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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 4, 1892)
?h3 'V VOL. IV. THE DALLES. OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1802. : NO. 43. III A ft WW Leok at the Bargains I : AT THE: OLD AND, WELL .KNOWN STAND. Alwag to the Froiit I REGULAR GlearlngM SJLE! j ' My Entire Stock, Consisting of Clothing, Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats and Caps; c-eiits' Furmsning goqds. laces ana EmDroiaeries 1!0W GOING AT BARGA1HS. And the. Bale will be co tinued until all is disposed of. A special opportunity is here afforded for' email ' stores to replenish their stock. Cairitnd Price these Goods, ' AT THE OLD AND WELL KNOWN STAND. NO t S If yon take pills it is because you hvo never S. B. Headache and Liver Cure. It works so nicely, cicaneing tbo liver and Kidneys;, acta as a mild -physic without causing ' vain or steknws, and does not stop you from eating and working. To try it la to become friend to it. rr sale by all druggigt.". Young & Kuss, - !EG;(S!Hilll& Wagon Si;0D General Blacksmithing and Work done promptly, and .all work--...... Guaranteed. - florse Shoeeing a Spciality TM Street, opposite toe cl Lieoe Stand. MRS. C. DAVIS Has Opened the ; C In the New Frame Building on SECOND STREET, Nest to the" Diamond Flouring Mills. , First Class Meals Furnished at all Hours. - Only White Help Employed. Worth 25 Cts., going ;. for 12 1-2 Cts. -. , - Just Received an Immense Shipment "j, ... "...' of the Celebrated FJoyal Ubreester Corsets IN EVERY STYLE and PRICE. ill JUL DRUGS Sni &Kin -THE LEADING 10 esinRei 5?-hO" .3. IES X E8L TX Gir sE Handled by Three Registered Druggists. ALSO ALL THE LEADING Patent ffledieines and 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 Tan sill's Punch. 129 Second Street, J. O WHOLESALE Finest Wines Liquor 171 Sepond Street, Frenchs' Block, !."- The Dalles, Oregon V i i GHBLER:WEBSTER . . , PIANOS AND ORGANS - v Sold on) Easy) Payments. ; Musical Instruments and Music. Booksellers and Stationers. El. J AbOBS EN & Go., 162 SECOTTjy STREET. IOd Druggists Sundries, ARE - The Dalles, Oregon MAGK, AND RETAIL and Liquors. Draits. Dealer The Dalles, Or. HOW GREAT THE FALL A PniMelp Ma Fnaitiye Returns S&at - teret is Mind and Boty. : ' FIVE YEARS AN EXILE FR0M4HCTM. Cursed by the Greed for Money, Wander : irtg About the World. r sacrifice: FOIt iltiiy LICRK. So Afflicted 1 tbo Victim That ha Never - can be Brought to Trial for hla Crime. .:' . '1 2Skw Yobic, Aug. 4. lathe summer of 1SS7 James Hunter, of Philadelphia-, startled the financial world by a precip itate flight from the country after put ting out forged papers to the amount of $106,200, was today held in $10,000 bail to answer, "having returned unexpeet-, edly on Sunday. : When the steamship Segu ranee arrived in New York yester day, it had on board the fugitive, broken in health, his tnind shattered and bear ing but a faint resemblance t- the once honored business man who .was .head of the extensive mill firm of James and John . II an ter. - Job n Hunter -was re ceiver of taxes and the fif m was recog nized in business-circles as' one" of the most reliable in the state. ; Tlie money , raised by James. Hunter is supposed to have beeh lost in western land specular ; tion Physicians examined; James yes- j terday and had' no. hesitation irj pro-'i nonnciug him incurably afflicted men- j tally.. Subsequently all the facts were placed before District Attorney Graham and be accepted bail.' The return of : Mr. Hunter was - so quietly conducted that some members of the family will have learned of it through the news papers today. There is no doubt in the minds of those who brought him back that he never will be in a condition to stand trial. , - : Rerreghlng For Allen, Review. When Senator Allen reads the Seattle Post-Intelligencer of recent': issues he will grit his teeth with rage and vexation... The trouble with the Seattle paper is of the '.'fond and foolish" variety. ' In its zeal to prove that Allen is King county s man it reprints every thing it finds in the state papers-, charg ing him with neglecting the rest of the etate. The Review, for example, print ed an article declaring that Mr. Allen was elected by entering into a combina tion with Hunt and McGraw and. their Seattle crowd. "The Seattle - paper has tens to fasten the collar by reprinting the article with' approval and without denial. Elsewhere it was charged that Seattle' was the open foe of the Columbia river, and this was also reprinted with' approval, j It looks as if the Post-Intelligencer had an idea that King county elects the senators for the state of Wash ington, and that Mr. Allen had only to carry - the King county prima ries to be returned to the Senate. - That has been true in the past ; but it is now time that the rest of the- state were as serting its rights. . -. '. f,.-. . .. . . .' :.. 9f ursine the Vipers. ; -Grants Pass Courier.'" Evidence mul tiplies daily to prove that this country in throwing her doors open so wide to the "oppressed of all .nations" has put her .foot in it and has cast pearls before a wholo lot of pigs. Wherever foreigners have been allowed to concentrate in any great fa umbers,-Americans have had to move. ..American :iliberty has. been trampeled upon, bigotry and intolerance established and. open anarchy has reigned in its stead. . The late assassina tion of Frick by a nihilist shows the kind of stock the "refuge of oppression" has been harboring. Yet, when will con gress do Drave enougn to restrict our immigration laws in such a way that paupers, criminals and anarchists may be kept out? After the steed of libertv and equality has been replaced by an archy, oppression and intolerance, there -will be very little use of trying to lock the door. . The doors will be locked - on the lovers of true liberty themselves and they will have to find some other clime where property rights will be respected, and murder in all its forms ' condemned The Tariff Money. : Review. Money is loaned in England at 2 per cent. The - proprietor of the Spokane Chronicle loans his at from 12 to 15 percent. '. What has the tariff to do with this. .-' A HAPACIOCS DISPOSITION. The lroeltloa of Spokane .on the 8ab- Jeet of mm Open Rtvex. . v From ho Review Aug. 3.J ' ... - . ' . ' r " Some of the reasons brought forward by the railroad agents here to .support their hostile attitude against the Spo kane mills are. amazing. - 'We want the long haul on everything," said one of these agents, "and if we don't get it we lose revenue that rightly belongs to us. Why should we build 'np your industry when yon dispose of a considerable pro portion of your flour to the local trade and thereby deprive us of, the monev we could earn if. it had been hauled to Taconia or the east?" For a hot day that is cool enough to be refreshing. We are. even begrudged the bread we eat, and are pronounced unreasonable be cause wo are unwilling to ship our wheat to Liverpool and buy our flour in Dakota. Henceforth, the public mast ever bear in mind tbat-in eating bread or consuming any of the various products of this sec tion it Is "robbing" the transportation companies of money that they ought to have for hauling them to distant mar-. etS. ' . . ' - ' ' :.'- Spokane and the inland, empire will be at the mercy of this rapacious dispo sition until the : Columbia has been opened and an independent railroad has been built down to the Snake. " Railroad men and railroad influences will ridicule this proposition, but it is nevertheless a fact that the water haul- and independ ent lines of road have brought the trans portation companies to terms elsewhere, and the same influence feared in this case. - Until we can command ' this kev to the .transportation situation of the Pacific northwest, our industries- will rise and fall at the caprice of distant railway officials who are manipulating their systems for all there is in it, ,afnd who will not hesitate to strike down the' interests of investors and the hopes -of the- people whenever? by ' so ' doing they can adcLa little to their revenues. This is a short-sighted policy, but it is the policy that frequently controls the man agement of the transcontinental rail roads in their treatment of the industries of the cities through which they run. . . A Very Important Pact. v-j. Review. There is one fact th'at the wage-earners - are . overlooking in ..dis cussing the tariff. Laying entirely aside the question of wages as affected by the tariff, it is yet a matter of overpowering importance that the workingmen of this country should have continued employ ment. If the United States is to adopt a policy that will permit Europe to throw her - manufactures into these markets ; if the wdrkingmen'of Great Britain are to be maintained, fed and paid by the people of the United States : how can the American ': workingmen" hope ' for steady employment? :: If we are to order half our shoes, half bur clothing, half - of this manufacture and that from another country, how are. we to find employment for as many workingmen as under a policy that contemplates the preserva- vation of the American markets for American industry?- - - ' A New Valley Pcit. : Salem Journal. During the past year a number of cherry trees have been de stroyed in this vicinity by a small insect which was entirely unknown to the fruit growers here. J. II. Albert has sent a specimen of this pest to. the government entomologist at-Washington, and has ru- j ceived the following reply : ."The insect J which has killed your cherry tree is oimv of bark beetles known as Monarthru Scutellaria. Other .tilings: being equal, this insect, seems J:o prefer trees which are unhealthy rather than -thrifty,' vig erous growers. Very few .observations have been made of this particular species and I am not aware of the exact time of egg-laying, but should this be ascertained the trees can' be protected to some ex' tent by washing them with soft soap re duced to the consistency of thick paint by the addition of "washing soda and water." - ' . ' . . ". . Protection' Aa In. . Review. The Portland. Telegram says "it costs $21,000 a day to keefp the -militia at Homestead, and this is another kind of protection the laboring man pays, for.'.' The militia is there by order of a democratic governor, and the labor troubles followed a reduction of the tariff. . '-. '-:; ' -. . - " Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. HOMESTEAD AFFAIRS. Carnegie People Cnargea Wita ' Mnrder . ; ..'anuConsniracr. HUGH ROSS THE COMPLAINANT. Report That Carnegie Will; . Withdraw iHis Pittsburg Donation. " MAD AT THE UNION RESOLUTION. Secretary Lorejoy Denies the Report. and Says Mr. Carnegie Would Mot Think of Saeh m Thine;. - Pittsburg, Aug. 4. -Secretary Love- joy.of the Carnegie Steel company, when seen by a reporter this morning made an ' official emphatic denial of the story to the effect that Andrew ; Carnegie with holds his gift to the city in event of the ; city, council's taking official notice of the protests from ' trades unions.' Lovejoy -said there is not one word of truth in the story that Carnegie is angry and wilL " take back his gift.-. "Such talk," he . said, "is the veiriest nonsense- It has not been talked of here, and I am con fident the author of that story did not get the statement from any one con nected with Carnegie." Hugh Ross,- the 'strike leader, this .: morning swore out a warrant for the ar restof H. C. Frick, chairman ; S. F. T. Lovejoy, secretary j J. A. Potter and G. x Leisbmah and H. M. Curry,, officials of the Carnegie company ; J. A. Potter and G. A. Corey, superintendents at the mill : Robert A. and William Pinkerton and .. half a dozen of theirmen who took part . in the fight at Homestead, charging them .. with murder. It is probable information will be made-later against them for con spiracy to depress the wages of the work-. men, add to incite a riot by - bringing armed men into Homestead. The suits, were delayed on account of the shooting of Frick, .and it is not ' the intention to arrest him at presehti." The attorneys for the strikers held a long consultation after the informations had been made, with the result that it was decided to serve the warrants only on Lovejoy and Potter. It is understood lovejoy will surrender, waive hearing, "and ask the court to fix bail, A Late Discovery. Moscow Mirror.- Quite a number of anion miners arrested for contempt and ' complicity in -the Coeur d'Alene murders and . other crimes have all at once dis covered that they are not citizens and can .not bo held by the authorities."' However, they deprive' true born Amer v leans of their rights, life ' and property, ' and it appears that they will be punish- ed in proportion to their crime. They were citizens enough to commit .murder-. and other crimes and they are surely -citizens . enough to suffer f or . their crimes. ' '' : - - : . Waking np at Last. Review. Seattle : knows where to-.' throw her political influence in order to delay the opening of the river - and hasten the digging of the ditch. It is a ' pity that more of the politicians of east-.-. era Washington are not modeled after, the mold of the Seattle .politicians. It is time that we were looking but for our over interests ; toolong we have played . the puppet for the overbearing and sel iish forces that- are. determined to , rule for ruin the state; : -. - .' .. (.'onrreuman Kllt'Improvlns;. . Heppner Gazette. Hon; W. E,- Ellis . came up town for the' first time last Thursday. - He made another visit Sat-' urdayi though on both occasions ho was" unable to walk, evcn.wit.h . crutches, but ( was brought up in the 'bus. Even this ia a treat to aman who has been in doors nearly sixty days".' From the way he is improving it will not be long till he can use- his crutches, . with no fea'rs of re breaking his game log. ' . . -