"' -" " 1 f.rt Lk.-. - - Kj J;.. THE DALLES. OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST S, 1892. NO. 44. VOL. IV, '' v . Loo k at the Ba rgai ns ! jr. HRHis, OLD AND : AT THE: WELL KNOWN STAND. 100 Dozen T0WEIiS; i Worth 25 Cts.-, going for 12 1-2 Cts. AlW&ijS to the Jpoqfc ! REGULAR dealing Out SflLE ! My Entire Stock, Consisting of Clothing, Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats and GEI1T8' FlimiSHil Laces and Enfoiiieries KOW GOING AT BARGAINS. And the Sale w ill be on "tinued until all is disposed of. A speciiil opportunity id here afforded for small "stores t replenish their stock. Caps, Just Received an Immense Shipment ' of the Celebrated v ' Ioya 1 Uorees ter Corsets IN EVERY STYLE and PRICE. In iUiln tin BOLD TRAIN ROBBERY.! AM ERICAX TINl MIN'IVG, A Mta Pacific R. R. The Express Car Blown Open With .;' "Dvnamite Cartridges. "... THE MESSENGER Ii A UH. WUUXUKU. The ltobken Kacupe .With 3O,0OO. ' Kvidently Professional ThleVe. Other ." News. DRU A SpnkHHc' Man Goto at Tlie Facts . lu jv - ' ' . - - . Direct Wj. - . .'. . 7 . t Frmu the SiiUano Review. . . . .. . " ' " . j i . : ' To get at the facts about the tin mi ues Passenger Express Stopped ou tlie at Tecai-par., reader of the Re- i view, recently wrote to the postmaster there relative to the sensational, reports sent out by the San Franeisco Examiner. The answer was as follows r-T J ' ' "- ' ! I Tembscai., Cal., July 27. la' rep v to' THE PASSENGERS TERRORIZED, j your letter of the 21st regarding the tin . '.'-. : J mines I can say it must bo a mistake, -'-'''' " -: ! for the company have about 150 men i rarkiug, and mine from 20 to 25 tons of ore per rtay. i hat paper saia it wouia fall two or three years ago, but it is still workinsr.- -There'is plenty of tin. ? The piece you saw in the - Examiner was about the manager. They hay.e a new manager and are working just the same as ever." I have had about 20 persons writing to mo nljout the mines. Yours ! truly, . D. J. DAwsosi Postmaster. A week age the local democratic paper was laboring under the delusion that the product of the tin mine was protect ed, "aiid- to-- show- that protection ; was death' to industry it declared with much vehemence that theiuiues were a failure, and J. Hamilton Lewi's made the asser tion that there was not a tin mine in ex istence in the United States.. Since then both have been enlightened.' Of course they will now come forward with-the plea that the prosperous condition of these mines proves the fostering influ ence of free trac A HUMAN SEA ROLLS. The. Mighty T'oronr Reaching Denver : - Unprecedented. ' r THE RAILROAD MEN ARE ANXIOUS. A Blockade Threatened Which may Last .- .... .. .. , . for More Than a Week. Snipes Kin ersly, THE LEADING CaJl Price these Goods, Wholesale ai Retail Drips '3E XJ fL! I XT 3r & :, p. HARRIS, AT THE L1) AND WELL -KNOWN STAND. ; Handled by Three Registered Druggists. : v ALSO ALL THE LEADING . . ' , Patent . (Dedieines and Druggists Sundries, house paints; oils anit glass. Agents for -Murphy's Fine Varnisbeslind the only agents in the City for The Sherwin, Williams Co.'s Painti: TtEATi -WE AKE- The Largest Dealers in Wall Paper. Finest Line of Imported Key West and Domestic . .. Agent for -Tan sill's Punch. C igars 129 Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon J. O. MACK, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL !! liave never If you take pills it is because S. B. Headache and Liver Cure. It works so nleely, cleansing the liver Mid Kidneys; aetsasaxuild physic without cansiDg pain or sickness, and dues tiot stop you from eatiug and working. To try it la to becomn a friend to It. or Bale by nll dmpfrints. " Young & Kuss, BiacKsmiiU wagon shod General Blacksmithing and Work done 'promptly, and all vork :. ' Ouaranteed. Liquor Dealer Finest Wines, and Liquors. Horse Shoeeing a Speiality Tniril Street, epposite tne old Lieoe Stand. MRS. C. DAVIS Has Opened the REVERE ; RESTAURANT, In the New Frame Building on SECOND STREET, Next to the Diamond Flooring Mills, 171 Second Street, Frenchs' Block, The Dalles, Oregon First Class Meals Furniabedaf all Hours. Only White Heip Employed. 1 . CKBLER-iflZEBSTER PIANOS AND ORGANS Sold on Easy Payments. . , , Musical Instruments and Music. ; Booksellers and Stationers. E.s Jacobs en &WGov 162 $X30ND STREET. The Dalles, Or. Sas Fbascisco, Aug. -5. A sheriff posse is on track of the men who robbed the S. P. passenger and express train near Collis night before last .The train which ,vaa held up was the south-bound night express, leaving San Francisco at 5:80 ri. m. Th exact sum contained in ! the messengers safe has not been ascer tained, Cut it is thought to have' been between $20,000 and $50,o6o. The Eal ton boys are supposed to- Tse ; iri Idaho, and it is a conundrum to-Tailroad offi cials who the parties concerned in the robbery were. Whoever they may be,' they were pretty bold in their operations. Several deputy sheriffs from southern counties of the Btate are stated to have been onboard the. train, - but - no resist ance was offered to the robbers. .Gen eral Freight Agent Smurr, of the South ern. PaciOc, was in a special car with a party of gentlemen bound east. ' Mes senger George Roberts, who was wound ed by the explosion of a dynamite bomb, was pronounced by physicians to be serV i6usly"injiired. He resides in Los An geles. The two robbers boarded the tender as the train was pulling Out at Collis, fifteen miles west of Fresno. Thev covered the engineer, and fire man' with .. double-barreled shotguns, and announced they had to obey their orders unrler the penalty of death When the train passed Rolindo station; the- engineer was ordered to stopr and the fireman was ordered with a lighted cigar to touch off the fuse of a dynamite cartridge which the robbers placed on the piston of the driving wheel of the left hand side of the locomotive. The ex plosion was terrific, breaking the pistori rod and partially disabling the- engine. The robbers then ordered the. engineer to get. off the train and walk- a short dis tance along the track, while they pro ceeded to bombard the two doors of the express-car by exploding dynamite car tridges j about eight inTali;' which tore the doors into-eplinters and smashed the floor of the car. The robbers, masked and completely disguised, boarded " the express car, and, covering Louis Roberts the - messenger, with double-Tjarreled shotguns.'ordered hrm to open Wells, Fargo & Co's. safe. Roberts set about doing this',' but was so nervous and ex cited that' ho forgot the combination, and" eo informed his captors, who there upon struck him a heavs' blow" oii' the head with the gun.and threatened .to kill him if he did not immediately open the safe."." With' trembling hands he did so, and they took out the sacks of coin. When the desperadoes exploded the first cartridge on the engine -the. passengers popped their heads out of the windows to Wee-what was doine. ' but they drew them "back again when they, felt the- pistol bullets and buckshot whistling past tbeir- "ears. ' ' ; Studying the Planet Mart.. Vienna Aug. 4. In an interview had by a' representative- of the Associated Press at the 'observatory -'on Turkeu- echanze, "with the assistant astronomer Hildebrand, the latter said a careful ob servation of the planet Mars was made from the night of July 4 to that of Aug ust 2. inclusive, by Herr Palisa, chief assistant astronomer, and himself. Owing to the proximity of thet planet to the southern horizon, the result 5 of the observations was unsatisfactory. The :pro"gres8 of the planet was watched for an hour.'. At a point 52 deg. above the horizon, enowCeld? could be seeii dis tinctly extending 30 deg. fronr the south note. Immediately after this white patch, three large dark groups were ob served; "Perhaps," - remarked Herr Hildebrand. "they are continents like those of our earth. . The haze! which en veloped the lower part of Mars, however rendered accurate, observations impoS' Bible. The north pole and equator were completely obscured." The observa tion8 were. taken at 1 :30 in the morning with the larsrest telescope in central Europe. : -; THE FLOODGATES OPKSED -WIDE. On Account of a Sweeping Kedariion in - Itaten Kvrybody ta Taking a Trip Westward. " Allison vst a Spy. ' Boise City, Aug. 5.: Allison, the de tective who went to Gem osten-ibly as a miner, and conducted a small business in the fruit and nicknacks line, arrived here today. He became a member of tbe miner's union, and was elected as its secretarv and afterwards gave for the use of the mine . officials the details of the pr&ceediugs of the union, their oaths, mode of initiation, names of members and 'officers and plan of procedure. After the Gem fight he left Gem and will appear-aB a "witness. ' It ; is under stood that Allison's testimony will cre ate a tr6mendou9 sensation. -It is ex pected that it will tend to show that the miner's union of the Cceur d'Alenes has long been a lawlees and incendiary as sociation. I It is said that Allison, while a member of the union, eot possession of the records that will astonish " the country, and that will go a long way to ward justifying the.determination of the mine owners to submit no longer to the exaction of the union. . - . -, A Fine Thing to Haye. - . Oregonian. It is a fine thiTig for a people to have a waterway and its com mercial possibilities stand between them aud railroad corporations. The people of Eastern Oregon and Washington ap preciate this and long with - feverish anxiety and' almost belligerent impa tience for the completion ji the great canal and locks at the Cascades. Avail able waterways everywhere reduce the cost of transportation. If v they carry only a traction of the goods they - make the rate at which the rest is carried. .; !Vlon at Duquene. - PittsburgV Aug. 5.--AH is quiet today at Duquesne. - Yesterday a mob of 300 men from Homestead attacked CO iton union men euteringthe steel works.. The mob were . armed with clubs and stones. In the fight Foreman Stagle and another workman were seriously injured, . and a dozen others' or7 less hurt. The Sixteenth regiment is now here, and no further trouble is - apprehended. . It is stated that alt but 50 of the old men will return to-work. - - ' .' - Dknveb, Aug. 5. The leading ques tion now is: "" Will the-railroad officials be able. to handle the mighty" throng ... which will reach this city Sunday and. V Monday to attend the Knights Templar . conclave?" - There is an expression of anxiety on this faces of tho railroad men concerning, the situation.'- When the 'j plans were made for receiving tho . knights nobody imagined the floodgates , would be opened by a sweeping reduction of rates. It is now prophesied that un- ; less a radical change is made in the pro gramme there will be a blockade which will not be disentangled for weeks. Would not Dress up. Dayton, O., Aug. 4, Frederick" Kay - ser, an aged, eccentric ana weaitny miser, has hanged himself, as the result of a quarrel with his daughter. In ad- .' dition to stocks andjbonds he owued : business and farm property .here "valued at $250,000, and had a large estate in Sweden, left him by his parents. For ' the'past twenty-five years his daily avo- ' cation had been the collection of garbage and slops, which he fed to stpek on his farm. DespiteT'his wealth he dressed in rags, and looked and acted like a dis tressed mendicant. His only . daughter, a cultured girl, returned recently from a 7 five years' absence in Sweden, where she was BtudyrTrg.mu8ic Her efforts to in duce her father to clean xip and discon tinue . his slop-gathering incensed : the old man so much that he committed suicide. His wealth is estimated at $500,000, aDd will go to bis daughter and her imbecile brother, - . - - -' To be Cardinal. ' RsT. Iavis, Aug. 4. It is stated in Catholic circles as 'a certainty that at tho pext meeting of the pope's consistory the holy father .will announce the ap pointment of Archbishop Ireland, of St. au,'a8 a uieraber of the college of car dinals. A prominent - Catholic, "who is in constant communication with Rome, says.: "The appointment 01 Arcnuisnop Irelan'd to- be' cardinal is just as sure ' as any event that has not 'yet transpired.;' A Sure-Cure. New York Advertiser.' , Queen Sophie of Sweeden and Norwayhas . been, fully I restored :to health.' Her-- trouble has "been of a neivous character, and her physiciitn - prescribed that she . should sweep her rooms", light her own fires, cook her brcakfaEt and perform a '-num ber of other manual offices in connection with housekeeping for a few months, and the prescription has.worked like a charm. -'. -- ' - ' Flood In St. Paul. - r " St. Pacl, Aug. 5. Where. Page street: crosses a deep gully, in this city, the cul vert choked tip and a lake formed dur ing the late heavy rains, covering an -area of about two acres, fifty feet deep. . Suddenly, last night tho street filling was i swept away, allowing the water t sweep - down in a - body on the land below. -When the. soft earth gave way, side-. ' walks, trees, houses" and human beings .. were hurried down the grade, thousand of yarjp. The loss of property is-at least $50,000. The loss of life is three killed , Seven were badly injured. The body of Mrs. August Adams was recovered this morning. There : is still two missing, . and Mr?. Strokel, of tlie injured, is in a critical Condi tioiiv ;':.-. ' I'nrlinient Opened. . lx)NDOx7Aug." 4.-fTlie new parlimcnt assembled this afternoon." The pro oeedings today w'ere'pujely'iormal, and ho business wiirbetVansacfed until next week,' The queoh;'-coiitieil, at which the - speech from' "tiie 'thrbno is'signed, will .. -be tomorrow. .' Whoii.'. Glad-. stone appeared . in- tlie" house this after noon he was given a wideiyentbusinstuv reception, the-Irish laemlHirs rising in a body, joined by the liberals, ; waving their iiats and "cheering, - non, 'Arthur . Wellesy Peel, speaker of the last house,' was elected speaker. ., Post 111 telligencr. The. business - men of Spokane have "at last tumbled to'Jim Hill's definition, of ."relative. ; rates." Nevertheless, Jim worked-S"pofcane '-.to the queen's taste, and the citizens have yet to learn wherein they have been bene fited, at least, as tar as ireignt raiva are concerned. "-- . . " Highest of all iri Leavening Power! Latest 3. S. Gov't Report