i EAGLE VALLEY. A Synopsis of the Xews of tho Week. THE 8CHOOL5 OF THE VALLEY. alt of Stsek Salmon Fishing Boy Hurt Trills ?lewlf iTotss. Nsw Rmbob, Or.. Sept. 27, 1S90. Hsyinj is almait n thing of thing tho pMt. Peaches nd grpss in abundance amd selling at food figures. Miss Kadio llolcomb is teaching school in Dry crack district, Pine val loy. Miss Cleaver and Miss La Bret have gono to Baker City to attend school this winter. Mr. Joe. Rittar anticipates building a new dwelling house and barn on his place in a short time. Several of our stock men have been speaking of selling some of their fat beeves to Mr. Gettis, of Baker City. Born, to the wife of Mr. Wm. Gover a son. It is nearly a week old. The last account mother and child were do ag nicely. Hev. Yoakum is to preach next Sun day (tomorrow) at eleven o'clock a. m. Ho has not visited us fer almost two jmoHthe now. Albert Saunders is improving again and it is lipped he will not undertake to cat English walnuts until he can tand sucli food. W were informed that llev. Mc Cart, tho now preacher, was in tho val ley last Sunday but whether there was services or not I am sure I could not Bay. Mr. J. Thompson's folks are expect ing tho arrival of gome of then- near relatives very soon from the east. They are coming from Albany New York. Mr. Joseph Hartley has employed Mr. II. II. Grubb of Tine valley to baild a new dwelling house on his place. I have notlearned the size it is to be. ivfl ritivn a trrrr mnAi mrt tar tn nw Middle district. The pupils seem to be pleased with their teacher, Mr. 0. Randall. When scholars liko a teach er they aro almost Biiro to make a suc cess. Mrs. CandifTand her little ton Wal ter arrived at her sisters, Mrs. Sum mers, last Wednesday. She came from Nebraska to see her daughter, Lillie, who is sick but is now slowly improving. Mr. J. Frusier has moved his family to their ranch o this side of Powder river, so his children are near enough to school to easily avoid any tardy marks and Mr. Carter and family who ,,have been residing on tlx above men- tfoncd rnnchc this summer have gone to their place. Chas. Perry was hurt to-day while riding a horso hitched to a single ahovel which his brother Waldo, was using to plow potatoes with. Jle shows a few bruises and scars but wo hopo he is not badly hint inwardly and will soon be all right. Tho hor60 fell, rolled all the way over him once, and a half way back leaving the child in a tight pkcj. He could not get out un til the horse was lifted some and the boy himself assisted in moving. Guess. Sept. 27, 1890. The atmosphcro is very 6moky. Mr. Reynolds was in the valley, Thursday. Mr. G. W. Moody expects to go east, shortly, on a visit to relatives. Quito a lot of lumber is now being hauled from the Spnrta saw mills. Mr. C. G. Ludwig is in the . valley ajain after about two moths absence. Dr. Musser, the dentist, visited our valloy recently and did some good work. Mr. W. W. Kirby started cast a few days ago. Ho will bo gono about a month. Mr. Tom Bnshaw is building a cel lar for I. N. Youug which is to lo two stories high. Mr. Ofcar Kendall is now teaching school in Craig school house. There is a fair attendance Metsrif E. and W. Chandler have improved their pluccs by putting up oiuo now huilclinge. nao iviruy wu he architect. Tho fall run of Gallium 1ms found ho you ii xrtBiiian in good com!) ion ami teveral of tho finny tnt- ao Leon taken. Married, at tho groom' resilience, n Sunday last, Mr. J. N. Holcomb and Miss Clara Gale, both of this val ley. Wo wish the happy couple un bounded success and happiness. Wc are pleased to note that Cornu copia is beginning to liven up again. Quite a number have passed through here bound for that place, recently. Mr. Ed. Makinson, of La Grande, arrived in the valley, Friday, on visit to relatives and friends. There seems to bo a strong attraction hero for Ed. Nbwto.v Bradford. To tho Liberals of Or 3 on. Deak Frikndb : 1 wish to call your attention to the second annual congress of the Oregon State Secular Union, to bo held in Portland, at New Aricn hall, corner of Second and oak streets, on Saturday, Sunday and Monday, the 11, 1 . and 1U, of October ncxr. The object of this meeting and of tho Oieyon State Secular Union,- is to guarantee civil ami religious liberty to the people; secure the taxation of church property and oppose tho union of church and State. The speakers who aro to bo present will be the beat that have yet been together. Among them will be, viz: Miss Katie Kilmi, of Iowa ; S. P. Put nam ; Prof. Geo. IT. Dawes; Mrs. M. P. Krekel, of Kansas City; lion. C. J. Curtis, of Astoria; Mrs. A. Scott Duni way; Judge Winsor, of Seattle, Presi dent of the Washington State Secular Union ; Elder Alonza T. Jones; John E. Remsburg; Moses Hull and others. Tho congress will close Monday even ing, with a grand ball- Wo want these meetings to bo a grand success, and wo ask every liberal in the State to co-operate with us, and aid us in making them so. ' Will you come forward, one and all, and ''lend a helping hand?" Announce tho con gress through your local papers; circu late cards of invitation ; post up no tices at your post office, and country stores in fact, do all you can to lot every one know of this great impor tant meeting, that all may attend if they so desire. Write to President C. Deal, Portland, and let him know what you arc doing toward aiding tho congress Let words of cheer resound from every city, town ind villiago in the state. Wc most cordially invito every liber al every poison who is in favor of the total soperatiou of church and btate, to be present. -,., ... .... ... wo nceu linaneial aid. Jicnts aro as high as they were last year and it will cost quite a sum to pay the ex penses of tho eongross, and wo ask every liberal, who is willing and able, to forward a few dollars to help de- ray the expenses. All financial aid will be most thankfully received. Send all money to Pres. C. Peal, Portland, and he will give you credit for it, in the San Francisco Freethought. Don't wait until it is too late for now is tho time we need encouragement. Wo can make our congress a grand success, if we only try. If everyone will help, even a little, our meetings will bo all that we de.-ire them to be. We have lately had somo neat blanks printed, petitioning the legislature of Oregon for tho taxation of church property, and we would be pleaded to pluco copies of this potition in the . anils of every earnest liberal in the State, for circulation. The exemption of ecclesiastical property from just taxation is a gross injustice to the peo ple. It is unconstitutional and not in keeping with the gonoral principal of our government, and all laws favoring this unjust exemption should bo im mediately repealed. Wo alto have had copies printed of tho constitution of the 0. S, S. Union, and wo ask you, liberal friends, tosond for them, and cireulato them through out tho Stuto, and scouro as many signatures for membership as possible. Thcro is no membership foe All that is required is the name and address of thoEO who indorse tho objects of the Union, and wish to become members. Wc would like to have the name of every libonil-miiuled person in the State recorded on our membership book we ahoady have a large number of names. Now hlnrals, one and all, if you think you can necuro any signatures for the.otii:i, or for the constitution of our Union by presenting thorn to your friunds mid neighbors in your locality, ph-uto end for them at onco and tlioy will bo promptly forwarded to you. " Both the blank petition, and copies of the uoiimitution aro to bo obtained from either President Beal or mvtoK. With 1 -t withe for the nieces of our Conprt-, uud sijuenly hoping that as many a josibU will attend our main! and useful mt otinkV, lllld liupiu;-: t ! romo'e litw rtv. truth, jus-1 lie. .1 :l i I I . ! mi , r i ii I!' . i... ,IA , li: ' K;i I .V. A ri ., . '..., on v in- ivcular f Lii'in. I Oswboo, ur., rk-pl., 2rJ, Era of Sci- tnco 2WJ. THE COVE. Ai) Extremely Good Yield of Wheat and Barlev. FOREST FIRES ON THE Ml NAM. Sal of La4 Sever! EapprJ Dad; Personal Jfstcs. Oct. 1, 101)0. Mr. Guy McCully of Joseph is pass ing a few days with Core friends. A Buckhart, shoemaker, is fitting up a neat shop' in tho Wright building. Mr. L. Corpe is hauling lumber for a commodious barn near his residence. Mrs. Frank Nowoll of Whitewater, Wig, is expected here on a visit shortly. A census agent has been looking after mortgages this week in and about the Covo. Mr. Alex. Cochran has purchased of C. C. Cofllnberry of Union his share in tho Covo blacksmith shop. Threshing is temporarily stopped on account of the rain. The crop will be about all threshed in ten dys run. The heavy dust is settled for this foil. The great teaming at this titno of the year will pack tho roads hard and smoothe. Mr. Wm. Holmes and uewlr made bride arc expected in town this week on their way to their future kome in Enterprise. Prof. L. J. Bouse, Clerk of Wallowa county was in town recently. Mo wai thinking of attending tho Industrial Exposition. Born, to the wifo of Jasper G. Etovens, in Eugene, Sept., 20th an elevon and a quarter pound son. Mother and child doing well. Large loads of wood are daily haulod from the mountains several lailes east of town. Good dry wood can be had for three dollars per cord. Mr. Albert Adams and S. G. White have gone to the Sound and will spend the winter in trapping uud hunting in the famous Olympic mountains. Indians, or white campers h.vo sot out fire on the Miaaui whichds now a destructive rottriuj couflaration. The rain may extinguish the flames. Andrew Anderson has Iwught of John Martin G5 acres of tho north part of the Olivo Barnes place and -10 acres of timber land adjacent. Csnsidera- tive?1150. Mr. S. M. Bloom has sold ouo of his hay balers to tho Sturgill Brae, of Powder river. They will bale hay for tho.mining market in tke eastern part of the county. Mr. Bert Benton who went to Tair Haven this summer, was ovcrtakon by bad luck. He was attacked by x feTer and was compelled to remain in a hos pital for Eome time. Beports of extra grain yields still como in. Mr. John Allon wua ovnes and farms tho old Corpe placo threshed AS bushels of wheat per aero and W bushels of barley per acre. Born, to tho wife of Mr. Franklin Mitchell Sept 29th, an eight pound daughter. All concerned convales cing. Frank is supposed to be the best pleated man in the great and grow' ing county of Union. Mr. II. II. French has bought of J C. Downey about 1-400 assoited fruit trees which he will plant on his place near Hondershotts. Mr. F. will also build a houso and put out several acres of strawborry plants. Tho Covo public school opens next Monday. Tho indications are that tho school will bo carefully mauagsd and a credit to tho place. Every per son of school ago in the district should i:rasp this golden opportunity ly at tending every day of tho six months. Our merchants are receiving large and full assorted stocks of fall goods which they propose to sell as cheap as any house in tho valley for cash. Tho good people of tho vicinity should pa tronizo oxclusivoly home establish ments when they buy as favorably as olsowhere. VABHIKGTOJf. Au Interesting Ltttsr from Our Ksgmlar Correspondent at the Capital. Washington, (D. C.) Sept. 22, 1890. EniTori OnuooN Scout: Mr. Maine'- last letter in favor of reciprocity created quito a sensation in congressional oirclu, for which it is generally believed it was specially in tended. It indicates that Mr. Bluino i not altofcetlter easy in his mind an ) what notion the Conference com mitter will tako on tho reciprocity amundmeut to tho McKmloy bill. Ho knows that at least two of tho republi can sonator on that committee - Messrs. Allison and Sherman are no! particularly enamoured with -he idea, and that Mr. McKinloy, who la-ad. the republican representatives ou the com mit tec, would fhed no tears if the amendment should suddenly die, hi fact he probably has a suspicion that the latter gentleman would take pleas ure in playing tho role ot executioner on this, occasion. So the letter was written as a final argument. Mr. Blaine may have exceptional source of information that caused him to get alarmed, but tho impression is general here that tho reciprocity amendment will not bo disturbed by the Confcrenco committee now at work on the senate amendments to the. McKinloy bill. The democrats anaccusmg Spcaki r Beed of having tried to uso the Kiver and Harbor bill, which he has just signed after more than a week's delay, as a weapon to compel them to agree to remain on tho lloor of the House to make a quorum while the republicans passed certain bills. The democrats have tho republi cans of tho House at a decided disad vantage just now, and they are enjoy ing and making tho most of it. The republicans have no quorum of their own men, and tho indications are that they will not havo again this session, though they say they will. Whenev er anything is called up that the demo crats don't like, contested oloetion cases, for instance, tho House sudden ly duds itself left without a quorum on account of tho democratic meniWrs leaving the chamber. The democrats might have prevented tho Tariff bill being referred to the Conference com mittee in the way it was if they bad been so disposed, and if they should trke a notion to make trouble when the bill is reported from that commit tee, which will probably be the first part of next week, there will certainly be a circus in tho IEouse."The re publicans here aro not speaking in the kindest terms of their thirty or forty absent colleagues, but tho absentees who are all looking after their "fences," probably cbnsolo themselves with the" thought that thoy aro only following the example of the eminent gentleman who presides over the Houso. The lottery lobby is vory much chargi nncd at its failure to have the anti-lottery bill, which tho Senate has passed, postponed until next Session, but it has not yet given up tho fight', and proposes, it is said, to ofibr 15x President Cleveland and Senator Ev arts $2fi0,000 as a retainer if they will undertake to get out an injunction to retrain the Postmaster Goneral from patting the new law into operation until a case shall havo been taken to the Supremo court to test ita consti tutionality. In tho meantime Mr. Wanamaker is preparing to carry out the law in a manner that will certainly cripple, if it does not kill tho lottery business in the United Slates. I am informed that ono of tho lottery mou stopped abusing ho newspapers long enough to say that his company would willingly give $f)00,000 if an injunction could bo had which would enable thorn to continue using tho mails until a test caso is tried by tho United States, even though they knew in advance that the caso would bo decided against them. That gives an idea of tho profits of tho business. Mr. Harrison is oxpected to return to tho Whito Houso next weok, and then the question of an oxtra session will bo decided. It is bolioved to havo already been decided in tho alllrma tivc by the republican loaders in Con gress, and tho only remaining point to be decided is as to who shall atsuiiio the responsibility. Shall Congress take a recess after passing tho' tariff bill, or shall it adjourn, leaving tho president to cull an oxtra session. There aro lots of people who don't be lieve a resolution for an oxtra sossion could bo passed in tho House. If that bo so, tho leaders will not attempt it, knowing that their object can just as well bo accomplished by moans of a presidential proclamation. The Houso lot Bcptcsonativo Kon ucdy oil for making tho speech abus ing Senator Quay quito easy. Thoob jcstionuble portions of (ho speech nro to be left nut of tho bound edition of tho Becord. What difference will that inako after tho abusivo language has been read in tho newspapers from ono end of tho country to the other? J. II. C. Merit Wins. Wo doslro to Kay to our citizen.1, that for years wo havo been xulllng Dr. KIii'm New Dikeovery for CoiiKimiption, Pr. Kin 's New Life Pills. Ihioklon's An dun .nlvo and Kltclrle Hitters, and have nnvcr'liainilnd rrmedio that Hell as well, or that bate giv en such uulvcnal satl aetiuii. Wed" not lioxltate to Kturantim llioin every lim, and we Maud ruady to rsfiuid tho urcha-e price, If satisfactory resiiljs do not follow their tine. The.io ruuiedlus linva won tln lr Iiopularity purely on tlmlr merits. H. II. Drown, druggist, Union, Oregon. i IS - !.:A,,I I hfc iscigjef: c i TKfef c-ure-'ve cokid. t'owealtiv:, WtfcR Wre Gattre Doors' uconomy Seems too tka patk oF Jxealtk .. For &s with tkeirv the jutces Remain witkln the meat More food anct muck fcke hatter r m 19 Ufb for x3 to qqJz. xs toxt x-s? vss ass?, BUY TH2 CHARTER OAK, WITH TMJS WIRE (MVZE OVEJf BOOHS. eWV an- f!t ttwhts ; M r-e n-H known Hlovcs nud Itnuco. In HA KING, HOAs-rlNO, l-VwNy. r VI lit.. S.V.V1NO of MHATtf. and t)ftltAl?I!.lTV, ttiey are sue. ; : I,-i , .i' tr cr . 'vi urst-ql us iov mucin in America, and wo are now mlirtisr ill M i rii.Ai'iitl Uinn any 8'-eauVil lirsi-chis stove h:is over been sold In K.IHtPlll i v .- I v , They arc Fully Warranted in Every Particular, - Tld-' is not. an tu!" an. I valutas assertion, la t a warranted harked liv (lie well known integrity .: ft j.jhitl'.v of tho Charier Oak Munufadtunng Co. JXPWe are also car ruitf a I'l.niplvto u:,-..rtni.nt of - , HEATING STOVES! All of tho above reliable manufacture. Hardware TTT J"1! YTT t T Th in choree of n first-rlaoa workman, and all kinds v U IV l I HjU. "I of nparlutf and job work doni at reasonable rates, uud sutWactiou y i.ua::tcil, t'ali amt examine our goods mid prici's. SUMMERS & LAVNE. Union, Oregon t-17tf Are You raifii to Plant an Orcliarfl? XML HAh . . -wian.'. v!. taxi. -1 siri '. i - -i A. ' Tuna J ! , , Of ' Payette, Ack County. Idaho. Has th(j Iavget General ITursery S.took in the Mountain Country 125 Acres. Tree1 ttom Payette Nursery will reach. Grande Hondo valloy in six hours from the time they are taken from tho ground. Wlounta'n Grown Trees are Hardy, Vigorous and Healthy. Do not order uniil you have visited our nursery, scon our agent or got our prices. Wholesale and retail.. (5-20-yl TEORE&OI SCOUT id Webster's laMtofl Dictionary for oft fa M iAJsL THE OREGON SCOUT has more read ers, and is therefore' the Best Advertising Medium of any paper in Eastern Oregon. H OTO GRA PHS ! III! I It 1 1 MUli Milt I K I 111 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ( t The Jonos Bros., Photographers, Union, Oregon, are now prepared to do finer work than ever before. NEW 8CKNEKY and AOOESSOKIES. All work giiar nilot'd to givo satisfaetion or no charges. H mi ai I (OPPOSITE CENTENNIAL HOTEL.) e Wm. En Bowker, - Proprietor. Kverytfelnff First Clans. Terms Very Ilcasoimhlo. 'Bus to and Fiom the Depot Making Connection with all Pass.- senger Trains. -MIULKItfl t!f &i Im Boob Miacoo, Cigars,. and Choico Family Groceries. iii cconomv' 3 AXJ Tinware. IN- II STABLE