at VOL. VII. THE DALLES, OREGON, SATURDAY, MAY 5, 1894 NO. lift'- RIOT AT JCOTTDALE A Fierce Fisht Occurs Between Strik ers and Deputies. SIXTEEN PEOPLE REPORTED SHOT Great Excitement Throughout the. En tire Coke RegionFoul Air Killed Three People. Scottdalk, Pa., May 4. A riot oc curred at the Painter works of the Mc Clnre Coke Company, at 6 o'clock this morning. The company made an effort to start this and other plants Tuesday, and today the women determined to drive the "blacklegs" from work with tin pau, clubs, coke forks and brooms. They m ehed to the cokeyards.. San ford White, the mine ' superintendent, Ewing B. Roddy, a bookkeeper, and a lot of deputies were on guard. A shot was fired to scare the women and the men rushed to the scene. White opened fire on a crowd that numbered over 100. At the first fire three men fell, wounded, one shot through the thigh, one through both legs and the third in the rock. The women carried off the wound, .i and the infuriated men set upon White und Roddy, White was beaten over the head, knocked down and kicked and bruised about' the body. His recovery is doubtful. A big Hungarian had White down and was Btanding over him with an ax, when he was knocked down by James Tarr, a store clerk. Roddy was at first thought to be badly injured, but he escaped with only slight bruises. While all this was going on the deputies shot' one woman, who is said to be dy ing. It is now believed at least sixteen were shot. There is great excitement throughout the entire region. The strikers are becoming desperate and mobs are assembling -at various points to raid the plants. Three Were Asphyxiated. Plkasant Hill, Mo., May 4. Two sons and a daughter of Samuel Gammon, who lives near Cockrell, in Jackson county, were killed yesterday by foul air while cleaning a well. The eldest of the boys went down in the well and was asphyxiated. The younger brother went to his rescue, and he, too, was poisoned. Thelatter's wife became hysterical when she saw that her husband was dead, jumped into the well, and in a few min utes was also dead. Fight UTer Bnried Trea.sa.re. City ok Mexico (via Galveston), May 4. The people of Toluca, in the state of Mexico, have related for years a story to the effect that a great treasure was ' buried on the Jalpa ranche, near the town. Monday a laborer on the ranche found just under the surface a large flat stone, with . the inscription, "Five mil lion dollars are buried here," and the owner of the ranch began digging for the money. - The people of Toluca claimed the treasure was theirs, and the town authorities forbade him to dig fur ther. Both the town and the ranch owner set watchers where the stone was fonnd. The work of excavating has been stopped and each side is ready to fight. Troops have been sent to Toluca to preserve peace. Most Have a Gold Value. London, May 4. A dispatch from An tanaurivo says the government of Mad agascar has issued a decree that silver without a gold guarantee is no longer acceptable at its face value. They Don't Want Work. Washikgton, May 4. Dr. G. P. Gehr ing, of this city, today , addressed a letter to General Coxey,. stating that he bad 60 acres of land at Columbia Park, 3i miles from the city, from which he wished to have the trees and under brush removed and streets 'opened up. He offered the park as a camping place and agreed to pay General Coxey $500 for the useof the army for the desired work, which would ' take several weeks "to accomplish. ' The offer was made in good faith and the industrial leader was in clined to accept, but the crowd was un willing to move their camp so far from Washington, so the offer was declined. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report r .-""OS. - w T I GOOD WORDS FOR TI1E CAUSE; Senators and Representatives in Favor of Bimetal Ism. Washington, May 4. Senators and representatives who assisted in the repeal of the Sherman act express them selves in hearty sympathy with the bi metallic movement in England. Sena tor Hill said : "I joined in the dispatch to the bimetalists in England because I desired to encourage them in an earnest effort to promote the cause of a double standard. The best thinkers and the best writers, the best statesmen and the best financiers, are gradually but surely realizing the fact that a single standard of gold means the impoverishment of the people everywhere, and some inade quate relief from the present conditions is essential. There are some indications that English sentiment is now drifting toward bimetaliero. It is the duty of this government to pursue a course which will hasten the day when bimetal ism will be an accomplished fact. If the present administration does not shape its ruling in that direction, the people will select one that will. Bimetalisrn by international agreement, or independ ently if necessary, is to be the great issue of the future." Senator Allison said: "The confer ence in London is significant as respects the membership and the strong utter ances favoring the full use of silver as money. I have faith the growing senti ment in favor of the lull use of silver will find expression at the election in England, Scotland and Ireland when dissolution takes place.'- -m Senator Voorhecs and Representative j Bland also -express hearty sympathy with the movement. COINED BY BRIG HAM YOUNG. Five-Dollar Gold Pieces Which Are Son Rarities Too Soft for Use. County Commissioner Ballard, of San Francisco, is the possessor of a rare and curious gold coin which fell into hif hands in California in 1849. It is t Mormon five-dollar piece, and for many years has been employed as a charm di bangle on Mr. Ballard's fob chain. Th owner himself . was a '49er, and took part in the early gold excitement : California. He told a New York Re corder man that the Mormons, whe were among the earliest in the gold fields, returned to Salt Lake with great quantities of the precious yellow dust. Much gold also found its way to Utah through other avenues. Brighom Young, who was at that time running a little government on his own account, estab lished a mint and 'coined probably one million dollars in five-dollar gold pieces. These coins very soon . found their way to California and passed current. At that early date, Mr. Ballard says, the coins were welcomed ' as a great convenience in matters of exchange. The metal in the coins was unalloyed so soft and pure, in fact, that it wore away very rapidly. On this account they soon disappeared from circulation almost as rapidly as they had appeared. On one side of Mr. Ballard's relic are two clasped hands, probably symbolic of brotherly love, while around the margin are the letters, "G. S. L. C. P. G.,n standing for "Great Salt Lake Cal ifornia Pure Gold." Below the clasped hands are the words, "five dollars," and the date "1849." On the other side, in the center of the coin ia the all-seeing eye, and below that a bet-hive, while around the margin are these words, "Holiness to the Lord." Mr. Ballard has had some trouble in keeping his coin. Once he accidentally lost the keepsake, but was lucky enough to find it again. Another time a thief got into his house and took all the money from his pocket book except this odd-looking coin, which, at a glance, resembles a trunk check. This was more than twenty years ago. Mry Ballard then attached it to his moroeep fob chain, which is anchored to an old-fashioned silver watch the movement of which is also dated 1849. Another of these rare coins is preserved in the National museum at Washington. A Fortune. Foggs Ha, my fortune is made. Trotter What now? Foggs I have invented a pro r.a ration that produces tho effect of sunburn and tan, and one need not spend a fortnight in the country in order to got colored. Dr. S. F. Scott, Blue Ridge, Harrison Co., Mo., says: "For whooping cough Chamberlain's Cough Remedy- is excel lent." By using it freely the disease is deprived of all dangerous consequences. There is no danger in giving the Remedy to babies, as it contains nothing injur ious. 50 cent bottles for sale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists. IS" r Kitcbei? Extension. University Extension is good, but Kitchen Exten sion is better. Wider knowl edge of better cooking pro cesses means better health and comfort for everybody. Science can never do us better service than by the multiplication of the cook ing schools which make healthful means and meth ods available for even the most modest home. OOTTOLEHE The 1 vegetable substitute for lard, is science's latest gift to the kitchens of the world. Every woman who has ever cooked a meal, knows that lard is disagree able in use and unhealthy in its effects. Cottolene is a most' satis factory substitute clean, delicate and far more eco nomical. At your grocers. REFUSE ALL SUBSTITUTES. N. K. FAIR BANK &, CO., ST. LOUIS and CHICAGO, NEW YORK. BOSTON. THE QUIET MAN. - - " lie "Was Something of a Liar Himself M His Story Proved. He was a quiet-looking, elderly man in a pastoral sort of black bloadclotb suit and a broad brim, such as are worn by "colonels" and "majors.". Next to him in the car sat two young men who were telling stories about personal experiences on the road. One of them related with much gusto an encounter which he had recently had with a des perate western man, the weapons being cards, says the Pittsburgh Dispatch. ; - The game was poker, the special oc casion was that old familiar "big jack pot" wliich so often figures in profane history and two principals were armed With straight flushes. ;Jt was a dollar limit game," remarked the young man, "and we lct sixty-seven times and then I called him. He had a sequence flush, queen high, and I had one king high. You should have heard him swear." I noticed that the old man listened with great attention to the story and at itf conclusion he exclaimed with much as tonishment: "You called him!" Th youngster blushed and acknowledged h is guilt. . "Well, well:" said the old man, shak ing his head, "these times is suttinly not what they uscn tu be. You see where I cum from we ain't up to this way er doin' things. Why, I'm playin a hand yit thet was dealt to my pap -ir '57. ' Him an' ole Jodge llolibin, of Mur freesborp, they Sot into a game on night in September ef- '.'.7 an' they be an.'- bi-t :;n hot. An' win r. they rur outer trash they bet mult an' ther. horses; -411' then nif-er;; tr.' :it las' thej took to k ttin' acres o' lau' and ther they run chirr "everything ay' it wai agreed thet the ban's rhud 1m? put in e sealed envollup an' marked an' kept ir the vattlt cf the bank till Loth on 'en got more stuff. Well, it went on thai way off an' 01 till the war cum anc the old jedgc had. 'tiled an' . pop' yvai killed at Sevon Pines, an' then young Jim Dobbin kc. tuk hit; ole man's place an' I tuk dad's. W ell, ren'elmen, we'rt just bettin' yit v.-henever wc git the cash an' there ain't no signs cf quittin'. but I Would suttinly like tocec'-them han's of pops an' ole Jetlgrt- Dubbin'F afore I die," and ho sighed a long sigh of patitrnt resignation while the twe youngsters 'and tha. other men in the smoking eompartnienta regarded him as one worthy of venerution. even tf it was only afj a liar. ' ' . riPctrU'lty i:t Warfare. "-" -, A clever piece of work wes recently done by the telegraph battalion of an English regiment in the course' of some night experiments. Vn extensive cable was rapidly laid over the roughest pos sible ground, anil that, tbo, without the slimiest rissistanee from search lights, and the lieutenant general was thus enabled not only to find a lost brigade, but to control th-j simulta neous advance and s..ia-k of three sep arated brigades oa .:va. earthwork - at midnight. The telegraph, in fact, ren dered a most difficult and doubtful op eration comparatively easy and certain.. At some late maneuvers, too, a highly useful attempt was rjade to produce on a map at headquarters a plan of battle, step by stop, as it progressed many miles away, by means of reports wired from the field. The attempt did not succeed because tho maps tjvailable were not on a sufficient scale; but the feasibility of the plan was demonstra ted, while its value to a perioral direct ing operations over a wide field is ob vious. With large soale maps, i bal loon and increased observing staff, it is likely to be made a most important aid to the strategist and the tactician. Rich, Delicate, d ' D Beautiful Shades INDIA One SUMMER DRESS At NEWS NOTES. The First National bank of Sedalia, Mo., failed to open yesterday. The ens pension is attributed to loss of business brought about by the publication in a St. Louis paper several months ago of a telegram Baying the bank had failed. Charles Robinson, lately one of the champion acrobats of America, died at his home in Muncie, Ind., from the effects of cigarette smoking. The inter ior of his month and throat had turned black. He had been a constant cigarette-smoker for over fifteen years.. - Dolph is receiving numerous congrat ulations from the.workingmen'a organi zations of the East on the fight he is making on the Wilion bill. He is also in receipt of a letter, thanking him, from the executive committee of. the Am ericai Protective Tariff League. The Oregon senator is making a good' speech bv installments. Seed the Law. i . ' Under the laws of every State in this Union the man w-ho shoots another man who may bo stealing his fruit or robbing his lien roost can be prosecuted " for manslaughter. The idea is that you shall go out and argue with him. and ii argument won't do whistle for an of ficer. The tray she looks troubles the woman who is delicate, run-down or overworked. She's Hollow-cheeked, dnll-eyed, thin and pale, and it worries her. Now, the way to look well is to be well. And the way to be well, if you're any such woman, is to faithfully use Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. That is the only medicine that's guaranteed to build up woman's strength and to cure woman's ailments. In every "female complaint," irregularity, or weakness, and in every exhausted condition of the female sys tem if it ever fails to benefit or cure, you have yonr mnpev hark. Askyotir dealer for Mexican Silve' Stove Polish. ' H I GH .' Usually mean risk of Principal; but here is an ex- beption -where "both, are seoru e. - Purchese your lotfyii, Boots apd 5oes' te.. at -;V;;v',M:::-:H.ONYSA- !;0;:S"I:; SM ;Gi i. O; T J .. :s E And you -will effect a saving equal to two years' high . t rate of .interest on the money youeip end. SILKS of the many Specialties in Very Select Stock of 50 Cents Per. Yard. A. M. WILLIAMS & CO. letters Tbat if ever Went. Borne time ago the man who fires a cer tain newspaper clipping bureau's circulars through the mall saw a notice of a newly issued cheap edition of Dr. Johnson's "Bass elas," and he immediately wrote to "Samuel Johnson, LL D., care of -r - & Co., publish ers," inclosing circulars, and stating .that the bureau would bo pleased to furnish him with criticisms .- on - his "recent popular work.'.' That was oply equaled .by the man who saw two pictures, tho property' of W. H. VanderbiU, at a loan exhibition, and who was so much pleased with them that he de termined to have some painted by the art ists to whom they were credited on the cat alogue, and so. wrote to them, addressing hi r letters, one to P. P. iiubens, Kq.-the other to V. R. Rembrandt, Esq., and sent them in care of W, H. Yanderbil with in structions to " please torward." . . " ' : .-' Fattl's Bis; Music-Box. " One of the curiosities of that sumptu ous palace in the-. Welsh mountains where Mme. Adelina Patti retires from time to time to rest after her triumphs, is a gigantic orchestrion, says a London paper. Thifi wonderful piece of mech anism eompri -,c!5 in itself all the instru ments of a 5-;raad oivhc .tra, and with its aid the queen cf Go:i.can reliearr any one of her roles. The oivhcstrion is the invention of a f narx. .hi: t V)rfore Christmas, something v.vnl wron'r with the huge mnsiesl li- .v.' m:'.i:cr. happening tn !. i:i iJn.;land, tn sot it right ajam. i t was the first ever con structed in this countrv, Teachers Examination. Notice is hereby given that for thr purpose of making an examination of al persons who may offer themselves at candidates for teachers of the schools ot this county, the connty school superin tendent thereof will hold a .public ex am iuation at his office in The Dalles, be ginning at 1 o'clock p. ni. Wednesday, Mav 9th. 1894. y Dated this 30th day qf April, 1894. Troy Shelly, ' Connty school Snpt. Wasco Co. dawtd. . of I WTERE our No t i s for Infants ssd Children. . Castorla ' promotes Digestion, and' overcomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour " Stomach, Diarrhoea, and Feverishness Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep natural. - Casrtoriav contains no Morphine or other narcotic property. Castoria is so well adapted to children that I recommend It as superior to any prescription known to me." II. A. Ahchxk. M. D., Ill South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T. " M For several years I have reeommenaed your Castoria,' and shall always continue to do so, as it has invariably produced beneficial remits." Ed win F. Pardbe. M. D., 325th Street and 7th Ave., New York City. "The nse of 'Castoria. la so universal . and its merits ro well known that it reams a work of supererogation to endorse It. Few are the in-telUfrent- families who do not keep Oastoria within easy reach." - ... Cab Dos Marttx. D. D-, New York City. : Thx Ckmtaub OoKP-urr, 77 Hurray Street, N.Y. B3Sf8 Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat- ? eat business conducted for Mooerstc Fees. 5 (Our omct is Opposite u. s. patent officc? , and we can secure patent in less time than those S . i remote from Washington. - S Send model, drawing; or photo., with descrip- f ; Don. We advise, ii natentable or not. free alt . (charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. J A Pamphlet, "How to Obtain Patents," with ( , cost of same in the U. S, and foreign countries 5 sent tree, aaress, t , O.A.SNOW&OO. 1 o