THE INDEPENDENCE 5200,000. In improvements will be made in Independence and vicinity during the year. rsiKirti rt Devoted to the best interests of Polk County. JOT. VOL. VII. $2.00 Per Year. INDEPENDENCES PpLK COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1890. Five Cents Per Copy.. NO. 49. THE WEST SIDE. I C. PENTLAND, PUBLISH!!. ef tutored it the Port-nHtce iu independence. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. FAVABUt IN ABVANCK. One Year Six Months ... Three Month . ... When not paid in advance $ TO ADVERTISERS. Indeneudenes (s locsteH t the head of ui. fitlou (the most ( the rest), on th WUUmette river, hud on the aatu line of the Oregon ud Ctltforuie KsHrosd; eonMlas a popnlatlon o4 MOO people; l( the prtaelpel shipping point tot 1X1 B SUUHfi WniVD 1. UU. Ul ID IMTg.HI. IBfW wealthy and thickly populated la the Willanv atte Taller. The steadily Increasing circulation the Wan BID la euJoTlng enablee It to be.ooe of the beat af aaveruMug mewuiu. JOB PRINTING I IK TBI 1 latest and Best Styles, AND AT TBI -f , JLOWEST :: LIVING r RATES. PHYSICIANS DENTISTRY. L-EE & BUTLER, Physicians & Surgeons. s ' - U. S. Examining Surgeons. Office: eatt side oi Main St., INDSPKNDBNCE, . ORIOOM B. L K.ETCHUM, Physician and Surgeon. Office: Opposite First National Bnnk, INDEPENDENCE. OREGON. DR. J. K. LOCKE, Physician and Surgeon. Buena Vista, Oregon. J. E. DAVIDSON, M. D. Physician and Surgeon. U. 8. EXAMINING 8UE8I0N, Independence, Oregon. DR. J. B. JOHNSON, Resident Dentist, All work warranted to give the best of Satisfaction. bDgrgNDBNClt, Orbgoh. ATTORNEYS. W. L. WILKIN, Attorney and Counselor at Law. All Legal Business entrusted to me will receive Prompt Attention. COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY. Office in Opera House. Independence, Or. A. M. HURLEY, Attorney and Counselor at Law. Oltice: Cor. Main and Monmouth Sts., INI'Fi 1.N1.EKCE, OREGON H. R. PATTERSON, DRUGGIST DKALIB IN WATCHES, -CLOCKS siND JEWELRY. INDEPENDENCE, . OREGON. J. H. ALEXANDER, :Dealer in: : Drugs and Medicines, BEUNA VISTA, OR. Tlnvin? purrrisowl trie stock of Drugs f.rnn-rto-.vd fcr U W. Robertson, I nureiia-eil to meet all the old crtste-ltn-iv. rtd many wmw new ones. Fair .,' .n.,rrinu. treatment to all. TAYLOR'S Cash Grocery & Bakery - ON 0 STREET. Fresh Rrcad, Pie- and Cakes on hand every dar excot't Sunday. ; iui' and fresh stock of canned goods, Hoar. Spss. eotfoe, sugar, eandles, cigars and tobaccos, D. B. TAYLOR, Proprietor. MRS. A. M. HURLEY, Ml&iiy.F&ac? Seeds Next to Independence National Bank. INDIPENDIHCS, OalOOI. C. S. McHALLY. Architect and Draughtsman, ROOMS S T BUSH-BRET MAN BLOCK. COMMERCIAL Bt, SALEM. OR. rr:-i-ir-f ?" ftiJf klsTWV&jsJsLSnt " v rwiMm. nt tnd nof bnn pantd. Call t the City Restaurant Has been reopened, by the Misses Fennells, on Main BU opposite the Opera bouse. Inde pendence. Meals cento. Board, S3 30 per week. Ice Cream and Oysters in season. Table supplied with the best the market af lords. So Chinese employed. -GO TO Tks WEST SHE JOB OFFICE For Fine Job Printing. READ And" be Convinced. 72 Stool tooth iron hurrow, $20, 5 and 7 tooth cultivators. The best horse shoeing." The best in , Iron Steel op Wood AT Best price paid for Old Iron and Castings. M.iin St., Independence. The Celebrated French Cure, Warranted 'APHRODITINE' to cure Is Sold on a POSITIVE GUARANTEE to eure any form of uerrous disease, or any disorder of the RMierative or gans of either ma wht.liur Islm from the AFTER excessive use of Stimulants, Tobacco or Opium, or through youthful indiscretion, over Indulg ence, &c, such as Loss of Brain Power, Wakeful ness, ju'HnuK aowu cams in me Hacic, nominal Wi)!:nes. Hysteria. Nervous Prostration Nocturn al Emissions, Incurrlicea, Dizziness, Weak MeiB ory, ixwaoi rower anu impoiency, wnicn )t ne- f lci'U'd often bad to prematnreold ace and iusan ty. Price 1.(i0 a box, 6 boxes for J5.00 Sent bv man ou receipt ot price. A WHITTKN GUARANTEE foreverv5.0T order, to refund the money if a Permaiien. cure is not effected. Thousands of testimonials from old and vounir. of both sexes, nermanentlv cured by Aphroditink. Circular free. Address THE APHRO MEDICINE CO. WaSTBEN BRANCH, BOX 27, PORTLAND, OR. For sale by Buster & Locke. Dii WJG mm VEGETABLE PANACEA PRERARED FROM ROOTS 8c HERBS, rORTHE CURE Of AND ALL OTHER DISEASES ARISING FROM A DISORDERED STATE QTTrE STOMACH OR AN INACTIVE LIVER. FOR SALE BT ALL 1 "Y DRU6SISTS ft GENERAL DEALERS.! ak's golden Fale Pills, For Female Irregular I ties; uorhinirlikethem on llie niaraet. Never (ail successfully ased by pTomineht ladies inonthlv. Guaranteed to relieve s ippn-ssed menstruation. SURE! SAFE! CERTAIN! pon't be humbugged. Save Time,' Health, and money ;uute no oui- ir. secire by mail ou e oeipt of price, J2.00. Address, tuc ipurd FnirtNF rniPlHY. westemBiancb, Box JPOKJJ"' "B' rur niw asperson& Parker, INDEPENDENCE, OR. Architects, Builders and Cor.t'rs. Always m Uimr ritawu eiisu iv-. , ' , ' ' TV v; i ii fnxj tvim a tr ii and be will iry w uiwy vss- convinced that they are worthy of your pat roiiage. DRESSMAKING PARLOR I . . MISS GEOBGIA KISOE, Lately from Portland, has opened Dress making Parlors In the Nelson building, on Main SL, and Is now prepared to do all work U her line. I. FARMER, TONSORIAL - ARTIST Main St., Independence. Shaving, 15 cents. Hair cutting, 53. Sham pooing. cent. Durham Bros. CITY MEAT - MARKET Choice Beef, Mutton, Pork and Veal always on band. Sausage in season. Bendered tallow for sale. Main HU, - Independence, .E.Ehs. Three Stories of Private Allen. One of the aspirants (or his Brace -in case it should be vacant a brillieftit fellow named Riley, met him on' the streets of Tnpelo with: "Look here, Allen, are you going to run again or notP I took your card to mean what it said, and I thought 1 would be a candidate if you were really outsat I keep bearing that you're going back after all. IM like to know about it, because if you're going back I'll keep out of it" "Well, now, Riley," said Allen, 'Til tell. I meant every word of that card. It was all true then; bat since I've gotten down here I find my self sort of in the hands of my friends. And I tell you, Riley, there's nothing more dangerous in politics than a man in the hands of his friends." Allen had no special reputation as a wit or orator when he hrst ran for Congress, and so he had a time getting tne nomination. He stumped the dis trict with his competitior, a Gen. Tucker, who opened the campaign with a rhetorical rhapsody in which he allud ed to his war services, and particularly described a battle in which be had commanded the Confederate side,' be ginning "Fellow citizen, I slept one night in a tent on the mountain tide awaiting the battle on the morrow." When he had finished Allen got up and said: "Friends and fellow citizens: It's all true what Gen. "Tucker told you about his sleeping in his tent that night before the - battle. I know all about it, for I was guarding that tent all night long in the cold and wet on picket. And now I just want to say to all of you who were Generals in the war and slept at night in your guarded tents like Gen. Tucker, you vote for him. But all you fellows that guarded the Generals' tents in the wet and cold like me, you vote for private Allen." It is needless, to say that Private Allen was triumphantly elected, and was Private Allen ever after. Like most humorists, Allen has a face grave almost to sadness in repose. Coming up on the' train the other day two strangers scraped up an acquaint ance with him. . After observing him with interest for a long time, Allen, noticing their scrutiny, pre served a wooden expression all the while until they had gotten hira well into conversation, when suddenly, he smiled. "Here's your dollar," said one stranger to the other, banding over a silver certificate: "you've won. He smiled." Then they all smiled. Philadelphia Record. Abuse of the Eyes. Like every Other function of the human frame, that of sight may be abused aud neglected in euoh a man ner as to deprive the possessor of much of the comfort and assistance which he should naturally derive from so useful an organ. And it may not be amiss, at the outset to remark that it does not by any means follow that those eyes which are most used are in the greatest danger of early failure. The contrary is true, and this for two reasons: First, that their value is generally better ap preciated by the possessor, resulting in their better care; and also for the general reason, . that any faculties, or portions of the anatomy most used are by the operations of nature strong est, and capable of much greater ser vice than those which are less culti vated, and strengthened by constant exercise. Good Housekeeping. - Water as an Air Purifier. Fresh cold water is a powerful ab sorbent of gases. . A bowl of water placed under tne bed of the sick-room and frequently changed is among the valuable aids In purifying the air. The room in which the London aldermen sit is purified by open vessels of water placed in different parts of the room. It can be easily inferred from this that water standing for any. length of time in a close room is unlit for drinking.. It has frequently been observed, that restless and troubled sleep has been corrected easily by placing an open vessel of water near the head of the bed. How Old Is She? , To tell a woman's age is one ot the easiest things imaginable, despite the fact that many brilliant ladies knock off a few stories of their years without de tection. , Observe well her hair! Her bangs? . No; her black hair! Now, don't sav it is- false. False or real, you can count her years by the threads time weares. Every year adds a hair or two. and, no doubt if a woman lived long enough she would become a female Esau. At twenty-five a Woman's back hair begins to fall over her collar as a pumpkin vine over a picket fence. Note well the direction of . the hair. Hair slants, and at thirty it takes an angle of 50, at thirty-five 60, and so on. Uf course vou cau't get near enougn to apply a niet hematic tape measure. But your practised eye will be enough. Next note the quality. Hair at twenty-five is moire, at thirty it is sateenat thirty-five it is passe satinette, at forty it is rops fit to hang any man that gets noosed in its meshes. Anybody can tell false or store, hair,, no matter who the previous' owner was. Tt i as -a .doeen.'t-belong-there look, and all the pomades in the uni verse cannot give it a permanent ten ure of office . . So you may reasonably conclude if a woman has false back hair ; her age is beyond the interesting point. Never believe her to be under forty-eight, mi' less Bill Jones or some equally reliable person oan prove it. Boston Qlobe. Birmingham Baths. The city supports four public swim ming baths in buildings, and one open air swimming bath at Small Heath Park. : The bath-houses are imposing buildings of better than mere tasteful designing. Thev cost, variously, from 160,000 to $100,000 (12,000 to 28, 000), and offer larger swimming facil ities than the people of New York city ever possessed witbin-doors in public or private batbs, along-shore or in town. The tanks are lined with tiling, and the water,' clear as crystal, is ob tained from artesian wells, One of these tanks, for instance, measures eighty-one feet by thirty-two feet, and the water has a depth of from four to six feet. Two of the bath-bonses con tain the rooms and appurtenances for Turkish bathing; for which a shilling (twenty.fonr oenu) is oharged if all the routine of robbing, needle, douche, and plunge bathing, with the use of private dressing-rooms and lounge, rooms, is undergone.' A simpler Turkish bath, without rubbing, can b had for sixpence (twelve cents). Eaoh bath-house has first-class and second class swimming tanks. It costs six pence to take a arst-oiass swim, wnn two towels snd private dressing room free, and a charge of an extra penny for a man's bathing dress, or three, pence for a dress for a woman. In the second-class departments , twopence (four cents) is charged for a bath with. 'out a private dressing-room. An extra Aft these bath .are set apart for women at -certain hours.- Special rates - are made for sehools ana - for : swimmirg cluDS. iToiesuonal oatmng-masters are allowed to teach in them. The swimming tanks are fitted with diving piatrornn, trapeses,- ana soowenng ap paratus. They are as clean and tidy as Borland kitchens, and they are so beautiful as to rank high among the sbow-piaces ot the city. -Julian italph, in Harper's Magazine. ';. "V Uncle Sam's Employes. Uncle Sam pays 1200.000 employes, Including soldrtrs and. sailors, an aver age salary of 8.ipiw. .The aver- bkq earninjTir irre"'n,i!rr-very-uay citizen, wh Mtapir iv proportion to the work t5riHsv arakwrrt half that much probirbly. This state of affairs ex plarinj,: per)ips,H-hy . ubeot - SO, W0, 000 nrttle Aiurriciiu'citizens1 make' a dead set for about 50,000 offices every four years. I'it slntry liisjuUch. Tea Culture In Natal. Natal, South Africa, is now look ed upon as. the great tea producing country oi tne future. : none oi tne tea has ret appeared in this country. The first plants were brought from Ceylon in 1877. J. L. Hulett, the pioneer, now has nearly three hundred acres nnder cultivation, and his crop is from eighty thousand to ninety thousand pounds aunually. His plant cost but $5,000. xhe land lies about one thousand feet above sea level, the soil containing a fair proportion of sand and decomposed granite, veg etable and other organic matter. The tea farm is open, level and is well ploughed. The rows are laid out five feet apart, and the plants are set four or five inches apart. A orop is ob tained after the first year, and increas es up to the sixth year, when the plant matures, after which it bears for an in definite period.' Great . care - has to be taken to keep the ground loose and clear of grass aud weeds. The picking begins in September and con tinues every ten days until June twenty to twenty-two pickings in all. Nothing could be done with the native help, but coolies are plentiful, and are exclusively employed. They are able to pick from thirty-five to forty pounds of green leaves daily. The crop is sold iu Dunbar at from eighteen to thirty eight cents perpoundT fully twenty-five per cent cheaper than the foreign pro duct can be laid down in that market. The withering is done on large floors, the leaves being laid thin and constan tly stirred by boys and girls. A hot and dry temperature is needed. The rolling is done by machinery, and has the effect of breaking up the juice. The fermenting process is the most particular of all, and upon it depends the quality of the product. The drying is done by hot revolving cylinders. The sorting is accomplished by the use of sieves, the top one containing the lowest grade of tea. Times Had Changed.1 ' At Sumter S. C, there was a large crowd of colored people at the depot as the train pulled in. An old bald headed Uncle Jerry had his head out of the coach set apart for 'colored pas-1 sengers. and a 'man on the platform recognized him and called out: "Hello, Misser Stivers! is dat yo'P" The old man looked straight at him, but made no responce. "Hello! Misser Stivers!" No re sponse. , "Say, Misser Stivers, has yo' losted yo' hearing?" persisted the man, as he drew nearer. "Boy, was yo' talkin' to me?" sternly demanded the oM man. "Sartin. What's the matter?" "Boy, - was you' want anything of me?" "Why, how yo' talk! " Reckon yo' has got" the hoodoo." "Does yo' evidently reckon yo' know me P" "Of co'se I knows yq Yo' is old man Stivers." "When did yo' know me?'' "Why last fall. Why, I dun worked wid yo' fur three months." "An' when yo' done worked wid me what was 1 a-iiolo'P" "Drivin' them' mewls for K urn el Johnson." -; "Exactly, sah, " But I want yo' to nnderstanr dat dere is a heap of d if ference atwixt drivin' dem mewls fur Kurnel Johnson au' ridiu' on the kivered kyars along wid white folks. I might a-knowedyo' last fall, sah, but if yrT now desiah to permeate any erlongated conversashun wid me' yo' mus' gh some 'sponsible gem'len to Introduce yo'.y iv. r. Sim. . ' A Providential Dispensation. It is remarked as a singularly thoughtful dispensation of providence in London that the influenza attacked most frequently and severely those who were at work on salary, and thai those who worked by the piece or day were either spared entirely or had light attack. "Tempering the wind to the shorn lamb" is what one papci calls it. HOW THE CILA MONSTER KILLS. loose Xxperlanee With, the Poison of This venomous Lizard. "Is he poisonous?" said a young man behind the newspaper stand at the Nadeau. "Well, I should say'he was. It isn't his breath, though. A man from Arizona said that the forked tongue was the sting." "You're wrong." said a listener; "its breath is what kills people. I heard a woman say that a single Diast ot its breath was sure death."" "That mav be." said another: "but I saw a man (fie from the bite of one, and that is the secret of it. I'd rather have a rattler bite me any day." "Where was it?" queried a startled listener. "Over in Arizona," was the reply. "A friend of mine had one in a box lust outside of a saloon, and one day a chap came along who was so drunk that he was ready to eat up the earth. He was afraid of nothing, and when he saw the bog and the sign 'Hands Off Poisonous,' he swore be could handle it, and before they could prevent him be ripped off the slats and made a grab at It. The thing twisted aronud and bit him on the finger, and to make a long story short, f saw him die in the middle of the street a short time after." The subject of this conversation was a pale yellow-aud-black, blunt-headed llaara snout a toot in lengtn, mat rested, apon a bad of sand in a small wooden box. It was the famous Gila monster of Arizona, the only poisonous liaard in the world, and asngly and dis agreeable a looking creature as one could imagine. The bead was long and blunt, tne eves black and bead I ike, the tail half tne length of the body, thickset and elublike. The entire body seemed en cased in a thinly coated armor, marked curiously with yellow acd black. , The Gila minster is sluggish , and slow of movement, in this respect ' be ing entirely different from the tribe in mal shows more activity, especially in the dry, bot regions contiguous to the Gila'Siver. In confinement it has the habits of a young alligator more than auytbing else. The interest which centers in the heloderma lies in the poison that is supposed to lurk in its bite, and perhaps no animal has given rise to so many weird and wholly imaginary stories. The native and some ignorant whites suppose that its breath is poisonouus. Others think that to have one touch the body is a bad sign. The heloderma is simply a lizard,' and the only one known that nan poison other animals by its bite; a discovery made a few years ago by some naturalists who were traveling through the country. The story was not at first believed, but several were sent East, where the poisons properties were soon demon strated. A naturalist at the Smith sonian was bitten, the poison taking effect so quickly, that he had barely time to call for help. Small animau soon died after being bitten, and it was shown that human beings,' under cer tain conditions might easily die from the effects of the. bite. ' The poison of the heloderma - has been carefully examined by Messrs. Mitchell and Reichert, the experts, who announce that the physiological action of the poison is entirely differ ent from that of snakes. The latter destroys life by paralyzing the re spiratory centre,'' while the poison of the - heloderma at once attacks and affects the heart, paralyzing it Among the interesting experiments that of injecting the poison subcutane ously has been tried. There was no local affect, the heart being at once affected, slowly contracting, the spinal cord rtnallv becoming paralyzed. It is probable that the condition of the victim or his general health would have much to do with the question of death. If a man was in a ' poor con dition and run down he would possibly die, while a healthy man would not be seriously troubled." . Specimens sent to Europe were ex perimented upon by Sir John Lub bock. A frog bitten by the lizard died in a few seconds in convulsions. A guinea pig bitten in the hind leg passed away in three minutes, and other ani mals died equally as quick, creating in the minds of the observers a decided respect. If the teeth of the specimen at the Nadeau House are examined they will be found to have curious fissures, and a further and closer look into the mouth of the monster will show at the base of the grooves small dents from which the poisonous saliva flows. The heloderma is an interest ing creature, and while not- always sure death, it is well to keep it at a dis tance and handle it with the care and respect due its unsavory reputation. Los Angeles Tribune. The Story of a New York House. There is in New York upon one' of the most fashionable thoroughfares, a most magnificent, house yea, it is a veritable palace which can' never be looked at by the sentimental woman without a tear coming to ber eye, , be cause of the stpry attached to it. It was designed and built by ope of the richest men in New York the head of an old Dutch family for the woman he loved. Throughout the whole house, which might have been called "The House Beautiful," were the colors, furnishings, ornaments and dainty touches that were the young bride's taste. ' The ball-room, in which she ex pected to trip so many merry measures, was walled and sealed in many-colored marbles; but the lover himself, directed the building of the porte cochere under which her carriage was to roll, so that, stepping out, she would not be touohed by a drop of rain or a flake of snow. Everything was ready; the horses were pawing in the stable waiting for the day to come when they would carry their new mistress out; the coachman and the footman had their big, white rosettes at hand to wear on the wed ding day; the house was full of fra grance, for beautiful flowers were massed to please the coming mistress, and everything seemed to be in har mony with all this thoughtful, loving care; for the sun shone bright, and it was somebody's wedding day. Yes; but it wasn't an earthly wedding, for, when, with quick footsteps, her mother went to wake the expectant bride, she found her dead. The last kiss she had given, had been to her lover the night before. The last kiss be ever gave any human being, he gave to ber as she rested in her coffin. But he lives on in the beautiful house and does, with his great fortune, a deal of good, all in the name of the woman he loved. The shutters are never opened in that wonderful house, the carriage has never been used, no feet have danced in the ball-room; but it and the solitary man are there as evidences of the fact that a love can so completely fill the heart that all life is nothing without it. Ladies' Home Journal. She Was Mistaken. "I called here two weeks ago to re port that my husband was missing,'" aid a woman at the central police station recently,, according to the Detroit Free Press. "Yes'm" "I expressed a fear that he was drowned." "You did." "And I asked you to have the river dragged." , "Yes." "You refused, and I went away be lieving you a heartless wretch." "Exactly." "I now return to beg your pardon. You are no wretch. Your heart is all right." Thanks." 'My hnsband has returned. He is alive.' . "Glad to hear it, ma'am." "So far from drowning himself, he never went near the water. He never even washed his face in the two weeks, but was lying drunk in an old barn. I've settle mailers with him, and now I'm square with you. Good-day, sir!". How a Sewer Was Choked Up. A large sewer in Portland, Ore., had to be reopened recently, as it was badly choked up. When the work men dng it open they found the roots of a shade tree had forced a passage through the walls and formed a sotW mass for fifty feet., Tse top of the sewer was tea feet below the sur , Siberia Rallwatyv ; ' - M. Nicolai, the engineer at the head pf the noramisBfott that baa been in vestigating the question of a Siberian railway for the Russian government, has reported that the whole line can be completed by 1900, at an expense) of about $130,000,000.- 1 - A new French invention is a smoke bombtintended to )'m ', tired Into tfae ranks of the enemy who uses siuolte lese powder, and' thus olwcure his view. piclFic coast rams. Castrovtlle lost $28,000 by fire, ' Oonareatinan McKenna of Yallejo is acta from Washington. ' den. J. W. Freeman, the oldest citi- sen of Kern comity, is dead. . Fin destroyed $20,000 of property in San Francisco Sunday night Henry Oohen, aged T2, was ran over by a team and killed at Portland. ' Bellerue and Shcehons are iu a bitter light over the county seat of Logan, Sffofts are being made to stop the in discriminate slaughter of deer in the Sierras. Two dwellings at Redding, belonging to Mrs. Tracle of San Jose, have been destroyed by fire. Charles 8. Beale, an old resident of Sacramento, suicided on the anniversary of his wife's death. - . The 8-year-old son of CoL Fred Crocker of San Francisco fell down stairs and re ceived fatal injuries. . -I Hon. Frank McCoppin declined tha . m ; o w.w nomination tor mayor ' U.. W. u. iwm on the Democratic ticket. The "Arizona Kid" has been sent to prison for life for murdering August Turner at Qarrison, Mont -I Eugene F. Loud of San Francisco has been nominated for congress on the Re publican tick in the Fifth district 8, J. Horn has been sentenced to ten years' imprisonment at Portland for rape on his wife's 18-year-old cousin. . F. C. Smith, a burglar on trial at Ta coma, snatched a revolver from a desk, covered the judge with it and escaped. ' G. W. Pinion, a prominent citizen of rani. , , , , , . . San Benito county, has mysteriously die- appeared and no trace of him can be , . Charles i Brown, who was shot by ' hta friend, Edward T. Murphy, at Seattle, refused to prosecute, and Murphy was discharged. . Capt E. S.Josse of Monterey was overpowered by two m?fl,1fedilrobber8' badly beaten and tied, while they ran- sacked the house. James Pease, the oldest resident of San Mateo county, is dead. He claimed to he 98 years old and that he came to vuuwuu iu ioio. iou uiuiuuuo 01 juuua uwuu wore shipped East from San Pedro. This was the first entire train of beans ever hipped from California, The printers on the Sacramento Bee struck and a new paperis tojbe started in opposition to The Bee on which the m - 1 a . t 1 1 strikers will be employed. Mrs, Cutting, wife of D. C. Cutting, a Modesto carpenter, was found dead in a Chair by her 11-year-old SOn. She was afflicted with heart disease. : McLaughlin and Walters, the two men arrested in Jaurez, Mexico, about a year ago for the murder of a Mexican Woman; have been released. Material for the construction of the first section of the Southwertern rail- road, from Pomona to South Riverside, is to renegotiated for at once. - Thomas Rhinehart of Modesto com - mitted suicide. His brain was affected by sickness. He was very poor and leaves a wife and seven children. Gorernor Stevenson of Nevada in his Will gave $1,000 to each of his two sone, $500 to each of his two grandchildren and the rest of his estate to his wife. An artesian well was driven eighty five feet through solid rock at Pullman, Wash., when water was struck. The flow is said to be 1,000 gallons a minute. George de Graff, a Seattle dry goods merchant, left that city on Sept 22, in tending to go to San Francisco, and has not been seen or heard of since, $4,000 with him. He had A wealthy syndicate of Philadelphia capitalists have purchased the McManus concession of Cerros islands, off the coast of Lower California, which contain valuable mining properties. ' John Samuel Robinson, aged 12, was playing with some other boys with a hand car on the Union Paciflo tracks at Salt Lake City. In coming down a grade he fell from the car and was killed. James Herrington, the land lawyer who was recently tarred and feathered by a mob at Bakersfield, is able to ap pear on the streets. He will sue Kern county for $100,000 and also prosecute his assailants. . ' A resurvey of certain entries in the Humboldt land district has been ordered by the secretary of the interior, because of the discovery of fraudulent subdi vis ional surveys of the townships in which the entries are. ' A burglar entered M. Zan's house in Portland and took $7. Zan found a note pinned to his rest saying he snored so much he ought to be robbed. Max Lang's house was burglarized the same night and $476 in gold taken, Herman Schultz, lessee of the Thomas mill at Bozeman, Mont, attempted to burn Nelson Story's mill in order to de - .... - stroy competition. He was discovered but escaped and the fire was exting uished. Later Schultz hung himself. Twelve tin cans, stored in an aband oned cabin near the Chinese quarter at Rock Springs, Wyo., contain the bones of twenty dead Chinamen, some of whom were murdered in the memorable riot of 1885. The bones will some day be shipped to China, Ross Hutchins, living about ten miles from Boise City, Idaho, was called to his cabin door by the wife of a man named Jennings, and when Hutchins appeared he was shot down by Jennings. The trouble originated in a land dispute. Jennings was arrested. ' Several masked men raided a saloon kept by Steven Rich and wife near the Bradford ' quicksilver mine in Lake county, and the result was a bloody tragedy. Mrs. Rich was fatally wounded being shot three or four times; Rich was wounded and W. R. McGuire was killed. During the fight Mrs. Rich pulled the mask off Henry Arcairo, a miner. , It is supposed the men went to Rich's for the purpose of giving Fred Bennett a coat of tar and feathers, Justice Miller of the United Kates Supreme court is dying at Ms home in Washington. He was stneaen witn hi, ..proverbial Philosophy" as fol paralysis while walking home. lows: "It is quite romantic. Papa Schweinfnrth, the self styled Christ, feU lB i0Te witn hli oousiu Isabell, was discharged by a Jury at Wlrtbago, uod then he thought he would, when SL He was oharged with promoting ha marrle hw( translate his notions immorality by the attorney genataU I u tb9 Banner of Solomon's Proverbs, O'Brien and Dillon forfeited their ban, Md m M m artlciei flrit on ai.uuu eacn, ana sausa tor anm They eluded the authorities and want to Ham and took passage from taste. Ei-Fensioa Comsnlssioner, Tarner de nies that he wrote to Conressman Cooper that President Harrison was go tot to "let out" Graunisslonet Baqm, The Patriotic Sons of Amjrrlc, in t Boilon4anieJ t.csjB- ration so as to make White native bom citiiens only eligible for membership. Annie V. Dallas, a woman of ques tionabto character, and Lawrenee Mac beth, her lover, drowned themselves ip the lake at Chicago. He was an actor. Ber. Albert Schemer, the oldest mem ber of the Redemptorist order in the United States, is dead. He was 81 years old and had been a prism fifty-fix years. Rube Burrows, the notorious Alabama ontlaw, was killed ia attempting toes- cape from jail at Greenville, Ala., He left $30,000 worth of property to his ions. Mme. Boneil, the German spy arrested at Nancy, has been sentenced to a fine of 6,000 francs and fire years imprison. ment, to be followed by ten years of exue. Lord Cahn at Croyden, Surrey,, Eng. land, was arrested for threatened assault on a neighbor. The lord cursed the magistrate and was sent to the work house. A son has been born to Mr. and Mrs. All i J V.t7"T" Oorean legation at Washington,' The YeChaYun, charge d'affaires Of the , . , , . . uuy in we urst vxjrean ever vuiu ui ua United States. The 100-yard record, which had stood for many years and was oonsided the ut most of human speed, has been broken by Owens of Washington. He made it in 0 4-6 seconds. , ... , U Buffalo Bill and Dr. Carver meet a tragedy will result The trouble dates back six years when they warned each other that they would shoot on sight at their next meeting, August Schlntz, a prominent young farmer of Franklin Township, la,, shot Lucy Boehegan because she refused to mv, wvut.uu WMMin ouv iuiucu W " Wa thon MaA Mmaau The supreme council of the railway 1, federation decided that the gtrikenl on the Hongton TeXM rsU, were that the I could not be made an issue. ; j, EUzabeth Saunders, toll gate keeper and postmistress at Toledo, Pa., 8hot by magkea ud t They intended to plunder the house and .he fired on them and thv shot W. At st Petersburg ayonng professorof medicine, Koucharsky, closed a lecture on noisonons acids to his clam hv rutnr. r - . into a glass some drops of poison and drank them. He died in two minutes, mile glx men wew engaged m hoigt. mg some steel bars weighing several tons at the Illinois steel company's works ' Bt Chicago the derrick broke and the mass fell upon the men. Thev will die. The wife of Arthur O'Connor, M. P., was found lying unconscious on the 1 street inDondon One thiarh woa broken , nd she wan severelv ininrerl arrnnf. rh head. It is a mystery how she was in- jured. ' The Russian government intends to construct a ship canal . connecting- the Dnieper and Dwinal rivers and forming a line of communication between the Arctic ocean and the Black sea and the Mediterranean, A sensation has been caused in London ! by a statement made by a lodging house keeper who is located in the Whitechapel district, who claims that it was at ker 1 house that "Jack the Ripper "lived dur- ing his murderous escapades. The daughter of Mrs. Mittman,- for whose murder Charles Benson was ar rested in New Jersey and taken to Leav enworth, Kan.,, has confessed that she and Benson planned the murder of her mother and brother, that they might se cure Mrs. Mittman's money and live to gether. 1 , . . A patriotic organization of women of America, known as the National Society , of the American Revolution, has been started at Washington. Its object is to perpetuate the deeds of brave men and women. Mrs. President Harrison is at the head of the society. Its first work will be the erection of a monument to the mother ot Washington. ; Coroner Boydston stood on the depot platform with a prisoner, John Swenney, at Oakville, O. A friend of Sweeney's pushed Boydston in front of the incom ing engine. The coroner was horribly mangled and died instantly. He retained his grip on his prisoner and Sweeney was fatally injured. The man who pushed the coroner was captured, ! The death of Thomas P. Murphy at Boston ended a romance in real life which has rarely been equaled except in novels. It was his elopement in 1870 with Lady Blanche Elizabeth Mary An nunciate, the daughter of the proud Earl of Gainsborough and granddaugh ter of the seventeenth Earl of Enrol, that first brought his name into prominence. Murphy was a poor , organist. He and his wife came America and he made a living by teaching music. His wife died in 1878. : '; ... When in a deep out near Huntington, Ind., the front Mid of. an engine, going to relieve a disabled freight engine ! on the Chicago and Erie road, blew out' 1 a II Jl.l. -.M A SA A YJ - I and flew a distance of 400 feet. Engineer Murphy was badly scalded, but jumped off, his leg being broken by the fall. Fireman Kirby was so badly injured that he will die. The explosion was heard for miles and a crowd soon col lected. The first man to arrive found Engineer Murphy crawling up the track on his hands and knees with a lantern to flag the vestibule train whieh was due, Murphy's presence of mind and heroism prevented a terrible wreck. Wilkle Collins wrote to his pub lishers during his visit to America in 1873: "Wherever I go I meet with the same kindness and - the same enthusiasm. ' I really want words to express my grateful sense of my re ception in America. It is not only more than I have deserved, it is more than any man could have deserved. I have never met with such , a cordial and such a generous people as the peo ple of the United States. Let me add that I thriv e on this kindness. I keep wonderfully well" ; Martin Farquhar Turner's dauch- ter tells how her father came to writs gnarrtage, then on love, friendship, and so on. But ot course, you know my father has written a great deal against Ritualism, and he is a strong supporter of the constitution, , When a man "gives himself away' he naturally loses hit selt-poeseesioa THE NEWS IN BRIEF. ; New York stete has 5,M1,9 souls. King Humbert of Italy is in poor healb, Mayor Grant has been renominated in New York. ! A Socialist congress Is in session at Lille, France. : . Grand Duke Nicholas of Russia is hopelessly insane, . , Secretary Blaine will take part in the; Ohio campaign. -' Work on the Nicaragua' canal is pro. gsesaing rapidly. . . ; , Th national eiateddfodia in session at Knoxville, Tenn. ;7 'The Servian government wants ex King Milan eiaed. y The Jews of Sebastopol have been or dered to leave that city.-.: " Much damage has been dene by hoary rains in West Virginia, r, ,. . ' , Patti is about to build a synagogue at ' Craig-y-Nnos in Wales. ' 1 ' Gladstone to to speak on the American tariff at Mid-Lothian soon. - ; ,. . Frank Wooden, a colored incendiary, , was lynched at Homer, La. Reports of trouble on the Guatemala San Salvador fronties are false. ' Store Jacobs, who killed three women, Was hanged at Lamberton, N. C. ... Four people perished in the flames in the Putnam house fire at Chicago. ' Amelie Lange, the authoress, dropped dead in the Leasing Theatre at Berlin. The population of Arkansas is 1,185, 885, and that of North Dakota ia 182,425. Germany is seriously contemplating the exclusion of American beef and pork. , The Erie railway has refused an in-' crease to their men and a strike is threat ened. :;;'..,..; Professor Auston Phelps, the famous, Andover professor, is dying at Bar Har bor, Me. . Thomas Saunders died in Boston from ' the effects of a dog bite received three years ago. . , v .... Elbert E. Jay cox has been made trafflo manager of the world's fair with a salary of $5,000. - A misplaced switch caused a collision and the death of an engineer at Platts mouth, Nev. , . Secretary Tracy is mention as a sue-, cessor of United States Senator Evarts ' of New York. Mrs. Ann Eliza McClnre of Chicago; ! has secured her third divorce from her drunken husband. . . The log cabin in which Abraham Lin- coin lived while a boy will he among the world's fair exibits. s Fire young men were drowned in the , river near Kinkora, N. J., -by the cap sizing of their boat. Mrs. Nancy Sullivan Of Springfield, 0.; crazy on religion, tried to sacrifice her baby on the alter. ( , . , , , The cigarmakers of New York nave' demanded higher wages and will strike -if they are not granted, r ; : r , . ! Walter Keraochan, a wealthy society , man, committed suicide at the Delta . Phi club in New York. Br an explosion in the Pyrotechnio ' school at Bourges,' France, - ten persons were killed an3 nine injured, , Clayton Lloyd of Newton, Ala., poi-, soned his wife and four children, one of whom is dead, and then fled.' Capt Peter Foster, aged M, the oldest 1 member of the G. A. R., died at Mount .' Pleasant, Ia., a few days ago. The Empire Lumber company, the largest lumber concern in Georgia, has ' failed with liabilities of $200,000. , The Haydeu Boiling mill at Columbus, O., was totally demolished by a boiler: explosion. . Two men were killed. The movement to create a Polish king dom with the emperor of Austria a king is again being agitated in Poland. The Indianapolis Car and Manufac turing company is in the hands of a re ceiver. Its liabilities are $650,000. Z Tilly M. Lewis, a prominent citizen of Jackson, Miss., was shot and killed in; his own door by somons unknown. Salvator, the turf king, has been re tired.' He was shipped from New York WednesdaytoHaggin'sCaliforniastahle, , O'Connor and Kemp have signed ar- , tides for A race in America next year. They will probably meet in California. ' The Tolstoi club of Boston, of which ' Rev. Edward Everett Hale is president, is in a predicament about "Kreutzer Sonata." . .... It is stated in London that Sister Rose -Gertrude is about to abandon her mis- sion to the Hawaiian lepers and return , to Europe. ; William Prver, 19 years old, tarred and feathered himself to enable him to !; get a position as a dime museum freak ; at New York. , , 1 : The entire Fern Cliff stud, owned by William Astor of New York, and which ' contains many valuable horses, is to be ' sold at auction. ,..,,. i William E. Whalen, ex-cashier of the , Hoffman house, N. Y., has been brought 1 back from Canada on a charge of em- -bezzling $6,000. ... The preeident visited his brother, John S. Harrison, c. Kansas City. John S. is younger than the president and a Demo-. cratio politician. '.. CDr. J. N. Converse, projector of the bnrungton and Missouri railroad, died , at Lincoln Neb. He was 60 years old and widely known. ' Dr. Mille Gates, president of Amherst ' college, is the successor of Gem Clinton 1 B. Fiak as president of the board of In- , dian commissioners. William Henry Spencer, a descendant ' of one of the oldest families in New . York, died in poverty there. , He lost a , fortune by sheer hard luck. 1 , . , , , Leonard Matthews, a brakeman, has . secured a $10,000 judgment against the Chicago and Alton railroad for injuries ', received while in their employ.; ,",, It is stated that arrests of Armenians at Constantinople continue, and that ' sixty prisoners have already been tor-'' tared to extort evidence from them for ' orabls to the Turkish cause. , ... He'll Get There Some Day. ; Stranger Boy, will you direct me to the nearest bank? ; .. Street Gamin Will f twenty-five . oents. .....,'..,.. '' . ' Stranger Twenty-five cents! Isn't that high Gamin Bank directors alwavi oat big pay, mister N. Y. Sun. ' The) costliest book owned in Chi cago Is a copy of the first folio edition of Shakespeare, published In 1623. ! It Is regarded aa ths finest copy in ; America, and is valued at $10,000, Iu owner is a man who made a fortune on the Chicago Board ot Trade, neral, in I'M own country tne an.