aoJ2A OREGON TARIFF FOR REVENUE, INCIDENTAL PROTECTION AND SOUND MONEY. VOL. I. COBVALLIS, BEATON COTJOTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1897, NO. 11. j4 UNION r ii NEWS OF THE WEEK From all Parts of the New and Old World. BRIEF AND INTERESTING ITEMS Comprehensive Review of the Import ant Happenings of the Cur rent Week. The 17th meeting of the farmers' national congress convened in St. Paul Tuesday. . The supreme court of Oregon lias de- cided that a jury cannot be discharged on Sunday. Mrs. John Drew, the famous actress, . died at Larchr.ont, N. Y., after an ill ness of three years. Table cutters employed in the four largest glove factories in Gloversville, N. Y., have struck for an advance in - wages. About 800 skilled men are out. By a vote of 53 to 35 the Pennsyt vania state Democratic committee de clared vacant the seat of William Har rity in the national Democratic com mittee. At a Spanish cabinet council it was decided to summon the next class of 80,000 reserves, 27,000 of whom wHl be sent to Cuba and 13,000 to the Phil ippine islands. A landslide occurred at tunnel No. 4, on the Northern Pacific, several miles west of the summit of the Cascades. Eastbound and westbound trains were delayed. A'genuine firing machine, it is said, was seen at Sterling, Colo., a few days ago by G. A. Nenstein. Mr. Nenstein noticed a large black object in the southeastern part of the heavens, trav eling rapidly toward the northeast. He watched it pass clear across the heavens, moving quite rapidly in a straight line. He watched it until it passed out of eight, and is convinced that it was a bona fide flying machine. . - The naval officers who compose the board recently appointed by Secretary Long, of the navy department, to pre pare plans for the erection of an armor T plate plant to be operated by the United. States government, have concluded their inspection of the steels plants of the country, and are now ready to re port. Plans will be drawn up for a government factory. Ten saloons in Kansas City, Kan., were raided by the police and $3,500 worth of liquors seized and poured into the gutters., Saloon furniture and fix tures filling ten big drays were seized and carted to police headquarters.where it will be burned. ' A dispatchfrom Buenos Ayres says the wheat crop in the province of Santa IJe is calculated at about 10,000 . . tons, scarcely more than enough to supply the proince for the year. . What is true in Santa Fe province is C said to be true in the other provinces, that is, none will furnish more than . enough for home use. ' r ,:v The jewelry store of W. H. Finck, 'g at Seattle, was burglarized and goods V to-the amount-of $10,000 taken. By ? sawing the iron bars off the window, "the burglars secured an entrance to the store.' With a seven-pound sledgeham mer and an ; eight-inch punch they broke the handle off the outside door ' of the safe, and then easily , pried . the door open. ' .. ; Five orphan children have been shipped from Honolulu to San Fran cisco. The government officials will not permit them to land unless $500 honds are furnished for each of the quintet as a guarantee that they shall '""not become piiblic charges, but so far the necessary amuunt has not been raised by the Salvation Army officer to whom they were consigned. Official information received at Ma nila confirms the reports previously published as to the disastrous character of, the eruption of the Manyon volcano. ' Several villages were" completely de stroyed. At Li bog 150 bodies were re covered and buried, and more remained in the lava. At another place 200 per sons were missing. Some of the bodies recovered were so completely calcined as to be unrecognizable. Advices from Rio de Janeiro state that the fanatics attacked several con voys of provisions and ammunition in the interior a few days ago and a bloody battle followed. The fanatics were forced to retire after severe losses. The Brazilian troops had 28 officers wound ed. The fanatics are now rewgarizing their forces and another attack on con voys is expected, as the fanatics are in need of ammunition. Involved in the qliestion of inter pretation of section. 22 of the new tar iff, with Tegard to the 10 per cent dis criminating duty on foreign goods com ing to the United States from Canada or Mexico, which i now betore the at torney general for decision, is another question of equal if not greater magni tude. It involves the question of whether this discriminating duty of 10 per cent does not apply to all goods im ported in foreign vessels landing at United States ports which are not ex empt from discriminating tonnage taxes by express treaty stipulation. The matter is now before the attorney-general, awaiting an interpretation. Another attempt has been made to destroy the life of President Faure of France. Three minutes after the pres ident had passed the Madeline churoh in Paris, on his return from Russia, a bomb was exploded inside the railing around the church. An arrest followed immediately, and the railed field was closed by the police, who began an ac tive investigation into the outrage. Nobody was injured by the explosion, but the affair, following so closely upon others of a similar nature, caused the greatest excitement. MICHIPICOTAN GOLD FIELDS. First Reports Confirmed by the Sault . Ste. Marie Party. Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., Sept. 7. The party of goldseekers on the yacht Mary Bell returned from Michipicotan last evening, after having been in the new gold fields but three days. They say the newly discovered EldoradoJ is as rich as reported. There were 14 in the party, and all are responsible busi ness men of this city. Each secured claims upon gold quartz promising big returns. In all, the party will make application for 4,000 acres, which were prospected and staked out while they were there. Many specimens of quartz, in which free gold as large as a pin head can be seen, were brought back with them. The specimens were se cured from different places on their claims, which are scattered! about. When the party arrived. Tuesday night there were but six prospectors on the ground at Lake Wawa, and they secured good locations. They are jubil ant over their finds, and say that the auriferous deposit evidently is an im mense one. Veins of beautiful white quartz, carrying free gold, exist in the River and Lake Wawa region. The original find is an extremely large one, beyond doubt. The returning prospec tors say that where the veins are laid bare, the gold particles can be seen everywhere in the quartz. When the party left Saturday, at least 200 prospectors had arrived, and they passed several parties going in. The shores of Lake Wawa were ' dotted with tents, and within the three days they were there a lively mining camp had sprung up. The distance from the mouth of Michipicotan river to Lake Wawa is not to exceed seven miies, and the party experienced no difficulty in .getting in and out. With their camp equipage, the trip was made in about three hours. The road is well defined. . . The,. reports the Mary Bell party brought has set the two Soos wild with excitement, and an exodus to Klondike, jr., will begin tomorrow. RICHER THAN KLONDIKE. According; to Reports From the Yaqui Indian "Reservation.. Kansas City, Sept. 7. A special to the Journal from SedaliaL Mo.-, says: J. W. Corkins, a Sedalia capitalist, and Leo Cloud, an expert mining engineer of Cincinnati, representatives of a St. Louis and-Cincinnati syndicate, will leave tomorrow for the westtcoast of Mexico to practically verify the value of gold placer and quartz mines which have recently been secured by the" syn dicate. Messrs. Corkins . and Cloud will go direct to Hermosillo, and from there to the gold fields in the new El dorado located in 'the Yaquf Indian country,' which has just been opened to entry to white men. This part of Mex ico has been explored but little by the whites, but, if reports of the syndi cate's prospectors are true, the inland mountain ranges along the west coast of Mexico are richer even than those of the Klondike. The placer mines are aid to be marvelously rich in acale and nugget gold, while the quartz rock in the upper ledges contain veins of free-milling ore which assays from $50 to $ 200 per ton. The syndicate suc ceeded in keeping the discovery a se cret while securing its patents and con cessions, and, if the reports are sub stantially correct, the syndicate will be able to turn the tide of fortune-hunters from the gold fields of Alaska to the Eldorado of Mexico. The Span Gave Way. Ranta Rosa,. Cal., Sept. 7. A tele phone message this evening from Dun can's mills stated that the southbound train on the Pacific coast road narrowly escaped serious accident. A long bridge crosses Russian river, near Dun can's mills, and as the train, a mixed freight and passenger, was crossing the third span, one of the piers gave way, owing to a defective bolt The greater part of the train had already passed the spot in safety, but it is reported that one of the freight cars went through the gap in the long bridge, fatally in juring John Blaney, one of the train crew. . Four to Get Office. Portland, Or., Sept. 7. The Oregon congressional delegation have agreed upon the following recommendations for appointment to federal offices in Oregon: United States district attorney John H. Hall, of Portland. United States marshal Zoeth IIou er, of Umatilla county. Appraiser of customs, Willamette district, at Portland Colonel Owen Summers, of Portland. Register of United States land qffioe, at Oregon City T. T. Geer, of Marion county. Nitroglycerin in a Baggy. Monongahela, Pa., Sept. 7. By an explosion of nitroglycerin this morning two men and a horse were killed, a buggy completely demolished and a bridge across the Monongahela river badly damaged. Windows in the vi cinity were broken and residents for miles awakened by the concussion. One of the men is believed to be Charles P. Rankin, foimerly superintendent of the Watson Company. It is supposed the men had nitroglycerin in the buggy and that a sudden jolt caused the ex plosion. ' Murderous Chief Arrested. Vancouver, B. ft, Sept. 7. Skooka wak, an Indian chief residing in Lower Nicolai valley, has been arrested after a hot fight with members of his tribe, by the provincial police, for tying his aged squaw to a horse by the heels and then having young bucks lash the horse to a gallop with the result that he was dragged to death. The latest thing in locks is one where the keyhole is in the center of the door knob. r THE AMEER'S LOYALTY Difficulty of Holding His Subjects in Check. NO IMPORTANT BATTLES FOUGHT Roth Sides Massing Their Troops on the Border Mad Mullah's - Men Deserting. London, Sept.' 7. The Times this morning, publishes a dispatch from Simla saying that further evidence has been-obtained of the desire of the ameer of Afghanistan to prevent his subjects from taking part in the frontier disturb ances. The British agent at Cabul sub mitted", at the ameer's request, a writ ten statement showing the points upon which the government laid special stress. The ameer replied to this statement in his own handwriting, emphasizing his previous statements that his subjects did not dare to openly take part in the fighting, but they have been drawn away secretly by the mullahs, whose conduct he strongly condemned. Not the least doubt is entertained, the dispatch says, of the ameer's desire to fulfill his obligations loyally. He has issued orders that his troops be withdrawn from the detached outposts, so that they may be kept together under the control of officers who' are able to prevent them from deserting and join ing in the fighting. An important step has been taken by Maharajah Sir Ber Shamsher Jang Rana Bahadur, prime minister of Nepaul, who has forbidden the circulation in the kingdom of native newspapers, which he considers seditious and hos tile to the British government. Both Sides Lined XT p. Peshawur, Sept. '7. No fighting of importance has yet occurred between the government forces and the tribes men who have taken part in the upris ing. The enemy is concentrating at various points, and it is estimated that 17,000 tribesmen are now on the Sa mana range, but they, appear loth to attack the government troops. It is reported that the followers of Haddah Mullah in- the Shabkar district are deserting him, nd several columns have been sent out in different direc tions. ' ; A. slight skirmish has occurred- near Hangu, from which point a small column was dispatched and scoured the districts of Algmir, Nawimela a.nd Turk . They found the enemy's posts desertedg There was some firing, but the enemy refused to be engaged at close quarters. - The sftbadar . com manding the Mullagori " Lovies, and 40 of his company, Which formed a part of the garrison at- Fort -Lundi-Kotal, ar rived at Jamrund on Friday, and were given An enthusiastic reception, , the. entire garrison turning out and cheer ing as they entered the town. The Mullagoris cut their way- through the. enemy after the capture of Fort Lundi Kotal, and marched to lheir own coun try, where they buried" their dead and reassured their friends. They then pro ceeded for Jamrund, -which place they reached in safety with their arms. " YELLOW FEVER AGAIN. . , The Disease . Prevalent on the Missis- " . " Ctppi Coast. Mobile, Ala., Sept. 7.- Yellow fever prevails to some extent at Ocean Springs, Miss. , on. the bay of Biloxi, ac cording to a report just made by a board of physicians who have been making an examination of the patients, and the place has been rigidly quarantined. All persons coming from that place or neighborhood are to be detained at a station established outside - the city limits. . The Town Quarantined. New Orleans, Sept. 7. The Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana boards of health have been at Ocean Springs since yesterday. An examination of the pre vailing disease was made a week ago. There have been several hundred cases, but few deaths, and a board of experts declared the disease to be Dengue fever. Since then, mortalities became more frequent, and the symptoms became more like yellow fever and the alarm became so great that the health authori ties again gathered. This time -they were accompanied by Professor A. L. Metz, chemist of the Louisiana board, who analyzed the virus in several cases. The verdict tonight was yellow fever, and various points on both sides of the town are rapidly declaring quarantine. Trying to Suppress the News. . Ocean Springs, Miss., Sept. 7. This has been a day of anxious expectancy as to whether or not yellow fever exists here, and the question has not been de termined, The members of the Louis iana state board of health have been hard at work all day long, working in conjunction with the representatives of the Alabama and the Mississippi organ izations, in a determined effort to settle the vexed question as to the identity of the pernicious fever. Their investiga tion i were extensive. Professor Metz appears of the opinion that the prevail ing complaint is due in a measure to the pollution of the water in the bay fronting the town. It is feared that the oysters absorb poisonous germs and communicate them to the consumers. Kentucky Farmer Murdered. Russellville, Ky., Sept. 7 Will Barker, a prominent farmer, was shot by Doc Chapman last night at Adair ville and died today. Chapman is under guard. He wasjaken to Bowl ing Green for safekeeping, as a mob was expected." An old grudge caused the trouble. Chapman claims self-defense. Barker's friends say it fras cold, blooded murder. . ' About 8 OIL yes tern cities have the curfew ordinance. - AWAITING HER FATE. A Glimpse at Evangelina Cisneros In Her Prison Home. , New York, Sept. 6. A special to the World from Havana says: ' The World's correspondent went to Bee Evangelina Cisneros in her prison. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays are visiting- days at the woman's jail, and the ante-room on these days is full of people from 12 to 4 P. M., who have oome to condole with and bear good tidings to their relatives and friends. When the World's correspondent asked to see Miss Cisneros, he was al lowed to pass through the outside iron gate into a small room with a stone floor, on one of the walls of which was painted in large letters, "Salla de Jus tica." Evangelina was sent for -upstairs,: and while waiting the corre spondent had the opportunity to notice some of the other women who were re ceiving visits. One was a well-dressed woman who had murdered her husband. Sitting next to her was a good-looking woman who had been caught selling ammunition and supplies to the insur gents. She was a political prisoner. Next to her was a woman who kept a lodging-house in Havana, and had rented a room to two men whom she did" not know." While their baggage was being moved into the room the polio? seized two of - their trunks and found arms and ammunition. The men escaped, but the landlady was arrested. Slid knew nothing of the case, but was held responsible, and is now waiting the result of the full and long investi gation. A few minutes after ( the arrival of the - correspondent Evangelina came tripping down the stairs and walked gracefully across the end of the court yard and out through the gate into the reception room. She is. beyond ques tion pretty She is petite of figure and graceful in all her movements. Her manners are perfect and her self-possession wonderful. She said she could not make any statement on paper be cause her friends had told her not to, but she talked freely" of her hopes-and fears and answered questions seemingly without reserve. She did not '. receive her meals from the outside, she. said, because she was afraid of - treachery, and preferred to be content With the rations of the jail. ...v. There are eight or ten other-women in this same big'rooni. All looked clean and respectable and - all . weYe white women. One of them was a distinguished-looking lady of about 50, with handsome gray hair. Some alleged political offense is the cause of her im prisc ninent. . . -v E angelina is the most, animated of all. She is the star boarder, and re ceives more attention and has more vis itors -than the others. She said the letters she received from Colonel Berris on the' Isle of Pines, and which contain evidence, of . his guilty inteiltions to ward her, were all sent by her friends to Austria," and from there directto Spain . to the queen regent. She says, if they could be produced before a fair court his conviction would be certain. The colonel says that he wrote her but one letter, and that grante'd the permit to her father to travel as a peddler. She would not describe the events of the night or July 26, 1896, further than to say that she knew Colonel Berris was coming to her. house that night, because his secretary had told her so. She opened the door When he knocked. As to how he wasBeized, or by whom' she would not say. She escaped from the house and was-caught and arrested the following morning and" brought to Havana. She says that the greatest favor anyone could do for her would be to- secure for her an interview with General Weyler. . She says: VI could convince him, if he would only hear me." In government circles nothing has been heard front Madrid in connection with transferring her to a convent. Opinions differ as to whether such a change would be of benefit. If her -case is let alone for 'a wh ile she will be released and perhaps ordered to leave the- island. EIGHT SUCCUMBED TO FEVER Fatal txpeditlon of Nine Prospectors to South America. Denver, Sept. 6. George W. Adams, of Cripple Creek, arrived in this city today from the gold fields of South America. Fourteen months ago Ad ams left this city to try his fortune in South American mines. He went to the gold fields 300 miles from George town in company with eight Ameri cans, remaining there 11 months. ; Of the entire party of .nine he alone escaped death from thefatal fever. One by one he saw his companions die of the terrible disease; saw hole's scooped in the ground, and their bodies, twist ed from pain, covered with earth. He was attacked twice himself with the malady, and all but died, and finally, after seeing the last of the eight die in agony, he became terror-stricken and fled from the country, from which he says not one of 70 white men ever -re-turnde alive. ' A Fatal Accident. Moscow, Idaho, Sept. 6. By the upsetting of a lamp the clothing of Mary Hildebraut, aged 4, caught fire and her body was burned almost to a crisp. The child died after three hours of terrible agony. Mrs. Hildebrant was badly burned in her efforts to save her child's life. Spain's Sick Soldiers. Havana, Sept. 6. The "last two steamers which have sailed for Spain carried 1,600 sick soldiers. Captain General General Weyler received from Spain today $2,000,000 in silver, to be used in defraying the expenses of the war in Cuba. Four camels have been succesfully acclimated in Poland by Count -,Skor-zewski,. who has had them broken to the plow on his estate in the province of Posen. OUR FLAG OVER THEM The United States Will An. nex Dawson City.- PART OF YUKON IS IN ALASKA Strong Efforts Will Be Made to Reclaim It Serious Complications May Arise Other Alaskan News. Port Townsend, Sept. 6. A letter just received from John TJ. Smith, United States coramisioner at Dyea and Skaguay, intimates that government officials now on the way to the Upper Yukon may by their official acts bring on serious international complications with the Dominion government. He says: "It is announced here by a deputy United States marshal that the United States government is to make claim for a large portion of the Yukon gold fields which have heretofore been supposed to be in British territory, and that the territory which is claimed as being within Alaska includes Dawson City. "The basis of the claim to be made by the United States official to the dis puted territory is in the fact that the boundary line has never been deter mined, and that the United States claim to possess information as to sur veys made by the Canadian government thatlBxes Dawson City and a large" por tion of the district in Alaska." Tars Attacked by Gold Fever. Santa Rosa, Cal., Sept. 6. A letter has been received by Deputy Postmas ter Griggs from his son, Joseph, who is a member of the crew Of the United States gunboat Concord. ' The letter is dated Juneau, August"- 25, f and . gives details of the desertions of 45 men from the Concord during its cruise in Alas kan waters. It says: - "Some of the boys got the gold fever and ran away, but were brought back, and are now in double irons. The ship lost 45 good seamen, but if they are fools enough " to go and starve this winter they are not fit for the ship." ' To Klondike by Balloon. ' Toronto., Sept. v 6. Aeronaut Leo Stevens has successfully tested his new generator for manufaturing gas for his balloon, and-says he will leave for Klondike the latter part of this month. He declares he will go to Andree's res cue providing his later experiments are successful. - - ALASKA'S SILENT CITY. Members of the Luigi Party Say They Saw the Mirage. Seattlet Sept. 6. Alaska's Silent City has emerged once more from its mysterious hiding place, and revealed its presence to five members of the party that acompanied Prince Luigi up Mount St, Elias. In the early morn ing of July 13,, the party, while return ing from the ocean with supplies, sud denly saw the city mirrored in the clear atmosphere. The vision was so clear that C. W. Thornton, who first noticed it, wrote in his notebook as fol lows:; "It required no effort of the imagina tion to liken it to a city, for the image was so distinct and plain that it re quired, instead, a strong faith to be lieve that it was not in reality a city." Whereas the Silent City, of which Minor W. Bruce wrote, was seen from Muir glacier, the one obsereved by Mr. Thornton and company was observed from Malaspina glacier, more than 100 miles distant. It remained a perfect image for 30 minutes, and then slowly faded away, while in its place appeared a rocky ridge. ' ? A BRIDGE-JUMPER. His Life Probably the Penalty, of His Recklessness. ' . New York, Sept. 6i William Orton jumped from the Brooklyn bridge this afternoon, and now lies in a critical condition at the marine hospital. He rode on a truck going to Brooklyn shortly before 2 o'clock. When the truck was near the center of the bridge, Orton got off and quickly climbed upon the rail. The bridge was crowded with promenaders, but no policeman was near. Oton stood on the rail fof a few moments, and throwing off his hat, jumped out into space. He turned over several times in his descent, and struck the water on his right side. When he came to the surface, the crew of the tug gratitude ffshed : him out. Orton was in an exhausted condition, and, after a while said: "I did it; I did it; didn't I?" Then he eank off into a state of coma, from which he had not recovered at last ac counts. Fly Wheel Burst. Porstmouth, O., Sept. 3. A 40-ton fly-wheel at the Burgess steel and iron works was bursted by a 4,800-pound ingot stopping a roll. The mill was crowded with workmen. ' John Murphy was hurled 30 feet and badly bruised. The roof was wrecked. Beams two feet square were cut in two like straws. The mill was set on fire, but the flames were soon extinguished and the furnace de stroyed. The loss cannot be estimated, but the damages will close the mill un til a new fly wheel is secured. Chinese Marries an English Girl. i Minneapolis, Minn., Sept. 3. John H. Taylor, an Americanized Chinese, was married yesterday to Carol Dis more, a pretty woman 22 years old. The bride was born in Manchester, England. She first met her husband in the Mott street mission, after he had moved here from Oakland, Cal. In the public schools in Japan the English language is required by law to be taught. NEARING THE END. Great Coal Miners' Strike Is Practi cally Over. Columbus, O., Sept. 6. The end of the great miners' strike is in sight. This afternoon the national executive board of the United Mineworkers' Association agreed to recommend to the miners a proposition from the Pittsburg operators for a straight price of 65 cents a ton, to continue in force until the end of the year, with the additional mutual understanding that a joint meeting of operators and miners-shall be held in December, 1897, for the purpose of de termining what the rate of mining shall be thereafter. A delegate convention of all miners who have suspended work has been called to meet in Columbus September 8, at 10 A. M., to act upon the recom mendation. President Ratchford and the other members of the board say there is not the slightest doubt but that the miners will approve the recom mendation. The proposition does not involve arbitration, and it provides for an immediate settlement of the strike. As soon as the miners ratify the proposition work will be resumed in all the mines. McDonald Miners Out. Pittsburg, Pa.,' Spet. 6. Colonel Rend's miners at McDonald, Pa., will not go back at the terras offered by him yesterday. The committee appointed to present his ultimatum to the men reported today that meetings were held last night, and it was decided to accept no rate except 69 cents, and not to work for that price unless all the other miners do it.' Operators-here say they will not pay 69 cents, and will now go ahead with their arrangements to start the mines with new men. ; . V: M archers Again Enjoined." Wheeling, W. Va., Sept. 6. An other injunction was eerved this "morn-, ing on J. Rea, - James' Wood and f73 other nanfed and an unlimited number of unnamed and unknown people, pro hibiting them from holding meetings or marching near the property of the Worthington Coal & Coke Company. This injunction was issued b Judge J. H. Hagans, judge of the Marion county court. Assistance From San Francisco. San Francisco, Sept. -The San Francisco labor council tonight adopted a resolution- recommending the affil iated unions to instruct their members to contribute one day's wages to the striking miners in the East, the money to be sent to Secretary Pearce, at Co lumbus, O. ' TWELVE MINERS KILLED. Explosion in a Coal Mine Near Glen. wood Springs, Colo. - Glenwood Springs, Colo., Spet. 6. A- coal dust explosion in one of the chambers of the Sunrise Coal Company, the property of the Colorado Fuel & Iron Company, at Sunshine, 12 miles southeast of Glenwood Springs, killed 11 Italians and one American tonight, a few minutes before 6 o'clock. The men were preparing to leave themine on the day shift when the disaster oc curred. A shot had been fired, and in stead of its being a direct explosion, which in miners' parlance is called a "blowout," it created a flame, which shot backward and caught the dust that hadccumulated in the chamber intsead of dislodging the seam of the coal in tended.' At the time of ther explosion there was a barrel of powder in the chamber, which ingited and aided the disaster which would have occurred through the coal dust exploding alone. The Sunshine mine, where the disaster occurred, is of a peculiar coal,, a com bination of anthracite and bitumen, and there is a belief that the gather ing of coal dust in the chamber was due to excessive explosions caused by a desire to empty the chamber too quick ly. In the property there are 50 to 55 men employed. . The single chamber where the men were killed, was the only one damaged. Two hours after the explosion occurred, the bodies of the dead men were all brought to the surface. Tasquez Was Deported. San Francisco, Sept. 6. The steamer Acapulco brought information of an other' political earthquake -in Guate mala. - When the vessel reached Aca jutla it wsa met by a telegram from President Barrois and held until 1 1 o'clock at night, when a special train arrived with General Vasque, ex-president of Honduras, under guard. It was ascertained that. Vasqnez, who had taken refuge in San Jose de Guatemala after his expulsion from Honduras, had been ordered deported by Barrois The refugee was put on board the steamer and landed at Acapulco. It is said he was detected in fomenting a revolution gainst Barrois. Lead Industry Booming. St. Louis, Sept. 6. Prosperity has truck the lead industry, and the mar ket is on the boom. Prices are higher than they have been for the past five years, with the prospect -of attaining the highest point in the history of the metal. Missouri mines, which were on the point of closing down, have resumed operations in full blast, and will pro duce a larger tonnage than ever before. - Since August, 1896, when the price cf lead reaohed the lowest, it has been gradually climbing, until today it was quoted at $4.05 to $4.10 per 100 pounds. Bicycles Are Personal Property. Oakland, Cal., Sept. 6. Judge Eli -Worth has ruled that a bicycle is per sonal property and exempt from execu tion if uesd by the owner in his daily business. . . Erench Monuments. ' France is the country of monuments. It has set up about 300 monuments to more or less distinguished Frenchmen during the last 25 years, and there are now 127 committees collecting money for more. NORTHWEST BREVITIES Evidence of Steady Growth and Enterprise. ITEMS OF GENERAL INTEREST From ATI the Cities and Towns rf the Thriving Sister States It is estimated that 1,280,000 prunes were shipped in the three cars that left The Dalles for Chicago recently. That number could about supply nearly everybody in Chicago with one Dalles prune. A plan is on foot in Pendleton to raise $16,000, to be invested in build ing a first-class racetrack. Nearly enough subscriptions have been prom ised to make up a joint stock company with the required capital. Albert Geiser.who recently purchased the Pyx mine, in Baker county, for $15,000, sold the property this week to New York parties, for $30,000. All mining properties in this section of the state are advancing in value. The vicinity of Bly, on Sprague riv er, in Klamath county, was the scene of a cyclone one day last week. Exten sive damage was done to fencing, out buildings anl hayricks at an estimated loss of several thousand dollars. The Indians on the Siletz are object ing because, when they get drunk, un der the law passed by congress, they get at least 30 days in jail, whjle a ' white man can get drunk without be ing sent up for more than five days. . The grain crop of Grant county is -something -enormous - this year, es pecially wheat, and, with the good round price it is bringing in the mar ket, will put the farmers in a fine financial condition for the coming year. On the 1897 assessment roll, in Lane county, all church parsonages are as sessed. This is the first time they have been included in the assessable prop erty of Lane county. All lota, owned by churches, but . not ocoupied by . churches, are also assessed. The ' Umatilla reservation has been nearly deserted by the Indians,, who enjoy summering as well as the pale faces. Many -have gone" to the John Day mountains and the Wallowa lake to hunt and fish. Over 200 are pick ing hops in the Yakima country. Estimates of the wheat crop of Union county for 1897 range from 1,250,000 bushels to 2,000,000. While the latter figure is considered -rather high, yet when the facts of increased acreage and better crops of this year, as compared with others, are taken into ensidera- . tion, it is not improbable that the out put will reach that amount.. . Craig Blankenship, of South Salem, is packing eggs for the Klondike trade. The eggs are dipped in a preparation to preserve them before they are packed. It is the intention of Mr. Blankenship "Ho" ship his eggs to. the ..Klondike next , spring. The demand has not caused -any noticeable advance in "price, but has stiffened the egg market here. The law preventing Oregon sheep raisers from driving their sheep into Washington doesn't seem to permit of reciprocity.1 More than 10,0000 sheep that would have crossed the Columbia ' at Arlington have been kept out of Washington; but thousands of Wash ington sheep have been driven all along the border into the mountain ranges of Eastern Oregon, so the Oregon sheep men say. Washington. Grouse are reported to be quite ". plentiful on Blue Mountain. Congressman James Hamilton Lewis arrived in Spokane, from Washington, last week, on his way to the Sonnd. There are 62,000 sheep owned in Kit- -titas county. Besides this number, many bands summer there on the moun tain ranges. A party of prospectors from Seattle are reported to have made a rich strike in the Olympics about 18 miles from Duckabush. . A telephone line is to be erected at once from Oakesdale to Thornton, Sun set and St. John. Work will begin as soon as the mateiral can be had. A Tacoma carpenter, while walking in his sleep, fell from a two-story win dow to the ground. Nothing but his ' nap and a little skin were broken. Salmon for the interior and transcon tinental shipment have begun to arrive in Tacoma from lower Puget sound can- series, and the traffic is expected to . eoori be brisk. The firm of Balfour, Guthrie & Co., for the first time in the history of the crop hop industry in Yakima county, is buying in that county this year. The firm recently bought 1,200 bales on a 10-cent basis. Two wagon-loads of immigrants passed through Walla Walla on their way to Centralia. They started from Kansas on the 29th of April and have been traveling ever since. . Whitman county warrants have re cently advanced from 95 to 98 cents. As these warrants only draw 7 per cent interest, the price offered is considered good, and as speaking well for the county. The hay crop of Kittitas county for this year is estimated, by those who are said to know, at 35,000 tons. Fruit has been shipped from Wen atchee at the rate of a carload a day for the last few weeks. ' The shipments consist mostly of tomatoes, pears, peaches, watermelons and apples. The marketing of tomatoes has ceased al most entirely at present, owing to de preciated prices, and, as a consequence, hundreds of bushels will rot on the vines, as the hot weather has ripened them very fast t 1 t 1