CiJ : .. .. VOL. II. THE DALLES, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1892. NUMBER 42. A RELIABLE REPORT. Tie California Train Roddgk Still at Large Unlmrt. kTHE OUTLAWS FARING VERY WELL. I No Signs That Either Evans or Sontag Have Been Injured. CALLED AT A RANCH FOB DINNEB. After a Conversation They Took Their Icpartnre Golne Awa.T as They Had Come. ' Fkesno, Cal., Sept 22. A reliable citizen who lives near Sampson Flat has arrived here. His account shows that neither Evans or Sontag was wounded at Young's house ; that Evans did not lose his gun, or if he did that he got an other, and that the outlaws are not short of ammunition, although they have lost 200 cartridges. The day after the officers were killed at Young's placeEvans and Sontag came to the camp of a man named Rogers, who keeps horses and cattle. The camp is about three miles from Youngs'. They came to his camp j and asked him for something to eat. He pretended not to know them and replied that he had nothing cooked, but if they would wait till he ould cook something he would get them dinner. They said they would wait, aud he proceeded to cook dinner and make .coffee. Evans and Sontag each had a double-barreled shot guu'and each carried two revolvers in his belt, and Sontag had a sack of cartridges strapped to his back. JCeith er of them showed any signs of having re ceived a wound in the encounter with the officers. This camp is nearly north om Young's cabin, where the fight oc curred. Rogers prepared dinner for the 'men, Betting both plates on the same feide of the table, and poured their coffee for them. Evans picked up his plate And coffee and moved to the opposite side of the table, so that he could torn- Inland a view of the country in one di rection, while Sontag could look out for danger in the other. They ate their dinner without anything unusual occur ring. Then Evans took out a $10 gold piece and offered it to Rogers in payment for the dinner, but Rogers refused to take it saying it was too much, and be sides that they were welcome to the dinner without pay. Thereupon Evans j turned to Rogers and said : "Maybe you don't know who we are." Rogers answered that he believed they were strangers, and then Evans continued: "Well, I am Evans, aud this man is Sontag." Rogers replied to them that f they wanted anything about the camp tnev couiu take it. jvans saia tney aia not want anything except their dinner. When they were ready to go, Evans picked up a Winchester rifle lying in camp, and examining it, said: "I see it is not loaded." Rogers replied that it was not, but if- they wanted it they could have it. "I don't want it," said Evans, "but if it had been loaded I would request you to walk a few rods away irom it wnne we are leaving. Since it is not loaded yon need not mind," and with that he laid the gun down again. They talked a few minutes ipore and then took their departure, aroine the same way they had come, and ilisappeared in the woods. - Progress Due to Republicans. Post Falls Post : The people of Idaho kind the northwest owe the development uid the prosperous condition of our fcountry to the wise and liberal policy of republican administration. We do liot have to go back very far to find out .vhich of the two great parties placed tself on-ecord as favoring our interests. pnly last winter, in the lower house of congress, the democrats endeavored to ripple the northwest and retard its de velopment by cutting down the appro priation for surveys for the whole ountry to an amount far below that vhich was needed for Idaho alone. On he othfr hand, a republican senate, ided bv the nersistent efforts of Willis iweet, our representative in the lower louse, fought the measure and defeated An Oregon Autumn. Telegram. The man who was calling br the rain-maker a week ago is happy Jodjiy. The wind came along to give mpnasis to the rain. sut, alter all, it only an equinox blow. In a day or o the sunshine ana clear skies will veal the glories of an Oregon autumn. ABOUT WAGES IN EUROPE. Comparative 1.1st of Prices Tairt In the United States. Mr. Julius Goldschmidt, American consul-general at Vienna, recently fur nished eome interesting data in regard to the daily wages paid for skilled and unskilled workmen in the iron and steel industries of Austria. His report shows a state of facts that ought to be read by every wage-earner, and in part is as fol lows : . "Men in iron foundries, 46 cents rolling mills, 72 cents ; cutlery, 31 cents ; forges, 37 cents ; wire nails, leadenware, etc., 45 cents ; coppersmiths, 57 cents ; machinery, 40 cents; shipbuilding, 34 cents." Men who earn f 8 and $10 per day in Pennsylvania and Illinois are paid at the rate of 72 cents per day in Bohemia and other manufacturing districts of the Austro-Hungarian empire. Consul Go'idschmidt concludes his re port with the following pen picture, which ought to be preserved by every laboring man so that he may read it in his despondent moments : "A mechanic, clerk or inferior func tionary rarely sees a roast on his table. The houses of the people Wannot com pare with those in the United States. There is little house life ; the majority of the population manage to make a supper out of a glass of beer and a slice of bread and a sausage at the restau rants and public gardens, because more than one meal at their own houses is qnite beyond their means." Crushed by an Elevator. St. Lcuis, Sept. 22. Mrs. A. E. Shields, the wife of a traveling man, was killed at the Richheu hotel shortly after noon yesterday. She and her hus band had been boarding at the Ricblieu for some time, with their baby and its nurse. Mrs. Shields went to the eleva tor to go down to the dining-room. There is no glass in the door leading to the elevator, and Mrs. Shields, after ringing the bell, put her head through the opening to see if the elevator was coming np. At that moment is was de scending, and it struck the back of her head, crushing it badly. Strange to say, she was not knocked down the shaft, but staggered back into the hall way. Then ensued a most horrible scene. A chambermaid and- a porter had witnessed the scene and ran to her. She walked from them, and, notwith standing the fact that she was practi cally decapitated, ran to a speaking tube and apparently tried to call some one below. Then she ran or staggered to her room a few feet away. Mrs. Shields was twenty-four years old and daughter of Colonel Campbell, clerk of the court of appeals in Arkansas. Her home was in Little Rock. Pauper Immigrants. Quebec, Sept. 22. Several hundred immigrants, lately arrived by the steam ef Sardinia and other steamers, having through tickets to the United States, are held here, awaiting the decision of the United States government as to whether they will be allowed to enter the United States; after having been duly disinfect ed at Grosse island by the railway com panies. The condition of these people is deplorable, man v not having a cent wherewith to obtain either shelter or food. ' A Shadow of His Former Glory. Portland Telegram: There is still some glory for a dethroned monarch it is stated that ex-Jiang Sullivan re ceived more applause than the new King Corbett at the Madison square benefit, Perhaps this will serve to save the Boston giant from committing suicide and believing that the world has no sympathy for the wreck of his physical greatness. Working for the Same End. Oregonian. . When the democratic party shall succeed in restoring the old wildcat money system, through state banks, a result to which their national platform points, the country will have a quality of "money" quite as worthless as the most deluded "populist" could require. Strikers Indicted Homestead, Pa., Sept. 22. The ac tion of the grand jury in returning 169 indictments aganist the' strikers has created a profound sensation here, . not unmixed with apprehension. A Blick Swindle. ; Madrid, Sept. . 22. Two men repre senting themseleves as agents of the Credit Mobilier, recently arrived at San Sebastian and opened an alleged branch of that institution. They obtained $20 000 in depoBita and then absconded. . THE WETMORE WRECK Capt. O'Brien ana the Watchman in : Perilous Situation. AN EFFORT MADE TO REACH THEM The Xew York Herald Has a Cholera Proof Correspondent. THE HAFFKINS INOCULATION TEST The Case of Dr. JlcGlyiiii to Come on the Cth of November To Be Heard at Last.' Mak.shfikld, Or., Sept. 22. A heavy southwest swell is breaking over the Wetmore today, and fears are entertain ed for the lives of Captain O'Brien and the watchman, who are on board the wreck. . When it came up so rough that the wbaleback could not be approached yesterday with a lifeboat, Captain Loch placed his beach gear on the tug Lib erty and went as near as safety would permit and tried to shoot a lifeline on board, but the recoil kicked the cannon overboard, and it was lost. Today the cannon was brought over from the Ban don life-saving station, and an effort will be made to take the men off this afternoon. A diver with a complete diving outfit arrived in town today, and as soon as the weather permits, will go down and inspect the hull of the Wet more. lie Seems to be Cholera-Proof. Xew Yokk, Sept. 22. The Herald's cable from Hamburg states that its cor respondent, Stanhope, who submitted to Dr. Haffkins' inoculation to test its effi ciency in preventing cholera, is doing his utmost to catch the disease. Stan hope thus writes from the hospital, his present residence : "I have so far done nearly all my teste. Last night I slept between two dying men. I have drank Elbe water, eaten among the sick, and neglected all precautions, and further still, have placed my hands in my mouth after nursing patients, etc., and, so far, am safe.". The Trial of Dr. McGlynn. .new louK, fcept. 22. The coming meeting in their annual conference of thirteen archbishops of the United States, which will begin on November 6th, has already been announced. A new interest has been given to it by the cabled statement that the pope will have a representative present in the person of Archbishop Sotolli, who, as papal delegate, will be entrusted with plenary powers. The St. Louis,' Mo, Western Watchman, which is one of Archbishop Ireland's organs, and of which the Rev. D. S. Phelan is editor, says in its issue of Sunday : "There are many disputes between the bishops and their clergy tnat nave long awaited a settlement; chief among these is the case of Dr. McGlynn. It is safe to say that that famous case will now come up for trial. Information from Rome is to the effect that the propaganda has re ceived satisfactory assurances from Dr, McGlynn, and that his Bide of the ques tion will at last be heard." A Horrible Death. Arlington Record. Wednesday morn ing, as Watchman Leghorn, just starting on hia daily rounds, was about two-miles east of here on the railroad, he discovered the mangled remains of a man scattered over the road and covering a space of two hundred feet. Mr. Leghorn had the fragments brought to Arlington as soon as he could summon assistance, and they were deposited in the car house near the depot. It was a sickening sight, one that will be remembered a long time by those who viewed it. The head, left arm, and both legs were completely sev ered from the body. The supposition is that the man was riding on the truss roda of a coach of No. 2, which passes here at 2:15 a m., and either becoming sleepy or not having a firm hold on the roda was thrown from hia position and instantly ground under the fast- flying wheels. Deceased was a young man, light haired and complected, and was about 20 years of age, aa near aa could be determined. He had a letter in hia pocket addressed to Charles Z. Edwards, Portland, Oregon, postmarked, Bedding, Cal., and signed' "Brother Jim." A coroner's jury was empannelled, and re turned a verdict in accordance with the above facts. ..- J . -' . PROSPEROUS FARMERS. An Inland . Empire Class With Solid '.. Reason for Satisfaction. From the Oaksdule Sun. . . , , . . , . People of the Inland Empire have every reason to feel pleased with their lot as. they find it today, They find as they harvest the wheat crop of the pres ent season that it is a good average yield 'and far ahead of what they had anticipated. While the price does not promise to be as encouraging as last year, it will certainly be reasonably high to begin with and no prospect or reason of its getting any lower. Not only should they fell thankful for what they have been permitted to produce and the realization that thev are per mitted-to experience but ' also for the fact that their financial condition is very favorable compared with that of other agricultural districts where the yield is little over half of what it is here and where the interest on indebtedness con sumes a large portion of the country's products. While eastern Washington is not altogether free from mortgage in debtedness, it is comparatively small, and the instances are ' decidedly few where liien of industry" have taken up land infthe country and remained ' with it for any length of time'that they have not been able to remove any incum brances" that were necessary beginning the improvement, and with the success that has heretofore attended the efforts of the agriculturist it is only a question of a verv short time when everv farm will be ; clear of the dreaded incum brance. ; Xot only has .the farmer been able to make his pursuit a paving one by the products of his labor, but he has found that his land has increased in value far in excess of that in any other part of the United States, and he can sell a place which ten vears ago was government land for more than enough to purchase the best improved tarm in the central and eastern states. New York, Sept. 23, A false alarm of lire caused a panic in the Jewish syn agogue crowded with worshipers this morning.S Jn the rush for the stairway four people were crushed and trampled to death', a'lid a dozen seriously injured. The firemen succeeded in extricating the people from the blocked stairway, The panic occurred in a tenement build ing occupied by three synagogues, one on each floor." In the synagogue on' the top floor a candle accidentally ignited a bit of drapery. Immediately ah excited individual yelled fire, and then the rush for the exit' came. At the front parti tion door' there was a jam, then a crash and part of the board wall gave way. The mass 'poured, fell and rolled down the steep stairway. Ithree times as many persons were attending the synagogues on the lower floors, more than l,000 in all. They heard the rush and crash above and heard the cries of fire, and immediately likewise made a rush for the street. At the second floor the two blind and maddened 'human avalanches met, and a f nriouH struggle ensued. Men and- women fought, dumb, but with the madness of despair, and the weakest went downL The deadlock was broken again and; again, only to be renewed with the same scenes of terror. Slowly the solid mass, filling the stairway from wall to ceiling, slid down to the ground floor ; down there it brought up against a rush irom the rear-noor synaeogue and all came to a dead stop. The police patrol arrived at this moment, and the officers, fighting their way through the crowd, finally broke the jam. Four women lay dead and nine are seriously injured. The injured were promptly sent to a. hospital. Of the four dead taken to 'the station-house, three were identified. They are: Freda Becker, 44 years, Russian ; Naomi Rosenthal, 30 years, married; Tuebe Boynim, aged 50. S" 11 Immigration Checked. QuEENSTOWif, Sept. 23. In conse quence of the orders of the United.States authorities that no second-class passen gers would be allowed to land in Amer ica unless ftbey could show they are American citizens or have residences in America, the Cunard line steamer Ce phalonia, from Liverpool for . Boston, put forty passengers ashore at Liverpool who were neither citizens- nor residents of the United States. Thirty-three others who had never been in the United States were landed here today by the same -vessel. All these persons will be returned to their homes by the Canard company.'; ; : ' Base Ball Game. Saturday afternoon the Ferguson baBe ball nine of The Dalles distinctively sent back to the east a great big "No !" to the inquiry "Is base ball playing losing caste," by being swiped by the Dufur nine.-; The game stood nine to fifteen. Starr, McGreer, Ferguson and Wiley left records. So did Jenkins and Fulton of Dufur. - . ; , , COLOMBIA IN DANGER. An, Epidemic of IReyoIntions in ' Soatn '' - And Central America. - QUARANTINE, RAISED A RACKET. Business of All Kinds Said to be Com pletely Paralysed. AX A3IAIIKAN WAR SHIP WASTFD. Intelligent Residents so elliieved. Re. c sent The. Action -oC-Panama Au thorities. ,'.-. Washington-, Sept. 23. The epidemic of revolutions in Central and South America seems to be spreading. Colom bia is now in danger. Word has reached the state department that serious trouble is brewing in consequence of the quaran tine established against European and American vessels. The' trouble was commenced by the action of the author ities at Savanilla in firing on the British mail steamer Atrato as a warning to keep out of that port. British residents have resented this action, aud other foreigners, especially merchants, are complaining bitterly at the action of the Panama authorities m closing all ports against European and American ships. Business is said to be completely parakv zed, and general discontent prevails 98 the result. The American consul at Colon has advised that an American man-of-war be eent there as a means of preventing trouble and to protect Am erican interests should . the. necessity arise : His request was promptly com plied with.-- Admiral Walker was - tele graphed to last night to dispatch' the cruiser Concord to Colon immediately, and he replied this morning that the de partment's orders had "been ' 'complied with. . The Concord should arrive at Colon tonight. " ' '"' ;' 1 A Monstrous Social- Disease. Telegram. Several .hundred immi grants, absolutely and literally poverty- stricken, waiting., in quarantine - at Quebec to enter the' United States. What a disgrrce this is to our present laws. Within a few days this mob has collected. What is the number for the whole year? ' The' very thought of the dregs of European humanity. which are being dumped into America as a gar bage ground 'is startling. Talk about the invasion of a few germs of cholera, it is nothing compared to the human parasites, that are 'being shipped in myriads to America to infect our cus toms and civilization with a social dis ease that cannot be cured. IS ROYAL Best Baking Powder The Official Government Reports: " The United States. Government, after elaborate tests, reports the Royal Baking Powder to be of greater leavening strength than any other. ( Bui Icliv 13, Ag. Dep., p. 599 J ' . . The Canadian Official Tests, recently made, show the Royal Baking Powder, highest of all in leaven ing strength. ( Bulletin o,p. 1 6, Inland Rev. Dep.) In practical use," therefore, the Royal Baking Powder goes further, makes purer and more perfect food, than any other.' .' ' Government Chemists Certify : . "The Royal Baking Powder is composed of pure and wholesome ingredients. ,It does not contain either alum or phos phates, or other injurious substances. ' - : , ; u Edward G. Love, Ph. D." ' "The Royal Baking Powder is undoubtedly the purest and most reliable baking powder offered, to the public. ' "Henry; A. Mott.M.D., Ph.D." . "The Royal Baking Powder is purest in quality and high- . est in strength of any baking powder of which I have knowledge. . Wm. McMurtrie, Ph. D." Cnrrent Topics In Cajon valley, San Diego- county, Cal., the crop of 3,200 acres of vineyards is being gathered, and besides twenty eight cars of grapea for the fresh fruit markets of the east, the yield will be 5,150 tons of raisins. One grower will. name his raisins Amercian Eagle grapes, instead of London layers, etc. The stockholders of the Hawaiian Commercial and Sugar company have been told by Claus Spreckels that the outlook at the islands is not favorable.. The first cotton mill to be established in China has its machinery imported from the United States. The operatives are mostly Chinese women who receive $4 per month. A good strong man earns $5 per month. The cotton is raised in the vicinity, and costs about 6 cents per pound. . - , . If Commissioner Peck made false re turns of the effect of the McKinley law in New York, it should be easy to prove their falseness. Inquiry made of a few of the industries named in his schedules would show Peck's report to be true or false. If he were proven false in parts it ' would be reason to believe his whole re- - port a lie. . But too many others have made' similar reports. A senate com- : mi t tee of investigation unanimously' ' made a similar report. Peck's report is .. true as a whole and true in detail. . His report cannot be discredited by charge ' . that he burned the records. " Prof. W.H.Wiley, national chemist, . is making preparations for a test of the sugar beets raised in thePalouse country to discover their saccharine qualities, and -farmers are sending information and ' samples for the purpose. A combined ', effort is being made there to promote the ' culture of the beet, and lucrative returns -. 1 are certain to follow the establishment of a factory for manufacturing sugar., ,-" - A Falling Out. A dispatch from Columbus, Ga. says Mrs. ,-- that at a meeting there yesterday Lease characterized the Atlanta Journal - ' as a lying Bheefc and its representative ,. as a liar. The aeporter -. who. obtained -the , affidavits in Pulaski ' regarding , Weaver was on the stage, and stated he , had the affidavits in hiB pocket to prove . the correctness of the Journal's report, and he would read them. . Weaver de- , clared he should not, as. he had en gaged the house. Great . confusion en sued. .The reporter was finally removed from the stage. He told .Weaver that , Mrs. Lease's sex protected her, but he would hurl the lie in the teeth of any man who would step out as her cham- ' pion. ' - - ' Heroism Shown. . Astoriau. Much heroism of the calm, deliberate kind has been displayed at New York by the medical profession since the cholera scare set in. .The -women who have volunteered as nurses . arc also entitled to high praise. There's Too Much Klsk. Helena Journal. There ' may be men in Montana will risk money on the tiger, bnt we doubt if any are in favor of " the wildcat money which is provided for by the national democratic platform THE