Sty Date VOL. XI THE DALLES, OREGON. SATURDAY, MARCH 19, 1898 NO INQUIRIES I'roliiiiiwH'y Report to lie Made fo the President. CLAIM THE KM) TO Mv IN SIfiHT AnnnuiHi'ii"''" ' '' AcliiiliilHtrntlon'B l'ollr.v Will IS" Mnilii Upon iiulit "f tltn Kniiitrl. WAfliiiSRTox.Mnr. 18. Tim prcai- iilcntiloi'H not expect nnytliiiiR in 1 the nature of u preliminary report from Hid haanl of inquiry in thu Maim; ilisiiHtur. On the contrary, Its expectation is llmt the report, when it eniiioe, will ho complete in 1 all ruspi'CtH, although following tho ' usual course, it iH within thu pow , erof the Kcerotary of this nnvy to i onlor tin hotly to continue thoir i investigation!! iiloiin certain lines, 1 Bhonlil lu hi'lii'vu further infurtna 1 lion is uVirahlo. Wasiiini.to.n, Mar. 18. Nothing of n tptcinl character developed at today's cabinet meeting heyonil thu fuel that tho report of the Muino court of inquiry is not expected until the eaily part of next vveek. As haw heen the caeo in ev ery cabinet meeting during the hiHt month, ahnoat the entire cession wau conauuied in iliaeuBBiiiR the Cuban ques tion, ami it can he Htuted on uood au thority that no plan of action will ho definitely deeided upon pending the ar rival of the report. Kviry phase oi llie Kovurul queHtionn involved wim carefully coniiilurcd, and it is lielieveil that very booh after tho re port ia received the prcHidcut, probably in conjunction with conreBH, will un nouncea delinite policy. Wahhimiton, Mar. 18. Senator 5nl lingcr was ut tlio capitol today for tho first time since his return from Cuba. When requeued to niitko a Htatoniont as to his observations of tho condition of affairs at present on tho inland, ho re sponded . "Von can tjicji my natno to any pict ure you may draw of utter wretehednesH and destitution and hulltalincas in that country. Tho recoucentrados are per ishing by thousands for wuntof the com monest necessities of life. Tho best in formation obtainable leads to the con clusion that there have beon beyond Joubt lOO.OOOdeatlia nsa result of Spain's brutal policy, and many more are occur 'ing from day to day. "There is a divergency of opinion on the island as to tho probability of war between Spain and thu United States, nil I am erne that I am within tho bounds of truth when 1 euy that almost the entire native population would wel comoany turn of events however tragic, tbat would wrcnt Cuba from tho nomi nation of Spain. This is true not only of those avowedly favorable to indepen "Wee, but of many from tho ranks of 'no Spanish Hympathizon', who nro at heart strong advocates of Cuban inde pendence. 'UKSH 1IKMANUS. '"'I'Ottaill ;IIICIIMHII)N til lilt KXHUtllll from Olilmi. Pkki.no, Mar. 18. Franco Iiiib formu the follow tug fresh doumnda from "ia Celestials : fl't China hIiuU not cedo any part J tl'O four province, Kwiuig Tung, it'i, Yuu Nan, ami Kwei Chan; '"atthorailwuy from Thiijj Ohau TiiiR 5i?e Salve Gnrlaiiil's "Happy" Thouiiht Salvo la made right. It is tho aalvo you nro euro of. 50 cents at DONNELL'S, Royal niukcs the limit pure, wholesome nnil delicious. . fi m0 POWDER Absolutely Pure novi iiAKisa roworn no., hew vouk. (on the northern Bhall bi! extiiuled froutior of Tonquin) via Paz, Siam, into the Yuu Nan province, and that a coal- in? station be granted Franco at l.ei Cliau I'll, in tho Hen Chan peninsula, north of Unit Nan. Thua far China declines to comply with any of these demands. I'nKi.NCi, Mar. 18. France makes nu merous other demands upon China in ; addition to Uioho cabled last night. They include railroads and coaling feta tion conceaaionn. exclusive miniiiL' priv ileges, and also insist that tho director of the imperial postollicu should be a Frenchman. Eight days are allowed China to reply and the threats are interpreted to indi cate that thu French will occupy the province of iiui Xiu unless the Chinese comply. A IMirriiw Knrii. Thankful words written by Mrs. Ada K. Hart, of Ciroton, S. I. "Was taken with a bad cold which settled on my hums ; cough set in and finally termin ated in Consumption. Four doctors gave mo up, Baying I could live but a abort time. 1 gave myself up to my Savior, determined if I could not stay with my friends on earth, 1 would meet my absent ones above. My hufitand wiib advised to get Dr. King's New Dis covery for Consumption, Cougha and Colds. I gave it a tiial, took in all eight bottles. It has cuied ine, and thank (iod I am saved and now a well and healthy woman." Trial bottles free at Ulakeley & Houghton's drug stoie. Regular si.e 50c and $1 .00. Cuaranteed or price refunded, 1 WieUUIC OKI" TILLASIOllK. I.iuiibiir Hrlinonnr Arthur AMior Near OmUowii. '.Tillamook, Or., Mar. 18. News has just been received from Oretown.a email villugo on the coast, about thirty miles aouth of bore, that tho lumber schooner Arthur I., of Sun FranciBco, is on tho beach at that point, a total wreck, hav ing been broken into sovoral pieces by heavy seas. Nothing Iiiib been Boon of the crow, and it is feared that all have perished. There ia no telegraph lino to Oretown and no further particulars nro obtain able. Cliiiniltiirliilit'H L'oiieli llimiiuly. Tlila remedy ia iniondod especially for coughs, eoldf, oioup, whooping cough and influenza. It has become famous for its cures of these diseases, over a largo part of the civilized world. Tho most llattoring testimonials have been received, giving accounts of its good works ; of tho aggravating and persist ent coughs it lias cured ; uf severo colds that have yielded promptly to its sooth ing elfects, and of tho dangerous attacks of croup it tins cured, often saving tho life of tho child. Tiio extensive use of it for whooping coughs has shown that It roba that disease of all clangorous con sequences. For sate by lilnkeley & Houghton. Wej lnr HiHilim Um Ntiiry. Madiiid, Mar. 18. Wcyler denies tho 'nuthonitcity of the letter published in 'the New York Journal yesterday in which ho is alleged to have said tho ! United States would not claro to kbihI J a warship to Havana while lie was in jcomnittiid there. ' Tho Shakers of Mount Lebanon, a ' community of simple, honest, God-fearing moil iiihI women, have prepared tho , Klmk.tr Dieost vo Cordial for many years, and it is always tho same, tiiuple, hon est, curntivo medicine that has helped to mako tho Shakers tho healthy, long lived people that they are. Tho Shak oro never have indigestion. This is partly owing to thoir simple inodo of life, partly to tho wonderful properities of Shaker Digestive Cordial. Indiges tion ia caused by tho stomach glands not supplying enough digestivo juice. Shaker Digestive Cordial supplies what's wanting. Shaker Digestive Cordial in vigorates the stomach and all its glands so that after awhilo they don't need help. Ah evidence of tho honesty of Shaker Digestive Cordial, tho formula is printed on every bottle. Sold by druggists, price 10 cents to $1.00 per bottle. Nnliral lu II lu Favor. Ni:w Youi:, Mar. 18. A Madrid dis patch Bays: His significant that Senor Sobral, late naval attache at Washington, who has full pinna of all the United States coast defenses, has been appointed on the stair of the admiralty and had a long conference with the minister of state. DcariH'NK Cannot ho Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. Theie is only one way to euro deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of the Eus tachian Tube. When this tube is in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it Ib en tirely closed, Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed for ever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous sur faces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh; that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars; free. F. J. Chunky & Co., Toledo, O. gflTSold by Druggists, 75c. G-10 Fleet at L.uh rulimtH. Ni:w Yoitic, Mar. 18. A Las Palmas special eaya : The Spanish torpedo fleet, consisting of the I'luto, Terror, Furor, Azerk, Ariole and Uavo and two transports have arrived here. Tho Suie l a (irlniie Cure. There is no use Buffering from this dreadful malady, if you will only get the right remedy. You nro having pain all through your body, your liver is out of order, have no appetite, no life or ambi tion, have a bad cold, in fact are com pletely used up. Electric Bitters is tho only remedy that will give you prompt and sure relief. They act directly on your Liver, Stomach and Kidneys, tone up the whole system and make you feel like a new being. They are guaranteed to cure or price refunded. For sale at Blakclev & Houghton's drug store, only 50 cents per bottle. 1 Spain Dltl lluy a Criunrr. Madiui), Mar. 18. According to a dis patch received by t ho Impareial from Home, the Italian min'ster of marine confirms the icported sale of the armored cruiser Varez to Spain. JSucklmi'8 Ariucu salte. The host biUvo in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcera, salt rheum, fovei sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and at! skin eruptions, and posi tively cuiea pnen, or no pay required It ia guivnu.toed to give perfect satisfac tion, or money refunded. Price 2& eonte per 1kx. For sale by lllakeley and Houghton, drucirista. ltov. E. Edwards, pastorof tho English ll.iptlst Church at Mineisville, I'u., when Buffurinir with rheumatism, was advieed to try Chamberlain's 1'nin Halm. lleaavs: "A few applications of this liniment proved of great Eervico to me. It aubsued tho inllnui.Ulon and relieved tlio nttin. Should any sulfur profit by giving Pain ilnlm u tiial it will please mo." For sale by Ulakoley & Hough ton. 2x1 St ft Wing's Best baking powder ought to sell for twice as much as the next beet. cat) I HEROES WHO FIGHT FIRE Thoir Bisks Incroaso in tho Ratio of Our Progress. Modern llnllillnun nnil Tliclr Con venience A Uil IJiiormounI y to the U'urk of the Firemen Security Unlit Upon Their Sncrlllec. His life is too full of real peril for him to expose it recklessly that ia to say, needlessly. From the time when lie leaves his quarters in answer to an alarm until he returns, lie takes a risk that may at any moment .set him face to face with death in its most cruel form, lie needs nothing so much as a clear head; and nothing- is prized so highly, nothing puts him so Mirely in the line of promotion; for as he ad vances in rank and responsibility, the lives of other.-!, as well as his own, come to depend on hii judgment. The net of conspicuous daring which the world applauds is oftenest to the fireman a matter of simple duty that had to be done in that way because there was no other. Xor is it always, or even usual ly, the hardest duty, as lie sees it. It eame easy to him because he is an ath lete trained to do such things, and be cause onee fcr all it is easier to rial; one's life in the open, in the sight of one's fellows, than to face death alone, cuight like a rat in a trap. That is the real peril which he knows too well, but of that the public hears only when he has fought his last fight, and lest. How literally our everyday security I of which we think, if we tliinl: of it at , all, as a mere matter of course is built i upon the supreme sacrifice of these de 1 voted men, we realize at long interval, i when a disaster occurs such as the one in winch Chief Iiresnan and Fore- ' . lni.iii lnC- 4lnl liv.lU .llTMin Tf.firU man jiuuuu mot itan ......v. jv..- ago. They were crushed to death un der the great water tank in a Twenty fourth street factory that was on lire. Its supports had been burned away. An examination that was then made of the water tanks in the city discovered 8,000 that were either wholly unsupported, except by the roof beams, or propped on timbers, and therefore a direct men ace, not only to the firemen when they were called there, but daily to those Jiving under them. It is not pleasant to add that the department's just de mand for a law that should compel landlords either to build tanks on the wall or on iron supports litis net been lucdcd yet; but that is, unhappily, an c'd story. Seventeen years ago the collapse of a Broadway building during a fire con vinced the community that stone pil lars were unsafe as supports. The lire was in the basement, and the llremen had turned the hose on. When the water struck the hot granite columns they cracked and fell, and the building fill' with them. There were upon the rnof at the time a dozen men of the crew of truck company No. 1, chop ping holes for smoke vents. The ma jority clung to the parapet, and hung t.iere till rescued. Two went down into the furnace from which the flames shot up 20 feet when the roof broke. One, Fireman Thomas I. Dougherty, was a wearer of the Dennett medal, too. His foreman answers on parade day, when his name is called, that he "died on the field of duty." These, at all eients, did not die in vain. Stone col umns are not now used in supports for buildings in -ew York. So one might go on quoting the perils of the firemen as so many steps for ward for the better protection of the rest of us. It was the burning of the St. (ieorge flats, and more recently of th Manhattan bank, in which adoen men were disabled, that stamped the average lireproof construction as faulty and largely delusive. One might 1 ven 'go further, and say the firemanV r'hk increases in the ratio of our prog ress or convenience. The water-tanks came with the very high building, which in themselves oiler problems to the lire fighters Hint have not yet been solved. The very airhafts that were hulled as the llrst advance in tenement house building added enormously to the ilrcinun's work and risk, as well as to the risk of everyone dwelling under the roofs by acting as so man.v huge chimneys that carried the lire to the peti windows opening upon them in every story. More than half of all the fires' In New York occur in tenement houses. When the tenement house commission of 1SU1 sat In this city, considering means of making them (ni'er and better, it received the mos' practical help and advice from the tire men, especially frcin Chief Dresnan, 'whose dentil occurred only n few days after he had testified as a witness. The recommendations upon which he in sisted are now part of the general tene ment house law. Jacob A. Wis, In Century. President A How Pres. MoKinley would look attired In one of our $7.50 Suits. Who is Be Up- To- Date. WE FIT THE RE3I6TCRED Spring Line Of interest to the Man A. M, WILLIAMS & CO. For more than fifty-six years it has never failed in, its weekly visits to the homes of farmers and villagers throughout the United States. IT HAS faithfully labored for their prosperity and happi ness, for tho improvement of thoir businoss and home interests, for education, for tho olovation of American manhood and true womanhood. IT HAS told at tho (iresido, interesting and instructive stories of the doings of tho world, tho nation and states. IT HAS advised tho farmer as to tho most approved meth ods of cultivating and harvesting his crops, and the proper time to convert them into tho largest possible amount of money. IT HAS led in all matters pertaining to tho wolfaro of farmers and villagers, and for over half a century has hold their confidence and esteem. IT NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE and we furnish it with the Somi-Weekly Chronicle one year for $1.75, cash in advance, M'Kinley and Mr. Bryan both agree that prosperity is large ly a matter of confidence. Man Who wears our clothing in spires confidence where- ever he goes. Spring Line Now Ready. hard to fit. Wear the Cloth ing. HARD-TO-FIT TRADE MARK Now Ready. BORN SEPTEMBER 18, 1841.