; louoty CleA'B Olfioe ': ' 1 . . . - - Vol. XVIII.-No. 17. CORVALLIS, OREGON. CJULY IV. 1905. B.F. IRVTNB dlt and Prop ( i Summer Clearance Great Bargains in a 1 1 Departments Big StoGk to make your selections ... ' Get our PriGes and make Comparison. WM Hotel ttfc;: ! Corvallls Leading Hoterin Oorvallis. Recently opened. New brick building. . Newly furnished, with modern con veniences. Furnace Heat, Electric Lights, Fire Es capes. Hot and cold water on every floor. Fine single, rooms. Elegant suites. Leading house in the Willam ette Valley. $ 1 "0, $1.25 and $2.00 per day. Star Brand Shoes are Better! For Shoes, Gothing, Hats, Gloves, Hosiery, Notions, Fruits, Meats, Staple and Fancy Gro ceries, see . . . WELLSHER & GRAY. Highest Market Price Paid for all Kinds of Produce Star Brand Shoes are Better! The Popular Grocery & Crockery- Good Things Butter Always Fresh from the Dairies, tasty and good. Pickles. Sweet and sour, Hienzes bottle and bulk. The best canned Fruits and Vegetables on the market. OUR METHODS OF BUSINESS -All appeal to the thrifty housewife who wants the very best groceries for the least money. HERE IS THE STORE - P. M. ZIEROLF. Sale! Fine Light Sample Rooms. J. C. Hammel, Prop. For Eating Eggs. Fresh and always direct from the hens. See our Garden Truck, nothing but best, grown by good gardeners. RIOT IN NEW YORK NEGROES AND WHITES HAVE A, FURIOUS RACE RIOT IN STREETS OF THE CITY. Mob Rules for Two Hours Arrest of White Man 'or Assaulting Negro Is Signal for Fight ' 'S ing Army of Police Have Htrd Strug- ' ' gle. ', New York, July 14. "San Juan Hill," the districo bounded by Arc- sierdam and West Jnd avenues ana Sixty-first and' Sixty-Third Etreets so-called because of its notoriety as a battle ground was the'' scene to night of a"fnrious race riot which required 250 policemen to quell, after many shots had been -fired and eevtral persons had been sepPjk ously injured. ' "J'. !'i:-'' . The trouble began eh or fly after 9 o'clock, when a policeman arrested Edward Connelly, for; attacking Henry Williams, d Wgro,- and was pursued to the stioc-house ' by a mob of Connelly's friends; hurling showers of stones and other missiles. When the station-house reserves turned out, the whole neighborhood was in an uproar, and whites and blacks engaged in a desperate strug gle. " Torrents of missiles were hurled from roofs and windows.- LWithin ten minutes not lees than a thousand men,' boys and women, black and white, were engaged in a furiouB combat. - The small paity of police were pcwerlt s and reinforcements were summoned. Oa their arrival, a cordon was drawn around the whole district, and strong j atrols made repeated : charges down the streets in a vain effort to restore or der. ; They succeeded in ; making a treat, fighting every inch of the W8y, and pursued to the station house by a howling mob. The worst of the fighting was in Sixty-second street, where from ev ery window and roof rained missiles while hundreds of shots were fired. Roundsman . Patrick Walsh was knocked down by a negro, who leaped upon him and, after attempt ing to shoot him, struck him re peatedly with the butt, of his re volver. Walsh was finally rescued by his comrades. - Inspector McLaughlin arrived shortly before 10 o'clock and, real izing how widespread was the dang' er, sent hurry calls (or leserves from as far north as One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street and as far south as Leonard street, from the East S.de and from the West Side, tn all there were ' more than 450 emn unler command of the inspec tor within 20 minutes. Squads of men were sent along the roofs of the houses in Sixty-second street, where the fighting seem ed heaviest. They walked from West End avenue 10 Amsterdam, clearing the roofs, and found that many chimneys bad been torn to pieces to furnish ammunition. More arrests were made, and several whites and negroes were rescued from gangs of assailants, but desultory combats continued. Captain Gallagher and Inspector McLaughlin, while pass ing through the mob, rescued Mich ael Jaceby, a white mai, who was being beaten by two negroes. ' The rioting spread to Ffty-sev- enth etreet and to Sixty-eiebth street, although the hardest battles were fought between Sixty-first and Sixty-third etreet. For more 'than half an hour cars on the Amster dam-avenue line were blocked. Col ored men, pursued by whites, took refuge on cars as they passed and were followed by showers of bricks and' stones as they fled. Every window in many cars were broken and passengers, took shelter in neighboring houses. Conductors and motormen hid under eeats, leav ing the cars to the mercy of the mob. - Commissioner McAdoo arrived at 11 o'clock and made a tour of the battle field, the fighting by that time having ceased. He said the riot could not have taken place had not the rougher element been per mitted to carry arms. They ap peared to have a regular arsenal of weapons. - . In all, seven whites and two ne groes had their injuries attended to, scores of others, less seriously hurt, were taken to their homes by friends. rive wnites ana six negroes, among thern women, were arrested. ' A picked body of 30 policemen was detailed to occupy the disturb ed region during the night. '. Portland, Me., July , 15. An earthquake shock, affecting a large portion of Maine, occurred at 5:10 a. m; today and was enoticable for abouj 10 secondp. It, was said to have'been mo-e severe than the shocks of March 2I, 1904, which occurred about 1 a. m. Today's tremoliog awoke many people from sle fi It was reported from Bangor to Klttery, and from above Farm ingtjn to-the coast at Rockland, and seemed most eevere in Central Maile, especially at Augusta emd Watsrville. Early reports of the quaking "were received from Kittery, York, Biddeford, Portland, Bruns wickV Lewiston, Augusta, Watsr ville, Rum ford Falls, Farmington, Skohegan,' Rockland, Belfast and Bangor, and Manchester and Con coroew Hampshire. -'.' To shocks were ""felt at Bruns wick, Thomaston and some other places; the second being more se vere than the first. In the vicinity of Portland, a rumbling noise ac companied the shock, being heard perc&ptibly by Captain Gilbert M. Dinsindre, of the Portland Observ- . . u - 1 e :i: :.u " -, VmUttw,lui earthquakes while living in Moroc-i co.V;lne state prison at Ibomas ton was shaken, but no damage was done' there or in any section of the state pood,' for " Stomach Trouble and ' f- 'Constipation. ".Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tab lets; have done me a great deal of good,". 3ays,C Towns, of Eat .-Portage, Ontario, Canada. "Being a mild physic the after effects are not unpleasant, and I can recom mend! them to all who suffer from stomach disorder."" For sale by Graham & Wortham. New Yoik, July Is.- Wit&ere, of Wakefield, who led the orchestra at Ford'a Theatre, Wash lobo, wnen rreeident 1,'ncoln was shot, is-dead at the age of 70. Wilkes Booth stabbed him, after leaping from the president's box to the stage, and a detective arrested him. . . In the confusion of the moment many in the theatre believed With ers fired the shot that killed Lin coln. Hundreds screamed "Kill him! Shoct him!" And- he. was dragged out of the angry mob to the stage, just in time to save him from being badly hurt The old man retained vividly a recollection of the incidents of that terrible April night. Just before his death he told the stoiy of the assassin to some friends. ' Wither's last engagement was under AuguBtin Daly, when "The Geisha" was presented. Since then he has suffered from an abscees of the ear and lived quietly at home. He wss a soldier in the Civil War, going to Ford's Theatre at the close of the fighting to lead the orchestra. Washington, July 16. The Jap anese legation here has received a cablegram from Tokio detailing the action on the Island of Sakhalin on July 10 and 11, in which the Rus sians were force to abandon their positions. Toe cablegram is as fol lows: "The Sakhalin army reports that in pursuing the enemy it dislodged him from the neighborhood of Vlad imiroeka and 'Blijimeye, two miles wet of Vlad'miroska, on July 10, iai.d occupied both places. The en emy 8 main force retreated to forti fied positions north west of Dalineye where with some machine guns a stubborn resistance was offered. Oar army commenced a vigorous attack on the 11th and routed the enemy toward Mauka on the dawn of the 11th. The enemy's less is not obtainable, but probably is at least 150." South Bend, Iod., July 15 Thousands of army worms have swept clean 5oo acres of timothy, as well as much oats and barley near the western part of the state, and are still advancing. The far mers are attempting to stay their ravages by plowing deep furrows. July Sunset Magazine. The July Sunset is a special , numb er dealing with the Lewis and Clark Ex position and the great Pacific Northwest. Filled with instructive articles, fine illus trations, a number that will give you an immense amount of" information and show yon the opportunities 6F the West as no other publication can. Don't miss it. On sale at all news stands, . - REFUSED NEW TRIAL JUDGE DE HAVEN DENIES MOTION OF DEFENSE. No Arrest of Judgment Judge De Haven Siys Judge Bellinger Made No Error Mitchell Will Appeal Other News. Portland, July 15. Portland Journal: Judge Da Haven this af ternoon decided that he would neith er grant Senator John H. Mitchell a new trial, heed the motion made for arrest of judgment or refrain from sentencing the defendant upon the sixth ccunt of the indictment, under which no evidence was sub mitted by the government. When the court had finished the decision, he asked if the defendant was io court, with the obvious pur pose of pronouncing sentence imme diately. Senator Mitchell was not preeent, but ex-Senator Thurston arose and aeked for a brief time in which to prepare a bill of exceptions. When asked what time he would re- quire for this, he said that a week fe a ffi H. or ten days would suffice. He stat ed that Monday or Tuesday he would have his bill ready and would submit it to the government's at torney at that time. District attorney Heney Eaid that if the bill was submitted to him by Monday or Tuesday he would re quire little time to review it before it was submitted to the court. Un der this arrangement the bill should be presented by Monday week, at which time it is expected that Judge De Haven will pronounce sentence Iola, Kan., July 15. Thirty-five hundred people are jammed into ka n.anjl fVia.t.a mV,iV. I u! "lic ntereet ha Ten eneae- man Funston, father of General Frederick Funston. Fifty witnes ses have been summoned. Funston "advocated dynamiting the saloons previous to the recent explosioos which wrecked several places, and was arrested for dis turbing the peace and carrying con cealed weaponp. Feeling runs high in this vicini ty, many of the most prominent cit izens openly approving of the dyna mite outrage which destroyed three buildings aud broke all the plate glass windows in the city. It is not believed that Mr. FunEton him self bad any ptrt in the plot or was cognizant of it, but he has long been an open advocate of the use of force to enforce the prohibition law and was "open in his approval of the deed. Vienna. July 15. Dispatches from St. Petersburg say it is rum ored tnere tnat a mutiny nas oc curred among the crew of the battle ship Catherine the Great in the Black Sea squadron, and the mu tineers are reported to have sunk the vessel. Kustenji, July 15. Thirty mem bers of the ciew of the battle ship Potemkin who were unwilling par ticipants in the recent mutiny have been shot by the Russian authori ties. All the officers who were left on board the Potemkin, though pris oners of the mutineers, are being imprisoned and loaded down with chains. The governmett will show no mercy to any oae aboard the mutinous battle ship. Harrisburg, Pa., July 18 The Pennsylvania Flyer, eastbound, the nevfr 18 hour train from Chicago to New York, s'.ruck a wreck train while running at the top of her speed at West Port Royal near this city, early this morning.' The freight train had buckled, throwing a car across the passenger track and the Flyer struck the car and hurled it from the track. The engineer of the Flyer jumped when he saw the obstruction and was severely injur ed. The engine of the Flyer was considerably damaged. Shanghai, July 15 M. Po'kiloff, the Russian minister to China, sail ed today for. Vancouver on the eteunjer Empress if China on his weyto Washington to attend the peace conference. - Washington, D. C, July 15. The battle .ship Oregon has won the tiophy lor h'gh scores made by ' vessel in practice. The same vei- sel won the trophy a year ago. The Asiatic made a higher average than either the Pacific or North Atlantic fleet. St. Petersburg, July 15. The czar has definitely decided not to go to Moscow July 19 to issue a proclamation convoking a repre sentative assembly. It is under stood the change of plan is due to the assassiDalioo of Count Schuva loff at Moscow. An imperial de cree has been issued granting an amnesty to all religious offenders in accordance with the ukase of May 12. Following an anti-semitic out-" break at Joeefow, in the provir.ee of Tublin, Russia, a mob of 3,000 attacked the Ghetto, wrecking and plundering more than 2OO houses. The casualties are reported to bat wo killed and 110 wounded. Reports from Manchuria stite that Linievitch has ceased his of fensive tactics and that the Rus sians are now entirely on the defen sive. Serious epidemics are said to be causing many deaths in the Rus sian army. Later reports from Karsakov say that the fire, which continued to burn until July 10, practically de stroyed the town. Paris, July 15. The minister of marine nas received a dispatch from Bizerta, Tunis, . saying that the effort! to raise the floating dock to which the sunken submarine bad been fastened were successful this morning. The dock was taken to Sidi Abdellah, where it will imme diately be placed in drydock for the purpose of opening the submarine and taking out the 14 bodies of her crew. Tokio, July 16. In the latest engagements near Kakabfuto, Sak halin the Japanese liases were Eev en killed and 60 wounded, some of he 1 lattsr seriously. The southern orthe Island is' now1 practical ly in the hands of the Japanese, who are moving slowly but surely northward. The natives express great delight at the outcome and are apparently very glad to get rid of the RussiaDH. Two delegations called at the camp of the Japanese commanders and professed loyalty to Japan. Fully 9o per cent, of the inhabitants c f Korsakovsk, which was burned to the ground while being evacuated by the Russians, have .returned and have commenced to rebuild their homes. In this work thev are re ceiving great aid from the Japanese commander, who has detailed a force of soldiers to help the natives in the work. It is reported that the navy de partment has received advices indi cating that a general engagement is likely within 48 hours, and the outcome will probably be the cap turn of the entire Russian army of defense. One Dollar SavKd Represents Ten Dollars Earned. The average man does not save to exceed ten per cent, of his earnings, lie must spend nine dollars in living expenses for every dollar saved. That being the case he can not be too careful about unnecessary ex penses. Very often a few cents properly in vested, like buying seeds for his garden, will save several dollars outlay later on. It is the same in buying Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It costs but a few cents, and a bottle of it in the house often saves a doctor's bill of several dollars. For sale by Graham & Wortham. New York, July 16. The Roose velt, in which Captain Robert E. Peary bopps to reach the north pole, started on her long voyage to day. Captain Peary and a party of guests were on botrl at the start, and remained on the ship on her trip down the bay, but they left her at the narrows, returning to the city on a navy tug. Captain Peary started tonight by rail for Sydney, Cape Breton, where he will join the ship. A launch bearing a party of ex cursionists attempted to run along side of the ship when she was under way and nearly collided with her. The Roosevelt was saluted by all manner of eteam and sailing craft on her way to sea. Nikolskoie, Asiatic Russia, July 16. Four Japanese torpedo boat destroyers reconnoitered Olga and Vladimir bays, northeast of Vladi vostok, July 14 end 15. They made sounriini and fxmined the bhorts and wer evidently investi gating the possibilities of landing troop?. ' They examined the wreck of the Russian cruiser Izumrud by; means of divers. -