"1 Circulation, 1,000.1 mr OREGON nn 784 Subscribers In Oolnmblit County. BHHT Advertising Medium In Columbia Co. JIIK Leading Paper of Columbia County. VOL. 9. ST. HELENS, OREGON, Fill DAY , FEBRUARY 26, 1892. TT7I MIS TJIE OHJCCK)H rMIST. ISSUED KVKHV FIIIWAT MOBNIJUO J. R. BEEGLE, Publisher. PIANOS and ORGANS. JIallutt & paviB and Now Scale Kimball Pianos and Kimball Or gans. I invito inspection, and defy cotnnetition. L.V.MOORE. 1 05 Washington St.. Portland. Or. Write tor catalogue and prices. Mention thin paper. The) County OfYlolal Paper. Siiliaerlpllun Hate.. Ontmpr nn year In advance , $1 JO llim ftimv an mouth 70 Minn h cony.. Advertising Hatee. I'rofpaatonal our.), one year (mia column oho year H m imiiiimi one year. m hr O'lurlcr cnluniu oan year.. oil him I tilth iiiih mini I h On hu h ilna moiiiiia,. , f Out lui li U luimlha H r ,m,.i iiiinua. lAitnniii imr line for flrat Inner- ton; IOantierllne lor eecb bKUtmt lu- Uaal eilvertlaemeut., 11.50 per Inch for flr.tl Inanition, anil 79 oetitap r lucu fur cai'U uua-1 qiifiit luaorllou. COLUMBIA COUNTY DIREUTO Julif,., Calk Hherlir. Tii'iiw Hii).t. til Huliuuil. Aaaeaaor........ Surveyor fJoinmuwtonvra,. County Ortleere. ,. I. J. Hwl ner.Ht. H Una K. K IJiilnk.Mt. Iluen. Wm. Hookr, Ml. Helena it. w. erne, hi. m-ieiia J. II. Watta. Sciitmoo. (1. f. Dimii, llalnlur A. II. l.lltlu, Mr. Hulena eixmctir, Vermmla (I. w. llarntM, Clatakanle. EVERDING & FARRELL Front Street, Portland. Oregon, DEALERS IN ! WHEAT, OATS AND MILL FEED OF ALL KINDS, Kay, Shingles, Lime, Land Plaster. Also Flour, Bacon, AND A GENERAL ASSORTMENT OF G i? o c eries, Which we sdl cheap for cash. Give us a call. EVERDING & FARRELL. PACIFIC COAST. Suits Against the Hun System. TIMBER SWINDLE AT TU SON Western Stock Raisers to Hold a Con vention at OgdVn A High Aluminum Assay. ; .. Monletr Notleea. Maminih. Ht. Helena IhIk,. No. W Regular oommuniraiioiii ant ami I Him H.taruay lu eacu mini i h at 7:Ht) r. at Maioule Hall. Vl.illug I mciniHT. in aiHKi aiainiing inviieu in aiu-nu. MtaiiNio. Kalult'r ImIud No. at Hutctl ma t IiiilD eaiar- ay ou or brfnra each full ninou at7:IW 1 r. H. at Ma-ollKt Hall, over nianrnarj'. alore. I Vl.lllng Dumber. In good tlaudlng Invited to eueuii. Cla, t s 1c a, n i e Line. atvaMaelleat Appointment,. rirat MnnJay Dear Inland, 11 A. M,; HI. Helen., 7.00 . N. H.wniid Sunder Near City, II a, tteuben, i:uir. . Tulrdrtunday-fllllloii.il a. M.; HoulKiu, i t. u. Fourth Snnday-Htnvlea I.laud (Olllalian), 11 a. Meaner, r. M. BURL1NAMK, Faator. STEAMER G. W. SHAVER. J. W. SHAVER, Master. The Malta. Down river (boat) oloae. at I D a. M. I!n river (tMial) pIoimm at I p. M. - The mill Itir Vernonle and IMtUhara leave. St. lleleiuTuiuday, Tliurtday aud Maturtlay at a a. m. Tiie mall for Maraliland, Clat'kanle and Mlat Leaves Portland from Alder-street dock Mondav. via Westnort. Skamokawa and tlathlaniet, Wednosday and Friday for Clatskariie, touching at Snuvies Inland, St. Helens, Columbia Citv. Kalama. Neer leave. Uuluu Monday, Weduetday and Friday at Citv. Hllilliei'. Cnflnr T.nndintr. Mt. finllin. Rrndlmrw Stolln Onlr Pnint ".7.... . . .t ... . ... ... .n, nil ...... K.. ..:... ..4,.:T 1 rm i o J railway norm viuie iv ., lor i t.n luvrimuuiaic nniii.0. lubuiiuiiu x uuouuy, xiiurnuuy tiliu oitLuruay, . M - - - Mill, fral Poclland at Traveler,' flulda Klvar Hnutea. Htam ii, W. HiiAvaa IavS, llvlen. for Poillaml at 11 a. M. Tiituday.Th'irwIay aud Hat- aroay. iavra nr. iiemn itir t;iaLKi day. v)'eilue.day and Krl.iay at no a. m. HrltKH Jiwkph K KU.OOO U'avv. Ht. llnlnni I for Porllaud dally ervitHunlay at M a. Ki'lurnlna, leavea I'lirtlaud at 'l.'M r. l'ROFEHStONAL. DR. H. B. CLIFF, Physician and Surgeon, Sa. Ilalena, Or. DR. J. E. HALL, Physician . and v Surgeon, Clat.Kanle, Catuinhla Co.. Or. ' T. A. ati'Baina. . A. 8. DMamaa. McBRIDE ft DRESSER. 5 Attorneys at . Law, , City, Or. Prompt atfntlna given to land office baktneaa ' A. B LITTLE, Surveyor and Civil Engineer, St. Helena, Or. Count Hiirv ynr. land aurreylng. town plat- M"l euu engiueeruig woia piompiiy utiur. W. T. Buaaar. , . J. W. Uaaraa. BURNEY & DRAPER, Attorneys v. at V Law, Oregon Cltr, Or. Twolve yean exnfrtem'a a. Il.'al.ter nf the I United Sta e. Ltud Ollli'e here remimuieudi hi In our .pei'lilty of allkimlaof liiiKliiea. lief ra uio ijiiiu umiw or ine v.eiinii, ami iiivniviug me pranttu In tua ueuerai i.auu uiilue. J. B. BROCKENBROUQH, ATTORNEY .' AT V LAW, Oregon City, Or. (f.tte Hpodnl Agent, of (Ivncral land Oftlfr.) 11 imtroa I, rr'-emnunn ami i unoer i.uu iy ml mi iini and ntliur Ijtnd Ollli Hnalneo. a Hiwi'ialiy. Ollliw, Souud Floor, Ind Ollloa Building. NOW IS THE TIME TO SECURE II LOT eprgetown. Tliis desirable property adjoins Milton Station, on the Northern Pacific . Kiulroad, ONE HOUR'S RIDE FROM PORTLAND. And is only miles from St. Helens, the county-seat, on the Columbia river. Milton creek, a lieautiful mountain stream, runs within 200 yanis of this projmrty, furnidhing an inexhaustible aimnlv fif watar for all purposes.. r LOTS, 50x1 OO "FEET, Ranging in price from $50 to $100, can be secured from D. J.Switzer.St. Helens, Oregon JOSEPH KEIiLOCO S CO.'S ; asyawr STEAflERS h trflt"i.iL r CHAS. W. JVIflYGE Notary Public AND INSURANCE AGENT, HAYOIR, OR. MISCELLANEOUS. ; D.iJ. SWITZER, GENERAL INSURANCE -AND- Real Estate Agent, ' St. Hrlenb, Oregon. - 00 TO- John A. Beck, Watchmaker and Jeweler, -FOR YOUll- ELECANT JEWELRY. The Flneat Aaanrtment of Watch ea, Clock, and Jewelry of all Deaoriptluna. JPfOSITI THI ESMOND," PORTLAND, Off Joseph Kellogg and Northwest FOR COWLITZ RIVER. lil taeJaLa m a Leaves KELSO Monday, Wednesday and Fri- IHVI lal I ff W7 L day at 5 A. M. Leaves PORTLAND Tuesday, inursaay anu oaiuruay at u A. m. v inCCDU IfCI I rrr leaves RAINIER at 5 a.m. w "eVeia. W"atVal daily, Sunday excepted, arriv ing at Portland at 10:30 a. m. Returning, leaves PORTLAND at 2:30 p. m., arriving at V p. m. DON'T BUY YOUR DRUGS ; ANYWHKRK BUT AT A REGULAR- : ' -YOU WILL FIND THE Freshest, Purest and Best of Everything AT THE . . . . CLATSKANIE .' DRUG '.STORE. DR. J. E. HALL, Proprietor. TRY A ylT II WHEEL and get MORE POWER and use less atck , , Write for oo New Illu.atra.ted Catalogue of 1891. THE LEFFEL WATER WHEEL& ENGINE CO. SPRINGFIELD, 0 U.S.A. A printer at Silver City, N. M , has iHi.en neir to t7o,ueu. Utah stock raiders have called for convention o' the cattlemen of the Went to lie held at V'len on Aprl 29 and 3 1. Wnrk of ron.trtifttion on the Oregon I acini! railroad in the direction of K mt- em o. egon is to begin as goon as spring opens. All cattle have been ordered off the While Mountain Indian reservation in Now Mexico, owing to dispute! with cowboys. The cowboys have bad no fiht with trie JNavajoH in tlie vicinity of Ujolmlge N. M., and nothing of a reriona charac ter is likely to occur between them. The Bradstrect mercantiln nvencv re ports twelve failures iu the Pacific Const S'ales and Territories dnriiijf the past week, compared with eleven the pre vious weea. The PostnfHee Department has mivie an order for two more card ra for the S'tletii post Hi . makiDtf five in all. The territory will boexiended to include all intiao ana corporate limits ol the city. Klix McClelland has been arrested at Ht'H'ftton and charged with robbing the M'ikeininne Hill and Valley Springs otave. lie was once a truBtel railroad employe, but drink hss caused bis down' fall. For some time past there has been i settlers' war brewing in the L Ule Te junga Canyon, ju-t north of Los Angeles, ana u iooks as u me uoroner would soon have work to do, as everybody la carry ing a Winchester. Advioeg from Alaska concerning the lite 01 Morn" urton ami a party ot ten miners ind cate that the men were mnr- dered by Indians or were lost in trying to cross the stormy waters from the sound to i ukitka. The TranC3ntinental Association, it is caul, nas agree i up jn a one and one-tilth rate certificate plan for the delegates to the National Methodist camp meeting to oe neia at uguen, utan, beginning May it auu running one weea. The Farmers' Loan and Trust Corn- piny of Boston has begun suit in the United States Circuit Court at Portland to foreclow three mortgages on the Ore gon ana Washington Territory railroad. commonly known as the Hunt system. The high assay of 8tf n;r cent, alumi num has been obtained from a stone ledge in the Sierra Madre, fifty miles from Los Angeles, whi, h hag furnished material for many of the best buildings in that citv. A com Dan v will develop the find. The Southern fac fie Riilroid Com pany has filed a number of complaints n the united States Circuit Court at .' Angeles ami net var.one persons in Tulam county to recover lands occupied iv them, aliened to be the Dronertv of the company. , H.irain V Carr. who nan 400.0(10 acres of laud and claim the inn i.iritv of the water in Kern countv. Cal.. have con sented t nermit a branch to be con structed from the Kern Is'and canal, which will irrigate about 50,100 acres of land mxt to BakergfHd that have here tofore been held as a desert. In September last at Bedford. Mont. IVter Woods, a railroad man. killed a man who was recognized as Z. A. Short of Butte. Woods was convicted, and is serving a life sentencH in the peniten tiary. The Public Administrator took charge of the estate of the deceased. Z. A Short has now appeared in Butte, proved that he is still alive and taken charge of his own estate. J. C. Reed of Astoria, President of the Oregon Fish Commission, is n'eased with the. law allowing none bnt citizens oi the United Hates to fish for salmon in the waters.of Oregon More citisen ship papers have been taken out at Aa-to-ia Ihe pist year than during any pre vious flv.4 years President Reed thinks there will be between 2,000 and 3,000 nsnermen on trie river this year. Governor Markham of California has favorably reported on a number of appli ed ions for pardons. They will be sub mitted to the Pi iaon Directors for final action at the next meeting of the board. Seneca Swnlm, who systematically se cured possession of Clara Belle McDon ald's jewelry, is making a strong effort to secure his release from San Quentiu, and the Governor is reported to have fa vorably cons dered his appeal for clem t ncy. Feeling is running high at San Diego against the Pacific Mail Company, and it is openly charged that Captain Friele of i he City of Sydney made four posi tively false statements as to the draught of his vessel, the depth of water on the bar at the moitih of ihe harbor, the depth of water in the channel and his delay there, with the object of aiding the company to avoid the clause in its contract forcing vessels to stop at San Diego. The sealing schooner Eliza Edwards has returned to Vancouver, B. C, from her third halibut fishing trip on the nortli coast with 40,000 pounds of splen did hali ut. Captain McKensie thinks lie hue found t e winter feeding grounds without a itou' t, and that the fisheries w'il grow to immense proport'ons. So fur the location of the halibut banks is a secret with 'he discoverers. The steamer wil go north again as soon as she dis charges her cargo. The Friends' Polytechnic Institute of O-eeon lias filed articles of incorporation at Salem with the County Clerk. The object of the corporation is to establish a Friends' (Quaker) pchool at Salem. It is the intention to have the school es tablished by June. The capital stock is $5,000, and the incorporators ere H. J. Mnthorn, W. J. Iladiey, J. W. Wins low and B. F. Hinfhaw, Shares of stock are $?5 each. The buildings will be located in Highland addition. PERSONAL MENTION. The Noble Old Roman Suffering From Rheumatism Wondeful Power of Pasteur's Eye. Judge Thurnian suffers so from rheu matism that be can hardly get abont. The Old Roman says bis legs are practi cally of no account except to ache all tue time. Rev. E. J. Hardy, author of " How to De Happy 'ihough Married," is now serving as an army chaplain in Plymouth, England. His wife is a first cousin of Oscar Wilde. Mrs. Catherine Standish. lineal de scendant of Lord Blandish, an Irish peer raisea to me peerage in iiiiu Dy the then Ctiglish K.ing, died recently at Birming bam, Conn., in abject poverty. Rudyard Kipling will be in this coun try in the spring, and reporters are now going into training to get at him. Con sidering that he will be well guarded by his wife, bis mother-in-law and biswife's sister, it looks as if the boys had a hard assignment to face. In a recent article on Cromwell the London Spectator says : " There ia no other name in the long and splendid history of our race, unless it be that of Lincoln, which can claim more retried for wisdom, for true patriotism, for duti fulneas in its highest sense." Pasteur has an eye of wonderful power. A visitor to his menagfrie in Paris, where he has gathered various kinds of animals for experimental uses, saw the chemist quell with a glance a fierce Spanish mastiff, which for bis ferocity bad been muzzled and chained. Ex-Governor Thomas T. Crittenden of Missouri waa recently in Washington. where his handsome face and white hair attracted much complimentary notice. The ex-Governor has done some famous deeds in his day, but none that brought him more celebrity than did the kiss he once gave Patti. The Princess Isaliella will be cleaned to know that the Brazilian government haa suspended the effort to confiscate tne property owned by her and other members of the late imperial family a counscation wnicn was admitted iv too cheese-paring in its scope to add to the dignity of a great Republic. Snureeon. like Grant, loved a rood cigar, and he smoked almost as many as the General did. The great preacher was a man oi curious onvsinue. He waa short and fat, or of " portly habit." as the doctors say euphemistically. In at tire he looked more like a country squire than a famous metropolitan minister. Rev. Robert Laird Collier once said that when he first saw Spurgeon preach be was grievously disappointed. The matter of the sermon seemed to him dull and at times flippant, and the man ner of ita delivery dreary when not un pleasantly aggressive. The great preach er's prayer especially seemed offensivelv familiar. Prince Victor Emmanuel, heir to the Italian crown, ia one of the handsomest and most accomplished men of his sta tion in life. Although nearly 30 years of age and widely traveled, he is yet un married. He is liberal in his political views, versed in several languages, ami- able and intellectual, and generally and justly imio.eo.. Mrs. Stowe baa been credited with having done much to bring the blood hound into disrepute in her "Uncle Tom's Cabin," but a reader who recently peruseu tnai remarranie dook to dis cover just what the author really did write abont those maligned plantation dogs says that there ia but one reference to bloodhounds in the entire story. Commodore Montgomery of Confeder ate naval fame, and later a popular cap tain of river steamers, says that the most interesting cargo iiis boat ever car ried was that which comprised the re mains of the men who fell at the mas sacre of the Little Big Horn. There were twenty-seven coffins, the dead in each wrapped in an army blanket, and most conspicuous among them all waa the body of ( niter. Carl Sclinrz was recently made an nonorary member oi a new German so- EASTERN ITEMS. Mexican Lottery Shares Advance. NATIONAL CAPITAL STATUE OF ROBERT BURNS, Trades and Labor Unions of Indian. apolis to Build an Expensive Labor Temple. Sioux Citv Is in serions trouble with ner saloons. Cincinnati is gaining a record for dark. oiooay ana mysterious crimes, Talton Hall, the boasted murderer of 100 men. will be hanged at Bristol Uenn., on March 14. The trades and labor unions of Indian apolis are arranging to build a large labor tempie to cost siuu,uuu, The fight will go on in Louisiana be cause the anti-lotteryitea have no confl uence in Morris sincerity. Kansas City showa a record of over ffi,000,OOJ expended in public improve ments in tne last jour years. White Cape have ordered Elisabeth. town (Ky.) whisky sellers to shut nn -i i- i .1 - Biiop or oe eioseu np oy lorce. Nevada. Mo., ia to have an "institute for the cure of the effects of whiskv. as well aa opium, morphine and the milder poisons. Mex'can lottery shares have advanced $6 to $ 0 a share in consequence of the judicial suppression of the Louisiana lottery. Robert Burns ia in a fairway to honored with a statue in Philadelphia. Scotchmen in that city have taken the scheme in hand. The supply of natural gas in Toledo is failing, and it haa been decided to resort to the use of pumps to force ihe gas from tue weita w tue city. Negro citizens of Nashville asked the Board of Public Works to allow their race to be represented on the police iorce. J.ney were reiusea, Alfred and Edmund Gosling have been arrested at New York and charged with swindling through forgeries the Coimo- polUan Magazine out of $4,000. The World's Fair Directors are wran gling aa to which body, the National or unicago Board, snail control the trans portation and installation of exhibits A hotel keeper on the upper shore of Lake Michigan proposes to transport hia big hotel over the lake on a raft to Chi cago in time to open in the spring of 1893. 8 A number of certificate holders of the unights and Ladies of Protection, a ten year endowment order of Boston, have applied for the appointment of a re ceiver. . . The next criminal New York will kill Dy electricity is Noah Richardson, a col. ored man, who murdered a New York policeman. He wili die in the week be ginning March 21. The ministers at Omaha are n aking c moral crusade against the pic.ures oi actresses as they appear on the bill boards. An effort will be made to have the police tear them down. One hundred and three alien contract laborers were deported from the port of New York during the month of January last, Deing tne largest number ever de ported in any month at any port. Mrs. Henrietta Snell. widow of the millionaire. A. J. Snell. who was mur dered by Tascott at Chicago, haa been threatened sith dynamite unless shede- uvers fi,000 to some anonymous person There is now talk in New York of formally opening the Broadway cable car system next Fourth of July. The contractor says the work will be com ne accepted tne compliment and ex pressed approval of the intention of the organization to assist in welcoming vis itors to the World's Fair from the Fa therland. But at a still later meeting, wnen tne socialist element waa out in full foice, the club reconsidered the res olution and withdrew the honor. EDUCATIONAL. School for Instructing Women In Prac tical Domestic Economy and : Cooking Etc. ciety, the Rhinelander, of Chicago, and , pleted by that time and the road ready iur uperatiun. . Henry H. Yard haa been indicted at Philadelphia by the United States grand jury on tne cnarge ot aiding uideon W, Marsh. President of the Keystone Na tional Bank, in embezzling the funds of mat institution. New York State factory oprratives are agitating for a law to prohibit bosses from fining employes. A law of this nature waa passed by the Massachusetts Legislature, but it waa tested and de clared unconstitutional. A venerable Indian chief, one of the last survivors of the I'ottawa tomies, died recently at Indian Grove, Ind., at the age of 10b'. This tribe, when the old chief was a youth, held sway from the Wabash to the shores oi Lake Michigan. The Secretary of the Treasury has ap pointed George H. Thobe of Covington, Ky., to be inspector nnder that depart ment for duty in connection with the immigration service. Thobe will be re membered aa the Union Labor candidate who contested John G. Carlisle's seat in the Forty-ninth Congress. ... At a big cattle sale in Kansas City re cently, said to be the largest in that city since the boom times' of 1882 and 1883, the Waddingham Bell Ranch Cattle Company of New Mexico sold 4,000 two-year-old steers at (15 a head and 3,000 three-year-old steers at $19 a head. The ranch company owns 700,000 acres of land. . . Chicago has iuet obtained decision from the courts affirming its right to open up streets across a railroad track running inside the city limits of the city. The decision will greatly aid the author ities in their contest with the grade- crossing evil, with which Chicago is more atiiicted probably than any city in the country. It is reported that it ia the intention of the government to establish at the Exposition grounds a complete postof fice, equal in capacity to that required by a city of 203,000 or more inhabitants, and to operate it, not only during the fair, bnt for several months previous to the opening and after the closing. A government postomce inspector is now on the grounds perfecting plans and es timates. It is believed that the number of exhibitors will be between 150,000 aud 170,000. To these mail will be de livered hourly. Maila sorted on the cars will be dropped at the grounds from in coming trains whenever possible. At a rough estimate this Exposition postomce will require about 300 employes and en tail an expense of about $260,000 on the part of the government. There are six schools ia Ireland where Irish is taught. There are students from fifteen foreign countries at Yale. In Chili there are 1.020 oublie schools. With 84,386 pupils. There are free public libraries in 248 of the 351 towns and cities of Massachusetts. Texas learning has been made the tar get for many a shaft, yet the State haa a school fund of $UiO,000,000. Sixty-three students are now said to be working their way through Yale Col lege and paying all their expenses. Of the $7,000,000 and more capital represented by Harvard Univeraity about $3,000,000 is invested in Boston real estate. The London School Board estimates that about 1 per cent, of the children of school age in that city 1b habitually Buf fering for want of food. Boston claims the honor of having had the first free public school (in 1035), with only a sufficient number of pupils to make a single class in the schools of today. - , 1 The girls in a few of the higher grades of the public schools of New York city are taught the physiology of feeding. They are told what kind of food ia need ed by the body, and the? have learned the wonderful processes by which bread la transmitted into blood and into thought. The University of Chicago will atart mil-fledged, with the best professors money can obtain, as the John Hopkins began its career. The Chicago institu tion determined to pay $7,000 a year to every professor it invited to a leading chair, and it is taking some of the best from some of the oldest seata of learn ing. It has successfully invaded Har vard, Yale, Cornell, Oxford and Frei burg. The West is something more than wild and woolly. Nothing In the Financial Condition of the United States Treasury to Cause Uneasiness. , A bill has been reported to the House appropriating K60,000 for the construc tion of a revenue cutter for use in San Francisco harbor. Representative Hermann has secured a clerical allowance for the postoflice at Lebanon in Linn county, Or., and an equally generous allowance for Burns in Harney county. Senator Squire haa obtained favorable action from the War Department recom mending the building of the county bridge to be erected across the Bwi nomish slough in Skagit county. Senator Allen's bill appropriating $400,000 for the purchase of a site and -the erection of a public building at Ta coma has passed the Senate without ob jection from the Democrats. What ita fate or that of the billa for buildings in Seattle and Spokane in the House will be is not known. But it ia doubtful if they pass by Objector Holman and his disciples. The Senate committee on military af fairs baa ordered an adverse report upon the bill providing for the location of s military post in Alaska, and for a sur vey of the Ynkon river valley, also a favorable report upon the bill to increase the pay of non-commissioned officers and provide fdr an examination of non commissioned officers for promotion to second lieutenants. When the Boise City public building; came np for consideration the proposi tion was to cut the appropriation in two and make it cost only $100,000. The bill, however, at the reooest of the Idaho Senators, was recommitted, and will probably bo amended. If the Idaho Senators would consent to have the building erected upon the ground al ready owned by the government, there would be little or no trouble in securing an appropriation. On the application of Senator Mitchell. the Superintendent of the money older system of the Postoflice Department has ordered that the postomce at Myrtle Creek, Douglas county, Or., be placed upon the list of additional money order offices next to be established, and the postmaster at that office will be author ized to commence the issue and payment of money orders and postal notes on or about April 1, the beginning of the next quarterly period ; provided he shall bave nied tne required bond. Senator Do! ph has introduced a bill which will, if it becomes a law, permit purchasers nnder the timber and stone act of March 3, 1879, relating to Wash ington, Oregon and California, to make proofs before any officer authorized to take proofs in homestead entriea. Under the present law the neome who have taken lands are compelled to go before the land office, as was previously the case nnder the homestead and pre emption laws, which were afterwards modified for the benefit of settlers. Senator Mitchell introduced a me morial from several towns in Oregon. asking for the passage of a bill appro priating money for the improvement oi the Willamette and lower Columbia rivers, borne doubt naa been expressed aa to whether the house committee uu rivers and harbors will appropriate the IZoU.uuo asked lor me deep water cnan nel from Portland to the sea. There baa been aome rather persistent oppo aition manifested to this proposed im provement from various sections of Oregon, and members of the committee nave received information indicating that it would not benefit very many people. The sub-committee, to whom the foreign committee referred several Rus sian Hebrew resolutions introduced in the House, has reached an agreement upon the following resolutions to be re ported: Kesolved, That the American people, through their Senators and rep Resentatives in Congress assembled, do hereby express sympathy for Russian Hebrews and their depressed condition and .hope that the Russian government, however, with which the united States always has been on terms of amity and good will, will mitigate as far as pos sible the decrees lately issued respect ing them, and the President is request ed to use his good offices to induce the government of Russia to mitigate said , decrees. The Secretary of the Treasury haa written a letter to the Speaker of the House in response to the Honae resolu tion calling on him for information whether at any time since the per cent, bonds became due. there had been sufficient funds in the treasury to pay the same, and if so, by what authority ne assumed to continue any such bonds at 2 per cent, interest, and why the same waa not paid at the time said bond8 were due. The S.-cretary Bays the i per cents are redeemable at the pleasure of the United Stales and three months' notice to the holders. He ahowa there were sufficient binds in the treasury to pay the outstanding bonds, but eava it was deemed prudent and profitable to the government to con tinue a portion, and the authority un der which the bonds were permitted to continue ia contained in the act which authorized their issue. The Secretary calls attention to the fact that the Forty seventh Congress opposed the contin uance of the 5 and 6 per cent, bonds at 8 per cent, " ' , The telegram from San Francieco to the effect that the claims fordamagee against Chili by the sailors on the cruiser -Baltimore, injured in the Valparaiso riot of October 16, would amount to $135,000 in addition to the clause made in behalf of the relatives of Rigio and Turnbull, the eailora who were killed in the affray, has led to aome misappre hension respecting the method of pre aenting such claims for collection. Some days ago in these dispatches the modus operandi of presenting and collecting rr, n a t-w tntat-nntinnn.1 olAim. Vflll Set forth at some length. As to these par ticular claims, an official of the State Department said: "The faoi the dead and injured r their representatives have presented, or will present, claims , to this department against Chili, will . not inflnence the action of the depart ment. Whether or not any such clarms were filed, we should see that the mat ter of reparation to the sufferers by the assault was attended to in the settle mentof the affair. The matter will be taken up in due time, and if we cannot agree upon the amount to be ptid, it ill be fixed by arbitration, bnt nettl ing will be done for some time yet. We shall wait for Chili to fulfill her promises.