4 rsv - sd y 1 -LsK: CTT 3 & I LSI I I'll VOL. VIII THE DALLES, OREGON, MONDAY, AUGUST 19 1895. NO 194 1 I ANY PERSONS KILLED L Denver Hotel Wrecked by an Explosion. IRE ADDS TO THE HORROR ram the Mass of Wreckage Can Be Heard the Moans of the Injured and the Dying. Denver, Aug. 19. The Gnmry hotel, No. 1725 to 1737 Lawrence street, was Wrecked by a terrific explosion at 12:10 hie (Monday) morning, the entire rear alf of the building, a five-etory brick nd stone structure, going down with a rash. The hotel was crowded with nests, and many of them must have en killed, as well as the entire force f hotel employes who were sleeping in hat portion of the building. On both sides of Lawrence street from Seven eenth to Eighteenth street, and on Lawrence street directly back of the Gumry, the plateglass windows of the business houses were blown in and a number of pedestrians were injured by falling glass. The fronts of many build ings in the vicinity were badly wrecked. The hotel structure, for 100 feet along the alley, and extending for 75 feet to ward the front, is merely a mass of de bris. Brick and plaster are piled in a heap 20 feet high, and from this mass of wreckage can be heard the moans of the injured and dying. At 12:35 live injured people had been taken out. They were all inmates ot the upper story, and sank down with the floors, escaping more fortunately than those below, who are still buried in the ruins. The fireman are working like beavers digging into the debris, but are making little progress. The remaining portion of the building, from which the guests are being removed by ladders as fast as possible, is expected to fall any moment, and precautions to avert further loss of life add to the dif ficulty in reaching the dead and injured. By some estimates 40 people were in the portion of the hotel destroyed, near ly all of whom must be dead. It will be morning before a correct list can be ob tained. The cause of the explosion is uncertain, but it is supposed that the battery of boilers in the hotel basement must have exploded. The Bound of the explosion was heard throughout the city, awakening people in bed a mile from the scene. A cloud of dust was thrown a thousand feet into the air, and as there is not a breatn of air stirring, it still hangs in the air like a huge column. Minute atoms of pow dered brick and mortar are descending like gentle snow many blocks away. At 12:50 the ruins are burning fierce' ly, and the firemen have been obliged to retreat from the work of rescue. Every engine in the city ia pouring streams of water into the seething mess, but the flames cannot possibly be gotten under control before many of the injured have been cremated. As their chances of escape lessen , the cries of the imprisoned people are in creasing, Heartrending snrieks rising from every portion of the great mass of wreckage. Fears are now entertained that the front portion of the building, which seems to be tottering, will fall and bury the firemen at their work. THRILLING EXFKKIBNCB. Mountain , Party Nearly Perished. Bkattle, Aug. 17. A party of seven mountain climbers from the Puget Sound Methodist University had a thrilling ex perience on Mount Rainier last Sunday The ascent of the mountain was made without difficulty; but in returning from the summit to the "Camp of Clouds,' I 6,000 feet below them, but which is at an altitude oi about tf.UUU feet, the party was lost in a dense bank of fog. They could see nothing but a waste of fog and now. Night came on and they were still lost. They tramped until hunger and weariness compelled them to stop Huddling behind a pile of rocks they finally decided to spend the rest of the night there and wait for the fog to raise, Here the party nearly froze to death The wind blew so hard that the only way they could keep their blankets from blowing away was by loading them with heavy stones. But morning came and they again found their trail and late Monday afternoon they reached "Camp of Clouds," frost bitten, starved and worn out. (Dr. Misner.one of the party, ruptured a blood vessel and is eeriously ill as a result of forty-eight hours on Mount Rainier's summit. Tbe rest of the party are not seriously injured. Rev. W. M. Jeffries delivered a ser mon on tbe summit last Snnday entitled "The Sermon on the Mount." The Farmers Resisted. Oakesdale, Aug. 17. A judgement was obtained iu the justice court here against Rowe Bros., farmers, and an ex ecution was issued on 300 sacks of oats. Fearing trouble, the constable placed three men to guard them last night. At midnight, the guards were called upon by 25 men, all armed with Winchester rifles and shotguns, and told to leave. They left at once. The oata were then hauled off, two four-horse loads being found five miles north, and the same amount the distance south of the place. These were secured. No arrests have been made. This is the second case of armed resistance to guards on crops in Whitman county. A New Country Opened Up. Goldekdalk, Wash., Aug. 17. Twen ty-five immigrants from Oregon passed through Goldendale today, en route to the Cedar vallej country, with a view of locating on government land. The pros pect of a railway up the Klickitat has revived the interest of the settlers in the future of the Cedar valley region. It is estimated that the proposed railway will afford an outlet for that new country. It is said there are seven townships in that vicinity open for entry. The heavy grade of the present wagon road will be avoided; and an excellent wagon road can be built to the railway on the Big Klickitat. Two Lives Saved. Mrs. Phoebe Thomas,of Junction City, 111., was told by her doctors she had con sumption and that there was no hope for her, but two bottles Dr. King's New Discovery completely cured her and she says it saved her life. Mr. Thos. Eg- gers, 139 Florida St. San Francisco, suf fered from a dreadful cold, approaching Consumption, tried without result every thing else, then liought one bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery and in two weeks was cured. He ia naturally thankful. It is such results, of which these are samples, that prove the wonderful effi cacy of this medicine in coughs and colds. Free trial bottlea at the Snioes- Kinersly Drug Co.,s.; Regular size 50c. and $1.00. . He Will Heed the Watnlnt. Montgomery, Ala, Aug. 17. S. S. Pilley, postmaster, mayor, justice of the peace, Sunday-school superintend ent and Methodist deacon, of Georgiana, Butler county, has been made to leave town. He wrote a note to a respectable young woman of Georgiana, making im proper proposals. He asserted the note was sent at the request of his brother as a test. At a mass meeting the citizens demanded Pilley's immediate resigna tion from all his public trusts, and that he leave town at once, or accept the con sequences. He will leave. Pilley was one of the most prominent men in this section. Cholera Morbus is a dangerous com plaint, and often is fatal in its results. To avoid tbis you should use De Witt's Colic & Cholera Cure, as soon as the first symptoms appear. Snlpea-Kinersly urug jo. Peffer Says It Was Like a Volcano. Minneapolis, Minnu Aug. 17. A state official who wrote Senator Peffer, of Kansas, asking him whether be had gone back on free silver, received a reply this morning denouncing the- "partisan newspaper press," and asserting em phatically that the free-silver craze is not dying out, but ia fast widening its field. It was like a volcano which could 'not be suppressed by covering the crater.' The belief in the East that it was dying out, he added, was due to the fact it had now passed the pyrotechnic stage of noises and demonstration. They Climbed the Selkirk. Tacoma, Aug. 17. A party of 25 mem bers of the Appalachian Mountain Club, of Boston, beaded by Professor C. E. Foy, of Tufts college, arrived tonight from the Selkirk mountains, in tbe Northwest territory, which they success fully explored. They will pass Sunday SIM MOM S REGULATOR Reader, did you ever take Simmons Liver Regulator, the "Kino, op Liver Medicines?" Everybody needs' take a liver remedy. It is a sluggish or diseased liver that impairs digestion and causes constipation, when the waste that should be carried off remains in the body and poisons the whole system. That dull, heavy feeling is due to a tcrpid liver. Biliousness, Headache, Mais iria and Indigestion are all liver diseases. Keep the liver active by an occasional dose of Simmons Liver Reg ulator and you'll get rid of these trou bles, and give tone to the whole sys tem. For a laxative Simmons Liver Regulator is better than Pills. It does not gripe, nor weaken, but greatly refreshes and strengthens. Every package has the Red Z stamp on the wrapper. J. II. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia. here, and may go into the Cascade mountains for a climb next week. Wages ot Twelve Hundred Operators Advanced. Walthasi, Mass., Aug. 17. The oper atives at the Boston manufacturing mills were informed today that wages would be increased from 4 to 10 per cent, to take effect September 3. The advance is general throughout all the depart ments of the company. The company employs 1200 operatives. There are so many accidents to live stock whicn cause delay and loss to the farmer in his work. In a large number of instances the delay would be but trifling if a remedy was prom ptly applied. Dr. J. H. McLean's Volcanic Oil Lini ment has for many years been regarded as the farmer's friend. Its healing on flesh of domestic animals is immediate and permanent. Price 25c, 50c and $1.00 per bottle, tor sale at bnipes-Kinersly Drug Co. Justice Strong is Dying;. . Washington, Aug. 17. Advices re ceived here indicate that all hope of the recovery of Justice Strong (retired), of the supreme court, has been abandoned. He rallied two or three days ago, but later reports from Lake Minnewaeka say he has lost consciousness and cannot survive much longer. "It is the best patent medicine in tbe world" is what Mr. E. M. Hartman, of Marquam, Oregon, says of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. "What leada me to make this assertion ia from the fact that dysentery in ita worst form was prevalent around here last summer and it never took over two or three dosea of that remedy to effect a complete cure." For sale by Blakeley & Houghton Druggist. Montreal's Great Loss. Montreal, Aug. 17. Forty thousand dollars' worth of securities have been purloined from the safes of the city treasurer In the city hall. City Treas urer Robbs admits the securities are missing. William McDonougb, who has charge of the securities, ia sick in bed, and cannot be seen. Mr. C. G. -Strong, principal of the public schools at Anderson, Cat., says: "I have used Chamberlain's Pain Balm and have found it an excellent remedy for . lameness and slight wounds." Lameness usually results from a sprain, or other injury, or from rheumatism, for which Chamberlain's Pain Balm is es pecially intended and unequalled. It affords almost immediate relief and in a short time effects a cermanent cure. For sale by Blakeley &, Houghton Drug gist. San Francisco's Tallest Building-. San Fkancisco, Aug. 17. Clans Spreckles, the sugar king, has let con tracts for the construction? in this city of the talleet building west of .Chicago, Tbe structure will . be situated at tbe corner of Market and Third streets and will be 15 stories high. The estimated cost is $1,000,000. Tr. Miles' Nsbvk PUABTKBscure RHEUMA TISM. WEAK BACKS. At druggists, only 25o. Get Ready for School. 2 Piece lVIade up Patent Riveted Buttons All-Wool Material. Every Suit Warranted NOT TO KIP. JBB3EBSE For Infants and Children. Castoria promotes Digestion, and orercomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, and Feverish ness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep natural. Castorlsv contains no Morphine or other norcotio property." "Qwtorla is so well adapted to children that I reoommrad it as superior to any prescription taowntome." H. A. Abohis. M. D., Ill South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N.Y. For several years I hare reoommeno'ed1 your Castoria, and shall always continue to do so. as it has invariably produced beneficial remits." Eovnr F. Pardbb, M. D., 125th Street and 7th Ave., New York City. . "The use of 'Castoria is ao universal and its merits w veil known that it reams a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the in telligent families who do not keep Castoria within easy reach." Ctauoa Mabttw. P. D-, New York City. Ths Ctchtaub OoxFAirr, 77 Murray Street, K.Y. m""i'T"i tir, rv ''!": nr rirt'it l&MKf neAo and Kettrnlfria cured by Dr. MILES' PAIN PILL8. "One cent a dose." BOSS CASH 1 NEWEST COODS I BOSS CASH STORE. for little money. STORE. I I Dry Goods, 1 1 Clothing, parnishings, I Boots and Shoes, For Ladies, Misses, Gents, Boys and Children, straight from their makers. . ??ES ; uAl8 M. Honywill, LOWEST. , PAPS : By buying one of our Special SCHOOL Double Breasted Elbows Seat Knee 'BLANKET SALE STILL ON. A M WILLIAMS GO FRENCH & CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A G ENSEAL BANKING BUSINESS Letters of Credit issued available In the 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 Orable terms. J. B. 8CHINCK, President. J. M. Pattkrbon, Cashier. First Rational Bank. THE 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. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold On New York, San Francisco and Port- ' land. DIRBOTOKS. D. P. Thoscpsox. Jmo. S. Schbkck. Ed. M. Williams, Gxo. A. Licbk. H. M. Be all. SUITS DOORS, WINDOWS, SHINGLES, FIRE BRICK, FIRE CLAY, LIME and CEMENT, Window-Glass and Picture Moulding.