O) VOL. XI Shafter Regrets that He Should Feel Slighted, Was Asked to Be Present and SANTIAGO, July 23. General Shafter has sent a letter to General Garcia express ing sincere regret that the insurgent general should feel slighted or aggrieved by the alleged ill treatment received by him at the hands of the American commander. General Shafter states that he invited General Garcia to accompany him to Santiago on the day that Toral surrendered, but Gircia declined. Full acknowledgment is made of the invaluable aid which was rendered the Ameri can army by General Garcia and his troops. Soldiers and civilians in Santiago bear no ill will toward the "Yankee," but are bit ter toward the Cubans. Food is becoming scarce. A fierce resistance is expected from the Spanish forces at Holguin. There are now only a few mild cases of yellow fever among the American troops encamped here. , FEVER AND SCURVY AT DAWSON Steamer Garronne Arrives With Almost Two Million Dollars Dawson Crowded With Idle Men. Victoria, B. C, July 23. The steamer Garronne, which arrived today from St. Michaels, brought 166 miners, a million and a half in duet and nuggets, and probably enough in dratts to raise the tJtal to over two million dollars. The latest news from Dawson is that feyer and scurvy prevail to a serious extent. Twenty thousand idle men crowd Dawson without work nntil winter comes again and opens the mines once more. Canadian royalty bHs fair to ruin the kings of Klondike who have invested heavily in properties that it will not pay to work because of the heavy roy alty tax. AN EXCITING FORGERY CASE A Multimillionaire Rancher of Glenn County, California, Has a Griev ance to Answer Claims Forgery. San Francisco, July 23. Mies Min nie Murdock has commenced suit here to collect a note for $100,000 and inter est at one per cent a month since 1877, amounting in all to $350,000, against the estate of William Murdock, a multimil lionaire rancher of Glenn county, who died four years ago. Plaintiff alleges her uncle gave her a note when she was a little child saying ho wanted to pro vide for her when she was older. Mur dock beard of the note before he died and declared it forgery. He denied em phatically that he ever gave his neice any note or had any such conversation as that alleged. The suit has created a sensation throughout Northern California, and the heir of Murdock will prosecute the holders of the note for forgery. Ex perts have declared the note bogus. Cain In laor checks. All conntv warrants registered prior to July 12, 1894, will be paid at my office. Interest ceases after July 7, 1898. . C. L. Phuups, Coanty Treasurer. THE NEGOTIATIONS STILL UNDECIDED Sagasta Said to Be Secretly Negotiating as Far as He Dares Contest Movement Gaining Strength. London, July 23. The question of peace or war still hangs on international conditions of Spain. From the most trustworthy eource it has been learned that Sagasta and two members of his cabinet have been secretly trying to ar range peace terms with the United States. Sagasta will, go as far aB he dares in the face of the masses. It is evident on every hand that the prepara tions are hastening to band over the negotiations to a military or combina tion ministry as soon as they shall have taken definite shape. It is certain that the Carlist movement ia gaining strength and that the government sin cerely desires peace. POPE LEO'S CRITICAL CONDITION His Sun May Soon Set A Number of Conferences Held Cardinal Par rochi May Be the Next Pope. New York, July .28. The health of Fope Leo continues to excite apprehen sion throughout the Catholic world. The prevailing opinion among the members of the college at Some is that Pope Leo's sun ia near its setting, and be knows his night is not far off. The Cardinals have held a number of conferences within the last ten days. Parrochi, Nicar of the Holiness, presided, and the question of hia successorship has been discussed. Parrochi is thought to have a good chance to succeed to the chair of St. Peter. Leo is thought to favor Bampollo, the papal secretary of state. No American church dignitary is even mentioned in the matter of suc cessorship, and an Italian is sure to be the next pope. . TYGH VALLEY -ROLLER MILL At all times flour equal to the best for sale at Tygh Valley Boiler Mills,, at prices to suit the times.' Also mill feed. W. M. McCorkijj, Prop. mcbl6-6m : DALLES, OREGON. SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 24, and Asserts that Garcia Declined. ANOTHER SCANDAL IN HIGH LIFE A Descendant of One of California's Oldest Families Kills His Cousin Through Jealousy. Pomona, Calif., July 23. James Mar tinez, desc?ndent of one of the oldest families that were famous in the early history of Southern California, shot his cousin, Jose Martinez, dead early this morning for criminal intimacy with the slayer's beautiful wife. James Martinez caught the guilty pair once before, but he spared his cousin's life and forgave bis wife on Jose's prom ise to leave the state forever. James came home unexpectedly at two o'clock this morning and the tragedy followed. The family is one of the wealthiest and proudest in this section. WOOD WANTED. The directors of School Dist. No. 12 wieh to give notice to wood dealers that at the regular meeting of Ang. 2d they will receive bids for furnishing tl e dis trict with 50 cords of oak and 45 cords of fir wood, more or less, to be delivered at the different school buildings or else where as may be required. ju)yl9-4t NOTICE. Ail doga running at large, without a license tag, after the 1st of August, will be impounded. Chas. F. Lauer, City Marshal. You cannot afford to drink colored tea. It undermines health, and the coloring hides defects. Schilling's Best needs no coloring; it is good enough. Royal makes the food pare, wholesome and deliclouc r imi FDVDZR Absolutely Pure ftOYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW VORJt. FIVE DROWNED MANY MISSING The Fraser River Disaster Worse Than First Reported Entire Fleet of Fishing Boats Caught in a Storm and Demolished. Vakcoiner, B. C, July 23. The dis aster to the salmon fishers at the mouth of the Fraser river, caused by the recent ttorms, appears to have been worse than at first reported. The who'e fleet was out at the time. Many of the bouts were strung together, and when tho storm-cloud burst they were-dashed against each other with such force as to 'either demolish them outright or render them useless. Five of the men were seen to sink out of sight. It was at first thought this was the extent of the fatalities, but when the men reported twenty-five were found to be missing. These in clude Chinese, Japanese, Indians and whites. They may yet be heard from, but- it ia more than likely that they have been lost. BETTER RIFLES FOR VOLUNTEERS Members of the Porto Rican Expedition Will be Armed With the Krag Jorgensen Gun as Fast as Possible. New York, July 23. A special from Washington to the Times says : At least 20,000 of the volunteers who go to Porto Bico are to be supplied with the Krag-Jorgensen magazine rifle, used by the regular army. This announce ment, made by the ordnance depart ment, came as a surprise, the under standing having been that the supply of the improved guns would not permit of their being served out to the volunteers for some months to come. The ord nance department was content to let that impression pervail, so long as it was not prepared to controvert it with the arms themselves, but it has been straining every energy to accumulate a stock of the rifjes in order to begin their issue generally as soon as possible. Only Three Escaped. Ottawa, July 23. Bev. O. L. String er, an Anglican missionary engaged among the Esquimaux, writes to a friend here stating that of the eleven whaling ships that left the Arctic for the West last fall, only three managed to get out. The others were caught in the ice and had to be abandoned. Four men were lost in trying to reach land. 1898. TO We will Inaugurate Our SPECIAL CLEARANCE a. q. mums & go. Hi Cloudy Weatheir Ppefepged foi Sittings. MY WORK Chapman Block. WILL ATTEMPT TO VOID THE CONTRACT Trouble May Result if the Spanish Steamship Company is Given the Contract for Carrying Troops. New York, July 23. The World says : A lawyer has 'been retained by the steamship companies who were bidders for the transporting of the 22,000 cap tured Spanish prisoners from Santiago to Spain, who will begin action today to have the contract made with Com pan ia Trans-Atlantic Espanola set aside. The ground taken is that the successful bid der is a licensed corporation of a nation with which we are at war, and that ac cording to a measure passed by the Spanish cortes one-half of the receipts of every corporation doing business un der the Spanish government must be surrendered to the government to help defray the expenses of the war. By letting the contract to a Spanish corboration the government indirectly pays into the Spanish treasury a sum equal to one-half the stipulation. NO 112 SALE MY SUCCESS. THE DALLES, OR. GARCIA MADE NO COMPLAINT Letter Said to Have Been Sent by Him to Shafter Was Written By an Of ficer of Castillo's Staff. Santiago e Cuba, July 23. It now turns out that the letter alleged to have been addressed by General Garcia to General Shafter, complaining of thet treatment accorded to the Cubans, and advising General Shafter of General Garcia's resignation, was sent by a corre spondent named Araa, who has been acting on the staff of ' General Garcia. It is not clear that Garcia ever saw tha letter. . To Care m Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab lets. All druggists refund the money it it fails to cure. 25c, DeWitt'A Little early Risers The famaiis tittle pill.