in VOL. II. THE DALLES, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1892. number- Bold TRAIN ROBBERY. A Passenger Express Stopa on tlie Mern Pacific R.R. THE PASSENGERS TERRORIZED. The Express Car Blown Open With . Dynamite Cartridges. THE MESSINGBRBAOLX WOVNDl. AMERICAN TIN MINING. in a I The ttobbers Escape With S30.00O. , Evidently Professional Thieves. Other News. San Francisco, Aug. 5. A sheriff posse ia on track of the meu who robbed the 8. P. passenger and express train near Collis night before last. The train -which was held op was the south-bound night express, leaving San Francisco at -5:30 p. ni. The exact sum contained in thp messengers safe has not been ascer tained, but it is thought to have been between $20,000 and $50,000. The Dal ton boys are supposed to be in Idaho, and it is a conundrum to railroad offi cials who the parties concerned in the robbery were. Whoever "they may be, they were pretty bold in their operations Several deputy sheriffs from southern counties of the state are stated o have been on board the train, but no resist' ance was offered to the robbers. Gen eral Freight Agent Smnrr, of the South- m Pacific, was in a special car with party of gentlemen bound east. Mes senger George Roberts, who was wound ed by the explosion of a dynamite bomb, was pronounced by physicians to be ser ionely injured. - He reeldos in Los An geles. The two robbers boarded the tender as the train was pulling out at Collis, fifteen miles west of Fresno. They covered the engineer and fire- I and announced they had to obey their . orders under the penalty of death. When the train passed Kolindo station, . the engineer was ordered to stop, and the fireman was ordered with a lighted cigar to touch off the fuse of a dynamite cartridge which the robbers placed on the piston of the driving wheel of the left nana siae oi tue locomotive, me ex plosion was terrific, breaking the piston rod and partially disabling the engine. The robbers then ordered the engineer to get off the train and walk a short dis tance along the track, while they pro ceeded to bombard the two doors of the express-car by exploding dynamite car tridges, about eight in all, which tore the doors into splinters and smashed the floor of the car. The robbers, masked and completely disguised, boarded the express car, and, covering Louis Roberts i the messenger, with double-barreled shotguns, ordered him to open Wells, Fargo & Co's. safe. Roberts Bet about doing this, but was so nervous and ex cited that he forgot the combination, and so informed his captors, who there upon struck him a heavy blow on the head with the gun and threatened to kill bim if he did not immediately open the safe. With trembling bands he did so. and they took out the sacks of coin. When the desperadoes exploded the first cartridge on the engine, the passengers popped their beads out of the windows l to see what was doing, but they drew f them back again when tbev felt the t pistol bullets and buckshot whistling ipuNb tueir ears. A Spokane Man Gets at The Facts Direct Way. From the Spokane Review. To get at the facts about the tin mines at Temescal, Cal., a reader of the Re view recently wrote to the postmaster there relative to the sensational reports sent out by the San Francisco Examiner. The answer was as follows : Temescal, Cal., July 27. In reply to your letter of the 21st regarding the tin mines I can say it must be a mistake, for the company have' about loO men working, and mine from 20 to 25 tons of ore per day. That paper said it would fan two or three years ago, out it is still working. There is plenty of tin. The piece you saw in the ixamincr. was about the manager. They have a new manager and are working just the same as ever. 1 have had about 20 persona writing to me about the mines. Yours truly, D. J. Dawson, Postmaster. A week age the local democratic paper was laboring under the delusion that the product of the tin mine was protect ed, and to show that protection was death to industry it declared with much vehemence that tho mines were a failure, and J. Hamilton Lewis made the asser tion that there was not a tin mine in ex istence in the United States. Since then both have been enlightened. Of course they will now come forward with the plea that the prosperous condition of these mines proves the fostering influ ence of free trade. A HUMAN SEA ROLLS. The Mighty Throng Reaching Denver Unnrcceflentei . - THE RAILROAD MEN ARE ANXIOUS. A Blockade Threatened Which may Last for More Than a Week. THE FLOODGATES OfF-NED WIDE. On Account of a Sweeping; Reduction in Kates Everybody Is Taking a Trip Westward." SOUTH CAROLINA POLITICS. Some Kxcittng Scenes at " . Union. a Meeting at TREASURE SHIPMENT. Allison was a Spy. Boise City, Aug. 6. Allison, the de tective who went to Gem ostensibly as a miner, and conducted a small business in the fruit and nicknacks line, arrived here today. He became a member of the miner's union, and was elected as its secretary and afterwards gave for tho use of the mine officials the details of the proceedings of the union, their oaths, mode of initiation, names of members and officers and plan of procedure. After the Gem light he left Gem and will appear as a witness. It is under stood that Allison's testimony will cre ate a tremendous sensation. - It is ex pected that it will tend to show that the miner's union of the' Ccenr d'AIenes has long been a lawless and incendiary as sociation. It is said that Allison, while a member of the union, got possession of the records that will astonish the country, and that will go a long way to ward justifying the determination of the mine owners to submit no longer to the exaction of the union. - 1'arllment Opened. Lonhon, Aug. 4. The new parliment assembled this afternoon. The pro ceedings today were purely formal, and no business will be transacted until next week. The queen's council, at which the speech from the throne is signed, will .be tomorrow. WTben Glad stone appeared in the house this after noon he wae given a widely enthusiastic reception, the Irish members rising In a body, joined by the liberals, waving their hats and cheering. Hon. Arthur weiiesy feel, speaker of the last house. was elected speaker. JDkkvek, Atfg. o. Ine leading ques tion now is: "Will the railroad officials be able to handle the mighty throng which will reach this city Sunday and Monday to attend the Knights Templar conclave?" There is au expression of anxiety on the faces of the railroad men concerning the situation. When the plans were made for receiving the knights nobody imagined the floodgates would be opened by a sweeping reduction of rates. It is now prophesied that un less a radical change is made in the pro gramme there will be a blockade which will not be disentangled for weeks. Would not Dress op. Dayton, Om Aug. 4. Frederick Kay ser, an aged, eccentric and wealtlry miser, has hanged himself as the' result of a quarrel with his daughter. In ad dition to stocks and bonds he owued business and farm property here valued at $250,000, and had a large cetate in Sweden, left him by his parents. For the past twenty-five years his daily avo cation had been the collection of garbage and slops, which he fed to stock on his farm. Despite his wealth he dressed in rags, and looked and acted like a dis tressed mendicant. His only daughter, a cultured girl, returned' recently from a five years' absence in Sweden, where she was studying music Her efforts to in duce her father to clean up and discon tinue his slop-gathering incensed the old man so much that he committed suicide. His wealth is estimated at $500,000, and will go to bis daughter and her imbecile brother. ... Uxion, Si C, Aug. 0. A question -of veracity came up at a political discus sion here yesterday, between Gov. Till man wKo asked Orr for1 his authority for saying that a preacher had said that ho (Tillman) had flaunted his profanity in public. Col. Orr replied that he did not divulge private conversations, and added that Tillman knew tho statement was true, asrhe could ascertain ;by appealing to the preachers in general. The gover nor said that sometimes an oath slipped out, but that it had done -so only on one occasion during the campaign. He ap pealed t the ladies to signify if, in their oninion, they considered liiin a black guard, but there was no response. The governor then said that if Col. )rr or any other man said he flaunted his pro fanity iii T)ublic, thev lied. ' Col. On- advanced to tho governor and, catching him by the arm, wheeled him around and asked him if he was trying to raise a personal difficult v. .Tillman replied that he was not. Orr shook his finger in his face and told him be could not in' timate that he (Orr) lied without ha?' ing it thrown in his (Tillman's) teeth He told bim further that Tillman bad boasted of being a "God Almighty" gen tleman. 4 '. Tho governor replied so ho had, and Orr replied, "He did not do himself credit when he made you." He again caught hold of the governor and asked him if he meant to intimate that he was a liar. , The governor said that If Orr had not originated the statement his remark did not apply to him. By this time the; .crowd had become a mob, feopie climbed upon the stand, men pulled their coats off, swore like troop ers, and gathered around the two men it looked as if there was going to be bloodshed.. Orr stood to the rack and told Tillman - he .had repeatedly used profane words on the stand: The gover nor said he had done it but once, and he would leave jt toex-Gov. Shephard, who had ftotgr tosay;, Col. . Orr .'again caught hiild of, Taiwan, who bad turned his head- toward the crowd in front, -and told him If he wanted a- fight , he could get it..: The governor Said he did not, and Col. Orr went back to his seat, re marking that Tillman must let him alone. : The . governor turned ' to the crowd and said that no living man could bulldoze him ' Sixty Million in Gold Leaves San Fran Cisco ftp the East A STRONG GUARD OF PICKED MEN, THE DALLES SENSATION. History of the Accumulations of Gold in the Sub-Treasnry. The Farmers' Friends. Studying the Planet Mars. Vienna, Aug. 4. In an interview had by a representative of the Associated .Press at the observatory on Turken- hanze, with the assistant astronomer ildebrand, the latter said a careful ob serration of the planet Mars was made frqm the night of July 4 to that of Aug- list 2, inclusive, by Herr Palisa. chief assistant astronomer, and himself. Dwing to the proximity of the planet to he southern horizon, the result of the Innervations was unsatisfactory. The regress of the planet was watched for in hour. At a point 52 deg.- above the torizon, snow fields could be seen dis- bnctly extending 30 deg. from the south Me. Immediately after this white atch, three large dark groups were ob arved. "Perhaps." remarked Herr lildebrand, "they are continents like lose of our earth. The haze which en- fcloped the lower part of Mars, however, naerea accurate observations impos- Me. The north pole and equator were fcmpletely obscured." The observa jons were taken at 1 :30 in the morning ith the largest telescope in central irope, ' ' ' - lr A Fine Thing to Have. Oregonian. It is a fine thing for a people to have a waterway and its com mercial possibilities stand between them and railroad corporations. The people of Eastern Oregon and Washington ap preciate this and long with feverish anxiety and almost belligerent impa tience for the completion of the great canal and locks at the Cascades. Avail able waterways everywhere reduce the cost of transportation. If they carry only a fraction of tho goods they make the. rate at which the rest is carried. Mob at Dnqueane. Pittsbuhg, Aug. 5. All is fftiiet today at Duquesne. Yesterday a mob of 300 men from Homestead attacked 60 non union men entering the steel works. The mob were armed with clubs and stones. In the fight Foreman 8tagle and another workman were seriously injured, and a dozen others more or less hurt. The Sixteenth regiment is now here, and no further trouble is apprehended. It is stated that all bnt 50 of the old men will return to work. XI1K FORFEITED LANDS, ipE ualles, July ae. following is a copy of the act, recently become a law, in reference to purchase of forfeited rail road lands under section three, act of September 29th, 1890. Be it enacted by the senate and house of representatives of the United States of America in congress assembled That section three, of an act entitled an act to forfeit certain lands heretofore granted for the purpose of aiding in the construction of railroads, and for other purposes, be, and the same is amended so as to extend the time within which persons actually, residing npon lands forfeited by said act shall be permitted to purchase the same in the quantities and upon the terms provided in said section at any time within three years from the passage of said act, Capt. John W. "Lewis, register of The Dalles United States land office more fully explains the question as follows "By act of congress, approved September 29, 1890, claimants, under the third sec. tion, were allowed two years from that date in which to pay for the land to which they were legally entitled. By a subsequent act (Feb. 1891) this time was extended to the 3d day of February, 1893, and by another and recent act the time was further extended, to actual residents only, to three years from Sep tember 29, 1890. So that, as the law now stands, parties entitled to purchase Grant County News. : In conversation with one of our enterprising farmers the other day, the News man was informed that Grant county, instead of offering a bounty on squint;! scalpel' which Mor row county tried and found ruinous, should protect badgers, skunks, wild cats and even coyotes, by making it a misdemcnor to kill them. These ani mals are al l great destroyers of squirrels, and before their wanton destruction be came so common the farmer's grain fields and ! 'gardens grew unmolested. Now, if they are destroyed it is the farmer's own fault, for he has been- in strumental in the death of the animals that destroyed thousands of squirrels every season. This farmer also said that he had often met his neighbors, who would boast of having just been instru mental In the " Ignominious death of some unoffending badger or skunk, and who in the next breath would whine about the squirrels eating their crops. and want the county court to fix a boun ty and pay them for killing the squir rels. Farmers and sheepmen, protect the badgers and skunks, as well as other useful animals. They will not be apt to eat your chickens while squirrels are plenty. ' - ,- " George Is no Greenhorn Baker City Democrat. The visit of Mr., Geo.; W. Weidler to Greenhorn promises to be of great advantage to the district. Mr. Weidler is a wealtbygen tleman and being interested in the mines TOO MICH 3IO MET FOR ONE PLAOE, The Balk an Hand at the Time of the . Chilean Affair was one Handled Million. Kan Fbancisco, Aug. C Quite a sen sation was created last evening when it was ascertained that $60,000,000 in gold coin.hadleft the city for Washington, guarded by a troop of picked men of the railway mail service. . The report is that the accumulated store of gold coin at San Francisco has been steadily increas ing during the past twenty . years. When J. P. Jackson assumed - the office of sub-treasurer, ho found more than $70,000,000 in coin in the vaults of that institution. Since then the amount has increased to $76,000,000, and the accumu lation was seriously crowding the vaults In the mint, too. there had been a steady accumulation. - At the time of the Chil ean trouble, the government had stored here more than $100,000,000. It was then. that attention was directed to the danger of carrying such an accumulation of treasure, not only , in San Francisco, bat in any seaport city. The proposi tion to remove the bulk of the: coin in tbo-sub-teasury vaults to Washington was mooted then, and it has - come "up regularly from time to time since, finally resulting in its shipment to Washington, nnuer a Btrong guard. ' - - - under the third section, but not actual fof tha sectlon he will probably exert his , A 8 are Care. New York Advertiser. Queen Sophie of Sweeden and Norway has been fully restored to health. Her trouble has been of a neivous character, and her physician prescribed that she should sweep-her rooms, light her own fires, cook her breakfast and perform a num ber of other manual offices in connection with housekeeping for a few months, and the prescription has worked like a cnarm. , Seeking Information. Postlntelligencr. The business- men of Spokane have at last tumbled to Jim Hill's definition of "relative rates. Nevertheless, Jim worked Spokane to the queen's taste, and the citizens have yet to learn wherein they have been bene fited, at least as far as freight rates are concerned. . resiaents on tne iana, must make pay- mem on or. oeiore reDruary 3, 1893. Actual residents on the land will have until September 29, 1893. To be a Cardinal. St. Louis, Aug. 4. It is stated in Catholic circles as a certainty that at the next meeting of the pope's consistory "is uoiy lauier win announce the ap pointment of Archbishop Ireland, of St. Paul, as a member of the college of car dinals. A prominent Catholic, who is in constant communication with Borne, says : , 'The appointment of Archbiehop ireianu to ue carainai is just as sure as any event that has not yet transpired." influence in the proper direction. Time's Change. Galveston News. The. belle of a sum mer or so ago whose beautiful train drew after Ber a score or so of fashionable beaux, now ties the end of it to the baby buggy and pulls two chubby passengers up life's steep hill in the evening BORN. In The Dalles, August 5th, 1892, to the wife ol A. A. Bouney, a son. : In The Dalles, August 4tb, 1892, to the wife of W. E. Gilhousen, a daughter. .-. . No Difference Dlseernable. Press-Times. To the naked eye, the warm weather has had no appreciable effect upon the coolness between the Telegraph and the" enemies of Any Good Eastern Washington Man. The jtoa Eruption. - ; The -"opposition" of Mars is taking up no more scientific observation perhaps, than the present eruption of Mt. .Etna, by far the' most destructive which has occurred for years'. ' Beginning in the early part of lpst month the volcano has, without ceasing, sent forth rivers of lava which' are destroying the vineyards and orchards on its slopes and at 'its - base, This eruption is peculiar in ontf respect, and this is the fact that the principal flow of lava is from numerous small craters far below tho summit of the mountain;' Indeed, from the principal crater hot ashes, dust and steam ' are mainly ejected, the lava, because of its great weight, bursting out of the moun tain's side at various points far beneath the main opening. At the present time five of these newly-formed craters are active. The fertile lands which are be ing covered with the fiery flood slowly creeping down the mountain's side are ompletely mined, and' many peasants will be reduced to actual want unless something is done for their relief at an early date. It is said the Italian govern ment will take steps in the matter, and sufferers from this calamity will be re lieved from this source. It would be in teresting to know if there is any connec tion between this eruption and the vol canic disturbance which overwhelmed the island of Sangir, one of the Phillip jne group, so recently. Opinion of a Portland Physician Pa thology vs. Chemistry. From tho Dally Oregonian. . , . The alleged poisoning case at The Dalles, an account of which appeared in yesterday's Oregonian, has attracted considerable attention of thinking phy sicians, especially of Dr. Otto S. Bins wanger, who expresses his opinion as follows: In the Oregonian I read a sensational report, coming from The Dalles, which not only excited my curiosity but also . aroused my sympathy and scientific in terest. According to the report Mrs. Matilda C. Rogers died suddenly July 7. Other information which I received gives the date of her death June 28. One week later, July 14, the body was ex humed and the stomach, heart, kidneys, lungs and liver ware sent for chemical analysis to Portland. The chemist re ported the presence of sulphate, of zinc or chloride of zinc and also the stomach and intestines in a highly inflamed con dition. On the strength of that analy sis, the justice decided to bind over William Bergfield, the son-in-law and suspected mnrderer of Mrs'. Bogers, without bonds, to appear before tho grand jury in November, and he is now in the hands of the sheriff. Permit me to quote some of the statements of that report, also some of the results of the analysis, and let us examine them in a scientific light. 1. Tho analysis "proves the presence of sulphate of zinc or chlorido of ' zinc." The statement, "either 'snlphateor chlo ride of zinc," after the analaysisis made is worthless. The examination must show with absolute certainty which one of the two was contained in the stom-. ach. . ... 2. "Tho body of Mrs. Matilda C. Rog ers, who died suddenly a week before, etc." ...!' ; . ' While it is- trne that sulphate of zinc or -chloride of zinc ean, under certain -pircu instances, cause death, they never . will kill suddenly Jn small doses they produce gastric inflammation ; in larger doses sulphate of cine produces vomit ing, and chloride oi zinc cauterization of ten stomach, which does not provo fatal suddenly.- .Besides, the chloride of zinc -in largo doses would leave erosion in the -mucus membrane of the stomach. The report only speaks of inflaination of the stomach and not of the erosions. 3. The chemest reported the lunge. heart, kidneys and liver in normal con dition, but the stomach and intestines highly inflamed. . It is very doubtful that after a body has been buried for one or two weeks,, even if it was embalmed in the ordinary . ' way, it would show yet distinct infiam- mation of the stomach and intestines.. In order to carry some weight, such a statement must come from a physician and not from a chemist, whose knowl edge of pathology is at the very "best rudimentary. Granting, therefore, that sulphate of zinc or chloride of zinc was found in the stomach of Mrs. Rogers, it is more than - doubtful that their presence caused her sudden death. Bergfield is under arrest and kept for trial, and on the strength of this chemical analysis may even lose bis life. Although personally acquaint ed with Assayar Fisk and on friendly terms with him, I deem it inv dutv to call the attention of the proper author- ' ities to the insufficient evidence result ing from his report. , Uer Influence Increased. Tacoma News. The influence of wo man in politics is increasing In Ohio a nominee for congress is a manufacturer of chewing gum. Marion Hariand's Endorsement Royal Baking: Powder. BIED.v -. In The -Dalles,-August. 6th, ,Wm. Glenn, son of Wm. C. Glasius, aged 2 years, 2 months and 21 days. : Funeral will take place to-morrow. (Extract from Marion Harland's Letter to the Royal Baking Powder Co.)