Circulation, 1, 784 Subscribers In Columbia County. ' . . HKT ' Advertising Medium la Columbia Co. J AjVV VI , , Tint Leading Paperof CplumbtaCounty. VOL. 8. 81V HELENS, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1891. NO. 42. OREGON MIST. TJIM OH KM ON .MIST. INNIKI. KVKItV KiUHAV IHOttNlNO J. R. BEEGLE, Publisher. The County Official Paper. Muliaxrlu Inn Italoa. (Inn unnr '! Tr M HllVXIXiU. )n iniV a in null Ht.lK I') .. 75 A.lvctlUlMtf Jtati. f'rofpii.liMiat car If onti yt-ar ,.. On imlumo on. yeae ,.4, II il? C 'lllllln Oil VtH' u, in r r column ii' vrtf ........... (I i J..- H he moult ,...,.,,...,, II II '11 ')!' fl lll'tllll.ll... Oh. iJii'Ii ! luoitiln. :, .Vt .. ? .. 2 ,. 6 .. I w. ! ! , Ifcc.aia por Himi Inr drill Inanr- lion: M 1 imiih iliiti ur li .nliM'iiU'iil III ho i n ' I.Miim .'I . rrt'.-mwii.. l.W ir Inch fiir Ar t IhaiWimi. and z ,:utila i r Mil-U for latll iuuatl lilill( Ul 't Mfiu. coi,t;Mitrv county dikkotouy. (.Hint firnr.ra. Jiolac D. J. Owl 'Mr. Hf. II.Iiiiii V v - K. K oulik.H'. Ilimiw Hli. 'til ., ... ...,.,.. tt in M rnaar, Ml. HhIi,iii T " W.i'hIb, Ml. Ilrlaii. Hun', wi K-txKt.r. .:, , , J, ii. Wait. Hvaniuma Aa- t r. DliiHI. lUlolcr urvator . n I,IUI, Ht, ll.iciia I 'uti in 'ui.li . f, tl.Sl "t"IMor, Vpruollla (it. w iinriiin. :intKMir, Hnrtiny Notlnaia, Miaovw ki. II I in I .iiIk,-. So. lUlli-imWr riitnu'iitt rit'l ii rii't alol llilnlfatorilaytriPacb nintiili Ht .( r . at Ma ouic Hull. VI.Iiimi Hirit n ' m k; . ii i iiniui mvioi nt mtiin. M . !' . .iU'ih.t l. nlf No. 'Jt-Huiwl ma t liiw. nv ..u o. h, (o.t ai-h (Mil iiiiMiitai7:ii f. i Ma -mil.' Hall, over H'a'icharil'a .tor,. V on x ii ciiihria iii nixit .lanilhiii InvlUxl (o a'tcuei.. V it-ll'al Apiiotnttoatita. firtl si tuy-liDt l.laml, II . a.; HI, lli-loiin. 7J KC-wu i'.tii'U ' N.r ,Uy, II ..;(((, Illua, 7 ' ;n I' M I" .iv injure tti tlilnl Huii.luy4'lnikkanlt-, 7 -i r 'I lilfl Umiitajf-liilluH, II Ilo lllon, 'J , . t'cimiii s irn'n -VnnionU. tl M. n. ?:!) r, n.i wuwu , a i m. W III HI.INliAMK. I'a.lor. Tim Mull. Down I"T Ix-a: ; iii.i'. ni.ii a. I nflt lt,,l I rl i i r. M. Vn iflin lot V wi (.inn- .til I'l ii.iuk Invn lit llvlunt 1 inniln)', liiinwlajr ami i-lutda) at a, Ihu mall (in Mih.i.Ii.ii I ciankniiln ami Xl.t lea- n unliin nuliv, Hi-lnutilay ami Kriilar at I.' H Mall, rraliwarl north tlum at lu a M ; (or Foitlatol at .1 r. m , Travrlvr' ltltr U..nta. lt . W, iuv.it. -lravauM. Illcii. Io I'nruaii.l ( ti t. m l iii'.itv, I liiltxtay ami Mat unlar I'aft. i4l. Mi li'iit (or rlai.aaiile Moll tlar, h pliH'o'Hf amt Krl.lav at H d a. M ftrii lniii-M Kmujoii- liavia hi. Ilolnii. lor foriiattil ilaily evi'nt Huri'lay at $ to a. at. Hiitiintlrii, ItMiVfa I'oitiauit al i..ai f. M. l'ltOI-'KSrI().SAI.. . DR. H. R. CLIFF, Physician and Surgeon. HI. Il.l.-n, or. DR. J. E. HALL. Physician v and . Surgeon, t lalakaiilr, oliiuilila Co., Or, T. A. Mi ItKii.at. A. . Ilam.ua. . McBRIDE & DRESSER, Attorney at . Law, Or.nuu ' "r. Or- ' I'rompl altriillmi ulvoll to laud oWrc tiiuini'M A. B. LITTLE. Surveyor and Civil Engineer, Ht, Hnlnna, Or. County Nurv, )'or. Unit aiirvpy Inar. loan ila ting anil iifrluwrlim wui k roimiitl lour. W. T. Hiihmky. J. W. Da.rna. BURNEY & DRAPER, Attorneys . at'.' Law, OrrtTon 'll)r. Or. Twrlvr Jraara' i-erlini'0 a. Hrnl.tor ( thir t'nllwl Mia pa Unit own hiro wniniurtila nt In our aixn'lalty ol all kliHl. ol htialnoaa brt .r Hi. I ami omrw at Hi. laiim, and Involving Hit ira'lli'o In Ilia tOiui-ial UliU tmioe. J. B. BROCK tNBROUGH, ATTORNEY ' AT.-.' LAwj Orrgon C'ltr. Or. (Ut Htrrlal Agent of (Icm ral 1-nml (inirc.) llomoaioaj, I'rt einiilni anil Tlinlmr lauit Ai- J ill at oik ami ntliar I ami IMIIob llu.limaa a ( H y. Ullloo, tkvoiid Hour, Land Ulllo llullillng. E. WINQERT, Notarj Public and Real Estate Agent, ltuhn, Onlumltla) Co.. Or. ' Tnn nnil.r.lnni'il will atinnil to and cortiry to II ImiiliHwa iMilalnliiK In th tramli-rrliiK ol ri'al oatato, anil anaanf Inuiilrlin ri'lalluit In lofatlo'i anil ailvaiilawca, Jotn In th town, ul Ntr. ilolne or Kiniivii. will alo annul to J'enaloil I'lalnii, Ih Iiik anthurlii'd, to hj Ivgal ruoiignltlon limn Iho Uuparl iiiunt of Inn r nr. K. WINUKHT. MIHCKLLAN K0U8. D. J. SWITZER, St. Hilens, Oreoon, . -A'flKNT KllR ; STATE INSURANCE CO. (if .' Salem, Oregon. tlO TO- John A. Beck, Watchmaker and Jeweler, :, ' -FOR VOI'R- ' ELEGANT - JEWELRY. The Kind AMnrtimitit o( Watahoa, Clock! and Jowolry ol all tlvaiirltlou., OPPOIITE (HI If MONO, . ,POMLArlD, OW EVERDING & FARRELL Front Street, Portland. Oregon, UKALKKH IN WHEAT, OATS AND MILL FEED OF ALL KINDS, Hay, Shingles, Lime, Land Plaster. Also Flour, Bacon, AND A OKNKBAL ABHOIlTMENT OK Gro ce rie s? Which we Bell cheap for chhIi. Give iw a call. EVERDING, & FARRELL. Cla,tslca,xiie Line. KnTZZZZ- a SlTr STEAMER C. J. W. SHAVER, Master. I.eavi'8 Porllnnil from Aliler;Htrt'ft dwlc Momlay. via Wcfltpcirt. kaiiKikttwa ami IJulliliuiii-t, Wwlntwday ami Friilay for ClatHkanio, touohliiK at SuuviuH Idluml, 8t. HelfiiH, Columbia City, Kalitma, Nwr City, Kaininr, Cottar Laiuling, Mt. and all lntcrincilmtti iiointH, rctuniing 1 ucHility, ihtirstlay and Saturday HOW IS THE TIP - IN eorgetown. This dcrtirable property nljoinu Milton Station, on the Northern Pacific Kailroad, ONE HOUR'S RIDE FROM PORTLAND, Ami is only 1 J iniUtt from St. HoIpiih, the county-seat, on tho Columbia nvtfr. Millon crt-ck, a beautiful nmuntain stream, ruriB within 2K) yaiiln of thia proNrty, furniHhin an inexhaustible aupply of water fur all purjKmes. LOTS, 50x100 FEET, Ranging in price from $50 to $100, can bo Bocured from D. J. Switzer, St Helens, Oregon JOSEPH KELLOGG Joseph Kellogg FOR COWLITZ RIVER. f I a -a, leaves KELSO Monday, Wednesday and Fri- IM O I TllWGSI (lay at 5 a. m. LeaveB PORTLAND Tuesday, Thursday aud Saturday at 6 a. m. mCCDU tYETI I riri leaves KAlMlin at o a.m. UUaCrn IXUI-I-W-Si daily. Sunday excepted, arriv ing at Portland at 10:30 a. m. Returning, leaves PORTLAND at 2:30 p. m., arriving at 7 p. m. " SEEDS F.L.P0SS0N W. carry a th vur TrMI, Bulb, Ct.. B..Btrl' SupmiM. to v hi a tnai F. L. POSSON & 30N. S09 Hucooaaora to Miller Hra. DON'T BUY YOUR DRUGS ANWVHKKK BUT AT A BEQULAB- YOU WILL FIND THE Freshest, Purest and Best of Everything -AT CLATSKANIE '.' DRUG ' STORE. -DR. J a E. HALL, Proprietor. ff TRYA EFFE and get WORE POWER - . and use LESS WATER lr onr Kaw Illntita4 CtUfU. ot 1891. THE LEFFEL WATER WHEEL4 ENGINECO. SPRINGFIELD, 0 U.3.A. W. SHAVER. Collin, Bratlliuiv, Htclla, Oak Point TO SECURE fl ltOT - & CO.'S STEAPHS and Northwest 1 SON." TREES lull .tock nt r.t s.d.. F.rlllliar.. onior. Second Street. Portland, Or. CalBlogue Fr. THE - II WHEEL PACIFIC COAST. Vefa Ava a Spiritualist in California. rEACHERS' UNION IN NEVADA The Leaders of the Military Mob at Walla Walla Arrive Safely at Aleatraz Prison. Traveler eay there ii an active vol cano in the Cancarlea. A teachers' onion li belnz organized in Virginia City, Nev. The examination of Frank Heney (or the murder of Dr. Handy U going on at Tucson. The Indian scare In Idaho is not cans ing apprehension to army oflicials at Spokane. The Junnita Is the only sealer not re turned to Victoria, B. 0., and fears are expressed for her safety. The 'etui-annual session of the South ern California I'omological Society is Mug held at Pasadena. The work on the jetties at the month of the Columbia is progressing. Rock is carried four miles out to e and dumped. Thomas H. Horn, a Pinkerton detec tive, charged with robbing a faro bank at Keno last April, has been acquitted by a jury. The Los Angeles Consolidated Elec tric Railway has commenced running electric cars on the road to Vernon, a distance of about three miles. There are reports that the Stonewall mine in Han Diego county has struck a bonanra, and that an option has been taken on it in Chicago for $1,500,000. An investigation into the difficulty with the Clalispie Indians in Idaho shows it originated in greeny wnites trying to dispossess Indians of their lands and to frighten the Indians away threatened to bring in troops. The sixty-second semi-annual confer ence of tiie Clinrch of Jems Christ of litter Dav Saints convened in the Tab ernacle at' Salt Lake Sunday, over 10,000 of the faithful .being in attendance. There was a choir of 000 voices present. A printer who is in the state prison at Canon, Nev., for buying a bottle of whiskey for an Indian, has appealed to the typos of Virginia City to keep him supplied with tobacco, reading matter, etc., while he is holding down his pres ent "ait" The Alaska Packers' Association, com prising the controlling interests in the thirty-three salmon canneries of Alaska, has been formed at San Francisco. The association is controlled by the follow intr trustee: 8. M. Smith, Q. W.Hume, J N. Knowlps, Charles Hirth and E. B. Beckwith, with D. B. Bradford as Secre tary. The big suit of Alexander Badlam, Isanc Trumbo and other San Francisco stockholders ot the Bullion Beck Mining Company against the directors of that rompanv, In which plaintiffs sue to re cover 13"0,000 damages, was dismissed in Judge Lane's court at Salt Lake re cently on plaintiff's motion. The attor neys refufied to give any information as to the terms of settlement, but it is said the directors are entirely satisfied with the terms. The chief of police of San Francisco has written Chief Dietzch of Cincinnati a letter concerning the Vera Ava mys tery. He has seen her picture and says she is the woman who has worked the Western coast as a spiritualist and mas sage doctor, under the name of Madame Inabel. She left Los Angelea last June, at which time she was so destitute that a collection was raised for her bene fit among the spirituaJista of that city. The chief sayt she is a good talker, but somewhat emtio and incoherent at times. Corporal Clarence Arnold and Private Charles E. Trumpower of Troop D, Fourth cavalry, have been taken to the military prison on Alcatrax island. They were implicated in the killing ot A. J. Hunt, who ahot a member of the troop over a gambling table in Walla Walla. Corporal Arnold waa in charge of the carbines, and the 'charge against him was allowing the men to take the pnn,- and further, for going out to the jail and helping to "take Hunt oat with the intent to kill him. Trumpower was recognised as one of the jail-breakers. The sentence of Arnold was that he be dishonorably discharged and be confined at such: place as the reviewing atith rity may direct for eight years. Trumpower received the same sentence, except that his term waa for five years. William Q Johnson of the United States geological survey, who discovered a remarkable glacier in the Big Horn Mountains, Wyoming, is in San Fran cisco with Prof. Thompson, director of map-making in the Western States. Johnson is to have charge of some map work in California. He says that the region in the Big Horn into which he peneiraieu nau never iwiure mn yibiwhi by a scientific man. Very rarely is it visited at all, and then only by prospect ors and hunters, who go everywhere in the mountain country. Johnson related hiw he climbed to the top of a mount ain 13,500 feet high; which he calls Cloud Teak. On reaching the very highest pinnacle he saw a great glacier stretched out before him. The mass of ice waa not less than five miles long, and at the bottom extended out into a lake about three-fourths of a mile. The lake is a small but very picturesque sheet of wa ter. In- it the explorer saw icebergs, which had broken off the glacier. ..The glacier in every way resembled those ol the Alps, and waa moving constantly, but by infinitesimal degrees. The great quantity of ice in the lake, too. seemed to lower the temperature considerably, and at the time Johnson waa there- three weeks ag a portion of the body of water was covered with ice three or four inches thick.. Another mountain loomed up less than two mils from Cloud Peak, and from a distance it looked as If it would be impossible for any man to climb it without cutting a stairway in the rock. There were precipices thou sands of feet hiah. and even.on the gla cier there waa one place where a man Iftould stand and drop stones down into the water, a aistance oi i.uuu ieei. WASHINGTON NEWS. Meeting of 8uperlor Judges Will Be Held In Seattle to Formulate -' Uniform Rule. ' The pontofflces of Whatcom and New Whatcom will soon be consolidated. The harbor at South Bend has been relieved of 83,400 cubie yards of mud by the Bowers dredger. Yakima Indians are reported to be willing to take up farms and throw open the reservation Jo settlement. Horse thieves are again at work in the vicinity of Spokane. Five animals were atolen during the past week. The Tacoma smelting and refining works shipped 4,250 bars of bullion, val ued at $(i5,010, during September. Tacoma's wheat receipt now average 100 cars daily, or about 67,000 bushels; Seattle, 35 cars daily, or about 24,000 bushels. 1 There is a movement on foot to take the eastern portion of Clallam and Jef ferson counties, separated from, the Sound by the Olympics, and form a new county of them. An adjustment of the Ions of the Che ney Normal School, which was burned recently, has been made by the Sta'o Auditor and the companies, and (4,000 has been paid in by the latter. Silver Like, one mile east of Medical Lake, is becoming quite a fishing res)rt, the German carp put therein a few years ago having increased so fast that they now furnish excellent sport for fisher men. Articles of incorporation of the Puget Sound Vinegar and Pickle Company have been filed by John Braun, Cieorire Trick and F. W. Bergen as trustees. The cap ital is $10,000. The company proposes to manufacture yeast also. . Postmaster W. A. Rounds has received official notification that the South Bend poatoflice has been promoted to the third class. The postmaster's report for the quarter ended September 30 shows $823 82 as the amount of stamps can celed. The Northern Pacific land department is doing a big business in the Clarke county tract The fears that the com pany will lose the land have about sub sided, and much land is being sold. Those who settled on their land prior to 1882 get it for $2.00 an acre. The lumbermen who met at Tacoma the other day to prepare plans for secur ing Washington lumber for the State ex hibit building at the Columbian World's Fair have decided to meet at Seattle within thirty days for the purpose of perfecting an organization of the State Lumbermen 'a Association. The projected ship canal to connect Paget Sound with Lakes Union and Washington at Seattle, if carried out, will make Seattle one of the fineet har bors in the world, having a fresh water dock large enough to accommodate the commerce of anv port; but. aa the im provement would cost $3.000,0110, it is scarcely probable that it will be under taken for many years. A zinc ledge is the latest mineral dis covery made in the vicinity of Spokane. C. P. Carlin reports that he has discov ered a fourteen-foot ledge of that min eral, and recently took samples of the ore to Charles Fassett for assay.- Mr. Fassett has made a number of assays, and finds that the ore carries from 33 4o 40 per cent, of the metal. The location of the ledge is withheld. A writ of error to the Supreme Court of the United States has been allowed by Chief Justice Anders in the Se attle Valentine scrip case of Milton L. Baer vs. Moran Bros. Company. The transcript must be filed at Washington within sixty days. An attempt will be made to advance the caae on the ground of its great public importance, so that it may be heard next February. Hoy Moya, a Seattle Chinaman, has secured a permit from the Health De partment of Tacoma to exhume the bones of a half dozen Chinamen who were buried in thj south part of the city near Center street several years ago, be fore the Chinamen were driven from the city. Hoy Moya will work under the protection of United States Marshal Brown, and the bjnes exhumed will be sent to China.- . . - At Port Townsend James C. Baird has been dismissed from service as Custom Collector by order of the Treasury De partment. The order came, and Baird waa removed from the ollice several days ago, but the matter was kept secret. As sistant Secretary Spaulding and Special Agent Mnlkey have been recommended. Baird's removal is on account of the shooting at Wolley. Taylor Holden'a dismissal ha been approved. A California company has leased for a term of years a- coal mine near Kelso, about half a mile from the Cowlita river and three miles from the Columbia, in Cowlita county, and is preparing to de velop it. A tunnel has been run in 200 feet on the upper vein, and from this point a shaft has been sunk eighty feet, passing through five strata of coal. The first is seven feet in thickness, the sec ond two and one-half feet, the third four and one-half feet, -the fourth five and ene-half feet and the fifth seven and one half feet There is coal enough in the upper stratum to last for a generation or so. Edward Kimball, an agent of the company, has had a working test of the coal made at the power-house of the cable-road companv at Portland, which proved very" tatisfactoiy. It is a good quality of lignite, hard and clean, carry ing 45 per cent, of fixed carbon, which is a little better than the best Washington coal, : State Auditor Reed adheres to his re fusal to audit the University building accounts. He has fully decided not to issue any warrants for construction ex penses unless ordered to do so by the Supreme Court. He suggests that man damus proceedings be instituted to de termine whether the warrant may be legally issued in the absence ot specific appropriations out of which to pay them. Mr. Reed feels that there is at least a grave doubt as to the matter, and he is therefore unwilling to assume the great official and financial responsibility of approving the warrants while the ques tion is In dispute. If the Supreme Court should direct the Auditor to issue the warrants, he would, of course, do so, as the order of the court would relieve him of liabilities. If, however, the Supreme Court should hold Mr. Reed' objection to be a sound one, the decision would involve other important State affairs, and talk 1 already heard that an extra session of the Legislature will become a necessary expedient. EASTERN ITEMS. Electrocution 'Reported to Be a Success. NEGRO STRIKE EXTENDING. Minnesota's Supreme Court Dsolares Wheat Futures Are Illegal and Con traots Void. Real estate in Oklahoma is booming. The grip is making its appearance in New York again. Neither St. Paul nor Minneapolis baa a single horse-car line. There is a fine of $500 for practicing hypnotism in Cincinnati. The Arctic' Ice Machine Company at Cleveland, Ohio, has assigned. A $300,000 onion railway station has just been opened in Louisville. A syndicate has offered to buy the Washington monument for a shot tower. Pennsylvania farmers, irrespective of Alliance orders, are holding wheat for $1.50 a bushel. , Beacon Hill in Boston is to be ex plored by diamond drills in the interest of rapid transit. England and Germany have each ap plied for 200,000 square feet of space at the Columbian Fair. Strong resolutions were adopted at a public meeting at Windsor, Canada, fav oring commercial union with the United States. Cadets Griffith of Maryland and Kav anaugh of Nebraska at the Annapolis Academy are to be court-martialed for hazing. Thomas Edison, the electric wizard, has a new system of applying electricity to cars that doe away with the trolly of the slot. The Minnesota supreme court declares wheat futures are illezal and operators on the wrong aide can repudiate their contracts. The Odd Fellows in the United State can boast of a membership of nearly 700,000 and an anuual revenue of more than $7,00,),000. The official report on the executions by electricity at New York show them to have been a complete success, aa waa designed by the law. The Boston Herald has a dispatch say ing that ex-Speaker Reed will give up politics and enter a large business cor poration at New York.. It is probable that the scheme of transmitting mail in large cities by pneu matic tubes will be abandoned on ac count of the great expense. It is estimated that the Western rail roads have earned $250,000 the past year from the transportation of Mormon mis sionaries and 'heir proselytes. New York will soon have a score or more of practically free public baths, unless the plana of the trustees of the Baron de Hirach fund miscarry. The water is so low in the Erie canal hat ba's are grounded all along the line. The creeks and feeders have not been so low as now in some years. There will be more than an average vield of corn and buckwheat in New York. A large tobacco crop has nearly been secured in excellent condition. The excitement at Clearfield, Penn., over the suspension of the Clearfield ; and Uoutidale bank still continues, and the mobbing of the bank waa feared. The Mexican government is preparing to meet all revolutionary forces that cross the Rio Grand, and the prepara tion indicate that the government is much alarmed. All the Northwest railroad companies are calling attention to the critical situa tion in the North Dakota wheat fields, where the wheat is lying in stack for want of threshers. No rain worth mentioning baa fallen is Norwalk, Conn., since early in the spring. A a consequence her reservoir are empty, and arrangement are being made to tap the main of a neighboring town. Development in the Christ man bank failure at Paris, 111.,, make the situation more serious than at first supposed. It is stated that the lose will not be leas than $150,000, and the asset may not exceed $10,000. Typhoid fever in New York ia said to have been caused by foul drinking water brought in by the new and costly aque duct Sewers, slaughter-houses and other abomination are pouring into the source of supply. - x Secretary Tracy believe that a plant for the manufacture and assembling of steel forginga should be constructed on the Pacific coast by the government as soon aa possible, and Benicia seems to be the favored locality. The Cheyenne and Arapahoe reserva tions, to be opened for settlement, are four times larger than the lands recently opened in Oklahoma, and the rush for them, it is expected, will surpass any thing yet witnessed. , a . . , : In consequence of the success of the electrio road between St. Paul and Min neapolis the steam road between the two cities has been nnable to obtain its share of the traffic, and has discontinued from fifteen to twenty trains daily. . Chairman Coppel of the board of directors of the llenver & Rio Grande railroad ha issued a circular announ cing the appointment of E. J. Jeffery, formerly general manager of the Illinois Central, aa president and general man ager. ' The distillers at Peoria, UL, the great est whisky-producing city in the world, have decided to use theTakamine (Japan ese) process of making whisky. The new plan greatly reduces the cost of manufacture. A queer feature Is that a specie of bugs found on the rice is used instead of yeast for the fermenting process. ' , A stranger at Keosba, Wis., Pat Welsh, lectured the other day in Tholeen's Hall, taking for his subject " Why I Left the Roman Catholic Church." The crowd frequently interrupted the speaker, and threatened his life. When he left the hall he was followed by a mob of 150 or more. Stone and club were thrown at him, one of which struck him in the head. The entire police force were called out to protect him. OREGON MELANGE. Horrible Butchery of One Chinaman by Another Occurs at John Day The Wheat Fleet. The Sumpter Valley Railroad Com pany is now running passenger coaches regularly for the accommodation of its patrons. " The river bottom two or three mite from Pendleton is alive with, rattle snakes, of which there are more than have been seen for years. The Western Union Telegraph Com pany proposes to extend it line from Marnhfield to Florence, if the people of the Siuslaw Valley are willing to share the expense. The grain fleet from Europe is arriv ing at Portland. The warehouses are crowded with wheat, and the fleet of vessels coming to carry it away is larger than ever known at Portland. There is considerable talk of organiz ing an athletic club in Portland for the purpose of promoting friendly glove con tests with Urge pillow gloves as an in centive to greater proficiency in the manly art of self-defense. The Oregn State Insane Asylum ap pears to have been in an unfortunate condition before the present manage ment assumed control. The sleeping rooms were filled with vermin, and the sheets from the beds were used as towels. T. B. Trevett, William L. Ladd and Lewis Russell, who were judges of the recent regatta at Portland, have decided that the Willamette and Portland senior four-oared crews must row again. This race waa protested on the ground of foul. A number of Astoria' athletic yonng . men, who attended the regatta in Port land a few days ago, are contemplating organizing a boat club. There is a four mile straight-away course of smooth water on Young's river, from the old mill, that is unexcelled tor racing pur poses. . The alate quarry recently discovered in Josephine county, twelve miles from Grant' Pass, is the only one in the Northwest south of British Columbia, and there is only one in California, so it ia bound to be of value. The slate is of superior kind, ahead of nearly all (late fonnd in th- East. William A. Pinkerton, General West ern Superintendent of the Western di vision of Pinkerton's national detective agencv, has decided to establish a Pacific Northwest branch in Portland. He has rented a suite of roomsvin the Marquam building, and the branch office will lie opened at once with Charles Mapplestein in charge. The Oregon Board of Commerce has elected the following officers: President, T. F. Ouborne ; Secretary, Chariea Ran dolph; Treasurer, Henry Failing. Ten Vice-Presidents from various Boards of Trade throughout the State were elected. A com mittee of seven waa chosen to have full charge of raising funds for the World's Fair exhibit. ' At Portland "W. A. Buchanan as re ceiver of tke Portland smelting and re fining works has entered suits against A. I.. T).vennort and H. B. Oatinan on promissory notes given by each of them to the comrjanv September 1 1800. for $3,500 each. The complaint alleges that the notes were aue anu payaoie one year from their dates, and that no pvt of them has been paid, except the interest up to June I, ttftU. George W. Crowell and J. H. Tomhn- boh at Portland bought small fruit stands, saloons, etc., by giving notes se cured by a mortgage on some lot in au out-ot-the-way place that nail been iraud-. ulentlv conveved to them. Ttiis pur chase they would resell, the purchaser paying part cash ana assuming a mort gage on the property. In this way, it ia stated, they have secured several thou sand dollar. Thev are under arrest After a careful investigation the Ore gon Board of Railroad Commisaionera exonerates the Southern Pacific and it employes from all blame in the neci dentaf killing pf J. W. Hamilton at Cen tral Point b-'ptember 25, the tacts show ing tivat Hamilton deliberately threw himself on the track before the train. The same conclusion was reached in the killing of au unknown man at Harna burg August -19. Commencing October 19, the Board will make an oiiicinl semi annual tour of inspection of all railway line in the State. At Astoria O. W. Dunbar and George Hibbert, publishers of Town Talk, have been arrested on an indictment from the grand jury, charging them with criminal libel. The complaining witness waa Samuel Elmore, and the article which he deemed libel was published in 7Ww Talk over fourteen months ago. It re flects quite seriously on Mr. Elmore' character. The men gave bail for their appearance. The case is looked upon by the legal fraternity a a huge joke, and the two editors state that they have abundant proof to substantiate the arti cle in question. The mill of the Willamette Valley Milling Company at Salem will be ready . to begin operations in two or three weeks. The delay has been caused by the failure of the rolls to arrive. A rail road has been built down Front street to connect the mill with the Southern Pa cific lines. Thie will enable supplies of grain to be received and flour to be shipped to much better advantage. Not so much wheat is now brought into Sa lem by farmer from the surrounding countrv, as a great deal of land has been planted to fruit. With a railroad and the river, alongside, the mill will be able to obtain supplies from all parts of the Willamette Valley. It will use a large quantity, aa it capacity is 800 barrels par day. ' Word has just been received of a dar ing robbery which was perpetrated npon ' the National Bank of Enterprise, Wal lowa county. Cashier Holmes was alone in the bank, when a man entered and said: "How much money ha John Smitu of Portland on deposit here?" Upon Mr. Holmes saying that no such man had any money there, the visitor pulled out a pistol, and sticking it in hi face, aid : " You are a d -d liar.". By thi time two confederates had come up on horseback, and while one. sitting on his horse, with a pistol in each hand warned the people back, the other en tered the bank and pushed all the. money on the counter $3,500 into a sack. The three then escaped to the mountain in the direction of Cornnco-, pia. A posse was organized and sent in, pursuit; but, as the country Is upaw:! settled, their capture ia doubtful, lour thousand dollars more waa in the till' under the counter, and could have beett had aa well aa not, had the robber taken the time. , ; i!