E OREGON . MI nn VOL. 13. ST. HELENS. OREGON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1806. NO. 1). pin NORTHWEST BREVITIES Evidence of Steady Growth and Enterprise. ITKHS OF GKNFJUL INTEREST Now. From Our HLter States Kpltom-Uxl-Th Leading Toultm ll-ounHtlr-Waalilngtun, Aberdeen will have only tlx moutht cl school, tbo term ending the latter part of this ntuutb. , . . ' - A permanent county immigration convention waa organized in Taooum for Pierce oouuty last week. There will, it in ununited, be from 8.UUO to 13,000 bushela of apples shipped from Oroas lslund this year. The winter school for farmer at l'ulluiar ia Droving populur. Farniert fnmi all oaru ot the atate are in at teuduuoe. Mra. Caroliue E. Hurtman, who it 62 ycart old, hut taken op a claim tlx miles above (intuitu Valla, lu Buotio. ruiab oouuty. Kx-Sheriff DuRaukin, of Ltuoalu county, hai purcbaed the Populist pa pur at Davenport, the People's Banner, from U. H. Scott Thiiro will be no ice famine in 8po Jtane. notwithstanding tlie mild win tor. There ia plenty of ioe in Silver iuke. Medical lake and other lakei near : the oity. , At a reward for hard work on the part of the wouieu, Buohouiish now baa a large rondiug-room, well ligMua ana miiulv innllod with pa pen and other reading mutter. A buvor of horses hat been in North Yakima on the loukout for amull aul mala to ahip to Alaska. He hai been paying from (5 to (10, and baa bought up fourteen horses. Turner & Williama, of Spokane, re nnntlv wut a htru-e sblDineut of ore from the Le Roi mine to tbo Everett amelter, from which they got (18,000, The ore averaged over (100 a ton. .Tuff Lntton. a former reaideut of Faruiinirtou. ia in trouble at Wallace, Idaho. Me ia acouaed of poiaoning bia 18-uioutha' old child in order to obtain a lugacy to which the child waa sup poaed to bo beir. The analysis of a depoait from a lake lu Aduma county haa been made by the uhiefof the wiuerul division oi tne guologioul aurvey. He found that the depoait constated of a mixture of ohlo ride aulphute and carbonate of eodium. The public soboool of Weaton ia to be oonducted for the remaindor of the year by the normal school aa a train ing department, an agreeemnt to that effect having been recently arrived at by the directors with the aohool man agers, t The atar mail aorvioe between Chelan and Stehekin, haa been ordered in creased to throe time a week from June 1 to Hop turn bur 80 of each year. The postoflloe department haa for warded a commission aa postmaster to William D. Stark, at Seguin. The atate mining bureau baa ap pointed Harry Laudea aa atate geolo giat. Tbe now appoiutee K profeaaor of geology in the atate nuiveraity, and haa accepted the new position with the understanding that he will receive no compensation exeopt that paid by the nuiveraity. O.N. Uylea, aaaignoe of tho Wake field Bute bank, haa tiled hiaaeoond re port. Claima aggregating (10,900 have been filed with biiu by 73 credit ors. He baa collected (380.88, and paid out (108.80. The assets are in auuh a oondition that it will be a loug time before the affairs can be closed up. Colonel Georae Hunter, who is over 70 veara uf aue. was niarrlea in waBn iuuton. D. C, to a woman of 84, about a. w..PW auo. his first wife having been dead onlv alx month. Colonel Hunter ia one of the pioneer Indian fighters of this region, and is known' all over Eastern Washington. During services in an Ilwaoo ohuroli the other day two or three dogs kept up a contiuual yelping not far from the building. On going out to ascer tain the oause, it was found that they had a flue eight-point elk at bay, in the timber a few yards back of the church. The animal eaoapod capture, however. David Spoor, ex-street commissioner and oity oounoilman of Port Town aend, died in that city, aged 68 years. He was a native of New York, and left that state when the rush to the Cali fornia gold fields took place in 1849. Then he drifted to the Sound country , and for the past thitry years made hia home in Port Townsend. He waa a prominent mason. for taxes, from Sheriff Houser, and hat remitted (3,600 of that sum to State Treasurer Metsohan. The Lawler syndicate, owning and developing the (juartzville mine in the Bautlain district, paid out to those In its employ and lor supplies over (10, 000 during January. A petitiou for the pardon of Frank Kelley, conviotod of having deer meat in his possession during the closed sea sou, has boon forwarded to Governor Lord from Pendleton, The Buudon Coal Conpamy is ao tively operating its mines at Rlverton and expects in the near future to keep two steamers plying between the Co quille and San Franosoo. The president of the Douglas County Pioneer Society will call a meeting sometime in March or-April for the purpose of electing officers, and decid ing upon the time and place for tbe next reunion. The telephone line between Canyon vllle and John Day is finished, and the next work will be its extension to Prairie City and Long Creek. A move ment ia on foot to extend the line on to linker City. Two of the four prisoners in the En gene jail out through the board wall reoeiitly and made their escape. Tbe jail has several iron cells, but it was not thought necessary to oonflue tbo prisoners therein. In Astoria, Officer A. Seafeldt stuck a key in the keyhole of a fire-alarm box to turn lu an alarm, and was knocked almost senseless. The box waa heavily charged with electricity by tbe wirea having become orosaed. The farmers of Sherman oouuty feel elated over orop prospeota. . More moisture ia in tho ground than there bat been for years, which ia an aasur- anoe that an abundant harvest will re sult. There is large demand for wheat laud to rout in the county. The White Swan Mining Company, coin posed of Iowa capitalists, haa sent out two repeseutatives, who are busy adjusting the affairs of tbe company. They aay all indebtedness will be paid and tbe mine will soon take its plaoe among Baker oouuty a bullion pro-ducers. Reliable information has been re ceived from Cracker Creek, Baker county, of a rich strike in tbe upper tunnel of the Nor'Ji Pole mine. The ledge is seven feet wide, ore from which is of such a high grade that the company bus decided to make ship incut to a smelter rather than treat it at the mill Oregon. "wheat at Salem jumped torn 63 to 66 cents one day last week. The city counoil of Hillaboro has levied a tax of 7 mill to raise revenue for the oomiug year. Dr. Inman, of Umatilla oounty, has been bound over in the turn of (1,600 to answer to the grand jury the chargo ot manslaughter. Eugene horsemen are making ar rangements to tenure Eugene a place in the racing circuit, and to have a three days' meet there In May. Coot oounty farmers have agreed to furnish the Myrtle Point oreamery tho milk of 200 oows, and the creamery will begin operations in the spirng. - Railroad officials at LaGrunde re port that the new flange machine for clearing tbe track of snow and ioe is a success. The maohiue in use was con structed at Albina. " Treasurer Kern, of TJamtilla oounty, bat reooived (3,800, money oolleoted Idaho, ThePotlntch Horticultural Associa tlon held its meeting last week. There waa brought out some interesting data concerning the condition and prospeota of tbe orchards of the Potlatuh empire. The state board of land commission ers at Boise, on tbe 14 th inst. took favorable aotion on tbe application of the Amerioan Falls canal and power oompany, for the reclamation, under the Carey aot, of 76,000 acres of arid lands iu Idaub. It ia said that the prospects for operating the mines ot the Coeur d'Alenes, in Idaho, are fairly good for the coining season. Tbe price of lead is not, however, very encouraging, but it oan not keep closed such mines at the Standard, the Gem, 'Frisco, Poor- man and others. These and other properties are well equipped with the latest reduction plants and the product oan be handled economically. It is expected from this time on nearly every mine in thia rich country will be operated to its fullest oapaoity. The new mining exchange of Boise will toon be opened for business. This will not be a stock exchange, but will be an association devoid of brokerage or other oonoerns, where tbe miner and prospector will congregate, securing correct assay returns of their mines, etc A description of the merits of all such properties will be conspicuously posted and filed with the officers, and whloh will at all tiroes be open to the inspection ot investors. The work of the association ia not confined to any one seotlon of Idaho, but will take in the entire state. TELEGRAPHIC RESUME Events ot the Day in a Con densed Form. OF INTEREST TO ALL READERS Itams of Importance from Domestic and Ponies) Source Oraatn of tho Dispatch.. Three were killed and two injured in truin-wreok near Rochester, N. Y. Mrs. Nancy Welch, an Oregon pio neer and the first white woman to set tle in Astoria, died suddenly of heart failure in Astoria. Montana. The classification of the min eral land commissioners made last Sep tember bat been made final. By tbit decision the Northern Paoiflo will ao quire title to about' 60,000 aorea ot land in Missoula, Flathead and Ra valli oounties. :; A carload ot ore was shipped from the Big Seven mine at Neihart last week that netted (33,000. Thia mine is looated near the Benton group and is being managed by E. J. . Barker, who, together with D. L. S. Barker, is fortunate enough to own the prop erty. The extension of the Anaconda re finer v was started up for the first time last week. It it an event of more than ordinary importance in the history of the Anaoouda Copper Mining Com pany, sayt the Recorder. After an ex penditure of (360.000, nearly all of which was paid out for Montana labor and products in its construction, Ana conda now enjoys tbe proud distinc tion ot possessing the largest and moat complete electrolytic refinery in the world. Chief Engineer Lombard of I he Mon tana railroad bat just returned from a trip of inspection along Sixteen Mile creek. Work, he reports, it progressing as fust as oan be expeoted. The work it extremely diffioult at portiont and the men at this teotion are now at work, making a roadbed through the solid rock. A month't work after the frost is out ot the ground next spring will complete the road to within four teen milea of its terminus Castle. The remaining distance will be com paratively easy. By the use of Roentgent't new dis- oovery, tbe "X" rays, a buoksbot was looated in a man's hand, where it bad been for two years. Grant Atterbury, a murderer, wat taken from tbe jail at Sullivan, III. dragged to tbe courthouse in hit night shirt by a mob, and banged to a tree. The schooner Aida, twenty-tix days from Shanghai to Port Townsend, has made the best passage across the Pa oifio ocean on record for a sailing vessel Bartholomew Shea wat electrocuted in Dannemora prison, New York, for tbe murder of Robert Ross, at Troy, in March, 1894. He died protesting his innooenoe. There is believed to be Jaok the Ripper abroad in San Franoisoo. The police aay tbe murders recently com mitted there are similar to those of the London terror. The city of Guayaquil, Ecuador, was visited by a terrible fire. The Peru vian consulate and several blocks were destroyed. The lost will aggregate over (4,000,000. At a result of a prizefight in Phila delphia, Frederick Sohlecnter, one of the prinicpala, died and ex-Poliooman Plucktelder, the other principal, it in jail charged with murder. A statement prepared at the treasury department, under the direction of As sistant Secretary Curtis, shows that tbe government will realize from tbe new loan (111,878,886.87. Governor Lord received from the United States land office a certified transcript of a dear list of school in demnity selections in Tbe Dalles dis trict, embracing 6,633 aorea. Minister Buchanan of Argentine cables in reply to an inquiry about the wheat oondition that it is unfavorable owing to exoessive rains, and estimates the exportable aurplus at 80,000,000 bushels. Juatioe Morris, of Washington, D. O. , in announcing a decision of the court of appeals for the District ot Co lumbia, ruled that while intoxioation may be a disease, yet if it it voluntary and leads to oom mission of orime, it is orime in itself. Mary Ellen Lease, the Kansas orator. win mane ner debut into tne minis terial profession, and henceforth her literary prefix will be reverened in stead of colonel. Her recent sickness was the immediate oause of her mind taking a divine turn. It is announced on authority that fol lowing the advioe of the United States, Venezuela baa praotioally deeded to send a representative to Loudon with power to open negotiations with the government of Great Britain for the settlement ot the boundary dispute. An aerolite exploded above Madrid, The loud report was followed by i general panic. AU buildings were shaken, and many windowt were that tered. Aooording to the offloiala of the Madrid observatory, the explosion oc cured twenty miles above the earth. While proceeding from Yokohama to Kobe, the United States flagship Olym pia struck a gale, to escape whioh all steam wat orowded on and a apeed of twenty-one knots developed. The storm broke her forward deck stanoh iont and carried away her bridge rails. The London Chroniole olaima the oredit for the conversion of England to arbitration, and says: "The speeches in parliament show that we have reached the point where a solution it a oertainty. The Sohomburgk line it at . defunct aa the boundaries of W ea se t." Barney Book, a printer, shot and seriously wounded Mrs. E. B. Catlin in Anaoouda, Mont . He waa puraued by an angry mob, but killed himself be fore they oould oapture him. Infatua- tion for the woman, and her refusal to aooept his attentions is given as the oause. Rev. J. H. Hunyoutt, Baptist min ister, has been arrested at Morrilltown, Ark., obarged with infantioide. His housekeeper's 1 -year-old baby cried while he wat preparing a sermon, and the preaoher became enraged at the annoyanoe and ohoked the child to death. Martin Cleary, a oustom-house in spector, waa arrested in San Franoisoo, oharged with accepting bribes from a Chinese opium manufacturer and from Chinese emigrants, who , desired to land but did not possess the neoessary certificates authorizing them to enter the United States. Delegate Catron, of New Mexico, the author of the anti-prizefight bill, ia greatly displeased at the impression whioh haa been formed that be was aoting under the advioe of Governor Thornton, of New Mexico, in hia ef forts to prevent prizefighting in the territory. Catron made satement to the press aoousing the governor of "standing in" with Stuart, ia his de tire to pull off the fights. Catsiut R. Carter, a retired sergeant of the United States army, wat found dead in hit room in the Palmer house, Chicago. Death wat caused by at pbyxiation. Carter had the distlna tion of having served twenty-three years with the Seventh cavalry, Gen, eral Custer's old regiment He par ticipated in a dozen engagements with hostile Indians and earned a record at a brave soldier on the frontier. Dr. Cyrut Edson, of New York. olaima to have discovered a remedy for tuberculosis, ue terms it aseptolin. It ia principally water and carbolic acid, and it used bypodermioally. About fifty physicians in the oountry have pi ocured aseptolin from Dr. Ed- ton's laboratory and are using it in their practice. It hat oared every case of malaria and la grippe in which it has been tried, seventy-seven in all of malaria and fifty-one of la grippe. Tbe Cramp Shipbuilding Company, of Philadelphia has been awarded the con tt aot for building revenue cutter No. 8, for the Pacific coast. The new outter it to be 160 foet long. While the Amerioan steamer Paris, from New York, was dooikug in South ampton, ahe came into collision with the steamer Majesty, belonging to tbe Isle of Wight. The Majesty was sunk, but all her crew were saved. Meager details have been received in San Francisco of a disastrous hurricane on tbe Tonga islands, in the South seas. The barks Woosung and West Australia and the Samoan schooner Aele were wrecked, but no livet were lost. - Li Hung Chang and Shaa Yu Lien have been appointed delegates to rep resent the emperor of China at tbe ooronation ot Emperor Nicholas II, of Russia, at Moscow. Negotiations are still in progress looking to the conclu sion of a commercial treaty between China and Japan. Through Senor Andrade, its min ister in Washington, the government of Venezuela has notified Seoretary Olney that it will respond affirmatively to the invitation of the Venezuela com mission to submit all the evideuoe in its possession touching the location of the true boundary line. Magnus C. Crosby died in Astoria. Tbe deceased was one of Astoria's lead ing business men, and wat twice elect ed mayor of tbe city. He left a widow and five children. The oause of bis death was a complication of Bright's disease, from whioh be had been suf fering for several years. Count Zeppelin, of Germany, hat de livered a lecture at Stuttgart in the presence of the king of Wurtemburg and tbe military authorities on a steer ing airship, whioh, it is laid, will cost about (76,000 and travels eleven miles an hour. It is olairaed such an airship oan remain in the air 7t days. The Brisbane river in Queensland haa been greatly swollen by floods. A small steamer crossing the river with about ninety passengers capsized, and only forty were saved. The capsized steamer waa the ferryboat PeraL The current was very swift and tbe river banks and Victoria bridge were endan gered. ' i FRENZIED WITH FRIGHT Match Carelessy Thown Into a Pile ot Oily Waste. L0KS OF LIFE AND PROPERTY Advices just reoeived from Seoul, tne capital of Corea, say an uprising took place there February 11, during which the premier and seven officials were murdered. These dispatches add that the king and crown prince sought shelter in the Russian legation. Tbe king ordered the ministers put to death. Two hundred Russian aailiors and mariners are now guarding the legation in that oountry. For the first time in half a century tbe American fulls of Niagara praoti oauy ran dry, by tne lormation ot an ice bridge or dam, extending from Schlosser'a dock, on the American bank, about halt way across the river. The water was almost entirely diverted to the Canadian falls. It was possible for a time for a man with a plonk to have walked from the mainland to Goat island without wetting hia feet During the debate on the address in reply to the queen's speech in the house of commons, Sir William Vernon Har- oourt, supporting the amendment for not proposing self-government for Ire land, pointed out that the colonies, from whioh there was evidently" splendid testimony of loyalty to the crown, enjoyed home rule, and he maintained that the policy of home rule oould be as successful in Ireland as in the colonies. A great fire raged in Guayaquil, Ecuador, resulting in tbe death of thirty persons. When the firemen and soldiers, who were hurriedly ordered out to help them finally brought it under control, thousands ot panic- stricken persons were wandering home less in the streets, many lay dead in the morgue, and property worth nearly (3,000,000 had been destroyed, includ ing the noble cathedral and the oon vent whioh adjoined it. D. Willit James, of New York, has offered (36,000 toward paying the debt of the Amerioan board of foreign missions. The gift is to be made on oondition that (90,000 additional be subscribed before March 1. The board members are making a determined effort to carry out the conditions of the offer. Tbe (90,000 has been appor tioned as follows: Boston, (86,000; New York, (30,000; Chicago, (36,000. Milton Evans, ohairmun of the farmers' committee, of Walla Walla, has reoeived a letter from Washington, through Senator Squire, from W. R. Morrison, of the interstate oommeroe commission, in whioh Morrison says the commission had considered the oomplaint made by Evans against the Oregon Railway & Navigation Com pany, alleging tnat exoessive ireigbt rates were oharged on wheat, and that the commission bad decided to make a slight reduotion from Walla Walla to Portland, and that an order to that effect will be issued aa toon aa it oan be prepared and printed Three Hundred Olrl Fought for Life a. tbo Hot Flame. Chaud Thou With Hungry Tongues. Troy, N. Y., Feb. 18 A small boy carelessly throwing a match into a pile oi ouy waste, a mast of flames and 800 girls and women frenzied with fright: ngbting lor life at the hot flames chased them with hungry tongues, was the beginning ofafa fire tonight which consumed thousands of dollars' worth of property and caused the destruction of many lives. From the outside of tbe high building tbe sight of a body of girls as they rushed out on tbe fire ercapes from the windows, those who were more fortunate crowding out at tbe entrance. Following Ithem was a mass of tmoke, with flashes of hot flame ior luird streaks. Then the mass of frenzied , humanity, finding the egresses too small for instant escape, began climbing over the sides ot the escapes and bundles of clothing filled with writhing humanity dropped at tbe feet of the horrified passers by. Within twenty minutes after the fire started there were three dead women laid upon the floor of an adjoining store, and at least a dozen burned and maimed girls and women taken to hoe pitals or to their homer. Of the 860 girls and women in tbe building, it is presumed that at least half a dozen are in the ruins, for it is impossible to locate all, and there may possibly be a score of dead. 'It was just thirty minutes before the closing hour in Stettheimer & Ca's shirt-waist factory on River street, and the 350 girls and women were working rapidly to finish up. In tbe cutting- room, on the fifth floor, the 150 girls were closing up tneir day's work and preparing to leave when the. whistle blew. Lillie Kreiger, who wat work ing near a machine, called to a small boy to light the gas over her work. The boy struck a match and threw the burning stub to the floor. It struck a pile of oily waste and in an instant the girl was enveloped in flames. With her clothes and hair burning, she rushed to tbe window, and at once the loom became a struggling, shrieking mass of humanity, filling the window, the fire-escapes and the only stairway. Jamming and pushing, tearing and pulling each other's clothes from their backs, turning in narrow corridors to find a sister or mother, or friend, tbe number in the exits augmented every minute by those from the lower floors, these girls and women fought for their lives to get away from tbe flames which seeemd to be growing to a monstrous size. - With rare presence of mind, Police man Farrell, who was on the street, seeing that in the panic a number were liable to jump, let down the awning over tbe entranoe. Barely waa it down when two or three forms came flying down from the fifth and sixth stories, and, bouncing from the awn ing, fell to the sidewalk. Lillie Kreiger, over whose machine the fire started, was one of these. She struck the awning, fell on her back and bounced to her hands and knees on the walk. She got up and stag- j gered about until people helped her to ber feet again. By this time nearly every window had a female form dangling from it, and when the fire men arrived there was a hustle to get ladders up. The firemen and polioe worked like heroes, and to their enegy waa due a geat saving of life. At least a dozen of the women. .and girls were carried down the ladders or dragged out of the oorridors, the officers and firemen going into the midst of the smoke. Captain Williard, of the polioe foroe, says he saw a number of girls at win dows who never came out, but fell baok into the flames. Lrttie and Nellie Hull, sisters. grasped eaoh other tightly by the handa and started down the stairs from the tixth story. At the landing oi tne fifth floor they encountered a wall ot flame and smoke. Nellie had on only ber corset and skirts, having been making her toilet. Lottie was only partially dressed. She threw her dress over Nellie s faoe, and together they went through the flames. Lot tie's hair was burned completely off. and when she reaohed the sidewalk Nellie was burned only about her bare arms. They were taken home. The lost by fire is from (360,000 to (400,000, with about (100,000 insur ance. CONGRESSIONAL NEWS. Condensed Keeord of the Doing, of the Nation' Lawmakers Henate. Washington, Feb. 14. There wat an unusually full attendance on the Republican side of the senate chamber today, aa Morrill, chairman of tbe finance committee, bad given notice of a motion to take up the tariff bill. The deficiency appropriation bill held its place at unfinished business, and there wat no disposition to displace it. Vest secured tbe adoption of a resolu tion calling on the secretary of agricul ture to report what recent changes have been made in tbe quarantine line against cattle coming north from Tex as. Peffer came forward with t lengthy resolution proposing a senate investigation of the circumstances of all tbe recent bond issues. The resolu tion proposes a special committee of five senators and gives comprehensive directions as to the scope of the in quiry, the dealings with tbe syndicates. tha effect of such dealings and explioit information as to the purchasers of the bonds, the rate, and all attendant cir cumstances. The resolution went over. Washington, Feb. 16. The friends of tbe tariff bill met an unexpected repulse thia afternoon, when, by the vote of 21 ayes nd 39 noes, the senate defeated tbe motion of Morrill to take up the tariff bill. The negative vote, which defeated the motion, wat given by Democrats, Populists and four Re publican senators Teller, Mantle, Du bois and Carter. The affirmative vote wat entirely Republican, but its total of 81 ia less than half of the aggregate Republican strength. The senate has passed the bill authorizing the leasing of lands in Arizona for edocatonal pur poses; also, the bill authorizing the First National bank of Sprague.Wash., to change its name and location; also. the bill authorizing repairs for the public wharf at Sitka, Alaska. ' Washington, Feb. 18. The senate committee on foreign relations held a meeting today and practically decided to faovrably report Pettigrew'a bill for the amendment of the law regulating the teal fisheries. The main feature THE FIELDiND" FIRM Practical Pointers on Proper Care of Farm. WE MUST SUIT THE MARKET So Say One of Consul Abroad I'r. ' ventlre of Dl.eaee-Veeflliig Potato to Cow. One ot our consuls writes that it Is absurd that Amerioan t utter should go to England in very small quantities and at very moderate orices. while Denmark is sending England enormous quauntites that bring high prices, and its only serious competitor it Australia, whose butter baa to traverse the tropics and make the passage on the Red Sea. But the people of Denmark have taken pains to find out what can be sold in England and other fc reign markets, and they have applied themselves with great energy and high intelligence to the task of producing those thincs. This has not been the work of the gov ernment or of the commercial classes more than it baa been the work ot tbe peasantry themselves who have shown an enterprise and a business capacity that put the American farmer to shame. - Prerentlve of Disease. Exercise on high ground may miti gate the hog-oholera trouble, by in creasing the extent of exhalation, to relieving the blood in some degree of the accumulated poisons. Regular daily exeroise in good sized pastures, or in open grounds, together with a greater variety and more albuminous quality of feed, preventive treatment that can exempt swine from the inva sion of bacteria. Keep the. bldbd of the hogs sound by a healthy supply Ot oxygen from regular exeroise and full breathing, and bacteria or cholera, will not affect the bogs nor vex their owners. And the only ture preventive of lung fevers in cows, or other cattle, ot the bill is a provision permitting tbe ig regular, moderate exercise in whole president to have a 1 tbe seals, male tome air, thus cooling the circulation, and female, on tbe Pribvloff islands, while supplying a healthy proportion xiiiea, in case other governments in terested will not agree upon a modus vivendi for tbe better protection of the seals, while the matter of permanent protection is under consideration by an international commission, for which the bill makes provision. The com mittee had also under consideration tbe proposition for a cable to Hawaii. The of oxygenated blood, that will not irri tate the lungs, while such a quality of blood certainly forma sound tissue, in renewing general growth, or in en larging size in growing cattle or swine. Feeding Potatoe. During a recent tour through the dairy sections of York state, in attend - subcommittee which bad this under nco at the dairy meetings, the matter consideration made a favorable report ! of teeding potatoes to milch oows came without recommending either of propositions before the oommittee. the House. Washington, Feb. 14. At 12 o'clock up at about all tbe meetings, in the in- dieot way of "Why does not my milk cream better," "Why does not the but ter come, and what make it salvy, aua oi ten grainless, and in one ln- the regular order of the house began, j Rtanoe the creanier had been served Pii.Kuawjoiuiresom- notice by their New York house that tion appropriating (75.000 for the pur-' le8g tbere wag legg feedi of a pose of making a joint aurvey together tein food not to mon bntter with Great Britain of the boundary jj, every case the trouble waa traced to line between Alaska and British ter- feedjn g potatoes to the cow in excea ntory. The resolution waa adopted. An .mounts, often as high aa a bushel Ihe house then resumed consideration , ja ,ru i : of the bond silver bill. Dolhver taking totoegt their alow sale, made it a the floor in opposition to the free-coin- tempting matter to teed them to the age proposnion. He reviewed the M , j e t of the ration, and story of the subject from the fourteenth the large per cent of the raw and im- perfectly digested starch had damag ing effect upon the milk, the milk be ing very vioions, hence diffioult tot the cream to rise, and the butter globules being unable to free themselves from Newfouudlaad-Preneh Shore, Montreal, Feb. 18 The report comes from St John's, N. F., and lit saia to ne nasea on semi-omoiai infor mation that negotiations are progress ing between England and France, Wbioh will for all time settle the Newfoundland-French shore question. The basis of the settlement is said to be the ceding to Franeo of Englands' interests in the state ot Tunis, Africa, in ex ohange for the Frenoh claim in Newfoundland. Galveston' lizport or Corn. St. Louis, Feb. 17. A special from Galveston says: Edwin Webster, chief grain inspector, reports that from Oc tober 13 to January 29 tbere were ex ported from this port to foreign points 8,018,6U bushela of oorn. So far dur ing the present month there hat been exported about 800,000 bushels, mak ing the total grain exports thus far this season nearly 8,000,000 bushels, with fully 1,000,000 bushels on hand await ing tonnage. oentruy, and said tbe demonetization ot silver in 1873 bad "not struck it down," for during a previous period of seventy years there had been no silver circulation. MoMillin followed. He . , . , , , uoiMg uuauig iu un milium n luaumoieui currency, milk ther in creaming or churn ami mat we snouia not wail ior ine oo- ino . thtk t,tto. m4ii. operation of any foreign country be-' lement ln nTnnnrtinn anrt fore taking steps to improve our Bive8 the magg a salvy tenure. This umuicuu auairs. ne was not ior ig inoreaBec from the fact that the monometallism or anything of the sort; milk fet8 of a ,0 textnre when he desired the use of both metala. Bro-1 potatoes are fed, and thia only adds to sius opposed free coinage and Bailey ' difflcillty. where only , BmaU sought to prove that gold had appro- amonnt of potatoes are fed. four to six oiated Within the last twenty years. qnarta mixed with food there WM saying that if this were ture the oppo- liMa ot no inj 00 the sn00u. nenta of silver would have nothing to leBoe of thf) potato in EmAll stand on. amount, was a sort of digestant to the Washington, Feb. 15. After a ten dry food. Where potatoes were daya debate the house today, by a vote t cooked, a much larger amount of them of 80 to 190, in oommittee of the : oould be fed. aa the onokiwl ctamh wee not in its -effects the same at the raw material. From all : that oould be gathered, it seemed that with meal at (20 per ton, potatoes might have a feeding value not to exceed (3.25 a ton. ". whole, rejected the senate free coinage substitute to the bond bill, and re ported baok to the house, with a recom mendation to nonconcur and insist upon the house bill. The most signifi cant statement came in form of an ultimatum from Dingley that a bill might be reported from the ways and means oommittee looking to the initia tion by this oountry of a project ot an other international monetary confer ence to meet within a year. While Dingley said be was expressing his per sonal position in the matter. it was generally understood from the manner in whioh he said it that the suggestion had already matured into a well-de fined intention on the part of tbe Re publican leaders of the house. Washington, Feb. 18. The attack on Seoretary Morton for his refusal to expend the appropriation for seeds in the present agricultural appropriation bill waa transferred from the senate to the house today, and furnished the feature of the proceedings in the lower house. It waa led by Baker and was supported by Moses and Livingston, Boatner and Meredith. Some very harsh things were said and applauded, especially by Boatner. who referred to Mr. Morton contemptuously as "that individual," and not a voice was raised in hia defense. The general de bate on the agricultural bill during its consideration, ' when the attack was made, was olosed before adjournment. Several bills of minor importance were passed and a resolution was adopted directing tbe judioiary oommittee to inquire into tbe right of an executive offioer to refuse to execute a law on the pound of its unconstitutionality, and to report by bill or otherwise. This investigation grows out of Controller Bowler's decision in the sugar-bounty oases. : : , Firmly closed lips indicate deter minates. Miscellaneous Note. . The breakfast food made at the Ta- flnmfl mill nnt nf whnnt i a mnnHno in popularity and is taking the place of Aooording to official statistics the importations of lemons into the United States during the : past ten ; years amount to (38,500,680. One hardly knows what . he will plant next year, prices are so univer sally depressed. But fruit and vege table growing, under favorable condi tions, will likely be favored. In England and Scotland tbe farmers raise large sheep, whole flocks averag ing over 800 pounds eaoh, alive, and when a wether is killed for family use, that whioh is not desired immediately is corned the same at beef. Small breeds are not raised in Great Britain, and the farmers pay no attention to wool compared with mutton. In the February bulletin of the well known Thayer Fruit Farms, it la stated that after the land it put into high cultivation the aotual cost of bringing an acre of blackberries or raspberries, well set and with no miss ing hills, to a good bearing age, it from (125 to (150. .v ; - It it predicted that Within a few years all the work of tbe farm will be done by electricity. ; Not - in a few years. Jhe time may come when elec tricity will play a considerable part in farming, but it will take longer than a few yeara. It is true that it may be utilized for some portion of the power used on the farm in the not very dis tant future.