U - ft A VOL.. IV. THE DALLES; OREGON; TUESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1892. NO. 59. mm glgK -A V. E. GARRETSOIi, SOLE AGEST rOB THB " r .' ' L . , .V.-. J All Watch Work Warranted ." V" y " "-3 Jewelry Made to Order. 138 Second St.. Tha Dalles. Or. Kranich and Bach Pianos. Recognised as. Standards of the high est grade of manufacture,- T. -. - . ,. - 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; sets as a mild physic without causing pain or eicknees, and does not stop yon' from eafog and working. o try It la to become at friend to It. "or sale by all draggiste. Annie Wright Seminary, Boarding and Day School for fiirte. ' : Jttrith Year begins Sept.' 8th '1892. For Admission, Apply to t6j. Principal " Mrs. Sarah K.. White, - Annie Wricjbt Seminary, IACOMA. - - WASH.- . FINAL ACCOUNT..-,-.- Notice is hereby given, that-the-undersifrned, Julia A. Obarr, the duly appointed,: acting and qualified adminiBtratrix of the estate of William A. Obarr, deceased, baa filed her final account and petition in said estate, and that Monday the &th day of September, 1892, at the -hour of ten. o'clock, a. m. of said day, said day being the first day of the next regular term of the County Court for Wasco county, Oregon, at the County Court room of the County court house in'-Dalles City: Wasco county, Oregon, has been duly appointed by said court as the time and place foe hearing said petition and final account. - All persons interested in said estate are hereby notified to appear at said time and place and show cause if any there be, why said petition and final account should not in all things be allowed, ratified and confirmed. . 8.5w6t.2td . JULIA A. OBARR, . Administratrix of the estate of William A. Obarr, deceased. Dufur & Menefee. Attorneys for Estate. -'-" CU. 8. Young : BiacKsmiiti&vasoiiD ........ - . y General Blacksmithing and Worst done prompt J 75 arid Jtlr . wort J Guaranteed. Horse Shioeeing a Spciaiity Tfeira Street, opposite tHe old Liebe Stand. MRS. CL DAVIS Has Opened the 7." In the New: Ffame BuildingVon:" SECOND STREET, Next to the . . ; , Diamond Flooring Mills. -.J, first Class Meals Famished at all Hours, f 'Only "White Help Employed. - r Worth 25 Cts., going for 12 1-2 Cts : : - - - "Just Received an Immense Shipment of the Celebrated F(oyal Uoreester Corsets - - - - In every . STYLE and PRICE. A nn ; Q liluD DRUGS Snipes & Kin ERSLY. -THE LEADING- Handled by Three Registered Druggists. - .-' . .ALSO ALL THE;iEAMNO 1 .1 J '1 . , Patent ffletH HOUSE PAINTS, OILS AND! GU3 Agents for Murphy's Fine Vaynishes an&;Jhe :0iily agents m . the City for The Sherin,-WiH;ams SvPaints, -WE.ARE- - The " Largest Dealers in ! .Wall Paper, - Finest Line "of Im ported Key West and .Domestic . GigarsI T - Agent for TansiU's 'PurichV- 129 Second Street The Dalles, Oregon - . : - . . ... , HO LES A LEA Finest Wines lIQUOR o ;lf71siedond Street Prenchs Blook, GHBLEREBSTER ' " PI A N OS AND : ORGAN S i. A , : .Sold on Easy Payments. ,;; . .. . MiisiGal Instrum aiid Muc , i H'J'l . ; Booksellers and Stationers. Jacobs 1 62v SECOND ; STREET.' 1 DMA w a m. m W N D RETA 1 1 .. r . and Liquors. The Dalles, Oregon en & DEAIvBR Go., ' V j--The'Dallesj Or. THE CASCADE LOCKS. Jim Hill and Maj. Handliiiry -Visit M Scenes of Ficielness. v RATHER DISCOURAGING OUTLOOK. People Discuss the Whys for Abandon ing the State Road. HITBOD or QEANTINO LICENSES. Comforts of Samerau Cunptri In trie Cool Retreats of the Casoad . " Mountains. . Special to tHfc CUBOKIClE-l . r Cascade Locks, Aug. 22. We of the Cascade Locks have had a visit during the last few day of Jupiter Pluvius, who m all his generous impulses In the torrid, and jail the rest of the wide world, has not failed to be present and made his presence objectionable to us denizens of the mountains. The nights are cool, however,' and the light elysium breeze from off the cataract of enchant ment renders sleep a' luxury and re freshing. We can do no more than pity you, in your, warm condition, ' and breathe a silent prayer that Boreas may temper the sunshine and shade .with a cooling draught of the elixir of comfort. Quiet reigns supreme here, and as a consequence two saloons have closed their doors to fate, for. the want of patronage, as there seems to be an exit going on from these parts to other fields, where there is . more of the wherewith in sight. - , Jim Hill, not the Great Northern Jim ; who has tried to dispense- "forty rod" in several places in your city in the past few years, came down here a couple of weeks ago! or the purpose of opening out in business, but the outlook is so dark for a; successf ul accomplishment that he has concluded to move on. By the way,"is there not a law In our Ore gon statutes prohibiting saloons or the sale of liquors within two miles' of any place 'where, 'government J wprks -were prosecuted? - If this be so, what author ity has our county kurt to issue licences at this point? ' County courts have done some strange things in the past. V- ' For instance, flome years ago, a county judge and hia qominiaaibners accepted from the O. R. & N. Co. a patch which they carelessly put on The Dalles and Sandy wagon road at' Shell Rock - and subsequently, without any apparent legal or moral reason, abandoned the whole road from Hood River to Eagle creek, in this cqunty, while the road from Hood River to a short distance west of Viento and from Shell Rock to Cascade . Locks, was as good a buggy road as there is in the county. The same county court could appro priate, funds for bridges and a road be tween Hood; River and your city, hut could not do less than abandon five or six miles of a connecting link, which would give' a valuable outlet to those along this road and those of the western boundary - of the county, a right and privilege: which they claim and deserve respect for.. There . is and always has been a mystery attending this move by our county court. ' Mr.'JI M. Waugh, father of Mrs. Jus tin of this city, died last Friday after a short.-illness " aged 76 years. His re mains were buried in . the . cemetery at this place. , '".' '. There is ft quiet but determined move on foot being worked for a division of the county down this way which is. en gineered by leaders who are not politic ians but by those who feel that The .Dalles is for itself r at the expense of the outsiders who get what inadvertantly falls by the wayside.- The couplet of Bret Harte, ' paraphrased. "That for ways thatwre dark and tricks that are plain, Wasco county courts are pecul iar," fits the point admirably. Major Handbury was here last Thurs day : and ..Friday- looking over affairs. Mr. C. E. Wyley has been temporarily transferred to the dredging department of the' Willamette; where he will re main a couple "of months. His fajnily will remain here' for the present. ' In the engineer department here, there are three, civil engineers busily engaged in completing details for contractors ' and 'will have them ready by the 1st of Sep tember. ; , j. y.-' .V ? 1 . Mr.-'L.''-Wv Heppner and family re turn home from their summer camp at this place tomorrow, by the Regulator. There is a camp'of ten or twelve persons from Portland at Rock creek, across the riyer at tbi8..place-.Thcy put 'in ; their time trouting and hunting. . A couple of sons of.Wm. E; Brainard of Mt. Tabor are visiting the Brooks' camp. -- ' . . . Mrs. N. Haines and ' children ' came down last Thursday and returned by Regulator yesterday. - They seemed to enjoy their stay very much. . LBt Thursday, - whiles a farmer on Hannah creek; was out in his potato field, a large gray wolf made him a visit and showed his ivory savagely,'-but' the rancher with hoe ia hand, chased the beast away to the woods. " ,' ; Cass. - Telegrrapble Flaabea. ' . .- - ,;t :f. . v.- . Bud Lindsay, one of the most daring, most lawless' and most troublesome of miners in Coal Creek, Tenn.; has turned states evidence and besides, aiding the officers to make arrests, will reveal the namea and. plans of all the leaders, tell. how the mob was raised, the nature of the oath, the names of the miners known to have killed the deputy guards ; ' in short, to reveal to the civil authorities all of the lawlessness that has reigned. Bertie Helen Forelund, the "Montana terror," is now a salvation lassie in -East Portland. She takes exception to the statement that she has ever lived with Herrall, the all-round professional crook, who is now doing time in Son , Quentin for a steamboat robbery. "I never had anything to do with Herrall, nor did : I work as a cowboy," said Miss Bertie to a ' Telegram ' reporter , .this : morning. Williams" never had a cattle ranch, Tint was a professional burglar, stage robber and safe - blower. I met him when I was very young, and he ruined me. . I did live with him for two years and dressed in male attire for four years. I was implicated-in several roberies and was acquitted in the Montana courts. I am willing to plead guilty to all I have done, but it is not right that I should be charged with things which are untrue.'! ' Kansas 5ity Is outdoing Denver now, with the K. of P. The National en campment has : called together there about 100,000 knights, and the city has been thrown open - to them . in royal shape. " The encampment is destined to be a great success.' . The report of officers of the endowment rank states that on July 1, there was 1,417 active sections, 29,407 members, and the endowment in force was $62,962,000, showing an in crease of 500 sections, ; .8,000 "members and $17,000 ,t00 endowment in the two years preceeding. . The London, Eng, council,, have re fused the petition to stop outdoor meet ings of the Mormon missionaries, where they are gaining many converts for Utah. . A Baptist minister in Hornsev district, in denouncing the perversions . of his flock, stated that Brigham Young, jr., who is the European apostle of the Mor mon church, sends 500 converts to. Utah annually. The greater part of these converts are English. , .The volcano of Sangir. has quieted down and enormous' columns of smoke are the only signs of activity! Cocoanut plantations and fruit orchards were laid waste and the destruction brought about has resulted in distress bordering on famine. ' ' ' Oregon Preia Association. Glacier. The Oregon Press Associa tion meets in The Dalles September 26th, and already that metropolis of the In land Empire is : preparing," to' receive them. - Of course we-are-' interested in' this matter, for we shall be there. As a mater or local pride, we hope the.- edi tors will be royally entertained, and this hope' is accentuated by the fact that' we are citizens enough of The Dalles- to take pride in having her do' the grand, and just far enough ' on - the outside to ' be classified as'one of the guests. This is a political year, aud we; thus dignifiedly straddle." . ; ' . Who Can Beat It! Antelope Herald. Some people .from a distance' contend that this. Inland Empire will never amount to anythingv for raising hay and. grain. We can truth fully assert that no where' in Oregon can larger yields of hay and grain be had than up hero in the Antelope section. ., This season Undo Bill and Alf Kelsay put up eight tons of hay off one and one-fourth acres of land. Now if any one can beat this for a dry season let him stand up. j Highest of all in Leavening Power.-Latest U. S. Gov't Report -. t a. a- - -II av rrcw yx 1 1 i UaVc AS GOT. FLOWER SAYS.; Answering Criticisms as to Calling Out : Sncii a Large Force. TRIBUTE TO THE STATE MILITIA; An Outrage "to Imperil Lives .Which Could be Possibly 'Avoided. ; : EVEBI MAN IN . CONSTANT DANGE". Dlseuaslng; features of tbo Strike Among Leaders of Various. Or .... Kanlzationa. : .. Albany, Aug. 23. Some -sharp criti- .: clsma having been offered in-' regard to . " the course pursued by Gov. Flower on ' bis action in sending so many troops to' the scene of the Buffalo strike, hereplied, in substance as follows: "The militia of the state of New York,- ia composed of active, intelligent young mOn, com- -; ing from prosperous homes and shops and business places. " They devote their energy, and relinquish a part of- their liberty In the service of the state for pro tection in just such emergencies-as the present one. . When the' state calls on them for service that has an element of danger, the state is bound to use .every... means at its command to minimize that danger as far as possible. ' Certainly it would be an outrage to place these young men in a perilous position so long as it is possible to avoid it. When the proper ; authorities at Buffalo informed me that ' 2,000 militiamen of that locality 'were-. ' trying to protect property so- vast that' ;.' it was necessary-to place every man in constant danger, and when : asked for more troops to lessen this danger to lives '-. as well as protect the property, the state . could do no less than .to send enough troops to prevent bloodshed. . It : was dud to the strikers as-well as thc rivilrtf? and the owners of property in question, that we gave ample protection to all; for the strikers are not the ones from whom erioua trouble- is feared; that coraes from the lawless element, the hangers-on who invariably gather : at 'such ' places, and find pleasure in -stirring up a strike and causing wreck and ruin. In a city .like Buffalo this element 'numbers many thousands.' I am sure the good people of the state find no fault because the qhief executive has ' granted the request for sufficient- troop? to prevent this law-breaking crowd from" -committing any act that might lead to further trouble.",- The firemen of the local organisation have passed the point ' ' where the enthusiasm of their sympathy -. might take them on a strike. Frank P. Sargent, grand master- of the Locomo tive Firemen, this morning said, in emphatic language : "If I order a strike of Firemen, it will " be in conjunction with - the Tirotherhood ' of ' Locomotive ' . engineers, Railway, Trainmen, Railway -; Conductors and Railway -Telegraphers' ; There will be no strike of the firemen-" alone." Briefly; then, the Strike if it comes must be one involving ' the above ' organizations-- and "the replies to " Sweeney; will be, in brief u that no iso-. lated case will call a strike, but if the -time cornea when labor must assert itself " . and the other allied orders will ' come ' out, Sargent is willing to place his men in the same column. . ; i 'Good Wafel. Qregonian. Fourteen thousand dot- ' lars is the amount "in wages .that is due- -the hunters and crew of the sealing schooner San Diego, who will soon be - paid off in San Francisco. - The sailors , before the mast have, been working ' on a . . lay; and have $414 apiece owing to- - tliem, while the four huotfrs. have $2,000 apiece. . This ia the largest amount of .' money that has ever - been paid out on this coast for wages divided among 16 men. The cabin boy, a lad of 14 years, was also out on a lay and has the snug -amount: of $320 to his credit.'-.' The . schooner's cargo of skins is valued at $31,035. . .. ;;. y. ' - - , , .- . n 4