VOL. VII. THE DALLES, OREGON, FRIDAY MAY 11. 1894. NO. 12ft, THE. YAKIMA TROUBLE -Citizens to tie Hell RespsMe-For Ee . cOuraps Coxeyites. DEPUTY JOLLY CANNOT LIVE. The Spokane Coxeyites United States Marshals After the Colorado Men Miss Coxey is Pert Nobth Yakima, Wash., May 10. There have been no farther encounters between the United State3 deputy mar shals and the industrials. The ' latter are still here and claim they will take the first east-bound freight. Deputy Marshal Ed. Minch, of Tacoma, is here in charge of about 50 specials, and Joe Warren, T.ith 27 men all armed with rifles, ai rived this morning from Spo kane. Tho city is crowded with people who gather in k nots and crowds to dis cuss the situation. It is claimed that eome citizens incited the commonweal ers to resistance and did much to pre cipitate the conflict of last night, and a clerk of the United States court at Se attle is here with citations for 0of those who made the most inflamn tory remarks. This move has created con siderable excitement and uneasiness among some citizens, and the number of citations may be increased, as deputy marshals are closely inquiring about those who encouraged the Coxeyites. There seems to be a difference of opinion as to who shot the deputy marshals,' a number of witnesses of the conn ct maintaining that they . were shot by their companions. Deputy Jolly who was wounded in the back, has been taken to Tacoma. Physicians who have examined him say he cannot live, as the ballet is supposed to have cut the in testines. Took tbe Water Routs. A lot of Coxies left Ellensbnrg this morning for Pasco by the river route in boats, and in their downward course ran mio a wniri ana lour were drowned. Mis Coxey Is Yery Pert. Massillon, O , May 10. Miss Mamie Coxey, the attractive young daughter of the commouwealer commander-in-chief, and goddess of peace in his parade, has returned to Massillon. Her arrival was wholly unexpected. To a reporter who called to pav his respects Miss Coxey sent this message: "You tell him l am not at home to reporters, and that I will not be interviewed. That's the way we talk to reporters, and you just tell him so." Miss Coxey thinks her father will soon begin a lecturing tour. The Spokane Coxeyites. Spokane, May 10. The Spokane Cox eyites are very much disturbed. The traitorous conduct of the leader, Dol phin, and the vigilance of the. authori ties, have crushed their spirits. Deser tions are numerous. Deputy United States Marshal Vinson went out to Hill yard at noon today to serve papers of in . junction issued by Judge Hanford, re straining the common wealers from inter fering with the property of the Great Northern railroad. A committee from the Spokane trades council, with Jumbo Cant well, commander of the Tacoma army, at the invitation of Dolphin, went out to Hillyard this morning to investi gate the charges of the attempted deser tion 6l Dolphin, to be in the form of a court-martial. It is thought Dolphin asked this far his pwn protection until he can get out of town, as there are threats of lynching. Part of the Spo kane army will probably tto to E. J. Jef fries, commander of the Seattles, and part to Jumbo Cantwell. Dolphin can so longer lead them. Wife and Money Gone. San Francisco, May 10. It trans pires that Mrs. Ah Chong, wife of a lo- l : , . . ... viimrao uierenant, decamped lor China yesterday on the steamer Oceanic, - e "cr fiv,uuu oi ner Due- band's .money. Ah Cbong was accus tomed for years to store his earnings in ' trunk to which he had a single key. He once found bis wite trying to open tha trunk, but having severely repri manded ber, he forgot the occurrence. The robbery and the movements of Lis v Highest of all in Leavening Power. ABSOlLnrEClf PUBS Unfaithful ppoune was discovered by Ah Chong very shortly after the steamer sailed, and strenuous efforts were made to stop the steamer by signaling, but the Oceanic paid no attention to the flags displayed from the heads, and soon dis appeared beneath the horizon. A cable gram will be sent to Yokohama for the arrest of the woman, and the authorities at Honolulu will le notified in case she may have stopped there. It is believed some Chinese Lothario has accompanied the woman and ber husband's $10,000. Irrigating Arid Lands. Washington, May 10. Congressman Magmre, when asked concerning the truth of the statement that he knew Commonwealer Kelley and he would as sist him on reaching Washington, said he knew him as a ball-player. He an deretood Kelley had a petition which he would present asking government aid for the unemployed by irrigating the arid lands. If Kelley brought such a petition, Magnire sai he would not only present it bnt urge its considera tion. Maguire added that if the single tax system was adopted there would be no need of people resorting to arid lands for homes. The only difficulty, he de clared, in the way of prosecuting the scheme of irrigation was a private mo nopoly'of the arid lands acquired under the desert lands act. Gt Around The Obstruction. Topeka, Kan.. May 10. The state Journal has information from Horace, Greeley county, Kan., that the Coxey train reached that point at 11 o'clock, having got around the obstructions at Chivington, Colo. The sheriff of Gree ley county wired Governor Lewelling for assistance. The Missouri Pacific has placed obstructions between Horace and West Selkirk. THE MABSHALB AFTER THEM. Abilene, Kan., May 10. The Coxey ite train is ditched west of Selkirk, and cannot be moved by its possessors. General Attorney Wagoner's special train, with United States deputy mar shals, left Salina about 11 o'clock to capture tbe party. : - Aceuved of am Old Murder. Ykbka, Cal., May 10. George Decker, accusnd of the murder of his wife and child 27 years ago. the skeletons ol whom were found a few days ago, had a preliminary examination yesterday, and was bound over to the grand jury which is now in session. It is investigating his case today. He neither denies nor acknowledges his guilt, refusing abso lute'y to talk about the case. NEWTS NOTES. The first item in the tariff bill, are tic acid, was taken up and an amendment by Senator Allison" to substitute the Mills-bill rate was adopted by aseeret party vote in the senate yesterday. In the senate yesterday Teller favored Mie Allen resolution. Coxev was a law abiding citizen. He and his followers naa trudged through snow and mud, and were entitled to respectful consider ation. He did not indorse the statute maer which they had been arrested He did not think the senate could refuse to investigate the poiice clubbing. He himself would furnish the names of wit nesses. Whether Ci.xey w as a crank or not oid not matter; his statement was absurd as were many others put forward in the hour of distress, but it was not a wicked scheme. It only asked congress to provide work for the ueni ployed. In London, a Swiss lunatic by the name of Tabottier was left fur half an hour in a hot bath at a hospital and boiled to death. The officials of the hospital say it was an accident. The man was subject to violent fits, and it had been the custom to fix him down in a bath to calm. The water was turned on yesterday by mistake. 4,000 rolls wall paper, fresh goods and new defliimS- With kirifon an. I u.ili..... to match, just received, will be sold at uiu times prices. . tjel. Jos. T. Peters Sc. Co. Ask your dealer for Mexican ' Silver Stove Polish. , Rambler bicycles are the best. Good second-hand wheels for sale cheap. Mats & Cbowk, Agency F. T. Merrill Cycle Co. Haworth, printer, 116 Court St. tf Latest U. S. Gov't Report. " Aa old as ' thehiUa"and never excell ed. "Tried and proven " ia the verdict o f ' millions. Simmons Liver Begu lator ia the - y-j j j . lator ia the 77lonly Liver and Kidney medicine to which you can pin your . CTJ faith for a i nan mild laxa tive, and purely veg etable, act ing directly on the Liver and Kid neys. Try it. Sold by all : Druggiata in Liquid, or in Powder to be taken dry or made into a tea. Tho King of Liver Medicines. " 1 have used yourSimmons Liver Regu lator and can conscienciouely say it is the kinir of all liver medicines, I consider It a medicine chest In itself. Geo. W. JACK SON, Tacoma, Washington. -TEBT FACKAOEI ' Bma tie Z Stamp In red on wrapper. PLUCKY ARMLESS' MEN. Some Who Have Succeeded in Spite of Their Great Misfortune. There are many persons who, through one misfortune or another, lose their arms; It is a terrible loss, but I have often admired the pluck and ingenuity of some persons, who would not let this misfortune overcome . them. I Knew a young fellow, seventeen years of age, who, at a celebration of some political victory, was aiding another young man to load a cannon, when the gun went off before they were ready, and while they were ramming home the charge, says the New York Adver tiser, it blew both arms off both young men. One of them afterward died, bnt Bob, as we called him, survived and got well. For years he has successfully managed a good business, as the keep er of a restaurant and bakery, and em ployed his brothers and sisters to help him. It is wonderful how well he keeps track of the business and plans it, and he can open doors, go after the mail, and attend to a great variety of busi ness. People who have lost their arms have become artists, some holding the brush in their teeth, and others train ing themselves to paint with their feet, holding the brushes in their toes. Some years ago there was in Brussels, Belgium, an artist with no hands, bnt who was very skillful in using his feet in painting. He handled the brushes and palette with great skill, and his paintings, which were mostly" cafes, were very attractive. Another young man, who lost T?oth his legs and arms, learned to paint by holding his brush in his mouth, and painted sitting up in bed. ' Mr. Un than, who performed in New York, is without arms, and holds a cornet in his toes and puts it to his mouth and plays, will eat and drink, feeding him self, loads and shoots guns with accu racy, and plays cards with his feet. There are so many things that a man can learn to do, who ia unfortun ate, that we admire the pluck and persistence of these men, who will not let their condition chain them down, but show an adaptability that is won derful. Let no one, no matter how un fortunate they may be, ret dis couraged, but strive to overcome their difficulties. They will grow stronger and be happier and better. STRANGE SIGHTS IN INDIA. Peculiar Resnlts of the Hindoo Belief Con cerning: Animals. "Of all the strange places we visited none was more unique than Jeypore," said Mr. Burditt of the Stoddard party, according to the Washington Post. "This is a city in the north of India, which is under native government, its ruler being the maharajah of that dis trict. Here the sacredncss of animal life, so carefully observed by the Hin doos, gave us queer sights. Monkeys ran along walls like dogs, ; Doves in' flocks of thousands filled the open squares, or blackened the heavens in their flight. Peacocks covered walls and buildings.' Elephants and camels were always to be seen in the streets. The maharajah had in his stables three hundred horses, many of the finest Arabian blood. And in the mud of a sluggish pond in the rear of his palace enormous and vicious-looking croco diles lazily rolled about. ..To get them to move sufficiently to be able to dis tinguish their black forms from the surrounding mud we threw out bait in the shape of big pieces of raw beef, tied to a string, many pounds of which they would gulp at one effort." TEMPLES OF WORSHIP. Greek temples erected in honor of the superior deities were always un covered or open to the sky. The temple of the sun at Palmyra covered a square of twenty-two yards 4 on. cacn eiuo. it was approached by a magnificent avenue over half a mil long, inclosed by rows of columns and Pills Gentlemen For Summer Wear - Too much cannot be said in favor of Manhattan . . ' Shirts, not only for wear but for Style, 1-it, Finish. . Just Received, Our Summer Stock. XBFBOTION. A PUZZLING ADDRESS. The Remarkable Feat of Bright Spanish Postal Clerks. Ex-Senator Palmer, of Michigan, who, according to the Washington Star, who was minister to Spain for a time, - says they have bright postal clerks in the land of the dons as well as in this country. In proof of the assertion he tells of a curiously ad dressed letter which passed through the post office at Madrid while he was in that capital. According "to the ex senator and ex-minister, the address was a perfect rebus. At the left-hand side was the figure of a lady. This made it Clear to which sex the one to whom the letter was addressed be longed. Over the lady's head was a rising sun, which was ' interpreted as indicating that her name was Aurora. For her surname there was a hill, with a castle at its foot, or in Spanish "Montes y Castillo." For the town there was the plan of a city drawn, in which the Alhambra appeared. Of course that meant Granada, especially as a pomegranate was drawn beside the plan of the city. The address was completed by a number in one of the streets of the plan. The postal au thorities took three days to study this curiosity, said ex-Senator Palmer, and then delivered it in triumph to "Senor- ita Aurora Montes x-Castillo, Aza cayas No. 20, Granada." So proud were the postal authorities'of this feat that they had the. envelope photo graphed and printed in the Madrid papers as proof of the acumen ot the department. . "All the foreigners in Madrid were very much amused by the affair," said Mr. Palmer. Dr. S. F. Scat, Blue Ridge, Harrison Co., Mo., eaye: "For whooping counn Chamberlain's Cough Kemedy is excel lent." By using It freely the disease is deprived of all dangerous consequences. There is no danger in giving the Kemedy to babies, as it contains nothing injnr ions. 50 cent bottles for sale by Blakeley & Hooghton, druggists. H I G H R ATES of I IS1 T E R EST LTsTially mean risk of Principal; "but here is an ex- . . - ception -where both are secuie. -Purchase your ' V loti7ii7, Boots apd tyoes, Ite., at mM.-HONYWIL.L1 And you -will rate of T fi ED LATEST! :;MV (G) SOMETHING ENTIRELY NEW AND NOBBY. :E::isr FRONT, - A. M, WILLIAMS & CO. WHEN THE .-CZAR WAS ILL. He Lltdn't Stop to Consider the Dress of . His Physician. , An amusing anecdote is told illustrative of ' the simplicity of life at the Palace of Annitchkoff. It appears, says the London Standard, that when the. czar's illness began to take a serious turn, Count Verontzoff Dashkoff telegraphed to Moscow to a friend to summon Prof. Zacharin. The professor was - himself ill, and was somewhat loath to go, having no idea who was to be his patient, but think- , ing it was. probably one of the chil dren. Consequently he wrapped him ; self up in comfortable old clothes and drew on a pair of long felt boots, ' reaching to the thigh, and in this ; plight alighted at the St. Petersburg : station. There he was met by. a court ' official who, in spite of his remon strances as to his dress, insisted on his ; coming straight to the palace, and he spent tho whole night, in company with the empress at the czar's bedside in his traveling costume. The empress has remarked to her friends that had ' her imperial husband been an ordinary individual no notice would have been I taken of his Illness, which was never at all serious, but, having summoned i Zacharin, it was necessary ' to issue bulletins in order to quiet the rumors which would otherwise have arisen. . PllOP. TStTT.T. tVia invontn. rt phone, has been grappling with aerial ' locomotion in Nova Scotia, and, like ail other experimenters in that science, he is very hopeful of success. The regular subscription price' of the Weekly Chronicle is f 1.50 and tlie regular price of the Weekly Oeegonian is $1.50. Any one subscribing fi,r The Chronicle and paying for one year in advance can'j get both The Chbokiclk and Weekly Ohbgonian for $2.00. All old subscribers paying their subscrip tions for one year in advance will be en titled to the came, offer. Use Mexican Silver Stove Polish effect a saving equal to two years' high interest on the money you expend. Manhattan Fine Shirts 2VE, . TiADJ WHITE. For Infants and Children.. Castorla. promotes Digestion, and' overcomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour Stomach, .'. Diarrhoea, and : Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep natural. Castor ia contains nc Morphine or other narcotic property. . ' Cavtnrla Is po well adapted to children that I recommend It as supn-ior to any prescription, known to me. H. A. Abcheb. M. 1., Ill South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N.T. For several years I have reoonuneil3ed your CKstoria, snd phall always continue to do s, as It has invariably produced beneficial remits, Eswm F. M. D., . 125th Street and 7th AveL, New York City. "The nae of 'Castoria is so universal and Its merits to well known that it reams a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the ln toliifrent families who do not keep Castoria within easy reach." CUbtxw Kabttw. P. P., NewYorkCitT. Tmt Cianuca Ookfavy, 77 Murray Street, N. T. 99 Caveats, and Trade-M arks obtained, and all Pat- J ent business conducted lor moderate Fees. Our Omcc is Opposite U. S. Patent Office J and we can secure patent in less uiue uiau UiubC 1 remote from Washington. 2 Send model," drawing or photo., with descrip- tion. We advise, it Datentaale or not. free of 5 caargs. vjuriee not oueiiu patent is securea. a PiaiwtrT. khlct. How to uotain Patents, " w;in .cost of some in the U, S. cud foreign countries J sent free. Address, CA.SMOWdCO.