COS ljc ID alios vol. v. THE DALLES, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1893. NO. 108. hrontcle W SHOWING NEGLIGEE SHIRT WITHOUT VJHITCGMB S COL.UAR STAY. Have you Seen oar lieia Spring Stock? Men's and Boys' Clothing, FURNISHING GOODS, HATS, ETC. BPWe are Headquarters for SWEET, ORR St Pantaloon Overalls and Easy Every pair Warranted NEVER IX. 7Vt. PROFESSIONAL . H. H. RIDDKLL Attorney-at-Law Office Court Street, The Dalles, Oregon. E. B. DUFTJR. FRANK MENKFEK. DUFUB, & MENEFEE Attorneys - at law Rooms 42 and 43, over Post Office Building, Entrance on Washington Street The Dalles, Oregon. AS. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Of- flee In Scbanno's building, up stairs. The Dalles, Oregon. r. P. MAYS. B. 8. HUNTINGTON. H. S. WILSON. M AYS. HUNTINGTON & WILSON ATTOR- nkys-at-law Offices, French's block over First National Bank. ' 1 Dalles. Oregon. Wf H. WILSON Attornb y-at-law Rooms T T . 62 and 83, New Vogt Block, Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. DR. ESHELM.AN (Homoeopathic; Physician and Subgkon. Calls answered promptly, day or night, city or country. Office No. 36 and 37 Chapman block. wtf DB. O. D. DOAN E PHYSICIAN AND bur gkon. Office: rooms S and 6 Chapman Block. Residence: S. E. corner Court and Fourth streets, sec md door from the corner. Office hours 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 5 and 7 to i P. M. DS1DDALL Dentist. Gas given for the painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth et on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms : Sign of the Golden Tooth, Second Street. SOCIETIES. w ASCO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. & A. M. Meets nrsi ana tmra Monday oi each montn at 7 TTVALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6. U Meets in Masonic Hall the third Wednesday f each month at 7 P. M. MODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. ML Hood CampNo.59,MeetsTuesdayeven lngof each week in Fraternity Hall, at 7:30 p. m. COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 5, L O. O. F. Meets every Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in K. of P. hall, comer Second and Court streets. Sojourning brothers are welcome. H. C'lough, Sec'y. H. A. Bills.N. G. FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K,of P. Meets every Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in Schanno'B building, corner of Court and Second streets. Sojourning members are cordially In vited. W. 8. Cham. D. W.Vausk, K. of R. and 8. C. C. A88EMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF L. Meets In K. of P. hall the second and fourth Wednes days of each month at 7:30 p. m. WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE UNION will meet every Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the reading room. All are invited. Harmon Lodge No. 501, I. O. G. T. Regular weekly meetings Monday at 7:30 p. M., at Fraternity Hall. All are i nvited. rpVEMPLE LODGE NO. 3, A. O. U. W. Meets A in Fraternity Hall, over Kellers, en Second street, Thursday evenings at 7 :3U. Paul Kreft, W. 8 Mybbs, Financier. M. W. J AS. NE8MITH POST, No. 32, G. A. R. Meets every Saturday at 7:30 P. M., in the K. of P. Hall. B OF L. E. Meets every Sunday afternoon In the K. of P. Hall. GESANG VEREIN Meets every evening in the K. of P. Hall. Sundav BOF L, F. DIVISION, No. 167 Meets In K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednes day of each month, at 7 :30 p. m. Mrs. S. A. Orchard, Carpet leaver, They Have Got to Go! Hard times, high prices, and big profits can't exist in this town, because we have got the Goods, and make the Prices that save the people's money. - It is a -wonderfully complete assortment of high class goods St CO. THE CHURCHES. ST. METERS CHURCH Rev. Father Brons geest Pastor. Low Mass every Sundav at 7 a. ii. High Mass at 10:30 a.m. Vespers at 7 P. M. ST. PAULS CHURCH Union Street, opposite Fifth. Rev. Eli D. Sutcllffe Rector. Services every Sunday at 11 A. M. and 7:30 P. M. Sunday School 9:45 A. M. Evening Prayer on Friday at 7:S0 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. Tay lor, Pastor. .Morning services every Sab bath at the academy at 11 a. m. Sabbath School immediately after morning services. Prayer meeting Friday evening at Pastor's resi dence. Union services In the court house at 7 P. M. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. W. C. Curtis, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11 A. M. and 7 P. M. Sunday School after morning service. Strangers cordially invited. Seats free. ME. CHURCH Rev. J. Whikler, pastor. . Services every Sunday morning at 11 a. m. Sunday School at 12:20 o'clock p. m. Epworth League at 6:30 p. m. Prayer meeting every Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock. A cordial in vitation is extended by both pastor and people to all. CHRISTIAN CHURCH Rbv. J. W. Jenkins, Pastor. Preaching In the Congregational Church each Lords Day at 3 p. M. All are cordially invited Evang. Lutheran church, Ninth street, Rev. A. Horn, pastor. Services at 11:30 a. m. Sunday school at 2:30 p. m. A cordial welcome to every one. CIiAtA STOHY, Art Teacher Room S, Bettingen Building, Will give Lessons Mondays and Thursdays of each week, or oftener if desired. PHOTOGRAPHER. First premium at the Wasco county fair for best portraits and views. The St. Charles Hotel, PORTLAND, OREGON. This old, popular and reliable house has been entirely refurnished, and every room has been repapered and repaintc and newly carpeted throughout. The house contains 170 rooms and is supplier with every modern convenience. Kates reasonable. A good restaurant attache to the house. Frer bus to and from ah trains. C. W. KNOWL.ES, Prop. W. H. YOUNG, Biacksmiip & wagon Slop General Blacksmitbing and Work done promptly, and all work Guaranteed. Horse Shoeing a Speciality SHOWING NEGLIGEE SHIRT WITH WHITCOMB-S COLLAR STAY. in CO.'S Fitting Pants, to rip ! "The Regulator Line" Tie Dalles, PortlanS ani Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Freigitanfl 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. FABSENGEK RATES. 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. LAUGHLIN, General Manager. THE DALLES. - OREGON JOHN PASHEK, Merchant Tailor, 76 Count Street, Next door to Wasco Sun Office. Has just received a fine line of Samples for spring and summer Suitings. Come ani See tie New Fashions. IN THE STORM'S PATH Twenty-One lares Lost in Full View of Thousands. IMPOSSIBLE TO RESC0E THEM A Fierce Gale Sweeps Over Chicago Lake Front-Names of the Drowned. Milwaukeb, Wis., April 20. Lake Michigan is being swept by one of the worst easterly gales experienced in years. The sea is running very high and all craft are unable to venture out .rofthe harbor. A small vessel is ashore at the head of Juneau avenue. The worst feature of the gale is the probable loss of 20 lives by the washing away of a house over the crib at the terminus of the new water works tunnel. No men are in sight, and it is believed that they were swept away, but they may be in the air lock below. Five or six men can be seen clinging to the machinery and tim bers of the water works crib. The water is sweeping over them. It is thought that the others may be dead in the chamber below from the lack of air. The life-saving crew has been unable to render them assistance as yet. It is now known that twenty-two men went out to the water works crib last night. Unless rescued soon, all that may be alive at this hour must perish, as the crib is submerged by every wave. It is reported that five of the life-saving crew refused to obey orders to go out in the life-boat. The tug Stark left the harbor at 9:30 a m., but was forced to return. The sea broke in the pilot-house windows, and cut Captain Chris Miller quite severely. There is talk of man ning the revenue cutter Johnson and going to the scene. Captain Davis sig nifies his willingness to make the at tempt if men can be secured to man the lifeboat. The small vessel ashore at the head of Juneau avenue is the Lorena. A tug is now on the way to the scene with a life-boat and men on board. She is making slow headway, and is fairly buried by the sea at times. The tug Welcome has returned from the crib. The life-savers found one man whom they rescued. He will probably die from exposure and exhaustion. As there are no signs of any of the rest, it is believed the twenty-one men are either swept awnv or dead in the crib I chamber. The man rescued from the wrecked water works by the tug Welcome and the life-saving crew was so exhausted when taken aboard the tug that he was unable to speak. He recovered suffi ciently just before being taken to the hospital to be able to tell those about him that his companions were all in the air chamber below the crib. It is believed they are all suffocated. Two bodies were seen floating around in the well of the crib by the life-saver who reached the crib. His name is Oleson, and he was badly handled by the sea while performing his noble work. Cap tain Peterson of the lifesaving crew, was badly hurt about the head. It was an anxious crowd that stood on the shore and looked at the crib this morning. The sight was the most awful one anybody in the vicinity had ever eeen. Waves fully 15 feet high dashed over the crib with terrific force. All that was left of the crib was a c3uple of posts that supported the house and one of the pumps. The two large boilers, the en gine, one or two pumps, the air com pressor plant and the 20,000 brick that were on the crib had been washed off. Twenty minutes after the house was washed out of existence, the entire machinery, and whatever else the house contained that had teen left, was lifted directly into the air, apparently by the combined force of the wind and waves, and everything was hurled into the raging sea, many feet below the level of the crib. One of the most pitiful in cidents in connection with the disaster was the spectacle of the aged father of Engineer Dwyer pacing to and fro on the beach, vainly trying to see through the mist and catch a glimpse of the pocr boys clinging to the crib. "Joe is home sick, good for him," he said, "but Mikey is out there, and I wish he was home sick too." The following are known to have been in the wrecked crib : George Gregg, lockman ; Michael Dwyer, engineer ; John McBride, engineer; Eben All, cook ; James Miller, Wiiliam Priestly, Joseph McCarty, George W. Holly, William Presser, Joseph Pretznold, Gustave Lacomitz and Fred Spanner, miners. James Miller is the man who was rescued. The doctors say he will recover. that the Ann Arbor strike, aided by Judge Ricks' decision, has proved a death blow to the Brotherhood Of Loco motive Engineers. A new association is being formed in this city. The new organization will include, aside from the engineers and firemen, such superinten dents of motive power as are desirous of joining, and may also be open to all em ployes of the railroads from the highest officials down to the trackmen. The ob jects of the new organization will be practically the same as those of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, with the same insurance features. The management of the new organization will be placed in the hands of the older and more experienced railroad men, and will provide for general arbitration when it may become necessary. CUBAN SUGAR CROP. An Immense Falling oft From Last Tear. Havana, April 19. The weather con tinues favorable for sugar-grinding op erations. Several estates have already finished grinding and most of the others do not expect to continue beyond the 25th inst. The Revista de Agricultura states that the estimate of a decrease of 20,000 tons in the sugar crop is now con firmed, and it is very doubtful whether the production will equal the yield of 820,000 tons of 18dl. According to the Bulletin-Commercial the representative of the Trinidad Sugar Company is meeting with great difficulty in securing a sufficient quantity of sugar cane to commence grinding next year, the syndicate having forbidden him to advance money to the tenants. The latter are reluctant to enter into any agreement unless advances are made them in order that they may proceed with the preparation and sowing of their fields. The Weekly says : "Several of our principal planters are endeavoring to obtain from the ware house companies and managers not only a reduction of storage rates, but also an arrangement by which those charges and insurance and weighing expenses shall be paid by the producer, and not by the purchaser, as has heretofore been the custom at this place. This scheme, it is claimed, would attract to Havana a large quantity of sugar which could be disposed of at the same prices they ob tain at Matanzas and other outport markets, notwithstanding the smaller advantages planters enjoy there as to storage and facilities for raising money on stored sugar. COMING TO THE COAST. The Senatorial Committee Hay Visit I'uget Sound. Washington, April 19. Senator Ran som has designated Senator Ransom, I Vest, White of Louisiana, Cullom and and Washburn as the subcommittee to go to California and make the proposed investigation looking to the settlement of the deep-water harbor question. It has been decided that a start shall be made from New York May 5th. The committee expects to be gone about five weeks. Under a resolution adopted April 6th, the committee is authorized to vieit such other works on the Pacific coast, existing or proposed, as the inter ests of commerce shall demand. The most important of these is the proposed canal from Lake Washington to Puget sound, which will cost in the neighbor hood of $3,000,000. WILL VISIT PORTLAND. Washington, April 19. Senator Dolph Bays the committee will probably be at Portland somewhere about May 25th, and that it will examine the work at the mouth of the Columbia river, the works for the improvement of the lower Columbia and Willamette rivers and the Cascade locks-, and possibly will visit the dalles of the Columbia. Carter Harrison's Nerve. ' Chicago, April 20. At 11 o'clock last rJight Mayor Harrison surprised the gamblers by issuing an order 'calling upon all keepers, of gambling-houses and poolrooms to close their places within 24 hours. If the order is violated the offenders will be arrested and pros ecuted. In view of the fact that the sporting element of Chicago worked hard to elect Carter Harrison, the order comes on them like a thunderbolt. Go to S. & N. Harris for stiff felt hats. A fine line only 50 cents each. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report WARDNER IN FLAMES Report Tnat the Entire Town Is Destroyed. EVANS AND S0NTAG SEEN AGAIN Examination of Flood, the Defaulting Bank Clerk, Again Postponed Notes. Spokane April 20. A brief dispatch from Wardner, in the Coeur d'AIene mining district, reports that the town was destroyed by fire. No particulars. Wardner is a place of about 1,000 inhab itants. It suffered severely from fire in the winter of 1889-90. K vans and Sontag Again. Visalia. Cal., April 20. Late last evening Sheriff Kay got a tip that Evans and Sontag were at Evans' house. Kay quietly went to work and got a posse to gether and placed the men in good .loca tions. Kay and a deputy were in the vicinity of the barn, and when Evans and Sontag came out of the barn they gave the signal for the balance of the posss. The posse were divided on the different roads, but the men on the lane going toward Goshen had moved from where Kay placed them, and when the outlaws passed in their cart the officers were out of reach with their shotguns. The robbers have evidently fled to the mountains. Fighting; In Brazil. Valparaiso, April 20. A correspond ent in Rivera telegraphs that Sangada has retaken San Juan Bautista, which seems to insure the posession of Urn guayana to the revolutionists in Rio Grandedo Sul. The advance guard of General Telles' Castilhistas army had a skirmish with the troops defending Uruguayana under the belief that they were federals. General Telles is also reported to have suffered serious losses in a fight which took place within the Oriental territory. The federals have captured San Francisco, a small town near Urugozota. General Moura, the Brazilian minister of war, has arrived at the city of Rio Grande do Sul with reinforcements for the army which is operating against the revolutionists. General Moura will at once proceed toward Porto Alegro. He refuses to treat with the federals and will demand that they surrender unconditionally. A gunboat bombarded San Juan yesterday, but did very slight damage. Snow Storm in'lowa. Kansas City, April 20. A special to the Star from Des Moines, la., says : "A terrific snow and wind storm is raging in the city and throughout eastern and northern Iowa. Crops will be greatly retarded by the storm. Much damage was done to fruit." A special from Columbia, Mo., says: "There was a heavy rainfall yesterday, which was followed by a blinding snow storm this morning. Snow is still fall ing, and unless the weather moderates before night the fruit crops will be greatly damaged. A Battle In Tennessee. Nashville, Tenn., April 20. A tele gram was received early this morning by the adjutant-general from Tracy 'City, announcing that a battle was inv progress, and that one of the guards had been mortally wounded, and another hurt. About 100 soldiers and artillery left for the scene at 5 o'clock. Marriage of Royalty. Florence, April 20. The marriage between Prince Ferdinand, ruler of Bul garia, and Princess Marie Louise, the eldest daughter of the Duke of Parma, took place today at the villa Pianore, the ducal residence near Viareggio. 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 A Kinersly, druggists. WOOD, WOOD, WOOD. Beat m-ades of oak. fir. and slab cord wood, at lowest market rates at Jos. T. Peters & Co. (Office Second and Jeffer son streets.) Baking Powder Offers her services to all who wish Cleanino an Q ReP&ll?lflCl I Th. Ann A T-r.,.1.1. '" " ' -