"(( A VOL. IV. THE DALLES, OREGON, MONDAY, JULY 18, 1892. NO. 28. 1 Look at the Bargains ! : AT THE:- OLD AND WELL KNOWN STAND. Altoaijg to the Ffoqt ! REGULAR Clearing Oui SALE ! My Entire Stock, ConeiEting of Clothing, Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats and Gaps, 6tw Furnisnino GOODS. LaDBS Emliniiilenes SOW GOIDG AT BARGAINS. 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. PU IS ? STO ! S If yon take pills it is because you have never S. B. Headache and Liver Cure. It works so nieelv. clean sine the liver and Kidneys ; acts as a mild physic without causing pain or sickness, and does not stop you from rating ana vornng. To try it Is to become a friend to it. For sale by all druggists. . Young & russ, nscKsmitn & waooa sap General Blacksmitbing and Work done promptly, ; and all work Guaranteed. - Hofse Shoeeing a Speiality TM Street opposite the- eld Lielie Stanl MRS. C. DAVIS Has Opened the RESTAURANT, In the New Frame Building on SECOND STREET, Next to the Diamond Flouring Mills.. First Qass Meals Furnished at all Hours, V Only White. Help Employed. : REVERE 100 Dozen TOWELS. Worth 25 Cts., going for 12 1-2 Cts. Just Received an Immense Shipment of the Celebrated Royal Uoreester Corsets IN EVERY ... STYLE and PRICE. iaHo 'Williams IioD D RUGS Snipes &, Kinersly, -THE LEADING Handled by Three Registered Druggists. , ALSO ALL THE LEADING Patent ffledieiiies and HOUSE PAINTS, Agents for Murphy's Fine Varnishes and the only agents in tne Uity lor The Sherwin, -WE The Largest Dealers in 'Wall Paper. Finest Line of Imported Key Agent for Tansill s Punch. 129 Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon J O. WHOLESALE Finest Wines LIQUOR 171 Second Street, Frenchs' Block, '.-'. ;. Jos. T: Peters & Co., -DEALERS IN- in and Dm Lite and a full line of Builders' Supplies, all of which are carried constantly in stock. Call and see us at, our new store, southwest corner of Second and Jefferson Streets, before "buying else where. ' Our prices are as many things "below all competitors. mil Retail Mils. Druggists Sundries, OILS AND GLASS. Williams Uo. s Faints. AKE - West and Domestic Cigars. MACK, AND RETAIL and Liquor's. The Dalles, Oregon low as the lowest, and on Dealer PRETTY LODD TALK. . " . ; - - ' . Cccnrd'Alene Strikers Ccndema tie law That Holds Them, v DON'T WANT ANY- STRINGS TAUT, Disclaim any Connection With the Bloody Savagery at Mission. WILL AGAIN DESTROY PllOPKUTT. Prisoners Very Indignant Because They are mot Treated With Greater Consideration. Spokajje," July 18. There is nothing startling from the seat of war. The re tarn of non-union miners still goes on. A great many arrests have been made and the striking miners are loud in their condemnation of the way the law is ad ministered. They profess to be confi dent that the mine-owners will operate the machinery of the law to suit them selves, and, right or no right, punish them without mercy, when the arrests were made at , Burke the prisoners, heavily guarded, with their wet clothes and gnm boots, were marched two deep to the depot. They - were not allowed even to partake of dinner. In reply to their loud talk United States Deputy Marshal Hullman informed them they were seized by the iron grasp of the law and were his prisoners. They are re solved on having revenge, and it is ru mored they will next attack the root in stead of the branch to remedy the evil. They confess to fighting the non-union men in open conflict in self-defense and disclaim any connection with the Old Miesion affair, which they say were per petrated by outlaws, who took advantage of the occasion for the purpose of rob bery. Half the miners of the Tiger and Poorman mines . are now . in custody Among those arrested are Justice of the Peace Fraser and Postmaster Maretf, both sympathisers. . A very prominent member of the anion says : "The influx of non-union men means the commence ment of a guerrilla war. Our men have shown that they are fearless and de termmed. They have not hesitated to destroy valuable property - when they knew that it jeopardized life, and they are ready to do it again. We are the men who have made this country Van. is. DeLasnmutt, . tne mine-owner, informed the . associated press corres pondent yesterday that most' of the non union men, driven outof Wardner, have returned and it is quite probable the Bunker Hill and Sullivan mine would be started up again this week. DeLash- mutt says the Sierra Nevada at Ward ner will start up with ; nearly the same force as before the trouble. The Gran ite miners, who were last to be driven out, did not go far, and nearly all have returned and will go back to work today, ' For a Summer Outing. Yamhill Reporter. Prosecuting At torney McCain, wife and three daughters, left with their camping effects for Tilla mook county on Tuesday," to be gone month or six weeks. For fourteen years they have regularly taken this summer outing. A week or so is spent in camp, after which removal is made to a ranch they own in that section. . No one makes more of a business of going to the coast or takes more pleasure in it than Jim McCain. He takes every living thing about the premises, except the family cat, the canary and the house plants. The spring wagon is loaded to its utmost capacity and the family dish pan hangs out behind. ; One of the young ladies made the trip on horseback. ; Yamhill Poesy. ' McMinnvilie , Reporter. . An humble boy with shining pail went gaily singing down the dale to where the cow with the brindle tail on the clover pasture did regale. A bumble " bee did gaily sail over the soft and shady vale to where the boy with shining pail was milking the cow with a brindle tail. The ' bee lit down on the cow's left ear, her feet flew up through the atmosphere, and through the leaves of a chesnut tree the boy soared into eternity. . - II waco . Ahead. Tacoma News. . Pacific ocean summer resorts are just now humping themselves to secure rival attractions. Ilwaco beach is ahead at present, having had a 72-foot hump-back whale stranded just where visitors can get the 'best view of it. Westport should now get the whale back. . HONEST DEMOCRATIC SENTIME5T. The Idaho AKktr li not Vnlonl.m, But Anarchy. From the Walla Walls Statesman, Democratic) The action of the anion men in jCoear d'Alene is indefensible and the utmost punishment mtist be meted out to the wrong doers. It is a pretty state of af fairs when men who, anxious to earn an honest living must work with rifles in hand at the peril of. their lives, and are shot down like dogs while earning bread for their little ones. The late tragedies in the mines is not unionism ' but anar chy. It has long been a festering sore, but has now come to a head when the surgeon's knife can no longer be delayed. The miners and strikers throughout the state had the sympathy and " assist ance of the people as long as they were beset by the Pinkerton emissaries, but there is not a scintilla of excuse for their recent actions, especially in using dyna mite to destroy property. The militia of Idaho and the United States troops are now on their way to the scene and must remain until the terrorism, so long rampart there, is at. an end, and each man desirous of work be enabled to carry out the first principles of the Dec laration of Independence of life', liberty and the pursuit of happiness. California Girls Embarrassed. S. F. Examiner. This ought to be the happy hunting ground for the keen-eyed spinster. Every girl in California has a man and a half for her consumption, and the proportion holds good through the other states and territories on the Pacific slope. Our girls are troubled by an embarassment of riches. Tbey have so many men to choose from that they are fastidious, and while they hesitate between the two bundles of hay the buxom New England girl and the ether eal maiden from New York and Penn sylvania slips in and restores the equilib rium of the sexes. They bad better mend their ways or they may some day learn .what an Adamless Eden really means. Who's Heard Any Thine; Cascades. Drap at tha .telegram. Uaptam Symons nas in structed his superintendent to start in on the work of improving Coos bay and the Coquille immediately, and his force is now busy getting' out specifications for contract work. He is also getting ready to let' contracts for 'boats to be used in improving the Snake river be tween Huntington and Seven Devils, for which an appropriation of $20,000 has been made. The drill scows used in the improvement of the upper Columbia are now on their way up the Snake river in tow of a steamer. The Management In It. . . Pittsburg, July 18. Potts town was surprised Saturday by the numbers of Hungarian employs who suddenly quit the iron and steel works. The accepted theory is that they have been engaged to go to Homestead and take the place of the strikers in the Carnegie mills. As a result of the foreigners' sudden de parture, the Pottstown company adver tised for American workmen to fill their places. About Home." The Dalles, July 18. Further reports coming in since Saturday morning, from points as far south as Prineville, say the rain was general, and did an im mense amount of good. It is now thought the average wheat crop will be about twenty bushels per acre. Barley in all sections is a good crop, having been less affected by the hot winds than the wheat. Oregon Leads Once. Review. The Oregon 'state horticul tural society, which has just closed its session, chose the Oregon grape as the state floral emblem. The ladies of. eastern Washington are again unfortu nate in their choice for the Washington holly, generally preferred in this part of the state, is identical with the grape, chosen by Oregon. Carter For Chairman. Missoula, July 18. The republicans all over Montana, so far as heard from, are delighted with the action of the National republican committee last Sat urday, in selecting Hon. Thos. II. Car ter of this state to serve as chairman. Highest of all in leavening Power. Latest U..S. Gov't Report. fsv .. ' :.. n . tins ABSClJLrSTEKif ; FUSE SATURDAY'S SHOWER. Froi Priiemie to Walla Waila te ... -- Effect Was Grant " PROSPECTS OF THE HARVEST. The Grain Will Be Clean and of a Very Excellent Quality. ' ' FIRST WHIAT UF THK SKASOX. Harvesting May Be a Little Late But the Grain is Improving All the Time. . Walla Walla, July 18. The first new wheat of the season was brought to the city Saturday by Wm. C. Tow'nsend.: . The wheat is of the Martin Amber winter vaiiety, and . yields twenty bushels per acre. This region was visited by a shower Saturday morning, which, besides bringing a large number of farm hands to town, did much good to growing crops. The streets were thronged all day and the city presented a lively appearance. They clnstered - together on the corners like a hive of. bees. If two men stopped to shake hands and talk of the harvest politics, or the weather, in a , moment a dozen would have gathered around and a quiet con versation would be turned into common conversations about the "harvest.." Around Walla Walla for miles and miles reaching to the mountains on the south and east and to Waitsburg on the north, great waving fields of golden grain are said to stand, which when examined are found to be but little injured and will yield from twenty to forty bushels per acre. In the Russell creek region, the wheat is particularly good for this season, and heading has just commenced. One of the largest farmers of that region reports that all the wheat in that part of the country has a stand for fifty bushels to the acre, but being slightly shriveled it will cot the yield down to thirty-five and forty bushels.. Homestead Situations. - , . . Homkstbad, July 18. Notices posted up Saturday are having effect. They state that the Homestead mill "would be started up with non-union men July 25th and that any of the former employes of the country at this mill who did not take part in the recent disturbances were at liberty to make - individual application -for work till 6 p. iu. July 21st, those first applying to be given the choice of the unfilled positions which they are capable -of filling, those who fail to apply by the time mentioned to be considered as- not desiring to enter the company's service and their places to be filled with non union men. , The possibility of the arrest of the leaders of the men for . the riot of last Wednesday ' week is still being considered. There has been' no move ment as yet looking to their arrest, but they have prepared themselves, and if permitted to do so in case of arrest, will give bail to any sum required.. The discipline of the troops is very ', stringent. The patrols all carry loaded guns, mostly with bayonets fixed, and the orders are not . to hold coinmunca tien with anyone except in a strict line of duty. The officers manifestly expect something to happen. A large ; terie-v . ment and the adjacent houses, occupied mostly by Hungarians, Is the central object of suspicion. Some Left in Wasco, Yet. Olympian. So rapidly has the public , lands of the eastern portion of the state' been absorbed - by settlers, that in the Yakima land office district receipts have dwindled away to almost nothing. The register and receiver are not able to make $50 per month and as a conse quence are thinking very seriously of resigning. The Olympia and Vancouver offices are good for their present salaries of $3,000 for perhaps six years. V 1