t 1 ' mm. "1 ft - ... VOL. IV. THE DiVLXES, OREGON; SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 1892: NO. 10. lolr at tte Bargains ! 1. HR1WS, , ; iAT THE: OLV AND WELL KNOWN STAND. AIWBiJS to the Ffoqt ! REGULAR ftark OUT Sale ! Mv Entire Stock, Consisting of Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes; Hats and Caps, CBfTS' FUFPMing GOODS. : r laces aiifl . ; ' Batteries KDf : G0IRG AT f BARGADIS. And the Sale . will be con- -tinued until all ia disposed 'of, A special opportunity" . ia here afforded for small b to res to replenish , their . stock' l7l V D' rj- AT -THE ; ,OLD AND WELL KNOWN STAND. If you take pills it 1 because you have never S. B. Headache ' and Liver Cure. It works o nicely, cleaanlng tho J Aver and Kidney.; acta mild .physio without causing pain or sickness, and loc not top yon from sting and working. try it i. Ixroomat ik friaad tolU -. Tox sale by all druggUts. t ... Voang & Kass, inninmnn vy ? General Blacksmitbing and Work done promptly, and all work "':. -'''. . ' '' Guaranteed.''' ' " ' v HorseShoeeing a pciality Ttird Street opposite till oil Liete Staid. MRS. C. DAVIS , ' - Has Opened the REVERE RESTAURANT 'In the New Frame Building on SECOND STREET, Next to the , Diamond Flourins Mills.' ' First Class Meals Furnished at all Hours Only White Help Employed. Clothing 5 yWX - innnn i?nnn iDmiuia uauuu ouuu Worth 25 CtsU going for 12 1-2 Cts. ; ' Jvist : Received an Immense Shipment ' );, - y of the Celebrated t: ; : H i .. w w r ;.. ! i v j. ..: . :i ; . -.- . . ... ' . loyal -. : IN EVERY . style: arid price. 0 If- iUiio D RU G S 1 SnJPES5& KrNERSL,i THE . LEADING " lott ii Retail Drmisis. Handled by three Registered l)nigst$; ' : L T ALSO -iAtt. J THE LE ADING -' . Patent ffledieiries; and Druggists Sundries, HOUSE PAIMTS OILS? AMD GUSS. i p Agents for Murphy's Pine-Varnishes and. the only agents in the City for The Sherwin, Williams Co.'s -Paint.. ; -WE -The Largest4 Dealers in Wall; Paper. Finest Line Jof. Imported Key West and Domestic Gigars: 129 Second Street, WHOLESALE Finest Wines ,171 eqond Street mad mitt&: ' - v--.' Prenciis' Block,' : os. .1 . iJeters & CLo., mm 300 OMLUm and a full line of Builders Supplies, alf-whlcji t- iara;carried constantly in slock. ' Call and see us at our of Second and Jefferson Streets, before "buying else where.: Our prices are Tas low as the lowest, and on many things "below all competitors. reester Corsets lOi ARE- The Dalles, Oregon AND RETAIL and Liquors. f 'te palles, Oregon new store, sotitliwest corner Dealer - - OUTRAGES NEAR HOME Brutal Outrage ana Cruel Mnrfler Rear MURDEROUS ACT IX COKVALL1S. A Citizen Assaulted in His. Bed With a Club by Assassins. " AFTKK MOKV.Ijr THIT MAN'S llOUSK They l ulled to VinU th Trutnc, But . ' Nearly KllleU the Victim of Tlelr Crime.' Portland, June 25. Laat Thursday a loveable girl of 13 year8,,Minnie Walsh, was brutally outraged and.cruelly inur dered'in the brush" near her home jjn the vicinity of. Milwaukie,. Clackamas county, where-she -was picking . berries, sappoeedly by d tramp, bh t I 'of whom no clew has : yet been obtained, atthoagh the wholi) neighborhood is searching, armed,-and determined upon, lyuchihg.' Several burglaries have been commit ted recently in Corvallis and considera ble cash and clothing have been stolen, but the climax was reached .last night, when someone broke, into ..the. -bedroom, of Carl Strage.' a- bachelor, and . almost killed him by beating lii mover the head with' a clnb,- Straga lived all alone and had about $300 in the lioi-use at the time. The burglars evidently knew this, and it is supposed they slipped into, the - house and knocked him' senseless', wliile lvine in tied before making, a search for the money, which they were unsuccessful in finding.' Strage was found jn a' barn this morning in .his night clothing; al most demented. Ilia face, was lacerated and swollen so badly that no one recog nised hiiii, and it was several hours be fore his identity- was revealed. lie is now lying in a critical condition. -The' citizens are very indignant, bat no clue to the guilty, putties. can be found. ' r Eatek, The murderer of little Mamie Walsh, referred : to ;in- the dispatches ; baa been captured, and ia inj Hillsboro jaiL Be confessed the' crime.-' He gave hia name as Sullivan, j It... will require great caution to prevent the people from lynching him. ; WASHINGTON SKNATOUS. Senator Squire May le. I'urivevBut :. Ilow About Allen? f. , . : From the Spokane Itevievr. . - ' Senator Squire may be forgiven for his I advocacy of the lake Washington scheme. It ia a local deal of glittering possibilities, and as it oft'ersd Vantages - to . his . home city he naturally desires 'its i advance ment. ThiB may not be exalted states manship but it is modern politics. But what can be said 4n. justification: of the attitude of .Senator . Allen, .wlio; repxeTinay ae well admit aftuttpateDt to all; senis a constaoency tnat w.ouia, receive no benefits from the improvement, and whose fondesj. riesire of an-open river to the sea is manaced by it? Tho "Review has spoken favorably of the legislative services of Mr., Allen in times gone by. Very recently ij; gaye wam. approval to his efforts for the opening of the-Coiville Indian reservation ; -but it cannot stand by and maintain silence when, he is. en tering uijon a course that we. know, aiid that his constituent know is wrong and indicative of moral weakness. The grab ought to be strangled in its infancy. If .the entering wedge ia driven now the government will be committed to a course that will ..entail the expendi ture of miHionaof .dollars,, all .of .which mufit be diverted , from" the rivers' and harbors, tbe postal service, ' the .public domain of tbe state and the educational interests that 'have been so generously endowed with broad holdings of public lands. The canal would add nothing .to the general wealth of the' state. It wouldjnot even draw hither an addltlonal salt, It ;lsJ Hstactiveiy " a ; local improvement;-ahd-should be paid for-by the local interested benefited. The con Obption belongs to Villard. In thq hey day of his power lie took up the matter and started engineers and experts . upon the "work of1; compiling' estimates and Tunnirig'levels.'r, But ha nevet; dreamed of tapping the TJnited States treasury for the money, required in Uie .work. -.-He waa to contribute-half of the." requisite fnnds, nd citizens of Seattle .were - to contribute the other half, and they were to share the benefits and profits. . The claim that more harborage is needed fore the iremremmttsof cornmerce is too preposterous.' for serions-consi del ation. Seattle has all the harborage she will require for the ' next century , "and there is enough of the article on Paget sound to last for all time to-ooine. The real purpose of the scheme is. to. bring about the expenditure of several million dollars in Seattle to open up timber preserves owned by combinations and Corporations, to create an artificial water power, and to gi'ye Seattle an, advantage oyer the other Pnget sound cities in the way of fresh water berths for ocean craft coming to these shores. " Aa we have paid before, the canal would not add a bushel of wheat or a pound of ore. to the wealth of tlie state, and could in no respect affect the .'question of freight rates either to tho seaboard or thence to Eurojie. Instead it is i menace to tho opening of the Columbia river, and when it is supported. by Senator. Allen that gentleman plays a dangerous game of political chess. - . , ' . ' .' .. from the KliekitsX lxJcr. . Eastern Washington cannot thank her senators or representatives for any pub lic improvement sanctioned by the gov ernment for this section of : the state. Their eyes seem only to discern the Sotuid cities', and any pet or personal jscheme undertaken there is sure to have their support, no matter whether it ia good, bad or indifferent; For an illus tration we refer our readers to the per sistent mamier in which they advocated the appropriation for the lake Washing ton canal. We detest- men who repre sent a state that ' will labor most ener getically for one part and entirely ignore the Other.' 'Nothing "will help Eastern Washington more than . the improve ments in the navigation of the Colombia river bciqg completed at once, yet when it comes riyhf'down to whether the Col umbia river 'or the lake .Washington canal should be granted, an - appropria tion we find they stick most tenaciously to the :canal,-' while .for the river- im provements they appear no wore inter ested in" than if it w,a" fiver back east. If it was left to therohe chances are we need not look for relief nn til dooms day. But, thank goodness, 'we have men m Ofegoii who are not only .cognizant. of the benefits that.' that state would de rive, but also to Washington and" Jdaho. The conferees on the river and harbor bill, aier being in conference four days, failed .to 'reach, an agreement joix the.- ap-r proprUftioir for the construction of a boat railway around the dalles, etc., and the other . for the . lake. Washington canal. These were the only two things. tnat the conferees refused to agree to, which is to be taken up again this week ..THK BOAT 1UILWAY. I"TaotJcalljr Imperilling tbe Kntire Ap propriation by' Adhering to . .. '.-' . . That Item". - Tlwjre is no longer any donbt that the i dalWs boat railway project, at least so far as the present, session of congress is concerned ; is defeated. The people of Wasco, .- Sherman,' Gilliam indeed, the ' whole broad . - Inland Empire, are.. -more- thany all others inter ested.in JiiB knatter. ,Thci Congressional Record ai hand, containing accounts of the last -struggle i n the v liouse over the project, clearly ,hawa . the defeat. -We the bill was loaded down too heavilv; and as Oregon, had "one of the c&ntract plums" as our opponents term this sys tem of carrying along large national im provenients, it may readily be seen that the attempt of one of our senators to de mand till another, with a large snm at tached, to it j naturally! produced jealous ies,' contentions, "and : bad feelings for what we have already secured in the bill. 'lly.. some who "h'aVe a :; kindly" feel ing for 'Orison - otherwise," it has been claimed Hint this demand jeopardises the;-en tire;, river and harbor bill. All things-considered, aa-shown by the -record; our representatives; have made a gallant fight, but the measure is lost, so f ar'-ks the dalles project goes. That we 8hould-no longer carry on the contest for that item, "at this time, : it is urged ' that we are perilling too much; to longer in sist. -If the" canal and locks can be com pleted in two years after the contract ia let, and the dailes iihproyement can be made available", for t transportation "pur poses within' six months after work is begun, it seems to us wisdom dictates that we'ehosldlet up on the dalles pro-' jecC fbt t-npther sewpion'. -- ; Highest?ofaIL in .Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. Milium ii Mi iimM THE DEED OF ABUSER. Eioie Islanfi Paralyzed ly The Gift 8f . . a Haled Mas. ' MR. GEORGE BABCOCK HAZZARD. A Dispiscd Resident uf . Newport Slid - ''..".'" -' . deoly Landed by' All. - -. .... . - ' , HI8 AMMA88EU rOKTDKK I SEJTI." Tbe Finest Sehool Bnildlac in lvborl. Island . Now the Huwd M . morlal. Newfokt, 11, I., June 25. When it became known today that the gold and silver medals, and the diplomas, award ed at the St. Joseph schools yesterday wWe tlie gift of G. B. Hazzard, it caused a profound : anrprinel A sensation was also caused when it became known, that George Babcock , Hazeard had paid tbe, cost of the land Catholic parish. ' St. Joseph's whools are known now as the Hazzard memor- ial schools. . Ilazzard came to Newport in the '20a. a comparatively poor boy, with practically . no education, but .by close application and strict economy, even to parsimony, be amassed an im mense fortune. Up to a year ago he was looked unon as an avaricious monev- grabber of very eccentric mind, always in hot water with the owners of land ad joining hia propertj'j and euveral times he has been brought up ii.p"olice courts for assault and other . charges. " The" school buildings are the finest in Rhode Island, with . splendid halts, . well-turn-. iahed. rooms and good acoustic - proper ties. . Until the. "day of its consecration, the. secret was so well kept that when the public announcement was made that Hazzard waa, tho donor , the people were incredulous. - Yesterday afternoon the .first graduation exercises w?re held.- On the platform were Bishop . Ilarkina, of Providence, and prominent citizens -of Newnorr. The isioi made an eloonent address on reminiscence of ITazzard:. i but not a word 'escaped him of tho de I nouneement to follow. ' After the diplo- i mas, with gold and silver medals as tlie principal prizes, bad been awarded, and all the exercisea concluded, the rector, the Rev. Father Doyle, called on his ue- wit.ant ' 'Fttthur 'IJhwnini' to read- the - written statement signed by George Bab cock Hazzard, giving a resume of his life, winding up with the statement that he, George Babcock - Hazzard, gave tbe school as a Protestant, bat. now had been received into the Koman Catholic church, and promising to erect a build ing suitable to the parish. This means a new-stone chureJi. '- Tbe. schools co.t nearly $100,000. , ' ' . . ' Telegraphic lrlbt. ' v . ' British Columbia Indians rexrt that a steamer, supposed to be the Standard, fonndeied off Cape Mudgc in a tide-rip. According to the Indians, she gave sev eral idiarp w histles, then - went down. One man was washed ashore unconsciousi The scene of the " accident is near Sey mour narrows, wlere tlie. United States gunboat Grappler sank. . The Standard waa of thirty-one .tons register, com manded by Capt. Carroll, and owned by the Standard canning company. She left JSanaimo un - the. IV th, bound for Skeena.-aud carried a .crew of five per sons. '..'. .'. Chicago," and all nortlicrn Jlliiioi.s were nearly drowned by. tiie exces sive rains ottbe past three days. The damagc in Chicago is chiefly1 confined to the flooding of cellar, many always dry before being filled with water. At Ga lena, Ottawa, Kockford and other towns floods. ' Bridges being washed away and railroad tracks flooded or covered with earth causing a total suspemiion of traf fic. ' At Ottawa, every business house in the town was flooded to a depth of from two to seven1 feet, .,; . . ..