J. 'j 'ffljjjj f-Jpjj :fj0 ll VOL. VII. THE DALLES, OREGON, SATURDAY, APRIL il, 1894. NO. lftfiT' A MURDERER HANGED i Patriot j. Sullivan Expiates His Crime at San Francisco. .' v SOME MORE TARIFF SPEECHES The Insurgent -leaders of the Brazil ian Rebellion Ask for - - Amnesty. A Murderer Hanged. San Quentin, Cal., April 20. Patrick J. Suliivan, who brutally murdered his wife on the streets of San Francisco in November, 1892, was banged at 11 o'clock this morning in the presence of the prison officials, reporters, doctors and others. Sullivan passed the previous night comfortably and joked and laughed with the guards several hours. He ato a hearty breakfast. After the usual religious consolation by a Catho lic priest, a few moments before 11 o'clock he mounted the scaffold with a firm tread. He made a short speech, adjuring those present to be aware of wine and women, "which are man's downfall." As the black an was drawn over his head he shouted; "You can't say I died like a cur." The trap was sprung, and his death was instan taneous. ." Gallnger on the Tariff. Washington, April 20. Senator Gal inger spoke on the tariff bill. Galinger denounced the bill as one nobody un qualifiedly approves except the senators from Missouri and Indiana, McLaurin and Turpie. Even the author entered an apology for the measure. It is strictly a Sonihern bill, and most of the New England money invested in the South is forever lost if it becomes a law. . He took np in turn the various industries of New England that would be injured if passed, and said the increased tax on spirits would benefit alone the whisky trust. Free wool will ruin this industry, and the income tax was denounced as sectional and unjust. The laboring masses of the Nor.h had set the seal of condemnation on the bill and no longer stick to the ticket they voted last year, but ally themselves with the party that stands for protection, good wages, happy and comfortable homes. ASKING FOR AMNESTY Conference With the Leaders. Insurgent Bubnos Ayhes, April 20. A dispatch to the Times says an envoy from President-elect Mores lias held a conference here with the insurgent. General Mar tins, for the purpose of arranging peace in the state of Rio Grande do Sal, Brazil. General Martins terms of peace were that the governor of Bio Grande do Sul be deposed and that a new election be held in Brazil ; that the insurgent officers be reinstated in the posts they formerly held, and that amnesty be granted to all. It is stated Da Gama will- be landed in Buenos Ayrea today. It is reported General Saraiva, with 5,000 of bis insurgents, is on the North western frontier of Bio Grande do Sul. NEWS NOTES. The betrothal is announced of the ciarowitz, Grand duke Nickolas, to Princess Alix Victoria Helena Louisa Beatrice of Hesse. The creditors of C. I.- Webster & Co. are disposed to help Mark Twain. He is in his 60th year, has aged rapidly the last few years, and bis fortune is greatly over-estimated. It is proposed, that the United States congress, in the name of the people, com plete the explorations of the north and south polar regions and make an annual appropriation of $25,000 for this purpose. The reported discovery of a wonderful deserted city in a remote section of the Sierra Madre mountains, in Durango, has been verified by Maurice Lentow and a party of explorers. They found a secret entrance to the city and made an exhaustive exploration. They returned laden with curiosities from abandoned residences and temples. The population of the city could not have been less than 25,000. Highest of all In Leavening Power LL. AESSHfElf PURE NWS OF THE STATE. A barber in La Grande named Ankeny is missing'. - The only explanation is a note posted on the Wallowa bridge stat ing that he intended to jump into the river. , The note reads : "Notice--To whom it may concern : Having drank so much whisky, making myself and everybody else enemies, have come to the conclusion I would end my. life by jumping off this bridge. Hoping it will relieve others as well fas myself, I go. If my body is recovered feed it to the hogs." Those who were acquainted with him think it is a hoax. ORIGIN OF DEATH VALLEY. An Indian .fcre"d Regarding: a Queen as Beautiful ns Cleopatra. . The Indian legend regarding the origin of Death valley, in. Mayo county, California, is an interesting1 one. From the outer edge of this vast furnace it is three hundred miles square and one hundred feet below sea level one may see far off, tremulous through the shimmering waves of heat, a sort of butte that has the form of a ruined castle. The story goes that in the old days, before the Amar gosa river ceased to water the valleys, the place was the site of a powerful city ruled by a princess as beautiful as Cleopatra and as imperious as Eliza beth. An ambassador to the reigning Aztec monarch described to her on his return the glories of the king's palace in the City of Mexico. Itesolving to equal the magnificence of her neighbor she began the'ereetiop of a vast building. : All the laborers and artisans of the city- were employed and the work. Was pushed -night and day, for within twelve months the Aztec ruler was to be' her guest, and she wished to welcome him to a pal ace as splendid as his own. She ex hausted the resources of her realm, men went mad with toil and hunger, and at last the high priest protested. He was ordered to execution, and, dy ing, cursed the city for the princess' sake. That night the earth shook and sank, the river . dried up' and ; the morning sun poured down a flood of heat. All perished, and now the ruined walls of the palace alone remain. The Amargosa, by the way, Is a most erratic stream. It flows south ninety miles from its fountain head in the western Sierras, vanishes at Best ing Spring mountain, is in evidence again for fifty miles, disappears for a space, then bobs up and runs along tur bulently for one hundred milea, All trace of it is lost at Death valley. -Excess of Etiqancte Killed Blm, The rigid etiquette of courts has more than once come near making a martyr of the person whom the rules preveutod from aiding ofS-hand. In Spain these, notions of etiquette were carried to such an extent that Philip III. met his death in direct conse quence of them. The king was one day gravely seated by a chimney where the firemaker of the court had kindled so great a quantity of wood that the mon arch was being suffocated with heat. Hi3 grandeur would not suffer him to rise from the chair to call for belp; the officers-in-waiting were not within call, and the domestics could not presume to enter the apartment, because it was against the etiquette. At last Mar quis de Pobat appeared, and the king ordered him to damp the fire; but he excused himself, alleging that he was forbidden by the etiquette to perform such a function, for which Duke d'Asseda ought to be called upon, as it was his business. The duke was gone out, the fire burned fiercer, and the king endured it rather than derogate from his dignity; but his blood was heated to such a degree that erysipelas broke out in his head the next day, which, being succeeded by a violent fever, 'carried him off. Boneless hams at 11 cents; 1 selec breakfast bacon at 12 cents per lb; chice kettle leaf lard, 5 lb pails, 55 cents ; 10-lb pails at $1 at the Columbia Pack ing Co. 's Central Market. Photographs. VcT thft TlPTt airtv flora T wiTI . moVa my best $5 per dozen cabinets at $1 per . 1 nu: r.-n i --ii tu viucHKu tjaiiery, opposite Mays & Crowe's hardware store, on Second street, The Dalles, Or. dl4t. Now is the time to kill squirrels. Sure Shot at Snipes & Kinersly's. Poison the squirrels. Sure Shot at Snipes & Kinersly's. Jbles, Collins & Co. are running a free feed yard for the accomodation of their customers. dw Sure Shot Squirrel Poison at Snipes & Kinersly's. Latest U.S. Gov't Report. Powder -CotS " How good digestion wait on JCi appetite, Coi And health on both. Cot' Cottolene ICottolene ICottolene ICottolene ICottolen Cottolene (Cottolene Cottolene ICottolene Cottolen . ene To assure both the above ends, ? giod, wholesome, palatable food is demanded. It is next to impossible ene to present a sufficient variety of appe tizing bills of fare for our meals with- (" out a liberal allowance of pastry and ene other food in which shortening i iene required. How to make crisp, JJJJJ healthful, digestible pastry has Ceno puzzled the cooks. A difficulty in cne all good cookingin the past has been S lard. Always fickle, never uniform, Jene most unwholesome lard has always ccne been the bane of the cook and the fcjj ODStacie to "gooa aigesuon." . Jene Cottolene Cottolene Cottolene ICottolene Cottolene Cottolene Cottolene Cottolene Cottolene (Cottolene Cot g comes . now into popular coiJ favor as the new shorten ed ing better than even the best of lard with none of coi lard's objectionable quali 8o!$ ties. And Coi' Col Cot Col Comes attended by both Coti -APPETITE AND HEALTH." CotC A ,1 -A. 1, . 1 , Cott 'w-as scj-l it au. auoui. Cot REFUSE ALL SUBSTITUTES. Coti Cotolcne (Cottolene (Cottolene ICottolene iCottolene Cotcle ne Cottolene K .nttolenc Cottolene ICottolene fade only by N. K. FAIRBANK A CO., ST. LOUIS and CHICAGO, NEW YORK, BOSTON. THE MIDWINTER. 'Sing Three" Sees lirautlfal Things and Hides a Camel. - ; San Francisco, April 16, '94. Editor Chromiclb: Sometimes we are compelled, no mat ter how much we resent it, to take back what we have said so often that we have come to believe it the whole truth and nothing but tho truth, and such is the case as present. The Dalles is not the windiest place on earth, for if yester day's wind storm is a fair sample of San Francisco breezes.- no place on the globe can compare with.it. However up till yesterday we had fine weather and ought not to complain though we were so "blowed." . : Well, we have not changed our minds in regard to" the merits of the Midwinter fair, and the more we see of it the better are we pleased. Through the influence of Mrs. Barton, who is a sister of Mrs. French and in the office of Mr. DeYoung, and t the kinduess of the executive secretary, ; Mr. Badlam, I was allowed a pass into ; the grounds without other recommends tion, so have had a good opportunity to ; see all that is to be seen. The licet plan is to spend a day at a time on the grounds, so that you may' miss none of ! the fine music by Sonsa's band and also j enjoy watching the illumination in the j evening, which is grand, all of the prin I ci pal buildings being fringed with elec trie lights. The principal object of in- ; terest is the electric tower, about 200 ; feet high, and on which are arranged : different shaded lights to represent shields, stars, diamonds, etc., and op i the very top is a powerful search light, j This tower is in the center of the court and around it are walks fringed with flowers and plants. Directly in front of the administration building is the alle gorical fountain, which I do wish I could describe, for L think it one of the most interesting things to be seen. One statue particularly took my fancy, that of a mining shaft, in front of which are two miners at work, one holding in his 'hand a large hose from which flows "a powerful stream of water. Near the top of this fountain, below a beautiful statue, are the w rds, "California, the land of sunshine and flowers." The electric fountain is situated in front of the liberal arts building and plays at about 8 o'clock every evening, when all other illuminations are suspended for the time. It must be seen to be appreciated, for it cannot be described. Those who attended the world's fair say this is one of the things which fully come up to what was to be seen there. r . The exhibits of the different counties in California of .coursehave a' sameness, but are none the less Interesting. The orange exhibits of Southern California are especially fihe,: comprising "among other things honses, arcbes, .Ferris wheels, etc., of oranges. The Examiner and Chronicle of this city have offered prizes to be' given by vt to the county having the best ex hibit. S;ilinc comity eo far has the most votes for the gold cup to be given by the Examiner, but hs n-nal, it stems to me does not deserve it as much as many others. ' The attendance at the fair is increas ing every day, but in spite of the efforts j Cottolene ICottolene ICottolene Cottolene ICottolene "pthers' 1 For Boys, These G-oods are in every form reliable, as following guarantee. We have also a Large Line of Boys' Knee Pants At 50 cents to reduce the price of admission, in the words of the immortal fakir, it "still re mains at 50 cents a head' Speaking of fakirs, there are fakirs galore, as numer ous as the fleas in San Francisco, and one is anything but complimented to have them .yell at you a block away, 'Here, lady, bay Bomething for the children," or "Lady, has yonr husband taken you to see Pharoah's -daughter, the dead woman who is made alive?" One feels inclined to (top and afck if among the other illusions may be seen the said . "husband" or "children." Among other concessions which no vis itor should fail to hear are the Vienna Prater concerts. ' The orchestra is "im mense" and in addition to that Satur day evening was a chorus of about! 300 male voices, which was grand. . - j - " Last Wednesday being Berkeley day, the university students took the grounds by storm, and we were not a little proud to be escorted by a student from The Dalles, and took it for Grant-ed that a number of yonng ladies were envious. The fireworks in the evening were de cidedly "in sight" and the best we ever saw. As the different pieces were dis played, especially one representing the main university building you could hear the college yell "Rah rah, California, D. C. Berkeley, Zip boom ahl" from every part of the grounds. - The next three days are to be the days of the fair, when the famous Manli Gras, which is held every year in New Or leans, is to be celebrated. The city is all decorated in red, green and yellow, and great preparations are being made, -of which I will tell you when I return. We are taking in everything worth seeing, from the mint down to the tilth and degradation of Chinatown, and will be fully learned when we return, which will be by the next steamer. - I forgot to tell yon of our ride on the cainals in the streets of Cairo. Deter mined not to miss anything, we perehed ourselves on the back of one of tbote ugly looking beasts, with the apsaiance from the "black beanty" who led it tat "I'll hold you on, madam," which p-aa of course encouraging, and furnished fun for "ourselves -and the crowd while we an C rr Slcq Three. CliOTirfe and Ladies' Shoes, Man's Boots and Shoes: ; ' ' :' : Misses' Shoes, "Youths' Boots and Shoes, ; . Children's Shoes, - Boys' Boots and Shoes. Friend" JUST RECEIVED Ages from 6 to ;.- gratis m-' : TTiisjaarmeriT has pipp prelected 3 earns. & doable knees. W X: Asc&t clbous W -' a pair. Call and See Them. Km williams" co msmmm for Infants and Children,' - - - .. ... . - v , .vv THTRTY yar' observation of Castoria with ih.e patronago ot million of persons, permit as to gpealc of it without gpeaiing. 1 It in tmqqpstioqahly tho test remedy for Infants and Children the world has w known. It is harmless. Children IHro it. It gives thorn health. It will save their lives. In it Mothers hay some tiling which is apsolwtely safe and practically perfect as 1 sVMld's medicine. Castoria destroys Tornta. . t '. , Castoria allays Feveriahnesa. ' - Castoria prevents vqw-Mt(i Song Curd. Castoria nres Piarrhcea and yind CoHo. . , , Castoria relieves Teething Tronhles. ('a'tori enros Constipation and Flatnlency. ; Cnstoria neutralizes the effects of carbonic acid gas or poisonons ajw ' Castoria does not contain morphine, cptnm, or other narcotic property. Cawtoria asmmilates tho food, regnlates the stomach and Dowels, i giving; heftlthy and natural sleep." ' ' Csto-ria is pnt np in one-sizo hottloi only. It is not sold in hnlfc. X?on't allow any one to soil yon anything eluo on tho plea or yromisa . thatft is "jtit as good" and "will answer every purpose. .' f?oa tftat Tn ft C-A-S-T-O-R-I-A. The fac-trfmHo fljtitalxiTO rf . QhHdr&n Cry for Glothin 9 t ; 14 Years; will lie shown by the of nearly All Wool Material from 4 to 14 Years, i on ever jr ' T-ra-nTr. Pitcher's Castoria. ; . ..