C'J fl j-rr VOL. VII THE DALLES, OREGON, SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1894. NO. 197 STILL FAR . APART The Senate and House Me Looted Horns. A FATAL RAILROAD WRECK The Track Tom up and a Passenger Train Ditched, Twelve Persons Burned . to Death. without regard to what his senatorial associates may do. It is said the con ferees will report a disagreement today, and a motion to discharge theni will be A Dlaaatrsna Wreck. Lincoln, Neb., Aug. 10. A fearful wreck, involving the loss of 12 or more lives, occurred on the Chicago Kock Island & Pacific railroad, where it crosses on a high trestle the tracks of the Union Pacific and Burlington & Missouri Kiver, at 10 o'clock last night. The Fort Worth' accommodation Is due to leave here at 9 :40 P. in. It was about 10 minutes late, and was making up time when it struck a trestle crossing Salt Lake. The rails 6pread and the engine, drawing two cars after it, went thumping along over the cross-ties about 50 feet, and then with a crash fell 40 feet to the bed of the creek below. The en gine burst and the glowing coals ignited. the wooden supports and the coaches behind. In a few moments the bridge, dry as tinder from long exposure to the sun, was one mass of flames. Coals falling upon the coaches set them afire. The flames mounted high in the heavens, coloring the entire southern sky a bril liant carmine, while the moonbeams fell npon the glowing mass below, from which mortal sbrieks of agony were heard to issue. Willing bands were there to help, but little could be done. The engine had fallen first, then the combination smoker and express coach fell partially upon the engine, 'and the rear coach following telescoped that car, pinioning the unfortunates in the smoker so that it was impossible to save them or for them to escape. J, W. Glover, section man, today said he saw three well-dressed men jump the freight and go west. He said the men each carried a long, brand-new satchel. This gives rise to the suspicion that some of the Round Pond (Okla homa) enemies of the Kock Island may have caused the wreck. The marks made by a wrench on the loosened rail were plainly visible, and there were marks of a crowbar on the cross ' ties The wood of the tie s was deeply dented where the crowbars had been inserted, and the rails lifted clear off the ties and the spikes pulled out were lying loose around the bridge. -. C. H. Cherry, the injured mail clerk, was to have been married in a month. The loss to the railroad company alone will amount to $300,000. How much money may have been lost through the mails and otherwise is not known. Conferees are Wider Apart than Ever. Washington, Aug. 10. It is stated on the authority of- a conservative senator the republican senators will be called in today and the senators will make a proposition to report a disagreement on the tariff bill. If the house will not - ac cept this, a resolution is to be preseuted in the senate recalling the senate con ferees. It did' not take the conferees long today to find they could come to no agreement on the basis of free sugar. Within half an hour after the confer ence began the senate conferees left the room and met Gorman. Other con' servatives were sent for and it was said the point has been reached where a de cision one wav or the other must ' be reached. j.The difference between democratic conferees on the tariff are as great as ever today. The senate conferees offered the house members either free coal or free iron, with a 40 per cent duty on the remaining articles. When the house conferees accepted this and agreed on free coal the senate withdrew the offer, The house members say the senate (.members are trifling with them, and the house members have decided to main tain their position. They say the offers by the senators are Inspired by the sugar trust with the hope of killing the bill." If tha bill is essentially changed from the shape in which it ' passed the senate, Quay has declared his intention of attacking the bill in a speech " that will, he Bays, take 40 days to deliver, He adds that he will deliver the speech In The Senate. Washington, Aug. 10. Chandler to day, in the senate, offered a resolution directing the committee on elections to investigate the recent -elections in Ala bama and ascertain if frauds were com mitted. At Hill's request the resolu tion went over until tomorrow. Hill tried to obtain recognition - to offer a resolution calling for information as to the status of the tariff conference, but it was temporarily crowded out and went over until tomorrow. Vest declared that when the resolu tion is considered tomorrow he will speak of the infamous lies invented and circulated as to the work of the confer ees on the part of the senate. The senate immediately after going into executive session today took up the Chinese treaty. There is . a great desire on the part of the senators favor ing the treaty to have it disposed of be fore adjournment. . . - Mr. Pullman Returning Home. Pittsburg, Pa., Aug, 10 George M Pullman was a passenger last night on the Pennsylvania limited for Chicago This will be his first visit to Pullman since the great strike ended. He was close-mouthed oh the affairs of the strise, saying that be had been away so long that he was not conversant with the situation. His advices were , that the trouble was settled, and that no outbreak was probable, He said that the strike had cost everybody connected with it a heap of money, but he had no figures with which to make an estimate Mr. Pullman was accompanied by Bob' ert T. Lincoln, ex-minister to England Mr,. Lincoln said be was interested mainly in the Japan-China war, and he thought that the mikado's subjects would win. . Prance and Bussla to Co-Operate Berlin, Aug. 10. A dispatch to the Tageblatt from St. Petersburg says : "in addition to the eight Russian warships which sailed recently from Vladivostock, under sealed orders, for Corea, the commander-in-chief ot Eastern Siberia has been instructed to hold troops - in readiness to march at any moment Russia wishes to maintain a strictly neutral position, but as soon as the con stitutional change occurs in Corea, she will resolutely protect her interests." The dispatch says France has declared her readiness to co-operate with the Russian fleet in the far east. .Japanese Leaving Shanghai. London, Aug. 10 A Shanghai dis patch says the final exodus of Japanese residents has begun. Some 600 Japan ese will leave Shanghai tomorrow for home. The Japanese postoffice has been shut. ' Every precaution has been taken to prevent any hostile demonstra tion of the natives against the emigrants. Captain Galsworthy, of the Kow Shing, has arrived in Shanghai. The American and Norwegian consuls at Shanghai 'are refusing clearances to ships carrying rice. Xji the, llouie. Washington, Aug. 10. The senate bid crantmz the Northern Pacific Rail road com pah y the right of way through Indian reservations in Minnesota was passed by the house today. Chairman bayres, oi the appropriations committee, reported the disagreement of the con ferees on the sundry civil bill, as to the senate amendments involving $621,021. The house ratified the agreements agreed to, and discussed the amend ment upon which there .was still dis agreement. - Oil Tempered Nickel Steel.' Washington, Aug. V 10. Captain Sampson, chief of the ordinance bureau, told the armor investigating committee today how armor must be treated to give it the required ballistic resistance. He said he did not agree with Lieuten ant Stone's statement that oil-tempered nickel steel was useless. He declared that the superiority of steel thus treated has been fully demonstrated by experi ments. "'.- For Hale. One span of driving horses, one side bar top buggy ,'one set double harness, one single carriage harness. Inquire of d&w2w. Mbs. C. E. Haight. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report ! V jf . v czzz&ztn Ann iT?rHr rfirr? - ii ii n i . if 1 iaf lil in r- t k. a- a O I OTTOLBH R f CoTTOLKMKj q OTTOUHN j Q jCoTTOLHMq iCOTTOLKITn. tCOTTOLaMBj tbi i It? 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