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Show Striking; Miners Act as a Guard to Hbn-TJnion Hbn-TJnion Hen and Then Brutally Kill Them BECAUSETHEYWON'TWALK Colored Troops are Special Objects of Aversion and Narrowly Escape Assassination As-sassination in a Defile. A Earned Bridge Delays the Train That Bears Them and Thus Averts More Bloodshed. FEGULARS ARE CENSURED. They Stood By and Never Interfered White Rioting Was Going On, and General fecbofield is Aked to Bring; I Them to a Sense of Their Duty. j . 1 Portland, Ore, July 14. At 13:30 a. m. the Associated Press received the following dispatch from its correspondent at Wallace, Idaho: "4:30 p.m. All miners under arms will be bere alout 6 o'clock. Union men claim a complcto victory and say that all trouble is over. What the troops will do when they arrive is a conjecture. Conservative men think the civil authorities can now take charge. Secretary Poynton, of the Central Cen-tral Executive Miners' union, now tn the telegraph ofllce.s.iys til miners will go home' as speedily as possible. There is absolutely no cause for alarm of more trouble unless unforeseen circumstances should precipitate precipi-tate it. |