CO &l)c Hulks Chronicle vol. v. THE DALLES, OREGON, SATURDAY, APRIL 8, 1893. NO. 97. Do You Wear Shoes? - We can fit We can give you any style. We can show you every width. We can sell you every size. WE CAN and WE WILL save YOU money on every pair of SHOES pur chased from US. v. See oar Shoe Seed Wheat, " Oats, " Corn, " Rye, " Potatoes, Garden Seeds, Grass " Seeds in Bulk. -AT- J. H. CROSS' Hay, Grain and Feed Store. YOUR JITTEJITIOH la oalled to the fact that Dealer in Glass, Lime, Plaster, Cement and Building Material of all kinds. Carrie the Finest Line of Picture Mouldings To be found in the City. 72 fJUashington Street. COLUMBIA Candy Factory, Campbell Bros. Proprs (Successors to V. s. cram.) Manufacturers of the finest French and -Home Made caudi'bs, Sast of Portland. DEALERS IN Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish any of these goods at Wholesala or Retail 0TFKESH 4- OYSTBf?S4& la Krery Style. Ice Cream and Soda Water. 104 Second Street.The Dalles, Or. Hugh Glenn THEN WE CAN your foot. Display, Genter Gpanter. A. M. Williams &, C9 "The Regulator Line" The Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Frew and Passeier 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 KATES. One way $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. ALLAWAY, General Agent. B. F. LAUGH LIN, General Manager. THE DALLES. OREGON JOHN PASHEK, Merchant Tailor, 76 Court Street, Nexfdoor to Wasco Sun Office. Has just received a fine line of Samples for spring and summer Suitings. Come mi See the New Fashions Cleaning and epairring to order. Satisfaction guaranteed. INTEREST YOU ! French & co., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BTJ8INE88 Letters of Credit issued available in he Eastern States. Sight Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, 8t. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fav rable terms. 3. SCHBNCK, President. H. M. Buu Cashier. First Rational Batik. 'CHE DALLES, - OREGON A General Banking Business transacted ueposits received, subject to Sight Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds prompt roxiuiaieu uii uay ui couecLiun. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold JNew York, ban ran Cisco and Poi land. DIRECTOKS. D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. Schenck. Ed. M. Williams, Geo. A. Liebe. H. M. Be all. THE DALLES Hational Bank, Of DALLES CITY, OK. President - - -Vice-President. - - Z. F. Moody Charles Hilton M. A. Moody Cashier, ... 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. T"eARTICcSS?Y SODA WATEK ATp I0E 0BEAM. Candies and Nuts at wholesale quotations. TOBACCO, CIGARS AND : : SWEET BRINKS Finest Peanut Roaster in The Dalles 2 3 8 i rni pn At right side Mrs.. Obarr's restaurant. 2? Street J. TULUU I 1 rt-l Specialties A MURDERER LYNCHED The San Bernardino Fiend Rilled by an Angry Mob. TOOK HIS DEATH VERY COOLLY. Asked for a Cigarette Just Bofore He Swung Off No Attempt Made to Identify the Mob. San Bernardino, Cal., April 7. About 1 o'clock this morning a large body of men marched to the county jail and called on Jailer Brown, who slept inside, to come forth and unlock the door. The latter refused and warned the crowd not to attempt an entrance. . The crowd, finding Brown would not un lock the door, secured a large iron girder, which they used as a , battering ram in an attempt to break down the door. The jail is new and the door with stood their efforts, and their attention was turned to the window, and, after a few attempts, the bars were broken and an entrance gained. Inside chisels and hammers were brought into requisition and the doors of the cell of Fuen the double murderer, were forced open, and Fuen was taken out and marched to the railway bridge across Warm Creek and hanged. There was no excitement, and but a few of the mob were masked. The murderer took matters coolly, offering no resistance, and just before being swung off requested a cigarette, which was given him, and he smoked in ap parent unconcern. There is a general feeling of satisfaction, as he undoubtedly deserved his fate. Before being strung up he was given an opportunity to say -the last words through an interpreter. He said he was brought to his present condition by whisky ; that his wife had wronged him, and that he had killed her and that be was ready to die. When asked what Goldcoffer had done to him, he said that he had shot at him. The end of the rope was then made fast to the bridge and the murderer was swung off into eternity at 2 :30 o'clock. The crowd was orderly through the whole transaction. Some one fired a shot at the body as it swung from the bridge, but the leaders of the mob at once put a stop to it, de claring that whoever repeated it would himself be shot. It is stated this morn ing that the leaders of the mob are known, and that an investigation will be had, but up to the present time no move in that direction has been made. The coroner's inquest held on the body of Jesus Fuen, the murderer who was lynched by a mob last night, found that he came to his death by hanging at the hands of parties unknown to the jury. No attempt was made to discover who the leaders of the mob were, and it is even rumored that two or three of the coroner's jnry were participants in the hanging bee. The talk of arrests is dying out. Though a few of the mob wore masks, they are well known to hundreds of spectators New York, April 7. Colonel W. H. Gilder proposes to make another expe dition to the Arctic regions. His pur pose on this tri p is not to reach the geo graphical pole, but the magnetic pole He is now seeking funds to defray th expense of the journey J At the mee ing of the chamber1 lit commerce yester day an interesting communication was read by John Austin Stevens. His statement reads in part as follows : "It is my purpose sometime during the early part of next June or July to con duct a party of trained observers into the Arctic region of North America to determine the present location of the north magnetic pole and make a magnet survey of the pole-containing region. The instruments and observers for this work will be supplied by the United States coast survey, but there is no fund in that bureau from which the cost of transportation and maintenance of this party while in the field can be defrayed. so that the money for that purpose wil have to be ohtained by the volunta euDscriptious ot tnose who have boui the means and inclination to aid a work 01 sucu importance. The entire expentee of tbe expedition will be about $25, and it is desired that this sum shall be subscribed so that the party need not be cramped or hampered in its work." On motion of Henry Hentz, the mat ter was referred to the committee on for eign commerce. The committee recom mended tbe appointment of a committee of three, which was adopted unani mously, and the president' appointed Messrs. Morris K. Jessup, Abram S. Hewitt and William E. Dodge. Did Columbus Discover America? Buffalo, N. Y., April 7. Right Rev. William Stevens Perry, Bishop of Iowa, last night preached the first of a series of Columbian sermons at St. Paul's church. He said he owed nothing to Columbus, Spain or Rome for the dis covery, which belonged to John Cabot, who sailed under the patronage of King Henry Vin, and that the discovery was made in defiance of Pope Alexander VII. The sermon was strictly anti Columbian and anti Romanism, and has created considerable excitement. Tbe Alaska Boundary. Ottawa, Ont., April 7. A joint sur vey of the territory adjacent to the boundary line of the United States and the Dominion between the territory of Alaska and the province of British Co lumbia and the Northwest Territory of Canada, with a view to a permanent relimitation of boundaries, is about to begin. The surrey is to be made in pursuance of an agreement between Canada and the United States reached at the Washington conference, and under an international commission con sisting of T. Mendenhall, superintendent of the coast and geodetic survey of the United States, and W. F. King, astrono mer and surveyor of Canada. Mr. King left today for Alaska with a party of nine surveyors. Two of these will be detailed to accompany the party of nine surveyors, who are now leaving Wash ington for Alaska to report on their work, and two of the American survey ors will be detailed to accompany the Canadian party. A joint report will be drawn up, and separate reports of the points of disagreement. The treaty of St. Petersburg of 1825 defines the east ern boundary of Alaska as "the summits of mountains parallel to the coast," and the two important questions are to agree as to the summits referred to in the treaty, and to define what is the coast. The work will take two seasons. California Crops. San Francisco, April 7. Reports re ceived from 40 points in all parts of Cal ifornia indicate that this state will have bountiful crops this year. In San Joaquin valley, the great wheatraising district of the state, the crop will be unprecedented in size. The rains have been bountiful and timely, and a larger acreage than ever before planted. In the Sacramento valley another great wheatraising district, the reports are not so favorable. It is estimated there will be only half an average crop this year on account of continued cold and rainy weather and smaller acreage planted to wheat. In Southern Califor nia a large yield of grain is expected, as the conditions in that section have been favorable. Fruit in all parts of the state is doing well except apricots, which will fall far short of an average crop. Bank Robbers Not Found. Baker City, Or., April 7. McCarty's house at Haines was searched, and to the great surprise of the officers no trace was found of Tom and Bill, the bank robbers. Finding the horses near is looked upon as a ruse adopted by the fugitives to throw the detectives off their guard. They could have been secreted in the vicinity and perhaps are awaiting a favorable opportunity to get oat of the country by rail, as great difficulty would be experienced on horseback, as the streams are badly swollen. The re ported capture of Kid McCarty at Boise City is not true. He is supposed to be in Arizona. Eck McCarty is now in jail here, who assisted Bill and Tom to escape. He killed a man with a cork screw in a variety theater in this city two years ago. A Leper In a Hospital. San Fbancisco, April 7. The Even ing Post prints a sensational story to the effect that a woman afflicted with leprosy has been at the city and county hospital, a constant menace to 300 pa tients and nurses at the hospital. The Post severely criticises the hospital au thorities for keeping the woman there, but they say there is no other place to send her and they cannot turn her out on the streets. r regon. Bethlehem, Pa., March 19. The ship ment of eight tons of armor, forming the diagonal plates of the battle-ship Oregon, left the Bethlehem iron works yesterday for the Union iron works, of San Fran cisco, where the Oregon is now building. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. ABSOUfElSf PURE A Demand for Prune Trees. A New York syndicate, owning a ditch in Idaho, are going into the business of prune-raising on an extensive scale. They have purchased 44,000 Italian prune trees from a Portland man, and have engaged his son to go to Idaho to superintend the transplanting of the trees. These 44,000 trees will make about 10 car loads and will plant about 440 acres. The syndicate intend to plant 10,000 acres to prunes, and say they have no fear of the market being overstocked, as the New York market alone will take all the prunes the coast is liable to produce. Seal Ushers Out of Luck. St. John's, Newfoundland, April 7. The Newfoundland sealfishery is now admitted a total failure for this season, worse even than expected. The schooner Thrasher arrived from Bonavista yester day, and reports 17 steamers off the north coast without seals. The Falcon had 4,000, and all the other vessels of the fleet a much less number. Among all there is not sufficient to load one ship. The Newfoundland brought 18,000 seals, the Nimrod 12,000 and the Algerine ex pected to make a catch. The total catch of the fleet is not expected to yield 90,000 seals, which is a fourth of last year's catch. Analysis of Chicago Water. London, April 7. A special report to the Lancet on the condition of the Chi cago water dilates on the vileness of the water in the river and points out the dangers of using the river as a big sewer, but says the samples of drinking water from hydrants in various parts of the city failed to reveal the presence of sewage, though there was vegetable matter, and recognized that, while the water furnished is quite as good as that of London, for perfect 6afety it should first be boiled and filtered, and not to use water cooled with ice, as Chicago ice is very bad. Lost Her Life For Ten Cents. Oakland, Cal., April 7. Mrs. Ida Lewis, 80 years old, was struck and killed by a local train last night. In crossing the track she dropped 10 cents,' and stopped to pick it up while a train was approaching. Mrs. Louis was a cripple, and walked with crutches. She was a well-known character in Oakland. Her proudest boast was that she had seven sons in the war of the Rebellion. The Latest wi from Turkey. Hon. D. B. Thompson, minister to Turkey, met with quite a painful acci dent on March 14. He slipped on a marble staircase and fell, spraining his elbow, knocking out three teeth and cutting"hi8 lips and tongue. When he wrote, he had a sore elbow and mouth, but expected to be all right in a few days. Some of Mr. Thompson's friends are wondering what kind of a stick of timber they put. in the lemonades in Turkey, but this probably has nothing to do with the case. Walking on Per sian carpets and Daghistan rugs has made his shoes unusually slick, and this caused the accident. Colonel Robert Miller, who has not dwelt in marble halls or trotted up and down marble staircases much, will do well to take a few weeks' practice before leaving for Turkey by taking a room in the ninth story of the Oregonian building and eschewing the use of the elevator. If this is not convenient, hobnails in his shoes may save his life. The more Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy is used the better it is liked. We know of no other remedy that always gives satisfaction. It ie good when you first catch cold. It is good when your cough is seated and your lungs are Bore. It is good in aDy kind of a cough. We have sold twenty-five dozen of it and every bottle has given satisfaction. Stedman & Friedman, druggists, Minne sota Lake, Minn. 50 cent bottles for sale by Blakeley & Houghton, drug gists. Sam Hop& Co. wish to inform the public that they have a very superior washer and ironer from Portland. Money to Loan. I have money to loan on short time loans. Geo. W. Rowland. For Rent. I A nicely furnished room m good loca tion with or without board. Apply at jthis office. tf. Baking Pomfep