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"f "W(WPWS j?-- CHEAPEST Associated Press Daily News paper Published on the Pacific Coasti $:?. a Year. One cent daily i V r- Oxxl 1- 25cU.;a meath byj WiUlf Prepaid ia Advaaee. No Papers Seat Wtop Timo Is On. ' B VOli. 6. DAILY EDITION. SALEM. OltJWO? MONDAY, OCTOBER 15, i3. DAILY EDITION'. N'. 3iJ. rAL JOURNAL. MS, M ! Best St. Louis make at VERY - LOW - PRICES! Every pair of better grades fully warranted. When you want a pair of men's, ladies' or child ren's shoes, see what The New York Racket HAS TO OFFER YOU. A general assortment; of Racket Goods at Racket Prices carried in stock. E. T. BARNES. State Insurance Block, 333 Com'l St. LADIES CLOAKS REMODELED, A SPECIALTY. OSTON TAMllNG AND s mw mm hUUIW ll WWII VlliV"- V.WH.MHj w.VH..VH VjW, ..--,... ..- Piessed. Cleaning and PressiDg Gent's Suit $2.00 to $2.50. " Ladles' " 1.60 to 2 00. Dying, 50 cents to (1.00 extra. Work neatly done on short notice, at moderate price?. State St., 1 door below 8mith & Stelner's drug store, Salem. I. GOLD & CO. ECd. C. EX Meeker & Co., Hop Exporters OFFICE, Oberheira Block, up stairs, Salem. W. A. TEMPLETON, Gcn'l J gent. Dress Suit for $100. J. RUBENSTEIN, - 308 Commercial Street, salt in. Suits made to order and cleaned or repaired. THE LEADING INDEPENDENT REPUBLICAN PAPER OF THE VALLEY. CHEAPEST fflMRR IN ORHJON Receiving all the Associated Press Dispatches. iuhv rv Mill PURYEiR TOKIY " ' "a Double Newspaper 1.50 These low hard times rot. s . liable every ton), r to have . Z and inow the slato of the market and all the r"S?rjiSr SK able to deal justly and fairly with all. Complete Telegraphic, State, Capital, For eign, Market and Crop News. I I Cross Choi Wholesale and Ret ill Dealer in Fresh, Salt and Smoked Meats of allliinds 95 Court and 110 State Streets. Tiara la ft l-lmtlPft of ft lire-time. Wt)V appeal shabby when you can have an elegant suit tor -ONE DOLLAR? leas $3.00 I NO MM Cleveland Against Re peal to the Last. MORE BOMBARDING AT RIO, Contradictory Reports as to the Damage Done. EITHER OF THE REPEAL BILLS Would Result In Establishing Free Coinage of Silver. No Compromise. Washington, Oct. 2. "Carlisle has consulted again with President Cleve land on compromise terms but with no satisfactory results," says a morning paper. It is understood the reply be has authorized Carlisle to give the ad vocates of compromise, is be will listen to no compromise until a supreme ef fort has been made by the friends of unconditional repeal to avail them selves of the conceded strength as a majority of the senate to force tbo vote. If all efforts fall then he may listen to compromise terms as the less of two evils. Silver senators assert that they are certain of support at the critical moment. The senators who have been most ac tive In trying to effect a compromise on the repeal bill do not express them selves as discouraged by the outlook this morning. They say nothing Is likely to transpire In that direction dur ing the present week, but express an opinion that the beginning of next week will see a change in the situation, by which time the senate will be more thoroughly Impressed with tho futility of its effort to pu the pending bill In Its present shape. The extreme mea on both sldeB are still holding out stlftly, however, and if there is any Improvement of the situa tion it does not appear on the surface. Dlusmore, of Arkansas, opened the second week's debute on the bill to re peal the federal election lawn, with au argument in favor of repeal. In thp senate the silver repeal bill was taken up and Kyle addressed the seuute iu opposition to the bill. Democratic- members of the ways and means oDmtnltleo are making progress with a tariff bill. The ground work Is understood to be free raw materials with compensatory reductions on all other productions. These Is a growing Impression that the consequent deficit In re celpts must be met by Increased internal revenue taxes on whisky aud tobacco. Carlisle Id understood to favor an Increased tax on whisky to $1.20 cents, caculatlng this will Increase the revenue thirty million dollar. Some silver advocates who have been studying repeal bills proposed In the senate by Voo-heea, and In the house by Wilson, reached the conclusion from a silver standpoint, passage either these bills. Instead of proving an unmixed evil may be a real benefit. Tbey claim the enactment of either of these bills into a law will have the effect of re storing free coinage of silver. Their rcasonlna Is to the following effect: The repeal leaves untouched the fifth bectlon of the Sherman act, which re peals the purchasing clause of the THE BEST - .. ... ,. ivl Medicine. becanM US'": ViM It a.UU nature W throw o the In. tlm. tone ni. Hie entire wpuiUm. TOUii JuM S-3- ScKeVTand I VlLg7 Ttcr.foVe, tat a LrouUt .an fare Un Tery ocmmI. 1 iwni on Mood and kU OUeitf uudUd . It nnd-.Vlltaiii uct. This they argue leaves the Bland-Allison act in full effect. Bio Bombarded Some Moro.s London, Oct. 2. A private cable gram announces that the rebel lleet at Rio Janeiro bombarded that city all day yesterday, resulting In further damage to the city and a great loss of life. On the other hand the Brazilian minister here furnished the following dispatch under date of yesterday giving the government side: "The Insurgent squadron Is still In the bay, and muoh weaker by desertions dally. Some of the vessels are, damaged by the shore artillery. The forts vigorously answer ed yesterday's bombarding. The two steamers which escaped have been re pulsed Pt Santes: At Santa Catharlua they failed to land. The troops are united and loyal to the government. Publlo opinion Is opposed to the Insur gents. Heavy Libel Suits. Trknton,- N. J., Oct. 2. Tho Mon mouth park association has begun a libel suit for- $100,000 against the New York Tribune and Times for the publi cation of an article declaring It n mon strous gambling hell. Fatal Wrecs. Cincinnati, Ohio Oct. 2. The south bound fast freight tralu on theCleveland Cincinnati, Chicago & St Louis road this morning ran into threo freight cars, carelessly left au the track near Edg aroit, maklug an ugly wreck, killing two tramps and fatally Injuring two others. Switchmen Strike. MemI'IUS, Tenn., Oct. 2.-It Is stated that the switchmen in nil the yards ex cept the Tennessee Midland have struck. No disturbance is reported. Yuma Uprislug. Washington, Oct. 2. Au uprising amoug tiie Yuma Indians In the south west of California headed by Miguel, the reueguiie chief, and several of his followers, Is telegraphed to the interior department today by Indian Agont Estrldello. Portland Bank Resumes. Portland, Or., Oct. 2 Commercial National bank resumed bmluesB today. An Iowa Sensatlcn. Des Moines, Oct. 2. Tho greatest political sensation of tho Iowa campaign this tall was sprung this morning. Senator L. It. Bolter of Harrison Co. Iu a letter to Chairman Bcott, of the Populist central committee, announces that he has bolted the Democratic ticket and will support Joseph for Governor. Bolter has been a democrat ic leader Iu Iowa for several years. First Regiment Officers Resign. Portland, Oct. 2.-At tho Armory while the reglineiit was' drawn up for orders. (Jolrnel Beebe caused to be read the retaliation of Lleutenaut-Colnnel Summers, and Immediately afterwards gave notice that his own resignation would be submitted within a few days. The Gascado Reservation. Wasiiinqion, Oct. 2. President Cleveland has signed a proclamation setting apart a large tract of land as forest reservation under uct of March 8, 1891. The reservation to be known as the "Cascade Forest reservation" It extends from the Columbia river 200 miles southward about twenty miles la width, taking ui the Cascade Range. Hereafter no settlement will be allowed within Its boundaries. Bardalejr Oullty. PiTTsmmo, Oct. 2. The supreme court has decided John Bardsley was the officer of the city of Philadelphia and Us agent, and Judgment was ren dered against the city for a million dollars paid In tuxes on Pans (o Bard sley as city treasurer and by him em bezzled. Severe Storm. Nahhvimx. Tenu., Oct. 2. A dis patch from Mobile, Ala,, says: A very .......a .turiii r.LMtiir. tiurt of town Is submerged, water rovera the wharves, tflegraph wire- are down and housts unroofed. It 1- the worst storm ever known la the city. POLITICS IN GERMANY. Program of the Parties in the Elections. BISMARCK STILL RECOVERING HEALTH Tho Gorman Emporor Hunting Elk in Sweden. Berlin, Oct. 1. Among many per sons who sent inquiries as to the condi tion of Princo Bismarck was Slgnor CrlBpf, tho Italian prime mlnlstor. Slgnor Crlspl'a dispatch was received September 17th, but no answer was sent until Saturday, when Prince Bis marck personally indited an answor, suyluiz: "I thank you heartily for the Interest you tako in my recent Indispo sition, which was painful but not dan gerous. I haye commenced recover ing.'' According to dispatches receiver hore from Stockholm, Emperor William Is now hunting elk In the Hunsburg. The imperial party have already shot forty animals. The Hon. W. W. Thoma9, tho American minister to Sweden and Norway, Is taking part In tho cbaso with the emperor. Elks are now found only In a limited area of Sweden. Many of the animals have been driven within tho royal preserves, where they fall an easy prey to tbo im perlal party. At the conclusion of the shooting Emperor William w 11 return to Germany on board the Imperial yacht Hobenzollern. Ho will travel to Berlin by way of Daulzlc. Unsuccessful efforts bavo been made to get German bankers to tak a great Italian loan. Tho amount of tho pro posed loan is teported to be $120,000,000. Italian and German agents, It Is said, tried to Induce Loudon bankers to Joli the proposed syndicate, hut their over tures iu this direction were repulsed, tho scheme was then abandoned. Sev eral papers today announced that the loan has been floated here, but they have been misled. Interest In tho l'rusalan elections Is heightening In proportion as the great party groups develop their concern li the result. Tho Indirect oleotlon sys tem that prevulls In Prussia with clast representation, has always tended In the direction of popular difference to ward the elections. This year, how eyer, there Is somo reflex action, caused by the agitation accompanying the relchstag elections, and this livens U party spirit. Both factions of tbo Frol slnnlge party, tho national liberals, centrists and conservatives alike, in tend to take part in the fray. Tho bo clalist leaders differ as to tbo polloy to be followed by that party. Herr Singer udvlsea tho socialists to abstain from voting, urging that as Indirect elections paralyzed tho popular will, tho social ists can do nothing except through political combinations, which the paity ought to despise. Under the influence of Herr Singer, a majority of the social ist committee has advised tbo party to hold aloof from the elect'ons. An in fluential minority insist, howover, that the party should take part In the elections, and doubtless a number of socialists will respond to this advice. Tho radical unionist, one faction of the Frelslnnlge party .still maintains Its cob illct with the other faction, tho Rlohter Ists, though no great question ought to divide them on the Prussian elections. The recent feud in the party over the army bill baa left, apparently, irrecon cilable hatreds between the lenders. Herr Rlohter Is again distinguishing himself by the violence of bis denun ciations of his old political friends. The national liberals will appear In the lists with a definite and practical program. This party will demand the extension of tho stato railways and canals; Improved navigation in the rivers; reform in the finances; amended taxation, and finally extension of ec clesiastical Influence in tho national schools. The elections will largely (urn on financial, taxation and educational questions. Tim tbiiihstair will not resume its ses sions before November 2d. When tie house opens the voice of Ahlwsrdt will again bo beard, loader and more pow erful than ever. Disgrace and social dlnrepute do not aOect' Ablwardt'a In fluence, as at ft recent congress of North German atitl Semite his pro cram found uuaoluious acceptance. Amoug the propoaalc they submitted and accepted waa the absurd one for bidding Hebrews to have CJermau oerv ants. The congress declared new de parture ou the oart of the anti-Semites In denouncing an alliance with the conservatives, with whom the party Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report fej &sm MTW ABSOLUTELY PURE at one tinia tfUlated. A lesolutiou adopted declaring that the anti-Semites should oppose all direct taxation that burdened tho lower and middle- classes, proved the desire of the party to split with tho conservatives. Another sec tion of tho antl-Semltea held a meeting at Chemnitz, and by their proceedings appeared to be less Inclined, to desert tho conservatives on hearing fiom Herr Llebermann and Von Sonnerberg that, with tho pledged support of tho con servatives, their faction would obtain places on tbo relchstag committees. CHINESE ARTIFICIAL PEARL8. An Ingenloni Prnceia bjr Which Thouinmli, ofOrmimmiU Aro Produced. Tho processes by which Cliinoso pro duco artificial pearls aro as remarka blo as tlioy aro ingenious. This busi ness constitutes quite an important industry in tho northom part of tho provinco of Chihkiaug, which is a silk producing region. In tho months of May and Juno largo quantities of mussels aro brought in baskets from a lako SO miles distant, and tho big gest of the mollusks aro selected for thooporation that ia to bo performed. Into tho Hholl of each mussel is in troduced a nutnhor of small objocts which it ia intonded that tho bivalvo shall coat with tho pearly substance it Bocrotes. Sometimes littlo pills of earth aroused. Such pollots aro mode of mud taken from tho bottom of watercourses, dried and powderod with tho juico of camphor treo seeds. In tho same way aro omployod di minutive images, usually of Buddha,, but often of fishes. Thoy aro made of load, cast vory thin by pouring tho molton motal upon a hoard which is carved with tho impression. To placo theso nucloi inside of tho mussels is a process of no littlo deli cacy. Tho sholl is usually openod with a small instrument of mother of pearl, and thomantloof tho animal is gently lifted. At tho samo timo tho images or pills aro laid in two rows honoath tho mantle. Tho Bholl is then permitted to closo. Finally, tho molluskH aro deposited in canals or pools five or six inches apart at depths of from two to five foot in lots of 6,000 to 60,000. In November tho mussels aro cot looted and opened. Tho animals are removed from tho shells and tho pel lota or images aro dotochod hy a sharp knife. By this timo thoy aro fastened tightly to tho iunor surface of tho shells, and havo bocomo cov ered with a coating of nacro. The next process is to cut away tho mat rices of earth or lead about which tho artificial pearls havo formed. Into tho cavity thus made in each ono is poured moltod yellow roslnf and the oriflco is artfully covered ovor hy a pioco of mother of pearl. Tho poarls formed about tho earth en pollota aro flat on tho bottom, and In shapo aro somowhat more than hemispheres. They bavo much of tho lustor and beauty of tho real goma ami aro sold at u rate so cheap as to bo procurable hy all who care to possess thorn. Thoy aro omployod to a considerable extent by Jowolers, who sot them in tiaras and various ornaments of fomalo attiro. Those inado from images aro employed as ornaments and amulets on tho caps of children. A few sholls aro sent to market, with tho poarls adhering, for salo to tho curious or superstitious. Exchange. Mow Manufacturer! Get Idea. In society thero aro women who havo unquestioned right to their po sition and who aro not rich enough in mtnnntn with til(MU) who h&VU both title aud money. By somo means tho largo dry goods nhope miccood in get ting such women into their employ and pay them royally for revealing new things in tho way of houeo, din ner and reception dresses. On tho first night or a play you win seo men anil women in tho audionco busily drawing la akotehbooks. They aro artlata who aro busy taking down tho tollota for fashion papers, minor dreasmakera and for all the shops which sell made up clothes. Their employoru have paid for the entrance ticket $3 and $10 and beeidos Fv the artista well at so much an hour. Paris Cor. New York Tribur. I Baking tOWUCr TRAIN ROBBER CAPTURED. Hardin, the Lost oftke Ceitralia I HE MAKES A FDLL CONFESSION., Description of II Im hy a Woman Causes Ills Arrest. Crntiialia, III., Oct 1, Hardla, the last of tho Contralla pang of train, rob bers, who was captured In Cincinnati, waa conveyed to the Salem jail Satur iny afternoon where his pals Jonee and O'Owyer ate confined. He then, made full confession. 'Thero were three of ua Implicated, ' Jones, O'Dwyer and myself, tie said. "The robbery was planned at St. Lou,la iver three months ago. Jbuea waa too trunk to play his part well, He held up the engineer and fireman before O'Dwyer aud I were ready to attack the car and our plans were thrown nto iionfuslon. When we entered the oai I found myself in the grasp of Baggage nan Armstrong. I saw a man oooilpg into tho oar with a gun and supposed a'o had been trapped. From, that nio ruontmy Bole object was to get out of he car. I endeavored to keep Arm itrong between myself and tbeBiiotguu md did so pretty successfully until I impulsively reached fur tho bell cord to itop the tralu. It was then that Saun ters shot mo In the arm. The shooting filled tho car full of smoke and I man iged to jump out at the east door, O'Dwyer wa a few feet ahoad of me. We both landed outside about the same time. "We ran east until we reached O'Dwycr's house where he stopped. I passed on in h circuitous route until 1 tturued to the Illinois Central track nearly a mile from where we held up tho train. My arm was paining me 'earfully and I crawled Into a culvert uidlatd down. While I lay there ft wild engine bound for St. Louis on the air lino pulled up to the depot and (topped. While tho engineer and are man were in the telegraph office I irawlod out and secreted myself on the engine, on which I rodo Into St. Louis, "I went directly to Mrs. Kay's about 7 o'clock on tho miming after the rob bery. From there I went to the depot in East St. Louis and at 7 o'clock p. m. Sept. 21st I was iu Cincinnati and went direct to tho city hospital wiiere I had my arm dressed. I leglstered under the name of Kay. I have beeu read ing the papers regularly aud supposed detectives were searching for me la Missouri and Indiana. It was this that caused me to bo nit my guard when I was arrested. I think It wae the de scription of my wound given to the press by tho St. Louis woman that caused tho city noptlal authorities to Identify me and give mo away." Without a doubt Simmons Liver Regulator will cure you. It ha cured thousands. TMS HJUUCXTi. Ban Fuanoiboo, Oct. 2. Wheat, December f 1.13. ChioAoo, Oct, 2. Cash, G8J; De cember 00. Portland, Oct. 2, Wheat valley, I.07J; Walla Walla .871, Deafaeee Caaset le'Gwe by local applications ae they 'oap not reach the diseased portion oftlwear. Thero le ouly one way to cra deafoese, and that ia by contltutloul pemedke, Deafness Is caused by an I nfltutea con dition of the mucous lining of (he Rue tachlau tube. When thli tube l Id llarued you have a riiW4u aaund or Imperfect herlur, and when It k en tirely closed, deafueM Is the rult, and unlet1 the Inttsination can be takeu out and this tube restored toils unyt&al condition, hearing wilt be destroyed forever; nine cases out or ten are oauaedi by catarrh, which l nothing but an in flamed condition of the utueott aur fucts. Wo will give one hundred doiiart for any cane of dsafuese (eatwed by eaUrrh) that cannot be owed by llalra Catarrh Cur-. Bend for circulars; torn. V. J. Uhknky 4 Co., TaWdo.O. Sr3old by DrufujWU, 76c r- E? - fjbimdkiA -.. -