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About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1891)
City SEGON 3RPRISE. vol. 2: NO. 1? OKKfJON CITY, OKKCJON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1(1, 1891. ESTABLISHED 1800. Bnti 1853--18131. Profession Cards. I t()Ty JN CHINA. i: II. MMITII, (IrmluitUinf tlm Kolwllo Medlor.1 eolleite, of l'hilwl!l,iil,iiii. regularly llroussd by UiuHUile Minimal lluitrit ill emtiulnurs Haute Creek, Oron. J" L. I'OKTKIt, ATTOHNKY AT LAW aiistiui rs tir I'mirmiTY ri'KNiaiiRU, OilW'ti two doors above pimtiifflM, Owm City. 1 miine. OF THE STATE. j,p jjfuwlh of Oregon City W JiCUJlt' tf C the who! liu lenuiit) familiar, nut nlone K kiUniiH Comity, but to i' of tllt HtiltC. now t njut-H tin- " Pioneer More." fully Up to the reijuire rim.N ami u'emainU of the whole eon n try, and fully ilrt. rmiiH d to ufler fueh iii'lueenients us will attract the attention of Uiom who are wi.hinj,' to purchase a K(,o- ntrneiitof Men hainliHe at I !- -k prices yes, A. . tlHKHKItR. JCHIflUK DltKHHKIi. ATTOKNKY8 AT LAW, Office In JiiKnr niork, OriKin City ( 1 II. HYK, vy ATTORNEY AND COl'NFELOK AT LAW Office owr Oregon city Hank. iiRKiiim CITY, OKKUOS (i KulKiK ('. UIIOWKKLI, LAWYER, OKKIillJi CUT, Will irw'tli' In all llic PumU ol Hit' Mate. 01 nVe. lit' k L itour ti Cmillci'l & Huntley's droit The Native Soldiers Null! to Lead . the Outbreaks. Al'TIMi CHI) Kit SKCIiKTOItllKKS. Kiru(fi'f from leliaiitr Foreigners in Desperate Situation Where linn boats Cannot Go. ml assiu Cheaper than Portland Prices. Wtave jit ri-iv'i n very fin and well selected stiw k from New Ymk, t'hiciigo ami San Fruneiiteo, which we now oflVr at th very lowest iri. We will net Ih uinI'TauM by anyone in tho statu. Our stx'k in every lint Drv uooas. r ancy uress uooas, Notions, Clothing, Hats & Caps, Boots & Shoes, 1 1. HAYKH. ATToliNEY AT LAW, (IHKOuN I ITV, - ORauHN. Will t.racHi-e in nil ili courts of the ntU'. limn, comer Main and KlgHth streets, opposite court Ihhi.o Hhanwiai, C'tiit.a, Kept, 12. Ttie North China New say editorially : There urn point about thu Ichang riot uf seri ous iiniortuii(:e. It wait in no sense the work of a mob. There were indeed pre texts In the shape of a child Raid to have been kidnaped on tlie day of the riot, but thin U evidently merely a subterfuge in order to give a shadow for an excuse for uti outbreak. Evidences that it was directed and carried out by soldiers are only too numerous. The Chinese briga dier general at Ichang is a great friend of foreigner!, but he was helpless in the presence of an order that evidently came to his Hunan soldiers to destroy all foreign property they could on that day. Where no gunboats can go, the position of foreigners, unless in numbers, U very insecure. When soldiers get orders from their secret lenders, as at Ichang, they care nothing for their olllcers The I central government is powerless, for it li MIOT IIIM IIIIOIIII II. ICcoiill of ii Unit I'oiinO iiiii i i (her I, ml. iTJIE WORLD'S NEWS Ai.iunv, Oct. 9 Information was re ceived In this city )at lust night of the killing of Henry Ingram, at Mie laller'H farm, five miles from this city The killing was the result of a quarrel between the brothers over the division of an estate, and a contest over the terms of the will left bv their mother. Henry, on several occasion, had been found lying in wail, armed, near the house of his farther Frank, it is sup posed for the purpose of killing him, and both have recently been going around armed . The hired man on one occasion shot at a midnight prowler, ( supposing it to Vie Henry Ingram. To night he was again seen approaching the house armed with a gun. He was met by his brother Frank, with a revolver in each hand, who ordered him to throw up his hands. On his refusing and raising hi gun to shoot, Frank opened fire upon him, killing him instantly. A many, Oct. 10. In his preliminary examination today F. 8. Ingrain was held without bail to await the action of the grand jury for the murder of his brother, Henry Ingram, near this city lat Thursday. U. S. Machinery lleiinj Shipped to South Amei iea. THE 1'KHSECITEI) RIVSIA.NS. ' lianiatres t be 'iililCnnndfnii Hi-alers Reports of Crop Leciierwus Segro Lynched. American Knginrw tiolng Moulh. Washington, Oct. 10 The bureau of American republics is informed that one of the results of the reciprocity treaty with Brazil is the sale of 128 American locomotives in the republic. In addition to this, twenty-four locomotives are now being loaded at I'hiladephia for Brazil on the barkentines Mag gie Thompson and Eleanor Will iams. Under the reciprocity with Brazil locomotives and railroad supplies from tiie United States are admitted free of customs duty, and U' railroad eqtii j mentof that republic, which was form ally f F.nglish manufacture, is now, the bureau states, being rapidly replaced by articles of American manufacture. HUT C.M.UENIKH.SON&COS CtUiNAlio boots a inuiJi GHIIiABO. - . r limn m'MOi.'r'iil T t KtiCKKSHKiil i.ll Si t'OWIKi). AITuliNKYM AT LAW. All ( lii'Inm I'. S Unit oitlre ipwlally. ua rinmiii Hmirt c. C s Unil omcs o bulltliiig, o OHKtN CITY.- Orcgna. W.T. BI N, J Jl'K.NEY & UKAI'KK, ATTOHNEYS AT LAW i. w. isri. Ornon (Mty, Crfon Tlvr votni tsporlrnfl h rtrUtr ol th I!. S 1H'I ntili lir rMMimmxiKla us In mr utme lulu ol all klii.l. ul biialnrMi Iwli.r Ui Uud of Aid suil llio courts, ami liiviilvl:i( tba irat tloc tu tha ftHHTal laml nrtlc. CASI V JOHHWIX. NHOS A IHIJ5MAN l.AWYEltS, C. H. llll.KMA. J OH Corucr Klglit sail Main triMta, Oregon City, Ori'Kuu. ItKAI. KSTATE T08KLL AN D MONKYTO I.OAS. Q 11.1 l. C LATOCKKITK. ATrOlJNEYiS AND COUNSELOHS AT LAW MAIS STKKKT, OIlKdON CITY, OHBUON. ruriiMi Atmracn ol Title, Loan Mimi'y. Fnre elone MiirtKHcH. ainl trannacl Ijeuvral J E. CKtlSS, ATTOKXKY AT LAW. Wiu. 'Acnc is All cocbts or thk 8tat ll.'al Ktttt sntl linnirnncf. OfWce on Main HlrMt, bet. BUth and Seventh, ilRtWuN IITV. OR. Rubber Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Sash, Doors, Paints and Oils, (InclutlingtheCclchratcl Clevelan.1 Mixed Paint.). Also Agricultural Implements, Seeds, Crockery and Glassware ALL OF THE BEST QUALITY. ..... i. , ".!...: nr nf Cashmcros. IlenrJette ur iry uoous vaiiimim, m - - Cloth, l'laida and Ladies Cloth. 1 m ' . ! rn C fill Our Fancy Cioods-Kihbons, Laces arm lub' - Descriptkyis. . nu.. Hfnni'ifiiptnr. Clothintr-Cassimoro, Boaver, and uregon vuy ing Company's Goods. UdioH' Furnishing Goods-Fancy Skirts, Vests, Drawers, and other Underwear. a -:..i.:. rinmi Hats. Caps, Gloves, and Under- wear of every quality. Utile.' Shoes of every description from the best known fac lories. Boot, and Shoes-Men's, a choice lot, from the best factories in the world. Fine Groceries a Specialty. None but the best kept. Notions of every description. j 1 M, KAN1W, XOTABY rUBHC, REAL ESTATE A INSURANCE. Office with tho Willamette Falls Inveatment Co. OH'unClty, Orefon ins Hunan oiiicials every wnere, anu thetriHips every hero arelluuar. men. except Hi Hung Chang s disciplined force. To order him to suppiess Hunan with these men is to start a civil war. The situation is very critical, and the only solution is fur a foreign force to overawe Hiiimn, with the tacit connivance of the Chinese government. There will be no security for foreign life or property in China, unless the rebellious Hunanese are suppressed by force. Honkow, China, Sept. 0. The' steamer I'aohua arrived here today with the Ichang refugees, twenty in all, all of whom lost everything except the clothes they wore at the beginning of the outbreak. Several fare marks of serious violence. The riot took place at broad noonday, without warning or provocation. The destruction was car ried out with the utmost speed that no lives were lost. The Scotch mission aries owed their escape to the fact that they had gone boating on the river at Ike time of the outbreak. They hurried back, and were iust in time to rescue the senior missionaries, infant children, and escape when the mob arrived. Ro man Catholic sisters were hurled over a steep bank into the river, where they were stored and several were severely hurt. In Hankow things are stirring again. Yesterday there was a gathering of the anti-foreign element here, including a large numls?r of magistrates and officials They resolved that foreigners must be driven immediately from the central provinces. The missions at Wachang have received threatening placards, or dering them to leave at once or they will be exterminated. The Taotai inspected the nunnery today making search for bones, eyes etc , of children said to have been murdered by the sisters, Till: N.tSlfWH'll I!.!. It e port Hint ((urni l.lliiiokulaiil iaj ai- ul any .llomeul. SAx Fbanmbco, Oct.. 9 The Exam iner has advices from Honolulu to the effect that (Jueen I.tliuokaliu.i has been taken ill with serious fainting spells, and her physician, Ir. Tiossean, has pronounced her trouble organic disease of the heart, for which he can suggest no remedy. Drfath, it is stilted, may oc cur at at any moment. The queen has been advised of the worst and has made her will. The Honolulu press is silent on the subject, but it is known that all the political factions are busily at work. It is stated no one can be found whom all the factions will agree upon for regent to hold power during the minority of the heiress to the throne, Princess KaiuUni whoiB now finishing her education in England. The father of the princess is an Englishman, with pronounced English sympathies, and the opinion is expressed that in the event of Kaiulam's accession to the throne jf the islands an effort will be made to bring the island under Eng lish control. The native sentiment is preponderating in favor of a American protectorate in some form. The Ielitut- Kuiunrt. Kt. I'ktkksbi'Iki, Oct. 10. Senator Barnoff estimates that no fewer than 32, 000,000 peasants in Russia are now des titute, and must be provided for the next ten months. It will require 320, 000,000 pounds of grain to feed them. Owing to the difficulty of obtaining fod der for cattle, the export of linseed cake tro n Russia is prohibited. The famine in the Volga valley has caused wide spread sickness among the hunger-suffering inhabitants there Thousands of unfortunate peasants are already pros trated by typhus fever. O. T. W1I.UA MS, REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE. Desirable Business Property and Sub urban Homea in Oregon City. Fsrrn Property In tracts to salt on ey termi. CorreMionilenre promptly snuwered. Office, next door to CauHeld A Iluutloy'i drn atore. Banks. T THE COMMERCIAL BANK, OF OREGON CITY. ,., . . - - 1100,000 TRANSACTS A GENERAL RANKINtl BUSINESS. Loam made. Bills discounted. Makes ro lections. Huvs and sells exchange on all nolnw ... .... 11..1..J iuiuim. Kumna and llonf Kontf. Deposits recsl-ed subject to check J""' ' usual rates allowed on time deposits. BUR Z!uVm A.ii.to4r. . Saturday evenings from 6 to 7 r, a. n n T.ATrtllKKTTK. Prcsidont. f K. DONALDSON, Cashier BANK OF OKKGCN CITl, ... . .,., TT 1. (Vr, Hit OUeSI BaMlM. HUUSC 111 IUC UIU. Paid up Capital, 1NJ.O0O. THOS. CHARMAN. OSO. A. HARDING i. a CAiiriSLD. CHARLES H. CAUFIBLO. r business transacted. PRESIDENT, VICE FRESIDKNT, CASHIER, MANAUKK. - Y:.r;.;r.,iMii. nd notes discounted, County and city warrants bonrtt. Loans mane ' KxchaiiK tBht and solil. "WSKff.iail ol the world JWir"htahM ViWon Portland, San F3"c7 Oh.oas7aBnd New York. Interest paid on time l opoMW. Sub Atoms ot TIIK LONDON Ctllil CHEQUE BANK, F. W. DUKES, House, Sign and Ornamental painting Good work guarantoou. Al l' UK HIM. A ,'Hor,oiiclIIiHory AlHlmleTo wwimI the 1 nllert !uies. A .; ro I,ynrhel, Omaha, Neh. Oc. 11 Joe Coe, a dis- . reputable negro, was hanged by a mob here Friday for criminal assault npon a five-year-old girl who subsequently died . The mob beat the jail doors down with railway rails and hong Coe to a trolly wire in the street. A nnmher of indictments have been found against the leaders of the mob but it is certain no jury can be found in the county that will convict. HOI.O HA-VU KOIIKKV. They diet Away Willi flSSO at r.nlcrprl-e In lsiijlljjlit. New York. Oct. 13 The Herald ca- blo from Valparaiso, Chili says the jun ta an! political circles are greatly ex ercised over the comments which are appearing in the newspapers of Argen- j tine Republic in regard to the treatment of the officers of Balmaceda's govern ment, who have fallen into the power of the present anthoiitios. The editorials condemn the action of the janta in pros esuting, as they term it, Balmaceda's supporters by imprisonment. Such action, the newspapers declare, is un worthy of a civilised nation, and they add that the proper course for the victors to pnrsne is one of forbearance and that is tho only thing that will benefit the republic in the future. The attitude of the junta toward the American legation is now so conciliatory that the presence of the San Francisco in Chilian waters is no longer deemed necessary. Captain Schly, of the Baltimore, has so informed Admiral Brown, I learn on reliable authority that the name of Augustin Ed wards has been presented as a candidate for the presidency with the assurance that he will be elected. He is a strong man politically, although not credited with brilliant qualities of statesman ship. His candidature will probably tend to settle all political difference. La Grande, Or., Oct. 9 News has just reached here of a daring robbery which was perpetrated upon the National Bank of Enterprise, in Wallowa county Wednesday afternoon. Cashier Holmes was in the bank alone, when a man en tered and asked how much money John Smith of Portland had on deposit. Upon the cashier saying that no such man had any deposit there the visitor drew a pistol and, covering the cashier, said; "You're a liar." At this juncture two confederates came up on horsaback. One of them, sitting on his horse, with a pistol in each hand, warned the people back ; the other en tered the bank and poured into a sack all the money on the counter, about ;?500 in all. The three men escaped to the mountains in the direction of Cor nucopia. A posse is in hot persuit, but as the county is sparsely settled the cap ture of the robbers is doubtful. Four thousand dollars in a till under the coun ter was not found by the robbers. Morrow on the Hcncli. San Francisco, Oct. 5. Ex-Congressman William W Morrow, who was recently appointed by President Harrison to succeed Ogden Hoffman, deceased, as judge of the United State3 district court for this district, took his seat on the bench this morning. Judge Morrow reviewed the services of the de ceased judge at length,' and paid a trib ute to the latter's ability. Addresses were made by other members of the bar. Reports From Wheut riohU. St. Paul, Oct. 9 Reports from the wheat fields in North Dakota and North western Minnesota today are more en couraging, lhe weather is nne ana threshing is in progress in a number of places. Less than half the crop is threshed, and fears are entertained that much of it will be lost. SlIOl- ON FIFTH, N1EAR U. H. T. A L. BTABLKS Hlttloe vh. IlarrlNon. Washington, Oct. ,11. Senator Mitch ell was Interviewed to day on the matter of Oregon's choice for president, He said Harrison had given the country a good administration and the people felt very kindly toward him, yet Blaine had a great hold upon the people of the west, The senator also snid that it was too soon to talk about the presidency. Oregon Hoard of Commeroe. Portland, Oct. 9. The state board of commerce today elected the following officers fer the ensuing year: President, T. F. Osborne, re-elected; secretary, Charles Randolph, re-elected ; executive committee, J. P. Farrell, of Baker City, J. D. Matlock, of Eugene, R. A. Booth, of Grant's Pass, B. W. Granby and A. J, Apperson, of McMinnville, J. T. Apper son, of Oregon '.City, C. H. Dodd, of Portland, C. W. Towne, of Coos Bay, D. S. K, Buiek, of Roseburg, and M. C. Ar thur of Coquille. The following were elected a committee to sacure sub scriptions for the world's fair exhibit; J T. Apperson, Oregon City ; C. H. Dodd, Portland; 8. M. Yoran, Eugene; S. White, Baker City ; M. Garrigiea, Coos bay. After the meeting adjourned the world's fair committee met and effected an organization by the election of C. H Dodd for president and Charles Ran dolph, secretary. Kansas Crop 1 TopskaJ Kan., Oct. 9. Secretary Mohler issued the final crop report on wheat and oats today. It shows the yield of wheat for Kansas to by 58,309, 619 bushels; oats 39,668.045 bushels. The probable product of corn is 145,485,- 918 bushels. I'aolflo Coast Failure. San Fbansisco, Oct. 10. The Brad- street Mercantile Agency reports seven teen failures in the Pacific coast states and territories for the week ending today, as compared with twenty-seven for the previous week, and fifteen tor the cor responding week of 1890. The Holy Coat Exhibition Closed. Treves, Oct. 11. The exhibition of the holy coat baa closed Bishop Mo rum conducted an elaborate service and pronounced the benediction. The total number of pilgrims who viewed the coit is 2,925,130. The relic is now en shrined. Will Mare to lay Damagei. Ottawa, Oct. 11 .It is ascertained that the British government will have to pay the Canadian sealers damages on account of the modus vivendi, to the amount of $500,000, and maybe as high as $700,000. Grape Vine Cuttings for llraall. Washington. Oct. 11. The Brazilian government has ordered the purchase of 50,000 cuttings of grape vines in the United States and Europe for use in experimental vineyards in that republic. Coal In Albany. Albany, Or., Oct. 10. At a depth of about twenty-five feet the workmen in a sewer in this city struck a vein of fine quality of coal today. The extent of vein is not yet known. New York, Oct. 4. Mrs. Frank Les lie was married today to William G. Kingsbury Wilde, M. A., of London. . .... , , n-iTi'niir-r -hw,,,,,,.., , . j ,... w pfev-iiaffwi' . -mmemmmsv. v . - .. : i .. r i