OREGON CITY COURIER-HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 14 1899. NEWS OF THE WEEK ' STATE, t & Balnier'i populatioa ia 1080.' It has been suggested t GorvaUis that steps be leke-i to preserve Ins old iUt eapitd eUhat pieee. " The Boys Brigade ha been organised K- 4t nnnili nf ftnlmnhnl afhnr.l. Me Muinnlle Fruit Of to h captain. It u iw) that there are 200 PortInd fcoboe making thl jt to Astoria. They expect to lire eear during the fish. iog season. ,i- " ' Marshal Heathttaa.of Pendletoa, hai announced that, he intends to eappreH every form ol gam bit nf, including the lot machinea, aext to-it the city of die orderly women. The newly elected officers of Canyon City are : Mayor, B. A. Hinei; record r, George Ohittenach ; treasurer, Chat. Crown ; councilman, Ira flpronl, Fred Bimpsoii, diet Guernsey, Fred Bladgen and Tony Wendler. A human skeleton was exhumed on the Adams farm, near Tale lake, last week. The bones were just beneath the surface of the ground, and were turned up by a plow. It is supposed that the bones are those of an unfortunate who fell during the Modoc war in 1873. Secretary Holden, of the Astoria chamber of commerce, hu received ad vice from the surgeon-general's office, at Washington, that work will begin on the quarantine station at the mouth of the Columbia as soon as the government Is satisfied that it can obtain a clear title to the land. The indications for a lare grain crop in Klamath county were never more fa vorable than at the present time. It is claimed that nearly a half more acreage will be put in this spring, and the abun dance of moisture which has fallen this pring will bring Klamath to the front as one of the best farming counties in the state. Elgin sheepmen report a loss of less than 5 per cent for the winter. Receipts for the year ending March SI at the Baker City postofflce were tlO, 134. A child of Frank Page, of Elgin, was killed Monday by a dose of nitric acid administered by another child. The First Congregational Church of Astoria has called Rev. Edward Curran, of Oakland, Cal., to be its pastor. The grand jury of Jacksonville has in dicted Alonzo Edwards for murder. Ed wards killed Charles Evans near Ash land on March 8. A large sawmill is soon to be built by the Booth-Kelly Lumber Company in Lane county. Right of way lor a motor line along the county road between Corvallis and Mon roe has been denied by the Benton coun ty court, Permission has been granted the state by the interior department to build a fish hutoliery on the Olackamas river in the Otscado mountain reserve. The Fishermen's Union is making ef forts to have several bar buoys at the mouth of the Columbia river removed, claiming that they interfere with the nets. fitayton has a broom factory. Six per sons are employed. Astoria has reduced the tax on bowl ing alleys to 4 a quarter. Salem's amateur photographers will organise a camera club this evening. The preliminary surveying party of the Lyle and Uoldendale railway has arrived at Goldendale from Centerville. At the First M. E. church of Salem Tuesday morning was celebrated the 64th anniversary of the beginning of the work of that church in Oregon. The convention of the Eugene district Epworth League ended Wednesday. There were 66 delegates present from the district and a number of fraternal dolegates from Salem and Portland dis tricts. PACIFIC COAST. The scurvy epidemic on Copper river, Alaska, Is abating. Tacoma will be honored by the nam ing oi one of the new cruisers now being built tor the eity. The Green-Smith fight scheduled to take place In San Francisco on Sunday night proved a fiasco. Smith refused to go ea, claiming there was not enough money In aiaht. Masked rob hers tortured Andrew Mi cfeaele, near Oolville, Wash., by holding his leet over fire in an attempt to make him meal the whereabouts of his money. lie was severely burned. . GENERAL. Terrr Belmont is said to be training to enter the race for the governorship of Hew York. General Ruseel Hastings has declined the president's appointment as director of the bureau of American republics. The third annual mee ting of the Amer ican Academy of Political and Social 6ciencs began at Philadelphia Saturday, Director Wolcott'a plans for continua tion of the Alaska survey work have been approved by the secretary of the interior. Districting the country for the taking of the twelf'h census has been complet ed. Two supervisors will be appointed for Oregon. Discharged New Jersey volunteers committed many acts of violence- on their way throng). South Carolina 8rm day ;,'tenwlaiafrthe cjomiMnitieethrongn which they passed. An attempt was made Monday to place the recently appointed receiver for the Boston A Montana Mining Company In possession of the-office at Butte. Seri. oos trouble wee red. The beei court of Inquiry has decided to admit as evidence the reports of army officers regarding the quality of the meat supplied their respective commands in Cuba afijlorto Rico. Vice-President Hobart from his illness. . is recovering Thomas J. , Havemeyer died at New York yesterday, aged 63 years. RitSah, a circus elephant, killed bis keeper, Frank Fisher, at Kansas City Monday. Governor Roosevelt is viaitina; in Chi cago, where he has been enthusiastically received. Officials at Washington take no stock in the proposal to exchange the Philippines for the British West Indies. Thirty West Point cadets engaged in a fight with the boys of the village Mon day night. U 8. Grant the Third was among the seriously injured . In a flood at Glendive, Mont., Monday lour persons were drowned. Eight oth ers are missing. Three spans of rail road bridge wash4 out, causing a loss of $25,000. fobeign. . .. . . . - iiauan troop nave been landed at 8an Mun bay, China. ' Internal dissentions have arisen in the Carlist party of Spain. England has bought the Tonga islands VIMIH. 1 U ! T t 1 n . uiwhkmi uwu in ireuna naiuraay re sulted in a wholesale defeat of the on ionists, - Kiotera have wrecked a French mis sion in the province of Chun Chang, Co- rea. mi n ... ine uerman expedition sent to I-Chau, China, last week, has returned to Kia-Chou. Figaro has begun the publication rjf the evidence given by Major Harfmaij In the Dreyfus case. Kong Yu Wei, the Chinese reformer who was forced to flee from his native land, has arrived in Victoria on his way to London. An uprising of Tartars has just oc curred In the province of Carsan, South eastern Russia. The German National Zeitung declares all changes made in the status of affairs at Samoa since March 4 are invalid. Dupuy, the French premier, announ ces that conditions, both at home amd abroad, are eminently satisfactory to the French government, Returns from the Irish county coun cil elections shows that 300 nationalists 83 unionists, one labor candidate and one liberal have been returned. An American Protestant missionary at Hankau, China, makes charges against the Catholics of burning Protest ant chapels and torturing Protestants. WAR. Dewey has cabled the iiavy depart ment a request for six months' engineer ing supplies. Gomes has been reinstated as com mander of the Cuban army by action of the Cuban assembly. Distribution of the 3,000,noo fur nished by the United States for pay mantof the Cuban troops will begin at once. The transport Scandia arrived at San Francisco Sunday from Manila with a number of time-expired soldiers. MaoArthur'a forces are still at Malo los. Their operations consist merely of dally reoonnoisancea in various direc tions. At Saturday's cabinet meeting the war situation was discussed, and confi dence in General Otis' ability to cope with the situation from now on was gen erally expressed. Lawton's brigade is advancing on Santa Cms, across Laguna de bay and several miles from Manila. Aguinaldo has iasued a proclamation declaring that Spanish shall be the of ficial language throughout the Philip pines. Alger his left Porto Rico for New York. Dewey has stated positively that he will not allow his name to be used as that of a candidate for the presidential nomination next year. The troops on board the transport Grant, en route for Manila, are reported by their officers to be in unfit condition for service, being mostly raw rec ruita. THE END- NOT JET. It it Estimated 50,000 Troop$ Are Xeedtd to Crush Ae Rcbtllion. The battles of the part few days have all been skirmishes. It Is now known that 93 rebels were killed in the battle of Santa Cms. Major-General Shnftev thinks the Fili pino war will last for a kwg time. The fighting about Manila will cease in ten days as the rainy season then Company Vtf Second Oregon, got the brunt of thi tfhtlng near Malolos. New Yobs:, April 12.-A dispatch to the World from Manila says: While it is pro-able that there is an end to the big engagements in the Philippines be tween the Americans and the Filipinos, the war Is not at an end by any means. It is the universal opinion among army men here that it will require the pres ence of 50,090 American troops to occu py the territory that has been taken and keep open communication among the islands. General Lawton's advance promises to meet with a harrassing resistance. Trenches are built by the enemv from town to town. Ou all sides the rebels are in nightly communication by means of signal fires. They avoid being caught in a trap and are quick to harass the flank. Since March 25 the enemy's losses have not been more than double ours. Our kindness to the rebel wounded and prisoner, does not allay their dogged enmity. Only a" small portion of the population of the north have returned to their homes. Only the diseased and aged remain in Santa Cruz. Aguinaldo is reported to be in San Fernando and still in absolute charge of the defenses of the new capital and of Calumpit. Mahila, April 12-6:10 P. M. Gen eral Wbeaton stated at daylight with the Tenth Pennsylvania and Second Or egon regiments and two guns to drive the rebels from the American right flank between the railroad and the foot hills. He met with slight resistance near Santa Maria, and one man was wounded, but the enemy bolted when shelled by the artillery and burned and abandoned the town of Santa Maria. where 1000 rebels were reported to have been concentrated. During the rest of the day the enemy was in full retreat toward the moun tains, burning villages behind the re treating force. Occasionally a few reb els dropped to the rear and fired at the advancing American troops from the jungle, apparently with the idea that this would check our advance and cover the retreat of the Filipinos. Finding these tactics ineffectual, they scampered after the main body. The American guard along the rail road has been materially strengthened, and it is not likely the rebels will suc ceed in getting in the future to as close quarters as they did yesterday, even if they return from the mountains. Washington, April 12. The following cablegram has been received from Gen eral Otis : ''Manila, April 12. Adjutant-General, Washington : Yesterday in the lake re gion Lawton pursued the insurgents eastward from Santa Cruz, dispersing them. He captured all the larger ves sels used in the lake trade and a Span ish gunboat. He is now endeavoring to pass them from the river, where they were concealed, into the lake. "When ton drove the enemy ten miles to the eastward of the railway commu nicating with Maloloe. Lawton's and Wheaton's casualties are very slight, as the enemy made no stand. "I have been notified by Spain that she will evacuate Mindora and Polo soon. Otis." Manila, April 126:60 P. M. Gen eral Wheaton has telegraphed to Gen eral Otia. saying: "Tbey would not wait to be killed." General Lawton la scourine; the vicinity of Santa Crux. He finds the rebels have decamped. He has secured a gunboat, six launches and two car-coea. comprising the Filipino fleet. The vessels were stuck in the mud in the river. NEW YORK, April U.-A dispatch to the Herald from Manila says: Law ton captured the villages of Pagsajan ana uimDan yesterday alter some re sistance at the latter place. The mouth of the river, commanded by Lumban, waa effectually blocked against the en trance oi the gunboats. Shells from the Laguna de Bay drove moat of the insurgents in flight up the mountain side. A small force remained in an old church, offering resistance until it was rushed by the troops. About 50 were captured and several killed. There waa one casualty among the Americana, that being an arm wound, ' Six launches and two caecoee were captured in the river. The mouth was to be dredged today and the obstructions removed. Santa Crua and Pagsajan are now guardrd by the men of the Fourth cav alry. Most of the Fourteenth infantry, with General Lawton, are in Lumban. A body of insurgents attacked the rear of McArthur'a division between Marilao and Bocave at 3 o'clock this morning. The telegraph line was cut . Our loss was five killed and 14 wonnded all in company M of the Second Oregon regiment, and companies C and D, of the Thirteenth Minnesota. Tbe-inanrgeitte loosened aome raila on the railrord track, bat the damage was quickly repaired. . WASHINGTON, April U.-General Otis has forwarded the following cas ualty list: EILUD. Fourteenth infantry, April 10, Private j. W. Pitts. Second Oregon, April H Company M Privates Henry Payne, Edward Hoffmen and Joseph Boddey. Thirteenth Minnesota, April 10 Pri vate M.Cele. April 11 Private Morris P.Beatty. WOVHDIO. ' Hospital corps, April ft Acting Hos pital Steward Barnett Altman. Thirteenth Minnesota, April 10 Hen ry Foss, First Lieutenant Charles Clark, First Sergeant Eugene Samson, Corpor als Holden Q. Gilbert, Walter Ryberg, Privates W. G. Obel, Eugene A. Har vey, O. J. Miggson, Charles Packett, John J. Young, John Lichten , Harry Anderson, Richard Kelly and Adams Hotchkiss. Fourteenth infantry, April 10 Private William Somers. Fourth cavalry, April 11 Private Jo seph Grabowsky, head, severe. First North Dakota Corporal Her man Wolf. First Idaho Private Arthur P. Lar son, forearm, severe. Second Oregon, Company M Privates P. Miller, abnomen, severe; Arthur Sullen, arm, slight. CAUGHT IN A TRAP Americana and British Attacked By Samoans. AUKLAND, N. Z., April 12. Dis patches from Apia, Samoa, dated April 1, say that a praty of 105 American and British sailors were ambuscaded by 800 of Mataafa's rebels on a German, planta tion on that day. The Anglo-Americans were forced to retreat to the beach, leaving their dead. The expedition waa led by Lieutenant A. H. Freeman, of the British cruiser Tauranga. The killed are: Lieutenant Freeman, Lieutenant P. V. Lansdale and Ensign J. R. Monaghan, of the American cruis er Philadelphia, two American sailors and two British sailors. Ensign Monaghan stayed to assist Lieutenant Lansdale and was shot down. The natives severed the heads of the British and American killed. Priests of the French mission afterward brought the heads into Apia. The manager of the German planta tion has been arrested and is detained on board the Tauranga. Affidavits have been made declaring he was seen urging the rebels to fight. In a previous engagement 27 of Ma taafa's warriors were killed and there were no casualties among the European forces. F. C. REED THE MAX. Governor Geer Appoints H. D. McGuire's Successor as Fish Commissioner. The appointment of Hon. F. C. Reed, of Astoria, as fish commissioner to suc ceed Hollister D. MoGuire was this af ternoon announced by Governor T. T. Geer. Mr, Reed is a prominent citizen of Clatsop county and has served in the Oregon legislature. He has had wide experience in the fisheries work of the Columbia, and his appointment will no doubt prove very acceptable. He is the right man for the place. Capital Jour nal. A Frightful Blander Will often cause a horrible- burn, scald, cut or bruise. Bucklen'a Arnica Salve, the best in the world, will kill the pain and promptly heal it. Cures old sores, fever sores, ulcers, boils, felons, corns, all skin eruptions. Best pile cure on earth. Only 25 eta. a box. Cure guar anteed. Sold by Geo. A. Harding, drug- A Sure Thine for Ton. A transaction in which you cannot loae is a sure thing. Biliousness, aick head ache, furred tongue, fever, piles anda thousand other ilia are caused by coa st! pat ion and sluggish liver. Gascarets Candy Cathartic, the wonderful new liver stimulant and intestinal tonic are by all druggists guaranteed to care or money refunded. C. O. O. are a sure thing. Try a box to-day j 10c, 25c, 50, Sample and booklet free. All druggists That Tkrvbalat daeh Would quickly leave yon it yon used Dr. King's New Life Pills. Thousands of sufferers have proved their matchless merit for sick and nervous headaches. They make pure blood and strong nerves and build up your health. Easy to take. Try them. Only 25 cents. Money back if not cured. Sold by Geo. A. Harding, druggist. Blsaark's Iras Nerve - Waa the result of his splendid health. Indomitable will and tremendous energy are not found where 6tomacb, Liver, Kidneys and Bowels are out of order. If you want these qualities and the suc cess they bring, use Dr. King's New Life Pills. Tbey develope every power of brain and body. Only 25 cents at Geo. A. Harding's drug store. GLADSTONE GREENHOUSE WILKINSON MKOtf., FBOPBIBTOKS IUT FIOWEB8. POrTXD PLANTS. tOSES AND OTHER SHRUBBERY. Pnatral alaoat h4 !aarMca. Spatial attanu . gtTa W arwglt Saul aiaplaya f wtiUInt-. an aartli. P. O. AddrM. Box 238, Oregon City, Ore. Weekly Oregonian and Oregon City Courier-Herald FOR ONE YEAR Two Just NEW TV.,- Ktmvcu fiwififr and Siinimof (Infule,' f- - L I III Mill! Shoes, Boots, Clothing, Gent's Furnishing : Goods, Hats, Fancy Goods, Dry .Goods. vnitn l-i a ni a ri nTU i rvirz rnni da mv- m Tk w n mm mmm mm vl m &w No. 3 Commercial Blk, next A Good Thing If you have a good thing the people want it. Their scales of living is many degrees higher than their fathers'; they want the necessities of life to be as good as possible for the money. MARR & MUIR gives the best groceries at the lowest price. A penny saved is two earned. HARRIS' GROCERY see Fresh Stock of First-Class . Depot for HAT and FEED On Top. The top of the Shoe isn't where the most wear comes, but it's important, nevertheless. Tops are made in a great variety of styles now-a-days. All of them are good, but some more beautiful than others We have all the new styles of tops, for you to select from. KRAUSSE BROS. MRS. R. t 220 First Street - Has just returned from San Francisco with a complete assortment of Imported Pattern Hats & Millinery Noveltie$ Hats trimmed to order. . Feathers dyed and curled. . PRICES MODERATE iAiAAAAa.lAiaiAaSAisaijai4AAAA tloa of IkmeiH tom or dlMM vooau - Ml MTHIinV lrirthllM ul i .t in Tbo THm Hfferora r not on rut by Doctor la hroaaa nhNty per Mot art ttanbtaS wMh ft nmnii. CCPIDKNK i tVooly known rrwtj to ear-without an optruloa. MMttaattaaoai. ala. A wrtttoa jraaraat tr mtit aacrnay ratnmaw U mix boi-a doaa not aflaot aaraiaaant a CS a box. mix fat r aU. , B4 tor tmm dwnUr 4 laatlmoalala, AdOr-an ATB, MiaiB4raaHirilBHrMeko,Cal ArMaa Geo. A Harding ...The Most Desirable Suburb... ABJSMINI 0RE80N CITY AMI FRACTICAUY A PART OF IT. IT ti all within one mile of the center of the city and It con . nected by an improved plank road. Healthy location, fine view, good air, soil, water and drainage and a first-class public school adjoining. With all the advantages of the city and but a 15 minutes walk to to the business houses, makes this a very desirable place of residence and bound to grow in popularity. 5 Choice Lots ready for the garden from $100 to $150 on easy monthly installments with liberal discount to home build ers. Call on or address. T. L. CUaRXAN, Trustee, Greenhouse on Eaat.SJd Electric Car Linn Dollars : see . . "'''"''" .'.'., , LINE OF e f" w -a. wi v vpr" m v nva vl m h nv n ajtsm door to P. O., OREGON eClTY r THE LEADER OF LOW PRICES GROCERIES Willamette Block, Oregon City BECKER - - Portland, Oregon J I lllllllll i a fllLl V MAI2H00D RESTORED "CUPIDINI ThbcnatV4tabl VlUUur.UMprMcrlp. frock ! jtictea, wiu ealckljr aura of Um mnun wtut, much mm . it our. Ton r mil m ner InwmntaJmttoBck,Bntnal IoWdm, Norroaa DoMUtr IM, MCa H 144 amajl wh nmn. Charman Bros.' Block