TT OREGON COURIER Cityttbrwy OREGON CITY. CLACKAMAS COUNTY. OREGON. FRIDAY. OCTOISEU 20. 1893. NO. 24. VOL. XI. CONSTIPATION la called the "Father of DisMaies." It is caused by a Torpid Lirer, and is generally aocompanied with LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE, ' BAD BREATH, Etc. To treat constipation successfully It is a mild laxative and a tonio to tlio digestive organs. By taking Simmons Liver Kegulntor you promote digestion, bring on a reg ular habit of body and provont Diliotisncsa and Indigestion. "My wife wai Knrely diMreued with Constls tinn ami toughing, followed with rllacdinf Pile. Alter four mujttiK use of Simmona Liver Heulalof tlie ii almost entirely relieved, gaining itrength mid flesh."-W. a. LaaraK, Delaware, Ohio. ''I have ineil Simmon Liver Regulator far '"i.sti.li(in of my llowcli. caused by temporary drratti'. ment nf the Liver, and alwaya with aiinl Iwnrrtt Mikau WA.Haa, Lau CblaJ J.t: '. -u ci ticorgia. OCCJMOTAL NEWS. It !h itronosod bv un irriirutiim com pany to rcclnim a lurge area of the Mo jave Desert in the vicinity of Dnggutt by melius of a diim across t ho Mojuve river and a sulinicrgca lluine lor the purpose of tupping the underflow. Judge Shaw hug denied the motion for a change of venue in ttie case of Richard 8. 1 Iciith, charged with the murder of IxmiH It. Whirter at Fresno, and set the Hint Monday in January as the time when the (late for the second trial of Heath will be resumed. The overseer of a Fresnowinery, while playing the spy on top of a 5,000-gallon tank of wine to detect employes who miht sample the ruby goods, missed his footing and took a header into the tank. The men who pulled him out laughed at his mishap, and were promptly dis charged. Governor Pciinoyer was consulted as to the character of a testimonial to be presented to the battle ship Oregon. The Governor remarked that, if Oregon real ly desired to present the ship with a tes timonial, nothing would be more appro priate than a silver Bervice, especially now that silver was so cheap, A remarkable tiling in connection with ihe Hathdrown homicide trial at Vic toria, 11. V., is the fact that when it was sought to introduce the dying statement of the dead man, Jones, an ejection was made and sustained by the court on the ground that it had been taken on Snu day, and it was therefore thrown out. George Mint, of the I'liumix (A. T.) Evening Herald was anxious toget busi ness from a linn that advertised in his held, and wrote soliciting an order for the paper. The reply came, "Where does your paper go?" "To North and Soul It America, Kurope, Asia and Africa, and it is all I can do to keep it from going to h ." He got the con tract, with the money in advance. The Tacoma smeller turned out 3,885 burs of bullion, weighing 348,337 pounds and valued at 7(i,445.50, during Septem ber. To employes $0,547.(10 were dis bursed. The mines of Washington, Brit ish Columbia, Alaska, Mexico and South America furnished ores more than suffi cient for operating the plant at its pres ent capacity, and the second ore stack has been put in operation in conse quence. At SH)kane Judge Moore has appoint ed II. K. Houghton and J. W. Uinkley executors of the estate of the late Mrs. Jennie V. Cannon. No bond was re quired, and the executors under the will also act as trustees. Judge Houghton dead-letter postolllce in Washington, tiled a statement of the value of the es-1 is the moBt expert reader of illegible tate. Community real estate is put at j handwriting in the country. $700,000, and community personal prop- William U. Bate, Senator from Ten ertv is iriven at 1000.000. Mrs. Cannon's 1 noRHPi nnvpr livlita a citmr. Unban nl- sep'arato estate is given at $00,000, of n ruin ;u ool oui,.ta ami 490 nnn V, HUM e"iw,uw io in., wa. T-U,v personal property Silver salmon are reported as going up I'tiget Sound in great numbers. It is claimed that a stenmer was brought to a full stop in the Straits recently by run ning into a school of them. There is a tradition among the older fishermen to the eli'ect that a hailstorm always pre cedes a big run of the fish. A storm of this nature was reported on the lower Ninn.i.anu lIle."i J V mid urrivui tu , ... . ... :.! , Straits immediately followed At Tueoma the other day Miss Cam eron was conducting an experiment in the chemistry class of one of the public schools to produce musical sounds by burning hydrogen in a flask. Ihe hy drogen was generated by putting acid on zinc. Miss Cameron neglected the cau tion of the instructor, and set fire to the gas immediately after opening the flask. The air entered", and as soon as the fire was set an explosion resulted and two of the pupils were severely cut by the flying glass. The Great Northern Express Company has completed arrangements for doing business both in Alaska and Asia, and has issued a tariff of rates to those coun tries from Seattle. To Yokohama, Hong kong, Hiogo, Nagasaki and Shanghai the rates for packages valued at $50 or less range from $1.50 for fifteen pounds or under to $5 for forty-five to fifty pounds, with additional rates for pack ages of higher value. There is an addi tional charge of $1 to $2 to Auioy, Foo chow, Swatow, Bombay, Batavia, Cal cutta, Manila or Singapore. The rates to Alaska are 45 cents per 100 pounds to Wrangel and 55 cents to Sitka, the busi ness being carried by the Pacific Coast Steamship Company. A big scandal has len developed at San Francisco in the affairs of the Stearns rancho, a corporation which at one time owned 130,000 acres in Califor nia and is still one of the heaviest landed corporations on the Pacific Slope. The storv is that a committee of three disinterested business men have been for three or four months investigating the conduct of the manager of the busi ness of the corporation, Colonel R. J. Northam, who is a member of the Gov ernor's statf and one of the best-known public men in the State. The committee has about completed its work, and will in a few days report to the stockholders. The committee consists of BarclavHen ley, George B. Polhemus and E. W. Mc liraw. It is reported thrre will beama jority and a minority report. The ma jority bv Henley and Polhemns will state that $luO,uO0 of the income of the ranch has been illegally diverted. It is not charged that there has been any em bezzlement, however. In his minority report McOraw will defend Colonel Northam in his actions as custodian of the property of the company. EDUCATIONAL ITEMS. Cornell has 51 2 free scholarships, which aggregate f lOO.UUu. Italy In 1887 had 70,007 schools, 85,400 teachers anu a,uvi,wu attenuance. Joseph Pulitzer has given $100,000 to Columbia College, New York city. Tills country has fifty-two law schools, with S4B teacliers anu H.uuu students. New York onens five evening high schools for the use of advanced pupils employed during the day. The first normal school ever estab lished for women was that opened in July, 1831), at Lexington, Mass. There is probability that there will lie no schools bold in the Chickasaw nation this year on account of lack of funds. Religious teaching in public schools was declared absolutely necessary by the Church ol JMiglaml synod in uanaua. Of fiftv-three younn ladles who urad u a ted this year from a famous female educational institution not one has a pet name. The Brooklyn Board of Kd ilea t ion has decided to increase the school hours in that city over an hour a day for the sake ol physical culture. The French Minister of Public Instnuv tion has issued a circular which will have the eli'ect of greatly stimulating the study ol the English language. Miss Lillian Stephenson is the Repub lican nominee for School Commissioner in the First Oneida (N. Y.) district. Her Democratic competitor is Miss Ijiura r, Mayhew. At the end of the second week the Missouri State University had enrolled 475 students. This is forty more than the number enrolled at the same tune last year. The Mechanic Arts High School in Boston promises to be so much of a suc cess from the rush of pupils that more land and a larger building are linjwra tively needed. Oxford iB to have another' college for women, nt. Hilda will soon ue opened under the auspices of Miss Ikirothea Beale. a worker in the cause of hiirhor education in England. There are now 300 students at the University of North Carolina, and at least 100 more are expected. The num ber of students at the opening is the largest in thirty-three years. The new Searles scientific building at Bowdoin College will cost 1150.000 in stead of $00,000, as was first planned when Kdward F. Searles, husband of the late Mrs. Mark Hopkins-Searles, an nounced the gift. There are a dozen colleges of more or less importance in Kansas, and so far every one that has opened reports an in creased attendance this year over last. This is one of the best possible indica tions that Kansas is all right. J. Grant Cramer of Orange, N. J., son of a former United States Minister to Switzerland and a nephew of General Grant, has been appointed instructor of French and German in lehigh Univer sity, and lias entered upon his duties there. Women belonifine to a Baltimore cook ing school have offered to train in the culinary science 100 girls attending the grammar schools of the eity without charge, hoping thereby to demonstrate the utility of establishing a cookery de partment in connection with the public schools. Dr. G. C. Grandison. a colored man and late President of Bennett College, Greensborough, N. C, who spoke at the recent memorial exercises at HaniDton Institute, is described as one of the lore most orators, not only of his race, but of the day. 11 is address was eloquent in the extreme, and he has command of all the resources of the public speaker. He has a dash of Indian blood in him. PURELY PERSONAL. Rose Coghlan, the actress, has paid $27,01X1 for a home in New York city near Central Park, Susanne, Mme. de la Ramee, mother of " Ouida," died a short time ago near Florence. Italy, from the ellects of a fall. She was by birth an English woman named Sutton. Mrs. Patti Lyle Collins, who presides over the " live-letter " department of the wava one j ,i9 fingers or between his t... . t. r . ... i. ir. .i huh, OUV HO UiaiCll IS put, I.U lb. I1V ttU' vocates what he calls the "dry smoke." Kdwin S. Filler, ex-Mayor of Phila. delphia, mentioned eighteen months ago as possible candidate lor the 1 residency, begins the fall campaign with eighty pairs of trousers and fifty suits of clothes. Geronimo. the cruel and once powerful Indian chieftain of the West, is now a quiet and peaceful prisoner at Mount V ernon Harracks, an army post upon the A,ftbama river Hhort aistance above v eriiuu i Mobile. Jerome K. Jerome began life as a clerk. Then he went on the stage, which qauli- ! lied him for play-writing, to which in conjunction with novel-writing and co- editing a magazine he has since turned his attention. Forty years ago a mulatto boy of Chat ham county, N. C, was sold into slavery, and was taken to Georgia. A few days ago he returned, a venerable-looking man and worth more than $oou,000. ilia name is Nathan. Mrs. Ada M. Bittenbender, the Prohi bition candidate for Supreme Judge of Nebraska, is in the law practice at Lin coln witli her husband as senior partner of the firm. She is a native ol Bradford county, Pa., about 45 years of age and a very bright, well-educated woman. One of the most affecting reunions dur ing the recent encampment of the Grand Armv at Indianapolis was that of Gen eral Lew Wallace and his men of the Eleventh Indiana Regiment. About 325 of the members were present. General Wallace was their first Colonel and the one who made the regiment. Dr. Edward Warren, who died the other day in Paris, had a career of more than common interest. lie was acting Surgeon-General in Lee's army during the Peinsula campaign, and after the war he went abroad and became our-geon-General in the Khedive's armv in Egypt, and was honored with the title of Bey. Rev. Leonard Blomefield, who died re cently at Bath, was one of the most em inent naturalists in England, and had been a member of the Linmean Society lor seventy-one years, lie was long a well-known and popular figure at Cam bridge, and was an intimate friend of Whewell Darwin, Julius Hare, Sedgwick, Bishop Thirwall and other literary and scientific celebrities of the period. Edward H.Watson of California, a naval cadet at Annapolis, carries a time piece which is a historic relic. It is the watch which was presented to Admiral Farragnt by the citizens of Vallejo in 1858. At the time of the presentation Farragnt was a Captain in the navy, and had just been relieved as commandant of the Mare Island navy yard. The watch it a plain gold timepiece, and was presented to young Watson by Loyal I Farragnt, sen of the Admiral, EASTERN MELANGE. The Eighty-fourth Parallel of the Pole Reached. MARY WASHINGTON MONUMENT. Urge Number of Deaths Caused by the Recent Storm Below New Orleans, Louisiana. The new public building at Omaha will be builtol granite. The cotton crop Is 40 per cent short of last year's yield in Southwest lexas. For 10 cents each children under 14 are now admitted to the World's Fair. Dengue or break-bone fever has made Its appearance at Corpus Christi, Tex. Ex-Treasurer Green MeCurtin of Ok lahoma is short $104,727. He has dis appeared. A public library and literary resort ex clusively for the blind has been opened in Chicago. The Ferris wheel at the World's Fair has taken in the $1100,000 it cost and $100,000 beside. New York city will spend $20,000 to make her day at the World's Fair a memorable success. Many railway bridges have been swept away by floods in the Indian Territory and Northern Texas. Denver has contracted to ship to Eu- roe by the way of Galveston, Tex., 5,000 tons of Colorado nay. The Welsh in the United States claim that they are in number as many as their countrymen In Wales. The manufacture of cigarettes shows a remarkable and steady increase over other forms of tobacco. The cruiBer New York will be the first United States vessel to receive a battery of Whitehead torpedoes. Eight thousand men are employed on the canal that will carry the sewage of Chicago to the Illinois river. In New York the grand jury has made a presentment recommending that the oltiee of Coroner be abolished. worker, has indict over 000 persons to sign the pledge at Tuscola, la. A Portland (Me.) furniture man, who baa failed for nearly $800 000 shows up with less than $5,000 worth of assets. The employes of the Denver and Rio since July 1, 18H3; also that of 10, Grande railroad have agreed to accept a 782 cases suspended under the act of 1U per cent reduction in wages until Jan uary. TKa nlttlltr Biitninn wnalliRi. Iinfl brought sickness and death to the Orientals on the Midway Plaisance, Chicago. The diminished price of silver lias caused the shutdown of many Mexican mines and also greatly decreased the rcVUUUU. . Contracts have recently been made for between 500 and 1,000 cars In Nebraska i,y the United States Commissioner at for transportation of last year's corn and ti,e port of entry. The certificate de hay crop. scribes the immigrants. The circular Mrs. Samuel Bennett of Tanner, W. Va gave birth to her twenty-ninth ciuid a lew days ago. . ah the cnuuren are alive. I It is safe now to number the deaths in the nw.nl fltiirm liulnw ew Of leans at 2,000 and over, and the loss In property will be many millions, The house of the late Justice Bradley, formerly the Washington home of Ste- fihen A. Douglas, has been purchased by 'apal Delegate Satolli. The Texas Associated Press has con tracted with the Associated Press for a period of ten years and severed its con nection with the United Press. A correspondent of the New York Trl bune suggests the holding of a great World's Fair at New York in 1000 to eel-' brate the closing of the nineteeth cen tury. There is a movement in Canada for having a national park created in the ( Nepigon country,, in order that the ...... .. .i ii 1 trout nsiung mere may oeeiernauy per-. i.?1' v i ir ii . . u... The New York Herald announces tha President McLeodof the New England i railroad has secured an entrance to the center of New ork city with good termi- nal facilities. Fourteen members of the Board of ( rreenoiuers oi laiiersuu, n. o., wave n.MII nf motrin.. t'Al IHH1 franrl. ulently in the purchase of a courthouse for that town. Captain Porter of the whaler Newport claims to have sailed to the eighty fourth parallel of the pole. Navigators are getting there by degrees. This is within six of it. John D. Rockefeller, the Standard Oil multi-millionaire, is to purchase at Tar rytown, N. Y., about 500 acres for $750, 000. He will build a mansion which will cost over $1,000,000. Every member of Congress has re. ceived an anonymous printed circular threatening United States Senators as enemies ot the people lor not acting on the silver purchase repeal bill. Two hundred prominent citizens of Austin, lex., have asked - Governor Hogg to accept the sugar bounty ac cumulated at Washington to Texas credit, which he refused last spring. Mrs. Mathilda Cross MacConnell has presented to the city of Pittsburg five long squares of ground as it is described for a public park. She is the third ladv in the city who has given land for park purposes. It is announced that more than 21,000 patents were granted on inventions in volving the industrial application of electricity between January 1, 1876, and December 31, 1802, and tbe number of new ones is increasing at the rate of 2,000 per annum. At present there are seventy-one pub lic buildings in course of construction in the United States, and the plans for forty-nine new ones, for which appropri ations have been made, are being pre pared in the Treasury Department. Representative Caminetti has discov ered a way to avoid the heavy expense of deporting Chinese who refuse to register. He protxwes that the government send some of the old war vessels going out of commission for that purpose. Th Standard Oil CouiDinv has hnnirht 3,000 acres of land near the lake front at Ashtabula, O., with the intention of erecting a big steel plant capable of turn ing ont 2,000 tons per da v. ihe location is favorable for securing supplies of cheap coal and ore. The Old Mary Washington monument at Fredericksburg, Va., was polled down and the box in the corner-stone turned over to the officers of the Monument As sociation. The box was filled with water and a confused mass of pulp. None of the objects eonld be distingnished. The stone of the old monument will be placed in the foundation of the new one about to be erected. Tbe same corner-stone will be nsed. FROM WASHINGTON CITY. Senator Dolph believes that silver may be maintained, but not by the Sherman law or free coinage, rostmaater-Ueiieral Hissell Is expected to devote considerable attention in his annual report to the project! 1-ceut postal service. He believes the Inaugu ration of the service is Impossible at the present time, owing to a dellcit of $, 000,000 In postal funds in the Treasury. Governor Caleb V. West of Utah, In his annual report, states that the total population of the Territory is estimated at 233,806, an Increase of iWi.DOO. He cause of recent financial stringency and the decline of silver values, the popula tion of the mining districts has ma terially decreased during the past six months, while there has been a steady growth in the other parts of the Terri tory. Anderson of West Virginia has Intro duced a bill to amend Section 5,628 of the Itevised Statutes by striking out the words "unless such force be necessary to repel armed enemies of the United States or to keep the peace at the polls." This Is one of the lederal statutes not repealed in the Tucker bill, and the amendment is intended to prevent any army or navy officers bring troops to the polls. Hepreaentative Poolittle of Washing ton has introduced a joint resolution In the House providing lor a commission, consisting of three Senators anil six Rep resentatives to go over the entire route of the Nicaragua canal and make a thor ough examination with a view of sub mitting to Congress a comprehensive re port ofthe existing conditions and fur nishing information upon which future legislation may be had. The resolution was referred to the Committee on Inter state and Foreign Commerce. The Banking and Currency Com mittee heard Bryan of Nebraska ou his bill to secure depositors of National Banks, compelling the banks to set aside one-fourth of 1 per cent of the av erage deposits for the two mouths pre ceding January 1 until a fund of f 10, 000,000 is created to be paid depositors of failed banks. Bryan argued that the lepositors ought to be paid at once, for if every depositor was sure of his money he would not draw it out, and this would have the effect of preventing panics. Secretary Smith has sent to the Senate the reply of Commissioner lochren to inauiries. The number of pensions granted during the period ending Sep tember 1, 18113, was 55,244. Of these 1 ?..1?Lere. w?eT. the.?l!n?raL Bw nd W.U67 under the law ol imw. i ne num- I i .. , .aiia ! arjt , 01)iae tlB jm.jHaiction , 1r..itl xtt !... h n .nxnen.l. 1800 payment lias been resumed in 0,072 cases up to October 5, 18t)3. ' me circular saueu uy un ieu guiles nupennienuenr, oi immigration oui up 1 10 carry out the agreement with Ca- ! '"n.T." .'T.r.. . .Vl , tL:, K.otoo miianA jn r,i vjdeg fcr an immi t eertim.ate ich AntUla.O Ko I.Mai.. trx a.ln.io.inn int tit a I vtin n.a irtiu aitsawi w vjjidoivi i i j vuo . Unita states when nmtwrlv iwH.lflvd also provides for a head tax by the ' steamer landing the immigrants. The' ports oi iiainax, iueuec, roini ievis, Vancouver and Victoria are the only ports at which such immigrants shall be; laiiueili Cumuiiiiga from the Committee on Naval Affairs presented to the House and had passed a resolution calling on the Secretary of the Navy for informa tion as to the amount of premiums paid extractors for the construction of war ships developing speed in excess of re quirements, etc. After this the bill to remit the penalties on the dynamite cruiser Vesuvius came up, and Sayers of Texas vigorously opposed it, claiming the Vesuvius was worthless lor the pur poses for which she was built, Talbot Qf Maryland read a letter from Secre tary Herbert declaring the claim an equitable one and Baying if the dyna mite guns did not show Improvement the Vesuvius would be fitted with other armament. The amount involved is $30,- sui mi . i. Ml . .i . uuu. me um wem over wunoui aciion. In the Supreme Court of the United StaUig ex-Attorney-General Garland a9ked tmj mntt vaMCe for he . the , o( th(J Northem Vaci&c Kaif. roa(, Company vs. J. L. Patterson, Treas- nrer of uanatjn county, Mont., from the Montana Supreme Court. The proposi- tions contained in this case involve niu mately the question of the taxability of all the unpatented surveyed lands within the limits of the Northern Pacific, South ern Pacific, Union Pacific, Central Pa cific, California and Oregon, Oregon and California, Atlantic and Pacific, Texas Pacific and all other various land grants made bv Congress to aid in the construc tion of railroads. These lands now amount in the case of the Northern Pa cific grant alone to over 17,000,000 acres, an area rapidly increasing as the surveys are farther extended. The area of lands in the same condition included in simi lar grants will more than double this. These lands are to be found in almost every State west of the Mississippi, and their taxability has been one of the great sources of revenue in those States. The Southern Pacific Company, controlling the land grants of that road, of the Cen tral Pacinc.'Oregon and California and California and Oregon, refuses to pay taxes upon unpatented portions of those grants. The States along the line of the Northern Pacific have sustained the claims of the County Treasurers, and tax the lands within their jurisdiction; and the railroad company comes to the Su preme Court for relief. The report of Brigadier-General Will iam P. Carlin, commanding the military department of the Columbia, which in cludes the States of Oregon, Washington and a part of Idaho and the Territory of Alaska, has been received at the War Department. The General devotes a large part of his report to urging the necessity for the abandonment of some small posts in the department because of their inaccessibility and the estab lishment of larger posts in place of them at points near the railroad and the large cities and towns. General Carlin re commends the discontinuance of Fort Spokane, Wash., and the construction of a post near Spokane. Fort Town send, he says, is useless to protect the cities and harbors of l'uget Sound, and he thinks the garrison should be re moved to some important point. One, if not two, points in addition to th ese named could, in General Carlin's opin ion, be abandoned with advantage to the government. Fort Canby, at the mouth of the Columbia river, would be of great importance in time of war with a naval power, but it is inaccessible in winter, and only a small garrison is re quired there in time of peace. Fort Stevens, on the opposite or southern side of the river, is also a point of great importance, and General Carlin urges that it be strongly fortified. General Carlin reports that desertions in the de partment of tbe Columbia showed an in crease during the year. He says that . i . . . . ir. . . me Munufn hj eniisa a cumpany us In dian resulted in failure. FOREIGN FLASHES. Novel Method to Secure Payment of Taxes. the ROUKN CATHEDRAL IN DANOER. Canal du Midi to be Extended-Plow or Bar Silver to India-Postal Service by Camels. Drought Is interfering with farm work in Italy. i Germany has a clock whlnh. It is claimed, will run 9,000 days without shopping. , The Russian authorities -have forbid den the publication of marriage oilers in me newspajiers. The population of the English town of Nottingham has increased 127,300 in the last sixteen years. London has been holding an exhibi tion of fire engines. The oldest one shown bore the date of 1570. Spain has excepted from quarantine all Russian war ships touching at Cadis, unless there is disease aboard. In Paris at the sale of autographs the letters of Zola realized 4s each; Mau passant, 6s; Victor Hugo, 0s 8d. The American colony in Paris now numbers 3,600. There is a falling oil' from the census of two years ago of 1,200. No less than forty Italian Bishops are now without their exequaturs, owing to a conflict lietween the Vatican and the tjuiriiial. A water-drinking contest was recently held in Paris. The winner swallowed twelve quarts, the second nine and the third seven. Among the novel societies Incorporated in Europe recently is "The Society for the Protection of Non-Smokers'' in Lower Austria. Abbas Pasha, the Khedive of Egypt, intends to visit England in the spring of 1804, provided that the English court shall be willing. The British government has decided to act as a mediator between the striking miners and owners provided it iB accept able to both sides. Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria is in great tlnancial straits, and iub lather-ln-Faw and Karon Hirsch have each loaned him 1,000,000 francs. Returns from the various vitlcultnral societies of France show that the wine crop of the country for the year amount ed to 30,000,000 hectolitres. Prince Bismarck has Bold his memoirs to a London publisher for 600,000 marks on the condition that they shall be pub lished Immediately after his demise. Unsuccessful efforts have been made to got German bankers at Berlin to form a syndicate to take a great Italian loan, the reported amount being $120,000,000. world's fair to be held In Madrid in 1804 will seek to surpass the Colum bian Exposition in all the attributes of greatness. It is a very large undertak ! Ipg for Spain Emigration from Spain to South Amer- nan Kepublics is assuming considerable proportions, owing to the extreme die- tress prevailing in the country, especially in the agricultural districts, It is currently rumored In London that William Waldorf A star is about to build in that city the largest and most costly hotel in the world, which, it is estimated, will cost more than $7,000,000, The Queen Regent of Spain has de cided to fulfill a heartfelt wish of her husband and establish a college in the Escurial. bearing her name, for the teaching and study of Christian sciences, Apollinaris water comes from a Bnring in the valley on the Ahr in the Rhine district. A whole villuge is engaged in bottling it and shipping it. From 100, 000 to 150,000 bottles are prepared in a day. " Piggie's Island " in London, which took its name from the dirty hovels which clustered on it, has been converted hv the Iindon County Council Into a clean and beautiful park. It cost $25,000 to make the change. The report that eleven rebellious Se as were blown from the guns at Cabul enied bv later news from Simla. An officer was shot by an orderly, and the latter was executed. 1 Hat wag an tne rioting and the only execution. It is reported that the French govern ment has determined to suppress bull fighting in that country. The Society for the Protection of Animals will bring suit against a Mayor who authorized a fight in order to test the law in the case. Fully 1,600 people are to leave Iceland this year for the Canadian Northwest, and as the Canadian government will nav their passage and in other wave en able them to settle in more desirable homes, the exodus is likely to continue, Rouen Cathedral is in danger, the west front being seriously dilapidated. 1 he local authorities will not pay for the nec essary restoration ; so, unless the State comes to the rescue sjieedily, this fine old building promises to be irreparably damaged. The French government has just cre ated in the nature of an experiment a Pistal service by camel express in the rench territories of Olxish and the So mali coast. In connection with this service a special provisional stamp will be issued, the value being 5 francs. It is under renewed contemplation to extend or supplement the old Languedoc canal Canal du Midi built some 200 years ago, from ISordeaux at the Garonne river to the Mediterranean by means of a new canal, to be 27 feet deep, 140 to 200 feet broad and some 300 miles long. Calcutta advices say the flow of bar silver to India is due partly to the de mands made by the native mints and by private enterprises for the illegal coinage of rupees. As soon as the decree sus pending the free coinage of silver was issued, the illegal coinage of rupees in creased alarmingly. Princess Maud of Wales is particularly fond of assuming an alias and dropping some of the red tape and royalty. Every year she goes to visit her former gover ness, who lives in Devonshire. Always the sensible Princess insists on being called Miss Mills and upon being treated as a member of the family. It is said that fully 300,000 men, wom en and children in Lancashire, England, alone are dependent from meal to meal on public charity, owing to the prolonga tion ot the lockout, a remarxauie leat n l.. . Lit., un nrin . : i UIC IB ...U, J.,WV U...J.O cashire have been idle for two months, not ten Police Court eases have arisen. The government of Saxony has adopted a novel method to secure the payment of taxes. The names of persons who did not pay their taxes last year are printed and hung no in all the restaurants and saloons. The proprietors dare not serve those mentioned on the lists with food or drink under penalty of losing their iieensea. PORTLAND MARKET. Whit Valley, 05(307t'c; Walla Walla, Mttm;-,c per cental. movisioNS. Eastsrn Smoked Msats and Lard Hams, medium, U(t5c per pound; breakfast bacon, 18(4 lOc,; nhort clear sltles, 1610c; dry salt sides, I3i4c; lard, compound, in tins, lO'c per pound ; pure, In tins, 13 (3 15c. AOS AND HAQuINO. . Burlaps. B-onnce. 40-Inch, net cash, 6c; burlaps, 10 -ounce, 40-inch, net cash, o'c; burlaps, 11 -on nee, 40-incn, 7,c; burlaps, ltl-ounce, 00-lnch, 11c; burlaps, Ill-ounce, 70-inch, 14c; wheat bags. Calcutta, 22x30, spot, 8c; 2-buahel oat bags, 74c; No. 1 selected second hand bags, 7c; Calcutta hop cloth, 24 otince, 10c. BOPS, WOOL AND HIDES. Hops were quiet yesterday and a shade lower. Tallow has advanced in the East. Hops 'V2s, 10(3 10c per pound, accord ing to Quality: new crop. '03s. HctaiOc; choice, 10c(317c. Wool Prices nominal. Hides Dry selected prime. 6c; green, salted, (10 pounds and over, 3,'yc; nnder 60 pounds, 2 (at 3c; sheep pelts, shearlings, 10( 1 5c; medium, 20($36c; long wool, 30(3J0c; tallow, good to choice, 33e per pound. FLOUR, PEED, ETC. FixDR-8tamlard, $3.00; Walla Walla, $3.00; graham, $2.60; superfine, $2.25 per barrel. Oats New white, 3530c per bushel ; new gray, 3233c; rolled, in bags, $0.25 6.50; barrels, $tl.757.O0; cases, $3.76. Mii.Lsrurrs Bran. 110.00: shorts. $18.00; ground barley, 2223; chop feed, $18 per ton: whole feed, barley, 80 moots per cental; middlings, fzaigst per ton: chicken wheat. tl.I0l. 25 per cental. Hay Good, $1012 per ton. DAISY PRODUCE. Riitteh Oreimn fancy creamery. 30 (332 c; fancy dairy, 2527c; fair to good, 1720c; common, 15 10c per pound. Cheese Oregon, 1012c; Califor nia, 13(gl4c; Young America, 15 10c per pound. Eoos Oregon, 27,0 per dozen; East ern, 2325c Poultry Chickens, old, $3.0U3.&0; broilers, $1.50(93.00; ducks, $3.00(4.00; geese, $8.009.00 per dozen; turkeys, live, 14c per pound. LIVE AND DRESSED MEAT. Beep Prime steers. S2.60S2.75; fair ... 1 .lutM tO Rll. nnnl ln.il.nlM cows, $1.602.00; dressed beef, $3.60 0.00 per 100 txmhds. Mutton Choice mutton, $2.002.50; dressed, $4.00g5.60; lambs, $2.002.60; dressed, $0.00 ; live weight, sz.uuc42.ou. H 00s Choice heavy, $5.00(5.50; me dium, $4.505.00; light and feeders, $4.505.00; dressed, $7.00. veal $-:.ou(9o.ou. MISCELLANEOUS. Tin I. C. charcoal, 14x20, prime qual ity, $8.50(89.00 per box ; for crosses, $2 extra per box; I. C. coke plates, 14x20, prime quality, $7.508.00per box; terne plate, I. C, prime quality, $0.507.00. Nails Base quotations: Iron, $2.25; steel, $2.35; wire, $2.60 per keg. Steel Per pound, 10c. La ad Per pound. AMo: bar. 0c Naval Storks Oakum, $4.505.00 per bale; resin, $4.80(35.oo per 48U pounua; tar. Stockholm. $13 ; Carolina, $0 per bar rel ; pitch, $G per barrel ; turpentine, 05c per gallon in car lots. Iron Bar, 2o per pound; pig-Iron, Z3(gz& per ton. VEGETABLES and fruits. Vegetables Cabbage, la per pound; potatoes, Oregon, 76c per sack ; new on ions, II4C per pound; tomatoes. 35 40c per box: green corn. 15c per dozen; sweet potatoes, 1 1 c per pound ; egg plant, $1.00 per box; uregon celery, so (g50c. Fruits Sicily lemons, $0.00(30.60 per uua , vnuiuitiia nun uui ft.uviBw,uv per box ; bananas, $l.60C43.00 per bunch ; oranges, $3.60 per box : Oregon peaches, 85c(3$1.00 per box ; California, per box ; fall butter pears, 8000c per box, ll)4c per pound; cassavae. fzigfz.ou: grapes, 60(a3OOc per box : Italian prunes, 75(g$l per pox; apples, naiuwiii, mug, 00c 1 . - 1 r 1.1 ir: nr. . MSl.OU per liox; waxen, voigvuc; cran berries, $8(38.60 per barrel. STAPLE GROCERIES. Dried Fruits Petite prunes. lOrti 11c: silver, ll12c; Italian, 13)c; German, 10(3 lie; plums, 80c; evaporated ap ples, 10(3 11c; evaporated apricots, 14(3 15c; peaches, 10(3 12 '4c; pears, 7 (3 11c per pound. Honey Choice comb, 18c per pound; new Oregon, 10(g20c; extract, 0(8 10c. Salt Liverpool, 100s, $10.00; 60s, $10.50; stock, $8.60(89.60. Coffee Costa Rica, 23c; Rio, 22c; Salvador, 23c; Mocha. 2()28c; Ar buckle's, Columbia and Lion, 100-pound cases, 26.30u per pound. Beans Small whites. 3(3 3 c; pinks, 3c; bayos, 33c; butter, 4c; lima, 3'aC per pound. Rice Island,$5.756.00;Japan, j New Orleans, $6.60U.2o per cental. Syrup Eastern, in barrels, 4055cj in half-barrels, 42(867c: in cases. 35(3 80c per gallon ; $2.25 per keg ; California, in barrels, 20(340c per gallon; $1.76 per Hugar D, 5c ; Golden 0, 6c ; extra C. &c ; confectioners' A, 64c ; dry gran ulated, 0c; cube, crushed and pow dered, 70 per pound ; Jo per pound discount on all grades for prompt cash; maple sugar, 15(3 loo per pound. CANNED GOODS. Canned Goods Table fruits, assorted, $1.75(32.00; peaches, $1.85(32.00; Bart lett pears, $1.75(32.00; plums, $1.37)(3 1.50; strawberries, $2.25(32.46; cherries, $2.25(32.40; blackberries, $1.85(82.00; raspberries, $2.40; pineapples, $2.25(3 2.80; apricots, $1.05. Pie fruits, assorted, $1.20; peaches, $1.26; plums, $1.00(31.20; blackberries, $1.25(3 1.40 per dozen. Pie fruits, gallons, assorted, $3.16(33.50; peaches, $3.50(84.00; apri cots, $3.50(84.00; plums, $2.75(33.00; blackberries, $4.25(84.60; tomatoes.ll.io. Meats Corned beef. Is, $1.60; 2s, $2.40; chipped, $2.55(83.00: lunch tongue, Is, $4; 2a, $0.75; deviled ham, $1.75(32.15 per dozen. Fish Sardines, l4, 76c$2.25; $2.16(84.60; lobsters, $2.30(33.50; sal mon, tin Mb tails, $1.25(3$1.60; flats, $1.76; 2-lbs, $2.26(32.60; .-barrel, $5.50. The German Government has ar ranged with half a dozen universities for a series of lectures on sanitation, to tie delivered to people engaged in the pub lic service, numbing, drainage, laundry work, the disposal of sewage, slaughter ing cattle, ventilation and other subjects which involve the public health are to be tbe topics for instruction. SksotlB, LloM la Of AUm Mountain. Amopg the Arabs of the Atlas mountains, where the lion is hunted with anccees, the hunter studies his beast before engaging' in battle. If he is very fat, there is little danger in pot shots. If he is lean and spry, the Arab will maneuver for a coign of vantage from which be can pour in three or four shots before coming to clone quarters. If he is so emaciated that yon can count his ribs, the rule fcs to ahoot boldly; tne brute cannot retaliate. San Francisco Argonaut Highest of all in Leavening II WT ABSOlaUTEliY PURE FARM AND GARDEN. Spirits of Turpentine Will De stroy ltoup Germs. SUGGESTIONS FOB THE FARMER. A Flan of Keeping Onions Through Winter Advice About Milk ing Farm Notes. Never waste f je in wintering weak colonics. The grub is often the cause ot the flower plants turning yellow. Keeping the orchard well trimmed will add to the appearance of the farm. Tobacco is a valuable insecticide against greenhouse peat, used dry, as smoke or in the form of decoction. Where the hives are troubled with ants a little pine tar on a board, placed next tne nive, win seep tnem away. Cuttings of grapes and currants taken close to the old wood will be more cer tain to root than if from long pieces cut up. This season seems to be a favorable one for some of the less common kinds of insects, and they have occurred in increased numbers. Burn the Btraw or other material from the nests once a week, and replace it with fresh. This practice will aid greatly in keeping down lice. Manv swarms and large yields of honey will not be obtained during the same season. The one will be developed at the expense of the other. To secure the greatest quantity of pure white combs remove the sections as Boon as filled, and replace empty ones with starters of comb foundation. Do as much plowing this autumn as possible. It will save time in getting crops in next spring, and will prevent many weeds maturing in stubble fields. Late growth produces tender wood. which cannot withstand a low tempera ture; tlierelore, cease cultivating orchard trees in time for them to thoroughly ripen. If discarded apples are removed from the orchard and fed to pigs or other stock or the animals allowed to pick them up in the orchard, many injurious insects will be destroyed. Do not allow weeds to mature seed on the land where potatoes were grown. They will seed the ground thoroughly for another year witli loxtail, pui-sian, pig' weeds, etc., if allowed to grow. Examine flocks of sheep, and if ticks are still found on them, destroy by dip ping in tobacco decoction or in some of the prepared dips before they are con fined in barns and Biieda again. In pruning voung seedlings after the introduced bud has started growth do not cut away too much of it at a time, or too heavy a flow of sap sont to the young snoot may kin tne introduced bud. One of the liest ways of renewing an old currant bush is to cut out all the old growth and the greater portion of the new and dig thoroughly around the roots und apply a good dressing of manure. wintkhino onions. I will repeat my plan of keeping onions through winter in as few words as possible, as some of your readers ma have forgotten it, or perhaps not have noticed it, Bays a writer in Ohio Farmer. We select a piece of dry ground and dig a trench from four to six feet wide, and long enough to hold all that we have to nut in it. We put them about six inches deep in the pit. They are put upon the ground, but about two inches of straw over them, and then a few inches of earth on the straw. We wish them to get frozen as soon as possible after they are put into the pit. After we are certain that they are all frozen, we haul some manure and cover them, perhaps a foot deeper, than at first. There are two reasons for this. One ia that if they are allowed to thaw during the winter, they will almost certainly rot and the entire lot be lost. Upon the other hand, if they get frozen too hard, tliev will either rot when they thaw out or else be dead and worthless for sets. In the spring, after the frost is all out of them, we take them out of the pit and put them back upon the shelves again, as they were during the fall before. There they remain until they are needed to set out. I have tried various plans of preserving onion sets through winter, but none 01 them nave proved as satis factory as the above, In fact, we con sider ft Just about perfect. TURI'ENTINE por roup. Western Kural says: Experiments made show that germs of roiiD are de stroyed when brought in contact with spirits of turpentine. Turpentine, how ever, is a severe dose to give, even if ef fectual, and if too much is given, it may do damage of itself. To properly pre pare it mix one part spirits of turpen tine, one part kerosene and three parts glycerine in a sewing machine oil can, and always shake well before using. with the point ol the oil can force three drops of the mixture down the throat of the towl three times a day. Koup is a disease that is almost incurable, being contagious, and gradually exhausts the mru iiinieau 01 causing insiam ueai.11. If it appears in the flock, the labor of han All Other Baking Powders Leave traces of Ammonia Alua, Alkali or Acid in the Food. Dr. Price's Cream Baking Pow&r Is tht only Baking Powder that is free from any taint ol adulteration or defect Dr. Price' is indispensable when perfect work and whc some (bod are desired. Its higher raising power and marvelous purity msi uore economical than any other. Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report BaMng dling the sick birds Is often more than the value of the flock, and as roup can not well be treated on the wholesale plan (that is without handling the fowls), it is cheaper to clean them out, burn the carcasses, thoroughly disinfect and begin anew. The building should be very warm and dry. ADVICE ABOUT HII.KIN0. It cannot help but he injurious to a cow to milk her np to a new calving. It is exhausting to the cow and the calf both, as the calf is supported by the cow and needs the nutriment that is taken from the cow in the milk. A cow should be dried off four weeks before the calf is due, and this is more desirable because the milk itself is undergoing a change during this time by which it is made un- nt tor use in tne dairy ana unpieasani for food. To dry a cow leave half the milk in the udder, and continue this for a week ; then milk once a day only, and still leave some ot the milk ; feed only dry food, and if necessary, straw ; but give meal in moderate quantity. If the cow is one of those occasional profuse milkers that cannot be dried, the milk may be fed to pigs and the cow milked partly. ' To Inaora Plcaunt Draws. It Is not enough that children should be kept In Ignorance of evil, their sensitive spirits are so alive to every passing influ ence that suggestions ars surely boms to them of the sin and sorrow all around. They have intuitions, if not discernment, of the existence of much concerning which their elders suppose them to be altogether In the dark. The expulsive power of toothing thoughts is perhaps tha only remedy for all night fears. The writer partly attributes her own exemption la childhood from these tortures to a habit somehow acquired of repeating to herself before going to sleep tbe nrst stanza or Bishop Ken's evening hymn. We could scarcely tell what spell of peace it bore, whether it lay in the music of the words, in Its opening note of praise, which seemed to lift the spirit Into regions ol eternal calm, or in the trustful rapture ot its prayer, but the "blessings of the light" seemed still to linger on the strain; tha darkness was but as the shadow of tha "Almighty wings" beneath which we were gathered. "Give me a great thought to die on," asked Herder on his deathbed. And a peaceful thought to fall asleep on, a thought in which, as Herbert hath it, "more than in bed we rest," is a mighty help for children of every growth toward healthy slumber. Argosy. DeBnltlent of tbe Praloas Infant Cynical subscribers to London Tit-Blta have funushedjhe following definitions ot a baby: y A daylight charmer and a midnight alarmer. A pleasure to two, a nuisance to every other body and a necessity to the world. An Inhabitant of Lapland, The morning caller, noonday crawler, midnight brawler. An Invention for keeping people awake at night A mite of a thing that requires a mighty lot of attention. A thing everybody thinks there is a great deal too much fusa about unless it Is their own. A thing we are expected to kiss, and lsok as if we enjoyed it. A mite of humanity that will cry no harder if a pin is stuck into him than he will it the cat won't let him puU her tail. A crying evil you only aggravate by put. ting down. Tbe bachelor's horror, the mother's treas ure and the despotic tyrant of the most re publican household. The human screech owl, whose warbling sounds are demoniacal to some, seraphic to many and appealing to all. That which increases the mother's toll, decreases tbe father's cash and serves as an alarm clock to the neighbors. Mark Twain's Hrothar. Mark Twain has a brother living la Keokuk, la., who Is absentminded enough for Mark to "put In a book." It is related that he drank violet ink for blackberry cordial and took an allopathio dose of am monia Instead of his cough medicine, but his latest abeentmioded adventure oc curred when his wife bad goes to a Sun day school picnic Mis. Clemens Instructed hr husband that he would And his lunch nicely pre pared In the refrigerator. On her way home she inquired of Mr. Clemens as to his bachelorhood and bow he had enjoyed his lunch. "Well," said Mr. Clemens, "I dtdnt think the salad you spoke of wa especially good, but I ate it." Mrs. Clemens discovered that be had "eaten it" indeed that Is, the yeast pat to raise for the next day's baking, while the salad remained untouched. New York Sun. Dangers of Procrattlnntlea. Undlady-I 'pose you noticed that long whiskered old gentleman who sat opposite yon at dinner today f That Is Professor Driebones, and you can bars his room, as be is going west on a scientiflo exploration -strangest thing you srer heard. New Boarder-What Isf !.andlady-The object of his tour. He bas been told that a prehistoric cars has been discovered out west, and In It sat ten skeletons around a petrifled table. wi u i-V.r1i Willi! Whv dtdnt the fools change their boarding house sooo- er.-New xora weeaiy. What the Qumb'i Rom Crave. It Is told oo high authority that Queen Victoria's favorite scents are petchoali ..j ..k.i. Tkiaa famous India auu uivMM..w ihawla which the gives ss wedding pns 1 . I L -1- antaars perfumed wun rnrii. ioo I Mot