Chtotiick I VOL. X THE DALLES, OREGON, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY G, 1897 NO 23 rf Hi 4 !llYllr MS ROYAL The absolutely pure BAKING POWDER ROYAL the most celebrated of all the baking .powders in the world cel ebrated for its great leavening strength and purity. It makes your cakes, biscuit, bread, etc., healthful, it assures you against alum and all forms of adulteration that go with the cheap brands. V OVAL BAKINQ POWDCft CO., NEW YORK. V THE CANAL BILL DEAD So Far as the Present Con gress Is Concerned. MUST HAVE ABSOLUTE FREEDOM This I Cuba'M Ultiiuatum, and No Com proinlae Measures Will Be Accepted. Washington, Feb. 5. Senator Aldrich and other friends cf the Nicaragua ca nal bill have had conferences with Speaker Reed and other house leaders during the day regarding the possibility of the bill being brought up in the house in case it should pass the senate. The result is that the bill wil be abandoned in the senate next Monday, and the bankruptcy bill being brought forward. Friends of the Nicaragua bill, while in a majority, doubt if the senate can be brought to a vote, but they know the futility of their efforts unless there is some assurance that the bill will receive consideration in the house. Nothing but a physical test would bring the bill to a vote now, and a large number of those supporting the bill will not subject it to such a test when it would not even be taken up in the house. The conference today convinced the senators that the Nicaragua bill will not receive consideration in the house, and they decided it was better to withdraw it. our army will be no party to them or give an inch of the country conquered by eo much sacrifice of life, property and money. If Spain were confident of ultimate success, do you suppose those so-called reforms would be offered to us? Tbey would not even offer us bread." These expressions are made with the approval of the other members of the junta. Most of them were more bitter in denunciation of the proposed reform than Mr. Palma had been. "There is no autonomy in this scheme," said one ot them. "If real autonomy, such aB Canada has from Great Britain, hid been offered us be fore the war, it would have been ac cepted. Do you think it would be fair or just to those who have fought and fallen for our independence for us to outrage their memories by accepting such terms as these? It would be a virtual surrender when we are satisfied that our cause has been won. "After the 10-years war, Spain pro posed the Arbazuza treaty, which was founded on practically the same lines as the present scheme and which we spurned on the same ground as we shall reiect these reforms. Some of these terms, such as the creation of a local as semblv. whose members would be elected by popular vote, sound very well, but let them once be put in opera tion and It would quickly be seen juBt how much of a voice we would have in theadministration of our country." MO KEFOKMB ABB WANTED. Cubans Must Have Absolute Independ ence or Nothing. New York, Feb. 5. The Herald says: Tonias Estrada Palma, Cuban delegate to the United States, in an interview, eaid the royal decree proposing the promised reforms in Cuba was a trap for the Cubans and a confession of the weakness of the Spanish cause. He re iterated his emphatic statement that the Cubans would accept independence only. Rather than to allow Spain any voice in the government of Cuba, he said, the Cubans would suffer death and the de vastation of their island. "The reforms which I understand have been signed by the queen regent of Spain," Mr. Palmer declared, "amount to nothing. They are practically the same that were voted before the war broke out. If the Cubans did not then accept them and rose in arras can they be expected to accept them now, after so much bloodshed and after so many have' fallen for the ubsolute independ ence of their country? "The only solution possible for the Cu ban problem and the only one wbich the Cubans In anus would accept is tbeir independence. As for the effect of reforms on the island, I will say that Executions at Cabanas. New York, Feb. 5. A World special from Havana via Key West says : The sharp ring of rifle shots from the gray walls of Cabanas fortress is heard daily at 7 a. m., with unfailing regular ity. It is the hour of execution. The morning's programme was varied Monday by a double execution with an added chapter of cruelty and horror. The condemned were Enrique Heilders Osma, a lad of 19, and Antonio Perdoma Guzman. Tbey were charged with re bellion and incendiarism. Usma, a virile, handsome youth, carried the true patriot's heart. In an engagement, the boree of his chief, Perez, was shot; Osma, quick as thought, but barely in time, gave bis horse to Perez and the chief escaped. The lad, by a desperate Schillings Best is simply good honest tea, well' grad ed, fresh - roasted, packed air-tight. If you don't like it, your grocer returns your money in full. There is no other such dealing in tea. A Schilling & Company Mn rrencMco 419 chance, also escaped. A few weeks afterward he and Guzman were cap tured. An execution is a semi-public show, and people who cross the bay to witness it are permitted to gather on the outer walls of the fortress. On Monday they saw again the usual careless and even jaunty preliminaries of death. Bands playing a lively march air marched cheerily into the enclosure. Several hundred troops followed, and within the inner walls formed a noiiow square. Eight soldiers separated from the ranks and took a stand on a mound forming a slight elevation m the square. They had drawn the short straws the night before, and were to be the executioners. Six priests then appeared in double line. Between them were Osma and his fellow-prisoner with' hands tied behind their backs. They stumbled and would have fallen but for assistance. They knelt to the ground with their faces to the wall and their banks to their exe cutioners. The band stopped playing. A priest stepped forward, and gently stroking the boy's cheek, whispered a few words of hope and retired to the lines. The executioners moved ten feet for ward. The rifles were raised and the command was given. Six shots rang out, and two bodies fell forward to the ground. But the boy was not dead. His left arm twitched and vibrated. Even the soldiers, inured to the scenes of execution, turned tbeir heads, and a groan of horror went up from the spec tators huddled together along the edge of the great wall above. It was a grew some, blood-chilling sight, but it was only for a moment. Another command was given, and two of the firing party, who were held to give "mercy shots," stepped up. One placed his rifle almost at the boy's back and fired. It was over at last. The spectators returned to the city barely in time to see a crowd about a crying hysterical young women. Min gled with the Btrains of music were the wails of dtspair from Guzman's wife. The shots were still ringing in her ears when she read the name of her btieband in the awful daily bulletin which means so much. It is published in the even ing papers, and is a list of those who are to be executed the next morning. The grief-sirickeu women had not seen the list until the sound of the shots told her that another of death had been carried out. Two little children, ignorant of the grief, were at their mothers 6ide when the crowd moved about and asked the meaning of her wild incoherent cries. A few minutes later a priest was de livering a letter to an aged, white-haired old woman. It was datsd the night be fore, and began : "Dearest Mother, to morrow I die, a patriot for the freedom of Cuba." The old woman, the lad's mother, fainted without reading it fur ther tor it was her first information that her eon was to be put to death. IN THE SENATE. the Resolution Presented to Reduce Number of. Clerk. Salem, Or., Feb. 5. In the senate tbis morning, after the usual prelimina ries, the committee on penal institutions reported favorably on Driver's bill for the employment of convicts on public roads. Holt made a speech against the employment of clerks and moved that the special committee to regulate clerks be required to report. The motion was lost. Johnson then introduced a long reso lution to cut down clerks from 60 to 25. After a short debate, the resolution was laid on the table by a vote of 15 ayes to 13 nays. The ssnate had a long debate on Price's bill to create laborers' liens on crops. The committee proposed an amendment extending the time In which the laborer may file a lien from ten to thirty days. Nearly every senator ex pressed himself on the subject. A mo tion to re-commit was lost, and the dis cussion was continued. The amendment was f nally adopted, and the bill ordered to the third reading, The committee on railroads reported favorably on Brownell's bill to abolish the railroad commission. Several bills were introduced and the senate adjourned till 2:30 Monday. M. Crevreuil, being about to leave the city, offers liii fine stock oi artificial flowers, plants, etc., at greatly reduced prices. 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They are beyond all doubt the greatest skin cures, blood purifiers, and humor remedies of modern times. They especial. ly appeal to Mothers worn out with the: care of Skin-tor-tured Babies, at jingle appli cation being often sufficient to per mit rest and sleep, and point to a speedy and permanent cure. SreEDT Cure Tubatment. Warm batha with CimcmiA Boai', Bcntlo application of Cuticuua (ointment), nnd mild done of C'utj. r.uiu Kebolvjsnt (blood purifier). Bold throughout tho world. I'otteu Pauo ahd Ciibm. Coup., Sola Prop., Uoston, Matt. "All about tho flkln, Bcalp, and Hair," free. KILLS EVERY PAIN The moineut It I applied. Nothing IlkeCutlcuri Anll-l'utn I'laitor (or pain, inflammation, and weak. uua. Instantaneous aud Infallible. Harry Liebe, PRACTICAL Watchmaker Jeweler All work promptly attended to, aud warranted. 174 VOGT BLOCK. g A. J. OUUfcKT, ' Atacy and Cqdb at Law, ARLINGTON, OHKOON, Practice In the State and Vederal Courts of Oregon uud Wuauiugtou. 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