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About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (April 24, 1896)
MIS -I VOL. 13. ST. HELENS, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1896. NO. 18. nn OREGON TELEGRAPHIC RESUME! Event of the Day In a Con denied Form. Or INTEREST TO ALL HEADERS Items of Important), From Domestic Mi Foreign agrees Oreaaa of th, Ul.patobee, The president has nominated Leo Herghola, of New York, at consul at Eraeroum, Armenia. Rich placer grounds have been found In Washoe slley, noar Carion, Nev., and there ii considerable exoltement In oonaaquenoe. Charles H, Voorheei, formerly a lay judge or Bergen oounty, N. J., and an ex-member of oougress, oommitted aulolde in New York. Vive meu were fatally injured by an explosion of fire damp during a Are in the Ked Aid vein of the Woodward mine in Wilkeskbarre, Pa. John Jones, colored, aged IS, who oommitted an aaaault upon a 11-year old white girl near Mormon Spring., Miss., waa banged by a mob. Jones oonfoMod bla crime. A oable montage from Cape Town, South Afrioa, report the killing of three engineera near Buluwayo. The namee of two of the vlotlms are given ai Hammond and Palmer. An explosion ooonrred in the oolliery at Wellington, & C Eight miner. are known to bare been killed, and It Ii believed 18 peraoni will lote their Uvea through the dlaaater. On April 8 another powder explosion ooonrred at Juneau, Alanka, thia time in tho new tunnel of the Treadwell Company, between the Treadwell and . Mexican miuea. - Some of the men in' Jored are expected to die. A dispatch from Buluwayn, Booth Afrloa, says, Tbe whole country it in the handa of rebellloua native, and they are moving in great foroe north ward. It will require a large foroe of troops to dislodge them. Joseph Selamel waa put to death In the state prison at Clinton, N. Y., by eleotriotty. lie murdered his sweet heart, Therein Kammora, by outting her throat with a rasor, August 80, 1808. Tbe oause was jealousy. Tbe Madrid correspondent of tbe London Standard aayat The new chamber just elected will oertainly support the government in resisting American Interference in Caba, and it will also be a very protectionist body. Tbe Paria correspondent of the Lon don Times says be learns that at Franoe'a invitation, Russia now di rects the negotiations with England on tbe subjeot of the Nile expedition, growing out of the objections of Russia and Franoe. A broken rail on the New York, Pennsylvania & Ohio road wreaked the third section of freight train No. 88, near Meadville, Pa. Two men were killed and three others seriously Injured. The dead are: Patrick Kerr, engineer; Bert Rowley, brake man. r Emperor Francis Joseph has bestowed the order of tbe Golden Fleeoe upon the Gorman imperial ohanoellor, Prinoe Von Hohenlobe. Emperor William has decorated Count Goluobowski, the Austrian minister of foreign affairs, with tbe order of the Black Eagle. It haa been discovered that some of the Matabelos who are employed at servants in Buluwayo have been aot- ing as spies and oonveylng information of the movements of the expeditions to their friends in outlying dlstrlots. One of these traitoroua natives has beon shot While brooding over the idea that his family would suffer from want, John Lehman of Chicago shot and killed his three children. After com mitting thia terrible deed, Lehman attempted to end bis own life by hang ing, but, failing in thia, he turned the revolver upon himself, and sent bul let through bla heart, killing himself instantly. One of the main buildings of the Chicago Fireworks Company, at Gross Point, fourteen miles north of Chicago, blew up, resulting in the death of Nioholaa Boree and Annie Boree. The explosion is supposed to have been caused by powder being ignited by concussion in the machinery uaed In making fireworks. Tbe house committee on ways and means has deolded to report favorably the bill introduced by a W. Stone, to repeal that section of the Wilson aot which gives free alcohol for use in tbe arts and manufactures. The Internal revenue offloiali acknowledge their inability to oarry ont the provisions of the law. Great frauds are said to be possible undor the law, and many large olainia have been piled up against the government Meager reports from the lower Brule agonoy in South Dakota, state that Handsome Elk, an Indian belonging to that agonoy, shot two Indian polioe who were trying to arrest him. In dian Commissioner Browning and Unitod States Marshal Peemlller have been notified, and deputy marshals have gone to the soeneof the difficulty. More trouble is feared. Chairman Aldaoe Walker, of the Atoblson, in an interview stated that Judge Collier's decree in the foreclos ure oase of the United States Trust Company against the Atlaotio' & Pa olflo railroad, waa a preliminary step toward the foreclosure sale of the line. The deoree covers the property in New Mexico, but no deoree In Ariaona has yt been given. Similar proceedings will be taken in other sections of the company's territory, The senate ooraimttee on publlo buildings and grounds has authorized favorable reporta on the amendments to the snndry-olvll bill, increasing the limit for cost for publlo buildings at Cheyenne, Wyo., from $160,000 to 1260,000, and at Boise City, Idaho, from 1160,000 to $300,000, and at Helena, Mont, from $160,000 to $800, 000. An appropriation of $100,000 was made available in eaoh oase. In the suit of the London Times against the Central News, whlob fur nished dispatohoa to a news agency in the United States, demanding the re turn of sums of money which bad been paid by the Times to tbe Central News for telegrams alleged to have been fabricated or unduly expanded, the News agency submitted to a verdict imposing upon it nominal damages and costs, the Times withdrawing its obarges of fraud. Joseph D. Eigglns, one of the oldest pioneers of Oregon, died in Astoria. He was 78 years of age, having been born in Fulton oounty, 111., in 1888. A New York Herald special from Cairo, Egypt, says: A telegram to the war department states that Colonel Lloyd defeated the dervishes near Ban kin. A poatoffloe has been established at Chase, in Yamhill county, Or. Wil liam O. Chase is tbe postmaster and the office is a sp.oisl one from MoMinn vllle. The young ladies' olub of the uni versity of Washington defeated tbe young ladies of the Ellensburg normal school at basket-ball by a soore of aix points to three. a Madrid dlspsotn saya: it is an nounoed that tbe royal speech to be de livered at the opening of the new oortes will promise political and adminlstr tlve reforms for Cuba and Porto Rioo. Jndge B. F. Dennison, ex ohtef jo. tloe of tbe supreme court of Washing' ton territory, and one of the ableat Jar ists of tbe state, died In Olympla, aged 79. He waa a native of Vermont and one of the Argonauts of California. From Washington, D. C, oomea the news that the postoflloe at Exoelaior, Pierce oounty, Wash., will be dlsoon tinned Aplrl 80, next It is to be con solids ted on May 1 with the poatoffloe at Taooma, to whlob all mail should be sent Sir Hercules Robinson, governor of Cape Colony, telegraphs to tbe English governent that there is no sign that Buluwayo ia endangered, and that pre cautions are being taken to keep the road to Buluwayo open in order to sup piy it wito lood. The first sleeping oar porter ia dead. He waa John D. Mitchell, and be was with tbe Pullman company over thirty years, tie began his servioe as porter on tbe "Pioneer," the first sleeping oar ever built, tbe rolling foundation of its Inventor's vast wealth. A dispatch to tbe Volks Zeitung, Cologne, dated from Shanghai, declares that it is true, as baa been before re ported, that Li Hung Chang, who la on bla way to Mosoow to be present at the ooronation of the csar, bears with him a secret Russo-Cbinese treaty. The arrest of the Baptist missionary, Blsohp Diaa, in Havana, waa due to the declarations by some prisoners who were captured at Vlvora, near that plaoe, and to the documents which were found in their possession. His oase will be summarily pushed. A dlspatoh from Rome to tbe Pall Mall Gasette, London, aaya the papal nuncio at Madrid has been instructed to propose the mediation of the pope to bring about a settlement of the trouble in Cuba or to urge upon Spain the ao oeptanoe of President Cleveland's re ported offer of mediation. Jamea E. Allsop, alias A. A. Austin, who was arrested in Seattle by Detec tive John Courtney, of Minneapolis, on the oharge of murdering Lena Olsen on tbe shore of Lake Buperlor, near Dulnth, in order to get possession of $460, oommitted suioide in the oity jail at Seattle, by hanging himself with a pleoe of blanket Undertakers of Chioago are interested in the propositions of an Indiana com pany to manufacture glasa coffins on a large soale. In an interview George F. Kimball, the plate-glass manufacturer, stated that the idea ia entirely practic able, and thatoofflna can be constructed in the cheaper grades for not more than 60 oenta running foot A dlspatoh from Havana aays: Three prisoners of war, Gregorie Birgea, Es taban Hernandei and Joae Paoallao, were executed at Cabana fortress. They belonged to the Insurgent band com manded by Dr. Bruno Zayaa, and were captured by the soldiers of Aarapilea' battalion during the attaok on Mana gua. A number of the newspapers of Mad rid and elsewhere demand that tbe elections in Cuba be annulled and ex premier Sagasti intends to ask the chamber of deputies to annul the Cuban elections on the ground that tbe elec tors, owing to the state of rebellion prevailing, were not tree to vote as they pleased. The steamer Gaelio brings news that Admiral McNear, in oommand of the Asiatld squadron, is contemplating a naval demonstration in Chinese waters. The fleet, consisting of the Detroit, Olympla, Charleston and Boston, will rendesvous at Shanghai during the summer, and will aail north along the ooasts of China and4Jnpan. Deputy United States Marshal Sam The Omaha Kxpoaitioa. Vinson and Secret Officer Harris made Washington, April 88. Tbe house a raid on a den of oonterfeiters near the oommittee on ways and means today Union Paolfio depot, Spokane, Wash. , 1 decided to report favorably the senate and captured two. A oomplete plant bill to give $200,000 for a government for the making of half-dollar was t building and exhibit at the trans Mis found, with about thirty ot . bogus ilssippi and international exposition in oolns. Tbey are splendid imitations, j Omaha in 1898. An amendment was and have been in oiroulatlon freely In added providing that the exposition saloons and sporting resort. 'authorities must raise an equal sum. TREACHERY IS FEARED Buluwayo Is Threatened Horde ot Matabeles. by WHOLESALE MASSACRE IMMINENT The Uo.tll. Matlvas Are Catharine by Thouaanda About th. Town , Feeling of ApprehenaJon. Buluwayo, April 80. A feeling of apprehension as to what the next step of tbe revolting Matabeles will be per meates all oiroles here. Information ooming from the. country around makes it certain that the na tires are prepar ing an offensive movement against the place. The number of Matabeles re ported gathering at points near by is sufficient to appal the hearts of even experlenoed fighters. There ia a Jread in the minds of many that the plaoe is in danger of being overwhelmed by a rusn of bordes of Matabeles, and tbe inhabitants put to a wholesale mas sacre. The fear of treaobery ia added to thr apprehension of overwhelming num bers. Many indioationa point to a con nivanoe witn tbe war parties of sop- posed friendly natives. There are many of the latter in the town itself, and no white man feela sure how far be oan trust his dusky associates or ser vante. On Wednesday evening, three Dutch soouts were sent out from here to se oure some definite and aoourate info mation of the position and movements of tbe natives. What they have found baa not served to relieve the anxiety and suspense. Tbey report that tbe Matabeles are gathered like ante in a bill on tbe Umgusa river, only six miles north of here. That some treach erous plot 1 being oonoooted ia indi cated by thefaot that native women are secreting European clothes. The native men on the Veldt wear the na tive costume, while most of those in Buluwayo wear clothes appro ohing tbe European fashion. By attiring the native warriors in European garments, the Matabeles hope they will be enabled to enter the town unquestioned. A Matabele "boy" has. also been caught stealing the badges belonging to tbe Rhodesia horse, and it la be lieved that it waa intended to use thea for the purpose ot disguise to further some treacherous project for taking Buluwayo at a disadvantage and kill ing tbe inhabitants. It is plainly no tloeable that tbe natives in the town are becoming aa thick a bees. In or dinary times, the nativea oome and go in town without attracting attention. Tbe native population ia at all times a shifting one, and a, large number of the men that make it up are not known individually to the white people of tbe town or to tbe authorities. The faot that the natives in the town live apart from the whites add to the difflonlty of identifying those who belong in tbe town. But there is little more confi dence felt in the native who belong in the town than in the hostile men who it is believed, are surreptitiously being introduced to aid from within when an attack shall be made from without It looks now as though that might occur at any time. Tbe roads by whioh oommunioation is had with the south, both the one to Tuli and the one to Mafeking, are felt to be in peril There are undoubtedly, large numbers ot hostile natives be tween Buluwayo and the settlements to the south, some of tbem in open re volt The situation is felt to be serious and threatening. letl-Ureaker Left HI. Card. Prioe, Utah. April SO. S. H. Brown- lee, who has been oonfined in tbe ooun ty jail since March 88 lata, on a six months' sentence for oriminal libel, broke jail last night and is supposed to nave taken midnight train eaat. When tbe deputy jailer, George Slmpleman, went to the jail this morning to feed Brownlee, he was confronted with a note pinned to the empty cage inform ing him that Brownlee had taken tbe eastbound train, and that if it was de sired that be should return to please wire Him at Leadvllle, and be would take the first train baok. The note was signed by Brownlee, who had by that time over eight hours Start, and was in all likelihood in Colorado. . The Laeaborn Warder Case. Leavenworth, Kan., April 80. The hearing ot the oase of Charlea and Annie Lamborn and Charles Davenport, accused of the brutal murder of John Lamborn, at Fall Leaf, February 17, was begun here at 8 o'olook this afternoon. Detective Charles Schaeffer, of Kansaa City, who worked up the evidenoe against the three aocused and oansed their arrest, failed to appear. The oounty attorney had relied on Sobaeffer to produoe the evidenoe to oonvlot Two day will be required to oonolnde the trial. The prisoners and their attorneys are confident of aoqultal. ' Band.ome Bla Haslets Arrest. Chamberlain, S. D., April SO. Handsome Elk, a Lower Brule Indian, who shot two Indian polioe, one of them fatally, ha taken refuge in a bouse whioh haa been transfonnd infv temporary fortress. He is berliy armed and will resist arrest He is a very bad Indian, and the Indian polioe force may be orderei to assist the deputy marshal to make the arrest BULUWAYO RELIEVED. Imperial Troops Fu.blna Forward From Mafeking. Loudon, April 28. The South Afri can situation still absorbs a large share of public attention, and apprehensions for the safety of the English in Mata beleland, and particularly in Bulu wayo, are not yet abated. There is an appreciable sense of relief oyer the news that a supply train from Mafe king ba got through to Buluwayo, and that the reinforcements of imperial troops from Mafeking are being rapid ly pushed forward for the relief of the plaoe, which is, to all puproses, be leaguered, so closely invested by the natives that numerous skirmishes are ooourring almost in the outskirts of the town. Friends of the people in Buluwayo (and thia includes, so far as sentiment ia oonoerned, all England) are relieved to hear that no extensive offensive movement is planned at pres ent against the nativea. There have been grave fears that the white would be rash and invite disaster. Tbe reply of President Kruger to tbe Invitation of Colonial Secretary Cham berlain to visit England and discuss with bim what remediea oan be ap plied to the grievances of the Uitland era in the Transvaal is the newest faotor in tbe South African problem, Tbe reply is not aooorded a very kindly reception by the English public its editoiral commenting upon Presi dent Krugera' reply to Colonial 8ecre tary Chamberlain, tbe Times says: "If President Kruger and his sup porters willfully close their eyes to obvious faoia and obdurately refuse to redress tbe grievances of tbe Uitlanders oircumstanoea may occur that will foroe tbem to rely upon tbe primary wgbt of all communities to save them selves from imminent pei-iL" Tbe Time tomorrow will publish a dispatch from Pretoria, whioh says: "President Kroger s reply to Mr. Chamberlain ia friendly and concilia tory, but it fails to advance the nego tiation. It repeats that tbe president canot ask the volksraad to oonsent to hi visit to England until a basi for the disouss'.on is settled." TORNADO IN OHIO. Two Parsons RIHad and Many Others Injured. Fremont, O., April 83 A tornado accompanied by a heavy rainfall swept over tne northwestern part of Ban dusky oounty, killing two persons, in juring a number of others and doing great damage to buildings and other property. Tbe tornado oame from the south west with great fury, and every tree and building in its path was swept away. After smashing a road bridge ana mowing a Dig tree aoross a Wheel ing & Lake Erie freight train, whioh crashed the oaboose and oame near kill ing a number of trainmen, the wind began to play havoc with farm build ings. Tbe barns of Jaoob Engler, J. E. Hoflinger, Upton Burger and Anthony Swift first went down by it Then the house of James Greene waa de stroyed. Greene's aged father, f Wil liam L. Greene, waa killed outright Hi wife waa fatally hurt, and the baby carried aoross tbe road in its cradle. The child escaped uninjured. Next tne barn of Amos Harriok, in which Harriok and John Low were shearing sheep, waa oraabed. Low waa blown arooss a field against a tree, being instantly killed. Other build ings destroyed were tbe barns of Al Fairohild, William Hanson. Perry Parish, George Waggoner and Charles Tuoker. Tucker's child waa badly hurt At Booktown, a hamlet near here. nearly all tbe buildings were destroy ed, out were was no loss of life. , A Riot In Kanaaa. Topeka, Kan., April 83. Governor Morrill ha received a dispatch asking mat troops De sent to sst Jobn, staf- ford oounty, to quell a riot. Tbe dis patch was signed by the sheriff and oounty attorney. Tbe cause of the disturbance waa not stated. Tbe gov ernor ordered Adjutant-General Fox to proceed to St John at once, taking witn mm tne oompany of militia at Newton. Kansas City, April 83. A dlspatoh to tne Time from Hutchinson, Kan sas, says the reported riot at St. John was provoked by follower of Bond Brother' oirous, who after swindling several people, resisted the efforts that were made to recover tbe money that tbey bad taken. In the scrimmage that ensued, the entire oirous orowd wa pitted against tbe oitiaen and offtoer. The trouble soon took on an aspect so serious that the sheriff tele graphed Governor Morrill for assist ance to put down the riot Five men are reported to have been badly hurt. The details of the trouble cannot be learned. Tha Arid Land Aot, Washington, April 33 The oom mittee on irrigation of arid landa today authorised a favorable report on a bill amendatory of the Carey aot The amendment provirta that where the greater part of a legal subdivision is desert in oh:aoter, the whole shall be oonsulcrc i. In order to be entilted to desert lands, the states and terri tories must oause to be irrigated and occupied not less than 80 acres in eaoh 160 Snob, tracts must be cultivated by aotual settlers within 10 year from the date of segregation. Agricultural Ratine Bill. London, April 33. Henry Chaplin, president of tbe local government board, today introduced in the house of commons the agricultural rating bill, by whioh, after Maroh 81, 1897, agricultural land will be assessed for one-half of it present ratable value. This mean an annual loaa in revenue of 1,660,000. GROWING NORTHWEST Progress and Doings in the Pacific States. CONDENSED BUDGET OF NEWS Fron All tha CI tie. and Towns of tho Feel He State, and Territorial Washington. The receipts of the Goldendale post offloe for the year ending March 81, were $1,966.64. Seattle's health offloer reports the publlo schools of tbe town in a bad sanitary oondition. J. H. Horan, of Wenatohee, has or dered a creamery plant, whioh will be in operation thi spring. Two guns and three revolvers were stolen by burglars from the hardware store of Frank MoKay in Port Town send. 8poksne jobber are talking of rais ing $10,000 to carry up a railway tariff fight to the interstate commerce commission. The regular annual meeting ot the Washington State Press Association will beheld in North Yakima this year on July 9 and 10. Two Paulist fathers from San Fran oisoo have been holding mission serv ioes at the Chnroh of tbe Assumption at New Whatcom. Hoquiam postoflloe reoeipta for the fiscal year ending Maroh 80, 1896, were $3,496.68. This ia sufficient to in crease the salary to $1,800. Raohael Duncan, a 6-year-old child. drowned in the tide flats in Seattle, while playing at hide and aeek with a number of oompaniona. Her body was reoovered. The correct thing in Colfax church oiroles is to present the pastor with a new bioyole. This is oertainly a step in advanoe of the old-fashioned dona tion party. , A Palonse correspondent of the Spokesman-Review estimates that 80 per oent of the wheat in that vioinity was destroyed by tbe cold weather dur ing March. Tbe oounty commissioners of Skagit oounty have decided to appropriate $6,000 for tbe Blanchard road, connect ing tbe Bellingham bay oities with the 8amish oonntry. William Hume, the veteran cannery- man and bunter, of Eagle Cliff, in Wahkiakum oonnty.killed a 400-pound blaok bear last week, in the woods baok of the cannery. Some uneasiness is felt oonoerning Mr. Cradlebaugh and the party who went with him on a prospecting tour into the Cascades north of Mount Adama a month ago. George L Cook, a man apparently 66 or 70 year of age, wa found dead iu a tent in the woods near Taooma. Heart disease is believed to have been tne oause ot bis deatn. At 18 o'olook at night a prisoner named Webb, who waa night engineer in the electric light plant at the pent tentiary at Walla Walla, scaled the wall and made his escape. The 18th annual association of Con gregational ohurohea and ministers of Eastern Washington and Northern Idaho has ended at Walla Walla. The next meeting will be held at Medical Lake. The Waitsbnrg fire department haa ordered a raoing cart for the tourna ment of the Eastern Oregon and Washington Firemen's Association, to be held in Pendleton. It ia ball-bear ing and cushion-tired. - Engineer E. G. Fanning, of the Walla Walla paid fire department. has perfected a most useful invention for a system ot fire alarm, and has made a proposition to tbe oity council for the adoption of the system. It has peculiar merit of its own, and ia high' ly spoken of. It is estimated that there are be tween 76,000 and 100,0000 bushels of wheat in the warehouses at Waitsbnrg yet unsold, the owner of which feel themselves able to hold for better prioes. The prioe now is 43 cents, which is about 10 oenta higher than it waa a year ago. The financial exhibit of the auditor of Pierce oounty shows that the oounty haa a bonded indebtedness of $698,000; general fund warrant indebtedness of $196,838.10; road diatriot and other indebtedness, $338 46; total, $890, 046.66. There is now cash in the general fund subject to obeok, $4,- 815.88. Robert Soott haa made a olose ex amination of fruit trees with a view ascertaining if the buda have been injured by the late freeee, aays the Yakima Times. He aays that they are praotioally uninjured. . Here and there. few apricot blossoms are killed, but the trees vail have all the fruit they should bear, and be better tor the thin ning out The certificate of tbe treasurer of Walla Walla oounty shows a total on hand of $3,878.66. Under the opera tions of the "barefoot schoolboy" law, $3,100 of the money oolleoted for school purposes must be first turned in to the state treasury and reapportioned. it la not available until the next state apportionment, while in the meantime many diatriot in tbe oounty are pay ing interest on their warrants at the rate ot 8 per oent and teaoher are oompelled in many instance to dis count their salary warrants. There are 4,398 children ot school age in the oounty. - Oregon. " " The aotion of the oounty court of Waaoe ia offering bounties tor the scalps of coyote is causing many of these pests to be killed. A lodge of Elk wa formed In Salem last week. A newspaper is promised for Lan- gnis, Curry oounty. Albany' gilded youth still do their base ball playing indoors. Columbia oounty : owe $49,710 un paid taxes, running as far back as 1887. A steam ferry 1 to be established across Young' river from Daggett' Point to Case' Astoria. There is an exodn ot Coos bay coal miners. A good many are going to tbe Nevada county, Cal., quarts mines. Joseph J. Miller, of Montana, is in Sherman oounty buying .8-year-old steers. He is paying $10 for good yearlings and $15 for good 8-year-olds. The semi-annual statement of the finanoial oondition of Linn oounty on April 1 shows resources amounting to $138,898.60, and liabilities of $44, 090.74. Mr. Charles N. Crittenden, the mil lionaire evangelist and founder of the Florence Crittenden houses for fallen women, arrived in Baker City and has begun a series of meetings. J. Durkheimer, of Burns, haa started 80,000 head of sheep from Harney county to the shearing grounds near Huntington. The wool and sheep will be shipped to market from Huntington. County Clerk Jacobs, of Jackson oounty, claims to have found a short age in the account of ex-Treasurer Moore of $106 43. Tbe olerk has been instructed to notify Moore to reim burse tbe oounty. ' Tbe Indians on the Umatilla reserv ation held a wake over Patawa and Big Dick for three days, and had a big feast The horses and personal effects of the deoeased have wen divided up according to tribal customs. J. Creswell, a young son of Press Creswell, of Heppner, recently swal lowed, in a joking way, a lot of cam phor, and not long after went into vio lent oonvulsions. It required the serv ices of a physician to pull him through alive. It ia reported that 15 inches of snow fell the last week over in the Lone Rook country, saya the Heppner Ga zette. Many sheepmen were in the midst of lambing and the oold snap has proven very disastrous to thi industry in that section. Tbe Goldendale Telephone Company baa submitted, through The Dalles Commercial Club, a proposition to the people of The Dalles to build a tele phone line from Goldendale to The Dalles, to ba connected with the Con-don-Senfert system. Last week- Sheriff Patterson, of Jaokson, levied an attachment on the property owned by E G. Salstrom, of Medford, to satisfy a judgment for $5,000, held by the estate of S..D. Gar rison, which waa rendered by the Washington courts. There is a milch cow in Tbe Dalles that has a wooden leg. One of A Thompson's cows was laid up with a strained leg and Mr. Thompson had a wooden one made and strapped on her, and now the cow uses the artificial leg as though always aocustomed to it Sheriff Houser, of Umatilla, has paid into the count treasury $31,400, the amount collected of the 1895 taxes. Treasurer Kern aent $16,000 of this amount to the state treasurer and the balanoe wil be apportioned to school districts and oities U. Hmatilla oounty. The apparatua for operating the gate at the locks ia now all placed and a successful trial was made last week. By attaching cables to the bydraulio machine, the big gates were opened and olosed with apparently little effort No water ha aa yet been turned into the canaL C. D. Moore, of White Salmon, hn jast completed setting strawberry plants for A. P. Bateham on the Coe plaoe at Hood river. He used a ma chine for doing the work that he learned to use ia setting sweet potatoe plants in New Jersey. He aet 15,000 plants a day for Mr. Bateham, and say be has set a high as 30,000 a day. Mr. Bateham aaya the work wa well done. Idaho. The Daddy mine, at Murray, is said to have netted its owners $50,000 dur ing the year 1895. A conservative estimate places the output of concentrates from the Coeur d'Alene mills at 10,000 tons per month. The building of boats in Lewiston i assuming considerable importance. Several boats are being oonatruoted at that point F. A. Bauer, of Elk City, write ad vising men and prospectors who con template going into that country, to wait a few weeks longer, aa there is considerable snow, whioh will interfere with prospecting and inspection of properties. Montana. The Montana Ore Purchasing Com pany haa declared its usual dividend of $1 per share, Thi dividend is at the rate of 48 per cent An assay offloe has been started up at Melrose under the supervision of M. D. Fleming, a well known ohemist hf Butte. Mr. Fleming wa in Butte this week and reports the mineral out look in that aeotion as being excellent. Another dividend haa been declared by the Boston & Montana Company at the main ffloe in Boston of $3.00 per share. Thia dividend is payable on May 80. Thi make a total of $4,025,000 np to date. The Butte owners in the War Eagle Company at Rossland received word that at a meeting ot director at Spo kane a dividend ot five cent per share wa deolared on the 60,0000 shares ot took of that oompany, making $35,000. THE NATIONAL CAPITAL Daily Proceedings ia Senate and House. IMPORTANT BILLS INTRODUCED ub.tanes of tha Maaanres Being- Con sidered by tho Flftj-Fonrth - Senloa Senate. Washington, April 18. The resolu tion for an investigation of the recent bond issue wa taken up in the senate today and Hill made a sensational and dramatic speech in opposition. Tbe New York senator defended Secretary Carlisle and his administration ot the treasury against loose insinuations ot irregularity, and showed the preva lence of charges of this character by presenting and reading in full the charges made by Senator Chandler against the friends of MoKinley that a levy of money was being made on protected industries in beablf ot Mo Kinley's candidacy for the presidency. Aa a lurtber evidence of the preva lence of tbe charges, Hill spoke of the sugar investigation, where, he said, one senator, referring to Quay, had frankly admitted that he had bought sugar stock and had a right to buy it. and today that senator was the favorite son of the leading republican state aa a candidate for the presidecy. Washington, April 80. To avoid a struggle for precedence, the senate, on motion of Cannon, took up the resolu tion directing the secretary of the in terior to open the Uncompahgre reser vation without further delay, the un derstanding being that the bond inves tigation resolution should oome np at 8 o'olook as unfinished business. After Brown had spoken for the resolution, be sought to secure a vote. Gorman asked that aotion be deferred owing to the absence of Vilas, who desired to be beard. Aldrioh said it must be clear that there was "something behind" these efforts at delay, and this persist ence in putting off a vote. Gorman responded that it was tbe first intima tion ooming from the distinguished senator on the other side of the cham ber that delays in public business were occurring. ...... ... Wanhiugton. April 23. With the thermometer standing at 80 degrees, less than 20 senator were on the floor wlifn the president pro tern, Frye c:llf-il the upper house to order. Dur ing the morning hour the joint resolu tion for the appointment of Genearl Franklin, Representative Steele,- Gen eral Bale and General Henderson as nu mbers of the board of managers of the National Soldiers' Home, was adopted without debate. Cannon in troduced a bill for the construction. near Washington, of a ground map of the United States on the scale of one inch to a mile. Mitchell, of Oregon, gave notice that on Friday next he would ask to take up the bill pension ing veterans of the Indian wars. Al lison followed with a report of the sundry civil . appropriation bill and said be would seek to take it up at the earliest day, Houee. - Washington, April 18. In the house, Blue asked if Hull would allow the vote on the resolution to be dropped for ten days. This Hull declined to da The speaker decided also that a motion to recommit would not be in order, the vote having been ordered at three o'olook. Mahon's amendment to inves tigate Governor Smith's oonduot was ruled out, and the vote waa taken on the Blue amendment to substitute tbe name of General Howard' for that ot General Franklin. On demand of Blue, tbe vote was taken by ayes and nays, and was rejoeted- by 61 to 149. The resolution was then adopted without division. Washington, April 80. The net re sult of five hours' work on the private calendar in the house today was the passing of four pension bills, one to pension the widow of Rear Admiral Foote, at $5Q per month; the rejection of a bill to retire a hospital steward as a second lieutenant of oavalry, and the passing of a war claim ot less than $600. The latter waa the first war olaim brought before the house for con sideration, and naturally provoked a general debate on the policy of paying war claims. It drew from Mahon, chairman of the war claims oommittee; Walker. MoCall and Evans, eloquent pleas for the payment of the findings of the court ot claims. Mahon argued that these claims should be paid or abolished. Dookery eulogised Speaker Crisp, and Sayers, the chairman of the appropriations oommittee in the last congress, paid a high tribute to Speak er Reed. Washington, April 33. For the first time this session Speaker Reed was late in arriving at the capitol. Clerk Mc Dowell called the house to order and aunounced that a speaker pro tern would be elected. Hull was unani mously elected. He bad been seated but a few minutes when Reed appeared, and, amid much laughter, said: "Tbe house will be in order " Although this was the suspension day under the rules. Cannon, ohairman of the oom mittee ou appropriations, insisted on proceeding with the general deficiency bill. The house went into oommittee of the whole for its consideration. This is the last of the regular appro priation bills. Mr. Deacon In Far!.. New York, April 23. A World dis patch from Paris says: The divoroed wife of Edward Parker Deaoon has re-, turned from America, bringing with her two children. It is said that Mr. Deaoon has been in oorrespondene with her for six months. It has even been asserted by those professing to have seen his letter, that he haa made many overture to her for oomplete reconciliation. V,