TSCn DA1XX3 -WXETiT CHEOaijaJS, JTODAT, SrCSUBES 16, 18. JiEW DIAMOND FIELDS -tiffany Reports Fayoralili Upon Speci ' mens From Wans. AN INLAND EMPIRE RESOURCE. Added to the Long List of Rich Treas nres now Existing. aBI BIGCLAR KIMI(BI.I STONES. rmeiuiel of the Party aow on the Ground for Further' Definite Prospecting. A Boise City dispateh says that Chaa. andorn, who is interested in the dia mond discovery on Snake river, tells the following story in regard to the discov ery and his connection with it: In the 80s he was at KVniberly, Sonth Africa, and become acquainted with diamond lining. About six years ago, alter com ing to Boise, a prospector showed him a tone, which he pronounced to be a Ximberly diamond. When the man told him that he picked it np on Snake river he ridiculed the idea. Subse quently he made an investigation, and Jound that there was a formation '.litre aimilar to that at Kimberly . He had H Sratnoben, the widely-known mining Man, look into it, and that gentleman advised him to have the ground proh nected. He then took Mr. Waters, who was running a ferry in the vicinity, into his confidence, and the latter has been quietly prospecting the country, having recently found the gems. One or more of those stones was sent to Tiffany & Co., who made a favorable report. Vandorn states that he will soon have one of the atones that is i-ingcut. The party who h;is gone to the fields is composed of .Engineer Wellington and an assistant, three employes of Vandorn, who are to take up additional ground, L. W. WeiUn an expert from New York- and a Mr. Casscerouft and Mr. Bullfinch, -.-xperts irom Baltimore. What it will amount to only time can tell. It should be stated that fields are in that part of the tate which fIiuws Buch great evidences f volcanic action, being on the border of the famous lava flow which stretchet in a cheerless desert for hundreds of miles across the country. -Progress lu Mexico. For the fourth time Porfiro Dial has been inaugurated as President of Mexi oo. His first term was from 187S to 1SS0. Since 1884 he has been continually 'in of fice. In many respects he has shown him self to be and enlightened an proyre ive ruler. In the matter of railroads, telegraphs and telephones, banking faci lities and other modern improvements, there has been a remarkable develop ment. The separation of state and church continues to be enforced. Pop ular education makes headway, but' slowly. The population of Mexico is about eleven millions. Of late somewhat more has been attempted in order to rescue the laboring people from their degraded condition. The Indians consti tute about one-third of the population, and lead a life of their own, mingling but not mixing with the other raceB. Mexican Romanism, not having the en lightenment and stimulus that would come to them from powerful Evangel ical churches in contact with their own, is mostly what it is in the other Spanish Bepublican countries, largely a miser able parody on what a christian church should be. A more needy, if a more hopeful field, for the mission of a pure Christianity hardly exists. "The Greatest Farce." "The greatest piece of detective work in the history of Oregon," is likely to prove the greatest farce. The Oregonian Thiel-Sullivan combination, who are trying to establish the fact that a lot of sheep herders and cowboys ot Gilliam county are the "terrible desperadoes'' who robbed the Roslyn bank, are, if onr information is correct ; likely to be the butt of ridicule of two states. The "sixty-four of the bravest men that ever marched out of Portland," and who sur rounded one cow boy, and marched him to Roslyn, are probably upon the wron track. ' Hale, who has been identified a the one who held the pistol at Cashier Abernathy's head, was at Wm. Hendryx place in Gilliam county, on the day after the robbery, having come from Fossil that day; he was in Fossil and pur chawd goods of Steiwer & Co., on the day oi the robbery, and it is said the alibi of the other men who have been "jositively identified," can and will be clearly established by men whose word 18 unquestioned. . '" Pretty Good. . Oregonian. The Dalles, Baker City, La Grande, Pendleton and Union are the commercial centers of five counties, which represent a gross valuation of over $22,000,000, and have a population of over 75,000. This is a good showing ior a country that two weeks ago was -described by a state official as a land ch'eSy devoted to sagebrush and bunch- A VVOMA.1 . AUli A DISS A REMAfitCASl-E . CAPTURE ON MN v RTVEA 04 UKXtGAM. Ha. atia twilu, mt Hiiii1K Has Had : a BflaJOy Thrilllaj r i I na . as Her Ufa THI. Story ghm That Mte Only Ha Nerve bmt Ktrensth. . Ods of tbo best known characters to the lumbermen and sportsmen of upper Michigan is Mrs. John Towle, of Strong ville, a small deserted village an the Pine river; twelve miles below Radyard, a station on the Soo railway thirty miles from here. Her home and name have become famous to tae woodsmen and rambermen on account of Mrs. Towls keeping a boarding house, where the woodsmen engaged on the drive in the spring have always stopped for their meals, it being the only house on Pins river for a distance of ten miles on each side of Stroagville. Mrs. Towle came to this country from Aalborg, Denmark, twenty years ago, and first settled down in Newport, Vt She was called to attend her present husband, who was confined wita a broken shoulder, after the doctors had given him up. She mended him in soch good shape that Mr. Towle decided that she was the woman of his destiny, where upon they were married and started for the wild upper peninsula of Michigan to make their home and fortune. Taking a boiusatead near th banks of the Pine river, Mrs. Towle has occasion to come to this city ouceabont every two months with the produce of the form and dairy. In the whiter she can drive in, but in the summer there is no other way bot to take a boat and row up the Pine river twelve miles to Rndyard station, where ahs can take the train for this point. It is with one of those trips that this narrative has to deal. Mrs. Towle had left home with a boatload of produce as usual, and came to town with good suc cess. On her ratnrn trip taa was leisure ly rowing home down the Pine rirer, with its high and very thickly wooded banks in some places, and sloping, moss covered banks in others. See had not gone far when she heard a rustling vound above her. "OUT OF TH FEYIJfO FAS," KPC. On looking up she perceired a large deer standing on the edge of the preci pice about fifty feet up. screaming, with a wolf hanging on its front quarter. The deer immediately jumped for the river, landing clono to the shore, bat the wolf mill held its grip. It might be noted rare that deer when attacked by wolves in this country will always make for the dearest river, as wolves will not go into ha water uulesa they have a hold on their prey. The deer had no sooner left ihe ground to jump when two more wolves j maped down after him. followed Oy ten more. One of the wolves man .iced to secure a grip on the deer's hind quarters aud took a chunk out the size it a saucer. The deer, now thoroughly frightened .md excited, on seeing Mr. Towle in i he boat started for the boat. The water :xj being very hign it maaagsd ire its fore feet into the craft, with the two wolves still hanging on. Mr. Towle. ; J though half scared to death, did not lose her presence of mind, but seizing iter paddle struck the two wolves such IiIowb on their heads that they released their bold and took to the shora, while the boat continued to drift down the river with tha current. The wolves see ing this gave np hope and returned into the woods. - Mrs. Towle, now that the wolves were gone, found sibout enough of the sports man left in her to have a desire to secure the deer. She raised her paddle and struck it a blow between the horns, which was not a very light one, by the way, as Mrs. Towle has always been used to the harder working side of life and is of sirong physique. The blow ptunnod the deer for a few mqKoents, and Mrs. Towle, thinking it was dead, started her craft for shore to place the deer, in position to row the boat home with him. MB. TOWLK FINDS THB DBER. When she reached the shore and was about ' swinging the deer around by the tail the deer came to and started up the high bank, with Mrs. Towle hanging on to its tad. The deer succeeded in get ting about half way up the bank when the skin on its tail, which Mrs. Towle was hanging on to, gave way and pre cipitated Mrs. Towle down the bank headforemost. The deer by this time had become so weak from the lass of blood from the wolves' attack that it slipped and fell down the bank, landing on Mrs. Towle. She, thinking the wolves were after it again, nearly went into hysterics. The deer, however, on striking terra firma never moved again, and Mrs. Towle pro ceeded to load him in her craft and get home. She got him aboard, and after capsizing a conple of times reached her mall dock, made of logs, in safety. Her home is three miles back in the woods from the river bank. She was obliged to leave the deer on the bank all night, it now being dusk. n the moi niug, when Mr. Towle, her husband, went down for the deer with hia pony and jumper, he was surprised to find a bear there munching away at the deer. The bear on seeing the man started for the woods. Bears will only show tight in the spring. Mr. Towle got the deer safely home, and it would be difficult to find a more interesting story to listen to than that of Mrs. Towle, sitting in her log cabin in frost of the old log fire, telling her story in broken English of how she captured the deer. Sault Ste. Marie Cor. St Paul Pioneer Press. Want Pay for Alleged Dei tUmm. An old man named Taylor from Chi cago has asked several congresses for $10,000 in payment for having suggested to President Lincoln the idea of issuing greenbacks. Colonel de Arnaud has made repeated demands for 9M.M0, which as conninl is dna has far stow ing General Grant how to captors fee town of Padncah, Kj. Waskimtasi Letter. : EVANS AND. SOJiTAG. Detectiycs Are Scattered all Oyer The Mauntains in Disguise. LOOKING FOR THEIR WINTER CAMP. A Stock Raiser Had an Exciting Ad' . venture With The Robbers. TUKT TOOK a SHOT AT HIM. uiitag Still Carried His Arm In a Sling And Both Had Gnnny Sacks Wrap ped Aronnd Their Feet. Fresno, Cal. Dec. 9. A report has reached here, by way of. Lemoore, that Evans and Sontag have been seen in White Deer valley. Detectives are scat tered all over the mountains in disguise, and several of them visited White Deer valley, a secluded region lying several miles back of Sampson's flat. Very few persons live in that locality, it being merely a stock range. It was suspected ihat Evans and Sontag had a winter camp.among the hills somewhere near this place, and an effort was made to trace them to it. Among those owning - attlein that region is Edwin Dooley, who had an exciting adventure with the i rain robbers. Some sportsmen among vhom was Rev. Ledt'ord, of Lemoore, were hunting in the White Deer valley, :ind left their horses with Dooley who i urned theiu into the pasture with his uwn animals. One of the horses es- aped and Dooley was searching for it. While following a trail a short distance from the house, he heard a shot and felt a bullet whistle iast him. He turned around and, looking up, saw Son t as ami Evan." etanding not more t han 30 yards away. They accosted Mm i:i a !aih manner and asked him what l.e was doing there, and whether or not he war-taking i-are "f pack-horses be luiiging to the detectives. Dt.!ey as- sui''-J the riantm l'. it ne mm nounnt: ataii rodi. u it.'i ti.e detectives, but .in in the mea;::!me they put a convenient tree between the bandits and him- If, as he was fearful lest the next time their aim raitrht prove more accurate. I li said that Sontag still carried his arm la a sling, due to the wound received in : light with a posse at Young's cabin, .ii.d both n:en had their feet wrapped up i'i jjunny 9'.cks presumably to prevent ineir making tracks. A Kemarkable Chapter. The fate of nearly all the prominent ictors in the Cronin murder, to which ;he latent addition is the death of Mar tin Bnrke at Joliet last week f.rins a re- narkable chapter. Pat O'Sullivan, one i-t Burke's fellow-prisoners, died in prison last M.-ty. About a month before John Beggs died. As senior guardian f cmip 20, ot the Clan-na-Gael, he was prominently identified with the case. Dr. Lewis, the dentist, who was working on Dr. Cronin's teeth at the time of the murder, has recently died of consump tion. Edward Spelman, a wealthy brewer of Peoria, who testified in the case as a prominent member pf the Clan-na-Gael, was killed about a year ago by a fall from a ladder. Tom Desmond, of San Francisco, an other member of the Clan-na-Gael, is permanently crippled from a fall one night while on his way to a meeting of camp 20. Michael Gannon, a witness in the case, popularly supposed to have had much knowledge of the trouble lead ing, up to the murder, died recently of pneumonia. Frank Shea, another im j.ortant witness, went the same way. Peter McGeehan, who was accosted on the street about a week lefore the fatal night by Cronin himself, and accused of being a party to the plot to murder him, secured work in the south side rolling mill and met a horrible death one day iy falling into a pit. Robliert Gibbons, who was an lil i witness for Burke, nt into a quarrel two years ago with police Captain Schuettler, who was active in running down the Cronin conspirators, and as a result, of a threatening movem ent on Gibbons' part. Schuettler shot him and was exonerated by the coroner's jury. In addition, several other death have occurred among the "an i-Cronin gane,"some of them natural aud some violent. Swallowed a Cork. The Ashland Tidings of tne 9th gives the account as follows of a distressing thing that happened to a little child in that city. "A little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Anson Jacobs, three years old, had a serious time last -unday with a cork that fell into its throat whiie tne child lay upon its back playing with a per fume bottle in which the stopper be longed. The cork had a metal cap, bell shaped, surmounted by a tubuiar top of the same metal. When the cork fell "or was drawn into the windpipe, the child coughed violently, and the cork was forced up, metal end first, into the head into the' passaee leading to the nose, where it was wedged tight, out of sight. It caused the child great pain, and Dr. Psrson was appealed to for relief. As sisted by Dn Songer, who etherized the patient, the doctor succeeded in dislodg ing and removing the obstruction, after much difficulty. 1 Urn Mat rin1n Bar !JwA ot 21 mw Tara was a ar rnasut of ata m to toag tomg ago days The aud ward ml siattbaw L Davav ate tu tiauit aasu'iat sad Mograpaar ml Barr aha had it store uf aneodwtes of mea wao figured prosaineoUy in aarmnal ailairs seventy or eighty rear naca. bat taie one which I shall repeat as aearlT a tMiloim m her own words- uuerevl ate most of all . '1 was a schoolgirt of fourteen, spand- Ing a short vacation at Uncle Matthew's hoOHe la the city whan ooe day I beard him calling to aw frutn the hall below and went to th head ot the stairs -Come down, he niA There is a itu tleuiao here who wwhea to see you I bt-Kitated. held back by some nndehnabte fear Airais he said 'C'mne down . ami in such tones that 1 dared not disobey He led tw into the parlor and there oil the soa at an old uuta whom I had never before mm Very old be kxa.t drmndil w the ooatnma of Che last vttn tnry with Mia snow whit hair drawn back and tied in a cn behind But his .eyes- they were not old.' Large, dark and deep, they flashed with ail the tirr of youth I newer saw soch eyes la maa or woman They fasciaatad while they frightened mm. Mv ancle ted m forward and wwd Cotonel Bnrr. this is the child of whweu I spoke I Deed not tall you whose name she bears. The otd man rose, took my hand tm km aad bead mm mm at an length add looked at me looked at me with those eyes which oemnod o see mto my vary soot Only a mouHrat. but the motnemt was an boor. Then be dropped my hands and eaelaunad to a voice trembling with emotion: 'Take her away Matthew, take ber away! I cannot bear if 1 av hiia only ones afterward, it was on Broadway, aud I tried to slip by una, nupercaived. Bat when I turned to look back he was standing still, fol lowing m. with- those wonderful, won derfnl eyes They haunt me null, and will. 1 know, while memory lasts." -S Louia PoM-Dispatch- Hasaalay as a Bees. Maeasiay was a pattern host. On bis ewe account, it true, he was no epr can and hia nepnaw tells as that at amy time ne would have been amply nasi tied with a (turner soch as m served at a decent seaside lodging buuas. Thia was a sad moral defect, bat happily h coa iiennous news of. the obligaticcia of hospitality prevaated Ins gnrmt from snfTormg by it He generally selected by a half cooevious preference dishes oi eHtablmhed caaracter and traditional fame Us Dirmeuting friends be treated to a tUiet of veal, 'which lie maintained to be the recognised Sunday dinner in good old NoncnofuriiiiBt fatnilira.' On Micbaluuu .lay li wonld bare bean wretched had no got smoked on the board At Ctirvttaiae be never forgot the old historic turkey If he was rntertaming a couple of nchooilioys who could construe the fourth satire of Juvenal, he wonld re ward them for their proficiency with a tlisn of mullet that might have ptisaed muwr on the table of an augur or an emperor's freedutan With regard to the contents of his cellar, Macanlay prided himself on being able to say with Mr. John Thorp. "Mine is famona good stuff to be sure.' and if he were taken to task fur hi extravagance he would reply, in - the words tuwi by aeothar of nis favorite harac-ters in fiction, that there was a i,Toat deal of good eating and drinking in 700 a year, if people knew how to manage it. All the Year Bound Tne Seaiors la War. One mar Ice. I difference divided the generals of Frederics' William 111 from those of Napoleou The Duke of Bruns wick was sHVvaty-oue years old. Prince Uonenlobu sixty and among subordi nate commanders were men of sixty eight seventy uud seventy-four. Lefe bvre. the oldest French general, was barely fifty-one. Auyereau forty -eighk Bernadotte ' torn two. Napoleou. Ney. Son It ami Launea tlnrty-nevea. Marat only thirty five Excepting for tne intervention, in Hol land ui l"t7 and the I hike J Bruns wick's ill starred invasion of Champagne m I7U2 the Prussian army -li'ie that of Great Britain in hihl suffered from a long peace o':e of the results in each case ieiri;j a certain disbelief in young com i..;iiders Von d-r Oecken. writing in 1 T!- under the title "Is it necessary that we should only have young sreneniLs-' iecide.l the question in the negative aud m the Bntistl army today au otii. .-i ot Hie same aire as that of Napoleon oi M mat at Jena may find bis energ.es routined to the command of a company whatever hv capacity. Edinburgh Review Claims Before Congr Immediately after every change of ad ministration claims which wer disal lowed by the outgoing power pour in by thousand, to tie considered and rejected again. Applicants tmngiue. evidently. that what one party will uot grant the other may grant. Their persistence in luauy .cases is astonishing. One citizen, who ban not the shadow of a right to back him up. has written more than 1 ,000 letters to the treasury respecting his demand, and has expended more money in postage than the value of the claim He has addressed his communi cations on the subject to every public official in Washington, from the presi dent down, and, even to the Chinese aud other foreign ministers Washington Letter . . Went t Choren Onee. A Maine woman who had an trreli grou husband kept driving at him on til ahe anally got him to go to church. Now mark how she was rewarded, in stead of fellowsag the service ha looked at the congregation and noticed how much more handsomely the other woav an were dressed than his wife 'fh fast pricked mas to the heart as no worda of the miAMter eouid. and the next day h gave has wife fBUt and told her e go aad buy some enries Seed we enlexx on the niral .f f rr We trrt i not & DRUGGISTS, 175 Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon A full ine of all the Standard Patent Medicinea, Drugs. Chemicals, Etc. ; ARTISTS MATERIALS. Country and Mail Orders will receive nromjit attention. THE DALLES LUMBERING CO.. INCORPORATED 1886. No. 67 Washington Stkeet. . . Thk Dalles. Wholesale and Retail Dealers and Manufacturers of Building Material and Dimension Timber, Doors, Windows, Moldings, Bouse Furnishings, Etc Special Attention given to the Manufacture of Fruit and Fish Boxes and Packing Cases. 1 Taotorr and. Xiumber Tarci eat Old STt. Xo.lloas. DRY. Pine, Fir, Oak and any part 33C.S c&j JOBBERS AND Hardware, Tinware, Etc., Etc. CORNER SECOND AND FEDERAL STREETS. CELEBRATED Acorn and Charter Oak STOVES AUD BAKGES. Guns, Ammunition and Sporting Goods. IRON, COAL, BLACKSMITH SUPPLIES, WAGON MAKERS' MATERIAL, SEWER PIPE, PUMPS AND PIPK, PLUMBING SUPPLIES. Gandall & Budget, MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN FURNITURE CARPETS Undertakers and Embalmers.' NO. 166 SECOND STREET. Farlev ( Successors to L. D. ilanufaoiorefs . A General Line of Horse Furnishing Goods. IR.IEIF'-A-IZRIIsrG- PBOMPTTjY. and :rr:ElA.TIj"3r JDOISTJSL Wholesale ana Mail Dealers in Harness, Bridles, Wnips, Horse BlanMs, Etc. Full AssQrtment of Mexican Saddlery Plain or Stamjed." SECOND STREET, - New - Umatilla- House, THE DALLFS, OREGON. SINNOTT & Ticket and Baggage Office of the U. P. R. Union Telegraph Office are in the Hotel. Fire-Proof Safe for the Safety of all Valuables. LARGEST : AND : FINEST Hen Qolumbia jotel, THE DALLES, OREGON, 3est Dollar a Day House on the Coast! First-Class Meals, 25 Cents. First Class Hotel in Every Respect. ' None but the T. T. The Dalles Mercantile Co., JOBBERS AMD General Merchandise, Dry Goods, Clothine, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Boots, Shoe9, Hats, 'Caps, Groceries, Hardware, Crockery, Hay, Grain, Feed, Etc. 390 to 394 Second St Houghton, Slab WOOD Delivered to of the city. CROWE, RKTA1LEKS OF ' Wagons and Carriages. Reapers and Mowers. AGENTS FOR Mitchsll, Lewis. S Staver Co.'s Agricultural Implements and Machinerj Tt ARB I'i O WXJtAZI. cSks Farcini Vz , Frank, deceased.) OF jfVJCiXj KIISTBS 0"F - Heraesses! - - THE DALI ES. OR FISH, PROP'S. R. Company, and office of the Western : HOTEL : IN : OREGON. Best ol White .Help Employed. Nicholas, Prop. DBALEB8 IN- The Dalles, Or.