Spring" S-fcoois. of ; ur Enoos are 'tlxe "Tlie Regulator Line" Tie Dalles, Portlani and. Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Freignt ana Passenger Line 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 RATES. One way Round trip. .2.00 . 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 ALLAWAY, General Agent. B. F. LAUGHLIN, ...:' General Manager. THE DALLES. OREGON The Dalles FIEST S'-L'-fciZE-Hl'-L'- '""- FACTORY NO. 105. fTf T Q of tbe Brands VlvXiiXiO 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. ' to Loan ! Time, and May be Paid On or Before Maturity. TUESDAY, MARCH examine our stock. latest novelties, and A. M. WILLIAMS PARIS AGAIN EXCITED Deyelopments in the Panama Canal ' ScanOal. WASHED CP. BY THE WAVES Life-Saving Patrolman at Long Branch Finds a Pocketbook' Containing 45,000. Paris, March 13. The approaches to the Palais' de Justice were thronged to day by excited crowds. There has not been such excitement since the begin ning of tbe Panama scandal. The crowd is composed fo all classes, from the militant socialist to the wealthy mer chant and financier. There was an ominous murmur of angry talk, and a menacing frown on the faces of the lower classes in the throng that reminded one of the days preceding the commune. The courtroom 'was thronged with as many as could obtain admittance. The prisoners seemed themselves revived by the new interest which their cases had awakened. Some thought the features" of Charles de Lesseps bore a book of triumph, while even Baihut looked less crushed than at any time previous since his pitiful confession. The chamber of deputies was crowded with members and spectators in expectation of a division that would result in' .the cabinet crisis, but owing; to the '.fact that Bourgeois, late minister of justice, had been sum moned to give testimony in the trial of Charles de Lesseps and his fellow de fendants, the debate on Panama matters was postponed.' Washed TJp by tbe Waves. Long Branch, N. J., March 13. It was reported here last night that Joel R. Wooley, a patrolman attached to life saving station No. 4, between Long Branch and Asbnry Park, bad fonnd a pocketbook on the . beach containing $45,000." According to the story, he was patrolling the beach on his regular tour Of duty early Friday morning when an unusually heavy wave swept far up on the sand. As the great wave receded, Wooley 'saw something black rolling over and over with the shifting sand. He picked it up and found it to be an old and fat leather wallet; opening it, he discovered a roll of I bills which made his eyes bulge out. The money was principally in $100 and $50 bills, although there were some of smaller denomina tions. In commenting on his alleged good fortune, people recall the peculiar actions of Harry Tyrell, the variety actor, who owned., a house in Asbnry Park and lived there last summer before his mind gave way and he was taken to Bloomingdale asylum, New York, hope-' lessly demented. Tyrell was known to have a great deal of money in his pos session, which mysteriously disappeared. He was caught one day burying a roll of bills in the ground hear his home, and seemed to have a , mania for . secreting money in that way. It was believed that he buried large sums of money of which no trace could ever be found. Special Session In Wyoming. Chetbnne, March : 13. Two - of the leading newspapers of the state have come out in advocacy of a special session of the legislature. Many public men are in favor of it. Scarcely any of the politicians believe that A. C. Beck with, the gentleman favored by the governor when the' legislature failed to elect a senator, will be admitted to .the senate The extra session would be somewhat different in composition from the regn lar. "A democratic senator was unseated the last day, and a republican senator left his party and went to the populists 14, 1893. We have the largest There would be an equal number of democrats and republicans and . six populists. : Both republicans and demo crats will hope to capture the prize, and the fight would be exceedingly warm. John Charles Thompson' would be the candidate of the democrats, and F. E. Warren of the republicans. A Ghastly DiscoTery. Abiqciu, N. M., March 13. A party prospecting in the old Spanish copper canyon came upon the skeletons of 43 soldiers in Devil's gulch. A company has been missing from Fort Mary ever since the Apache raid on Espanola, September 0,. 1879. It was supposed they were slaughtered by Indians, not one ever bavmg returned. It seems, however, that all had died from drink ing from . poisonous springs, where the skeletons had lain bleaching ever since. The skeletons of some were still en cased in uniforms, and the guns were Btacked as they left them. A lot of am munition and the skeletons of 45 horses constituted the ghastly discovery. . Pugilism Doomed. New Orleans, March 13. Pugilism is done for in New Orleans, - Fitzim- mons will, not get his $37,500. He will get $15,000 or $20,000 in cash, all that is available, and good paper for tbobalance. There will be no more contests in the Crescent Club ring, and perhaps no more in that of the Olympic Club, though the Bowen-Burke match is scheduled for the first week in April. The clubs will go at general athletics and rowing, and die unless their social sides are strong enough to bear the financial loss of such shows, which have long - ago ceased to pay in richer towns than New Orleans'. The women of the city are organizing an anti-pugilistic league as they did an. anti-lottery league, and., the. leading papers editorially denounce the contests. The next legislature does not meet un til May, 1893, and the city authorities are with the clubs, both Presidents Noel and Dickson being members of the city council ; but the best opinions are that neither club will fly in the face of public Opinion, and that pugilism in New Or leans is done. Tbe Senate This Week. Washington, March 12.4-The session of the senate tomorrow will probably be brief and confined mainly" to the recep tion of nominations from the president. Within a day or two following, the com mittees, however, will be appointed and the body in working order, so far as the business for which it is called together is concerned. Members of the committee on privileges and elections are already devoting attention to the .study of .the precedents and law affecting the guber natorial appointments of senators from Wyoming, Montana' and Washington and will doubtless be ready to make re ports soon after . their credentials are presented. As the points involved are many and the question itself complex, it is expected a debate will ensue in -the senate upon the : presentation of the report' of the committee that may oc cupy several weeks. t t The Railroad Strike. Toixno, March 13. A . new complex ion is put . on the Toledo & Ann Arbor Highest of all iri Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. NO. 75. &, CO strike this morning, by an order issued by the United states district court at Cleveland, directing that all connecting roads continue to receive freight from the Ann Arbor road regardless of the fact whether it is handled, by non-union men or not. Chief Arthur hurried over from Cleveland te look over the situa tion. The order makes it very awkward for him. It he orders a general refusal by brotherhood men on, connecting roads to haul Ann Arbor freight, he lays himself liable to being hauled up for contempt of court. He called the heads of the local committee on adjustment together, and after a long secret confer ence it was decided to make overtures to the Ann Arbor road for an adjust-, in en t of the differences. A conference with the officials will take place this afternoon. It is believed the trouble will be settled. Small Notes for Cold. , Washington, March 13. The treas ury department continues to receive offers of gold from the west in exchange for small notes, for which there1 is at present an increasing demand. Several' offers had to be temporarily declined, as it was found the gold was all light weight, and until those who offered it made up the deficiency in weight the government could not accept it. In this connection it is interesting to note that the government requires absolute accu racy before it will receipt for light weight coin. . Attempted Suicide and Murder. Detroit, Mich., March 13. An at- wmpivu uiuruer auu auwiuu luuk place at a late hour last night in a disreput able house on Gratiot avenue. Joseph Esser, clerk in Black's house-furnishing establishment, shot and seriously in jured Anna Shea, an inmate of the place, and then blew his own brains out. The girl will recover. ' The affair was the re sult of a quarrel. Another Highbinder War. ' San Francisco, March 13. The high binder war has broken out afresh. This morning Buck Chew, a Chinese laborer, was shot five times and killed by Si Gym, a highbinder. The murderer has been arrested. ' Bucklen's Arnica Salre. Th Vxst palvH 111 the world for cuts. bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion, or mbney refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Snipes & Kin- ersly. Proposals for Bids. Sealed bids will be received at the of fice of Crandall & Burget until noon March 20th, 1893, for the superstructure of a proposed dwelling to be built for W. L. Bradshaw on the northeast cor ner of Washington and Fourth streets, The Dalles, Or., according to the plans and specifications prepared by C. J. Crandall. Bids will also be received at . the same time and. place for , the mason work of the above , mentioned building. Plans and'specifications can be seen at the of ffice of Crandall & Burget. , - The right is reserved to reject any and all bids.