.... V v i i . --jr.. 4 VOL. IV. THE DALLES, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1892. NO. 24. Look at the Bargains ! : AT THE: OLD AND WELL KNOWN STAND. AlW&ijg to the Fpoqt ! REGULAR ing Out snLE ! ..My Entire Stock, Consisting of Clothing, Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats and Caps, eons Fiimisiing goods, . Laces and EmDFOiaeries NOW GOING AT BARGAD1S. And the Sale will be con tinued until all is disposed of. A special opportunity is here afforded for email stores to replenish their stock. Call and Price these Goods, AT THE OLD AND WELL KNOWN STAND. XO I If you take pills it is because you . have never tried the, S. B. Headache and Liver Cure. It works so nicely, cleansing the liver and Kidneys; acts as a mild physic without causing pain or sickness, and docs not stop you from eating and working. To try it i. to become a: friend to It. ' Jor sale by all druggists. Young & Kass, lacismitu wagon sbod General Blacksinithing and Work done promptly, and all work Guaranteed. Jktfse Shoeeing a Spciality TM Street, opposite tne old Liene stand. MRS. C. DAVIS Has Opened the REVERE RESTAURANT, In the New Frame Building on ( SECOND STREET, Next to the , Diamond Flouring Mills. , Piret Class Meals Furnished at all Hours, ; Only White Help Employed." 1 Oieai t . 3vmn.IT 100 Dozen TOWEItS. Worth 25 Cts., going for 12 1-2 Cts. Just Received an Immense Shipment of-the Celebrated loyal Uoreester Corsets IN EVERY STYLE and PRICE. ir o liUiin D R UGS Snipes & THE LEADING Itei al Retail Mists 3PXJK.E DR.ITGrS Handled by Three Registered Druggists. ALSO ALL THE LEADING . Patent ffledieines and Druggists Sundries, HOUSE PAINTS, OILS AND GLASS. Agents for Murphy's Fine Varnishes and the only agents in the City for The Sherwin, Williams Co.'s Paints. -WE The Largest Dealers in Wall Paper. Finest Line of Imported Key West and Domestic Cigars. Agent for TansilPs Punch. 129 Second Street, J. Q. MACK, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Liquor Dealer. Finest Wines 171 Second Street, Frenchs' Block, ; Jos. T. Peters & Co., -DEALERS IN- Rough and Diessed Lumiiei. and a full line of Builders' Supplies, all of which v are: carried constantly in stock. Call and see us at bur new store, southwest corner of Second and Jefferson Streets, before buying else where. Our prices are as low as the lowest, and on many-things below all competitors. ' ' Kin ERSLY, ARE - The Dalles, Oregon and Liquors. Tne Dalles; Oregon THE IDAHO AFFAIR. More Men are Dmen Out of tie Coenr ' fl'Alene Mines. . , TROOPS ORDERED TO THE. SCENE. The Sheriff Fails to Secure a Posse, Calls on The President. THK SITUATION KKPHKStNTEU. The Command at Fort Sherman to Send Troops Under General Ituger and lUCerltt. . Boise City, July 13. The governor of Idaho and Senators Shoup and DuBois, acting together on reports of the con dition of affairs in Coeur d'Aleue, have arranged to have troops sent to the scene of trouble immediately, from Fort Sher man, under Generals Eager and Merritt. The Sheriff at Wallace utterly failed to secure a posse of citizens to aid him in quelling the work of destruction. Mon day night armed bodies of miners went from Wallace all evening, and about 9 o'clock a large crowd went to the Union Pacific yards and took a fiat-car, put it on the main track and started it for Wardner. Being all down grade no trouble was experienced. The mill of the Bunker and Sullivan company is located on the Union Pacific track . two miles from Wardner. The miners took possession of this during the night, and sent word up to the mine that unless the non-union men would surrender be fore 9 o'clock Tuesday morning the mill would be blown up. Large bodies of miners went up to Wardner proper and toward the mine to await an answer and developments. -Before 9 o'clock Tues day morning all the Bunker Hill and Sullivan forces walked out of the mine and surrendered. The Sierra Nevada forces also surrendered. Not a shot was fired. What will be done with the non union men is not yet known. The Fris co and Gem companies paid their men off yesterday. U. S. Marshal Pinkham sent a dispatch to Senators Shoup and DuBois as follows, from a man named John Pinch at Wallace: "We are powerless to stop the conflict, and fear many will be killed and the mills burn ed." The latest dispatch, sent by Gov. Willey, to Washington city last night is as follows : "The casualities so far are six killed and seven wounded, and the fear is ex pressed that violence may extend to. other parts of the .state, necessiating a proclamation of martial law. The union miners are described as an undis ciplined mob of 400 to 500, armed with Winchesters and revolvers. They are elated with success, and will not be sat isfied until every new man is driven from the mines." President Harrison ordered the federal troops to be sent and General Schofleld ordered Generals Ru ger and Merritt to forward them. ' A Portland Compromise. Telegram. Councilmen Nicholas, Myers, Forbes and Parker, of the city license committee, met Saturday, and decided to issue licenses for the ensuing quarter to all applicants. The question of recognizing the application of Saloon keeper Oleson, who was arrested on election day for selling .liquor, was set- filed in his favor by his showing that his barkeeper opened the house while Ole son was away. The committee deemed it advisable not to shut out any of th6 disorderly houses, as the new police de partment should be given a. chance to show their ability to keep such places quiet. By Saturday evening the city treasurer had received $30,000 of the next quarter's license fees. ' ' ' The Hot Bed of Poesy. Review. - The head-line artiBt of the Tekoa Globe touches off the military en campment in this manner : "Company K comes home to stay ; the boys have baa enough, tney say; but want to go back in '93 ; what is the matter with corporal B?" ; Let none' say . that the glorious west is deficient in poetic talent. The Palouse country is the hot-bed of Poesy, and may emit; as many golden pastorals in years to come as it now does bushels of wheat. Even its infants lisp in numbers, and scarehead writers talk in verse.. . ' Dead as Smelt. Tekoa Globe. The Lake Washington canal scheme is as dead as a smelt, not withstanding Senator Allen's : noble speech. " Management vs.- Protection. Oregbnian. Has protection enriched Carnegie? Then why have "so many who have engaged in the same business failed? It is not protection that' has enriched Carnegie so much' as . superior management. With or without protec tion some would grow rich. A boat one half the eteel beams in the Oregonian building were made by a firm near Pitts burg, that had the contract to furnish all of them. This firm failed in busi ness and the rest of the beams had to be ordered from Carnegie's. There was just as much protection for one of ' these firms as for the other. Success, then, depends mainly on management in business. What there is in protection goes chiefly to labor. - Personal. Moro Observer. C. W. Phelps, for merly of Rufus, this county, has started a machinery establishment in - The Dalles and is already doing an extensive business. He sold three mowers and a header on Thursday of last week.. The firm name is C. W. Phelps & Co'. Ashland Tidings. Hon. J. F. Caples, of Portland, is the most popular 4th of July orator in the Northwest. He was invited to speak at more than forty dif ferent places in Oregon and Washington on the 4th this year. Pendleton put in the first call, and he spoke there. In Washington City. Washington, July 13. The Portland free bridge delegation, consisting of J. C. Moreland, T. F. Osborn, G. H. Moffett and J. L. Sperry, arrived yester day and are at the Arlington. This evening Senator Mitchell will give a dinner at Chainberlin's, in honor of the delegation, to which a number of his colleagues in the senate will be invited. They expect to have a hearing .before Secretary Elkins on the bridge-Hand-bury case today or tomorrow. Secretary Elkins will come from West Virginia to meet them. -. Americanisms-are They.' Spokane Review. In addition to such verbs as Sundayed, suicided and electro cuted, the Salvation Army War Cry, has invented another still more atro cious, and readers of that esteemed con temporary are spiritually edified by reading, Ensign Tarn bourine, farewelled here yesterday." Having farewelled in one place and Sundayed in another, it may yet be possible for the good peo ple to have Julyed out west, studying the question of electrocution and suicid ation. s Palonse and Averages.- Colfax Commoner. The damage done to crops from the recent heated term is not so serious as at first reported. Even where wheat fields are yellow from the work of the sun, the interior of the stalks are moiet and the heads are, for the most part, uninjured. Is it possible that the Palouse country, as a whole, will furnish a good average crop after all. Fusion in Iowa. Chicago, July 13. A Des Moines dis patch says there is no longer any doubt that the democrats and people's party will unite in this state. Conferences to that end have been in progress ever since the fusion in Kansas. The fusion will probably be on the basis of a people's party notional ticket and a democratic stace ticket. . For Senator Allen. Palouse Gazette. The interests of every shipper in eastern Washington de mand an open river, and if Senator Allen desires the support of this section he should display a willingness at least to assist whatever may benefit this vast region. Greeting. Klamath Star. The Dalles Chuoniclk is still in very wprtby hands, its edi torial management having passed to Mr. D. C. Ireland, a clever and well-known Oregon journalist. Long live the lively lucky Chronicle. The Combination. Astoria Herald. It is a beautiful combination. The mugwumps can shut their eyes and ; vote for Cleveland, and the Jarksonians can grit their teeth, and shriek for Stevenson. i Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. HOMESTEAD TROOPS. Martial Lav Sneeeeils tie Arbitrary " Beip of a Committee. PEACEFULLY RECEIVED BY ALL. A Complete Acquisition of Power by t he State Authorities. STKIKKKS ORACKKl'LLY ACCEPT. If the Workmen are all . Called ont and Non-Union Men are Called in the end is not yet Homestead, July 13. Three thousand troops arrived yesterday under com mand of General Snowden, together with . two Gatling guns and three field pieces. Their sudden arrival in the absence of the leaders of the strikers disconcerted the programme for their reception, and the soldiers evidently did not desire such treatment from the men whom they, were sent to keep in order. They de scended from the train, formed silently', marched in perfect order, ' took posses-; sion of the mills, deployed artillery ac ross the Monongahela opposite the mills, set pickets all about the works, and set- . tied the question of taking possession of the town by marching one company direct . to the strikers' headquarters, another to the vicinity of the depot, and a third to a slight eminence overlooking and commanding the commercial center of the town. Then Homestead was in the hands of the military and martial law had succeeded the arbitrary reign of the advisory committee. It was a com plete acquisition of power by the state, and as gracefully as they could the strikers accepted ' the inevitable. The batteries across the river command the whole town as well as the Carnegie works. President Weihe, of the amal gamated association, substantially ad mitted this morning that the workmen in all the Carnegie plants, aggregating c20,000 will be called out if the company attempts to start up Homestead with non-union men. H. C. Frick, chairman of the Carnegie company, said in an in- -terview today it was the intention of the. company to resume work at the Home stead mills as soon as possible. There were many of the lockod-out men who were willing to accept the terms of the-' company and return to work if they could be protected in doing so. It would-, be necessary, however, to secure " ad- , ditional outside ' non-union help. He thought it would not be long before the entire plant would be in operation. - Weather Reports.' Portland, July 12. Concerning East ern Oregon, crop weather bulletin Ho ld says: The cool weather and partly cloridy sky havn been of great benefit '- to growing grain. It is generally conceded that in all sections an half crop at the least will be harvested. To the east ' of Pend'eton about an average crop islesti mated. In Union and Wallowa counties the grain: crop - is fully an average. Heading has commenced in a few localities, but will not be general , until next week. Corn is doing very well. Haying is about finished. The wool clip is being shipped. Sweet corn .is ripe about The Dalles. Range feed is good and stock is in excellent condition. The rivers continue to fall. Wells and streams are becoming low. . . V How to Retaliate. Review. The state of Kentucky hav ing been refused further credit by the Western Union Telegraph Company can get even by the legislature memorializ ing congress to take government control of the railways and telegraphs. This would hardly he an honest act, but it is about as honest as the proposal that the government parallel the lines of the Westegn Union by wires of its own, and by underselling, drive the private con cern out of business.