DO t - ' VOL. IV. THE DALX.ES, OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 11, 1892. NO. 22. Look at the Bargains! : AT THE: WELL KNOWN OLD AXD STAND. Alwaijg to the Froqt ! REGULAR Clearing Out SflLE ! ' - - My Kntire Stock, Consisting of Clothing, Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats and Gaps, sEirrs' Mil goods, Laces anil KflW GOING AT BARGAINS. And the Sale will be -continued until all is dispoeed of. A special opportunity is here afforded for small stores to replenish their stock. Call and Price these Goods, AT THE OLD AND WELL KNOWN STAND. MERIT II you take pills it is because you bare never inca me S. B. Headaclie and : Liver Cure. It works bo nicely, cleansing tho liver and Kidneys; acts as a mild physic without causing pain or sickness, and does sot atop yon from eating and working. To try It la to become a friend to It. For sale by all druggists. : i - r 6t Kttss,- DiaoKsmUU & wagon stQD General Blacksmithing and Work done promptly,-and all work Guaranteed. -. Horse Shoeeing" a Speiality ThM Streets oppttsite tlie oli Lieto : Stand. MRS. C. DAVIS Has Opened the REVERE RESTAURANT, In the New Frame Building on SECOND STREET, Next to the Diamond Flouring Mills. First Class Meals Furnished at all Hours. - Only White Help Employed. mm 129 Second 100 MM Wortli &5 Cts., going for 12 i-2 Cts. Just Received an Immense Shipment of the Celebrated ' "' : . f loyal Uoreester IN" EVERY STYLE and PRICE. E R Snipes -THE LEADING- lotal mill Retail units Handled by Three Registered Druggists. AMO ALIi THE LEADING Patent fDedieines and Druggists Sundries, unncr miiiTP nil c Mn i ik'&tr nuuoc rMiiiio, ' "" ' , . , , Agents for Murphy's Fine Varnishes and the only agents in the City for The Sherwin, Will.ams Co.'s Paints. ; WE ti t V TV 1 Air 11 T" lhe Largest . Dealers m Wall raper. Finest Line of Imported Key West and Domestic Cigars, TanailTa Pnnph Street, WHOLESALE Finest Wines J. O. 171 Second Street, Frenchs' Block, VxniiH t Jos. T. Peters & Go -DEALERS IN- ounn aim Dressed LumDBr. 1. . v." i ' and a full line of Builders' Supplies, all of which are carried constantly in stock. Call and See US at OUr n-F Cannn A o-nrl TofTbrcnn where. Our prices are many things oelow all competitors. - TOWEItS Corsets J G S n uilo hhu ulhoo. ARE I r , The Dalles, Oregon AND RETAIL and Liquors. The Dalles, Oregon Hew Store, SOUtn-WeSt COmer 3toocs "hoflnkTv Viti tr n ry - olen. as low as the lowest, and on Dealer I 3 Forty Thousand More Heaths Than Births Last Tear. SYMPTOMATIC OF COMING DOOM. Bat the' Active Progress! veness of the Gaul Contradicts This. SAVANTS AND ISVEKIOBS KQUAI. 1'9 Her Peasantry Kuloy in y - Contentment Better Tban Their Continental Fellows. New Yoke, July 11. From the census taken of France the interesting fact is learned that the' deatha in that country last year exceeded the births by about fortyrthousand. The remarkable feature of it is that this tendency toward depop ulation cannot, in the circumstances, be regarded as a sign of national decay or of growing weakness. No doubt the peo ple over on the other Bide of Alsace Lorraine may find the disproportion be tween deaths and births symptomatic of a coming doom. ' But the activity, pro gressiveness and prosperity of the Gaul contradict this. As a military power France must now be confessed equal to the best. She maintains her supremacy in the world of art unshaken, and her savants and inventors are only surpassed energy by those of America. Her peasants are as contented as any, and the opportunities they enjoy are better than are offered to any. of their- fellows on the continent. They are not over- I'crowded, for one thing, and they have no fear of famine. It will be; awkward for economists to explain that discrep ancy 1 between - the country's general condition and the figures of the census. wuruittW, . . Washington, July 6. The bill for the free coinage of silver ia the absorbing topic just pow and will continue to give the politician's in both parties more trouble than all the other questions now before congress combined, for there is a general belief that the issue is to have considerable influence in the campaign just beginning, and there is such a radical difference in different sections of the country upon this subject that there is no one who is able to say just what the effecVwill be one way or the other. With the leaders of both parties on record against -the bill many, politicians think it will not be surprising ' if " the 7 third party people carry enough states on this issue to prevent either. -candidate from having a majority of the electoral votes and thus throw the election into the houBe. Dispassioned leaders on - both sides seem to think it is more necessary to look after the votes of the three east ern -states, which will probably decide the result of the election, New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut, than it is to cater to the silver states of the west Unless the influence of President Har rison on the one hand and Mr. Cleveland on the other is brought actively to bear against the measure it is likely to finally pass, and a decision of. the matter may be reached by tho time this letter ' is in print. It is believed that the Presi dent is not quite so much averse to ' tak ing the responsibility of a veto as he was some time ago. ' - ,- Open the Columbia First. , WatervlUe Democrat. - The opening of the Columbia river to the sea would- be of almost incalculable benefit to eastern Washington, Nothing would moVe con duce tor the prosperity of the farming in dustry, its, mainstay. The importance I of utilising this 'great natural highway at an. early date an not be urged, too strongly. . Tf tho national government is to Improve our . rivers and harbors. surely there can be none more deserving i of recognition than the mighty Coram bia, which passes directly through the heart of our great Inland Empire. The object is one which should be vigorously advocated by 'all eastern Washington Here is where Uncle Sam's money should be expended, and hot on Paget sound. Synonomous "With Democracy Walla Walla Statesman, ijrhe Alli ance Advocate comes one lor ur. van Patten of Columbia county, for congress man Tha. ArutfT haa aloftvfl ViAAn staunch democrat and worked hard .for I it. As the Alliance ' principles are wmha L thnomlnation from both parties, FRANCE DECLINING. MliEAT HALSTEAD ON BLAINE. Fame Second Only to Weoster A Grand Figure la n intory. Mr. Blaine informed his friends two or three days ago that he knew his' chances for the presidency were'. slowly and Irretrievably failing. Gallant efforts were mode to revive them V and they were supported by generous expressions of popular' feeling. As he regards the chapters of history associated with those delays at Minneapolis, if he feels him self ' at all' stricken, and looks at ' the shaft by which he was pierced,-he may find that he was guided in this uner ring flight, as the eagle, by -his own plumage. ' It was his tetter to Clarkson, so much com plained of by the friends of the administration, that nominated Har rison.' The question is asked r-what ef fect will the story of the convention have upon the fame of James G. - Blaine? The Answer is easy and historical in its nature. When one thinks of the fame of Daniel Webster, the most colossal figure in our political history, who' re members or tares that lie got but .29 votes in the Baltimore convention in which lie was for the last time a candi date for the presidency, standing against his executive chief, Millard Fillmore? It is not much to say ; and now is the time to eay it ; that the mark which Mr. Blaine has made in American annals, though not so austere and grand as that of Webster, is equally brilliant and lofty, useful and honorable. The Author of the pan-American idea, of a policy com prehending the hemisphere, and of' the system of reciprocity that has opened foreign markets to our products and made-New York more than ever the Golden Gate of the North American con tinent, will be held in remembrance as long and will not be less illustrious than the expounder of the constitution of the United States." An Early Settler. Prineville News. During' the week we received a pleasant call froth Dr. L. Vanderpool, who was in Prineville -on business with the county-court. The doctor was one of the first to make permanent' settlement here, and 'bis fun dof reminiscences of the days' when he came to Prineville and found only settlers lonely cabin on the sat, is interesting. ' This is his first visit' for several years and he is of course able to note many changes and improvements He has again returned to his home at Dufur. , Engaged In a Flgbt. " ' ' Prineville News. Word has been re ceived in town that Sim Brooder and Ben Jogaway, two herders in the em ploy of Woodt Bros., of Trout creek, en gaged in a fight : on Tuesday- and Joga way was stabbed in the back just below the shoulder. ' At the time of going to press Brouder bad not' been brought to town. Dr. Belknap was in attendance on the wounded man who is being cared for at the home of M. Mulvehill, in Summit prairie. . A. Fight fer Right. Olympia Tribune. Seattle, with her present harbor, which is claimed to be the best on the coast, can well afford to defer the improvement of her inland waters until the harbors now necessary to commerce are made safe and adequate to the present. We are not hostile to the interests of Seattle, but we are de termined to defend our own and protect those of the state at large against the greed of a private enterprise. . Eqnal to tue Emergency. Garfield Enterprise. For the next 121 days the country editor , will labor in dustrioosly to show why .Smith should be chosen for President and Jones for constable. Nothing is too small for the country editor to-work for, and nothing ia so large that be feels inadequate to explain it. ' - . - . -..A Iast Kesort. Seattle Press-Times. Will the Oregon lady who i making a great reputation bv hypnotizing all who come near: her please send her address to the Telegraph, Seattle? - Any good eastern Washington man must be captured some way.. y Medical " Lake J Ledger. At . Medical Late little is beard of politics, save as it echoes from Spokane; where political as pirants are as numerous as the voting BopulatJon:.;,.'x , . .. v ;' i Highest of all in Leayeruhg Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. THE KRUPP GUN COMES. The Interest fMct Kaiser WiMm Ms in the Fair. REAL REASON OF KRUPPS WORK- The Kaiser's Expressed Wish Taken a a Peremptory Command. . THK IMPOKTASOK OF THE 8IIOWINO A X.ittle Spectacular Business to be G1t- en In a Hignly - Impresaive Manner. . Chicago, July 11. A Berlin dispatch states that it is told by good authority that at a recent meeting between Kaiser Wilhelm and the proprietor of the great Krupp gun w.orks the young German monarch asked the manufacturer why he had not made preparations to exhibit his monster cannon at 'the worlds fair in Chicago. The reply was that it would hardly pay ; the expense must be enor mous and the resultant benefits scarcely in proportion. "But sir," said his maj esty, "I wish you would exhibit." The Kaiser's expressed wish is, of course, nothing less than a peremptory com mand to his subject's, and this brief in terview, it is said, is the real reason why Herr Krupp is preparing for an enor mous showing at the worlds fairgrounds. The Incident reveals plainly enough the interest Kaiser Wilhelm feels in the' worlds fair and his appreciation : of the importance of displaying his country' power there in all trie formidable maj esty of its fighting equipment. The em peror, in making this demand, indicates his belief that Germany cannot afford to be Been here at anything but her best and strongest. And the ootintiy that owns the Krubb gun works is certainly able to do a little spectacular bnsiness in a highly impressiveway. A Sky Picture. Glacier. Dr. Barrett's weather re port frout this section for 'June, shows -there was a fine solar halo on the 3d at 6 ;30 p. . in., - four corona? at cardinal: points, the upper coronse was indented,, as if a small disc had been cut out. The; coronse was very bright, -a ad a second ring a duplicate of the first, only not so- bright, surrounded it. In . the evening . there was a fine lunar halo. At 7 :45 the same day a brilliant meteor fell, its. course being from east to west, and be ing near enough to pass in front of the -hills on the Washington side of the Col-, nmbia, which made a fine back ground for it. It was a sea foam green in color,., and left a train Of brilliant sparks. Why Dally With It? Spokane Review.. If Andrew Carnegie has more protection than he needs or deserves, why in the name of Cobden is no effort made to reduce it? The demo cratic house has now been in session for seven months, and nobody has heard of an attempt to cut down the protection afforded the iron manufacturers of the east,' although several bills have been passed to put western products on the free list. - Whitney Pon't Put op For It. Union-Journal.' Whitney, who is managing the Cleveland campaign, is not only one'of the charmed circle of the Standard oil company, but is also the owner of nearly all the street railways in New York city.' During the past two years he has reduced-the wages .of car drivers and conductors sufficiejitly so that he can weir afford to give largely to the democratic campaign fund. The Canal Can Watt. Spangle Record. An open highway to the sea by way of the,Columbia is what the people of eastern Washington are bound to have. The Lake Washington canal may be put in some day, but not until the Columbia river is opened for traffic to the ocean. ' I i V;